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THE 


CHRISTIAN 


IN 


Compleat  Armour. 
TREATISE 

Of  the  Saints  War  againft  the  DeviL,wher- 

in  a  Difcov  ery  is  made  of  that  grand  enemy  of  God 

and  his  People,in  his  Policies,PowersSeatof  his  Empire, 

Wickedncfle,and  chief  dcfign  he  hath  againft  the  Saints. 

A 

JVLagazinoperid 

FROM 

Whence  the  Chriftian  is  furniflied  with  Spiritual 

Armes  for  the  battel,  helpt  on  with  his  Armour, 
and  taught  the  ufe  of  his  Weapon,together  with  the 

happy  ifluc  of  the  whole  Warre. 

The  Second  Tart. 


By  William  Gurnall,  M.  A.  of  Emm.  Coll.  now  Pallor  of 

the  Church  of  Chrift  in  Lavenham.     Suffolk^ 


The  fecond  Edition  corre&ed. 


Impim&tM)     Edm.    CalAMy. 


LO'NJVON,  Printed  for  Ralph  Smith,  at  the  Bible  in  CornhiS 
near  the  Rojall  Exchange.     I  6  5  9.         ^^^^ 


To  the 

WORSHIPFUL 

THOMAS  DARCTEfq; 

And 
Mrs.  SISILIA     DARCY, 

His  Religious  Confort,  at  Kentwetl- 

Hall  in  Suffolk 

F  my  Miniftry  be,  or  ever  was  a  mercy  to 
the  fouls  of  my  dear  people  in  Lwen- 
hamCXhzy  with  me,have  the  more  caufe 
to  blefle  God  for  Sir  Symonds  D'  Ewesy 
your  much  honoured  Father*  who  with 
fiich  a  noble  freenefTe  gave  them  their 
choice  in  fettling  me  amongft  them.     And  by  whofe 
favour  f  under  GodJ  I  have  many  years  enjoyed  the  roy- 
alty of  fifhing  for  fouls  in  their  ftreame.    A  priviledge, 
which  my  God(I  hope)  will  enable  me  to  value  at  a  higher 
rate  Chow  mercinary  foever  we  are  thought  by  many  ) 
than  the  temporal  emoluments  of  the  plac^.  Som?  years 
are  now  paft,  fince  God  was  pleafed  (for  our  finnes  I  fear) 
to  take  him  from  us-,By  whole  death5and  many  other  men 

A  2  of 


The  Epiflle  Dedicatory* 


of  honour,  that  have  their  heads  now  laid  with  his  among 
the  clods  $  the  confumptive  body  of  this  our  Nation, 
hath  loft  fo  much  of  her  beft  blood,  and  Tpirits  ^  as  is 
feen  in  her  pale  face  to  this  day.     And  now  ,  this  Wor- 
thy Gentleman,  being  removed  beyond  the  tender  of  my 
homage,  my  obligations  to  him  become  payable, to  you 
The  oncly      DOth  :Your  Lady  by  defcent  in  her  fathers  right,and  your 
living  sir**  ft/ty  alliance  in  hers ,  may  juftly  claime  the  debt,  were 
symonds  D'     it  worth  the  challenging.     But  to  fave  you  the  trouble, 
Eves  Knight    fafe  ijaes  are  (tni  to  make  publick.  confeflion  of  the 
fame.     Indeed  there  are  fo  many  towitnefTeit,  that 
mould  I  by  a  diflioneft  ingratitude  have  thought  to  con- 
ceale  it ,  I  mould  have  but  taken  paines  to  put  my 
felf  to  fliame  before  the  world.     I  fuppofe  it  would 
not  much  pleafe  you.,  that  my  penne  here  mould  tell 
the  world  any  thing  of  your  fa  triers  Worth,  with  which 
they  were  fo  well  acquainted,  before  he  left  it  3  And 
befides,  you  know,  the  unhappjnefle  of'  great  favours  is 
fuch,  as  brings  their   receivers*  under  a  fufpicion^of 
flattery,  for  that  which  in   the  mouth  of  a  dilobliged 
perfon,  would  be  counted  true    and  mbdeft.     I'mall 
therefore  only  fay  this,  the  more  to  provoke  you  both  t6 
a  careful  imitation  of  him.     Y0u  have  fo  faire  a  co- 
pie  left  you  in  the  example  of  a  Worthy  and  Religi- 
ous Father   ( a  happineffe  not  over  common  among 
the  children  of  great  onesj  that  to  fcrible  after  it,  would 
be  much  to  your  difhonout.     Both   your  educations 
have  been  with  t  he  greateft  advantage  for  piety.     And 
blelTed  be  God,  we   fee,  that  the  Religious  princi- 
ples, with  which  fo  early  you  were  fowne,  did  not 
fall  upon  dead  earth.     The  Name  of  Religion  is  not 
vile ,  or   contemptible  to  you ,  as  to  many  of  your 
rank  it  js  y,  who ,  looking  upon  its.  beautiful  face  with 

a 


TheEpifile  Dedicatory. 


a  carnal  eye ,  through  a  crackt .  glaiTe  (the  fcandals 
I  mean  of  broken  ProfefTours )  cm  finde  no  comeli- 
neffe  for  which  they  mould  defire  it  •,  yea ,  have 
very  unlovely  and  deformed  images  framed  of  it 
in  their  thoughts.  The  vvorfmp  of  God  is  .not  pro- 
fcribed  your  family ,  as  in  the  houfes  of  many  great 
ones,  who  it  feemes,  think  God  himfelf  too  mean 
company  for  them-,  and  count  it  a  greater  difgrace 
to  have  the  Bible  ufed  in  their  Parlour ,  than  Cards 
and  Dice. 

They  were  not  the  mofl  unwelcome  guefts  to  your 
houfe,  that   bring   God  along  with  them,  and  de- 
fire  to  leave  fomething  of  God  behinde  them.     You 
begin   well.    Noble    Friends  ,     blelTed    be    God  for 
this  Religious  Spring  putting  forth  in  your  youth.     Al- 
low me  ( I  pray  )  the  liberty  to  love  you  freely ; 
and  now  my  penne  is  ferving  you,  to  do  it  faith- 
fully. You  are  in  a  very  good  way^  like  true  travel- 
lours  ,  keep  it ,  and  let  none  hinder  you  in  your  jour- 
ney to  heaven.     Take  heed,  this  morning  Sunne.  that 
looks  out  fo  hopefully,  to  the  joy  of  all  that  know 
and  love  you,  fhut  not  up  with  foule  weather,  in 
the  evening  of  your  dayes.     If  you  were  got  many 
miles  further  on  your  journey  than  you  are,  yet  this 
counfel  would  not   come  too  late,  or   be  needlefie. 
Apoftacie  is  not  more  incident  to  our  natures ,  than 
breaches  made  on  early  profeflfion  are  dangerous.  When 
a  faire   morning   afterwards  turnes  to  raine ,  there  is 
lefle  hope  of  its  clearing  up ,  than  if  it  had  begun  foul. 
O  labour  therefore  to  be  more  in  earneft  for  God  ,  and 
Heaven ,  every  day  than   otheir.     Beware    of  falling 
into  a  confumption  in   the  folid  parts  of  godlinetTe, 
which  may  be  ?  and  yet  a  freih  fet  colour  appear  on  the 

face , 


The  Epiflle  Dedicatory* 


face  of  profeflion.  Borrow  as  much  time  as  you  can  for 
communion  with  God,  and  communing  with  your 
own  hearts  in  fecret.  If  fuch  as  you  can  finde  no  time, 
or  fpare  but  little  for  this  work,  who  then  may? 
Labour  to  get  a  greater  maflery  of  your  eftate ,  and 
love  of  the  world,  that  you  may  be  able  to  com- 
mand it  for  God  •,  ever  counting  a  large  heart,  a  mer- 
cy greater  than  a  large  purfe.  Value  your  felves  by 
your  inheritance  in  the  other  world,  and  not  by  your 
honour  and  riches  in  this :  You  may  (as  Saints)  call 
that  your  own  5  but  this ,  alas,  is  only  your  Mafters 
Cafh  in  your  hand,  for  the  disburfement  of  which,  you 
muft  account,  and  that  to  a  penny;  Be  abundant  in 
the  acts  of  Charity  and  let  the  Papjls  know,  that  good 
works  will  grow  on  Proteftant  ground ,  where  there  is  no 
hope  of  merit  allowed  to  water  them.  Be  not  much 
in  that  company ,  that  will  neither  give,  nor  take  a- 
ny  good. 

You  will  finde,  Honoured  friends ,  that  Religion  is 
a  ferious  bufinefle  ,  and  will  require  your  wifeft 
thoughts ,  and  beft  care  to  manage  it  well.  There  is 
an  unhappy  proverb  (  which  the  formal  Courtfhip, 
rather  than  cordial  friendfliip ,  that  Religion  findes  a- 
mong  many  great  perfonages ,  hath  occahoned , )  <viz, 
A  little  Religion  goes  a  great  way  amongft  great  onest, 
whereas  in  all  reafon ,  that  which  may  palTe  for  great 
Religion  among  inferiours ,  mould  be  thought  little 
by  thofe  that  are  mounted  higher  on  the  hill  of  honour  5 
becaufe  they  owe  more  fervice  to  God,  and  the  Devil 
owes  more  fpight  to  them.  Their  temptations  are  great- 
er ,  not  only  in  more  danger  to  fall ,  but  in  falling  alfo ; 
becaufe  of  the  height  they  fall  from.  The  good  Lord 
help  you ,  to  belie  this  proverb  more  and  more,  that  you 

may 


The  Epiflle  Dedicatory. 


may  convince  the  world  ;  greatneflfe ,  and  goodnefTe3 
are  not  fo  irreconcileable  3  but  may  be  perfwaded  to 
dwell  in  one  houfe,  yea,  lie  in  one  bofome.  This 
difcourfe ,  that  I  here  humbly  prefent  to  your  hands 
( a  little  fruit  of  my  labours  b  that  grew  in  your  Fa- 
thers foyle. )  If  you  water  it  with  prayer  in  the  read- 
ing of  it ,  may  (  I  hope  )  througn  Gods  blefling , 
give  encouragement ,  and  alfo  reach  fome  help  to  you 
in  the  work  %  which  that  it  may  do,  mail  be  the 
prayer 


Of  your  humble  fervant 

in  the  Lord, 
Levtnhm,  OSob.  1^57, 

William  Gurnall, 


' 


»; 


THE 


CHRISTIAN 


I  N 


Complcac  Armour, 


Part.  2. 


Ephes.   6.  14. 
£  Stand  therefore  and"] 

He  Apoftle  had  laid  down  in  general,  ver.  13. 
what  Armour  the  Chriftian  Souldier  muft  ufe, 
Awiour  of  God.     Now   left    any   fhould 
ftamp  divinity  upon  what  is  humane,    and 
make  bold   to   fet  Gods  Name   on   their 
counterfeit   ware,   calling  that  Armour   of 
God,  which  comes  out  of  their  private  forge 
fasPapifts,  and  many  carnal  Proteftants  alfo  do,  who  invent 
weapons  to  fight  the  Divel  with,  that  never  came  into  Gojis 
heart  to  appoint  )He  therefore  comes  more  particularly  to  flhew 
whit  this  whole  Armour  of  God  is,  defc  ribing  it  piece  by  piece, 
which  together  make  up  the  compleat  fuit,    and  every  way 
furnilh   the  Chriftian  to    take  the  Field   againft  this'  his  e- 
nemy.    We  (nail  handle  them  in  that  order  we  flnde  them  here 
laid  by  the  Apoftle.     Only  fomething  would  briefly  be  firft 
faid  to  the  pofture  given  us  in  charge,  as  that  which  we  are  to 
obferve  in  the  ufe  of  every  piece,  and  therefore  prefixt  to  all, 
bscaufe  it  hath  influence  into  all.    The  pofture  lies  in  thefe 
words,    Stand  therefore t  5*7* ,  fiand.    This  word  is  the  fame 

B  with 


I 


Stand  therefore 

with  the  lall  in  the  precedent  v.  But  neither  in  the  fame  mood, 
nor  fence:  There  put  for  viilory  and  triumph  when  the  war  is 
done,here  for  the  Chriftiahs  poffure  in  the  ft\ht,and  in  order  to 
ic.  It  is  a  military  expreflion,a  word  of  command  that  Captains 
ufe  upon  different  occafions  flo;  their  Souldiers,  and fo  imports 
feverai  duties  that  are  req«ise<iat  fhe  Chrifiians  hands. 

CHAP.     I. 

Wherein  is  briefly  fljetzed  the  necejfity  of  re- 
fifting  Sat  ans  tempt  Miens  ,  with  the  danger 
cf  yielding  to  them* 

FIrft,  to  fiand,  is  oppofed  to  a  cowardly  flight  from,  or 
treacherous  yielding  to  the  enemy.    When  aCaprain  k^s 
his  men  begin  to  fhrink,  and  perceives  forhe  difpofition  in  them 
to  flee  or  yield,  then  he  bids  ftaud3  tkst  is,  ftand  manfully  to  it, 
and  make  good  your  ground  again!*  the  enemy,  by  a  valiant  re- 
ceiving his  charge,  aud  repelling  his  force.     The  word  taken 
thus,  points  at  a  fuitable  duty  incumbent  on  the  ChriHian,  which • 
take  in  this  note. 
Note.         Satan  in  his  temptations  is  ftoutly  to  be  refilled,  natinanyri 
wife  yielded  unto. ! 
mf.  i.  The  command  is  exp rede  for  it,  \cPet.^.9.    whom 
Reaf.  l.     refift  ftedfafi  wthe  faith.  Set  your  felves  in  battel  againii  him, 
as  the  word  imports,  fight  him  when  ever-  he  comes.    Souldi- 
ers mull  keep  clofe  to  their  Commitfion,  whatever  comes  on 
it.    When  fiab  fent  Vriah  to  (land  in  the  fore-front  of  the 
battel,  in  the  face  of  death  it  felf,  he  could  not  but    fee   his 
danger,  yet  he  difputes  not  the  matter  with  his  General;  obey 
he  muft,  though  he  lofes  his  life  upon  the  place.    Cowardife 
and  difobedience  to  the  Leaders  command,  are  counted  among 
the  Turks  the  moll  damning  finnes ;  and  fhali  they  be  thought 
peccadilioes,  little  ones  by  us  that  haveChrift  for  our  Captain 
toferve,  and  finne  and  the  Divel  for  enemies  to  fight?  To  re- 
fill fome  temptations  may  coft  us  dear.   Ye  have  not  yet  refifted 
unto  blood  f  faith  the  Apofile )  ftriving  againft  fw>  Heb.  12.4. 
implying  it  may  come  to  that,  and  if  it  fiioufd ,   it  alters  not 

the 


^ . —— — — **— 

Sumd -therefore 

thscafe,  nor  gives  a  difpenfation  to  fliifr/for  our  felves,  by 
chooting  to  finnc,  rather  than  to  fuffer.     The  %jman  Captain 
faid  it  was  ncceifary  to  faile,aiottolive;  and  fhall  a  Chriftt- 
an  be  afraid  of  his  duty,  when  it  is  attended  with  outward  ha- 
zard ?  The  Souldier  carries  his  Princes  honour  into  the  Field 
with  him,  and  fo  doth  the  Chriilian  his  Gods ,   when  ever  he 
is  call'd  to  conteft  with  any  temptation  :   Now  it  will  be  feen 
at  what  rate  he    values  his  honour.    Davids  fubjeAs  va- 
lued him  worth  ten  thousands  of  their  Uvea,  and   therefore 
would  die  every  man  of  them, rather  than  hazard  him ;  oh  how 
unworthy  is  it  then  to  expofe  the  Name  of  God.  to  reproach, 
rather  than  our  felves  to  a  little  fcorne,  temporal  fofle  or  trou- 
ble? It  was  Pomfeys  boaft,  that  at  a  word  or  nod  of  his,   he 
could  make  his  Souldiers  creep  up  the  fteepeft  Rock  on  their 
hands  and  knees ,  though  they  were  knock't  down  as  faft  as 
they  went  up.    Truly,  God  is  not  prodigal  of  the  blood  of 
his  fervants,  yetfometim.es  he  tries  their  loyalty  in  ha  id  fer- 
vices,  and  fharp  temptations,  that  he  may  from  their  falhful- 
nefie  to  him;  and  holy  ftoutneffe  in^ieir  fufferings  for  hi -n, 
triumph  over  Satan,  who  was  fo  impudent  as  to  tell   God , 
that  one  of  his  choiceft  fervants  did  but  ferve   himfelf  in   fer- 
ving  of  him,  doth  Job  feare  God  for  nought  >   as  if  when  any 
(harp  encounter  came,  he  would  turn  head,  and    rather  curfe 
God,  than  fubnit  to  him ;  and  therefore  we  finde  the  Lord  glo- 
rying over  Satan,  Job  2.  2.     Still  he  holdtth  fafi  his  integrity  ^ 
although  then  moved $1  we  aga'mji  him^  as  if  the  Lord  had  faid, 
what  doeft  think  now  Satan  ?  hath  not  fob  proved  thee  a 
loud  liar?  I  have  fome  fervants  thou  feett  that  will  feFvc 
me  without  a  bribe,  that  will  hold  fait  their  integrity,  when 
they  can  hold  fait  nothing  elfe.     Thou  haft  got  away  his  e- 
ftate,  fervants  and  children,  and  yet  he   ftands  his  ground , 
and  thou  haft  not  got  thy  will  of  hi.n,  nor  his  integrity  from 
him. 

2.  God  funiifheth  >ts  with  Armour  for  this  end,  that  we 
fhould  ftand  it  outvali.vr.tly,  and  not  yield  to  Satan  tempting.  2. 
To  deliver  up  a  Caftle  into  an  enemies  hand,  when 'tis  well 
provided  with  ammunition  to  defend.' it,  is  fha  rueful  and  un- 
worthy of  fuch  a  truft.  This  rriakes  the  Chriftians  finne  more 
diihonourable  than  anothers,  becaufe  he  is  better  appointed 

B  2  to 


Stand  therefore 

to  make  refinance.    Take  a  gracelefle  foul ,    when  foliciced 
(fuppofe)  toafinnethat  promifeth  carnal  pleafureor  proric> 
'tis  no  great  wonder  that  he  yields  at  firft  fummons  ,    and 
delivers  up  himfelf  prifoner  to  Satan  :  The  poor  wretch,  alas, 
hath  no  Armour  on  to  repel  the  motion.     He  taftes  no  fweet- 
nelTe  in  Chrift;  what  marvel  i>  it,  if  his  hungry  foul  for  want 
of  better  food,  falls  on  board  upon  the  Divels  chear  ?  that 
he,  who  hath  no  hope  of  another  world,  be  made   to  (hark 
and  prole  to, get  fome  of  this  ?  The  Goat  (we  fay)   mutt 
browfe  where  (he  is  tied,  and  the  Tinner  teed  on   earth  and 
earthly  things,  to  which  he  is  ftaked  down  by  his  carnal  heart. 
But  the  ChriUian  hath  a  hope  in  his  bofome  of  another  guefle 
glory  than  this  pedling  world  can  pretend  to  ;    yea,  a  faith 
that  is  able  to  entertain  him  at  prefenc  with  fome  of  hea* 
vens  joyes,  it  being  the  nature  of  that  grace  to  give  exigence 
to  the  good  things  of  the  promife ;  this  helmet  on,  and  fhield 
lift  up,  would  keep  off  a  whole  fhowre  of  fuch  arrows  from 
hurting   the  Chriftian.     God  hath  reafon   to  take  it   the 
worfe  at  his  hands  to  yield,  that  mi^ht  have  flood,  would  he  but 
have  made  ufe  of  thoie  graces  which  God  hath  given  him  for 
his  defence,  or  called  in  help  from  heaven  to  his  fuccour.   Haft 
thou  eaten  (faith  God  to  zAdam)  of  the  Tree  whereof  I  com- 
manded thee  that  thou  Jhouldft  not  eat}   Gen.  3.     The  accent 
lies  in  Thou.    It  was  not  fure  for  hunger*  thou  hadft  a  whole 
Paradife  before  thee  j  haft  thou  eaten,that  wert  provided  fo  well 
to  have  withftood  him  ?  Haft  thou,  may  God  fay  to  the 
Chriftian,  eaten  of  the  Divels  dainties  who  haft  a  key  to  go  to 
my  cupboard  ?  does  thy   heavenly  Father  keep  fo  ftarv'd  a 
hpufe  ,    that    the    Divels     fcraps    will    go    down    with 
thee? 

Thirdly,  the  Ghriftians  fafety  lies  in  refifting.  All  the  Ar- 
mour here  provided  is  to  defend  the  Chriftian  fighting,  none 
to  fecure  him  flying.  Stand,  and  the  day  is  ours;  Flie  or  yieldr 
and  all.is  loft.  Great  Captains  to  make  their  Souldiers  more 
refolute,  do  fometimes  cut  off  all  hope  of  a  fafe  retreat  to 
them  that  run  away  •  Thus  the  Norman  Conqueronr  as  foon 
a$  his  men  were  fet  on  Englifh  fhore,  fent  away  his  fhips  -in 
their  fight,  that  they  might  refolve  to  fight  or  dye.  God 
takes  away  all  thought  of  fafety  to  the  Coward.    Not  a  piece 

to  1 


Stand  therefore 


to  be  found  for  the  back  in  all  Gods  Armory.  Stand,  and 
the  bullets  light  all  on  your  Armour  ;  Flie,  and  they  enter  in- 
to your  hearts.  'Tis  a  terrible  place,  Heb.  10.  38.  The  juft 
jball  Live  by  faith,  bm  if  any  man  draw  bac^  my  fonl  pail 
«  have  no  f/eafure  in  him.  He  that  ftands  to  it  tajievingly 
comes  off  with  his  life-,  buthethatrecoyles,  and  runnes  from 
his  colours,  as  the  word  t&wsw'awt**  imports,  God  will  have 
no  pleafure  in  him,  except  it  be  in  the  juft  execution  of  his 
wrath  on  him.  And  doth  he  not  make  a  fad  change ,  thit 
from  fighting  againft  Satan,  engageth  God  as  an  enemy  a- 
gainft  him  ?  There  is  comfort  in  ftriving  againft  finne  and 
Satan,  though  to  blood ;  but  none  to  lie  fweating  under  the 
fiery  indignation  of  a  revenging  God.  What  Satan  layes  on, 
God  can  take  off;  but  who  can  eafe,  if  God  layes  on?  What 
man  would  not  rather  die  in  the  Field  fighting  for  his  Prince , 
than  on  a  Scaffold  by  the  Axe,  for  Cowardife  or  Trea- 
chery ? 

Fourthly,  the  enemy  we  have  to  do  withal  is  fuch   as  is         4 
only  to  be  dealt  with  by  reiifting.    God  is  an  enemy  that 
is  overcome  by  yielding ,,  the  Divel  oncly  by  force  of 
Armes. 

Firft,  he  is  a  cowardly  enemy;  though  he  fets  a  bold  face  1. 
on  it  in  tempting,  he  carries  a  fearful  heart  in  his  breaft.  The 
work  is  naught  he  goes  about;  and  as  a  thief  is  afraid  of  e- 
very  light  he  kcs,  or  noifehe  hears  in  the  houfe  he  would 
rob  ;  fo  Satan  is  difcouraged  where  he  findes  the  foul  waking , 
andinanypofturetooppofehim.  He  fears  thee  (Chriftian) 
more  than  thou  needeft  him.  Jejns  I  k»owy  and  Taut  I  k»owy 
(faid  the  Divel)  Atts  ip.  ij...  That  is,  I  know  them  to  • 
my  ftiame,  they  have  both  put  me  to  flight,  and  if  ye 
were  fuch  as  they,  I  fhould  fear  you  alfo.  Believe  it  foul ,  he 
trembles  at  thy  faith;  put  it  forth  in  prayer  ro<  call  for  help 
to  heaven  againft  him,  and  exert  it  vigoroufly  by  rejecting 
the  motions  he  makes,  and  thou  {hale  fee  him  runne.  Did 
Souldiers  in  a  Cattle  know  that  their  enemies  belieging  them 
were  in  a  diftrafted  condition,  and  would  certainly  upon  their 
fallying  out,  break  up,  and  flie  away,  what  metal  and  cou- 
rage would  this  fill  them  withal?  The  Spirit  of  God  (who 
knows  well  enough  how  fquaresgointheDivels  camp,)  fends 

B  3  this 


2. 


5  Stand  therefore 

this  intelligence  unto  every  foul  that  is  beleaguered  by  his  tem- 
ptations, ?am.<\.%.  Rejiit  the  Divet,  and  he  will  flee  from  yon. 
He  cannot  hurt  us  without  our  leave.    The  Divel  is  not  fo 
oood  a  drawer,  but  when  he  findes  it  comes  not,  the  foul  yields 
not,  his  heart  then  failes  him,  at  leaft  for  theprefent,  as  in 
Chrifts  combate,  'tis  faid,  he  departed  from  him  for   a  feafen. 
•When  the  Divel  continues  long  the  fame  fuit,  'tis  to  be  fear- 
ed, that  perfon  though  he  hath  not  fully  promifed  him,  yet 
he  hath  not  given  him  a  peremptory  denial.    He  is  a   fuitor 
that  liftens  for  fomething  to  drop  from  the  creature  that  may 
encourage  him  to  profecute  his  motion ;  no  way  to  be  rid  of 
him ,  but  to  fhut  the  door  upon  him ,  and  deny  all  dif- 
courfe  with   him  ,  which   prompts   to  the    fecond    Cha- 
racter. 

2.  He  is  an  encroaching  enemy,  and  therefore  to  be  refitted. 
Let  w;  the  Smtie  go  down  ufon  your  B7v#A  (faith  the  Apol-HeJ 
neither  give  p lace  to  the  Vivel,  Eph.4.26.  as  fouldiers  by  cow- 
ardly leaving  fome   out-work  they  are  fet  to  defend,  give 
place  to  their  enemy  who  enters  the  fame,  and  from  thence 
doth  more  eafily  (hoot  into  the  City  than   he   could    be- 
fore. Thus  yielding  in  one  temptation,  we  let  the  Divel  into 
our  trench,  and  give  him  a  fair  advantage  to  do  us  the  more 
mifchief.    The  angry  man  while  he  is  raging  and  raving,  thinks, 
may  be,no  more  but  to  etfe  his  pa  {lion  by  difgorging  it  in  fome 
bitter  keene  words;  but  alas  while  his  fury  and  wrath  is  rally- 
ing out  at  the  portal  of  his  lips,the  Divel  finding  the  door  o- 
pen,  enters  and  hurries  him  further  than  he  dream 't  of.     We 
have  not  to  do  with  an  Hanibal,  who  rho'ugh  a  great  ftvord- 
man,  yet  wanted  the  Art  of  following  and  improving  the  ad- 
vantages his  victories  gave  him ,    but  with  a  cunning  Divel 
that  will  eafily  Iofe  no  ground  he  gets ;  our  beft  way  there- 
fore is  to  give  him  no  hand-hold,  not  fo  much  as  to  come 
near  the  door  where  finne  dwells,  leait  we  be  hooked  in  ;  if  we 
mean  not  to  be  burnr,   let  us  not  walk  upon  the  coales  of 
temptation;  if  nottobetand,  let  us  not  Hand  where  the  Sunne 
lies.    They  fure  forget  what  an  infinuating' wriglin^  nature 
this  Serpent  hath,  that  dare  yield  to  him  in  fomething,  and 
make  us  believe  they  will  not  in  another;  who  will  fet  in  the 
company  of  drunkards,  frequent  the  places  where  the  fin  is 

committed, 


Stand  therefore 

committed,  and  yet  pretend  they  mean  not  to  be  fuch  ;  that 
will  proflitute  their  eyes  to  unchafte  obje&s  ,  and  yet  be 
chafte ;  that  will  lend  their  eares  to  a;  y  corrupt  doctrine  of 
rhe  times,  and  yet  be  found  in  the  faith ;  this  isaftrongde- 
luhon  that  fuch  are  under.  If  a  man  hath  not  power  enough 
to  refill  Satan  in  the  lefie,  what  reafon  hath  he  to  think 
he  friall  in  the  greater  ?  Thou  hart  not  grace  ( it  feemes  ) 
to  keep  thee  from  throwing  thy  felf  into  the  whirle  of  tem- 
ptadon,and  doft  thou  think,when  in  it,thou  fhalt  near  up  againft 
the  dream  of  it;  >  one  would  think-it  iseafter  when  in  the  Ship,to 
keep  from  falling  over-board,  than  when  in  the  Sea,  to  get  fafely 
into  the  Ship  again. 

Thirdly,  he  is  an  accufig  enemy ;  and  truly  folly  is  in 
that  mans  name ,  who  knows  what  a  tell-tale  the  Divel  is, 
and  yet  will  by  yielding  to  his  temptation  put  an  errand  in? 
to  his  mouth,  with  which  he  may  accufe  him  to  God, 
Some  fooliihly  report  that  "Witches  cannot  hurt,  till  they  re- 
ceive an  almes:  ButIamfure,folongasthoufheweftnokind- 
nefle  to  the  Divel,  he  cannot  hurt  thee,becaufe  he  cannot  accufe 
thee ;  take  up  therefore  holy  fobs  refolution,  fob  27.  My  rlgh- 
teotifveffes  1 r  hold  fafty  my heart  (hall  notrefroich  me  fo  long  as  I 
live.  It  is  never  fad  indeed  with  the  foul  till  the  barking  is  with- 
in doors ;  confidence  f  not  the  Divel)  is  the  bloocf-hound  that 
pulls  down  the  creature.  Oh  let  not  that  reproach  thee,and  thou 
art  well  enough, 


CHAP. 


8 


Stand  therefore 


C  H  A  P.     II. 


.2. 


Note. 


Wherein  is  (hewed  what  it  is  fir  a  Chriftian 
tofiand  in  order  >  together  with  his  duty  in 
this  particular,  and  the  danger  ef  firagleri 
from  their  own  place. 

SEcondly,  to  ft  and,  amounts  to  as  much  as  to  (Und  every 
one  in  his  rank  and  proper  ftation,  and  is  here  oppofed 
to  all  diforder  or  (trading  from  our  place;  when  a  Captain 
fees  his  fouldiers  marcn,  or  fight  out  of  their  rank  and  order, 
then  he  bids  ttoxd.  Military  discipline  is  fo  ftrict  in  this  cafe, 
that  hallows  none  to  fiirre  from  their  place  without  fpecial 
warrant.  It  hath  coft  fome  their  lives  -for  fighting  out  of 
their  place,  though  with  great  fuccefle.  tjkanliw  killed 
his  own  fonne  for  no  other  fault.  From  hence  ths 
note  is, 

That  it  (nould  be  the  care  cf  every  Chriftian,  to  ftand  or- 
derly in  the  particular  place  wherein  God  hath  fet  him.    The 
Divels  method  is  firft  to  rout,  and  than  to  mine.    Order  fup- 
pofeth  company;  one  that  walks  atone  cannot  go  out  of  his 
rank.    This  place  therefore  and  rank  wherein   the  Chriftian 
is  to  ftand,  relates  to  fome  fociety  or  company  in  which  he 
walks.    The  Chriftian  may  be  conlidered  relating  to  a  three- 
fold fociety,  Church,  Common-wealth  and  Family.     In  all 
there  are  feveral  ranks  and  places.    In  the  Church,  Officers 
and  private  Members.  In  the  Common- wealth,  Magillrates  and 
people.    In  the  Family,  Mafters  and  Servanrs  -,  Parent  and 
Children  ;  Husband  and  Wife.    The  welfare  of  thefe  focieties 
confifteth  in  the  order  that  is  kept,  when  every  wheel  moves 
in  its  place  without  daflung,  when  every  one  contributes 

by 


Stand  therefore 

by  performing  the  duty  of  his  place  to  the  benefit  of  the  whole 
fociety ;  But  more  diftinSly,  then  a  perfon  ttands  orderly  in 
his  place  when  he  doth  thefe  three  things. 

Firft,  when  he  underftands  the  peculiar  duty  of  his  place 
and  relation.  The  wifdome  of  the  prudent  is  to  under (land,  his 
way  ,  Prov.  14.  8.  his  way,  that  is  the  way  which  he  in  par- 
ticular is  to  walk.  It  will  not  profit  a  man  to  know  the  way 
to  Tor^  if  going  to  London ;  yet  how  prone  are  we  to  ftudy 
anothers  way  and  work  than  our  own  ?  The  fervant  what 
his  Mailers  duty  is,  not  what  his  is  to  his  Matter.  The  peo- 
ple what  the  Minifter  in  hi?  place  fhoulddo,  rather  than 
what  is  incumbent  on  themfelves  to  fuch  as  are  over  them 
in  the  Lord.  It  is  not  knowing  anothers  duty ,  no  nor  cen- 
tring the  negligence  of  another ,  but  doing  our  own  will 
brings  us  fafely  and  comfortably  to  our  journeys  end  ,  and 
how  can  we  do  it,  except  we  know  it  ?  Solomon  in  no  one 
thing  gave  a  greater  proofe  of  his  wifdome,  than  in  asking  of 
God  wifdome  to  enable  him  for  the  duty  of  his  place. 

Secondly,  when  knowing  the  duty  of  our  place  ,  we  confci-         2. 
encioufly  attend  to  it,  and  lay  out  our  felves  for  God  therein, 
What  Paul  charged  Timothy  in  his  place  ,    rhat  every  Chri- 
ftian  muft  do  in  his ;  hemuli  meditate  on  thefe  things,   and 
give  himfelf  wholly  to  the  discharge  of  his  duty,  as  a  Chriftian 
in  fuch  a  place  and  calling ,     «?  rirote  Idt ,  1  7  lm.  4. 1  $.  be  in 
them,  let  thy  heart  be  on  thy  work,  and  thou  wholly  taken  up 
about  it.     The  very  power  of  godlinefle  lies  in  this.  Religion, 
if  not  made  practicable  in  our  feveral   places  and  callings, 
becomes  ridiculous,  and  vanilrierh  into  an  empty  notion  that 
is  next  to  nothing.    Yet  many  there  are  that  have  nothing 
to  prove  themlelvesChrittians,but  a  naked  profelTion,of  whom 
we  may  fay  as  they  do  of  the  Cinnamon-tree,  that  the  bark  is 
more  worth  than  all  they  have  befides.    Such  the  Apoftle 
fpeaksof,  Tit,  1.  16.  'They prof effeth .it they  know  God,  but  in 
works  they  deny  him-,  being  abominable  and  difobidient  ,  and  to 
every  good  rtork^  reprobate.     What  good   works   the   Apoftle 
means,  will  appear  by  the  next  words, chap.2.1.  where  in  oppo* 
ntion  to  thefe  he  preileth  thole  dunes  which  Chriitians  in  their 
particular  places  and  relations  ( asbecometh  hoiinefle  )  ought 
to  performs,     A  good  Christian  and  a  difobediem  wife,  a 

C  godly 


i  o  Standtherefore 

godly  man  an  J  an  unfaithful  fervanf ,  or  undutiful  childe  ,  is 
a  contradiction  that  can  never  be  reconciled.  He  that  walks 
not  uprightly  in  his  houfe,  is  but  an  hypocrite  at  Church. 
He  that  is  not  a  Chriftian  in  his  ihop,  is  not  in  his 
clofeta  ChrilHan,  though  upon  his  knees  in  prayer.  Wound 
Religion  in  one  part,  and  'tis  felt  in  every  part.  If  it  declines 
oneway,  it  cannot  thrive  in  any  other.  All  that  mifcarry 
in  Religion,do  notthe  fame  way  mifcarry.  As  it  is  in  the 
regard  of  our  natural  life ,  fome  ( 'tis  obferv'd  )  die  upwards , 
fo me  down-wards.  In  one,  the  extreame  parts,  his  feet  are 
firit  dead/ and  fo  creeps  up  to  the  lepges,  and  fo  at  laft  takes 
hold  on  the  vitals ;  in  another  his  iuperiour  parts  are  firR  in- 
vaded. 1  hus  in  profetfion,  fome,  their  declining  appears  firrt 
in  a  negligence  of  duties  about  their  particular  callings,  and 
duties  they  owe  by  their  place  and  relation  to  man,  who  all 
this  while  feeme  very  forward  and  zealous  in  the,  duties  of 
worlhip  to  God,  much  in  hearing ,  praying,  and  fuch  like  : 
others  falter  firft  in  thefe,  and  at  the  fame  time  feemvery 
ftric-t  in  the  other;  both  deftru&ive  alike  to  the  foul ,  they 
both  meet  in  the  ruine  of  the  power  of  °odlinefle.  He  ftands 
orderly  that  makes  confcienceofthe  whole  duty  that  lies  on 
him  in  his  place  to  God  or  man. 

Thirdly,  to  ftand  orderly,  it  is  requiike  that  we  keep  the 
bounds  of  our  place  and  calling.  The  Jfraelites  were 
commanded^  fitch  every  man  by  his  oven  ftandard,  Numb  2.  2. 
The  Septuagint  tranflates  it ,  **7«t  -niyva ,  according  to  order. 
God  allows  no  ftraglers  from  their  itation  in  his  army  of 
.faints.  As  the  Lord  hath  ca\bd  every  man^fo  let  him  wall^  iCor. 
7. 17.  Our  walk  mult  be  in  that  path  which  our  Call  beats  our. 
We  are  therefore  commanded  every  one  to  do  his  own  bufaefie  , 
iThef.4.  11.  That  which  is  the  Commanders  bufineffe  in  an 
army,  i  nor  the  private  foul  Hers ;  The  Magiltrates ,  not  the 
fubje£ts ;  The  Ministers,  not  the  peoples.  That  which  is 
juiiiceinthe  H.'.ier,  is  murder  in  another.  They  are  iJta,  our 
own  things,  th.it  corie  within  the  compaffe  of  our  general 
or  particular  calling ;  out  of  thefe,  we  are  out  of  our  dioceflfe. 
O  whit  a  quiet  vvorld  fhould  we  have,  if  every  thing  and 
oeribn  knew  his  own  place  1    If  the  fea  kept  its  own  place  we 

ibould 


Stand  therefore 


U 


ftiould  have  no  inundations ;  if  men  had  theirs,  we  fhould  nei- 
ther have  feen  fuch  Hoods  of  finne,  nor  miferies,  as  this  un- 
happy age  has  been  almoft  drowned  with.  But  it  mull  be  a 
ftrong  bank  indeed,  that  can  containe  our  fluid  ipirits  within 
our  own  termes.  'Peter  himfelfvvas-  fharply  chid,  for  pryin^ 
out  of  a  curiofity  into  that  which  concern'd  him  not.  whatis 
that  to  thee  ?  J  ohn  2 1 .  22.  as  if  £  hrifi  had  faid,  JFVw,meddle 
with  thy  own  matters,  this  concerns  not  thee ;  which  {harp 
rebuke  (  faith  one )  might  poflibly  -  make  Peter  afterwards 
give  fo  drift  a  charge  again!*,  and  let  fo  black  a  brand  upon  this 
very  fin,  as  you  may  finde,  1  Pet.  4. 1 5.  where  he  ranks  the 
buhebody  among  murderers  and  thieves. 

Now  to  fix  every  one  in  his  place,  and  perfwade  all  to  ftand 
orderly  chere  without  breaking  their  rank,  thefe  rive  corifidera- 
tions  (  me  thinks )  may  carry  ibme  weight,among  thofe  efpeci- 
ally ,  with  whom  the  Word  of  God  in  the  Scripture 
yet  keeps  its  authority  to  conclude  and  determine  their 
thoughts. 

1.  Confide r,  what  thou  doeft  out  of  thy  place  is  not  accep- 
table to  God,  becaufe  thou  canft  not  do  it  in  faith,  without  1. 
which  it's  imfojfible  to  pleafe  God;  and_it  cannot  be  in  faith, 
becaufe  thou  haft  no  call.  God  will  not  thank  thee  for  do- 
ing that  which  he  did  not  fet  thee  about ;  polhblythou  haft 
good  intentions  -,  fohad  Vz,z,ah  in  ftaying  the  Ark,  yet  how 
well  God  liked  his  zeal ,  fee  zSam.6.j.  S*»/himfelf  could 
make  a  faire  (lory  of  his  facriricing,  but  that  ferved  not  his 
turne.  It  concernes  us  not  only  to  ask  ourfelves  what  the 
thin  %  is  we  do,  but  alfo  who  requireth  this  at  our  hands? 
To  be  fure,  God  will  at  laft  put  us  upon  thatqueftion,  and  it 
will  go  ill  with  us  if  we  cannot  {"hew  our  commiflion.  So 
long  we  mult  needs  neglect  what  is  our  duty,  as  we  are  bufie 
about  that  which  is  nor.  The  Spoufe  confeflfeth  this,  Cant. 
1.6.  7  hey  mac'.e  me  the  keeper  of  the  viney.irds^  but  mine  oven 
vineyard  have  I  r,ot  Ijept ;  fhe  could  not  minde  theirs  and  her 
own  too;  our  own  iron  will  cool  while  we  are  beating  ano- 
riiers.  And  this  muft  needs  be  difpleafmg  to  God,  to  leave 
the  work  God  lets  us  about,  to  do  that  he  never  commanded. 
When  a  Matter  calls  a  truantly  Scholar  to  account,  that  hath 
b^en  milling  fo  me  dayes  from  Schoole,  would  this  be  a  good 

C2  plea 


13  Stand  therefore 

plea  for  him  to  tell  his  Matter,  that  he  was  all  the  while   in 
fuch  a   mans  fhop  at  work  with  his  tooles  ?     No  lure,  his 
bufmefle  lay  at  School,  not  in  that  fhop. 
2  2.  By  going  out  of  our  proper  place  and  calling,  we  put 

our  felves  fr»m  under  Gods  protection  :    The  promife  is ,  he 
^?vill  keep  us  in  alUnr  wsyes,  P fa/me  gi .  1 1 .    when  we  go  out 
of  our  way,  we  go  from  under  his  wing.    We  have  an  excel- 
lent place  for  this,  I  Cor,  7. 24.    Let  every  one  wherein  he  ;\ 
called,  therein  abide  with  Cjod.     Mark  that  phrafe,  abide  with 
God,    As  we  love  to  walk  in  Gods  company,  we  mult  abide 
in  our  place  and  calling ;    every  itepfiom   that  is  a  departure 
from  God;  and  better- to  ftayat  home  in  a  mean  place,  and 
low  calling,  wherein  we  may  enjoy  Gods  fvveet  prefence,than 
g©  to  Court,  and  there  live  without  him.    Tis  like  you  have 
heard  of  that  holy  Bifkop,  that  in  a  journy  fell  into  an  Inne, 
and  by  fome  difcourfe  with  the  Hoft,  finding  him  to   be  an 
Atheift,  or  very  atheifiical,  prefently  calls  for  his  fervant  to 
bring  him  his  horfe,  faying,  he  would  not  lodge  there ,  for 
God  was  not  in  that  place.     Truly  when  thou  art  in  any  place, 
or  about  any  work  to  which  thou  art  not  called ,  we  may 
fafely  fay,  God  is  not  in  that  place,  or  enterprize;  and  what 
abold  adventure  isittoftay  there,  where  you  cannot  expect 
his  prefence  to  affift,  o:  protect  ?  As  a  bird  that  wandnth  from 
her  neft ,  [0  is  a  man  th^twandreth  from  his  place,  Prov.  27. i>. 
God  took  fpecial  care,    that  the  bird    fitting  over  her  egges 
in  her  neft  fhould  not  be  hurt,  Vent.  22. 6.  but  we  finde  no- 
thing to  fecure  her  if  found  abroad.    In  doing  the  duty  of 
our  place,  we  have  heavens  word  for  our  fecurity  ;  but  upon 
our  own  peril  be  it  if  we  wander ;  then  we  are  like  Shimei 
out  of  his  precincts,  and  lay  our  felves  open  to  fome  judge- 
ment or  other.     It  is  alike  dangerous  to  do  what  we  are  not 
call'd  to,  and  to  neglect  or  leave  undone  the  duty  of  our  place. 
As  the  earth  could  not  bear  ( orahs  ufurpation  of  whit  be- 
long'd  not  to  them,   rJut  fwallowed  them  up.    So  the  fea 
could  not  but  bear  witnefle '  againfl:  Jonah  the  run-away  Pro- 
phet, difdaining  to  waft   him,  that  fled  from  his  place  and 
work  that  God  called  him  to.     Nay  heaven  it  felf  would  not 
harbour   the  Angels,  when  once  they  left  their  own  place 
and  office  that  their  Maker  had  appointed;  fo  thofe  words, 

Jitde 


Stand  therefore  jg 

fude  6.  AtoKinsovl^i  to  tftov  oiKHTtiftov ,  I  find  fnoft  probably 
interpreted.  The  ruine  of  many  fouls  breaks  in  upon '  them  at 
this  door.  Firft  rhey  break  [heir  ranks,  and  then  they  are  led 
further  into  temptation.  Abfidom  firft  looks  over  the  hedge 
in  his  ambitious  thoughts ,  a  King  he  would  be ;  and  this 
wandring  defire  beyond  his  place,  lets  in  thoie  bloody  linnes, 
rebellton,inceft  and  murder,  andthefe  ripen'd  him  for,  andat 
I  jft  delivered  him  up  into  the  hands  of  divine  vengeance.  The 
A^flU  joynes  order  and  ftedfaftnefle  together,  Co!,  2.  5.  J  am 
wtt»  you  in  the  Sp:r/ty  loywg  and  beholding  your  'order  ,  and 
the  ft:df*ftnejfc  of 'your  faith.  If  an  army  itands  in  cloie  order, 
everyone  in  his  place  attending  his  duty,  content  with  his 
work,  'tis  impregnable  in  a  manner.  How  came  many  in  our 
dayes,  to  fall  from  their  ftedfaftnefle,  but  by  breaking  their 
order ! 

3.  We  fhall  never  be  charged  for  not  doing  'anothers  work,         3  • 
Give  an  account  of  thy  ftewardfhip,  Luke  \6.1.  that  is,  of  what 
by  thy   place  thou  wert  intruded  with.    We  may  indeed  be 
acceffory  to  anothers  finne  and  mifcarriage  in  his  place.     Be 
not  partakers  with  themy  faith  the  Apoftle,  Ephef.  ^ .7.     there  is 
a  partnership  (  if  not  very  watchful)  that  we  may  have  with 
others  finnes ,  and   therefore   we  may  all  fay  Amen  to  that 
holy  mans  prayer,  Lord  forgive me  my  others  fins.    Merchants 
can  trade  in  bottomes  that  are  not  their  own,  and  we  may 
finne  with  other  mens  hands,  many  wayes,  and  one  efpecial- 
ly  is,  when  we  do  not  lend  our  brother  that   aflfiftance  in  his  ■ 
work  and  duty,  which  our  place  and  relation  obligeth  too; 
but  'tis  not  our  finne,  that  we  do  not  fupply    anothers  negli- 
gence y  by  doing  that  which  belongs  not  to  our  place.    We 
are  to  pray  for  Magitirates  that  they  may  rule   in  the  feare  of 
God,   butiftheydonot,  we  may  not  itep  upon  the  Bench, 
and  do  his  work  for  him.    God  requires  no  more  th.m  faith- 
fulnefle  in  our  place.  We  do  not  find  fault  with  an  apple-tree 
if  it  be  laden  with  apples  (  which  is  the  fruit  of  its  own  kinde) 
though  we  canfinde  no    figs  or  grapes   growing  on  it;  we 
expert  thefeonely  from  their  proper  root  and  ftock.     He  is 
a  fruitful  tree  in  Gods  Orchard,  that  brings  forth  his  fruit  in 
his  feafon,  Pfal.  1.3. 
4..  There  is  poor  comfort  in'  furTering,   fordoing  that'      £t 

C  3  which 


\: 


Stand  therefore 

which  was   not  the  work  of  our  place  and  calling.    Before  we 
launch   out  into  any  undertaking,  it   behoves  us  to  ask  our 
felves,  and  that  ferioutly,  what  our  tackling  is,  if  a  ftorme 
fhould  overtake  us  in  our  voyage.     It  is  folly   to  engage  in 
that  enterprize,  which  will  not    bear  us  out,  and   pay   the 
charge  of  all  the  lode  and  trouble  it  can  put  us  to.     Now,  no 
comfort,  or    countenance   from  God  can  be  expected  in  any 
fuffering,  except   we  can  entitle  him  to  the  bufineffe  we  fuf- 
fer  for.     For  thy   fake  are  we  lulled  all  the  day  bug,  faith    the 
Church,  Pfalme  44.  22.     But  if  fuffering   findes  us  cut  of  our 
calling  and  place,  we    cannot  fay,  for  thy  fake  we   are   thus 
and    thus  afflicted,  but  for  our  own  fakes;  and  you  know 
the  Proverb,   Self-do ,  [elf -have.     The  Apoftle  makes  a  vaft 
difference  between  fuffering  as  zbujie  body,  and  fuffering  as 
a  Chriftiax,  i  Pet.  4. 1 5, 16.    Tistothe  latter  he  faith  ,  let 
him  not  be  a  flamed,  but  la  him  glorifie  Cj  od  on  this  behalf ;   as  for 
the bufie body,  he    mates  him  with  thieves  and   murderers; 
and  thofe,  1  trow,  have  reafon  both  to  be  afhamed  and   a- 
fraid.    The  Carpenter  that  gets  a  cut  or  wound  on  his   leggz 
from  his   axe,  as  he  is  at  work  in  his  calling,     may  beare  it 
more  patiently  and  comfortably,  then  one  that  is  wantonly 
mealing  with  his  tooles,   and  hath  nothing  to  do   with  fuch 
work.    Whin  affliction  or  perfection  overtakes  the  Chrifii- 
an  travelling  in  the  way  Gocj  hath  fet  him  in,    he  may   fhew 
the  Bible  as  that  Holy  man  (  fuffering  for  Chriilj  did,  and 
fay,   1  lis  hath  mads  me poore,  this  hart)  brought  me  to  prifon  , 
that   is,    his  faith  on  the  truth*,   and  obedience  to  the  com- 
mands in  it, .   and  therefore  may  confidently  expect  to  tnffcr  at 
Gods  colt,  as  the  fouldie:   to  be  kept  and  maintained  by   his 
Irinceinwhofe  fervice  he  hath  lo!t  his  limbs.     Bat  the  other 
thit  runnes  out  ofhisphce,  and  fo  meets  with  fufte rings ,  he 
hath  this  to  imbitter  them,  rh.it  he    can  look  for   nothing 
from  God  but  robeibunc'ly  chid  for  his  paines,     as  the  child 
isieiv'd,  tharjecsfome  hurt  while  he  is  gadding  abroad,  and 
when  he  comes  home  at  night   with  his  batter'd  face,  meets 
v\i:h  a  whipping  from  his  father,  into  the  bargaine  for   be- 
ing from  home.     This  hy  heavy  on  the  fpirit  of  that  learn- 
ed German,  Jvhanvis  Fimcciw,  who  of  a  Miniilerofthe  Go- 
fpel  in  his  Princes  Court,     turn'd  Miniiler  of  State   to  his 

Prince 


Stand  therefore  1 5 


Prince,  and  was  at  laft  for  Tome  evil  counfel  (  at  leaft  fo  jud-fd  ) 
condemned  to  die.  Before  he  fuffered,  he  much  lamented 
the  leaving  of  his  calling,  and  to  warne  others  left  this 
Diftick. 

Difce  meo  exemplo  mandato  munere  fungi, 

Et  fuge  ceu  peftem  wV  <B0to7r&Lfy.Qn/tw. 
To  keep  thy  place  and  calling  learn  of  me : 
"Flee  as  the  plague  a  medlar  for  to  be. 

Fifthly,  it  is  an  erratique  fpiritthar  ufually  carries  men  out 
of  their  place  and  calling.     I  confeffe  there  is  an  Heroicm  im- 
petus, an  impulfe  which  fome  of  the  fervants  of  God   have 
had  from  heaven,  to  do  things-extraordinary,     as  we  read  in 
Scripture  of  CMefes,  Gideen,  Phineaf,  and  others.     But  it  is 
dangerous  to  pretend  to  the  like ,  and  unlawful    to  expe& 
fuch  immediate  commiiTions  from  heaven  now,  when  heiflu- 
eth   them  out  in  a  more  ordinary  way,  and  gives  rules  for 
the  fame  in  his  Word;  we  may  as  well  expect  to  be  taught  extra- 
ordinarily, without  ufing  the  ordinary  means,  as  to  be  call'd  fo. 
When  1  fee  any  miraculoufly  gifted,  as  the  Trophets  and  A- 
pofiles,  then  I  fhall  think  the  immediate  calling  they  pretend  to 
is  Authentick.    To  be  fure,  we  finde  in  the  Word,extraordinary 
calling     and  extraordinary  teaching  go  together.     Well,  let 
us  iee  what  that  erratique  fpirit  is  which  carries  many  our  of 
their  place  and  calling.    It  is  not  alwayes  the  fame;    fome- 
ttmesit'sidlenefle.    Firftmen  neglect,  what   they  fhould  do, 
and  then  are  eafily  perfwaded  to  meddle  with  what  they  have 
nothing  to  do.     The  Apoftle  intimates  this  plainly,  1  Tim.  5.1 3. 
They  learn  to  be  idle,  wandering  from  houfe  to  houfe ,   and  not 
only  idle,  but  bufie  bodies.     An  idle  perfon  is  a  gadder  ;  He  hath 
his  foot  on  the  threshold,  eafily  drawn  from  his  own    place, 
andasfoon  intoanothers  DioceflTe.    \\t  is   at  leifiire  for  ro 
heare  the  devils  chat.    He  that  will  not  ferveCod  in  his  own 
place;     the  devil,   rather  than  he  fhall  fiandout,  will  fend 
him  of  his  errand ,  and  get  him  ro    put  his  fickle  into  ano- 
therscorne.    Secondly,  its  pride,  and  difcontent  that  makes 
perfonsgoout  of  their  place;  fome  men  are  in  this  very    un- 
happy, their  fpirits  are   too  big  and  haughty  for   the  place 

Gfod 


1 5  Stand  therefore 

God  hath  lee  them  in.    Their  calling  maybe,  is  mean  and 
low,  but  their   fpirits  high  and  towring ,  and  whereat  they 
fhould   labour   to  bring   their   hearts    to  their  condition , 
they   project    how  they   may   bring    their     condition   to 
their  proud  hearts.     They  think   themfelves    very  unhappy 
while  they  are  (hut  up  in  fuch  (freight  limits,    (  indeed   the 
whole  world  is  too  narrow  a  walk  tor  a  proud  heart,  aftnat  m- 
foellx  angufto  limite  mttnAl.    The  world  was  but  a  little  eafe  to 
Alexander')  fhall  they  be  hid  in  a  croud,   lie  in  an  obfcure 
corner,  and  dye  before  they  let  the  world  know  their  worth? 
No,  they  cannot  brook    it,  and  therefore  they  muft  get  on 
theftage,  and  put  forth  themfelves  one  way  or  other.    It  was 
not  the  priefts  work  that  Corah  and  his  complices  were  fo  in 
love  with,  but  the  PrUfis  honour  which  attended  the  work, 
this  they  deiired  to  fhare ;  and  liked  not  to  fee  others  runnc 
away  with  it  from  them;,  nor  the  zeal  that  Abfalom  had   to 
do  juftice,  which   made  his  teeth  water  fo  after  his  fathers 
Crown,  though  this  muft  filver  over  his  ambition.    Thefe 
places  of  Church  and  State  are  fuch  faire  flowers,  that  proud 
fpirits  in  all  ages,  have  been  ambitious  to   have  them  fet  in 
their   own  garden;    though    they  never  thrive  fo  well  as  in 
their  proper   foyle.    In  a  third ,    'tis  unbelief;  rhis  made 
V^z>ah  ftretch  forth  his  hand  unadvifedly  to  ftay  the  Ark 
that  (hook,  which  being  not  a  Ltvite^  he  was  not  to  touch. 
See  Numb.^.\%.    Alas!  good  man,  it  was  his  faith  fhook 
more  dangeroufly  than  the  Ark,  by    fearing  the  fall  of  this, 
he  fell  to  the  ground  himfelf.God  needs  not  our  fmne  to  fhoar 
up  his  glory,  Truth,  or  Church.    Laftly,  in  fome  it  is  mif-in- 
formeu  zeal ;  many  think  they  may   do  a  thing ,  becaufe  they 
cm  do  it.     They  can  preach,  and  therefore  they  may  •,  where- 
fore elfe  have  they  gifts  ?  certainly  the  gifts  of  the  Saints  need 
notbe  loft  any  of  the  fa  ,  though  they  be  not  laid  out  in     the 
Minifters   work.     The  private  Chilian  hath  a  large  held 
wherein  he  may  be  iervicab'e  to  his  brethren,   he  need   not 
break  the  hedge  which  Gcd  hath   fer,  and  thereby  occaiion 
fuch  diiorder  as  we  fee  to  be  the  confequence  of  this.     We 
read  in  the  Jctoijh.  Law,  Exod.  22.  that  he  who  fet  a  hedge 
on  rire,  ana    that  fire  burnt  the  corn  (landing  in  a  field ,  was 
to  make  relUmtion,  though  he  only  fired  the  hedge ,  (  may  be 

nor 


Stand  therefore.  \j 


not  intending  to  hurt  the  come)  and  the  reafon  was ,  becaufe  his 
firing  the  hedge  was  an  occafion  of  the  corn's  being  burnt,though 
he  meant  it  not.  I  dare  not  fay,  that  every  private  Cbriftian  who 
hath  in  thefe  times  taken  upon  him  the  Minifters  work ,  did  in  - 
tend  to  make  fuch  a  combuftion  in  the  Church,  as  hath  been,  and 
ftill  fad!y  is  among  us  (God  forbid  I  fhouid  think  fo)  But,  O 
that  I  could  clear  them  from  being  accefTory  to  it ,  in  that  they 
have  fired  the  hedge  which  God  hach  (tt  between  the  Minifters 
calling  and  peoples.  If  we  will  acknowledge  rhe  Miniftery  a  par- 
ticular office  in  the  Church  of  Chrift,  (and  this  i  thin  k  the  Word 
toll  compel  us  to  do,)  then  we  muft  alio  confeffe  ic  is  not  any  ones 
work,  ( though  never  fo  able)  except  called  to  the  office.  There 
are  many  in  a  Kingdome  to  be  found,  that  could  do  the  Princes 
errand  ('tis  like)  as  well  as  his  EmbafTadour,  but  none  takes  the 
place  but  he  that  is  fent,  and  can  (hew  his  letters  credential.  Thofe 
that  are  not  fent  and  commiffionated  by  Gods  call  for  Minifterial 
work,  they  rmy  fpeak  truths  is  wdl  as  they  chat  are  ,  yet  of  him 
that  ads  by  vercue  of  his  calling  ,  we  may  fay  that  he  preachcth 
with  authority,  and  not  like  thofe  that  can  (hew  no  commiffion, 
but  what  the  opinion  rhemfelves  have  of  their  own  abilities  gives 
them.  Do' ft  thou  like  the  Minifters  wo^k  ?  why  (honld'ft  thou 
not  delire  the  office  that  thou  mayeft  do  the  work  acceptably  ? 
Thou  doeftfinde  thy  felf  (gifted  as  thou  thmkeft  for  the  work, 
but  were  not  the  Church  more  fit  to  judge  fo  flan  chy  felr?  and 
if  thou  (hould'ft  be  found  fo  by  them  appointed  for  the  tnaf  who 
would  not  give  thee  the  right  hand  offeliowfhip?  there  are  noc 
fo  m*ny  labourers  in  Chrifts  field  but  thy  help  (if  able)  would  be 
accepted  ;  but  as  now  thou  a&eft,  thou  b;ingeft  thy  felf  into  fuf- 
pition  in  the  thoughts  of  fober  Chiftians,  as  he  would  juftiy  do, 
who  comes  into  the  field,  where  his  Prince  hath  an  army  ,  and 
gives  out  hecomes  to  do  his  Sovereign  fervice  againft  the  common 
enemy, yet  ftand>  by  himfelf  at  the  head  of  a  troop  he  hath  got  to- 
gether, and  rcfufeth  to  take  any  commiffion  from  his  Princes  Of- 
ficers, or  joyn  himfelf  with  them  •.  I  queftion  whether  the  fervice 
fuch  a  one  can  perform,  ((hould  he  mean  as  he  fays,  which  is  to  be 
feared)  would  dafo  much  good,  as  rhe  diftra&ion  (which  this  his 
carriage  might  caufein  the  army)  would  do  hurt. 


D  CHAP. 


s 


Stand  therefore 


CHAP.      III. 

Wherein  k  contain  d  the   third  and  lafi  impor- 
tance of   the  word   fland>   and  the  Christi- 
ans duty    of  Ji an ding  on    hk    watch  /pollen 
to  y    why  he    is   to    natch  ,    and  how    he 
jhonld. 

THirdly  ,  to  florid,  here  is  oppofed  to  fleep  and  fleatb,  (land- 
ing is  a  waking ,  watching  pofture;  when  the  Captaine 
fees  his  fouldiers  lying  fecure  upon  the  ground  afleep ,  He 
bids  ft  and  to  jour  armes ,  that  is,  ftand  and  watch.  In  fome 
cafes  it  is  death  for  a  fouldier  to  be  found  afleep ,  as  whert- 
he  is  appointed  to  ftand  fentinel ,  or  the  like  ^  now  to  fleep; 
defeives  death ,  becaufe  he  is  to  wake  that  the  whole  army 
may  fleep ;  and  his  fleep  may  coil  them  their  lives-  therefore 
a  great  Captain  thought  he  gave  that  fouldier  but  his  due , 
whom  he  runne  through  with  his  fword  ,  becaufe  he  found 
him  afleep  when  he  (hould  have  flood  Sentinel ,  excufing  his 
feverity  with  this  ,  that  he  left  him  but  as  he  found  him , 
Afortuiim  inveni ,  &  wortuum  riliqtti ,  /  found'  bint  dead  in 
fleep,  and  hft  him  but  afleep  in  death.  WatchfulncfTe  is  more 
needful  for  the  Chriftian  fouldier  than  any  other  ,  becaufe 
other  fouldiers  fight  with  men  that  need  fleep  as  well  as 
themfelves ;  but  the  Chriftians  grand  enemy  Satan ,  is  ever  a- 
wakc  and  walking  his  rounds,  feeking  whom  he  may  fur- 
prife.  And  if  Satan  be  alwayes  awake ,  it  is  dangerous  for 
the  Chriftian  at  any  time  to  be  fpiritually  afleep,  that  is,  fe- 
cure and  careleffe.  The  Chriftian  is  feldomc  worfted,  by  this 
his  enemy ,  but  there  is  cither  treachery  or  negligence  in  the 

bulineflc 


Stand  therefore 

bufineffe^  either  the  unregenerate  part  betrayes  him,  or  grace 
is  not  wakeful  to  make  a  timely  difcovery  of  him ,  fo  as  to 
prepare  for  the  encounter,  the  enemy  is  upon  him  before  he 
is  thorowly  awake  to  draw   his  fword.    The  Saints  flecping 
time,  is  Satans  tempting  time;  every  flie  dares  venture  to  creep 
on  a  fleeping  lion.    No  temptation  fo  weak,  but  is  ftrong  e* 
nough  to  foile  a  Chriftian ,  that  is  napping  in  fecurity  :  Samp- 
/e»  afleep,  and  Dalilah  cues  his  locks.      Saul  afleed ,  and  the 
fpeare  is  raken  away  from  his  very  fide  ,  and  he  never  the 
wifer.     Noah  afleep ,  and  his  gracelefle  fonne  has  a  fit  time 
to  difcover  his  fathers  nakednefle.     Entkbus  afleep,   nods, 
and  falls  from  the  third  loft,  and  is  taken  up  for  dead.  Thus  the 
Chriftian  afleep  in   fecurity  may  foone  be  furprifed  fo ,  as  to 
lofe  much  of  his  fpiritual  ftrength  ;  The  joj  of  the  Lord  wh.ch 
is  hts  ftrength^  be  robd  of  his  fpeare,  his  armour ,   graces  I  mean , 
at  leaft  in  the  prefent  ufe  of  them ,  and  his  nakednefle  disco- 
vered by  gracelelte  men ,  to  the  (name  of  his  profeflion  j  as, 
when  bloody  Joah  could  take  notice  of  Davids  vain-glory  in 
numbring  the  people,  was  not  Davids  grace  afleep?  yea,  he 
may  fall  from  a  high  loft  of  profeflion,  fo  low  into  fuch  fcan- 
dalous  pra&ifes ,  that  others  may  queftion  whether  there  be 
any  life   of  grace  indeed  in  him.     And  therefore  it  behoves 
the  Chriftian  to  ftand  wakefully  ;  fleep  ftcales  as  infcnfiblyon 
the  foul,  as  it  doth  on  the  body.     The  wife  Virgins  fell  afleep 
as  well  as  the  foolifh ,  though  not.  fo  found ly  ^  take  heed  thou 
doeft  notindu'gethy  felf  in  thy  lazy  diftemper,  but  ftir  up  thy 
feif  to  a&ion    as  we  bid  one  that  is  droufie ,  ftand  up  ,  or  walk. 
Yield  to  it  by  idlenefle  and  (loth  ,  and  itwillg-ow  upon  thee, 
beftir  thy  felf  in  this  duty,  and  that,  and  it  wdl  over.  David 
firft  awakes  his  tongue    to  fing  ,    his    hind    to  play  on   his 
harp  ,  and  then  Davids  hearc  wakes  alfo ,  Tfalme  %  .8.  The 
lion  (*cis  faid)  when  he  firft  wakes,  lafhes  himfelf  with  his 
tayle ,   thereby  to  ftirrc  and  roufe  up  his  courage ,  and  then 
away  he  goes  after  his  prey ,  we  have  enough  to  excite  and 
provoke    us    to     ufe    all    the    care    and    diligence    pot 
able.  ¥ 

Firft,  The  Chriftians  work  is  too  curious  to  be  done  well  be- 
tween fleeping  and  waking,  and  too  important  to  be  done 
ilJ  and  flubber'd  over  no  matter  how.    He  had  need  be  awake 

D  z  that 


30  Stand  therefore* 

that  walks  upon  the  brim  of  a  deep  river ,  or  brow  of  a  fteep 
hill.  The  Chriftians  path  is  fo  narrow ,  and  the  clanger  is  fo 
great ,  that  calls  for  both  a  nimble  eye  to  difce  nc,  and  ftea- 
dy  eye  to  direct,  but  aflcepyeye  can  do  neither.  Look  upon 
any  duty  or  grace,  and  ycu  willfindc  it  lie  between  Scjlia  and 
£h*r)bdu,  two  extremes  alike  dangetons.  Faith  the  great  woik 
of  God,  cuts  its  way  between  the  mountaine  of  preemption 
and  gulf  of  defpair ;  Patience  a  grace  fo  neceiTary ,  that  we 
cannot  be  without  it  a  day,  except  we  would  be  all  that  while 
befides  our  felves.  This  keeps  us  that  we  fall  neither  into  the 
fleep\  apoplexy  of  a  blockifhftupiduy,  wh  ch  deprives  the  crea- 
ture of  its  fenfes  •,  for  into  a  raging  fit  of  difcontent,  which 
hath  fenfe  enough ,  and  too  much,  to  kt\  the  hand  of  God,  but 
deprives  the  man  of  hisreafon  ,  that  he  turns  again  upon  God, 
and  (hoots  back  the  Almighty's  arrows  on  his  very  face  in  the 
fury  of  his  froward  fpirit.  The  like  we  might  fay  of  the  reft. 
No  truth  but  hath  fome  error  next  door  co  her;  no  duty  can 
be  performed  without  approaching  very  near  the  enemies  quar- 
ters, who  foon  tik  s  the  alarum,  and  comes  out  tooppofe  the 
Chriftian  }  and  ought  he  not  then  to  h^ve  alwayes  h;s  heart  on 
the  watch? 
2  Secondly,  the  trouble  of  watching  is  not  comparable  to  the. 

advantage  it  brings. 
I#  Fjrft  ,  by  this,  thoa  fruflrat'ft  thedefigncs  Satan  hath  upon, 

thee  :  It  is. worth  watching  to  keep  the  houfe  from  robbing, 
much  more  the  heart  from  rifling  bv  the  Devil.  Watch  that  ye  en- 
ter  Mt  into  temptation.  He  b-yes  his  flcep  dear,  that  payes  his 
atl  l  4J*  throat- cutting  for  it-  yea,  though  the  wound  be  not  fo  deep, 
but  may  be  cured  at  laft.  Thy  not  watching  one  night  may 
keep  thee  awake  many  a  nighc  upen  a  more  uncomfortable  oc- 
cafion  And  hadft  thou  not  better  wake  with  care,  to  keep 
thy  felf  from  a  miichief,  than  afterward  thy  eyes  be  held  open, 
(whether  thou  wilt  or  not)  with  paine  and  anr^uifh  of  the 
wound  given  thee  in  thy  fleep  ?  you  know  how  fadly  'DaziA. 
was  bruifed  by  a  fall  got  in  his  fpiritual  flumber  (for  what  ello 
was  he,  when  in  the  even-tide  he  rofe  from  his  bed,  and  walk- 
ed upon  the  roof  of  his  houfe,  like  a  man  walking  in  his 
iSam.u.i.  fleep?)  and  how  many  reftleflc  nights  this  brought  over  this.* 
holy  mans  head,  you  may  perceive  by  his  own  mournfulcomr 

plaints 


Stand  the  re  fore.  2 1 


plaints  of  this  finne,  which  is  the  foot  and  fad  burthen  of  feveal 
mournful  Pfa/mes. 

Secondly,  by  thy  watchfulneiTe  thou,  (halt  beft  learn  the  evil 
of  a  flcepy  ftite^  oreaflecp  is  not  ienfibieof  his  own  fnorringr 
how  uncomely  and  troublefome  to  others  it  is,  but  he  that  is 
awakeisapprehenfiveof  both.  The  man  afleep  in  notfenfible, 
if  laid  naked  by  fome  that  would  abuehim^  but  he  that  is  awake 
obferves,  is  ashamed,  and  covers  him  ;  thus  while  thou  art  in 
a  fpintual  fenfe  awake,  thou  canft  not' but  obfervemany  un- 
comely paiTages  in  the  lives  of  thofe  profefTours,  who  do  not 
watch  their  hearts ,  which  will  fill  thy  heart  with  pity  to 
them  ,  to  fee  how  they  are  abufed  by  Satan  and  their  own  paf- 
(ions ,.  wh  ch  like  rude  fe  vants,  take  th.s  their  own  time  to 
play  their  pranks  in ,  when  they  have  made  fure  of  their 
Miftreffe  (grace  I  mean  now  laid  afleep,)  that  fhould  keep  them 
in  better  rule:  yea,  it  will  make  the  blood  come  into  thy  face 
for  fhame  to  fee  how  by  their  nakedncfTe,  profeflTionit  felf  is 
flouted  at  by  thofe  that  pafle  by,  and  fee  how  it  is  with 
them  •,  well ,  what  thou  blufheft  to  fee ,  and  pitieft  to  finde 
in  another,  take  heed  it  bcfaJ  not  thy  felf.,  if  thou  fuffereft  a 
fpiritual  (lumber  to  grow  upon  thee  ,  thou  wilt  be  the  man 
thy  felf  that  all  this  may  come  upon ,  and  what  not  befides? 
Sleep  levels  all ,  the  wife  man  then  is  no  wifer  than  a  foole, 
to  project  for  his  fafety ;  nor  the  (long  man  better  than  the 
weak  to  defend  himfelf;  if  (lumber  falls  once  upon  thy  eye,  it 
is  night  with  thee  ,  and  thou  art  (though  the  belt  of  Saints) 
but  as  other  men ,  fo  farre  as  this  fleepe  prevailes  or> 
thee. 

Thirdly,  by  thy  watchfulnefTe  thou  (hilt  invite  fuchcompa- 
n;  in  unto  thee,  as  will  make  the  time  (hort,  and  fweec,and 
that  is  thy  deare  Saviour  •,  whofefweet  communication  and 
difcourfe  about  the  things  of  thy  Fathers  Kingdome  ^  will 
make  thou  (halt  not  grutch  the  eafe  fl?epy  Chriftians  gee 
with  the  lolTe  of  fuch  an  heavenly  entertainment  as  chou  en- 
joyed. Who  had  not  ( that  loves  his  foul  better  than  his 
body)  rather  have  Davids  fongs ,  than  Davids  ileep  in  the 
night  ?  And  who  had  not  rather  have  Chrifts  comforting 
prefence  with  a  waking  foul ,  than  his  abfence  with  a  flcepy 
flathful.  one  ?     'Tis  the  wathful   foul  that  Chrift  delights  to- 

D3  be 


2, 


22  Stand  therefore 


be  with ,  and  open  his  heart  unto.  We  do  not  choofe  that 
for  the  'time  of  giving  our  friends  a  vifit,  when  they  are 
aileep  in  their  beds,  nay  if  we  be  with  them,  and  perceive  they 
grow  fleepy  ,  we  think  'tis  time  to  leave  them  to  their  pillow, 
and  verily  Chrift  doth  fo  too.  Chrift  with-drawes  from  the 
Spoule ,  till  (he  be  better  awake ,  as  a  fitter  time  for  her  to 
receive  his  loves.  Put  the  (weeteft  wine  into  a  fleepy  mans  hand, 
and  you  are  like  to  have  it  all  fpilt;  yea,  put  a  purfeofgold 
into  his  hand ,  and  the  man  will  hardly  remember  in  th«  morn- 
ing what  you  give  him  over- night.  Thus  in  the  fleepy  ftate 
of  a  foul,  both  the  Chriftian  lofeth  the  benefit,  and  Chrift  the 
praife  of  his  mercy^  and  therefore  Chrift  will  ftay  to  give  out 
his  choife  favours ,  when  the  foul  is  more  wakeful  ,  that  he  may 
both  do  the  creature  good,  and  his  creature  mayfpeak  good  of 
him  for  it, 
'jteft.  J&eft.    But  how    muft  the  Chriftian  ftand    upon  his 

watch  ? 

Anfroer.  Firft ,  conftantly.  The  Lamp  o  f  God  in  the  T*i£<r- 
nacle  was  to  bttrne  alwajes,  Exod.  27.20.  thatis,alwayesinthe 
night ,  which  fenfe  is  favoured  by  feveral  other  places.  And  I 
pray  ,  what  i%  our  life  in  this  world  but  a  dark  night  of  tern, 
ptation  ?  take  heed  Chriftian  that  thy  watch-candle  go  not  out 
in  any  part  of  this  darkfome  time ,  left  thy  enemy  come  up- 
on thee  in  that  houre.  He  can  fiode  thee,  but  not  thou  refift 
him  in  the  dark;  if  once  thy  eye  be  (hut  in  a  fpi  itual  (lum- 
ber, thou  art  a  fa  r-  mark  for  his  wrath-,  and  know  thou 
canft  not  be  long  off  thy  watch,  but  the  Devil  will  hear  on'c.Thc 
Devil  knew  the  Apoftles  fleeping  time,  and  then  he  defircs  leave 
to  winnow  them  ,  Luke  22.  Ke  law  they  were  in  fbme  dis- 
order ,  the  eye  of  their  foul  began  to  be  heavie,  the  thief  rifcth 
when  honeft  men  go  to  bed.  The  Devil,  lam  fuie,  begins  to 
tempt  when  Saints  ceafe  to  watch ;  when  the  ftaff  is  thrown 
away  ,  then  the  wolf  appears.  VVhen  the  foul  puts  her  danr/er 
(urtheftoff,  and  lies  moft  fecure  ,  then 'tis  neaieft  <  therefore  la- 
bour to  be  conllant  in  thy  holy  care ,  the  wane  of  this  fpoiles 
all.  M>me  you  (hall  have,  that  after  a  great  fall  into  a  fin 
chat  hath  bruifed  them  lorely ,  will  feeme  very  careful  for 
a  time  where  they  fet  their  foot  how  they  walk ,  and  what 
company  they  come  in  •  but  as  foone  as  the  forcnefle  of  their 

con- 


Stand  therefore  33 


confciences  weares  off ,  their  watch  broke  up^  and  they  are 
as  carelefle  as  evcr^  like  one  that  is  very  care.'ul  to  (hut  up 
his  fhop  ftrongly ,  and  may  be  fet  up  late  to  watch  it  alfo, 
for  two  or  three  nights  after  hath  been  robbed,  but  then  minds 
it  no  more.     Others  in  an  afflidion,or  newly  come  out  of  the 
furnace,  O  how  nice  and  fcrupulous  are  they  while  the  l'mell  of 
trie  is  about  them ,  and  memory  of  their  diftrefTe  frefh  ?  they 
are  as  tender  of  finning ,  as  one  that  comes  out  of  a  hot  clofe 
roome  is  of  the  aire  •,  they  fhrink  at  every  breath  of  tempta- 
tion ft  rring  ;  but  alas,  how  foone  are  they  hardened  to  commit 
thofe  finnes  without  remorfe,  the  bare  motion  of  which  ,  but  a 
little  before ,  did  fo  trouble  and  afflift  them  ?  Jcfephw  in  his 
Anticj.  tells  us  that  the  fonnes  of  Noah  for  fdme  yeares  after 
the  flood,  dwelt  on  the  tops  of  high  mountaines,  not  daring 
to  take  up  their  habitation  in  the  lower   ground,  for  ft  are 
of  being  drown' d  by  another  flood ;  yet  in  proceffe  of  time 
(feeing  no  flood  came)  they  ventured  down  into  the  plain  of 
Shin  ay  ,  where  their  former  fear  we  fee  ended  in  orie  of  the 
boldeft,  proudeft  actempts  againft  God  ,  that  the  Sunne  was  e- 
ver  witneffe  to  ■,  The  building  I  mean  of  a  Tower  whofe  top 
fhould  reach  heaven,  Gen.  .  1.  2,  3.  they,  who  at  firft  werefo 
maidenly  and  fearful,  as  not  to  venture  down  their  hills,  for  fear 
of  drowning-,  now  have  a  defign  to  fecure  themfelves  againft  all 
future  attempts  from  the  God  of  heaven  himfelfe.    1  bus  oft 
we  fee  Gods  judgements  leave  fuch  an  imprefiion  in  mens  fpirits, 
that  for  awhile  they  ftand  aloof  from  their  finnes  (as  they  on 
their  hills )  afraid  to  come  down  to  tbem  ,  but  when  they  fee 
faire  weather  continue ,  and  no   clouds  gather   towards  ano- 
ther ftorme,  then  they  can  defcend to  their  old  wicked  pradifes, 
and  grow  more  bold  and  heaven-daring  than  ever.     But  if  thou 
wilt  be  a  Chriftian  indeed,  keep  on  thy  warch  ftill,  remit  not 
in  thy  care,  thou  haft  well  run  hitherto,  O  lie  not  down  (like 
fome  lazie  travellour)  by  the  way  fide  to  flcep,  butreferve  thy 
refting  time  till  thou  getteft  homeout  of  all  danger.  Thy  God 
refted  not  till  the  laft  dayes  work  in  the  Creation  was  finifht  ^  nei- 
ther do  thouceafe  to  wake  or  work,  till  thou  canft  fay,  thy  falva- 
tion  work  is  finifhed. 

Secondly,  watch   univerfillj ,  Firft,  watch  thy  whole  man.        2. 
The  hon&wdtcb  man  walks  the  rounds ,  and  compafleth  the 

whole 


^a  Stand  therefore. 


whole  Town.     He  doth  not  limit  his  care  to  this  houfeor  that. 
So  do  thou  watch  over  thy  whole  man.     A  pore  in  thy  body 
is  a  door  wide  enough  to  let  in  a  di Tea fc  if  God  command,  and 
any  one  faculty  of  thy  foul ,  or  member  of  thy  body  ,  to  let 
in  an  enemy  that  may  endanger  thy  fpiritual  welfare.  Alas,  how 
fewfet  the  watch  round?  fomeone  faculty  is  not  guarded,  or 
member  of  the  body  not  regarded.    He  thac  is  fcrupulous  in 
one,  you  (hall  finde  him  fecure  in  another .-  Way  be,  thou  ;etteft  a 
watch  at  the  door  of  thy  lips,  that  no  impure  communica- 
tion offends  the  eares  of  men^  but  how  is  the  Lords  watch  kept 
r.  .         ,  at  the  temple  doore  of  thy  heart?  Is  not   that  defiled   with 
%     ron.i?    <  |uq  ?  Thou  ('maybe)  keepeft  thy  handout  of  thy  neighbours 
purfe,  and  foot  from  going  on  a  theevifli  errand  to  thy  neigh- 
bours houfe  :  But  does  not  thy  envious  heart   grutch  him 
what  God  allows  him  ?  when  thou  prayeft,  thou  art  very 
careful  thy  outward   pofture  be  reverent  ■  but  what  eye   haft 
thou  on  thy  foul ,  that  it  performes   its   part  in    the  duty  > 
Secondly  ,  wath   in   every  thing  :    If  the  Apoftlc  bids  in  every 
thing  give  thanks,  then  it  behoves  us,  in  every  thing  to  watch  , 
that  God  may  not  lofe  his  praife,  which  he  doth  in  molt  for 
want  of  watching.     No  aftion  fo  little  (almoft)  but  we  may 
in  it  do  God,  or  the  Devil  fome  fcrvice,  and  thefore  none 
too  little  for  our  ca*e  to  bebeftowed  on.  He  was  a  holy  man 
indeed,  of  whom  it  was  faid,  that  he  ate  and  drank^etemsJ  life. 
The  meaning   is ,  he  kept  fuch  a   holy  watch  over  himfelfe 
in    thefe    dungs  ,    that    he    was    in    heaven    while   doing 
them.      There    is  no    creature   fo    little   among    all   Gods 
works,  but  his  providence  watcheth  over  it,  even  to  a  fparrow 
and  a  hair.  Let  there  be  no  word  or  work  of  thine,  over  which 
thou  art  not  watchful.    Thou  (halt  be  judged  by  them  even 
to  thy  idle- words  and  thoughts,  and  wilt  thou  not  have  care 
of  them  ? 

Thirdly,  watch  wifely  •  wqich  thou  (halt  do,  if  thou  knoweft 
3-  where  thou  fhouldeft  keep  ftri&eir  watch,  and  that  muit  behrlt 

in  die  w.,;ghri<»ftdut .  of  the  command  ^  tjtb'ng  of  Cummin  and 
?A>;h  c:muft  not  re  neglefted,but  take  heed  thuu  dceft  not  neg- 
lect the  weightier!  things  of  the  Law,  judgement,  mercy,  and  faith, 
Maub  iy  i j.  making  your  precifencfle  in  the  lefle  a  blindc  for  your  horrible 
wickednelTe  in  the  greater. 

Begin 


Stand  therefore 

Begin  at  the   right  end  of  your  work  (  Chriftfan  )  by  pla* 
cing  your  chief  care  about  thofe  main  duties  to  God  and  man 
in  his  Law  and  Gofpel ,  in  his  worlhip,  and  in  thy  daily  conrfe, 
which    when  thou  haft  done,    negled:    not  the   circumftan- 
tials-    (hould  a  Matter   before   he  goes    forth   ,    charge  his 
fervant    to    look    to   his  childe  •    and    trim    his    houfe   up 
handfomly   againft   he  comes  home:,  when  he  returnes,  will 
he  thank  this  fervant  for  1  weeping   his  houfe  ,  and  making  it 
trimme  (as  he  bade  him,)    if  he  findes   his  childe  through 
his  negligence  fallen  into | the  fire,   and  by  it    kill'd  o    crip- 
ied  ?    No  lure  ,   he  left   his  childe  with  him    as  his   chiefe 
charge  ,   to    which  the  other  fhould   have  yielded ,  if  both 
could  not  be  done.     There  hath  been  a  great  zeale  of  latea- 
mong  us  about  fome  circumiiantials  of  worftiip,  but  who  1-joks 
to   the    little    childe,  the    maine    duties    of    Ch'ift'anity   I 
meane  >    was    there   ever   leiTe    love,    charity,   fel ;- denial , 
heavenly-mindednefle ,  or  the   power    of  holinefle  in  any  of 
its  feveral  walks,  than   in  this  fad  age  of  ou»*s .?  alas?,   thjefe 
like   the   childe  y  are   in    grat   danger  of  perifhi        n   the 
fire  of  contention   and  divifion ,   which   a   pe  vetfe  zeale    in 
leiTe    things  b?.th    kindled   among  us.      Secifti  Be   fore 

thou  beeft  watchful  more  than  ordinary  over  th     feffe  ,  in 
thofc    things    where     thou    findeft    thy       Ire     ve  L;eft    and 
haft  beene  ofteneft  foiled.     The    weakeft    pare  of    the  City 
needs  the  ftrongeft  guard  ,  and  in  our  bodies  -he   teniereft 
part  is    raoft   obferv'd   and    kept    warmer:,      i\nd   I    fhould 
think  it    were    ftrange  ,  if  thy    fabtack  61    grace   ftands  fo 
ftrong  and    even  ,    that   thou   fhouidett    not    foone  perceive 
which   fide,  needs  the  (bore   molt ,    by  fome    inclination  of 
it  one  way  more  than   another.      Thy  body  is  not  fo  firme  , 
but   thou   findeit  this  humour  over-  abound ,    and   that   pare 
craze  falter  than  another ^  and  fo  mayeft  thou  in   thy   foul. 
Well,    take  counfel    in   the  thing ,    and   what    thou  findeft 
weakcfl  ,   warch  moft   carefully.      Is  it  thy   head   is    weak, 
thy  judgement  I   meane  ?    watch   thy    felfe,   and  come   not 
among   thofe  that  drink  no  wir.e ,    bnt  that  which  thy  weak 
parts  cannot    beare   (Setaphlque  notions  and  high-flown  o- 
pinions)   and   do  not   think  thy  felfe  much  wrong'd   to   be 
forbidden  their  cup- fuch  ftrong  wine  is  more  heady  than  hearty, 

E  and 


q6 


Having  your  loyns 


and  they  that  trade  moft  with  it  are  not  found  of  the  heakhieft 
tempers  of  their  fouls,  no  more  than  they  that  live  moft  of  ftrong- 
water  are  for  their  bodies.  Is  thy  impotency  in  thy  pafilons  ?  In- 
deed we  are  weak  as  they  are  ftrong  and  violent.  Now  watch  o- 
ver  them  as  one  that  dwells  in  a  thatcht  houfe,  would  do  off  every 
fpark  that  flies  out  his  chimney,  left  it  fhould  light  on  it  and  fet  all 
on  fire.  O  take  heed  what  fpeeches  comes  from  thy  mouth,  or 
from  any  thou  converfeft  with,  this  is  the  little  inftrument  fees  the 
whole  courfe  of  nature  on  flame  •  when  our  neighbours  houfe  is 
on  fire,  we  caft  water  on  our  roofe,  or  cover  it  with  a  wet  fheet ; 
when  the  flame  breaks  out  at  anothers  mouth,  now  look  thou 
throweft  water  on  thy  own  hot  fpiritj  fome  cooling,wrath-quencb- 
ing  Scriptures  and  Arguments  ever  carry  with  thee  for  that 
purpofe,  and  fo  in  any  other  particular  as  thou  findeft  thy 
weakneflfe. 


Vef.se    14. 

Having  your  loyns  girt  about  with  truth* 

He  Apoftie  having  ordered  the  Epheftans ,  and 
in  them  every  Chriftian,  the  pofture  which  they 
are  to  obferve  in  fight  with  their  enemy ;  He 
comes  now  to  inftance  in  the  feveral  pieces  of 
that  armour ,  which  before  he  had  commended 
to  them  only  in  the  general.  The  firft  of  which 
istheGirdteef  truth. 


CHAP. 


girt  about  with  truth. 


37 


CHAP.     L 

therein  is  contain  d  a  briefs  Explication  of  the 
words. 


HAvlng  your  fay nes  girt  about  -with  truth.  A  twofold  enqui- 
ry is  here  requisite.  Firfl ,  what  he  meanes  by  truth. 
Secondly  ,  what  by  loynes  ,  and  their  being  girt  with 
truth. 

Fir  Ft ,  for  the  flrft.  What  is  f  m 6  here?  fome  by  truth  un- 
derftand  Chrift ,  who  indeed  elfewhere  is  called  the  truth  -,  yet 
in  this  place  I  conceive  not  fo  properly,  becaufe  the  Apftk 
inftanceth  here  in  fevcral  pieces  and  parts  of  armour, 
one  diftind  from  another,  and  Chrift  cannot  fo  well  be  faid 
to  be  a  fingle  piece  to  defend  this  or  that  pare,  as  the  whole 
in  whom  we  are compleat, compared  therefore,  Kjm,  13.  to  the 
whole  fuit  of  armour  ,  put  ye  on  the  Lord  efns ,  that  is,  be 
clothed  and  harncft  with  Chrift  as  a  fouldier  with  his  armour 
cap-ape.  Some  by  truth  meane  truth  of  dottrine ;  others  will 
have  it  truth  of  heart,  fincerity^  They  I  think  beft,  that 
comprife  both.  And  fo  I  (hall  handle  it  -y  both  indeed  are 
required  to  make  the  girdle  compleat ,  one  will  not  do  without 
the  other.  'Pis  poffible  to  finde  good  meanings,  and  akinde 
offincerity  without,  yea,  agiinltthe  truth.  Many  follow  an 
errour  as  they  Abjalom  in  the  Simplicity  of  their  hearts.  Such 
do  ill  while  thev  mean  well.  Good  intentions  do  no  more 
make  a  good  adtion ,  than  a  fair  mark  makes  a  good  (hot  by 
an  unskilful  archer.  God  did  not  like  Sauls  zeale  when  he 
perfecuted  the  Chriftian  C  hurch ,  though  he  thought  f  no  que- 
ftion)  he  did  him  good  fervice  therein.    Neither  is  it  enough  to 

E  2  have 


;8  Having  your  loyns 


have  trnth  on  our  fide ,  if  we  have  not  truth  in  our  hearts.  Jehu 
was  a  great  stickler  against  idolatry  ,  but  kickt  down  all  again  by 
his  hypocrifie.  Both  then  are  neceflary-,  [wceritj  to  propound  a 
right  end,  and  knowledge  of  the  word  of  truth  to  dired  us  in  the 
right  way  to  that  end. 

Secondly ,  what  is  meant  here  by  lojnes  that  are  to  be  girt 
with  this  girdle  ?  The   loj  nes  muft  be   like  the  girdle.     This 
is  fpiritual ,  and  therefore  they  muft  be  fo.     Peter  will  help  to 
interpret  Pattl^  Gird  up  the  Ujncs  rf  jour  mindes ,    I  Pet.  I.  13. 
They  are  our  mindes  and  fpirits  which  muft  wear  this  girdle , 
and  very  fitly  may  our  fpirits   and  mindes   be    compared  to 
the  loynes.     The   \o\  nes  are  the  chif  feat  of  bodily  strength. 
Of  Behemoth  its  faid  ,  Job 40.  16.    His  ftrength  is  in  his  Ujnes. 
Theloynesareto  the  body  as  Carina  navi ,  the  kncele  to  the  /hip. 
The  whole  (hip  is  knit  to  that,  and  fuftained  by  it.     And  the 
body  to  the  loynes  •,  if  the  loynes  faile ,  the  whole  body  finks^ 
hence  to  [mite  through  the  lojnes ,  is   a   phrafe  to  exprefle  de- 
ftrudionand  ruine,  cDeut.  33,  1 1.  weak  loynes,  and  a  weak  man^ 
if  we  be  but  a  little  weary ,    nature  directs  us   to   lay  our 
hands  on  our  loynes  to  fuftaine  jthem  ,  as  our  chief  ftrength  • 
Thus  as  the  a  dings  of  our  mindes  and  fpirits  are  in-their  facul- 
ties and  powers' ,  fo  we  are  weak  or  strong  Christians  -,  if  the 
understanding  be  cleare  in   its  apprehensions  of  truth,   and 
the  will  sincere,   vigorous  and  fixt  in  its  purpofes,  for  t!  at 
which   is  holy  and  good  ,  then  he  is  a  ftrong  Ghffftian  :  Bat 
if  the  understanding  be  .dark,  or  uncertaine  in  its  notions  (as 
a  distempered  eye  that  cannot  well  difcerne  its  objed  ,  and  the 
will  be  wavering  end  unsteady  (like  a  needle  that  trembles  be- 
tween   two     load-hones)    not    able    to   bring  its     thoughts 
to  an  iffue,  which  to  clofc  with  ,  here  the  man  is  we.k,  and 
all  he  doth  will  be  fo.     Feeble  fpirits  caufe  an  intermitting  fal- 
tering pulfe-,    fo  want  of  ftiength  in  the  minde,  to  know  truth, 
and  refolution  in  the  will  to  purfue  that  which  he  knows  to  be 
holy  and  good,  caufeth  a  man  to  taker  in  his  coufe.     Theufe 
therefore  of  theie  two,  truth  of  dtUrint  for  the  minde,  andjince- 
rity  for  the  will,  is  to  unite  and  eftablifb  koth  thefe  faculties, 
which  they  do  when  they  are  clafpt,  and  gut  about  the  foul, 
as  the  girdle  about  the  lo\  nes  of  the  bo  y        Though  the 
Coynes  be  the  ftrength  of  the  body,  yet  they  need  an  auxiliary, 

their 


girt  about  with  truth*  2p 

their  ftrength  from  the  girdle  to  keep  thofe  parts  clofe,  and  unite 
their  force,  withoQt  which,  men,  when  they  would  ftraine 
themfelves,  and  put  forth  their  ftrength  in  any  work,  findea  trem- , 
bling  and  loofnefle  in  their  loynes.  Hence  the  {baking  of  thelojnes, 
is  a  phrafe  to  exprefTe  weaknefie,  Pjal.69.23,  Thus  our  minds  and 
fpi  its  need  this  girdle  to  ftrengthen  them  in  every  work  we  do,  or 
elfe  we  (ha  11  a  ft  not  t,  ing  vigorously . 

Firft,  we  (hall  begin  with  truth  of  doctrine ,  or  truth  of  the  j# 

Word,  called  the  Word  of  truth ,  Ephef.  1.  13.  Becaufe  it  is 
the  Word  of  God,  who  \s  God  of  truth.  It  hehoves  every 
Chriftian  to  be  well  girt  with  this  truth.  £effitherDevil  ( faith 
Peter)  ficdfc.fi  in  the  faith  ,  I  Pet.  5.  9.  That  is,  in  the  truth  , 
faith  being  there  put  for  the  objeft  of  our  faith ,  which  is  the 
truth  of  God,  declared  in  thcdoftrine  of  the  Gofpel  -y  this  is 
the  faith  which  was  once  delivered  to  the  Saints  ,  Jude  10.  that 
is,the  truth  delivered  to  them  to  be  believed  and  held  faft .  And 
of  what  importance  is  it  to  be  thus  ftedfaft  in  the  faith  ,  the 
<iApoflle  Peter  in  the  following  verfe  of  the  forementioned 
place ,  fhewes ,  by  his  vehement  and  earned  praying  for  them , 
that  God  would  flaUiJb  ,  ftrengthen ,  and  fettle  them.  The  heap- 
ing of  words  to  the  fame,  purpofe ,  implies  the  great  danger 
they  were  in  of  being  unfettled  by  Satan ,  and  his  internments, 
and  the  neceflity  of  their  (landing  firme  and  unflbaken  in  the 
faith.  Nothing  more  frequently  inculcated  than  this  in  the  E- 
piftles ,  and  the  more ,  becaufe  in  thofe  bluftering  times ,  it 
was  impofTible  to  have  kept  the  faith  from  being  blown  from 
them,  without  this  girdle  to  hold  it  faft.  Now,  as  there  is  a 
double  deligne  Satan  hath  to  rob  Chriftians  of  truth ,  fo 
there  is  a  twofold  girding  about  with  this  truth  necef- 
fary. 

'•Firft,  Satan  comes  as  a  Serpent  in  the  perfons  of  falfe  j 
teachers,  and  by  them  labours  to  put  a  cheat  onus,  and  co- 
zen us  with  errour  for  truth.  To  defend  us  againft  this  de- 
figne ,  it  is  neceiTary  we  be  girt  with  truth  in  our  underftan- 
ding ,  that  we  have  an  cftablifhc  judgement  in  the  truths  of 
C  hnft. 

Secondly ,  Satan  comes  fometimes  as  a  Lion  in  the  perfons        2.1 
of  bloody  Perfecuters ,  and  labours  to  icare  Chriftians  from  the 
truth  with  fire  and  fagot.    Now  to  defend  us  againft  this,  we 

need 


gO 


Having  yonr  loyns 

need  have  truth  girt  about  us ,  fo  that  with  a  holy  refolution 
may  maintain  our  profeflion  in  the  face  of  death  and  danger, 
begin  with  the  firft. 


CHAP.      II. 

Wherein  isjbewn,  it  is  the  Chrijlians  duty  to  labour 
for  a  judgement  efiablijht  in  the  truth  >  with 
theReafons  of  it ,  as  alfo  fome  Application  of 
the  point. 

IT  ftiould  be  the  care  of  every  Chriftian  to  get  an  cftabliftit 
judgement  in  the  truth.  The  3eream  are  highly  commend- 
ed for  the   enquiry  they  made  into  the   Scripture  to  fatisfie 
their  judgements  concerning  the  doctrine  Paul  preacht.    They 
hid  not  believe  hand  over  head,  but  their  faith  was  the  re- 
(ult  of  a   judgement   (upon  diligent   fcarch,)   convinced  by 
Scripture  evidence,  tAEls  17.  n.  it's  faid  there,  they  fearchedthe 
Scriptures  daily  whether  tkefe  things  were  fo.     They  carried  the 
preachers  doctrine  to  the  written  Word  ,  and  compar'd  it  with 
that-,    and   mark,    verfe    12.       Therefore    mar>y    beleeved-^    as 
they  did  not  believe  before  ,  fo  they  durft  not  but  believe  now. 
I  remember  Tertullian  fpeaking  of  fome  HereticjHcs ,  their  man- 
ner of   preaching    fai:h  perfuadendo  docent ,  mn  docends  prrfua- 
dtnt ,  7  he y  teach  by  per f wading  ,  and  not  perfwade  by   teaching, 
that  is,  they  woe  and  entice  the  affections  of  their  hearers, 
without  convincing  of  their  judgement  about  u&at  they  preach. 
Indeed  it  were  a  hard  work  for  the  adulterer  to  convince  her, 
he  would  proftitute,  that  the  fact  is  lawful  -t  no,  he  goes  ano- 
ther way  to  work .  firft  ,  by  fome  amorous  infinuations  he 
inveigles  her  affections,  and  they  once  bewitcht  ,  the  other 

is 


girt  about  -with  truth* 


is  not  much  queftioned,  it  being  eafie  for  the  affections,  to 
make  the  judgement  or  their  party  j  well,  though  er,  our,  like 
a  thief,  comes  thus  in  at  the  window  ^  yet  truth,  like  the  true 
ownerof  thehoufe,  delights  to  enter  at  the  right  doorofthe 
underftanding ,  from  thence  into  the  confcience,  and  fo  pafTtth 
into  the  will  and  affedions.  Indeed  he  that  hits  upon  truth, 
and  takes  up  the  profeffion  of  it ,  before  he  is  brought  into  the 
acquaintance  of  its  excellency,  and  heavenly  beauty,  by  his 
underftanding  cannot  entertaine  it  becoming  its  heavenly  birth 
and  defcen-t  ^  'tis  as  a  Prince  that  travels  in  a  difguifc ,  not 
known ,  therefore  not  honour  d.  Troth  is  loved  and  prized 
onely  of  thofe  that  know  it  j  And  not  to  defire  to  know  ic, 
is  to  defpife  it,  as  much  as  knowing  it,  to  rejed  it.  Jt  were 
not  hard  fure  to  cheat  that  man  of  truth,  who  knowes 
not  what  he  hath.  Truth  and  errour  are  all  one  to  the  ig- 
norant man ,  fo  it  hath  but  the  name  of  truth.  Leah  and 
Rachel  were  both  alike  to  faceb  in  the  dark.  Indeed  'tis  faid 
in  the  morning  behold  it  was  Leah,  Gen.  29.25.  So  in  the  morn- 
ing when  'tis  day  in  the  underftanding ,  then  the  deceived  per- 
fon  will  fee  he  hath  had  a  falfe  bride  in  his  bofome,  will  cry  out, 
behold ,  'tis  an  errour  which  I  took  for  a  truth  ;  you  have ,  may 
be,  heard  of  the  covetous  man ,  thathugg'd  himfelfinthe  ma- 
ny bags  of  gold  he  had,  but  never  open'd  them,  or  ufed  them-, 
when  the  thief  took  away  his  gold ,  and  left  him  his  bags 
full  of  pebbles  in  the  roome,  he  was  as  happy  as  when  he  had  his 
gold,  forhelookt  not  of  the  one  or  other.  And  verily  an  ig- 
norant perfon  is  in  a  manner  no  better  with  truth  than  errour  on 
his  fide.  Both  are  alike  to  him,  day  and  night,  all  one  to  a  blind 
man. 

But  to  proceed  and  give  fome  more  particular  account .  why 
the  Chriftian  ftionld  endeavour  for  an  eftablifht  judgement 
in  the  truth.  I  (hall  content  my  felf  with  three  ReafonY  The 
firft  taken  from  the  damning  nature  of  falfe  dodrine,  the  fe- 
cond  from  the  fubtilty  of  feducers  to  draw  into  falfe  dodrine, 
and  the  third  from  the  univerfal  influence  that  an  eftablifht 
judgement  hath  on  the  whole  man,  and  whole  courfe  of  a  Chri* 
ftian. 

Firft ,  from  the  damning  nature  of  falfe  dodrines.  Tbey 
hunt  for  the  precious  life  of  fouls,  as  well  as  any  other finne. 

And 


51 


I; 


2  2  Having  your  loyns 


Animpoftume  in  the  head  proves  oft  as  deadly  as  one  in  the  fto- 
mack.    A  corrupt  judgement  in  foundation  truths ,  kills  as  fure  as 
a  rotten  heart,  indeed  it  proceeds  thence,  le^abels  children  are 
threatned  to  be  kill'd  with  death,  Rev.  2.  23.  and  who  arc  her 
children  ,  but  her  difciplcs ,  that  drink  of  her  cup  of  fornicati- 
on ,  and  cmbraee  her  corrupt  dodrines  ?  Bnt  fure  this  is  not 
believed  by  fome ,  who  though  very  ftrid  in  their  lives ,  and 
fcem  as  tender  in  matter  of  morality,  as  Zo?  was  of  his  gucfts, 
yet  are  very  loofe  in  their  principles  and  judgements,  expofing 
them    (as  he  his  daughters)  to  be  defiled    with  any  corrupt 
dodrine  that  comes  to  their  door.  They  would  make  us  think, 
that  here  men  plaid  but  at  fmall  game ,  and  their  fouls  were 
not  at  flake,  as  in  other  finnes.     As  if  there  were  not  fuch  a 
queftion  to  be  askt  at  the  great  day  ,  what  opinions  we  held, 
and  whether  we  were  found  in  the  faith  ?  in  a  word,asiffalfe 
dodrines  were  but  an  innocent   thing,    not « like  the  wilde 
gourd   which  brought   death   into  the   Prophets  pot  ( turning 
wholefome  food ,  with  which  it  was  mingled,  into  baneful  poi- 
fon )  but  rather  like  herb  John  in  the  pot ,  that  does  neither 
1  Kings  4-       much  g00d  nor  hurt.    Yea,  there  be  fome  that  fpeak  out,  and 
tell  us ,  a  man  may  be  faved  in  any  Religion ,  fo  he  doth  but 
follow   his   light  ^  and  are  not    thefe  charitable  men  ?  who , 
becaufe  they  would  have  the  company  as  few  as  may  be  that 
arc  damned ,  make  as  many  roads   to  heaven  as  the  Scripture 
tellsus  there  are  wayes  tohcil?  contrary  to  Chrifl,  who  tells  us 
of  no  other  way  but  by  him  to  life,     lam  the  way,  the  truth^ 
And  the  Hie,  John  14.  6.    point  blank  againft  Saint  John  t   who 
tells  us  but  of  one  dodrine  ,  and  that  the  dodrine  of  Chrift, 
and  he  that  holds  not  this,  to  be  markt  out  for  a  loft  man, 
%.  Epift.  John  Epift,  2.  ver.  9.  Whofcever    tranfgtefteth   and   abidctb  not  in  the 
9-1°*  dctlrinr  of  Chrift  ,  hath  n-t  G  d  -,  and  how   farre  I  pray  is  that 

man  off  hell  that  hath  not  God  ?  He  that  hath  not  God  be- 
fore he  die?,  the  Deviifhali  have  him  when  he  dies.  Well,(Srs)'he 
time  is  coming,  yea  it  haftens  ('what  favour  and  kindnefsfoever 
corrupt  dodrine  find  here  at  mans  hand  )  wrurein  the  obfti- 
mte  heretique  fliall  receive  the  fame  law  at  (  hrifts  hands  with 
the  impenitent  drunkard.,  ^ou  may  fee  them  both  under  the 
fame  condemnation  ,  as  they  ftand  pinioned  together  for  hell, 
C.aI.  5.  20,  21.     /  tell j ou  now  ,   (faith  the  dpeftle  J  as  I  have 

told 


gin  about  with  trnth.  33 


told  you  in  time  faft ,  that  they  which  do  fn*h  things  jball  not  inhe- 
rit the  kjngdome  of  God  f  andjfee  I  pray  yon  if  you  cannot  find  the 
hereticks  name  amongft  them  ?  Ignorance  in  fundamentals  is  dam- 
ning, fure  then  errour  in  fundamentals  much  more.  If  a  pound 
weighs  down  the  fcale,  there  is  no  doubt  then  but  a  ftone  weight 
will  do  it.  If  the  lefle  finne  prefleth  down  to  hell,  how  can  we  ra- 
tionally think  that  the  greater  fhould  efcape  it/  Errour  ftands  ac 
a  farther  diftance  from,  yea,  a  fuller  contrariety  to  truth  than  ig- 
norance. Errour  is  ignorance  with  a  die  on  it.  He  that  eates  little 
or  nothing,  muft  need  die,  much  more  he  that  eats  rank  poifon.The 
Apoftle  doth  not  onely  tell  us  of  pernicious  dstlrines,  and  damnable 
herejies,  but  he  tells  us,  they  bring  fwift  damnation  upon  thofe  that 
hold  them,  2  Pet,  a.  1 .  I  pray  obfet  ve,  what  an  accent  he  layes  on 
the  damnation  that  comes  by  thefe  corrupt  do&rines ,  he  calls  k 
fwift  damnation.  All  rivers  finde  their  way  at  laft  to  the  Sea  from 
whence  they  fprang ,  but  fome  returne  with  a  more  fwift  ftreame, 
and  get  fooner  to  it  than  others.  Would  any  make  itafhorter 
voyage  to  hell  than  ordinary,  let  him  throw  himfelf  tut  into 
this  ftreame  of  corrupt  doctrine,  and  he  is  not  like  to  be  long  in 
going. 

Secondly-,  becaufe  impoftors  arc  So  fubtile,  therefore  it  "be-  2. 
boves  the  Chriftian  to  eftablifti ,  and  ftrengthen  his  judgement 
in  the  truths  of  Chrift.  They  are  a  generation  of  men ,  skilful 
to  deftroy  the  faith  of  others.  There  is  an  erndita  neynitia  in 
the  world ,  as  one  calls  it,  a  learned  kinde  of  wickednefle ,  that 
fome  have  to  corrupt  the  minds  of  men.  The  Spirit  of  God 
fets  them  out  to  life,  fometimes  comparing  them  to  Merchants 
who  can  fet  a  glofle  upon  their  falfe  ware  with  fine  words , 
2<Pet.  2.  3.  they  are  faid  with  fained  words  ,  to  make  merchan- 
dife  of  fouls.  To  huckfter  s  that  blend,  and  dafli  their  wine  with 
water,  2  Cor.  2. 17.  To  cheating  gamefters,  that  have  a  flight 
of  hand  to  cog  the  die  ,  Ephef.  4, 14.  yea,  to  witches  themfelves, 
Gal.  3. 1.  Who  hath  bewtiched  jou  ?  faith  the  Apoftle  -y  ftrange 
things  have  been  done  in  our  dayes  on  thofe ,  that  God  has  fuf- 
fered  them  to  pra&ife  their  forcery  upon,  and  what  counter-  ' 
charm  better  than  an  eftabliflit  judgement  >  'tis  obfervable  that 
in  2  Tim.  3 .  where  the  Apoftle  compares  the  feducers  of  that 
prefent  age  to  thofe  Sorcerers,  fannes  and  fambres  that  refilled 
CMofes ,  and  (hews  what  kinde  of  pedons  they  were  that  fell 

F  into 


n4  Having  your  loyns 


into  their  fnarc  •,  fuch  as  though  ever  learning ,  yet  never  come 
to  the  knowledge  of  the  truth,  ver.  7.  Thenheturnes  to  Timothy, 
ver.  10.  'But  thou  haft  fully  hncvcn  my  dctlrme.  As  if  he  had 
faid  ,  I  am  out  of  fear  for  thee,  thou  art  better  grounded  in  the 
do&rineof  theApoftle,  than  to  be  thus  cheated  of  it.  Indeed 
thofe  whom  feducers  lay  in  wait  for,  are  chiefly  weak  unfetled 
ones-  for  as  SoUmon  faith ,  in  vaine  the  net  is  (pread  in  the  fight  of 
an)  bird,  Prov.  i .  1 7.  The  Devil  chofe  rather  to  aflault  Eve 
than  »s4dam,a±more  likely  of  the  two  to  be  catcht.  And  ever  fincc 
he  takes  the  fame  courfe ,  he  labours  to  creep  over  where  the 
hedge  is  loweft,  and  the  refiftancc  like  to  be  weakeft.  Three  chara- 
cters you  may  obferveof  thofe  who  are  muft  commonly  feduced. 
Firft ,  they  are  caird  ftmple  ones,  Rom.  1 6. 1 8.  by  good  wrds  and 
fair  fpeeches  deceive  the  hearts  of  the  fimfle ,  amowv  fuch  who 
mean  well,  but  want  wifdometo  difcerne  thofe  that  meane  ill, 
incautelous  ones ,  that  dare  pledge  every  body ,  and  drink  of  a- 
ny  ones  cup  ,  and  never  fufped  poifoning.  Secondly  ,  children, 
JEtoh.  4.  14.  Be  no  more  children  tojfed  to  and  fro  with  every  winde 
of  dsttrine.  Now  children  they  arc  very  credulous,  prone  to  be- 
lieve every  one  that  give9  them  a  parcel  of  faire  words  j  they 
think  any  thing  is  good  ,  if  it  be  fweet;  'tis  not  hard  to  make 
them  eai:  poifon  for  fugar^  they  are  not  fwaid  by  principles  of 
their  own  ,  but  by  others .  the  childe  reades ,  conftrues,  and  p.er- 
ces  bis  Iefibn  as  his  mafter  faith,  and  thinks  it  therefore  right^ 
thus  poor  creatures  that  have  little  knowledge  of  the  word 
themfelves,  they  are  eafily  perfwaded  this,  or  that  way ,  even 
as  thofe ,  of  whom  they  have  a  good  opinion ,  pleafe  to  lead 
them;  let  the  d  oftrine  be  but  fweet ,  and  it  goes  down  glib; 
they  like  Ifaac ,  bie.'e  their  opinions  by  feeling,  not  by  fight; 
hence  many  poor  creatures  applaud  themfelves  fo  much  of  the 
joy  they  have  round  fince  they  were  of  this  judgement  and  that 
way-,  iiOt  being  able  to  try  the  comfort  and  fweetneffe  they  feel, by 
the  truth  of  their  way  from  ihe  Word,  they  are  fain  to  believe  the 
truth  of  it  by  their  feeling,  and  fo,  poor  creatures,they  ble/Te  error 
for  truth.  Thirdly,they  are  fuch  as  are  unftable,  iPet.i.ij.beguil- 
ing  unftable  (mis ,  fuch  as  are  not  well  grounded  and  principled, 
Trie  truth  they  profeflfe  hath  no  anchor- hold  in  their  undemand- 
ing, and  fo  they  are  at  the  mercy  of  the  wind,  foon  fet  ad'ift ,  and 
carried  down  the  ftrcame  of  thofe  opinions ,  which  are  the  fa- 
vourites 


girt  about  with  truth.  35 

vouritesoftheprefent  time,and  are  moft  cried  up,  even  as  the  dead 
fifti  with  the  currant  of  the  tide. 

Thirdly,  We  are  to  endeavour  after  an  eftabliftit  judgement        3. 
inthetruth,  becaufe  of  the  univerfal  influence  it  hath  into  the 
whole  man.    Firft  ,  into  the  memory ,  which  is  helpt  much  by 
the  undcrftanding.     The  more  weight  is  laid  on  the  feal,  the 
deeper  impreflion  is  made  on  the  wax.    The  memory  is  that 
faculty  which  carries  the  images  of  things.     It  holds  raft  »vhac 
we  receive,  and  is  that  treafury  where  we  lay  up  what  wedenre 
afterward  toufeandconverfewich.     Now,  the  more  clear  and 
certaine  our  knowledge  of  anything  is,  the  deeper  it  finks,  and 
furer  it  is  held  by  the  memory.    Secondly ,  into  the  affections. 
Truth  is  as  light,  the  more  fteady  and  fixt  the  glafie  of  the  un- 
derstanding is,  through  which  its  beams  are  darted  upon  the  af- 
fections ,  the  fooner  they  take  fire.      Did  not  our  hearts  IttYne 
(^faid  the  Difciples)  within  tts^ivhile he opened to  us  the  Scriptures? 
Luke  24, 32.    They  had  heard  (no  doubt  J  Chrift  preach  much 
of  what  then  he  faid,  before  his  paflion ,  but  never  were  theyfo 
fatisfied  and  confirmed  as  now  when  Scriptures  and  underftan- 
ding  were  opened  together ,  and  this  made  their  hearts  burne. 
The  Sunnein  the  firmament  fends  his  influence  where  he  doth  not 
fhedhisbeames ,  t  mean  into  the  bowels  of  the  earthy  but  the 
Sunne  of  righteoufnefTe  imparts  his  influence  onely  where  his 
light   comes  ,    he   fpreads    the    beames   of    truth    into  the 
underftanding  to  enlighten  that,  and  while  the  creature  fets  un- 
der thefe  wings  ,  a  kindly  heart-quiekning  hea:  is  begot  in  its 
bofome.    Hence  we  finde ,  even  when  the  Spirit  is  promifed  as 
a  Comforter ,  he  comes  as  a  Convincer,  John  16.13.  he  comforts 
by  teaching.  And  certainly,  the  reafon  why  many  poor  trembling 
fouls  have  fo  little  heat  of  heavenly  joy  in  their  hearts,  is,  becaufe 
they  have  fo  little  light  to  underftand  the  nature  and  tenure  of 
the  Gofpel- Covenant.     The  further  afoul  (tends  from  the  light 
of  truth  ,  the  further  he  muft  needs  be  from  the  heat  of  comfort. 
Thirdly  ,  an  eftabliftit  judgement  hath  a  powerful  influence  in- 
to the  life  and   conversation.     The  eye  directs  the  foot ,  he 
walks  very  unfafely  that  fees  not  his  way,  and  he  uncomforta- 
bly that  is  not  refolved  whether  right  or  wrong.     Thet  which 
moves ,  muft  reft  on  fomething  that  doth  not  move^  a  man  could 
not  walk  if  the  earth  turn'd  under  his  feet.    Now  the  principles 

F  2  Wi 


2  5  Having  your  loyns 


o 


we  have  in  ou    underftandir.g ,  arc  as  it  were  the  ground  we 
go  upon  in  all  our  adions^  if  they  ftagger  and   recle,  much 
more  will  our  life  and  pradife.    *Tis  as  impoflible  for  a  (fla- 
king hard  to  write  a  ftreight  line,  as  an  unfixt  judgement  to 
have  an  even  converfation.    The  Apoftle  joyncs  ftedfaftncfle 
and  unmovableneifc  with  abounding  in  the  worleof  the  Lord^  i  Cor. 
15.  58.  and  if  I  miftake  not,  he  means  chi-fly  in  that,  place,  a 
fteifaftnefie  of  judgement ,  in  that  truth  of  the  refurredion , 
which  fome  had  heen  (haking ;  it  is  not  the  many  notions  we 
have,  buttheeftablifhment  we  have  in  the  truth  makes  us  ftrong 
Chr.ftians  \  as  he  is  a  ftrong  man  whofe  joynts  are  well  fet  to* 
gethcr  and  knit ,  not  he  who  is  fpun  out  at  length,,  but  not 
thicken'd  futable  to  his  height.    One  faith  well ,  men  are  what 
they  fee  and  judge;  though  fome  do  not  fill  up  their  light, 
yet  rone  go  beyond  it.    A  truth  under  difpute  in  the  under* 
(landing,  is,  as  I  may  fofay ,  ftoptin  the  head  ,  it  cannot  com- 
mence in  the  heart ,  or  become  practicable  in  the  life  :  But  when 
it,  pafleth  clearly  there ,  and  upon  its  commendation,  is  embraced 
in  the  will  and  affedions  ,  then  it  is  held  faft ,  and  hath  pow- 
erful effeds  in  the  converfation.    TheGofpel  fits  fad)  came  to 
the  TkcJftiloiians'm  much  ajfurance,  1  Thef.  1.  5.  i.  e.  evidence  of 
its  truth  ,  and  fee  how  prevalent  and  operative  it  was  ,  ver.  6. 
jc  btcr.me  fnfivwers  cf  im  and  of  the  Lord,  leaving  received  the  V/ord 
in  much  affli£iiony  with  joj  in  the  holy  Ghofi.    They  were  a  fibred 
that  the   dodrine  was   of  God ,  and  this  carried  them  mer- 
ri.lv    through    the  faddeft    afflidions,    which   attended   the 
fame. 
Vje  1 .  Firft  ,  to  reprove  thofe  that  inftead  of  endeavouring  to  efta- 

blfli  their  judgements  in  the  truth,  make  it  their  great  ftudy 
ho*  to  ttrengthen  themfelves  in  their  errors.  I  am  perfwaded  foma 
men  take  more  paines  to  funifti  themfelves  with  arguments, 
to  defend  f  me  one  errour  they  have  taken  up.  than  they  do 
for  the  moft  laving  truths  in  the  Bible-,  yea,  they  could  fooncr 
die  at  a  flake  to  defend  one  errour  they  hold ,  than  all  the  truths 
they  profefle.  Aujlh  faith  of  himfelf  when  he  was  a  Ctfanichaan, 
No*  it*  eras ,  led  error  meuser at  Dens  meiu.  ThouO  Lordwert 
not ,  but  my  r  rvur  wot  my  God  O  'tis  hard  to  reduce  a  perfon 
deepfv  engaged  in  the  defence  of  an  errour  •  How  oft  had  the 
Phaxifces  their  mouths  ftopt  by  our  Saviour ?  yet  few  or  none 

re- 


■ 


girt  about  with  truth.  37 

redaim'd.  Their  fpirits  were  too  proud  to  rccant;  what  they 
lay  down  the  bucklers,  come  down  from  Mojes  cfiaire,  and 
confefTe  what  they  have  taught  the  people  for  an  Oracle,  is 
now  falfe  ?  they  will  rather  go  on,  and  brave  it  out  as  well  as  they 
can  ,  than  come  back  with  (hame ,  though  the  ihame  was  not 
to  be  afhamed  of  their  errour ,  but  afhamed  to  confefife  it. 
The  Cj*ick  anfwered  fmartly  ,  who  coming  out  of  a  brothcl- 
houfe  ,  was  askt  whether  he  was  not  afhamed  to  be  feen  coming 
ou  t  of  fuch  a  naughty  houfe  ?  laid  no  •  the  (hame  was  to  go  in, 
but  honefty  to  come  out.  Ofirs,  'tis  bad  enough  to  fall  in- 
to an  errour,  but  worfe  «to  perfift.  The  firft  (hews  thee  a 
weak  man ,  httmanum  eft  err  are ,  but  the  other  makes  thee  too 
like  the  Devil ,  who  is  to  this  day  of  the  fame  mind  he  was  at  his  c, 
hriUall. 

Secondly,  it  proves  thofe  who  labour  to  unfettle  the  judge* 
merits  of  others  ,  to  ungird  this  belt  about  Chriftiau  loynes.  -^  Zi 
They  come  with  the  Devils  qu.ftion  in  their  mouths,  yea,  hat  It 
Goa  [aid  ?  are  you  fure  this  is  a  truth  ?  do  not  your  Minifters 
deceive  you?  labouring  flyly  to  breed  fufpicions,  and  jealou- 
sies in  the  hearts  of  Chriftians  towards  the  truths  they  have  re- 
ceived- fuch  were  they  that  troubled  the  GaUtians,  whom  Paul 
wifht  cut  i>§  for  their  pains,  Galatians  5.  12.  they  laboured  to 
puzle  them,  by  ftarting  fcruples  in  their  mindes  concerning  the  do- 
ctrine of  the  Gofpei.  This  is  a  cunning  way  at  laft  to  draw  them 
from  the  faith ,  and  therefore  they  are  called  fnbverters  of  the 
faith  of  others,  Thehoule  muft  needs  be  in  danger  ,  when  the  *Tim  2,14,  ] 
groundfels  are  loofen'd  ^  can  you  think  he  means  honeftly  that 1 1CL1S  s*  "* 
undermines  the  foundation  of  your  houfe?  This  they  do  that 
would  call  in  queftion  the  grand  truths  of  the  Gofpel  :  But  this 
is  a  fmall  fault  in  our  loofe  age ,  or  elfe  fo  many  Seducers 
would  not  be  fuffered  [  whom  I  may  call  fpiritual  rogues  and 
vagrants)  to  wander  like  Gypfys,  up  and  down,  bewiching 
poor  fimplc  fouls  to  their  perdition.  O  'tis  fad  that  he  who 
fteals  the  worth  of  two  or  thee  (hillings,  (hould  hold  up  his 
hand  at  the  bar  for  his  life,  yea ,  fometiraes  hang  for  it;  and 
that  thofe  who  rob  poor  fouls  of  the  treafure  of  faving  truths, 
and  fubvert  the  faith  of  whole  families,  (hould  be  let  to  lift 
up  their  he*ds  with-  impudence,  glorying  in  their  impunity. 
That  Blaiphemy  againft  God  (hould  not  bear  an  adion  where 

blafphe-  - 


28  Having  your  loyns 


blafphemy  againft  the  King  is  indicted  for  treafon.  It  is  well 
that  God  loves  his  truth  better  than  men,or  elfc  thefe  would  efcape 
in  both  worlds.  But  God  hath  declared  himfelf  againft  them. 
There  is  a  day  when  they  who  rob  fouls  of  truth  (hall  be  found, 
and  condemned  as  greater  felons  than  they  who  rob  houfes  of  gold 
and  (ilver.  See  how  God  layes  their  indi&ment,  fer.  23. 30, 
Beheld  1  am  againft  the  Prof  bets  ,  faith  the  Lord,  that  fiealmj 
werd,  every  ene  from  his  neighbour.  He  means  the  falfe  pro- 
phets that  enticed  the  people  from  thofe  truths ,  which  the  faith- 
full  fervants  of  God  had  delivered  to  them.  There  will  be  none 
on  the  Bench,  to  plead  the  blafpheracr  and  feducers  caufc ,  when 
God  (hall  fit  Judge. 
■yfe  3  Thirdly,  this  might  well  chaftife  the  ftrange  ficklenefleand 

unfctledneffe  of  judgement,  which  many  labour  with  ia  this 
unconftant  age.    Truths  in  many  profeflbrs  mindes,  are  not  as 
ftars  fixe  in  the  heavens ,  but  {ike  meteors  that  dance  in  the 
aire-,  they  arc  not  as  characters  engraven  in  marble,  but  writ  in 
the  duft ,  which  every  winde  and  idle  breath  of  feducers  deface; 
many  entertain  opinions,  as  fome  entertaine  fuitors,  not  that  they 
mean  to  marry  them ,  but.  caft  them  off  as  foone  as  new  ones 
come.     Never  was  there  a  more  giddy  age  than  ours.     What 
is  faid  of  fafliion-mongers ,  that  fome  men,(hould  they  fee  their 
pictures  in  that  habit  which  they  wore  a  kw  years  paft ,  would 
hardly  know  themfelvcs  in  their  prefent  garb;     It  is  mod  rrue 
in  regard  of  their  opinions -,  (hould  many  that  have  been  great 
profeflburs  take  a  few  of  their  religious  principles  a  dozen  years 
ago,  and   compare  them    with  their  prefent,  they  would  be 
found,  not  the  fame  men.  They  have  fochopt  and  chang'd  that 
they  fceme  to  have  altered  their  whole  Creed.  And'cis  no  won- 
der that  fo  many  arc  for  a   new  baptifme ,  when   they  have 
forfaken  their  old  faith.    Not  that  the  old  which  they  renounce 
was  falfe ,  or  the  new  which  they  efpOufe  is  true  ,  but  becaufe 
they  were  either  ignorant  of  the  truth  they  firft  profeft,  or  were 
infincere  in  the  profefhon  of  it ;  and  it  is  no  wonder  that  the  one 
(hould  npon  eafie  tcarmes  part  with  that ,  which  he  firft  took 
up  upon  as  weak  grounds  as  now  he  leaves  it ;  or  that  the  0- 
ther  who  did  not   love ,  or   improve  the  truth  he  profefTed , 
fluuld  be  given  up  of  God  to  change  it  for  an  errour.  If  the  Hea- 
then 


girt  about  with  truth.  39 


then  ( who  did  not  glorifie  God  with  the  light  of  nature 
they,  had)  were  r.ghteoufly  given  up  to  a  reprobate  in- 
judicious minde  to  do  that  which  was  inconvenient,  and  mo- 
rally abfurd  •  then  they  who  difhonour  Cod  with  the 
revealed  light  of  Scripture-truth,  much  more  def.rve,  thac 
they  (hould  be  given  up  to  that  which  is  fpiritually  wicked, 
even  to  believe  lies  and  errours  for  truth.  A  heavie  cur'e,  did 
we  rightly  judge  of  it ,  to  wandet  and  wilder  in  a  maze  of 
errour  ,  and  yet  think  they  are  walking  in  the  way  of 
truth. 

Qnesl.  But  may  fome  fay,  how  is  it  pofiible  that  ordinary  pro-  Quea 
fefTors  fhould  attain  to  this  eftablifht  judgement  in  the  truth,when 
we  fee  many  of  gteat  parts  and  eminencie,  much  unfetled  in  their 
judgements  ? 

sAnfw.  We  muft  diftinguifh,  Firft,  of  perfons-  Secondly,  *  r 
of  truths.  Firft ,  of  perfons,  there  are  many  eminent  for  parts,  n'w' 
whofe  parts  want  piety  to  eftablifh  them  ,  and  no  wonder  to 
fee  wanton  wits  unfixt  in  the  truths  of  God.  None  fooner 
topleover  into  errour  than  fuch  who  have  notanhoneft  heart, 
to  a  nimble  head.  The  richeft  foyle  without  culture  raoft  taint- 
ed with  fuch  weeds  They  have  been  men  of  unfan&itied  parts 
that  have  been  the  Leaders  in  the  way  of  errour,  though  the  more 
fimplc ,  and  weak  that  are  led  by  them.  They  are  knowing  men, 
which  firft  difgorge,  and  vomit  errour  from  their  corrupt  heart?, 
and  ignorant  ones  that  lick  it  '•  F  nd  therefore  defpaire  not  of 
aneftablifht  judgement,  i  rhou  defireft  to  have  an  ho- 

neft  upright  heart,  and  confclencioufly  ufeft  the  means.  The 
promife  is  on  thy  fide,  PfaL  1 1 1.  10.  the  feare  of  the  Lord  is  the 
beginning  of  wfdme ,  and  a  good  under  {landing  have  they  that  do 
his  C  emmands, 

Secondly,  we  muft  diftinguifh  of  truths,  fome  are  fundamen- 
tal,  others  are  fuperftru&oiy  ^  now  though  many  eminent  for 
piety  ,  as  well  as  parts,  are  in  the  dark  concerning  fome  of  the 
fuperftru&ory  ,  and  more  circumftantial  (becaufe  myfterioufly 
laid  down  in  the  Word)  yet  there  is  a  fweet  harmony  among  the 
godly  in  fundamentals.  And  in  thofe,  poor  foul,  thou  mayeft 
come  by  a  faithful  ufe  of  means  to  be  eftablilht.  As  for  our  be- 
dies,  God  hath  fo  provided,  that  things  necefTary  to  preferve 
their  life ,  are  more  common,  and  to  be  had  at  a  cheaper  rate. 

than 


4° 


Having  your  loyns 


than  things  for  delicacy,  and  ftate.  So  alfoforour  fouls.  If 
bread  were  as  hard to  coma  by  as  fweet  meats  •,  or  water  as  fear  ce 
as  wine ,  the  greateft  part  of  men  muft  needs  famifh  :  fo  if 
truths  necefiary  to  falvation,  were  as  hard  to  be  underftood,  and 
cleared  from  the  Scriptures,  as  fome  others,  many  poor  weak- part* 
ed  Chriftians ,  would  certainly  perifh  without  a  miracle  to  help 
them.  But  the  faving  truths  of  the  Gofpel  lie  plain ,  and  runne 
clear  to  all ,  but  thofe  who  royle  theftreame  with  their  own  cor- 
rupt mindes. 


CHAP.     III. 

Some  direUions  for  the  efiablifbing  the  judgement 
oj  profeffors  in  the  truth* 


BUt  what  counfel  can  you  give  me  towards  the  cftabltihing  of 
my  judgement  i n  the  truths  of  C hrift  ? 
Firft ,  let  thy  aime  be  finccre  in  imbracing  truths ;  a  falfe 
naughty  heart  and  an  unfound  judgement ,  like  ice  and  water 
are  produced  mutually  by  one  another.  The  rcafon  of  the 
ficklenefle  of  fome  mens  judgements  proceeds  from  the  guile  of 
their  hearts.  A  ftable  minde  and  a  double  heart  feldome  meet. 
That  place  fpeaki  full  to  this,  \Tim.\.%  The  end  of  the  Com- 
mandment is  love  out  of  a  pure  heart ,  and  of  a  good  ccn.cie  nee,  and 
of faith  unfeigbned,  (now  mark  what  follows)  ver.  6-  from  which 
fome  having  fveerv'd  (or  as  it  is  in  the  original)  not  aiming  at, 
have  turnd  aftde  to  vain  jangling.  They  never  aim'd  at  the 
power  of  holinefle  in  receiving  truth,  that  by  it  they  might  ad- 
vance in  their  love,  faith,  and  other  graces j  and  taking  a 
wrong  end  and  aime ,  no  wonder  they  turn  out  of  the  right  way. 
A  naughty  heart  can  eafily  bribe  the  judgement,  to  vote  on  its 
Gde.     This  (hall  be  truth  now,  and  no  truth  a  moneth  hence  if  it 

pleafe. 


girt  about  with  truth,  *i 


pleafe.    That  is  truth    with  many,  which   ferves    their  ime- 
reft ,  they  tie   their  judgements  to  their  purfe-ftnngs ,  or  pre- 
ferments,  &c,  and  fuch  men  are  ready  (with  that  weather-cock 
in  Queen  Maries  dayes  )  to  fing  a  new  long  upon  any  change 
in  their  carnal  concernments.     When  love  receives  a  t<uth,it 
is  held  faft  ;  but  if  luft  after  any  worldly  intereft  be  chcaufe 
then   it  may    be   packt   away    again  ,     when   the    turne   is 
ferv'd.     Amman  was  foon  as  licit  of  Tamar  as  ever  he  was  for 
her.    And  have  we  not  in  our  dayes  feen  fome Truths  and  Or- 
dinances kickt  away  with  as  much  fcorne  and  contempt  as  he 
did  her,  and  by  thofe  that  have  been  fufficiently  fond  of  them, 
a  few  yeares  paft ,  but  (to  be  feared)  never  truly  in  love  with 
them  ? 

Secondly,  attend  on  the  Miniftery  of  the  Word.  One  great 
end  of  its  appointment ,  is  to  eftablifh  us  in  the  truth,  Ephef. 
4.  II.    He  gave  fome  Pafiours  and  Teachers  for  the   fer  feeling 
of  the  Saints.     And  mark,   ver.  i_j.    That  we  henceforth,  be  no 
more  children  tojfed  to    and  fro,  &c.  He  that  runnes  from  his 
guide  ,  will  foori  be  out  of  his  way.    It  is  no  fmall  teftimony 
that  God  hath  given  to  his  faithful  Minifters  in  this  prefent  age; 
that  few  leave  them  ,  but  the  leprotie  of  errour  appeares  foon 
on  their  forehead.     And  ia  thy  waiting  on  the  Miniftery  of  the 
Word,  be  fure  thou  attendeft  to  the  doctrinal  part  of  the  Ser- 
mon, as  well  as  to  the  applicatory.     The  former  is  necelTary 
to  rnaketheeafolidChriftian.as  the  other  to  make  thee  a  warm 
Chriftian:  Indeed,  hot  arfe&ions ,  without  folid  knowledge,  are 
but  like  fie  in  the  pan,  when  the  pieee  is  not  charged.    The 
Levites  ,  Neh.  S.  -,8.  we  finde ,  g.we  the  fentence  of  the  Law> 
and  canfed  the  people  to  ttnd&pjfand  it.     Planting  goes  before  wa- 
tering ,  and  fo  fh'ould  teaching  before  exhorting.  And  the  fame 
method   people   (hould    learne   in.,    that   we  are  to  preach 
in. 

Thirdly,  enflave  no-t  thy  judgement  to  any  perfon  or  party. 
There  is  a  fpiritnal  fkreiijhip  hath  undone  many  in  their  judge* 
ments  and  principles  j  Be  not  bound  to  ,  or  for  the  judgement  of 
any.  Weigh  truth  ,  and  tell  g  Id  thou  mayeft  after  thy  father, 
Thou  muft  live  by  thy  own  faith,  not  anothers.  Labour  to  fee 
truth  with  thine  own  eyes.  That  building  ftands  weak,  which 
is  held  up  by  a  (bore ,  or  fome  neighbour  houfe  it  leanes  on, 

G  rather 


a  2  Having  your  loyns 


latherthan  on  any  foundation  of  its  own-,  whenthcfcgo,  that 
will  fall  to  the  ground  alfo-,  let  not  au  hority  from  man,  but 
evidence  from  the  Word  conclude  thy  judgement  •,  that's  but 
a  fhore,  this  a  foundation.  Quote  the  Scripture  rather  than 
men  for  thy  judgement.  Not  fo  faith  fuch  a  learned  holy  man  . 
but  thus  faith  the  holy  Scripture  ,  yet  take  heed  of  bending  this 
direction  too  farre  the  other  way  ,  which  is  done  when  we  con- 
temn the  judgement  of  fuch ,  whofe  piety  aud  learning  might 
command  reverence  :  1  here  is  furea  mean  to  be  found  be.wixt 
defying  men,  and  deifying  them.  'Tis  admiring  of  pe.fons  that 
is  the  traitor  to  truth ,  and  makes  many  cry  Hofann.i  to  errour, 
and  crucifie  to  truth.  Eufeiiw  out  of  f  ofephtu  tells  us  of  Herod 
( that  Hend  whom  we  read,  Alls  1 2.  to  be  eaten  up  of  worms,) 
hi9  coming  upon  the  Theatre  gorgeoufly  clad ,  and  that  while 
he  was  making  an  eloquent  Oration  to  the  people ,  his  filver 
robe  (  which  he  then  wore,)  did  by  the  reflex  of  the  Sun  beams 
(hining  on  it ,  fo  glitter  as  dazled  the  eyes  of  the  fpeftators  j 
And  this  (faith  he)  occafioncd  fome  flatterers  to  cry  OLt,  The 
voice  of  God,  and  not  of  man.  And  truly  the  gliftcring  varnifh 
which  fome  mens  parts  and  Rhethorique  put  upon  their  difcour- 
fes,  does  oft  fo  blinde  the  judgements  of  their  admirers,  that 
they  are  too  prone  to  think  all  divine  they  fpeak^  efpecially 
if  they  be  fnch ,  whom  God  hath  ufed  as  inftruments  for  a- 
ny  good  to  the  fouls  formerly.  O  'tis  hard  then  fas  he  faid) 
amare  hominem  humaniter  ,  to  love  and  efteem  man  as  a  man^o 
reverence  fuch  fo,  as  not  to  be  in  danger  of  loving  their  errors 
alfo.  Augufiine  had  been  a  means  to  convert  Aljpius  from 
one  errour,  and  he  confefTech  this  was  an  occafion ,  why  he 
was  fo  eahly  by  him  led  into  another  errour  ,  no  leffe  than  CMa- 
mchifwe ;  Alj'nu  thought  he  could  not  pervert  him  here,  that 
had  converted  him  •  call  therefore  none  father  on  earth,  defpife 
none,  adore  none. 

Fourthly,  beware  cf  curiefttj.  He  is  half  gone  into  en  our, 
that  vainly  covets  novelties,  and  lilkns  after  every  new  fangle 
opinion.  We  readof  itchingeares,  2  Tim. 4.  3.  Thisitchcom- 
raonlv  ends  in  a  fcab  of  errour.  Tamar  loft  her  chaftity  by 
gadding,  caslitat  mentis  ifi  fides  incorrupt  a.  The  chaftity  of  the 
mind  is  i  s  foundnefTe  in  the  faith.  And  this  they  are  in  dan- 
ger to  lofe,  who  will  go  into  all  companies,  and  lend  aneare 

to 


girt  about  with  truth.  ^g 


to  all  do&rines  that  are  prcacht.  Firft ,  be  a  hearer ,  and  then  a 
difcipleof  them.  Many  indulge  themfelves  fofarre  in  this  curi- 
ofity  of  converting  with  every  led  and  opinion,  that  at  laft  they 
turn  Sceptickj  ,  and  can  fettle  upon  nothing  as  truth.  »AugH- 
ftifie  confefleth  of  himfelf,  that  he  had  gone  through  fo  many 
crrours  and  delufions  of  the  Manichees ,  ( which  he  once  cry'd  up 
for  truths ,  but  afterwards  law  them  abominable  errours )  that 
at  laft  he  was  afraid  of  truth  it  felf ,  which  he  heard  Ambrcfe 
preach.  ZJt  malum  medic  urn  expertw,  etiam  bono  timeat  (e  com- 
mittee. As  (faith  he)  oh?  that  hath  had  experience  of  an  unskilful 
Pbjfitian,  is  at  laft  afraid  to  put  himfelf  in  the  hands  of  Urn  that  is 
skilul.  O  take  heed  that  you  who  will  now  heare  any 
thing  ,  come  -not  in  the  end  that  you  will  believe  no- 
thing. 

Fifthly ,    Humbly   beg  [an  eftablifht   judgement  of  God.     No 
travellors  lofe  their  way  fooner  than  they  who  think  they  know 
it  fo  well,  as  they  need  not  ask  it.    And  no  profefTors  are  in 
danger  of  being  drawn  from  the  truth,  as  they  who  leanc  to 
their  own  understandings,  and  acknowledge  not  God  in  their  way, 
by  confulting  with  him  daily.    Mark  pride   (however  it  may 
feeme  to  foare  aloft   in  profeflion  at  prefent)  and   you  fhall 
finde  it  at  laft  laid  in  the  ditch  of  errour  or  profanenejfe,  this  is  the 
bed  God  hath  made  for  it,  and  it  muft  lye  there  where  God 
hath  appointed  its  lodging.     It  isvcy  neceiTary  fuch  men  fhou/d 
be  left  to  be  bewildred,  and  fo  put  to  (hame  -,  that  when  their 
underftanding  returnes  to  them,  (if  God  hath  fuch  a  mercy  in 
ftore  for  them  )  they  may  with  Nebuchadnezzar,  blejfe  themoft 
high ,  and  acknowledge  him  at  their  return ,  whom  they  negle&ed 
fo  unworthily  at  their  fetting  forth.     O  take  heed  therefore 
of  pride ,    which   will   foone   make   thee,  a   ftranger   at  the 
Throne  of  grace.    Pride  takes  little  delight  in  begging  :  It  turnes 
humble  praying  for  truth  into  a  bu(ie  {tickling  and  ambitious  dif. 
puting  about  truth  ,  there  is  honour  to  be  got  here  ^  and  thus 
many  to  get  victory  ,  have  loft  truth  in  the  heat  of  the  battel. 
Lay  this  deep  in  thy  heart,  That  God,  which  gives  an  eye  to  fee 
truth  ,  muft  give  a  hand  to  hold  it  faft  when  we  have  it.    Qu£ 
habemm  ah  w,  tenere  non  poffumus  fine  eo.  'Bern.     What  we  have 
from  God,  we  cannot  keep  without  God-  Keep  therefore  thy 
acquaintance  with  God,  or  elfc  Troth  will  not  keep  her  acquaint- 

G  2  ance 


a  a  Having  your  loyns 


ance  long  with  thee.  God  is  light,  thou  art  going  into  the  dark, 
as  foon  as  thou  turned  thy  back  upon  him.  Wetland  at  bet- 
ter advantage  to  finde  truth  ,  and  keep  it  alfo ,  when  devoutly 
praying  or  it,  then  fiercely  wrangling  and  contending  about  it  ^ 
difputes  toyle  the  foul,  and  raife  the  duft  of  pa/lion;  prayer 
fweetly  compofeth  theminde,  and  layes  the  palF.ons  which  dif- 
putes draw  forth  5  and  I  am  furea  man  may  fee  further  in  a  ftill 
clear  day ,  than  in  a  windy  and  cloudy.  When  a  perfon  talks 
much ,  and  refts  little  ,  we  have  great  caufe  to  fear  his  braine 
wi41  not  long  hold-  and  truly  when  a  perfon  fhaM  be  much  in 
talking  and  difputing  about  truth  without  a  humble  fpirit  in  pray- 
er to  be  led  into  it;,  God  may  juftly  punifh  that  maris  pride 
with  a  fpiritual  frenzy  in  his  minde,  that  he  fhall  not  know  error 
from  truth. 

Q;  Sixthly,  look  thou  takeft  not  offence  at  the  difference  of  judg- 

ments and  opinions  that  are  found  amongft  the  profefTors  of  Re- 
ligion. It  is  a  flone  which  the  Papift  throws  (in  thefe  divided 
times  efpecially )  before  our  feet.  How  know  you,  faith  he, 
which  is  truth  ,  when  there  arcfo  many  judgements  and  wayes 
amongft  you  ?  fpme  have  fo  (tumbled  at  this ,  that  they  have 
quit  the  truth  they  once  profeft  ,  and  by  theftormeof  dilTenti- 
ons  in  matters  of  Religion,  ha\e  been,  if  not  thrown  upon 
the  rock  of  Atheifme  ,  yet  driven  to  and  fro  in  a  fluctuation  of 
minde,  not  willing  to  cart  anchor  any  where  in  their  judgement 
tilltheyfee  this  tempefi;  over;  and  thofe  that  are  fcattered  from 
one  another  by  divertity  of  judgement,  meet  together  in  an  unity, 
and  joyntconfent  of  perfwafions  in  matters  of  Religion.  A  re- 
folution,  as  one  faith  very  well ,  as  foolilh  and  pernitiousto  the 
Jbul ,  if  not  more  than  it  would  be  to  the  body  ,  if  a  man  (hould 
vow  he  would  not  eat  till  all  the  clocks  in  the  Cityfhould  ftrikc 
twelve  jeft  together  ^  The  latter  might  fooner  be  expected  than 
the  former. 

7^  Seventhly, Reft    not  till  thou  feeleft   the   efficacy  of  every 

truth  thou  holdeft  in  thy  judgement ,  upon  thy  heart.  One  fa- 
culty helps  another.  The  more  clear  truth  is  in  the  underfhnd 
ing,  the  more  abiding  in  the  memory  ^  and  the  moK  opera- 
tive truth  is  on  the  will,  the  more  fixed  in  the  judgment.  Let  a  thing 
be  never  fo  excellent  ,  yet  if  a  man  can  make  little  or  no  ufe 
thereof  ,  it  is  littk  worth  to  him,  and  may  cafily  be  got  from  him. 

Thus 


girt  abmit  with  truth.  a  - 


Thus  many  rare  Libraries  have  been  partrd  with  by  rude  fouldiers 
(in: o  whofe hands  they  have  fallen)  for  little  more  than  their 
covers  we  e  worth  ,  which  would  by  fome  (that  could  have  im- 
proved them)  been  kept  as  the  richeft  prize.     And  verily,  it  fares 
with  truth  according  as  they  arc  into  whofe  hands  it  falls  •  xt 
k  lights  upon  one  that  falls  to  work  with  it,  and  draws  out  the 
ftrcngthand  lvveetneiTcofit,  this  man  holds  it  fo  much  fafterin  his 
judgement,  by  how  much  more  operative  it  is  on  his  heart  ;•  but  if 
it  meets  with  one  that  tindes  no  divine  efficacy  it  hath,  to  hum-   ■» 
ble,  comfort,  fandifie  him  ,  it  may  foon  be  turned  out  of  doors, 
and  put  to  feek  for  a  new  Hoft  ^  luchmay  for  a  time  dance  a- 
bout  that  Hght,  which  awhile  a.ter  themielves  will  blow  ouc. 
When- 1  heare  of  a  man,  that  once' held  original  finne ,  and. 
the  univerfal  pollution  of  mans  nature  to  be  a  truth,  but  now 
denies  ic ^  I  cannot  but    fear,   he  did   either  never  lay  it  fo 
clofe  his  heart ,  as  to  abaie  and  humble  him  kindly  for  it  •  or  that 
he  grew  weary  of  the  work,  andbyfloth,  and  negligence  loft  the 
efficacy  of  that  truth  in  his  heart ,  befo  e  he  loft  the  truth  it 
felf  in  his  judgement.    I  might  inftance  in  many  other  particu- 
lars, wherein  profclTors  in  thefe  rowling  times  have  llid  from 
their  old  principles.     Singing  of  Pfalmes  hzih  been  a  dutyown'd 
and  pra&ifed   by  many,  who  now  have  laid  it  down  s  and  it 
were  a  queftion  worth  the  asking  of  them ,  whether  formerly 
they  never  enjoyed  fweet  communion  with  God  in   that  duty 
as  well  as  in  others?  whether  their  hearts  did  never  dance  and 
leap  up  to  God  with  heavenly  affections ,  while  they  fing  with 
their  lips  ?  And  verily  I  (hould  think  it  ftrange  to  hear  a  god- 
ly perfon  deny  this.     Well,  if  ever  thou  didft  (Chriftian)  meet  ' 
with  God  at  this  door  of  the  T^r**^  (for  I  cannot  yet  think 
it  other- )  let  me  ask  thee  again,  whether  thy  heart  did  not 
grow,  common,  cold,  and  formal  in  the  duty  before  thou  durft  caft 
off  the  duty?   and  if  Co  (which  I  am  very  ready  to  believe  .•  )  I 
defire  fuch  in  the  fear  o»  Gcd  to    confider  thefe  foure  Que-  x  I°h.*i*3j*4 
ftions. 

Firft  ,  whether  they  may  not  fcare  that  they  are  in  an  errourj  2i 

and  that  this  darknefTe  is  befallen  their  judgements  as  a  punifh- 
ment  for  their  negligence  and  flightnefle  of  fpirit  in  perform- 
ing the  doty  when  they  did  not  queftion  the  iawfulnefle  of 
it.? 

Se* 


Having  your  loyns 


2.  Secondly,whether  it  were  not  better  they  labourd  to  recover  the 

firft  livelineflc  of  their  affections  in  the  duty  (  which  would  foone 
bring  them  again  acquainted  with  that  fweetnefle  and  joy  they  of 
old  found  in  it;  than  to  caft  it  off,  upon  fo  weak  evidence  aj  they 
who  can  fay  moft,  bring  in  againft  it  > 

Thirdly,  whether  fuch  as  negled  one  duty,  arc  likely  to  thrive 
by  any  other,  and  keep  up  the  favour  of  them  frefh  in  their 
fouls .? 

4<  Fourthly ,  whether,  if  God  (hould  fuffer  them  decline  in  their 

affedions  to  any  other  ordinance ,  (  which  he  forbid  if  it  be  his 
will  ^  )  it  were  not  as  cafie  for  Satan  to  gather  together  argu- 
ments enough  to  make  them  fcruple ,  and  in  time  caft  off  that  al- 
to as  well  as  this  I  And  that  there  is  reafon  for  fuch  a  queftion  , 
thefe  times  will  tell  us  •,  wherein  every  Ordinance  hath  had  its 
turne ,  to  be  queftioned ,  yea ,  difowncd ,  fome  by  one ,  fome 
by  another  J  one  will  not  ring  -,  another  will  not  have  his  childe 
baptized  ^  a  third  will  not  have  any  water  baptifm  ,  nor  Supper 
neither-,  a  fourth  bungs  up  hisearetoo  from  all  hearing  of  the 
Word ,  and  would  have  us  exped  an  immediate  teaching.  Thus 
when  once  Ordinances  and  Truths  become  dead  to  us  through 
our  mifcarriage  under  them,  we  can  be  willing  (  how  beautiful 
foever  they  were  once  in  our  eye  )  yea ,  call  to  have  them  buried 
out  of  our  fight.  Thefe  things  fadly  laid  to  heart,  will  give  you 
reafon  to  think  ,  though  this  direction  be  placed  laft  in  order  of 
my  difcourfe ,  yet  it  (houldJ  not  finde  neither  the  laft  nor  leaft 
place  (among  all  the  other  named  )  in  your  Chriftian  care  and 
practice. 


CHAP. 


girt  about  with  truth*  aj 


CHAP.      IV, 

Wherein  is  contain  d  the  fecond  way  of  having  our 
loyns  girt  with  truth  ,  viz,,  foasto  ma\e  a  free 
and bold profejpon  of  it,  and  why  this  is  our  duty\ 
andafhort  Exhortation  to  it. 

THe  fecond  way  that  truth  is  aflaultcd  ,  is  by  force  and  vio- 
lence the  Devil  pieceth  the  foxes  skin  of  feducers,  with  the 
lions  skin  of  perfccutors.  The  bloodieft  tragedies  in  the  world, 
have  been  a&ed  on  the  ftageof  the  Church;  and  the  moft  inhu- 
mane Maflacres and  butcheries  committed  on  the  harmlefle  (heep 
of  Chnit.  Thefirft  man  that  was  flaine  in  the  world  was  a  Saint, 
and  he  for  Religion.  And  as  Luther  foidtCaitt  will  kill  Abel  un- 
to the  end  of  the  world.  The  fire  of  perfecution  can  never  go 
out  quite  ,  fo  long  as  there  remains  a  fpark  of  hatred  in  the 
wickeds  bofome  on  earth ,  or  a  Devil  in  hell  to  blow  it  up. 
Therefore  there  is  a  fecond  way  of  having  truth  girt  about 
the  Chriftians  loyns,  as  necefTary  as  the  other ;  and  that  is  in 
the  profeilion  of  it.  Many  that  could  never  be  beaten  from 
the  truth  by  dint  of  argument ,  have  been  forced  from  it  by 
fire  of  perfecution.  'Tis  not  an  Orthodox  Judgement  will 
enable  a  man  to  fuffer  for  the  truth  at  the  ftake  ^  Than  that 
poor  Smith  in  our  Engl  fb  Martyrology ,  would  not  havefent 
fuch  a  daftard-like  anfwer  to  his  friend,  ready  to  fuffer  for  that 
truth  ,  which  he  himfeK  had  been  a  means  to  inftrud  him  in  ;  that 
indeed  ir  was  the  truth ,  but  he  could  not  bu'n.  Truth  in  the 
head  without  holy  courage,  makes  a  man  ,  likethe  fword-hfh, 
which  Plutarch  faith  ,  hath  p«.xu?j,v  aW  «  ka^'uv,  afwordin 

the 


Having  your  loyns 


the  head ,  but  no  heart  to  ufe  it.  Then  a  perfon  becomes  un- 
conquerable ,  when  from  heaven  he  is  endued  with  a  holy  bold- 
neflc ,  to  draw  forth  the  fword  of  the  Spirit ,  and  own  the  naked 
truth  ,  by  a  free  profeflion  of  it  in  the  face  of  death  and  dan- 
ger.  This,  this  is  to  have  our  loynes  girt  about  with  truth.  So 
that  the  Note  from  this  fecond  kinde  of  girding  with  Truth , 
is, 
Doflr  D°tt-  1 ^at  lt  ls  c^e  faints  duty ,  and  (hould  be  their  care  , 

not  ontly  to  get  aneftabl  (ht  judgement  in  the  truth  ,  but  alfo 
to  maintain  a  ftedfaft  profellion  of  the  truth.     This  theApoftlc 
prcfleth,  Heb.  lO.  23.    Let  us  hold  faft  the  profcjfisn  of  our  faith 
without  wavering.     Hefpeaksitin  oppolition  to  thole,  who  in 
thofe  hazardous  times  declined  the  Allemblies  of  the  Saints,  for 
fear  of  periccution  ;  he  calls  it  a  waverings  and  he  that  ftaggers, 
is  next  door  to  Apoftafie.     We  muft  not  fpread  our  failes  of 
profeflion  inacalme,  and  firlethemup  when  the  winde  rifeth. 
1Jer gamut  is  commended  ,  'K^ev,  2.  13.  for  her  bold  profeflion,  / 
know  thy  works,  and  where  thou  dwetiefl ,  even  where  Satan  hath 
■his  throne  ,  and  thou  holdeft  faft  my  Name,  and  haft  not  denied  my 
faith ,  even  in  thvfe  dayes  wherein  Antypat  was  my  faithful  Mar- 
tyr ,  who  wm  Jlaine  among  you.     It  was  a  place  where  Satan  fate 
intheMagiftratesfeat ,  where  it  was  grand?  fatU  piaculum  mor- 
tem mereri ,  Chriftianum  ejfe  •,  matter  enough  to  deferve  death 
to  be  a  Chriftian  •,  yea ,  fome  blood  now  was  (hed  before  their 
eyes ,  and  even  in  thofe  dayes  they  denied  not  the  truth.  This 
God  took  kindly.     f  Tis  a  ftrid:  charge  Paul  gives  Timothy , 
•I  Efift,  6. 1 1 .    But  thou  G  man  of  God,  flee  thefe  things,  and  fel- 
low after  righteoufnejfe ,  ore.     while   others    arc    proling    for 
the  world ,  lay  about  thee  for  fpiritual  riches ,  purlue  this  with 
as  hot  a  chafe  as  they  do  their  temporal.     But,  what  if  this 
trade  cannot  be  peaceably   driven  ?  muft  (hop-windows  then 
be  fhut  up ,   profeflion  laid  alide  ?   and   he  ftay  to  be  religi- 
ous, till  more  favourable  times  come  about?  No  fuch  matter, 
-  .1  \    He  bids  him  fght  t're  good  fight  of  faith  ■  do  not  balely 
•quit  thy  profeflion ,  but  lay  life   and  ail  to  ftke  co  keep  this; 
and  that  he  might  engage  him  ,  beyond  a  retreat,  fee  ver.  13.  i 
charge  thee  in  the  fight  of  God ,  who  quickentth  all  things  j  and 
Jefm  thrift  ,  who  be f  re  Pontius  Pilate  wit  ne fed  a  gooa  tonfejfien^ 
that  thou  keep  this  Commandment ;  as  if  he  had  faid  ,  if  ever  you 

will 


girt  about  with  truth.  §y 

will  fee  the  face  of  Chrift  with  comfort  at  the  refurreftion  (who 
chofe  to  tofe  his  life,  rather  than  deny  or  difTemble  the  truth ) 
ftand  to  it,  and  flinch  not  from  your  colours.  Auguftine  in  his 
confejf.  lib.  8.  cap.  2.  hath  a  notable  ftory  of  one  Vittorintts 
(famous  in  Rome  for  Rlutorique  which  he  taught  the  Sent- 
tonrs)  This  man  in  his  old  age  was  converted  to  Chriftianity, 
and  came  to  Swflicianus  f  one  eminent  at  that  time  for  his  piety) 
whifpering  in  his  eares  foftly  theie  words,  Ego  [urn  Chriftianus, 
1  am  a  Christian;  But  this  holy  man  anfwered  ,  AW  credo,  nee 
Aeptitabo  te  inter  Cbriftianos  nife  in  Ecclefia  £hrifti  te  t/idero.  I 
will  not  belkve  it  er  count  thee  (o,  till  I  fee  thee  among  the  £hri- 
ftians  in  the  Churchy  at  which  he  laughed,  faying,  ergone  pari- 
etes  faciunt  £hriftiamw  ?  do  then  thofe  walls  make  a  Chriftian? 
cannot  I  be  fuch,  <xceptl  openly  profefleit,  and  let  the  world 
know  the  fd-e.?  This  he  faidfor  fear,  being  yet  but  a  young 
Convert,  though  an  old  man  ^  But  awhile  after  (when  he  was 
more  confirmed  in  the  faith,  andferiouflyconfidered,  thacif  he 
(hould  continue  thus  aftiamed  of  Chrift  ,  he  would  be  afliamed  - 
of  him ,  when  he  cometh  in  the  glory  of  his  Father,  with  the  ho- 
ly Angels)  he  chang'd  his  note,  and  came  to  Simplicianusfoying, 
Eamw  in  Ecclefiam  ,  Chrift ianu*  volo  fieri.  Let  m  go  to  the 
Church  ,  /  will  now  in  earneft  be  aChriftian  >,  And  the. e  though 
a  private  profeffionof  his  faith,  might  have  been  accepted, chofe 
to  do  it  openly  ,  faying,  that  he  had  ope:  ly  profeflfed  Rhetorick, 
which  was  not  a  matter  of  falvation,  andfliould  he  be  afraid  to 
own  the  word  of  God  in  the  Congregation  of  the  faithful  f  God 
requires  both  the  Religion  of  the  hearc,ai.d  mouth,  Rem  io.  10. 
With  the  heart  man  btlieveth  unta  rtghteoiffn?ffi^  and  with  the  mouth 
confejficn  is  made  unto  [ulvation .  Conf:  ilion  of  the  mouth  without 
faith  in  the  heart,  is  grofle  hypocrific  ;  to  pr<  tend  faith  without 
piofeffion  of  the  mouth,  is  both  hypocrific  and  co^vardife. 

Reaf.  I  fliall  give  but  one  Reafqn  of  the  point  and  that  is  'Kf*f< 
taken  from  the  great  truft  which  God  puts  in  h  s  *>a,..  6  con- 
cerning his  truth  ;  this  is  the  great  depvfttun  which  God  delivrrs 
to  his  Saints  with  a  ftricT^  and  folemn  charge  to  keepaoan.it  all 
that  undermine  or  oppofe  it.  Some  rung*  fee  truft  God  with, 
fome  things  God  truftsuswith.  The  g;ca<-  thi  ,g  which  we  puc 
into  Gods  hand  to  be  keptfor  us,i:  ourlou  .  z  T lot  i.r  2.  He 
is  able  to  keep  that  which  J  have  committed  unts  him  again  ft  that 

H  day. 


ijo  Having  your  loyns 


day.     That  which  God  trufls  us  chiefly  with,  is  his  truth.    It  is 
therefore  faid  to  be  delivered  to  them ,  as  a  charge  of  mony  to  a 
friend  ,  whom  we  confide  in,  fude  3.  contend  f*r  the  faith  which 
was  wee  delivered  to  the  Saints.     To  them  (faith  the  Apoftle  fpeaJc- 
ingof  the  Jews  )  were  committed  the  Gr tides  of God,  Rom.  3.2. 
They  were  concredited  with  that  heavenly  rreafure.  So  Paul  ex- 
Lorts  Timothy,  Ep.l.chap.  1.  to  hold  fa ft  the  feyme  of  found  Vfords, 
and  this  ver.  14.  he  calls,  the  good  thing  which  was  committed  to 
him.    If  he  that  is  intruded  wkh  the  keeping  of  a  Kings  Crown 
and  Jewels ,  ought  to  look  carefully  to  his  charge,  that  none  be 
left  ,  or  ftollen^  much  more  the  Chriftian  that  hath  in  hs  charge 
Gods  crown  and  treafurc.    Rob  God  of  his  truth ,  and  what 
hathheleft?  The  word  of  truth  is  that  tcftimony  ,  which  the 
great  God  gives  of  himfelf  to  man.    The  faints  are  his  chofen 
Lfav  8?  o      wicneiles  above  others ,  whom  he  calls  forth  to  vouch  his  truth, 
Hcb.  u.  1.      bya  free  and  holy  profeflion  thereof  before  men,  fcuird  there- 
Rev,  11.  *.      fore  the  witneflesof  God.)  He  that  maintains  any  errourfrom 
the  Word,  bears  falfe  witnelTe  againft  God.    He  that  for  fear 
or  (hame  deferts  the  truth ,  or  diflembles  his  profeflion ,  he 
denies  God  his  teftimony  •   and  who  can  exprelTe  what  a  bloo- 
dy (in  this  is ,  and  to  what  a  high  contempt  of  God  it  amounts  ? 
It  were  a  horrid  crime  though  but  in  a  mans  cafe     As  when  one  is 
faifely  accufed  inaCourt^olpeakfomething  that  might  clear  the 
innocency  of  the  man,  and  yet  fhould  fuffer  him  to  be  condemned, 
rather  than  hazard  himfelf  a  little  by  fpeaking  the  truth  in  open 
Court.  0,what  then  is  his  fin,  that  when  God  himfelf  in  his  truth, 
ftands  at  forry  mans  bar ,  dares  not  freak  for-God  when  cal/d 
in  to  declare  himfelf,  but  lets  truth  futfer  by  an  un  juft  fentence 
that  himtelf  may  not  at  mans    hands   for   bearing   witnelTe 
to  it? 
Ohutt.  Ob\tU.  But  this  may  feeme  too  beavie  a  burden  to  lay  on  the 

Chriftians  back  •,  muftwelayall  at  ft  a  ke,  and  hazard  all  that  is 
dear  to  .us,  rather  than  deny,  ordiflTembleour  profeflion  of  the 
truth  ?  Sure  Chrift  will  have  but  few  followers,  if  he  holds  hisfer- 
vants  to  fuch  hard  terms. 
Anjrv.  *sfnfw.  Indeed,  'tis  hard  to  flefh  and  bloodj  one  of  the  high- 

eft  ftiles  to  be  gone  over  in  our  way  to  heaven  ;  a  carnal  heart 
cannot  hear  this,but  he  is  offended  prelently .Therefore  fuch  as  are 
Maun,  13.  *T.j0tj,  tolofe  heaven,  and  yet  unwilling  to  venture  thus  much  for  it, 

have 


girt  about  with  truth.  5 1 


have  fet  their  wits  a  work  to  find  out  an  eafier  way  thither.Hence 
thofc  Heretiques  of  old,  Prifcilliamfis^  and  others  (whofechiefe  /£ 

Religion  was  to  fave  their  own  skin)  made  little  of  outward  pro- 
feflion.  They  thought  they  might  fay ,  and  unfay  i  fwear  ,  and 
forfwear  (according  to  their  wretched  principle,  Jnro,  perjuro, 
mentem  injuratam  gero  J  fo  in  their  heart  they  did  but  cleave  to 
the  truth.  Q  what  fools  were  the  Prophets^  Apoftles^  and  other 
holy  Martyrs,  that  have  feai'd  to  the  truth  with  their  blood,  if 
there  might  have  been  fuch  a  faire  way  of  efcaping  the  ftorme 
of  perfecution  ?  Bold  men  ,  that  to  fave  a  little  trouble  from 
man,  for  truths  fake,  durft  invent  fuch  deteftableblafphemiesa- 
gaintt  the  truth  -  yea-,  deface  thofe  characters,  which  nature  it  felf 
engraves  upon  the  confeience.  The  fame  window  that  let  in  the 
light  of  a  Deity,  would  with  it  let  in  this  alio ,  that  we  fhould 
walk  in  the  name  of  this  God  j  the  very  Heathen  know  this. 
All  people  trill  tvalk.,  every  one  in  the  Name  of  his  God ,  Micah  4. 
Socrates  to  blood  held  ,  there  was  but  one  God ;  and  in  his 
Apology  for  his  life  ,  faid ,  //  they  would  give  him  his  life,  on  J1, 

condition  to  keep  this  truth  to  himfelf ,  and  not  teach  it  toothers  ,  he 
won Id  not  accept  it  j  Behold  here  the  powerful  workings  of  a  na- 
tural confcience/havenoc  they  rhen  improved  the  knowfedg  of  the 
Scripture  well,  in  the  mean  time,  that  are  io  far  out- (hot  from 
natures  weak  bow  ?  Religion  would  foone  vanifh  into  an  empty 
nothing,  if  for  fear  of  every  one  we  meet,  we  rnuft  (like  run-away  , 
fouldiers)  pluck  of  our  colours,  and  put  our  profclfion  as 
it  were  in  our  pockets,  left  we  Should  be  known  to  whom  we  be- 
long. What  do^h  God  require  by  a  free  profeillon  of  his  truth, 
more  than  a  matter  doth  or  his  fervant ,  when  he  bids  him  take 
his  livery  and  follow  him  in  theftreets  ?  Or  when  a  Prince  calls 
his  fubje&s  into  the  field,  to  declare  their  loyalty,  by  owning 
his  quarrel  againft  an  invading  enemy?  And  is  it  reafonable, 
what  man  requires  of  thefe,  and  onelyhard  from  Gods  hands?  • 
nay  'tis  not  more ,  nor  fo  much  as  we  delire  of  God  for  our 
felves.  Who  would  not  have  God  make  profeflion  of  his  love 
to  us,  and  bear  witnelTe  for  us  againft  Satan  and  our  ownfinnes, 
at  that  great  day  when  men  and  Angels  fhall  be  fpe&ators .? 
And  fhall  we  exped  that  from  God ,  which  he  owes  us  by  no 
Law,  but  of  his  own  free  promife,  and  deny  him  that  which 
we  are  under  Co  many  bonds  to  pay  ?  If  it  be  but  inforacafHi- 

H  z  cYion 


<-  2  Having  your  loyns 


frion  (  while  we  are  here  )  how  difconfolate  are  we ,    if  Gods 
facebe  a  little  overcaft  ,  and  he  doth  not  own  us  inourdiftrcfle? 
And    is  there  no  kindnefTeto  be  (hewn  to  that  God  that  knows 
your  foul  in  adverfity  ?  When  his  truth  is  in  an  agony  ,  may  not 
Chrift  look,    that  all  his  friends  (hould  fit  up  and  watch  with 
it }    O  /  it  wereftiame  with  a  witnefTe,  that  any  fuch  effeminate 
delicacy  {hould  be  found  among  Chrifts  fervants,  that  they  can- 
not bieak  a  little  of  their  worldly  reft,  and  enjoyments  to  at- 
tend on  him  and  his  truth. 
Vje.  Let  this  ftir  us  up  to  get  the  girdle  of  truth  clofe  girt 
Vfe.      to  us ,  thar   we  may  be  able  to  hold  faft   the  profeflion  ofit, 
even  in  the  face   of  death  and  danger,    and  not  be  offend- 
ed when  persecution  arife;h.     BlefTed  be  God,  'tis  not  yet  come 
to  that,  we  have  the  truth  at  a  cheaper  rate^  but  how  f)©n  the 
market  may  rife  we  know  not.     Truth  is   not  alwayes  to  be  had 
at  tht   fame  price.     Buy    it  we  muft  at  any,  but  fell  it  upon 
no  termes.    And  let  me  tell  you,  There  hath,  is,  and  willbea 
fpirit  of  perfecution   in  the  hearts  of  the  wicked,    to  the  end 
of  the  world-,  and  as  Satan  was  considering  j2^,    before  he 
laid  his  foule  hands  on  him,  fo  now  perfecution  is  working   in 
the  fpirits  of  the  ungodly  ;    There    are  Engines  of  death  conti- 
nually preparing  in  the  thoughts    and  delires  of  Satan     and 
his  inftruments  againft  the  fincere  profefTours  of  the  trnth  •  'tis 
already  refolv'd  upon  what  they  would  do,  might   power  be  gi- 
ven, and  opportunity  to  put  their    malice  in  execution;  yea, 
we  are  half-way  already  towards  a  perfecution     Satan  comes 
firft  with    a  fpirit  of  errour,  and  then  of  perfecution  •  lie  firft 
corrupts  men  minds  with  errom,  and  then  enragetb  their  hearts 
with   wrath  agair.ft   the   ProfefTors  of  truth.    ]t   isimpoll.ble 
that  errour  being  a  brat  of  hell,  (hould  be  peaceable,  it  would 
not  then  be  like  its  father.     That  which  is  from  beneath  can  nei- 
ther be  pure,  nor  peaceable.    And  how  Farre  God   hath  fuffer- 
ed  this  fulphureous  fpirit  of  error  to  prevaile,  is   fo  notorious, 
that  no  apology  is  broad  enough  to  cover  thenakedneffe  of  thefe 
unhappy  times.    It  is  therefore  high  time   to  have  our  girdle  of 
truth  on,  yea,  clofe  girt  about  us  in  the  profefiion  of  it.    Not 
every   one  that  now  applauds   truth  will  follow  it,  when  once 
it  comes  to  (hew  them   the  way  to  prifon  ^  Not  every  one   that 
prcacheth  for  it,  or  difputes  for  it,  will  fufFer  for  it.    Argu- 
ments 


girt  about  with  truth* 


ments  a  e  harmlefTe  things ,  blunt  weapons,  they  fetch  no 
blood;  but  when  we  fuffer,  then  we  are  called  to  try  it  with 
truths  enemies  at  (harps.  This  requires  fomething  more  than 
a  nimble  tongue,  a  (harp  wit.and  a  Logical  head  :  Where  then  will 
be  the  wife,  the  di'pucer,the  men  of  parts  and  gifts?  alas,  they  will 
(like  cowardly  fouldiers)  be  wanting  in  the  fight,  though 
they  could  be  as  forward  as  the  beft  at  a  mufter,  or  training 
when  no  enemy  was  in  the  field;  when  to  appearefor  truth 
was  rather  a  muter  of  gaine  or  applaufe,  than  lofle  and  hazard, 
No,  Godhachchofen  the  fooli(h  to  confound  the  wife  in  this 
piece  of  fervice;  the  humble  Chriftian  by  his  faith,  pati- 
ence, and  love  to  the  truth,  tofhame  men  of  high  parts,  and 
no  grace. 


chap.    v. 

A  direStion  or  two  for  the  girding  of  truth  clofe  to 
m  in  the  prof effion  of  it. 


53 


BUt  how  may  a  foul  get  to  be  thus  girt  with  truth  in  th€  pro- 
feflion  of  it  ? 
Firft,  labour  to  getanheait  enflamedwith  afincere  love  to 
the  truth;  this  is  only  able  to  match  the  enemies  of  truth.  The 
worft  they  cafrdo  is  bonds  or  death,  and  love  is  ftronger  then 
death ,  it  kills  the  very  heart  of  death  it  fel^  it  makes  all  cafie. 
Commandments  arc  not  grievous  to  love,  nor  .doth  it  complain 
offufterings.  With  what  a  light  heart  did  Jacob,  for  the  love 
of  Rachel  endure  the  heat  of  the  day ,  and  cold  of  the  night  > 
'lisventerotis;  Jonathan  threw  a  Kingdome  at  his  heels ,  and 
conHi&ed  wiih  ttu-  anger  of  an  enraged  father,  for  *Davids  fake ; 
love  never  thinks  it  felf  a  lofer ,  fo  long  as  it  keep  its  beloved , 
yea,  'tis  ambitious  of  any  hazardous  enterprize,  whereby  it  may. 

H3  fa- 


t>A  Having  your  loyns 


facrifice  it  felf  in  the  fervice  of  its  beloved,  as  we  fee  in  'David, 
who  put  his  life  in  his  hands  for  Michal^  how  much  more 
when  out  love  is  pitcht  upon  fo  tranfcendent  an  objed  as 
Chrift  and  his  truth  !  Alas ,  they  are  but  faint  fpirits ,  which 
are  breath*  d  from  a  creature,  weak  beams  that  are  (hot from 
fuch  forry  beauties-  If  thefc  lay  their  lovers  under  fuch  a  Law, 
that  they  cannot  but  obey,  though  with  the  greateft  peril  and 
hazard  ^  what  conftraint  then  mull  a  foul  ravifht  with  the 
love  of  Chrift  be  under  ?  This  has  made  the  Saints  leap  out  of 
their  eftates,  relations-,  yea,  out  of  their  bodies  with  joy, 
counting  it  not  their  loffe  to  part  with  them  ,  but  to  keep  them 
with  the  leaft  prejudice  to  the  truth.  Rev.  12  1 1.  it's  fa-.d  the/ e, 
Ihey  loved  not  their  live •*  unto  the  death.  Mark,noc  to  the  lofTe 
of  fome  of  their  comforts  of  their  lives ,  but  to  death  •  life  it 
felf  they  counted  an  enemy,  when  it  would  part  them  and  truth. 
As  a  man  doth  not  love  his  arme,  or  leg  when  it  hazards  the 
reft ,  but  bids,  cut  it  off.  Cannot  weliv^  (fay  thefc  noble  fpirits) 
but  to  the  clouding  of  truth,  and  calling  our  love  to  it  and 
Chrift  into  queftion  >  welcome  then  the  wci.tt  of  deaths. 
This  kept  up  Davids  courage,  when  his  life  wis  laid  for,  Pfal. 
119.  95.  The  wicked  have  waited  for  me  to  deftroy  me^hut  I  will 
confder  thy  tejlintonies.  A  carnal  heart  would  have  considered 
hiseftate,  wife,  and  .children  ,  01  at  leaft  his  Jife  now  in  danger; 
but  Davids  heart  was  on  a  better  lubjed ,  he  confldered  the 
reftimonies  of  God  ,  and  fo  much  fweetnefle  pours  in  upon  his 
foul ,  while  he  is  rowling  them  in  his  meditation,  that  he  cannot 
hold.  0  how  1  L-je  thy  Law^vtt.  97.  This  made  him  fct  light 
by  all  the  troubles  he  met  with  for  his  cleaving  to  the  truth.  Jt 
is  a  great  myftery  to  the  world,  that  men  for  an  opinion  (as  they 
call  it)  fhould  run  fuch  defper.ite  hazard.  Therefore  Paul 
was  thought  by  his  Judge,  to  be  out  of  his  wits  And  that  que- 
ftion which  Piiite  a<kt  Chrift ,  feems  rather  to  be  flighcingly, 
than  ferioufly  fpoketi,  foht  18.  Our  Saviour  had  told  bim, 
vcr.  7.  that  the  end  why  he  was  bcrn,  and  came  into  the  world, 
was  that  he  fhould  hare  witnejfe  to  the  truth.  Then  PiLiteyvir. 
38.  asks  Chrift,  what  U  truth}  and  prefently  flings  away ,  as  if 
he  had  faid,  Is  this  now  a  time  to  think  of  truth  ,  when  thy 
life  is  in  danger  >  What  is  truth ,  that  thou  fhouldft  venture 
fo  much  for  it?  But  a  gracious  foul  may  better  ask  in  a  holy 

fcorn. 


girt  about  with  truth.  55 

■  — 1  ■  — —     . 

fcorne ,  What  are  riches  and  honours ,  what  the  fading  plea- 
fares  of  this  cheating  world ;  yea  ,  what  is  life  it  felf,  that  a- 
ny ,  or  all  thefe  fhould  be  fet  in  oppofition  to  truth  ?  O  Sirs, 
look  what  has  your  love ,  that  will  command  purfe ,,  credit, 
life  and  all.  aAmor  mew  pondm  moan,  every  man  goes  where 
his  love  carries  h  m.  If  the  world  has  your  love ,  on  it  you 
will  fpend  your  lives;  if  truth  has  your  hearts-,  you  will  catch 
ihe  blow  that  is  made  at  it  in  your  own  breafts ,  rather  than 
let  it  fall  on  it.  Only  be  careful  that  your  love  to  truth  be  fin- 
cere,  or  elfe  it  will  leave  you  at  the  prifon-door,  and  make 
you  part  with  truth ,  when  you  fhould  moft  appear  for  it. 
"1  hree  forts  of  prerenders  to  truth,  their  love  is  not  like  to  endure 
the  fiery  trial. 

Firft,  fuch  as  embrace  truth  for  carnal  advantage.  Some-  1. 
times  truth  payes  well  for  her  boord  in  the  worlds  own  coyne^ 
and  fo  long  every  one  will  invite  her  to  his  houfe.  Thefe  do 
not  love  truth,  but  the  jewel  at  her  eare.  Many  were  obferv'd 
in  Hen.  8.  his  time  to  be  very  zealous  againft  Abbyes,  that 
lov'd  their  lands  more  than  they  hated  their  idolatry.  Truth 
findes  few  that  love  her  gratis.  And  thofe  few  only  will  fuf- 
fer  with  truth  and  for  it;  as  for  the  other,  when  the  world- 
ly dowry  that  truth  brought,  be  once  fpent ,  you  will  finde 
they  are  weary  of  their  match.  This  kitchin  fire  bums  no  lon- 
ger than  fuch  grofle  fewel  of  profit,  credit,  and  the  like  does  feed 
it.  If  you  cannot  love  naked  truth,  you  will  not  fadge  to  go 
naked  for  truth.  If  you  cannot  love  difgraced  truth,  you  will  not 
endure  to  be  difgraced  for  truth;  and  what  ufage  truth  findes,  that 
her  followers  mult  <?xpe&. 

Secondly ,  fuch  who  commend  truth  ,  and  cry  it  up  highly,  Zt 
but  if  you  mark  them  ,  they  do  but  complement  with  it ,  all 
this  while  they  keep  at  a  diftance ,  and  do  not  fuffer  truth  to 
come  within  them,  fo  as  to  give  Law  unto  them.  Like  one  that 
entcrtaines  a  fuitor ,  fpeaks  well  of  him ,  holds  difcourfe  with 
him,  but  will  not  hear  of  marrying  him.  It  is  one  thing  ^aw, 
another  xpythnv-  'BuchtlcerHs  would  oft  fay ,  mttlti  ofculantur 
C  hriftum  ,  fauci  vero  amant  ±  Ataxy  kijfe  X  brift  ,  but  few  love 
him.  True  love  to  Chrift  is  conjugal  j  when  a  foul  delivers  up 
ic  felf  from  an  inward  liking  it  hath  to  Chrift  as  to  her  husband, 
to  be  ruled  by  his  Spirit,  and  ordered  by  his  Word  of  truth, 

Here. 


c&  Having  your  loyns 


Here  is  a  foul  loves  Chrift  and  his  truth  ^  but  where  truth 
has  no  command,  and  bears  no  rule,  there  dwell  no  love  to 
tiuth  in  that  heart.  She  that  is  not  obedient,  cannot  be  a  lo- 
ving wife,  becaufe  love  would  conftrain  her  to  be  i'o,  and  fo  would 
love  in  the  foul  enforce  obedience  to  the  truth  it  loves.  Nay  ,  he 
that  doth  not  obey  truth,  is  fo  farre  from  loving  it,  that  he  is 
afraid  of  truth  -y  and  he  that  is  flavifhly  afraid  or  truth ,  will 
fooner  prove  a  perfecutor  of  truth,  than  a  fuflferer  for  truth.  So 
true  is  that  of  iiierome,  quern  metuit  quit  odit^quemtdit perijje 
cuftt  j  whom  we  fear  ,  we  hate  ^  whom  we  hate ,  we  wifti  they 
weredeftroyed.  Saul  fcar'd£><*W,  and  that  made  him  more 
induftrioufly  feek  his  ruine.  Herod  fear'd  John  ,  and  that  coft 
him  his  life,  flavifh  fear  mak;s  the  naughty  heart  imprifon 
truth  in  his  confeience,  becaufe,  if  that  had  its  liberty  and  au- 
thority in  the  foul,  it  would  imprifon ,  yea,  execute  every  luft 
that  now  rules  the  roft^  and  he  that  imprifons  truth  in  his  own 
bofome ,  will  hardly  lie  in  prifon  himfelf  as  a  witnefle  for 
truth. 

Thirdly,  fuch  as  have  no  zeal  againft  truths  enemies  Love 
goes  ever  arm'd  with  zeal  j  this  is  her  dagger  (he  draws  againft 
all  the  oppofers  of  Truth.  <g*i  non  zelat ,  non  arnat-^  Ke  that 
is  not  zealous,  doth  not  love.  Now  right  zeal  ads  (like  fire  J 
aduitiwum  fuifoffe,  to  itsutmoft  power  (^et  ever  keeping  its 
place  and  fphere.)  Jf  it  be  confined  to  the  breaft  of  a  private 
Chriftian,  whence  it  may  not  flame  forth  in  pumftiing  i  ruths 
enemies,  thenitlurnes  inwardly  the  more  ffor  being  pent  up) 
and  pre\s  (like  a  fire  in  his  bones)  upon  the  Chriitians  ow.i 
fpirits,  confumingthem^ea,eatinghimup  for  grief  to  &e  Truth 
trod  under  ftot  of  errour  or  profaneneife ,  and  he  not  able  to 
help  it  up.  *Tis  no  joy  to  a  zealous  lover  to  out-live  his  be- 
loved ;,  fuch  there  have  been ,  who  could  have  chofe  rather  to 
have  leapt  into  their  friends  grave  ,  and  laine  down  with  ilicm 
in  the  dull  ,  than  here  patfe  a  difconlblate  life  without  them. 
Let  m  go  and  die  rvith  him^in^'Thomas  when  Chrift  told  them 
Lawrns  was  dead  -^  and  1  am  fure  zealous  lovers  of  Truth  count 
it  as  melarcholy  living  in  evil  times,  when  that  is  fallen  in  the 
ftreets.  The  news  of  the  tArk*  taking  frighted  good  Elie's 
foul  out  of  his  body,-,  and  this  may  charitably  be  thought  to  have 
given  life  to  Elijahs  vtifti ,  yea  folemn  prayer  for  death,  i  King. 

19.4. 


girt  about  with  truth.  57 

19.  4.  It.  is  enough  ,  t#\e  away  mj  life-,  the  holy  rranlawhow 
things  wenc  among  the  great  ones  of  thofe  wicked  times^Idb'i 
laters  they  werecoruted,  and  the  faithful  fervants  of  God  cart- 
ed (as  1  may  fo  fay)yea  ki lied ^and  now  this  zealous  Prophet  thinks 
it  a  good  time  10  leave  the  world  in,  rather  than  I  ve  in 
torment  any  longer,  to  fee  the  Name,  Truth  ,  and  fervants  of 
God  trampled  on  ,  by  thofe  who  fliould  fiave  (hewn  molt  kind- 
nefTe  to  them.  But  if  zeal  hath  any  power  put  into  her  hands, 
wherein  (he  may  vindicate  Truths  caufe;  (aswhenfhe  is  exalt- 
ed into  the  Magistrate s  feat)  then  Truths  enemies  fhallknow 
and  feele  ,  that  fie  bars  not  the  [word  in  vaine.  1  he  zealous 
Magiftrate  will  have,  as  an  armeto  rel.eve  and  defend  Truth, 
the  ifraelite-^  fo  a  hand  to  frnite  blafphemy,  errour,  and  pro- 
fanenefie  ,  the  Egyptian ,  when  any  of  them  aflaulc  her.  O  how 
OMcfes  laid  about  him  (that  meek  man  ,  who  ftood  fo  mute  in 
his  own  caufe,  Numb.  12.  )  when  the  people  had  committed 
idolatry/  his  heart  was  fo  infired  within  him,that  (as  we'll  as  he 
loved  them)  he  could  neither  open  his  mouth  in  a  prayer  for 
them  to  God,  nor  his  eare  to  receive  any  petition  from  them, 
till  he  had  given  vent  to  his  zeal  in  an  acT  of  juft'ceupon  the 
offendours.  Now  foch  ,  and  fuch  onely  are  the  perfons  that  are 
likely  (when  called)  to  fufferfor  the  truth,  who  will  not  let  it 
fnffgr'if  they  can  help  it.  Rut  as  for  natural  Gallk  like  fpirks, 
that  can  fee  truth  and  errour  fcuffling,  and  not  do  theirutmoft 
to  relieve  truth,  by  interpofing  their  power  and  authority,  if  a 
Magillrate:  by  pieachin^  the  one  up,  and  the  other  down,  if  a 
Minifter :  and  by  a  free  teftimony  to,  fervent  prayer  for,and  affe- 
ctionate lympathizing  with  truth  (as  it  fares  ill  or  well)  if  a  pri- 
vate Chnftian  ^  I  fay,  as  for  fuch,  whoftandin  this  cafe,  (as  fome 
fpecTaors  about  two  wreillers)  not  caring  much  who  hath  the 
fall ,  Thefe  are  not  the  men  that  can  be  expected  to  expofe 
themfelves  to  much  fuffering  for  Truth.  That  Afkgiftrate  who 
hath  not  zeal  enough  to  ftop  the  mouths  of  Truths  enemies  when 
he  may ;  will  he  open  his  mouth  in  a  free  profefiion  of  it  when 
death  a'd  danger  face  him  ?  That  Minrfte9-y1who  hath  lie  thcr 
love  nor  courage  enough  to  apologize  for  Truth  in  the  T^/p/V-, 
can  it  be  thought  he  would  (land  to  her  .defence  at  a  fra$  ?  In 
a  word, that  prtvateChriftian  whole  heart  is  not  wounded  through 
Tru:hs  fides ,  fo  as  to  fympathize  with  ic ,  will  he  interpofe  him- 

I  felf 


*g  Waving  your  loyns 


{elf  betwixt  truth  and  the  blow  that  bloody  perfecutors  make 
at  it,  and  choofe  to  receive  it  into  his  own  body  ( though  to 
death)  rather  than  it  fhould  light  on  Truth  ?  ifthefirc-otTove 
within  beout ,  or  fo  little,  thac  it  will  not  melt  the  man  into 
forrow  for  the  wrongs  done  to  Truth  by  men  of  corrupt  mind<, 
where  will  the  flame  be  found  ,  that  fhould  enable  him  to  burn 
to  afhes ,  under  the  hand  of  blood,  men  ?  het'le  never  endure 
the  fire  i«i  his  body  ,  that  hath  no  more  care  to  keep  that  facred 
fire  burning  in  his  foul  ^  if  he  cannot  flied  teares,  much  leiTe  will  he 
blood  for  Truth. 
S2j*eft-  Qveft.  If  any  now   (hould  ask,  how  they  may  get  their 

hearrs  enflamed   with  this   heavenly  lire  of  love  to  truth  ?  I 
anfwer-,  firft, 

aAnlypir.    i.    Labour   for  an  inward  conformity  of  thy 
Jnjw.      heart  to  truth.    LikenelTe  is  the  ground  of  love.    A  carnal 
heart  cannot  like  truth,  becaufe  it  is  not  like  to  truth.  Such  a 
One  may  love  truth ,  as  he  did  Alexander ,  Regent  non  j4Uxax- 
d'HW.     The  King^  net  the  per/on  that  was  King.     Truth  in  its 
honour  and  dignity ,  when  ic  can  prefer  him ,  but  not  naked 
truth  it  felf.     How  is  itpofiible,  an  earthly  foul  (hould  love 
truth  that  is  heavenly?  an  unholy  heart,  truth  th?t  is  pure?  O 
'tis  fad  indeed  ,  when  mens  tenets  and  principles  in  their  under- 
ftandings   do  clafh,  and  fight  with  the  principles  of  their  hear;  $ 
and  afre&ions  ^  when  men  have  orthodox  judgements ,  and  he- 
terodox hearts  /  There  muft  needs  be  little  love  to  truth,  be- 
caufe the  judgement  and  will  are  fo  unequally  yokt.  Truth  in 
the  confeience  reproving  and  threatning  luft  in  the  heart;  and 
that  again  contrcling  truth  in  the  confeience.     Thus  like  a  fcold- 
ing  couple,  they  may  a  while  dwell  together,  but  taking  no 
content  in  one  another ,  the  wretch  is  eafily  perfwaded  to  give 
7>#r/?aBillof  divorce  at  laft  ,  and  fend  her  away  (as  Ah*fbuirm 
did  Vajhii)  that  he  may  cfpoufe  other  principles ,  which  will 
fuit  better  with  his  corrupt  heart,  and  not  croffe  him  in  the 
way  he  is  in.    This ,  this  I  am  perfwaded  hath  parted  many,  and 
truth  in  thefe  licentious  dayes.     They  could  not  finne  peaceably 
while  they  kept  their  judgements  found  •,  Truth  ever  and  anon 
would  be  chiding  them,  and  therefore  to  match  their  judgements 
with  their  hearts ,  they  have  taken  up  p  inciplcs  fuitable  to  their 
lufts.    But  foul ,  if  truth  hath  had  fuch  a  power  upon  thee  to 

tranf- 


girt  about  with  truth.  59 


transform  thee  (by  the  renewing  of  thy  minde)  into  its  own 
likeneffe;  that  as  the  fience  turns  the  ftock  into  its  own  nature, 
fo  Truth  hath  afiimilated  thee,  and  made  thee  bear  fruit  like 
it  felf  ^  Thou  art  the  perfon  that  will  never  part  with  truth ; 
before  thou  canft  do  this ,  thou  mult  part  with  that  new  na- 
ture ,  which  by  it  the  Spirit  of  God  hath  begot  in  thee.  There 
is  now  fuch  a  neere  union  betwixt  thee  and  truth,  or  rather 
thee  and  Chrift,  as  can  never  be  broke.  We  lee  what  a  migh- 
ty power  there  goes  along  with  Gods  Ordinance  of  marriage, 
that  two  perfons ,  who  poflibly  a  moneth  before  never  knew 
one  another ;  yet  their  atfeftions  once  knit  by  love ,  and  their 
perfons  made  one  by  marriage ,  they  can  now  leave  friends  and 
parents  for  to  enjoy  each  other  •,  fuch  a  mighty  power ,  and 
much  greater  goes  along  wirh  this  myftical  man  i  age  between 
the  foul  and  Chrift ,  the  foul  and  truth .,  that  the  fame  perfon 
who  before  converfion,  would  not  have  ventured  the  loffe  of 
a  penny  for  Chrift ,  or  his  truth  •,  yet  now  (knit  to  Chrift  and 
his  truth  by  a  fee  ct  work  of  the  Spirit,  new  forming  him  in- 
to the  Jikenefie  thereof)  he  can  bid  adue  to  the  world,  life, 
and  allforthefc.  As  that  Martyr  told  him,  that  askt  whether  he 
did  not  love  his  wife  and  children,  and  was  not  loth  to  part  with 
them  ?  yes  faith  ne,  /  love  tv  *n  fo  dearly  ^  that  I  would  mt  fart 
-with  any  of  ihem  for  all  that  the  T>uke  of  Brunfwick  is  worth 
(whole  fubjedhe  was)  But  for  Chrifisfaie  and  his  truth,  fare- 
rtel  to  them  all. 

Secondly  ,  labour  to  get  thy  heart  more  and  more  infired  with 
the  love  of  God,  and  this  will  work  in  thee  a  deer  love  to  bis 
truth  ;  Loveobferves  what  is  precious  and  dear  to  ks  beloved, 
•  and  loves  it  for  his  f  ke.  David:  love  to  Jonathan  made  nun 
enquire  for  fome  of  his  race,  tcac  he  might  (hew  kindnefle  to 
for  his  fake.  Love  to  God  will  make  the  foul  inquifitive  to 
flude  out  what  is  near  and  dear  to  Gjd(  that  by  Ok  wing  kind- 
nefle to  it,  he  may  exorefle  his  love  to  him.  Now  upon  a 
little  fearch  ,  we  (nalWinie  that  the  great  God  lets  a  very  high 
price  upon  the  head  of  truth,  Pfalme  38.2.  Thou  haft  magnified 
thy  Word  above  all  thy  Name.  That  is  Gods  Name  by  which 
he  is  known,  every  creature  hath  GodsNtme  upon  it;  by  it 
God  is  known ,  even  to  the  leaft  pile  of  grade  :  But  to  his 
Word  and  Truth  therein  written,  he  hath  given  preheminence 

I  z  abavc 


6q  Having  y  our  leyns 


above  all  other  things  that  bear  his  name.     Take  a  few  confide- 
rations  whereby  we  may  a  1»  cle  conceive  of  the  high  value  God 
fets  of  Truth.    Fir  ft  ,  God  when  he  vouchfafeth  his  Word  and 
Troth  to  a  people,    he  makes  account  he  gives  them  one  of  the 
g  eateft  mercieuhey  can  receive  ,  or  he  give  •  he  calls  them  the 
yreut  ihptgf  of  his  Law ,  Hofek  8   12.  a  people  that  enjoy  his 
truth,  thev  are  by  Ch  rifts  own    judgement  lift  up  to  heaven; 
whatever  a  peopl-  hav;  ac  Gods  hands,  without  this,  bears 
no  more  companion  with  it  than  Hagars  loafe  of  bread  and 
bottle  (  which  was  IflsmagXs  portion  )  would  with  1  faxes  inheri- 
tance.    God  that  knows  how  to  prize,  and  rate  his  own  gifts, 
faith   of  his  Word  which  hefbeweth  to  Jacob,  and  teftimonies 
that  he  gives  to    frael ,  that  hi  hath  not  dealt  fo  rvith  any   Na- 
tim,Pf<d. .'147.20..  th  t  is ,  not  fo  richly  and  gracioufly.    Se- 
condly, confider  Gods-efpecial  care  to  prefervehis  truthi  what- 
ever is  loft,  God  looks  to  his  truth.     In  fhip-wracks  at  Sea, 
and  fcare  fires  at. land,  when  men  can  fave  but  little, they. ufc 
to  choofc  not  lumber,  and  things  of  no  worth,  but  what  they 
efteem  molt  precious.     In  all  the  great  revolutions  ,  changes, 
and  overturning  of  Kingdomes,  and  Churches  alfo,  God  hath 
ftill  preferv'd  his  truth.      Thoufands  of  Saints  lives  have  been 
taken  away  ,  but  that  which  the  Devil  fpights  more  than  all 
the  Saints.;  yea,  which  alone  he  fpights  them  for  ('that  is  the 
truth)  this  lives,  and  ftiall  to  triumph  over  his  malice  ^  and 
fure  if  truth  were  not  very  dear  to  God,  he  would  not  be  at 
this  coft  to  keep  it  with  the  blood  of  his  Saints  -,  yea,  which  is 
more,  the  Mood  of  his  Sonne ■  whofe  errand  into  the  world  was 
by  life  and  death  to  bear  witnejfe  to  the  truth,  John  18.  37  In  a 
word,  in  that  great  and  difm  al  conflagration  of  heaven  and  earth, 
when  the  elements  (hall  melt  for  heat,  and  the  world  come  to 
jts  fatal  period  -,    then  truth  fhall  not  furTer  the  leaft  lofle,  but 
the  Word  of  the  I  ord  tndureth  for  ever,  I  Pet.  I.  laft  v-  Thirdly , 
confider  the  feverity  of  God  to  the  enemies  of  truth.  A  dread- 
ful cur'fe  is  denounced  againft  thofe  that  fliall  take  away  from  it, 
or  addt  the  h.-.ft  tc  it,  thatcmbafe,  or  clip  this  heavenly  coyne, 
Rev.  22.  )8.    The  one  pulls  upon  him  all  the  plagues  that  are 
■written  in  tie  word  tf  truth-,  from  the  other  fhall  be  taken a- 
way  his  part  out  of  the  book^f  life,  and  out  of  the  holy  City,  and 
from  the  things  (that  is,  the  good  things  of  the  promifes)  -which 

are 


girt  about  with  truth  £  f 


are  -written  in  this  bock-    All  thefe  fpeak  at  what  a  high  rate 
God  values  truth;  and  no  wonder,  if  we  confiderwhat  truth 
is,  (that  truth  which  fhines  forth  from  the  written  Word  J  it 
is  the  extraft  or  Gods  thoughts  and  counfels  which  from  ever- 
lifting  he  took  up,  and  bad  in  his   heart  to  crTed.    Nothing 
comes'iO  pafTebut  as  an  accomp'.ifhment  of  this  his  Word  •,  It  is 
the  mod  full  and  perfect  reprefentation  that  God  himfeif  could 
give  of  his  own  being ,  and   nature  to  the  fons  of  men  •,  that 
by  it  we  might  know  him,  and  love  him.  Great  Princes  ufe  to 
fend  their  pictures  by  their  Embaflfkdours  to  thofe  whom  they 
wooefor  marriage.     God  isfuch  an  infinite  perfection,  that  no 
hand  can  draw  him  f^rth  to  vife  but  his  own  ,  and  this  he  hath 
done  exactly  in  his  Word  ,  from  which  all  his  Saints  have  come 
to  be  enamoured  witb  him.  As  we  deal  with  truth,  fo  we  do  with 
God  himfeif-   he  that  .'efpifeth  that,  defpifeth  him.     He  that  a- 
bandons   the   truth  of  God,  renounceth  the  God  of  truth.* 
Though  men  cannot  come  to  pull  God  out  of  his  Throne,  and 
un-god  him,  yet  they  come  asneare  thisasit  ispoffi  le,  when 
they  let  out  their  wrath  againft  the  truth,  in  this  they  do,  as  it 
were  ,  execute  God  in  effigie.     There  is    reafon  we  fee  why  God 
fhould  fo  h'ghly  prize  his  truth,and  that  we  that  love  him  fhould 
cleave  to  it. 

Thirdly,  be  much  in  the  meditation  of  the  tranfeenderit  ex- 
ce'lencyof  truth, The  eye  aff efts  the  heart  -,  this  is  the  window  at 
which  love  enters.     Never  any  that  had  a  fpiritual  eye  to  fee 
Truth  in  her  native  beauty ,  but  had  a  heart  to  love  her.  This 
was  the  way  that  rDazids  heart  was  ravifht  with  the  love  of 
the  word  of  truth,  Pfal.  119.96      O  how  ILvethj  Law^itismy 
meditation  all  the  clay  -,  while  his  thoughts  were  on  it,  his  love  was 
drawn  to  it  -t  David  found  a  great    difference  betwixt  medi- 
tating on   the  truths  of  Gods  Word ,  and  other  excellencies 
which  the  world  c  ies  up  fo  highly  ;  when  he  goes  to  enter- 
taine  himfeif  with  the  thoughts  of  fome  perfection  in  the  crea- 
ture ,  he  findes  it  but  a  jejune,  dryfubjed  coropar'd  with  this; 
he  fjone  tumbles  over*  the  book  of  the  worlds  excellencies ,  and 
can  tfnde  no  no  ion  that  deferves  any  long  ftayupon  it,  I  have 
feeri,  faith  he  ,  an  end  cf  all  fi-rfeliians »  he  is  at  the  worlds  end 
prefently  ,  and  in  a  few  thoughts  can  fee  to  t'^e  bottom  of  all 
the  worlds  glory ,  but  when  he  takes  up  the  truths  of  God  into 

his 


5  2  Having  your  lojns 

his  thoughts  now  he  meets  with  work  enough  for  his  admira- 
tion ,  and  fwect  meditation ;  Thy  Commandment  k  exceeding 
broad;  great  (hips  cannot  faile  in  narrow  rivers,  and  {hallow 
wafers;  neither  can  mindes  truly  great  with  the  knowledge  of 
God ,  and  heaven ,  findc  roome  enough  in  the  creature  to  turne, 
and  ejjpatiate  thcmfelves  in.  A  gracious  foul  is  foon  aground 
and  at  a  ftand,  when  uponthefe  flats  -,  but  let  it  launch  out  in- 
to the  meditation  of  God  ,  his  Word  ,  the  myfterious  truths  of 
the  Gofpel ,  and  he  findes  a  place  of  broad,  waters,  fea-roome 
enough  to  lofe  himlelf  in.  I  might  here  fhew  you  the  excel- 
lency of  Divine  truths  from  many  heads  -,  As  from  the  fource 
and  fpring-hcad  whence  they  flow,  the  God  of  truth  ■,  from  their 
oppofite,  that  miftiapen  monfter ,  errow,&c.  But  I  (hall  on- 
ly direct  your  meditation  to  a  few  enamouring  properties  which 
you  fhall  finde  in  thefe  truths  •  you  may  meet  a  heap  of  them 
togetht  r,  in  Pfalme  1 9.  7.  and  fo  on.  Truth  it  is  pure ,  this  made 
David  love  it,  Pfalme  1 ro. 140.  It  is  not  only  pure,  but  makes 
the  foul  pure  and  holy  that  embraceth  it.  Sanclipe  them  through 
thy  truth,  thy  Word  is  truth,  John  17.17.  It  is  the  pure  water 
chat  God  wafheth  foule  fouls  clean  with,  E^ek,  36.  25  1  will 
(prinkle  cleane  water  upon  you ,  and  ye  (ball  be  cleave ,  from  all 
j9ur  filthinejfe  will  1  cleanfe  jou  ;  foule  puddle  water  wi  1  as  foon 
make  the  face,  as  errour  make  the  foul  cleane.  Truth  ps  Cure , 
and  hath  a  firme  bottome,  Pfal.  19.7.  we  may  lay  the  whole 
weight  of  our  fouls  upon  it,  and  yet  not  crack  under  us- cleave 
co  7>#^,  and  it  will  flick  to  thee.  It  will  go  with  thee  to  pifon, 
banilhment ,  yea,  flake  it  felf ,  and  bear  thy  charge?,  where  ever 
thou  gocit  upon  her  errand.  Not  one  thing  faith  Jcflwab,  hath 
fail'd  of  all  the  good  things  which  the  Lord  jour  God  fpake  ccvccrn- 
ing  yon  •  all  are  come  to  pa(fe  unto  you,  not  one  thin:'  hath  fail- 
ed thereof,  Jofi.iq.  14.  What  ever  \.ou  find  there  prom is\J, count 
it  money  in  your  purfe-,  fourfcore  years ,  faid  Pcfycarp  ,  J>  >ve 
(ervedGod,  and  found  him  a  good  Aidfltr,  But  when  men  mink 
by  forfaking  the  truth  to  provide  well  for  themfelves,  they 
are  fure  to  meet  with  difappointments«  Many  have  been  flat- 
ter'd  from  truth  with  goodly  promifes ,  and  then  ferv'd  no 
better  than  ludas  was  by  the  lews ,  after  he  had  betray' d 
his  CftUfler  into  their  bloody  hands,  loo\  thee  to  that.  Though 
perfecutors  love  the  treafon,  yet  they  hate  the  traytorj  yea  oft 

(to 


girt  about  with  truth.  63 


(to  (hew  their  dcyilifh  malice)  they,  when  fome  have  been  got  to 
wound  their  conference  by  denying  the  truth ,  have  moft  cru- 
elly butchered  them  ,  and  glory'd  in  it  -  as  a  lull  revenge  to  de- 
itroy  foul  and  body  together.     Again  truth  is  free, and  makes 
the  foul  free  that  cleaves  to  it,  John  8.  32.  The  truth  Jh, ill  make 
joh  free.    C  hrift    teils   the   Jewes  of  a  bondage  they  were  in  , 
(which  that  bragge  people  never  dieaml  on,)  verfe^q.   Te  are 
cf  your  fathir  the  'Devil ,  and  his  lufis  jqu  will  do  •,  fuch  flaves 
are  all  finners^  they  muft  do  what  the  Devil  will  have  them  y 
and  dare  no  more  difpleafc  him  ,  than  a  child  his  father  with  a 
rod  in  his  hand.     Some  Witches  have  confeft ,  that  they  have 
been    forced   to   fend  out   their  Imps  to  do  mifehiefe  to  0- 
thers  that  they  might  have  eafe  themfelves^  for  till  they  did 
fend  them  abroad  upon  fuch  an  errand ,  they  were  thcmfelves 
tormented  by  them.    And  he  who  hatha  luft  fucking  onfeim, 
findes  as  little  reft  if  he  be  not  alwayes  fe  ving  of  it,  and 
making  provifion  for  it:  Can  tht  world,  think  you,  (hew  fuch 
another  (lave  as  this  poorc  wretch  is  ?  Well ,  though  all  the 
bolts  that  the  Devil  hath  (luftslmeanj  were  lockt  upon  one 
(inner,  and  he  (hut  up  in  the clofeft dungeon  of  all  his  prifon, 
yet  let  but  this  poore  (lave  begin  to  be  acquainted  with  the 
truth  of  Chrift,  fo  as  to  open  his  heart  to  it,  andclofewithit: 
You  fhall  foon  hear  that  the  foundations  of  the  prifon  are  (ha- 
ken,  its  doors  thrown  open,  and  the  chains  (alien  off  the  poor 
creatures  legs'  :   Truth  cannot  it  felfe  be  bound,  nor  will  it 
dwell  in  a  foul  that  lies  bound  in  finnes  prifon :  and  therefore 
when  once  truth  and  the  foul  are  agreed,  or  rather  Chrift  and 
the  foul ,  who  are  brought  together  by  Truth ,  then  the  poor 
creature  may  lift  up  his  head  with  joy,  for  his  redemption  and 
jayle-delivery  from  this  fpirkual  bondage  draws  nigh^  yea,  the 
day  is  come ,  the  key  is  in  the  lock  already  to  let  him  out.    It's 
irapofllble  we  fhould  be  acquainted  with  truth  (as  it  is  in  Je- 
fusj  and  be  meer  ftrangers  to  this  liberty  that  abends  it,  JEpb. 
4  19,20,21.  In  a  word  i  Laftly, Truth  is  vltlorious.  Tisgrear, 
and  (hall  prevail  at  laft.    "Tis  the  great  counfelof  God,  and 
though  many  fine  plots  and  devices  are  found  in  the  hearts  of 
men  (  which  (hew  what  they  would  do)  yet  the  couniel  of  the 
Lord  (hall  ftand  j  all  their  egges  are  addle  ,  when  they  have  fet 
longeft  on  them  •,  Alas ,  they  want  power  to  hatch  what  their 

malice . 


6a  Having  your  loyns 


malice  lets  brooding  on.      Sometimes  I  confefle  the  enemies 
to  Truth  gee  the  Militia  of  this  lower  world  into  their  hands, 
and   then   Truth    Jeemes    to   go  to  the  ground  ,  and  thofe 
that  witneffe  to  it   aie  even  flaine^  yet   then  'tis  more  than 
their   Perfecutors   can  do  to  get  them  laid  under  ground   in 
their  grave,  Revel,  ii.  9.    Some  (  that  were  never  thought 
on)    fhall  ftrike   in   on  'truths   fide,  and   forbid  the  burial. 
Perfecutors  need  not  be  at  coft  for  Marble  to  write  the  me- 
morial of    their   Vi&orics   in  ,   duft  will  ferve  well  enough  , 
for    they    are   not    like   to   laft  fo  long.       Three  dayrs   s.nd 
a  halfe   the    WitnefTes    may    lie    dead    in   the   ftreets,    and 
Truth  ft   dfconfolate   by   them  •,    but    within  a  while  they 
ere    walking  ,    and    Truth   triumphing   againe.     If  Perfecu- 
tours   could   kill    their  SuccefTours  ,    then   their  work  might 
be  thought  to   ftand  firing  ,    needing    not  to  feare  another 
to  pull  down  what   they  fct    up  •  and    yet    then  their  work 
would   lie  as   open  to  heaven ,  and  might  be  as  eafily  hun- 
dred as  theus  at  Babel.     Who  loves  not  to  be  on  the  wa- 
ning fide  ?     choofe   Truth   for   thy  fide,  and   thou  haft  it. 
Newes  may    come  that  Truth  is  fick,  but  never  thut  it  is 
dead.     No,  'tis  errour  is   (hort-lived;  a  lying  tungue  />  but 
for  a    moment   ;    but   Truths    age  runnes  parallel  with  C  ods 
eternity.      It  fhall  live   to  fee  their  heads   laid  in  the  duft, 
and  to   walk  over  their  graves  that  were  fo  bufie  to  make 
one  for  her.     Live  did  I  fay  ?     yea ,  reigne    in    peace  with 
thofe  who  now  are  willing  to  fuffer  with,  and  for  it.     And 
wouldeft   thou  no:  (Chriftian)  be  one  among  that   goodiy 
traine  of  victors,  who  fhall  attend   on  Chrilts  triumphant 
Charret ,  into  the  heavenly  C  ity  .   there  to  take  the  Crown  , 
and  fit  down  in   thy  Throne  with  thofe  that  have   kept  the 
Held ,  when  Chrift  and  his  truth  were  militant  here  on  earth? 
Thus  wouldeft    thou    but  in  thy  thoughts  wipe  away  tcarcs 
and   blood ,  which   now  cover   the  face   of  luflering  truth , 
and  prefent   it   to  thy  eye  as  it   fhall  look    in'  glory,    thou 
couldell:   not   but  cleave    to  it  with'   a  love    {tronicr  than 
Death. 

But  fecondly,  if  yet  there  remains  any  qualme  of  feare  on 
thy  heart  from  the  wrath  of  bloody  men  threatning  thee  for 
thy  profeiTion  of  the  truth  ,  than   to  a  heart  inflamed  with 


tl; 


0 


girt  about  with  truth.  65 

the  love  of  truth ,  labour  to  adde  a  heart  fili'd  with  the  feare 
of  that  wrath ,  which  God  hath  in  ftore  for  all  that  Apofta" 
tize  from  the  truth.  When  you  chance  to  burne  your  fin" 
ger ,  you  hold  it  to  the  lire,  which  being  a  greater  fire 
draws  out  the  other.  Thus  when  thy  thoughts  arefcorcht, 
and  thy  heart  feared  with  the  fire  of  mans  wrath ,  hold 
them  a  while  to  hell  fire,  which  God  hath -prepared  for  the 
fearful,  Revel.  21.  8.  and  all  that  runne  away  from  Truths 
colours,  Heb.  10.  39.  and  thou  wilt  lofe  the  fenfe  of  the 
one  for  feare  of  the  other  ^  Jgnofce  Imferator  (  faid  the  holy 
man  > )  tu  carcerem,  Deus  gehemtam  Mwatur  •,  Pardon  me  O 
Emperour ,  if  I  obey  not  thy  command  -,  Thou  threatneft  a 
prifon ,  but  God  a  hell.  Obfervable  is  that  of  David ,  Pfalme 
1 1  p,  1 6 1 .  Princes  have  perfecuted  me  witheut  a  caufe ,  but  my 
hsart  fiandeth  in  awe  of  thy  Word*,  He  had  no  caufe  to  feare 
them ,  that  had  no  caufe  to  perfecute  him  •,  one  threatning 
out  of  the  Word  ( that  fets  the  point  of  Gods  wrath  to  his 
heart )  fcares  him  more  than  the  worft  that  the  greateft  on 
earth  can  do  to  him.  Mans  wrath  ( alas )  when  hotteft,  is 
but  a  temperate  climate,  to  the  wrath  of  the  living  God. 
They  who  have  felt  both ,  have  tcftified  as  much.  Mans 
wrath  cannot  hinder  the  acceffe  of  Gods  love  to  the  crea- 
ture ,  which  hath  made  the  Saints  ling  in  the  fire  in  fpight 
of  their  enemies  teeth.  But  the  creature  under  Gods  wrath  is 
like  one  (hut  up  in  a  clofe  oven ,  no  crevis  open  to  let  any  of 
the  heat  out,  or  any  refreshing  in  to  him. 


K  CHAP. 


66 


Having  y  our  Joyns 


•<$* 


CHAP.    VI. 

Cy  ffee  fecond  \inde  of  Iruth  ,  JrifjJb  <?/"  jba#r* 
#r  fincerity  ,  jriffo  /ta  hjndes  of  it  \  and  in 
■particular ,  of  moral  uprightneffe^  together  with 
its  deficiency,  and  a  double  Caution  about  thk\ 
the  one  to  the  Saints^  the  other  to  the  morally  up- 
right p  erf  on. 


i. 


WE  come  now  to  the  fecond  kind  of  Truth  f  commended 
to  the  Chriftian,under  the  notion  of  the  foulcfiers  girdlej 
and  that  is  Truth  of  heart,  VVhe  e  it   would  be  known-, 
Firft,  what  r  mean  by  truth  of  heart-,  Secondly,  why  compared  to  a 
girdle.  For  the 

Firft^by  truth  of  heart, I  under  fhnJyWm7;,fo  taken  inScripture, 
Heb.10.21.Let  us  dratvnearwitha  try.eheart,  that  is  with  a  fincerc 
heart.  We  have  them  oft  conjoyn'd,  the  one  explaining  the  other, 
Jojh.i^, 14.  Fear  tbs  Lor.l,«rJ.ferve  him  in  fincerity  an  J  truth,  l  Cor. 
5.?.  we  read  oft  he  unleavened  brey$  rf fmceritj  and  truth.  Hypocrifie 
is  a  lie  with  a  fair  cover  ever  it;  an  infincere  heart  is  a  falfe  heart-  the 
inward  frame  and  motion  of  the  heart  comports  rot  with  thepro- 
feflion  and  behaviour  of  the  outward  man^  like  a  clock,  whofe  wheels 
within  go  not  as  the  hand  points  without. 

SecenMy,  fincerity,  or  truth  of  heart  may  fitly  be  compared  to 
a  girdle,  in  regard  of  the  twofold  ufe  and  end,  for  which  a  girdle 
(efpecially  the  fouldiers  belt  )  is  worn.  Tirfi,  the  girdle  is  ufed 
as  an  ornament  put  on  uppermoft ,    to   cover  the   joynts  of 

the 


girt  about  with  truth.  6j 

the  Armour,  which  would  (if  feen)  caufefome  uncomefnefie. 
Here  (at  the  loynsl  mean  J  thofe  pieces  of  armour  fur  the  Cek  ice 
of  the  lower  parts  of  the  body  are  fattened  to  the  upper,  now  t  e- 
canle  they  cannot  be  fo  clofely  knit  and  dafpt,  but  here  will 
be  fome  little  gaping  betwixt  piece  and  piece,  therefore  they 
ufed  to  put  Gve-  thofe  parts  a  broad  girdl3,  that  covered  all 
that  uncomlinefTe.  Mow  fincerity  doth  the  fame  for  the 
Chrifrian,  what  the  girdle  doth  for  the  Souldier.  The  Saiirs 
graces  are  not  fo  clofe,  nor  his  life  fo  ex*  ft  .  tut  in  thebcft 
there  sre  found  infirmities ,  a  d  defVcfs  ,  which  are  as  fo  ma- 
ny gapings  and  clefts  in  his  armour;  But  fincerity  covers  all, 
that  he  is  neither  put  to  fhame  for  them  ,  nor  expofed  to 
danger  by  them. 

Sccondl],  the  girdle  was  ured  for  itrength-  by  this  the  loins 
were  ftaid,  and  united,  and  the  fouldier  made  itronger  to  fight 
or  march  \  as  a  garment ,  the  clofer  it  fits,  the  warmer  itiij 
fo  the  belt ,  the  clofer  it  is  girt,  the  more  itrength  the  Ioyns 
fecle  ■:  hence  God  chreatnirg  to  enfeeble  and  weaken  a  perfon 
or  people,  faith,  their  lojnes  Jball  be  loofened,  Efay45-  i.  /  wiM 
toofe  the  lojnes  of '  Kings^  and  Job  12.  21.  re  weakeneth  the  ftrength 
of  the  might y.Wzb.  he  loofeth  the  girdieof  the  ltrong. 

Now  fincerity  may  well  be  compared  in  this  refped  lot'ae 
fouldiers  girdle.  It  is  a  grace  that  doth  gird  the  foul  with 
ftrength  ,  and  makes  it  mighty  tc^ do  or  fufTe:.  Indeed  it  is  the 
very  itreng'h  of  every  g'ace^  fo  much  h  pocrifie  as  is  found 
cleaving  to  our  graces,  fo  much  weaknefFe.  *Tis  fincere  faith 
chic  -i<  che  ftrong  faith.  Sinfcefe  love,  that  is  the  mighty  love* 
Hy  ocrifi:isto  grace.,  as  the  worm  is  to  the  oak,  the  rult  to 
theiro.K  it  weakens  them,  beemfe  it  corrupts  rhem.  The  Meta- 
phor thus  ope./d  affords  thele  t  vo  doctrinal  conclufions,  in  hand- 
ling of  which,  I  fhall  comprize  what  I  have  to  fay  further  of  this 
piece  of  Armour 

i,  That  fincerity  or  truth  of  heart  in  our  wayes,  covers  all  the    DtU.  i. 
Chriftians  uncomelineiTe. 

2.  That  truth  of  heart  or  fincerity  is  of  excellent  ufe  to  ftren^-    baft.   2. 
then  the  Chfifttan  in  his  whole  courfe. 

T>oB.  1.   To  begin  with  the  firft,  Sincerity  covers  all  our    1)c£l.  r» 
uncomclineflfes.    In  handling  of  this  point ,   This  is  our  me- 
thod. 

K  2  Firft, 


6  8  Having  y  our  hyns 


i. 


i.  Firft ,  to  enquire   which  is  the  truth  and  fincerity  that  doth 

this.. 

*z  Secondly ,  we  (hall  enquire  what   uncomlinefles  they  are  that 

fincerity  covers. 
3 .  Thirdly ,  how  fincerity  covers  them. 

4.  Fourthly ,  why  fincerity  doth  this ,  or  fome  account  given  for 

all  this. 

Firft  ^  of  the  firft ,  let  us  enquire  which  is  that  truth  and  fin- 
cerity that  covers  all  uncomlinefles  and  deficiencies  in  the  Chri- 
ftian.  Here  we  muft  diftinguifti  of  a  twofold  fincerity,  one  Moral 
another  Evangelical. 

Firft  ,  There  is  a  moral  truth,  and  uprightnefle,  which  we  may 
call  a  field -flower,  becaufe  it  may  be  found  growing  in  the  wilde, 
and  wafte  of  nature.    It  cannot  be  deny'd,  but  one  that  hath  not 
a  dram  of  fanctifying  faving  grace,  may  (hew  fome  kinde  of  up- 
rightnefle and  truth  in  his  a&ions.     God  himfelf  comes  in  as  a 
witnefle  for  lAbimclech  ,    that   what   he  did   in  taking   Sa- 
rah ,  was  in  the  uprightnefle  of  his  heart jGen.  20.  6.1  know  (faith 
God  )  that  thou  dldft  this  in  th;  integrity  of  thy  heart,  that  is,  thou 
didft  mean  honeftly  as  to  this  particular  bufinefle,  anddidftnot 
intend  any  wrong  to   Abraham,  whofe  wife  (he  was ,    unknown 
to  thee.     Joab  ,  though  a  bloody  man,  yet  dealt  very  uprightly 
and  fquarely  wich  T>avid  concerning   the  rendition  of  Rabbah, 
when  he  had  a  faire  advantage  of  ftealing  away  the  honour  from 
his  Prince  to  himfelf.    Many  fuch  inftances  may  be  given  of  men 
that  have  been  great  ftrangers  to  a  work  of  grace  on  their  hearts  -y 
but  this  is  not  the  uprightnefle  that  we  mean  in  the  point  laid 
down.      It  doth  indeed  render  a  pctfon  very  lovely  and  amiable 
before  men  to  be  thus  upright  ,  and  honeft  in  his  dealings  ^  But 
me  thinks  I  hear  the  Lord  faying  concerning  fuch  ,  as  once  he  did 
to  Samuelof  Eliab,  1  5am   it.  7.   Lo.k^r.ot  en  their  countenance ,  fo 
as  to  think,  thefe  are  they  which  he  accepts ;  No,  he  hath  refufed 
them,  fcr  the  Lord  (eeth  net  as  man  feeth.  Gods  eye  looks  deeper 
than  mans.     There  are  two  great  defects  in  this  uprightnefle  which. 
Godreje&sit  for.  % 

Firft ,  It  grows  not  from  a  good  mot  a  renewed  heart.  This  is  a 
hair  on  the  moral  mans  pen  ,.  w' V  .-and  blots  his  copy,  when 
he  writes  faireft.  It  is  !;ke  the  lepioiie  of  Naamanh  that  fame, 
but  he  yeas  a  Leper  ,  took  away  the  honour  of  his  greatnefle  at 

Court, 


girt  about  with  truth  £q 


Court ,  and  prowefTe  in  the  field  ^  fo  here  it  ftains  the  fairft  a- 
dions  of  a  meer  Moral  man,  But  he  is  a  Chriftleffe^  grace- 
lejfe  per/on.  The  uprightnefTe  of  fuDh  does  others  more  good 
in  this  world,  than  themfelves  in  another.  They  arc  by  this  mo . 
ral  honefty  profitable  to  thofe  that  have  civil  commerce  with 
them^  but  it  doth  not  render  themfelves  acceptable  to  God.  In* 
deed ,  had  not  God  left  fome  authority  in  confeience  to  awe 
and  keep  them  ( that  have  no  grace  )  within  fome  bounds  of 
honefty ,  This  world  would  have  been  no  more  habitable  for  the 
Saints ,  than  the  Forreft  of  wilde  bcafts  is  now  for  man.  And  fuch 
is  the  uprightnefTe  of  men  void  of  fan&ifying  grace  ,  they  are 
rather  rid  by  an  over-powring  light  of  confeience  that  fcares 
them,  than  fweetly  led  by  any  inward  principle  encliningthem 
to  take  complacency  in  that  which  is  good.  Abimelech  himfelf, 
for  whom  fas  we  heard  J  God  fo  apologized  ^  yet  is  let  to 
know  that  his  honefty  in  that  matter  t  came  rather  from  Gods 
reftraint  upon  him,  than  any  real  goodneflein  him,  Gen.  20.  I 
I  alfo  with-held  thee  from  finning  against  me  ,  therefore  fujfered 
I  thee  not  to  touch  her. 

Secondly,  this  Moral  uprightnefTe  falls  fhort  of  the  chief  end 
in  difpenfably  neceffary  to  make  a  perfon  upright  indeed.  This 
is  the  glory  of  God  ,  1  £  or.  10.  31.     Whatever  ye  do ,  do  all  to 
the  glory  of  God.     The  Archer  may  lofe  his  game  by  (hooting 
fhort ,  as  well  as  fliooting  wide.  The  grofTe  hypocrite  (hoots 
wide ,  the  uprighteft  Moralift  (hoots  fhort.     He  may  and  oft 
doth  take  his  aime  right  as  to  the  particular  and  immediate  end 
of  his  action  ,  but  ever  fails  in  regard  of  the  ultimate  end.  Thus, 
afervantmay  be  faithful  to  hisMafter ,  fcorne  to  wrong  him  of  a 
farthing,  yea ,  cordially  leek  his  Matters  profit ;  and   yet  God 
not  looked  at  or  thought  of  in  all  this,  and  fo  all  worth  nothing 
becaufe  God  is  left  out  of  the  ftory ,  who  is  principally  to 
be  regarded,  Ephef.  6.  7.  Servants  are  commanded  to  do  their  fer- 
vice  a*  to  God.  n->t  to  man,  that  is,  not  one  ly,  not  chit  fly  to  man.  *Tis 
true,  the  matter  is  to  be  lookt  at  in  the  fervants  duty ,  but  in 
his   way ,    only   as  it  leads  to  the   glory   of  God ;  he  mutt 
not    when   he   hath    defired    to   pleafe    his    earthly  matter, 
fet  down  as  a:  his  journneys  end,  but  pafTe  on  (as  the  eye  doth 
through  the  aire  and  clouds  to  the  Sunne  where  it  is  terminated) 
fo  he  to  God  ,  as  the  chief  end ,  why  he  is  dutiful  and  faithful  to 

man, 


2. 


70  Having  your  loyns 


man.     Now  no  principle  can  lead  the  foul  fo  high  as  to  aims 
at  God,  but  that  which  comes  from  God.     See  both  thefe  ex- 
cellently coucht  together,  Phil.  I.  10,  il.     That  ye  may  be  fin- 
cere,  being  filled  with  the  fruits  of  righteoufnejje  nhich  a  ebjfe- 
(m  Chrift  to  the  glerj  and  praife  of  God.     Where  yon  ma .  obferve-, 
Firfti  that  thefincerity  of  the  right  (lamp,  is  that  which  brings 
forth   fruits  of  rightcoufnefTe  to  the  praife  of  God ,  that  is, 
where  the  glory  of  God  is  the  end  of  all  ouradions.  Secondly, 
that  fuch  fruit  cannot  be  born  ,  but  by  C^rifl  '■>  tne  ^ou^  mu^  De 
planted  into  Chrift ,  before  it  can  be  thus  fincere,  to  bear  fruits 
of  rightcoufnefTe  to  the  praife  of  God.     Hence  th.fe  fruits  of 
righteoufnefle  ate  faid  to  be  by  frfu*  C^rift'  What  men  do  by 
themfeWes ,  they  do  for  themfelves  :  They  eat  their  own  fruit, 
devoure  the  praife  of  what  they  do  •,  the  C  hriftian  onely  that 
doth  all  by  Ch;ift,  doth  all  for  Chrift-  he  hath  his  fapfrom 
Chrift  (into  whom  he  is  grafted,)  that  makes  him  fruitful,  and 
therefore  he  referves  all  the  fruit  he  bears  for  him.     This  we 
fee  how  this  moral  uprightnelTeis  it  felf  fundamentally  defective, 
and  therefore  cannot  be  that  girdle  which  hides  and  covers  our 
other  defects  .•  yet  before  I  paffe  on  to  the  other-   I  would  leave 
a  twofold  Caution  for  improvement  of  what  hath  been  faid  con- 
cerning this  uprightnefle ;  The  one  is  to  the  fincere  Chriftian, 
the  other  is  to  luch  as  have  no  more  than  a  moral  upright- 
nelTe. 
~      .      T  Firjl ,  to  the  fincere  Chriftian-    May  there  be  found  a  kind  of 

uprightneffe  among  men  that  are  carnal  and  deftituteofGods 
fancTifying  grace  ?  O  then  look  you  to  it,  in  whofc  hearts 
dwells  the  Spirit  of  grace,  thnt  \ou  be  not  put  to  (hame  by 
thofe  that  arc  gr  ace  lefle,  which  youmuft  needs  be  when  you  are 
taken  tardy  in  thofe  things  that  they  cann  >t  be  charged  for. 
Many  among  them  there  are,  thatfeorne  to  lie  ^  fhali  a  Saint  be 
tak  :i  inan'mtrnth  ?  Their  moral  principles  bin'c  them  over 
to  the  peace,  and  w  II  not  fuffer  them  to  wro-g  their  neighbour 
and  can  cheating,  over-reaching  opnreffron  follow  a  Saint* 
hand  ?  except  your  righteoufnefle  exceeds  their  beft,  you  are  not 
Chr'.ftkns-,  and  can  \ou  let  them  exceed  you  in  thofe  things, 
which,  when  they  are  done,leave  them  fhort  of  Chrift  and  heaven? 
*Tis  time  for  the  Scholar  to  throw  off  his  gown,  and  difclaim 
the  name  or  an  Acad.mkl^  when  every  School-boy  is  able  to 

dunce 


girt  about  with  truth  y  r 


dunce  and  pofe  him.    And  for  himaifo  to  lay  afidcbis  profef- 
fion,and  let  the  world  know  what  he  is,  (yea,  what  he  never 
was)  that  can  let  ameer  civil  man,  with  his  weak  bowe,  only 
backt  with  moral   p.inciples,  ou:-fhot  him  that   pretends  to 
Chtift  and  his  grace.    I  confeile  it  fometimes  fo  falls  out,  that 
a  Saint  under  a  temptation  may  be  out-ftript  by  one  that  i£ 
carnal  in  a  particular  cafe  :  As  a  LackiJ  that  is  an  excellent 
foot  man ,  may  (from  fome  prick  or  prefent  lamenefTe  in  his 
foot)  be  left  behind  by  one  that  at  another  time  fhould  not  be 
able  to  come  near  him;  we  have  too  many  forrowful  examples 
of  meal  mens  out  {tripping  even  a  Saint  at  a  time,  when  under 
a  temptation  ;  a  notable  pafftge  we  meet  with  concerning  A- 
bimclecbhis  fpeech  to  Sarah  falter  her  difTemblng  and  equivo- 
cating fpeech,  that  Abraham  was  her  brother  J  Gen.  26. 1 6.  And 
unto  Sarah  he  faidfthat  is,  ^AbimeUcb  faid  to  her,)  Heboid,  I 
have  given  thy  brother  a  thoufand  pieces  of  fiver  •  behold  he  is 
to  thee  a  covering  of  the  eyes  unto  all  that  are  with  thee,  and  rritb 
all  cth?r.     Now  mark  the  words  which  follow.  Thttsjbewas  re- 
proved.    How  ?  where  lies  the  reproof?  Here  are  none  tut 
good  words, and  money  to  boot  alfo.    He  promifeth  protecti- 
on to  her  and  Abraham-^  none  fhould  wrong  him  in  wronging 
her  ;  and  tells  her  what  he  had  freely  given  Abraham.    Well, 
f  >r  all  this  we  (hall  finde  a  (harp  reproof,  though  lapt  up  in 
thefe  fweet  words ,  and  filvered  over  with  his  thoufand  pieces. 
Fir  ft ,  (he  was  ep  roved  by  theuprightnefleof  Abime lech  in  that 
bufineiTe ,  wherein  (he  had  finfully  diffembled.  Tha*  he  who  was 
aft  anger  to  the  true  G')d  and  his  worlhip  ,  fhould  be  fo  fquare 
andhoneft,  as  to  deliver  he.  up  untoucht,  when  once  he  knew 
het  to  be  ano  her  mans  wife,  and  not  only  fo  ,  butinftead  of 
falling  into  a  paflion  of  anger,  and  taking  up  thoughts  of  re- 
venge agatsrft  them,  for  putting  this  cheat  upon  him,  ( which  ha- 
ving them  under  his  power ,  had  not  been  ftrange  for  a  Prince  to 
have  done)  for  him  to  forget  all  this,  and  rather  (hew  fuch  kind- 
nefle  and  high  bounty  to  them  ,  this  muft  needs  fend  a  (harp 
reproof  home  to  Sarahs  heart;  efpecially  confidering,  that  he 
a  Heathen  did  all  this;  and  fhe  ( one  call'd  to  the  knowledge  of 
God  ,  in  Covenant  with  God,  and  the  wife  of  a  Prophet)  was  fo 
poor-fpirited,  as  for  fear  of  a  danger,  wheh  only  her  husband 
(and  that  without  any  great  ground)  furmifed,to  commit  two 

fins 


j  2  Having  your  loyns 


finsatoneclapjdiflemble,  andalfo  hazard  theloffeof  her  chafti- 
ty;  (the  lealt  of  which  wasWorfe,  than  the  thing  they  were  fo 
airaid  ofj  thefe  things,  I  fay,  laid  together,  amounted  to  fuch  a 
reproof,  as  no  doubt  made  her  and  Abraham  too ,  heartily  aflia- 
med  before  God  and  man.     (iAgain,  Abimelech  in  calling  Abra- 
ham her  Brether  (  not  her  husband )  did  give  her  a  fmart  re- 
buke ,  putting  her  in  minde ,  how  with  that  word  he  had  been 
deceived  by  them.     Thus  godly  Sarah  was  reproved  by  a  pro- 
fane King.    O  Chriftians,  take  heek  of  putting  words  into  the 
mouths  of  wicked  men  to  reprove  you  withal ;  they  cannot  re- 
prove you  ,  but  they  reproach  God  .-  Chrift  is  put  to  fiiame  with 
you  and  by  }0U  :  for  the  good  name  fake  of  Chrift,  which  can- 
not but   be  dearer  to  you  (if  Saints)  than  your  lives,  look  to 
your  walking ,  and  efpecially  your  civil  converfe  with  the  men 
of  the  world  •,  They  know  not  what  you  do  iu  yonrclofet ,  care 
not  what  you  arc  in  the  Congregation,  they  judge  you  by  what 
you  are  ,  when  they  have  to  do  with  you.    As  they  find  you  in 
your  (hop ,  bargains ,  promifes,  and  fuch  like ,  fo  they  think  of 
you  and  )  our  profefFion.    Labour  therefore  for  this  uprightnefTe 
to  man  ^  by  this  you  may  win  fome,  and  judge  others.     Better 
vex  the  wicked  world  with  ftrift  walking,  as  Lot  did  the  Sodomites, 
then  fet  them  on  work  to  mock,  and  reproach  thee  and  chy  profefli- 
on  by  any  fcandal  as  David  did  by  his  fad  rall.They  that  will  not  fol- 
low the  light  of  thy  holinelTe,  will  foon  fpie  the  thief  in  the  candle, 
and  point  at  it. 

The  fecond  word  of  Caution  is  to  thofe  that  are  morally  up- 
right, and  no  more.  Take  heed  this  uprightnefTe  proves  not  afnare 
to  thee  ,  and  keeps  thee  from  getting  Evangelical  uprightnefTe.  I 
am  lure  it  was  fo  to  the  young  man  in  the  Gofpel.  In  all  like- 
lihood he  might  have  been  better,  had  he  not  been  fo  good.  His 
honcfty  and  moral  uprightnefTe,  was  his  undoing,  or  rather  his  con- 
ceit of  them,  to  caftle  himfelf  in  them.  Better  he  had  been  a  Pnb- 
lican,  driven  to  Chrift  in  the  fenfe  of  his  finne ,  than  a  Pharifee, 
kept  from  him  with  an  opinion  of  his  integrity.  Thefe,  thefe  are 
the  weeds,  with  which  many  (thinking  to  fave  themfelves  by,)  keep 
themfelves  under  water  to  their  perdition.  There  is  more  hope  of 
a  fool,  Solomon  tells  us,  than  of  one  wife  in  his  own  conceit  ^  andi  of  the 
greateft  Tinner ,  that  of  one  conceited  of  his  righteoufnefTe.  If 
once  the  difeafe  take  the  brain,  the  cure  mult  needs  be  the  more 

dif- 


girt  about  with  truth,  73 


difficulty  No  offering  Chrift  to  one  in  this  frenzy.  Ait  thou  one 
kept  from  thete  unrighteous  wayes  wherein  others  walk?  May  be 
thou  art  honeft  and  upright  in  thy  courfe,  and  fcorneft  to  be  found 
falfe  in  any  of  thy  dealings.  Blefte  God  for  it,  but  take  heed  of 
blefiing  thy  felf  it  it  •,  there's  the  danger,  this  is  one  way  of  being 
ritbteotts  overmuch  ;  a  dangerous  pit,  of  which  Solomon  warns  all 
that  travel  in  heaven  road,  Ecclef.  7.16.  There  is  undoing  in  this 
over-doing,  as  well  as  in  any  under-doing.  For  fo  it  follows  in  the 
fame  veTe,  Why  Jhonldeil  theu  deftroy  thy  felf?  Thou  art  not 
(proud  man )  fo  faire  for  heaven  as  thou  flattereft  thy  felf.  A  man 
upon  the  top  of  one  hill  may  feeme  very  nigh  to  the  top  of  ano- 
ther and  yet  can  never  come  there,  except  he  comes  down  from 
that  where  he  is.  The  mount  of  thy  civil  righteoufnefle,  and  mo- 
ral uprightnefTe  (on  which  thou  ftandeft  fo  confidently)  feems  per- 
haps level  in  thy  proud  eye  to  Gods  holy  hill  in  heaven,  yea ,  fo 
niph  that  thou  thinkeft  to  ftep  overfromone  to  the  other  with 
eafe  But  let  me  tell  thee,  it  is  too  great  aftridefortheeto  take; 
thy  fafer  way  and  nearer,  were  to  come  down  from  thy  mountain  of 
fel>  confidence  (where  Satan  hath  fetthee  on  a  defigne  to  break 
thy  neck,)  and  to  go  the  ordinary  road,  in  which  all  that  ever  got 
heaven  went  •  and  that  is  by  labouring  to  get  an  intereft  in  Chrift 
and  his  ri<*hteoufnefTe,  which  is  provided  on  purpofe  for  the  crea- 
ture to  wrap  up  his  naked  foul  in,  and  to  place  his  faith  on^  and  thus 
thy  uprightnefTe  (which  before  was  burof  the  fame  forme  with  the 
Heathens  moral  honefty)  may  commence,  or  rather  be  baptized 
Chrittian,  and  become  Evangelical  grace ;  But  let  me  tell  thee  this 
before  I  difmifle  thee,  that  thou  canft  not  lay  hold  ofChrifts  righ- 
teoufnefle till  thou  haft  let  fall  the  lye  (thy  own  righteoufnefle) 
which  hitherto  thou  halt  held  fo  faft  in  thy  rightthand.  When 
Chrift  callei  the  klinde  man  to  him,  Olfarl^-.o.  50.  it's  fate! ,  he 
cajlin£  away  his  garment ,  rofe  andcametoftfw,  do  thoufo,and 
then  come  and  welcome. 


I  CHAP. 


74 


Having  y  our  hyns 


m 


CHAP.    VII. 

Of  Evangelical  or  godly  flncerity^  what  it  is,  and 
what  uncomelineffes  this  girdle  covers ,  as  alfo 
how  it  covers  them. 


WE  proceed  to  the  fecond  kind  of  Truth,  or  uprightnefle, 
which  I  called  an  Evangelical  uprightnefle.  This  is  a 
plant  found  growing  only  in  Chrifts  garden  ,  or  theen- 
clofnre  of  a  gracious  foul.  It  is  by  way  of  diftin&ion  from 
that  I  calkd  moral ,  known  by  the  name  of  a  godly  /incerity, 
or  the  (incerity  of  God  ,  2  Cor.  1.  1 2.  Our  rejoycing  in  thu,  the  te- 
ftimony  of  our  confcience  ,  that  is  fimflicity  and  godly  /incerity  , 
not  with  flcfily  wifdcme ,  but  .by  the  grace  of  God ,  vs>e  have  had 
our  converfation  in  the  Xtor/d.  Now  in  two  refpe&s  this  Evangeli- 
cal (incerity  may  be  called  godly  (incerity.  Firft,  becaufe  it  is 
of  God,  Secondly,  becaufe  it  aimes  at  God  ,  and  ends  in 
God. 


SECT.  I. 

Firft,  it  is  cf  God.  It  is  his  creature,  begot  in  the  heart  by  his 
Spirit  alone.  Pauiittthe  place  forementioned,  2  for.  1.12.  doth 
excellently  derive  its  pedigree  for  us.  What  he  calls  walking 
in  gudlj  /incerity  in  the  h'rft  part  of  the  vcrfe,  he  calls,  bavin? 
urn  ccnverfat'un  by  the  grace  of  Gcd  in  the  latter  part^  yea,  op- 
pofctj  it  tb  walking  with  flcfily  rrifdome  in  the  world ,  (the 
great  wheele  in  the  moral  mans  clockj  and  what  doth  all  this 

amount 


girt  about  with  truth.  je 


amount  to  ?  but  to  (hew  that  this  fincerity  is  a  babe  of  grace, 
and  calls  none  041  earth  father.     But  this  is  not  all,  this  godly 
fincerity  is  not  onely  of  divine  extraction   (for  fo  are  common 
gifts  that  are  fupernatural  -^  the  hypocrites  boon  as  well  as  the 
Saints)  but  it  is  part  of  the  new  creature,  which  hisfanctifying 
Spirit  formes  and  works  in  the  elect ,  and  none  befides-  It  is  a 
Covenant- grace.  Ezek^.  11. 19.   I  mil  give  them  one  hearty  and  I 
veill  pnt  a  new  Spirit  within  you.     That  one  heart  is  this  godly 
fincere  heart   oppofed  to   the  double  heart ,  or  a  heart    and 
a  heart ,  by  which  the  hypocrite  is  fo  often  defer ,  ed  in  the 
Word. 

Secondly ,  it  aimes  at  Gody  and  ends  in  God.     The  higheft  project 
and  moft  ultimate  end  that  a  foul,  thus  fincere,  is  big  with,  is, 
how  it  may  pleafe  God.    The  difappointment  fuch  a  godly  fin- 
cere perfon  merts  with  from  any  other ,  troubles  him  no  more, 
than  it  would  a  Merchant    who  fpeeds  in  the  maine  end  of  his 
voyage  to  the  Indies ,  and  returnes  richly  laden  with  the  prise 
of  gold  and  filver  he  went  for ,  but  orly  lofeth  h  s  garter  or 
(hooe-ftring  in  the  voyage.    As  the  Mailers  eye  dire&s  the  fer- 
vants  hand,  ( if  he  can  do  his  bufinefie  to  his  Matters  minde,  he 
hath  his  wifh,  though  ftrangers ,  who  come  into  the  (hop,  like 
it  not  J  Thus  godly  fincerity   acquiefceth    in    the  Lords  judge- 
ment of  him.     Such  a  one  (hoots  not  at  fmall  nor  great,  ftudies 
not  to  accommodate  himfelf  toanv,  to  hit  the  humour  of  rich 
or  poor,   but    fingles  out    God  in   his  thoughts  from  all  0- 
ther,  as  the  chief  object  o'  his  love,   ear,  faith,  joy,  &c.  he 
directs  all  his  endeavours  like  avvifeAxher  at  this  white,  and 
when  he  can  moft  approve  himfelf  to  Gtitf,  h?  counts  he  fhoors 
beft.     Heare  holy    ¥*%t  fpcaking ,   not  only  his  own   private 
thought?,  but  the  common  fenfe  of  all  fincere  beteevcrs,  2  j£V. 
5.  p.  fife la&o ut ,  w%ct h?t pteftni tr air/bit.,  thtt  we  may  be  acc.pt td 
of  him.     The  worlds  true  man  is  he  rhat  v,i!i  not  wrong  man.- 
Though  many  go  trios  rat*,  who  can  mak°  bold  with  God  for  all 
their  denvjre  carriage  to  man.    Some  'hat  woiikfriot  ftsale  the 
worth  of  a  penny  from  their  neighbour,  yet  play  the  notorious 
thieves  with  God  in  greater  matters ,  than  all  the  money  their 
neighbour  hath  is  worth.     They  can  iteale  that./m;  f  nrn  God 
(to  gratifie  their  own  occaiionsj  which  he  hath  entlolcd   fur  him~ 
fclf.  and  laves  peculiar  chime  to  (the  Sabbarh-dav  l  rntfarMj"  By 

T.  - 


j  6  Having  your  loyns 

fuch  a  title  as  will  upontryal  be  found  ftronga*  ("I  trow)  than 
we  can  (h?w  for  the  reft  of  the  week  to  be  ours.     Others  will 
not  lie  to  man  poiiibly  in  their  dealing  with  him,  (and  it  were 
bttter  living  in  the  world ,  if  there  were  more  of  this  truth  a- 
mongusj  but  theie  very  men  (many  of  them ,  yea  all  that  are 
not  more  than  morally  upright)  make  nothing  of  lying  to  God, 
which  they  do   in   every    prayer  they  make,  promrfing  to  do 
what  they  never  beftow  a  fcrious  thought  how  they  may  per- 
forme  •.  They  fay  they  will  fa:  dtifie  Gods  Name  ,  and  yet  throw 
dirt  in  the  face  of  every  attribute  in  it  -9    they  pray  that  the 
Will  of  God  may  be  done  ,  and  yet  while  they  know  their  fanfti- 
rication  is  his  will ,  they  content  themielves  with  their  unho- 
ly hearts,  and  natures,  and  think  it  enough  to  beautifie  the  front, 
of  their  lives ,  that  part  which  faceth  man ,  and  ftands  to  the 
ftreet  (as  I  may  fo  fay)  with  a  few  flourifhes  of  civility  and  juftnefs 
in  their  worldly  dealings,  though  their  inward  man  lies  all  in  wo- 
ful  ruines  at  the  fame  time.     But  he  is  Gods  true  man,  that  de- 
fires  to  give  unto  God  the  things  that  are  Gods,  as  well  as  un- 
to man  the  things  that  ace  mans,  yea^  who  is  firft  trueto  God,  and 
then  to  man  fo- his  fake.    Good  fjfephwhen  his  brechren  feared 
as  ftrangets  to  him  (for  yet  they  knew  no  other,)  they  fhould  re- 
ceive feme  hard  meafure  at  his  hands  j   mirk  ,  what  comfe  he 
takes  to  free  their  troubled  thoughts  from  all  fufpition  of  any 
unrighteous  dealing  from  him.     cDo  this  (faith  he)  and  live,  for 
1  fear  God ,  Gen.  42.13.   As  if  he  had  faid,  exped  nothing  from 
me,  butwhatisfquareand  upright,  for  I  fear  God-,  you  pofli- 
bly  think  becaufe  I  am  a  g-eat  man,  and  you  poore  ftrangers 
(where  you  have  no  friends  to  intercede  for  you)  that  my  might 
(hould  bear  down  your  right  •  but  you  mayfave  your  felvcs  the 
trouble  of  fuch  jealous  thoughts   concerning  me;   for  I  fee 
one  infinitely  more  above  me,  than  I  feeme  to  be  above  you,  and 
h;m  I  fear^  which  I  could  not  do,  if  f  fhould  be  falfe  to  you. 
Theword,  2  Cor.  1.12.  for  fincerity  is  emphatical,    i'M^f /**/<*, 
a  Metaphor  from   things  tried  by  the  light  of  the  Sunne  , 
as  when  you  are  buying  cloth  (  or  fuch  like  ware)  you  will 
carry  it  out  of  the  dark  fhop,  and  hold  it  up  to  the  light,  by 
which  the  leaft  hole  in  it  isdifcovered^  or  as  the  Eagle  (fay  fome) 
holds  up  her  young  againft  the  Sunne ,  and  judgeth  them  her 
own ,  if  able  to  look  up  wiftily  againft  it ,  or  fpurious  if  not 

able, 


girt  aboht  with  truth  jj 


able.  Truly  that  is  the  godly  fincere  foul,  which  looks  up  to  hea- 
ven and  defires  to  be  determined  in  his  thoughts,  judgement,  affe- 
ctions and  practifes,as  they  can  ftand  before  the  light,  which  (Tunes 
from  thence  through  the  Word  ,  the  great  luminary  into  which 
God  hath  gather'd  all  light  for  guiding  fouls  as  the  Sunne  in  the 
firmament  is  for  directing  our  bodies  in  their  walking  to  and  fro  in 
the  world.  If  thefe  fuit  with  the  Word,  and  can  look  on  ^with- 
out being  put  to  (hame  by  it,  then  on  the  fincere  foul  goes  in  -his 
enterprize  with  courage,  nothing  (hall  flop  him :  But  if  any  of 
thefe  be  found  to  (hun  the  light  of  the  Word,  (as  <iAdam  would 
(if  he  could)  the  feeing  of  God)  not  being  able  to  ftand  to  its  tri- 
al, then  he  is  at  his  journeys  end,  and  can  be  drawn  forth  by  no  Ar- 
guments from  the  flefti^for  it  goes  not  on  thefkfhes  errand,  but  on 
Godsend  he  that  fends  him,  (hall  only  ftay  him,  Things  are  true  or 
right,as  they  agree  with  their  firft  principles.When  the  counterpane 
agrees  with  the  original  writing,  then  'tis  true ;  when  a  meafure  a- 
grees  with  the  Legal  ftandard  or  town  buftiel,  then  'tis  true  -,  Now 
thewillofGodisftandardto  all  our  wills^nd  he  is  the  fincere  man, 
that  labours  to  take  the  rule  and  meafure  of  all  his  affections  and 
actions  from  that.  Hence  David  is  called  a  man  after  Gods  own 
heart,  which  is  but  a  PeripbrajJs  of  his  fincerity,  and  is  as  much  as 
if  the  Spirit  of  God  had  faid,  he  was  an  upright  man,  he  carries  on 
his  heart  the  fculpture  and  image  of  Gods  heart ,  as  it  is  engraved 
on  the  feal  of -the  Word.  But  enough  for  the  prefent^  this  may 
ferve  to  (hew  what  isEvangelical  up  ightnefle.  Three  things  would 
be  defired  further  before  we  fall  on  the  Application. 

Firft,  to  (hew  what  uncomclinefles  they  are  that  fincerity 
covers. 

Secondly,  how  fincerity  covers  thefe. 

Thirdly  why  this  Evangelical  fincerity  doth  cover  thefe.  We 
(hall  give  fome  account  to  all.  . 


SECT. 


n  y  Having  your  loyns 


SECT.  II. 

Fit  ft,  of    the    firft,  What  uncomlineffc  doth   finceritie 
cover  ? 

I  anfwer,  all,  efpecially  finful.  T here  are  feveral  external  tem- 
poral priviledges,  in  which  if  any  fall  Ihort  (fuch  excellency  does 
this  vaine  world  put  in  them,more  than  their  intrinfecal  worth  calls 
for)  they  are  expofed  to  fome  difhonour  (if  not  contempt  J  in  the 
thoughts  of  others.  Now  where  fincere  grace  is,  it  affords  a  faire 
cover  to  them  all^  yea,  puts  more  abundant  honour  on  the  perfon 
in  the  fight  of  God,  Angels  (and  men  alfo  if  wife)  than  the  other 
can  occalion  contempt, 
i.  Firft ,  beauty,  this  is  i  he  great  idol ,  which  the  whole  world 

wanders  after ,  as  they  after  the  Besft ,  Rev.  i  3    which  if  God  de- 
nies (and  confines  the  fouls  of  fome,  to  a  more  uncomely  houfe 
(body  I  mean)  than  others)  this  their  mean    bodily    preferce 
prejudiced!  them  in  the  cfteem  of  others;  now  grace,   if  it  be 
but  graced  with  Sincerity,  fhines  through  the  cloud  that  nature 
hath  darkened  tde  countenance  withal,  Ecclef.  8.  1.    Wifdcme 
wakjs  the  face  to  /bine ;  who,  that  hath  the  ufe  of  his  reafon, 
would  not  prize,  and  choofe   the   veffel   in  the  cellar  full  of 
generous  wine,  before  a  gilt  tun  that  hangs  up  empty  at  the 
door  for  a  figne  ?  Jf  fincere  grace  fills  not  the  heart  within,  the 
beauty  with  which  nature  hath  gilt  the  face  without,  makes  the 
perfon  but  little  worth.     A  beautiful  perfon  without  true  grace, 
is  but  a  fair  {linking  weed,  you  know  the  bed  of  inch  a  one, 
if  you  look  on  him  furtheft  off  ^  whereas  a  fincere  heart  with- 
out this  outward  beauty  to  commer.d  ir  T   is  like  fome  fwect  flower 
(not  painted  with  fircn  hue  colours  on  the  leaves,  better  in  the  hand 
than  e\e,  to  fmell  on,  than  look  on-,  the  nearer  you  come  to  the 
fincere  foul,  the  better  you  find  him  Outward  uncomlineffc  to  true 
grace,  is  but  as  fome  old  mean  buildings    you  fometime  fee  ftand 
before  a  goodly  (lately  houfe,  which  hide  us  glory  only  from  the 
travellour  that  pafTeth  by  at  fomcdiftance  ;  but  he  that  comes  in 
feesitsbtauty,  and  admires  it. 
2.  Again  ,  a  me^nc  parentage ,  and  ing!oriou«  defcent  is  much  de- 

fpifedintiiewoTli.1.     Well,  how  b3le  foevcr  the  ftock and  igno- 
ble the  birth  be,  when  grace  unfeined  comes,  it  brings  armes 


girt  about  with  truth  jq 


with  it ,  it  clarifies  the  blood ,  and  makes  the  houfe  illuftrious: 
Since  thou  waft  fr<  clout  in  my  eye ,  thou  haft  been  honourable , 
Efay  4.  4.  Sincerity  fets  a  mark  of  honour^  if  you  fee  this  ftar 
fhining ,  though  over  a  meane  cotrage,  it  tells  thee  a  great  Prince 
dwells  there  ,  an  heir  of  heaven ;  finccrity  brings  the  creature 
into  alliance  wiih  a  high  family,  no  lefle  than  of  the  high  God, 
by  which  new  alliance  his  own  inglorious  name  is  blotted  out, 
and  a  new  name  given  him  ;  He  bears  the  name  of  God,  to 
whom  he  is  joyn'd  by  a  faith  unfeigned ,  and  who  dares  fay 
that  the  God  of  heavens  childe ,  or  (Thrifts  bride  are  of  an  ig- 
noble birth  ? 

*sfgaine ,  a  low  purfe ,  (as  well  as  a  low  parentage  )  expofeth  3. 
to  contempt ,  yea ,  more  .•  fomc  by  their  purfe  redeeme  them- 
felves  in  time  (as  they  think)  from  the  fcorne  of  their  meane 
flock.  The  litt'e  fp  ing  "from  whence  the  water  came,  by  that 
time  it  hath  runne  fome  miles,  and  fwel'd  into  a  broad  river,  is  out 
of  fight ,  and  not  enquired  much  after  :  But  poverty ,  that  it  felf 
founds  reproach  in  the  cares  o':  this  proud  world.  Well,  though 
a  man  were  poor  ,  even  to  a  proverb  •  yet  if  a  vein  of  true  gcdli- 
neiTe,  (incere  grace  be  but  to  be  found  running  in  his  heart ;  Here 
is  a  rich  Mine,  that  will  life  him  up  above  all  the  worlds  contempt^ 
fuch  a  one  may  poffibly  fay,  he  hath  no  money  in  his  houfe;  but 
he  cannot  fiy  that  he  hath  no  treafire  ,  that  he  is  not  rich,  and 
fpeaktrue;  hefureisrich  ,  that  hath  a  key  to  Gods  treafury.  The 
fincere  foul  is  rich  in  God,  what  God  hath  is  his,  all  uyoHrs^you  are 
Chrijis. 

Againe ,  in  a  word,  to  name  no  more^  parts  and  endowments  4. 
of  the  minde,  thefe  are  applauded  above  all  the  former  by  forne^ 
and  indeeJ  they  carry  in  them  an  excellency,  that  ftands  more 
level  to  his  nobleft faculty  (ReafonJ  than  the  other,  which  are 
fo  far  beneath  its  fpiritual  nature,  that  as  Gideons  fouldiers  (fome 
of  them;  could  not  drink  the  water  till  they  bowed  down  on 
their  knees,  fo  neither  could  man  take  any  relifh  in  thefe,  did 
he  not  firit  deb.ife  himfelf  fame  beneath  the  lofty  ftature  of  his 
reafonaWefoul  .  but  knowledge ,  parts,  and  abilities  of  the  mind 
thefe  feem  to  lift  up  mans  head,  and  make  him,  that  he  lofef  h  none 
of  his  height  -  and  thereroic  none  fo  contemptible  by  the  wife 
world  ,  as  tbofe  that  are  of  weak  parts,  and  meane  intellectual 

abilities: 


tio  Having  your  loyns 


abilities.    Well ,  now  let  us  lee  what  cover  fincerity  hath  for  this 
nakedneffe  of  the  mindcwhich  feemsthe  moft  (hamefulof  all  the 
reft.  Where  art  thou  Chriftian,that  I  may  tell  thecfwho  fits  lamen- 
ting, and  bemoaning  thy  weak  parts,  and  (hallow  understanding  ) 
what  a  happy  man  thou  art,  with  thy  honeft  fincere  heart ,  be« 
yond  all  compare  with  thcfe,  whofe  fpaikling  parts  do  fo  dazle 
thy  ej  es  ,  that  thou  cunft  not  fee  thy  own  priviledge  above  them  > 
Their  pearle  is  but  in  the  head,  and  they  may  be  toads  for  all 
that  -t   but  thine  is  in  the  heart,  and 'tis  the  pearle  of  grace,  that 
is  the  pearle  of  greateft  price.     Thy  fincere  heart  fets  thee  high- 
er in  Gods  heart ,  than   thy  weak   parts    do  lay  thee   low  in 
their  deceived  opinion  ;  and  thou  without  the  abilities  of  minde 
that  they  have,  (halth'nde  the  way  to  heaven^  But  they  for  all 
their  ftrong  parts  (hall  be  tumbled  down  to  hell,  becaufe  they 
have  not  thy  fincerity,     Thy  meane  gifts  do  not  make  thee  inca- 
pable of  heavens  glory-,  but  their  unfancTified  gifts  and  endow- 
ments are  fure  to  make  them  capable  of  more  of  hells  (hame  and 
mifery.    In  a  word,  though  here  thy  head  be  weak,  and  parts  low^ 
yet  for  thy  comfort  know  ,  Thou  (halt  have  a  better  head  given 
thee  to  thy  fincere  heart ,  when  thou  comeft  to  heaven  •  but  their 
knowing  heads  (hall  not  meet  with  better  bearts  in  hell,  but  be 
yoked  eternally  to  their  own  wicked  ones  in  torment,  but  enough 
of  this.  I  come  to  the  fecond  kinde  of  uncomelineiTe  which  fincerity 
covers,and  that  is  finful. 
2.  Secondly,  now  this  Iinful  uncomelineiTe  muft  needs  be  the  word, 

becaufe  it  lights  on  the  moft  beautiful  part,  the  fou!  if  dirt  thrown 
on  the  face  be  more  uncomely  than  on  another  member  (becaufe 
'tis  the  faireft )  then  no  uncomelineiTe  like  that,  which  crocks  and 
blacks  the  foul  and  fpirit-,  becaufe  this  is  intended  b  God,  to 
be  the  prime  feat  of7  mans  beauty.  Nowtha:  which  moft  ftaines 
and  deformes  the  foul,  muft  be  that  whitli  m  >ft  oppofethits 
chief  peife&ion ,  whith  in  its  primitive  creation  was ,  and  can 
ftill  be  no  other,than  the  beauty  of  holine  s  d-awn  on  it,bv-  the  holy 
Spirits  curious  pencil  (  and  what  can  that  be  but  the  foulc  monfter 
which  is  called  firmer'  this  hath  marr'd  mans  fweet  coun'enance, 
that  be  is  no  more  like  the  beauty  God  created  ,  than  dead  Sa- 
rahs face  was  like  that  beauty,  which  was  a  bait  for  the  greateft 
Princes ,  and  made  her  husband  go  in  fear  of  his  life,  where- 
ever  he  camej  nay,  than  the  foul  fiend  now  a  curfcd  Devil  in 

Hell. 


girt  about  with  truth  g  f 


Hell  ,  is  like  to  the  holy  Augel  hewas  in  heaven.  Thiswoun 
which  is  given  by  fin  to  man*  nature,  Chrift  hath  undertake11 
to  cure  by  his  grace  in  his  Eleft  ;  The  cure  is  begu  n  here,  buc 
not  fo  perfected,  that  no  fear  and  blemifti  remaines-  and  this 
is  the  great  uncomelinefle  which  fincerity  layes  its  finger  on* 
and  covers. 


SECT.   III. 

Que/}.  But  here  the  queftion  may  be,how  fincerity  covers  the     £&fi~ 
Saints  finful  uncomelinefTcs  ? 

Anfro.  I  (hall  anfwer  to  this,  Firfi,  negatively,  and  (hew  how  it      Anfvr. 
doth  not  ^  Secondly,  affirmatively ,  how  it  doth. 

Fir  ft ,  Negatively,  how  fincerity  doth  not  cover them; and  *• 

that  in  fevcral  particulars.    Firft,  fincerity  doth  not  fo  cover  the 
Saints  failings,  as  to  take  away  their  finful  nature-,  wandring 
thoughts  are  finnes  in  a  Saint,  as  well  as  in  another  ;  A  weed 
will  be  a  weed  where-ever  it  grows,  though  in  a  garden  among 
choiceft  flowers ;  They  miftakc  then,  who,  becaufe  the  Saints  fins 
are  covered,  deny  them  to  be  finnes.    Secondly  ,  it  doth  not  co- 
ver them  fo,  as  to  give  U9  the  leaft  ground  to  think,  that  God 
doth  allow  the  Chnftian  to  commit  the  leaft  finne  more  thano- 
thers  ^  indeed  'tis  inconfiftent  with  Gods  holinefle  to  give,  and 
with  a  Saints  fincerity  to  pretend  fuch  a  difpenfation  to  be  given 
them.    A  father  may,  out  of  his  indulgence  and  love  to  his  child, 
paffe  by  a  failing  in  his  watting  on  him  j  as  if  hefpills  the  wine, 
or  breaks  the  glaffehe  is  bringing  to  him  ^  but  fure  he  will  not      * 
allow  him  to  throw  it  down  carekfly  or  willingly.  Though  a  man 
may  be  eafily  entreated  to  forgive  his  friend  that  wounded  him 
unawares ,  when  he  meant  him  no  hurt  •,  yet  he  will  not  before- 
hand give  him  lcaveto  do  it.  Thirdly,  it  doth  not  focoverthem, 
as  that  God  fheiild  not  fee  them,  which  is  not  only  derogatory 
to  his  omnifcience  ,  but  to  his  mercy  alfo^  for  he  cannot  pardon, 
what  he  doth  not  firft  fee  to  be  finne-,  God  doth  not  only  fee 
the  finnes  of  his  children,  but  their  failings  are  more diftaftful 
to  him  than  others  •,  becaufe  the  perfons  in  which  they  are  found, 
are  fo  dear,  and  ftand  fo  near  unto  him.     A  dung-hill  in  a 

M  Princes 


g  2  Having  y  our  hyns 


Princes  chamber  would  be  more  offenfivc  to  him ,  than  one  far 
off  from  his  Court.     The    Chriftians  bofome  is  Gods  Court, 
Throne,  Temple ,  tru  re  he  hath  taken  up  his  reft  for  ever.    S  inne 
there  muft  needs  be  very  unfavoury  to  his  noftrils.  Fourthly  jt  doth 
not  fo  cover  them ,  as  that  the  Saints  need  not  confeffe  them,  be 
humbled  under  them ,  or  fue  out  a  pardon  for  them  j  a  penny 
is  as  due  debt  as  a  pound ,  and  therefore  to  be  acknowledged; 
Indeed  that  which  is  a  fin  of  infirmity  in  the  committing,  be- 
comes a  fin  of  prefumption  by  hiding  of  it,  and  bardning  in  it. 
Job  held  fafthis  integrity  throughout  his  fad  conflid  •  yet  tho.'e 
failings  which  'fcaped  him  in  the  paroxyfme  of  his  afHidions 
brought  him  upon  his   knees ;  /  abhor  my  felf  (faith  he)  and 
rtfent  in  dmfl  and  ajhesy  Job  42.  6    Fifthly ,  and  laftly ,  it  doth  not 
fo  cover  them ,  as  if  our  fincerity  did  the  leaft  merit,  and  deferve, 
that  God  fhould  for  it  cover  our  o:her  failings  and  infirmities  ± 
were  there  fuch  a  thing  as  obedience  abfolutely  compleat,  it  could 
not  merit  pardon  for  paftfins;  much  leffe  can  an  imperfed  obe- 
dience (as  fincerity  is  in  a  ftrid  fence  J  deferve  it  for  prefent 
failings.    Obedience  legally  perfed,  is  no  more  than  (as  crea- 
tures^ we  owe  to  the  Law  of  God ;  and  how  could  that  pay  the 
debt  of  (inne ,  which  was  it  felf  due  debt ,  before  any  finne  was 
committed  ?  much  leffe  can  Evangelical  obedience  (which  is  fin- 
cerity) do  it ,  that  falls  fhort  by  far  of  that  obedience  we  do  owe. 
If  he  that  owes  twenty  pounds,  merits  nothing  when  he  pays  the 
whole  fumme  5  then  furely  he   doth  not ,  that  of  the  twenty 
pounds  he  owe?,  pays  but  twenty  pence.    Indeed  Creditors  may 
take  what  they  pleale ,  and  if  they  will  fay  half  fatisfies  them,  it  is 
difcharge  enough  to  the  debtor.  But  where  did  ever  God  fay  he 
would  thus  compound  with  his  creature  ?  God  ftands  as  ftridly 
upon  it  in  the  GofpeK  Covenant  to  have  the  whole  debt  paid,  as  he 
did  in  the  firft  of  woiks.  There  was  required  a  full  lighteoufneffc 
in  keeping,  or  a  full  curfe  for  breaking  of  the  Law;  fo  there  is  in 
the  Evangelical  >t  only  here  the  wards  of  the  lock  are  changed. 
God  required  this  at  thecneatuesrumdinthe  firft  Covenant  to  be 
perfonally  performed,  or  endured.  But  in  the  Gofpel- Covenant  he 
is  content  to  take  both  at  the  hands  of  Chrift  our  furcty,  and  im- 
pute thefe  to  the  fincere  foul  thatunfeignedly  believes  on  him,  and 
gives  up  himfelf  to  him. 


SECT. 


gin  about  with  truth.  82 


SECT.  IV. 

SScondij ,  To  (hew  Positively  how  fincerity  covers  the  Saints 
failings. 

Fir  ft ,  fincerity  is  that  property  to  which  pardoning  mccy  is 
annext.  True  indeed,  'tis  Chrift  that  covers  all  ourfinnesand 
failings ,  but  it  is  only  the  fincere  foul ,  over  which  he  will  call  his 
skirt.  ? J  time  32.  2.  "Bleffed  is  he  rchofe  finne  is  covered ;  blejfed 
is  the  man  unto  whom  the  L>>rd  imfuteth  not  iniquity.  None  will 
doubt  this ;  but  which  is  the  man  ?  the  next  words  tell  us  his 
name-,  and  in  vehafe  fpirit  there  ts no  guile.  Chriftsrighteoufnefs 
is  the  garment  that  covers  the  nakednefTe,  and  fhame  of  our 
unrighteoufneffc  j  faith  the  grace  that  puts  this  garment  on;  but 
what  faith  ?  none  but  the  faith  unfeigned ,  as  Paul  calls  it, 
2  Tim.  1 .  Here's  water ,  faith  the  Eunuch^  What  doth  hinder  me 
to  be  baptized?  Atts  8.  36.  now  mark  Philips  anfwer,  ver.  37. 
If  thou  beleevefi  with  all  thy  heart,  thou  mayefi^  a^if  hehadfaid, 
nothing  but  an  hypocritical  heart  can  hinder  thee /Tis  the  falfe 
heart  only  that  findes  the  door  of  mercy  fhut.  He  that  promifeth 
to  cover  he  fincere  fouls  failings,  threa  ens  to  uncover  the  hypo- 
crites impiety.  Vrsv.  10.  9.  He  that  perverteth  his  way  t  /hall  be 
knownt  that  U,  to  his  fhame. 

Secondly  >  where  fincerity  is,  God  approves  of  that  foul,  as  a 
holy  righteous  perfon,  notwithstanding  that  mixture  of  fin  which 
is  found  in  him.  As  God  doth  not  like  theSaintsfinne  for  his 
fincerity  ^  fo  he  doth  not  un-faint  him  for  that.  God  will  fet 
his  hand  to  /  cts  teftimonial ,  that  he  is  a  righteous  man , 
though  many  finnes  are  recorded  in  the  Sripture,  which  he 
fell  into  (and  fou!e  ones  too)  yet  Jo£  perfect,  becaufe  the  frame 
of  his  heart  was  fincere,  the  tenure  of  his  life  hof,  and  he  was 
rather furprifed  by  them  as  temptations,  than  they  entertained 
by  him  upon  choice.  Though  fincerity  dot  not  blinde  Gods 
eye  that  he  fhould  not  fee  the  Saints  finne,  yet  it  makeshimfee 
it  with  a  pitiful  eye,  and  not  a  wrathful  !  As  a  husband  know- 
ing his  wife  faithful  to  him  in  the  raaine ,  pities  her  in  other 
w«akne(Tes ,  and  for  all  them  accounts  her  a  good  wife,  In  all 
this  (  faith  God)  job  fnned  not;  and  at  the  very  clofeofhiscom- 
bate ,  God  brings  him  out  of  the  field  with  this  honorable  te- 

M  2  ftimony 


1. 


2. 


g^  Having  your  loyns 


2. 


ftimony  to  his  friends ,  that  had  taken  fo  much  pains  to  bring 
his  godlinefle  in  qieftion;'  that  his  fervanc  Job  had  jpoke  ri?ht 
tf  h:m.  Truly  God  faid  more  of  Job,  than  he  dnrft  of  himfelf. 
He  freely  conrcfTeth  his  unadvifed  froward  fpeeches,  and  cies 
out,  /  abhor  my  ft  If  y  and  repent  in  d»fl  and  ajhes.  God  law  Jobs 
fins  attended  with  (incerity  ,  and  therefore  judged  him  perfect 
and  righteous  :  Job  faw  his  fincerity  dafht  with  many  fad  fail- 
ings, and  this  made  him  in  the  clofe  of  all,  rather  confefTc  his 
finnes  w.th  fhame,  than  glory  in  his  grace.  Gods  mercy  is 
larger  to  his  children  ,  than  their  charity  is  many  times  to  them- 
felves  and  their  brethren.  Firft  ,  to  themfelves ;  do  you  think 
the  Prodigal  (theemblem  of  a  convert,)  durft  haveaskc  the  robe, 
or  deiired  his  father  to  be  at  fuchcoft  for  his  entena  nmenr,  as 
his  facher  freely  beftowed  on  him?  no  fure,  a  roomc  in  the 
Kitchin  we  fee  was  as  high  as  he  durft  ask  ,  to  be  among 
the  meaneft  fervants  in  the  houre;  poor  foul  !  he  could  not 
conceive  he  fliould  have  fuch  a  meeting  with  his  father  at  firft 
fight.  A  robe  /  he  might  raher  look  for  a  rope ,  at  leaft  a 
rod.  A  fcaft  at  his  fathers  table  I  O ,  unlookt  for,  welcome  /I 
doubt  not  but  if  any  had  met  him  on  his  way,  and  told  him  that 
his  father  was  refolv'd  as  foone  as  he  came  home ,  not  to 
let  him  fee  his  face,  but  prefently  pack  him  to  Briae-wcl,  there 
to  be  whipt,  and  fed  with  rneadand  water  for  many  mor.eths, 
and  then  perhaps  he  would  at  laft  look  on  him  ,  and  lake  him 
home,  but  in  his  ftarving  condition  this  would  hav- been  good 
neves  to  him  ^  but  as  God  hath  ftrangc  puniftiroents  for  the 
wicked ,  fo  he  hath  ftrangc  cxprellions  of  love  and  mercy  for 
fincere  fouls.  He  loves  to  out-do  their  higheft  expectations; 
kifle,  robe,  feaft ,  all  in  one  day,  and  that  the  firft  oavof  his 
return ,  when  the  memory  of  his  outragious  wick^dnefles  were 
frefh,  and  theftinking  fent  of  his  fwiH  and  fwine  frorr;  which 
he  was  but  newly  come,  hardly  gone.'  What  a  great  favourite  is 
fincerity  wi  h  the  Goc]of  heaven  !  Again  ,  Cods  mercy  is  larger 
to  Ins  children,  than  their  charity  h  towards  one  another.  Thofe 
whom  we  are  ready  to  un- faint  for  their  failings  that  appear  in 
their  lives ,  God  owns  for  his  per/fed  ones,  becaufeof  their  fin-. 
cerity.  We  finde  Afaes  failings  expreft ,  and  his  perredion  vouchc 
by  God  together,  asl may  lay,  ina  breath,  zLhron.  15.17.  It 
was  well  God  clear'd  chat  good  man  •  for  had  but  the  naked  ftj. 

ru 


girt  about  with  truth.  8 


ry  of  his   life,  (as  it  frands  in  the  Scripture )  been  recorded, 
withouc   any  expreffe  teftunony  of  Gods  approving  him ,  his 
godlinefie  would  have  hazarded  a  coming  under  difpuce  in  cheo- 
pinionof  good  men,  yea  many  more  wich  bird  (concerning  whom 
we  are  now  put  ouc  of  doubt ,  becaufe  we   hnde  them  cano- 
nized for  Samts  by  God  himfelf  J  would  have  been  caft,  if  a 
Jury  of  men.  and  thofe  holy  men  too,  had  gone  upon  them.  E- 
lijah  himfelf,  becaufe  he  faw  none  have  Juch  zeal  lor  Goi  ,  and 
his  worfliip,  as  to  wear  their  colours  openly  in  a  free  profefFon, 
and  hang  out  a  flag  of  defiance  againft  the  idolatry  of  the  times, 
by  a  ftout  oppofing  it,  as  he  did,  (which  might  be  their finne) 
makes  a  fad  moane  to  Gjd,  as  iftheapoftafie  had  been  fo  gene- 
ral ,  that  the  whole  (pedes  of  the  godly  had  been  preferv'd  in 
his  fingle  pcrfon.     But  God  brings  the  holy  man  better  news, 
I  Kings  I  p.  1 8.     /  have  left  fev en  thoufand  in  ffrael,  all  the  knees 
which  have  nut  bowed  down  to  Baal,  and  every  mouth  -which  hath  riot 
fcffedhim.     As  if  God  had  faid,  comfort  thy  felf  Elijah;  though 
my  number  be  not  great ,  yet  neither  is  there  fuch  a  dearth  of 
Saints  as  thou  feareftintMis  ungodly  age  ^  it  is  true,  their  faith 
is  weak,  tbey  dare  not  juftle  with  the  finnes  of  the  age,  as  thou 
doeft ,  for   which  thou  (halt   not  lpfe  thy  reward  •,  yet  thofe 
night-difciples,  that  for  fear  carry  their  light  in  a  dark  lanthorn 
(having  fome  fincerity  which  keeps  them  from  poMucing  them- 
(elves  with  thefe  idolatries^  muft  not,  (hall  not  be  difown'd  by  me. 
Yea  ,  God  who  bids  us  be  moft  tender  of  his  Lambs,  is  much  more 
tender  of  them  himfelf.    Obfcrvable  is  that  place,  i  John  2. 12, 
13, 14,    There  are  three  ranks  of  Saints  ,  fathers  ,  young  men, 
little  children,  and  the  Spirit  of  God  chiefly  (hews  his  tender  care 
of  them,as  by  mentioning  them  firft,  vtr.  12.  fo  by  leaving  the 
fweec  promife  of  pardoning   mercy  in  their  lap  and  bofome, 
rather  than  either  of  the  other ^  Little  children,   J  write  unto  . 
yon ,  fur  your  finnes  are  forgiven  ym  for  my  Njme  (ak?.  But  are 
not  the  fathers  fiw,and  young  mens  alfo  forgiven?  yes,  who  doubts 
\t?    Bit  he  doth  not  fo  particularly  apply  it  to  them,  as  to 
thefe,  becaufe  thefe  from  the  fence  of  their  own  failings  (out  of 
which  the  other  were  more  grown)  were  more  prone  to  difpute 
againft  this  promife  in  their ^own  bofomes  :  yea,  he  doth  not 
only  in  plaine  termes  tell  them ,  their  finnes  are  forgiven  ,  but 
SQects  with  the   teet    objeftion,  which  comes  forth  their 

trembling 


8  6  Having  your  loyns 


trembling  hearts  in  oppofition  co  this  good  news ,  taken  from 
their  own  vilenefle  and  unworthinefie,  and  flops  its  mouth  with 
this,  forgiven  for  my  Names  f*\e}  a  greater  name,  then 
the  name  of  their  biggeft  finne  which  diicou  ageth  them  from 
believing. 

Thirdly  ,  fincerity  keeps  up  the  fouls  credit  at  the  Throne  of 
grace,  fo  that   no   finful   infirmity   can    hinder  its   welcome 
with  God.     'Tisthe  regarding  of  iniquity  in  the  6<v*rr,  (not  the 
having  of  it )    flops  Gods  eare  from  hearing  our  prayer.  It 
is  a  temptation ,  not  a  few  have  found  fome  work  to  get  overj 
whether  fuch  as  they,  who  fee  fo  many  finful  failings  in  thcra- 
f elves ,  may  take  the  boldneffe  to  pray  ,  or  without  prefuming  to 
exped  audience  when  they  have  prayed  5  and   fometimes  pre- 
vails fo  farre,  that  becaufe  they  cannot  pray  as  they  would,  there- 
fore they  forbeare  what  they  fhould;   much   like  fome  poore 
people  that  keep  from  the  Congregation,  becaufe  they  have  not 
fuch  cloaths  to  come  in  as  they  delire.    To  meet  with  fuch  as 
are  turning  away  from  duty  upon  this  fear,  the  promifes  (which 
are  our  only  ground  for  prayer ;  and  chief  plea  in  prayer )  arc 
accommodated ,  and  fitted  to  the  loweft  degree  of  grace ;  fo 
that  as  a  picture  well  drawn,  faceth  all  in  the  room  alike  that 
look  on  it;  fo  the  promifes  of  the  Gofpd  Covenant  fmile  upon 
all  that  fincerely  look  to  God  in  Chrift.     It  is  not  faid, //j^* 
have  faith  like  a  Ccv/./r,  but  if  you  have  faith  as  a  grain  e  of  muftfird- 
feed,  je  fha/I  fay  unto  this  mountain  remove  hence  to  yonder  place, 
end  it  /halt  remove,  Mat.  17.  20.  neither  is  jufti  ying  faith  beneath 
miraculous  faith  in   its  own  fphere  of  activity  •  the  leaft  faith 
on  Chrift ,  if  fincere ,  as  truly   removes  the  mountainous  guilt 
of  finne  from  the  foul,  as  the  ftrongeft;  hence  all  the  Saints  arc 
faid  to  have  like  precious  f-ith,  tPeti.i.  Sarahs   faith  (which 
in  Cenefs  we  can  hardly  fee  (as  the  (lory  prcfents  her  J  where- 
in it  appeared)  obtains  an  honourable  mention,  Heb.  II.  where 
God  owns 'her  for  a  believer  as   well   as  »^/braham  with  his 
ftronger  faith.    What  love  is  it   the  promife  cntailcs  the  fa- 
vours of  God  upon?  not  grace  he  with  them  that  love  cur  Lord 
Jefm  with  a  Seraphims  love ,  but  with  a  fincere  love ,  Eph.  6. 
laft.    Not  Bleffed  they  who  are  W>Iy  to  fuch  a  meafure  -,  this 
would  have  fitted  but  fome  Saints,  the  greateft  part  would 
have  gone  away  and  faid ,  there's  nothing  for  rnc  •   I  am  not  fo 

ho- 


girt  about  with  truth  87 


boly  j  but  that  no  Saint  might  lofe  his  portion ,  'Tit  blejfed 
are  they  -which  hunger  and  thirft  after  righteottfneft ;  and  this 
takes  in  all  the  children  of  God ,  even  to  the  leaft  babe,  that 
is  newly  born  this  day  to  Cbrift.  The  new  Convert  hun- 
gers after  holinefle,  and  that  fincerely.  And  wherefore  all 
this  care  fo  to  lay  the  promifes  >  but  to  (hew  that  when  we  go 
to  make  ufe  of  any  promife  at  the  Throne  of  grace ,  we 
(hould  not  queftion  our  welcome  for  any  of  our  infirmities,  fo 
this  ftamp  of  fincerity  be  upon  our  hearts.  Indeed  if  fincerity  did 
not  thus  much  (or  the  Saint,  there  could  not  be  a  prayer  accepted 
of  God  at  the  hands  of  any  Saint  that  ever  was,  or  (hall  be  on 
earth  to  the  end  of  the  world,  becaufe  there  never  was,  nor  (hall 
befuch  a  Saint  dwelling  in  flefh  here  below,  in  whom  eminent  fail- 
ings may  not  be  found.  The  Apoftle  would  have  us  know  that 
Elijah,  who  did  as  great  wonders  in  heaven  and  earth  too  by  pray- 
er, as  who  greateft  ?  yet  this  man  God  could  foone  have  pickt  a 
hole  in  his  coat.  Indeed  It  ft  we  attribute  the  prevalency  of  his 
prayers  to  the  dignity  of  his  perfon,  and  fomc  eminency  which 
he  had  by  himfelf  in  grace  above  others,  the  Spirit  of  God  tells  us, 
he  was  of  the  fame  make  with  his  poor  brethren.  Elijah  was  a 
man  [nhjecT:  to  Uke  fajfions  a*  ree  are ,  and  he  prayed,  &c.  James 
5,  a  weak  hand  with  a-  fincere  heart  is  able  toturnethekey  in 
prayer. 


CHAP.   VIIL 

An  account  why  fincerity  covers  the  Saints  un- 
comlinejfes. 

NOw  follows  the  fourth  Qiicre ,  Whence  is  it  that  finccry  thus      Offi* 
covers  our  failings  f 

SECT.' 


8  S  Having  y  our  leyns 


SECT.  I. 

*Re  f  i  F'rft  >  *c  A°ws  fr°m  ^e  §race  °^  C^e  Gofpel-Covcnant , 
'  that  relaxeth  the  rigour  of  the  Law,  which  call'd  forcompleat 
obedience  •  by  refolving  all  that  into  this  of  finccrity  and  truth 
of  heart.  Thus  God  when  entring  into  Covenant  with  Abra- 
ham >  expreiTeth  himfelf,  /  am  the  Almighty  God,  walk,  before 
me  ,  and  be  thou  ferfetl  or  fine ere ,  Gen.  17. 1.  As  if  God  had 
faid  to  him ,  ^Abraham ,  fee  here  what  I  expeft  at  thy  hands, 
and  what  thou  mayeft  exped  at  mine.  I  look  that  thou  ftiould- 
eft  fet  me  before  thee ,  whom  in  thy  whole  courfe  and  walking 
thou  wilt  fincerely  endeavour  to  pleafe  and  approve  thyfelfto, 
and  at  my  hands  tbou  mayeft  promife  thy  felf  what  an  Almigh- 
ty God  can  <sfo,both  in  protecting  thee  in  thy  obedience,  and  pardon- 
ing of  thee,  where  thou  falleft  fhort  of  perfect  obedience-, walk 
•but  in  the  truth  of  thy  heart  before  me,  and  in  Chrift  I  will  ac- 
cept thee,  and  thy  fincere  endeavour,  as  kindly  as  I  would  have 
done  Adam,  if  he  had  kept  his  place  in  innocency ,  and  never 
finnM}  indeed  a  fincere  heart  byvertue  of  this  Covenant  might 
(I  mean  the  Covenant  would  bear  him  out,  and  defend  him  in  it, 
relying  on  Chrift  )  converfe  with  God  ,  and  walk  before  him 
with  as  much  freedome,  and  more  familiarity  (by  reafon  of  a 
nearer  relation  it  hath  )  than  ever  zAdam  did,  when  God  and 
he  was  beft  friends.  If  our  heart  condemn  us  not.  then  faith  the 
-Apoftle  ,  we  have  confidence  towards  God  ,  1  John  3.  21. 
Qtoffaai'afi  iyo&v,  we  have  a  boldneffe  of  face.  And  'tis  not 
the  prefence  of  fin  in  us,  (  as  the  Covenant  now  ftandsj  that 
confeience  can  or  (if  rightly  informed  concerning  the  tenure  of  it) 
will  condemn  us  for ;  tauls  confeience  cleai'd  him,  yea ,  afforded 
matter  of  rejoycing ,  and  holy  glorying  at  the  fame  time  that 
he  found  finne  ftirring  in  him.  No  ,  confeience.  is  fet  by  God 
to  judge  for  him  in  the  private  court  of  our  pwu  bofomes,  and 
it  is  bound  up  b;  a  Law  ,  what  fentence  to  give  for,  or  againft, 
and  that  in  the  fame,  by  which  Chrift  himfelf  will  acquit  or  con- 
demne  the  world  at  laft  day.  Now  when  we  go  upon  the  trial  for 
our  Ives,  be  oreChriftsbar ,  the  great  inqueft  will  be,  whether 
we  have  been  fincere  or  no  ?  and  as  Chrift  will  rot  then  con- 
demn 


girt  about  with  truth. 


demne  the  fincere  foul ,  though  a  thoufand  finnes  could  beob- 
je&ed   againft    it ;   fo    neither  can   our  hearts  condernne  us. 

Queft.  But  here  it  may  be  askt,  how  comes  God  fofov our-       (w/? 
able  in  the  Covenant  of  the  Gofpel ,  to  acctpt  an  obedience  fo       ^ 
imperfe&athis  Saints  hands,  who  was  fo  drift  with  <ts4dam  in 
the  firft,  thar  the  leaft  failing,  though  but  once  'fcaping  him  was  to 
be  accounted  unpardonable  ? 

Anftver.  The  refolution  of  this  Queftion  take  in  thefe  two     tsfnfw. 
particulars. 

Firft,  in  the  Covenant  God  made  with  man-  kinde  in  Adam, 
there  was  no  (ponfor,  or  furety  to  ftand  bound  to  God  for  mans 
performance  of  his  part  in  the  Covenant ,  (which  was  perfeft 
obedience  )  and  therefore  God  could  do  no  other  but  ftand 
ftri&Jy  with  him  -,  becaufe  he  had  none  elfe ,  from  whom  he 
might  recover  his  glory,  and  thereby  pay  himfel  for  the  wrong, 
mans  fault  might  do  him  :  But  in  the  Gofpel-Covenant 
there  is  a  furety ,  Chrift  the  righteous,  who  ftands  refpon- 
fible  to  God  for  all  the  defaults  and  failings  which  occurc  in 
the  Chriftians  courfe.  The  Lord  Jefus  doth  not  only  take  up- 
ou  him  to  difcharge  the  vaft  fummes  of  thofe  finnes,  which  he 
findes  them  charged  with  before  converfion ;  but  for  all  thofe 
dribling  debts,  which  afterward,  through  their  infirmity,  they  con- 
trad,  If  any  man  fin,  we  have  an  Advocate  -with  the  Father,  Jefus 
Chrift  the  righteous ,  and  he  is  the  propitiation  for  ght  [ins,  I  John 
2.  2.  fo  that  God  may  without  any  impeachment  to  his  jufticecrofs 
his  Saints  debts ,  which  he  is  paid  for  by  their  furety-,  'tis  mercy 
indeed  to  the  Saints,  but  juftice  to  Chrift,  that  he  fhould  :  O  hap- 
py conjunction  where  mercy  and  juftice  (husconfpire,  and  kilte 
each  other  / 

Secondly,  God  did,  and  well  might  require  full  and  pecfcA  obe- 
dience of  man  in  the  firft  Covenant,  becaufe  he  was  in  a  pcrfed  2- 
ftate,  of  full  power  and  ability  to  perform  it ,  fo  that  God  lookt 
to  reap  no  more  than  he  had  planted.  But  in  the  Gofpel  Cove- 
nant God  doth  not  at  firft  infufe  into  the  believer  full  grace ,  but 
true  grace  5  and  accordingly  he  expe&s  not  full  obedience ,  but 
fincere.  He  confiders  our  frame,  and  every  bcleever  is  (if  I  may  fo 
fay)  rated  in  Gods  books  as  the  ftock  of  grace  is^which  God  gives 
to  fet  up  withal  at  firft. 

N  SECT. 


9  o  Having  y  oh r  hytis 


SECT.  II. 

'j?ejr  2  ^ne  ^ccon^  rcafon  may  be  taken  from  the  great  love  he 
'"■  '  bears,  and  liking  he  takes  to  this  difpofition  of  heart,  upon 
which  follows  this  aft  of  grace,  to  cover  their  failings  where  he 
fpies  it  -,  'tis  the  nature  of  love  to  cover  infirmities ,  even  to  a 
multitude.  Efttr  tranfgreft  the  Law,  by  coming  into  %4hajhueru» 
p  efence,  before  (be  was  fent  for ;  but  love  foon  erefted  a  pardon- 
office  in  the  Kings  breaft ,  to  forgive  her  that  fault ;  and  truly 
(he  did  not  find  fo  much  favour  in  the  eyes  of  that  great  Me- 
narchy  as  the  fincere  foul  doth  in  the  eyes  of  the  great  God.  He 
did  not  more  delight  in  Efters  beauty,  than  God  doth  in  this, 
Prov  11.20.  Such  as  are  upright  in  their  way,  are  his  delight;  his 
foulclofeth  with  that  man  as  one  that  fuits  with  the  difpofition 
of  bis  own  holy  nature,  one  whofe  heart  is  right  with  his 
heart  j  and  fo  with  infinite  content  to  fee  a  ray  of  his  own  ex- 
cellency fparkle  in  his  creature,  he  delights  in  him,  and  takes 
him  by  the  hand ,  to  life  him  up  into  the  bofome  of  his  love  ,  a 
better  charret,  I  trow,  than  that  which  Jehu  preferred  fehenadab  to 
for  his  faith'ulneiTe  to  him.  You  ftldome  finde  any  fpoken  of 
as  upright  in  the  Scripture ,  that  are  patted  over  with  a  plaine, 
naked  infeription  of  their  uprightnefle-  but  fomc  circumftance 
there  is ,  which,  like  the  coftly  work,  and  curious  engraving  3- 
bout  fome  Tombs,  tell  the  pafTenger,  they  are  no  ordinary 
men  that  lie  there.  God  fpeaking  of  ]ohs  uprightneflfe,  repre- 
fents  him  as  a  mn-fuch  in  bis  age.  None  li\e  him  in  the  earth, 
a  f  rfecl  mnn ,  and  upright .,  mention  was  before  made  of  his  vaft 
eftate,  and  in  that  alfo  he  was  a  non  fuch ;  but  when  God 
comes  ta  glory  over  Satan,  by  telling  what  a  fervant  he  had  to 
wait  on  htm  ,  he  doth  not  count  thfe  worth  the  telling  thede« 

^j  8  vilofj  Nor,  haft  thou  confidered  my  fervant  Job  ,  that  there  is 

none  fo  rich  ?  but  none  fo  upright.  When  God  fpeaks  to  Ca- 
lebs uprightneiTe ,  fee  to  what  a  height  he  exalts  him,  Numb. 
14.  24.  Tlut  my  fervant  Caleb,  becaufe  he  had  another  fpirit  with 
him  ,  and  hath  followed  me  fully,  him  will  J  bring  into  the  land,&rc. 
As  if  God  had  faid,  here's  a  man  I  do  not  count  my  felf  dis- 
paraged to  own  him  for  my  fervant,  and  fpecial  favourite  j  he 

is 


girt  about  with  truth.  91 


is  one  that  carries  more  worth  in  him,  than  the  whole  multitude 
of  murmuring  Ijraelites  befides ;  he  had  another  Jpirit,  that  is  for 
excellency,  and  nobleneflc,  far  above  the  reft;  and  wherein  did  this 
appear  ?  the  next  words  refolve  us ,  He  hath  followed  me  fully-, 
Now  that  which  gain'd  him  this  great  honour  from  Gods  own 
mouth,  we  (hall  find  to  be  his  fincerity,  and  efpeciaKy  in  that  bu- 
finelTe  when  fent  to  fearch  the  land  of  £anaan,  Jo/huab  1^.7. 
and  verfe  9.  compared ,  (&J  had  great  temptations  to  tell  ano» 
ther  tale.  The  Israelites  were  fo  fick  of  their  enterprife ,  that 
he  fhould  be  the  welcomed  meffengtr  that  brought  the  worft 
news,  from  which  they  might  have  fomc  colour  for  their  murmur- 
ing againft  CMofes ,  who  had  brought  them  intofuch  (traits,  and 
of  twelve  that  were  fent,  there  were  ten  that  fuited  iheir  an- 
fwer  to  this  difcontented  humour  of  the  people  •,  fo  that  by 
making  a  contrary  report  to  theirs,  he  did  not  only  come  under 
the  fufpicion  of  a  lyar,  but  hazard  his  life  among  an  enraged 
peop'.ej  yet  fuch  was  the  courage  of  this  holy  man,  faithfulnefle 
tohistruft,  andtruft  in  his  God  ,  that  as  he  faith  himfelf,  ver. 
7.  He  brought  him  ( that  is,  Aiofes  who  had  fent  him)  word  a- 
gain ,  as  it  was  in  his  hea-'t-y  that  is,  he  did  not  for  fear  or  favour 
accommodate  himfelf,  but  what  in  his  confeience  he  thought 
true ,  that  he  £pake  •  and  this  \  becaufe  it  was  fuch  an  eminent 
proof  of  his  fincerity,  is  called  by  Afofes,  v.  9.  follswing  Ged  ful- 
ly ■,  for  which  the  Lord  erects  fuch  a  pillar  of  remembrance 
over  his  head,  that  (hall  (land  as  long  as  that  Scripture  it  felf. 
To  give  out  one  inftance  more,  and  that  is  of  Nathaniel ,  at 
firft  fight  of  whom  (Thrift  cannot  forbear,  but  lets  all  about 
him  know,  how  highly  he  was  in  his  favour,  Bibdd  (faith  he 
of  him )  an  /. frae lite  indeed ,  in  whom  there  is  ho  £/*//?,  John  1.  47. 
Chrifts heart  (like the  babe  in  Elizabeths  womb  when  tJWarj  fa- 
luted  her  J  feem'dthus  to  leap  at  the  coming  of  Nathaniel,  $ea, 
comes  forth  in  ths  expreffion  ,  rot  to  flatter  him  into  an  over- 
weening conceit  of  himfelf,  (thrift  knew  what  an  humble  foul 
he  fpaketo)  but  to  bear  witnelTeto  his  own  grace  in  him,  efpe- 
cially  this  of  fincerity;  that  knowing  what  a  high  price  and  value, 
heaven  fetsupon  the  head  of  this  gi  ace,  they  mightiike  wife  Mer- 
chants ftore  thernfelves  with  it  more  abundantly  •  His  fimpli- 
city  of  heart  made  him  an  Jfraeiitc  indeed -,  many  goodly 
(hewj,  and  pompous  outfides  were  to  be  feen  among  the  Phari- 

N  2  fees, 


a  2  Having  y  our  leyns 


fees ,  but  they  were  a  company  of  bale  proje&oups  ,  and  dc- 
figners.  Even  when  fome  of  them  came  to  Chrift  ,  extolling 
him  for  his  finccuty,  Maftert  we  know  thou  art  true,  andteachefl 
the  way  of  God  in  truth ,  Matth.  22.16.  then  did  they  play  the 
hypocrites ,  and  had  a  plot  to  decoy  him  by  their  glozing  fpcech 
into  danger  as  you  may  perceive,  v.  15.  they  came  that  they 
might  entangle  him,  but  good  Nathaniel  had  no  plot  in  his  head,  in 
his  coming,  buc  to  finde  the  Mejfii^  he  lookt  for,  and  eternal 
life  by  him,  and  therefore  though  he  was  for  the  prefent  wrapt 
up  in  that  common  errour  of  the  times ,  that  no  Prophet  could 
come  cut  of  Galilee  ,  much  leffe  fo  great  a  one  as  the  Mejfiasy 
out  of  fuch  an  obfeure  place  in  Galilee  as  Nazareth ;  yet  Chrift 
feeing  the  honefty  and  uprightnefTe  of  his  heart,  doth  not 
fuffer  his  ignorance  and  errour  to  prejudice  him  in  his  thoughts 
of  him. 


SECT.    Ill; 

Now  to  give  fome  account  why  this  grace  of  (incerity  k 
fo  taking  with,  and  delightful  to  God;  that  it  even  captivates 
him  in  love  to  the  foul  where  he  findes  it.  There  are  two 
things  which  are  the  infeparable  companions  of  fincerity,  yea  ef- 
fects flowing  from  it,  that  are  very  taking  to  draw  love  both  from 
God  and  man. 

Fi> ft  "t  fincenty  makes  the  foul  wi lit »g  •,  when  'tis  dog'd  with  fo 
many  infirmities,  as  to  difable  it  from  the  full  performance  of 
its  duty;  yet  then  the  foul  (lands  on  tip-toes  to  be  gone  after  it^ 
as  the  hauk  upon  the  hand ,  as  foon  as  ever  it  fees  her  game, 
launchech  forth  ,  and  would  be  upon  the  wing  after  it,  though 
poilibly  held  by  its  fheath  to  the  fift  :  Thus  the  fincere  foul  is  in- 
wardly prickc  and  provokt  by  a  ftrong  defire  after  its  duty, 
though  kept  ba<k  by  infirmities  -y  a  peried  heart  and  a  willing 
mind  are  joyn'd  together,  1  Chron.  ifc.p;  'tis  'Davids  counfel 
to  \i\s  fonne  Solomon  r  to  ferve  Cod  with  a  perfect  heart  and  a  wil- 
ling minde.  A  falfe  heart  is  a  (hi  ting  heart,  puts  off  its  work 
fo  Joj£  *s  it  dares,  and  tis  it  t!c  tlianks  to  fet  about  it  when 
the  rod  is  taken  down  ;   yet  hypocrites  are  like  tops  that  go>no 

longer 


girt  about  with  truth  g  ~ 


longer  than   they  art   whipt^  but   the  fincere  foul  is  ready 
and  forward,  it  doth  not  want  will  to  do  a  duty  when  it  wants 
skill  and  ftrength  how  to  doit.    The  Levites,  2  Chron.  29.34. 
arefai&tobe  more  uf  right  in  heart  to  fanttifie  themjelves  than  the 
Priefts  were.  How  appcar'd  that  ?  In  this,that  they  were  more  for- 
ward, and  willing  to  the  work.    No  fooner  did  the  word  come 
out  of  the  good  Kings  mouth,  concerning  a  reformation,  v.  10. 
but  prefently  the  Levites  aofeto  fan&ifiethemfelvesi  butfome 
of  the  Priefts  had  not  fuch  a  minde  to  the  bu'lnefle,  and  there- 
fore were  not  fo  foon   ready ,  ver.  34.  (hewing  more  policy 
than  piety  therein,  as  if  they  would  ftay,  and  feefirft  howthe 
times  wouli  j       e  bf  fore  they  would  engage.  Reformation-work 
is  but  an  rcy  path,  cowardly  fpirits  love  to  have  it  well  beaten 
by  others,  before   ■..;  u&re  come  on  it  .•  But  fincerity  is  of  bet- 
ter mettal^  like  tbe  true  travellour,  that  no  weather  fhall  keep 
him   from   going   his   journey   when    fet ;  The  upright  man 
looks  not  '-at  the  clouds .  ftands  not  thinking  this  or  that  to 
difcourage  him  f  but  takes  his  warrant  from  the  Word  of  God, 
and  having  that,  nothing  but  a  counter  mand  from  the  fame  God 
that  fets  him  awork  fhall  turn  him  back     His  heart  is  uniform 
to  the  Will  of  God.    If  God  faith,  feek^  my  face,  it  rebounds  and 
echoes  back  again ,  thy  face  mil  I  feekj>  yea  Lord,  as  if  David 
had  faid  with  a  good  will ,  thy  Word  is  prefTe-money  enough 
to  carry  me  from  this  duty  to  that,  whether  thou  pleafeftj  may 
be  when  the  fincere  foul  is  about  a  duty  he  doth  it  weakly,  yet 
this  very  willingnefle  of  the  heart  is  wonderful  pleafing  to  God. 
How  doth  it  affed  and  take  the  father,  when  he  bids  his  little 
childe  go  and  bring  him  fuch  a  thing  (that  maybe  as  much  as 
he  can  well  lift)  to  fee  him  not  ftand   and  fhrug  at  the  com- 
mand as  hard.,  but  runs  to  it,  and  puts  forth  his  whole  ftrength 
about  it,  (though  at  Iaft  maybe  he  cannot  do  it,  J  yet  the  wil- 
lingnefTe  of  the  childe  pleafeth  him  fothat  his  weaknefTe  rather 
flirs  up  the  father  to  pity  and  help  him ,  than  to  provokehim 
to  chicle  him.   (Thrift  throws  this  covering  over  his  difciples  infir- 
mities, the  fpirit  u  veiling ,  but  the  flejh  is  veak^.  O  !  This  obe- 
dience, that   like  the  d  opping  honey,  comes  without  fqueezing, 
though  but  little  of  it,  taftes-  fwsetly  on  Gods  palate,  and  fuch  is 
fincere  obedience. 

Secondly  y  fincerity  mak.es  the  funl  very  open  and  free  to  God ; 

though 


qa  Having  your  loyns 


though  'the  Jfincere  foul  hath  many  infirmities  j  yet  it  defires.to 
cloak  and  hide  none  of  this  from  God,no,  if  it  could,  it  would  not, 
and  this  is  that  which  delights  God  exceedingly.  To  be  fore  hee'l 
cover  what  fuch  a  foul  uncovers,  I  Jehtt  i.  12.  If  we  confejfeohrjittj, 
he  u  j*ft  and  faithful  to  forgive. 

It  was  a  high  piece  of  ingenuity ,  and  clemency  [in  Augnftus% 
that  having  promifcd  by  proclamation  a  great  fumrae  of  mo- 
ney to  any  that  (hould  bring  him  the  head  of  a  famous  Pjratet 
did  >et  when  the  Pyrate  (who  had  heaifd  of  this)  brought  ic 
himfelf  to  him  ,  and  laid  it  at  his  foot ,  not  only  pardon  him  for 
his  former  offences  againft  him  ,  but  reward  him  for  his  great 
confidence  in  his  mercy.  Truly  thus* doth  Cod,  though  his 
wrath  be  revealed  againft  all  finne  and  unrighteoufneflc ,  yet 
when  the  foul  it  felf  come9  freely  and  humbles  it  k\(  before 
him,  he  cannot  ftrttch  forth  his  arme,  to  ftrike  that  foul  which 
gives  fuch  glory  to  his  mercy ,  and  this  the  fincere  heart  dotn. 
Indeed  the  hypocrite  when  he  has  finn'd,  he  hides  it,  as  Achan 
his  wedge  of  gold ;  he  fits  brooding  on  his  luft  ,  as  Rachel  on 
her  fathers  idols.  It  is  as  hard  getting  a  hen  off  her  neft,  as  fuch 
a  one  to  come  off  his  lufts,  and  difclofe  them  freely  to  God. 
If  God  himfelf  finde  him  not  out,  be  will  not  bewray  himfelf. 
I  cannot  fet  out  the  different  difpofition  of  the  fincere  and  falfc 
heart  in  this  matter,  better  than  by  the  like  in  a  mcrcinary  fer- 
vant,  and  a  childe^when  a  fervant  (except  it  be  one  of  athou- 
fandj  breaks  a  glafte,  or  fpoiles  any  of  his  mafters  goods ,  all 
his  care  is  to  hide  it  from  his  maflcr ,  and  therefore  throws 
the  pieces  of  it  away  into  fome  dark  hole  or  other ,  where  he 
thinks  they  (hall  never  be  found  •  and  now  he  is  not  tn  ubled 
for  the  wrong  he  haih  done  his  Matter,  but  glad  that  he  hath 
handled  the  matter  fo,asnot  to  be  difcovered.  Thus  the  hypo- 
crite would  count  himfeif  a  happy  man,  could  nc  but  lay  his  fin 
out  of  Gods  fight;  it  is  not  the  treafon  he  diflikes,  but  fears  to 
he  known  that  he  is  the  traitour :  and  therefore  though  it  be 
as  unfcafible  to  blinde  the  eye  of  the  Almighty,  as  with  our 
hand  to  cover  the  face  of  the  Sun,  that  it  (hould  not  fhine,  yet 
the  hypocrite  will  attempt  it.  We  find  a  woe  pronounced  againft 
fuch,  /fa.  29. 1  .  Wee  unto  them  that  dig  deep  te  hide  thtir  c  Mr.felfrom 
the  Lord.    This  is  a  fort  of  finners  whofe  care  is  not  10  make  their 

peace 


girt  about  with  truth  p< 


peace  when  they  have  offended,  but  to  hold  their  peace  ,  and 
ftarid  demurely  before  God ,  as  GehazJ  before  his  Mafler,  as  if 
they  had  been  nowhere,  but  where  they  ftiould  be.  Thefe  are  they 
whom  God  will  pat  to  fharae  to  pupofe.    The  Jews  were  farre 
gone  in  this  hypocrifie  ,  when  they  jnftified  themfelves  as  aho- 
]y  people,  and  put  God  fo  hard  to  it,  as  to  make  him  prove  his 
charge ,  rather  than  confeflc  what  was  too  true  and  apparenj^ 
which  God  upbraids  them  for,  \er.  2.23.  Hoft  canfl  thou  fa),  I 
am  net  fjttttted?  I  have  n->t  gone  after  Baa/am  ?  fee  thj  -way  in  tfo 
valle)  ,  and  know  what  thou  hail  done.    Haft  thou  filch  a  whorifh 
fore-head  to  juftrfie  thy  fclf,  and  hypocritical  heart  to  draw 
a  fai  e  cover  over  fa  foule  pra&ifes  ?  would  you  yet  pafle  for 
Saints ,  and  be  thought  a  people  unpolluted  ?  now  mark ,  'tis  not 
long ,  but  this  hypocritical  people  that  thus  hid  their  fin,  hath 
ftiame  enough  ;   is  the  thief  is  afhamed  when  he  is found,  fo  (faitfc 
the  Prophet,)  ver.  16.  Is  the  hoxfe  of  lfrael  afhamed-,  that  is,  as 
the  thief,  who  at  firft  is  fo  infolent ,  as  to  deny  the  fad  he  is 
accufed  of,  yet  when  upon  fearch ,  the  ftollen  goods  are  found 
about  him ,  and  he  brought  to  juftice  for  it ,  then  he  is  put  to 
double  (h*me   for  his   theft ,  and  impudence  alfo  in  juftifying 
himfelf  -,    fo   is  it  with  this   people  (and  with  all  hypocrites) 
though  while  in  peace,  and  at  eafe,  they  be  bragg,  andbold^ 
yea  ,  feeme  to  fcorne  to  be  thought  what  they  indeed  arej  yet 
there  is  a  time  coming  (which  verfe  24.  is  cajl'd  their  month 
■wherein  the  fhaU  be  found)  when  Gods  hue  and  cry  will  over- 
take them ,  his  terrours  ranfack  their  confidences,  and  bring  forth 
what  they  fo  ftifly  denyed ,  making  it  appear  to  themfelves  and 
others  alfo ,  what  jugling  and  deceit  they  have  ufcd  to  fhift  off 
their  finne.     It  is  eafie  to  think ,  what  fhame  will  cover  their 
faces ,  and  weigh  down  their  heads  while  this  is  doing.    God 
loves  to  befool  thofe  who  think  they  play  their  game  fo  wife- 
ly,  becaufe  with  Ahab^thty  fight  againftGod  inadifguife, and 
will  not  be  known  to  be  the  men.    But  the  fincere  foul  takes  ano- 
ther courfe ,  and  fpeeds  better  ^  as  a  child  when  he  hath  commit- 
ted a  fault,  doth  not  ftay  till  other*  go  and  tell  his  father  what 
the  matter  is ,  nor  till  his  father  makes  it  appear  by  his  frown- 
ing countenance ,  that  it  is  come  to  his  eare  ,  but  freely ,  and  of 
his  own  accord,  goes  prefendy  to  his  father,(being  prompted  by  no 
other  thing,  than  the  love  he  bears  to  his  dear  father,  and  the  for- 

row. 


95 


Having  your  loyns 


row,  which  his  heart  grows  every  moment  he  ftayes,  bigger,  and 
bigger  withal  for  his  offence)  and  eafcth  his  aking  heart ,  by  a  free 
andfullconfeffionof  his  fault  at  his  fathers  foot-,  and  this  with 
fuch  plain-heartednefle,  giving  his  offence  the  weight  of  every  ag- 
gravating circumftance,  fo  that  if  the  Devil  himlelf  (hould  come 
after  him,  to  gleane  up  what  he  hath  left,  he  (hould  hardly  finde 
where-withal  to  make  it  appear  blacker;  Thus  doth  the  fincere  foul 
to  God,  adding  to  his  fimplicityinconfeflion  of  his  finnc,  fuch  a 
flow  of  iorrow,  that  God  feeing  his  dear  child  in  fuch  danger  of  be- 
ing carryed  down  too  farre  towards  defpair(if  good  news  from  him 
come  not  fpeedily  toftay  him)  cannot  but  tune  his  voice,  rather 
into  a  ftrcine  of  comforting  him  in  his  mourning,  than  chiding  for 
bis  linne. 


CHAP.     IX. 

Of  the  odiom  nature  ofbypocrifie  and '  batefulnejfe 
of  it  to  God. 


Vfc  I. 


DOth  fincerity  cover  all  defeds .?  Then  hypocrifie  uncovers 
the  foul,  and  (trips  it  naked  to  its  flume  before  God, 
when  (ct  forth  with  the  richeft  embroydery  of  orher  excellen- 
cies. This  is  fuch  a  fcah,  that  frets  into  the  choyceft  perfecti- 
ons,  and  alters  the  comple&ion  of  the  foul  in  Gods  eye,  more 
than  leprofie  or  poxe  can  do  the  faireft  face  in  curs.  It  is  ob- 
fcrvable ,  the  different  chfrra&er  that  is  given  of  thofe  two 
Kings  of  Jndab ,  Afa  and  Amajiah.  Of  the  firft ,  lee  i  Kings 
If.  i^j.  the  high  places  were  not  rimmed,  neverthe/ejfe  Afa  his 
heart  was  perfett  with  the  Lord  all  his  dajes.  He  paflcth  currant 
for  a  gracious  pcrfon  ,  and  that  with  a  non  obfttnte,  never thelefe 
his  heart  was  perfetl  •,  fincerity  like  tru^j  gold  hath  grains  allowed 

for 


, 


girt  about  with  truth. 


for  its  lighmefle;  bis  infirmities  are  not  mentioned  to  ftaine  his 
honour  ,  and  prejudice  him  in  the  opinion  of  any  ;  but  rather 
as  the  wart  or  mole  which  the  curious  Limner  expreflfeth ,  on 
purpofe ,  the  more  to  fet  forth  the  beauty  of  the  other  parts ; 
fo  his  failings  are  recorded  to  caft  a  greater  luttre  upon  his  fin- 
cerity ;  which  could  not  withftanding  thefe  fins  gaine  him  fuch  a 
teftimony  from  Gods  own  mouth.  But  oiiAm^iah^  fee  z  Chr, 
25.  2,  He  did  that  which  was  right  in  the  fight  tf  the  Lord,  but 
not  with  a  p.rfett  h>  art.  The  matter  of  his  actions  was  good,  but 
the  fcope  and  drift  of  his  heart  in  them  was  naught,  and  this  but 
makes  a  foul  blot  upon  all ,  and  turnes  his  right  into  wrong? 
wherein  his  hypocrihe  appear  'd  is  expreft,2/<7ȣ.f  i^Meddthat 
which  was  right  in  the  fight  of  the  Lard,yet  not  liki  David  his  father^ 
hi  did  ac cording  to  zll  things  that  fo.  Jh  his  father  did.  He  did  for 
a  while  what,  David  did  ,  as,  to  the  matter  ,  but  imitated  ]oafh  as 
to  the  manner ,  whofe  goodnefle  was  calculated  to  pieafe  man  ra- 
ther than  God ,  as  appcard  in  the  latter  end  of  his  reigne  upon 
the  death  of  his  good  uncle  Jehoiada  ;  him  did  Amauah  write 
after,  andnot^Winhisuprighrnefle ;  thus  we  fee  Afa  his 
uprighrnefle  commends  him  in  the  mjdii  of  many  failings-,  but 
hypocrilie  condemnes  Am.iz.Uh  doing  that  which  is  right.  Sin- 
cerity ,  it  is  the  life  of  all  our  graces,  and  puts  life  into  all  our 
duties;  and  as  life  makes  beautiful,  and  keeps  the  body  fweer9 
fo  fincerity  the  foul,  and  all  it  doth.  A  prayer  breath'd  frorn 
a  fmcere  heart,  it  is  heavens  delight;  takeaway  fincerity,  and 
God  faich  of  it ,  as  Abraham  of  Sarah  (whom  living,  he  loved 
dearly,  and  hid  in  his  bofome  )  ba  y  the  4  ad  oat  if  my  fight;  he 
hides  his  eye,  (lops  his  no!hiI ,  as  when  fomepoifonous  carri- 
on is  before  us,  Ering  no  n.ore  vame  oblations  %  incenfe  is  an  abc* 
m' nation  to  ne\  the  call  »g  of  yoi*r  aff en.  b  lies  I  cannot  away  w[th% 
ye#r  appointed  fen fts.  mjfo,t(l bafeth)  they  are  a  troH  /<r  tomeyl  am\^  %t  ". 
weary  to  bear  t/em.  What  finking  thing  is  this ,  that  God  cries 
fo  out  upon;  it  U  nothing  but  hypocrihe.  Surely,  friends,  that 
muft  needs  be  very  loathfome,  which  makes  God  fpeak  fo  courtly 
of  his  own  Ordinances,  yea  makes  them  a  "Hjhnfhtan,  prayer  no 
prayer,  bjt  a  meer  idol  to  be  broken  in  pieces;  faith  no  faith, - 
but  a  fancy  and  a  dilution;  repentance  qo  repentance,  hue 
a  loud  lye,  Pf*k*s  7^-34.  Thty  returned  %  and  enquired  early 
after  God;  fee -how  the  Spirit  of  God  gloflfeth  upon  th\s9  vtrfe 

O  16,17* 


08  Having  your  loyns 


j  j,  1 2, 1 3,  ver. 


36,37.  nevtrthetfjfe  they  did  fetter.withtjoeir  Jiff ,  tf;*i  fjStfJ  bed 
unto >him  with  their  tongues,  for  their  hea-'t  was  not  rig!:  t  w.th  him. 
It  fmoked  God  our  of  his  own  houfe,  and  made  him  out  of  love 
withthatplace,whereofhehadfaid,it  Should  be  his  rel'iing place 
for  ever. 

It  brought  the  wrath  of  God  upon  that  unhappy  people  to 
the  uttermoit ;  mark  how  the  cornmiflion  rtinnes,  which  God 
gave  the  Affyrian,  whowas'rhe  bloody  execution rr  of  his  fierce 
wrath  upon  them ,  //5r.  10.  5, 6.  0  "A^yriatiytherodof  my  anger, 
and  the  ft  off e  in  their  hand  is  mint  indignation,  I  will  fend  him  a- 
oainftc.n  hypocritical  Nation,  ana  agar,  ft  the  people  of  my  wrath 
■will  I  give  him  a  charge  to  take  the  jpeile ,  arid  to  take  the  prey,  and 
t*  T?.  t?  ver  to  tread  them  down  as  mire  in  the  ftrsets.     There  needs  not  the 
Coroner  to  be  fent  for,  or  a  Jury  go  upon  this  milerable  peo- 
ple, to  flnde  out  how  they  came  to  their  difmalend;  they  were 
an  hypicritical  nation ,  that  was  it  they  cied  of.    God  had  ra- 
ther fee  the  abomination  of  defolation  landing  in  his  Temple, 
making   havock  of  all ,  than   the  abomination  of  cidimuhtion 
mocking  him  to  his  face,  while  they  worfhip  him  with  their  lips, 
and  their  Iufts,  with  their  hearts.   Of  the  two  'tis  more  tole- 
rable in  Gods  account  to  fee  a  Belfhaz,z,a;  that  never  had  a  name 
of  being  his  fervant ,  to  quaft'eand  carowfe  ir  to  his  gods,  pro- 
fanely in  the  bowles  of  the  Sanctuary ,  than  for  a  people  that 
would  pafle  for  his  fervanrs,  to  pollute  them  in  his  own  wor- 
ship by  their  curfed  hypocrifie;  if  God  be  dishonoured,  woe  to  • 
that  man-  of  all,  that  doth  it  under  a  fhew  of  honouring  him. 
God  finales  out  the  hypocrite ,  as  that  fort  of  (Inners ,  whom  he 
would  cTeal  wirh  hand  to  hand,  and  let  himfelf  even  in  this  life 
to  bear  witnefle  againft  in  a  more  extraordinary  manner  than 
others.     The  thief,  murderer,  and  other  the  like  linners,  provi- 
fion  is  made  by  God,  that  the  Magiitrate  fhould  meet  with  them, 
they  come  under  his  cognizance  ;  but  the  hypocrite,  he  is  one 
that  fins  more  fecretly  ,  God  alone  is  able  to  finde  him  ouf,and 
he  hath  undertaken  it,  E«£.  14.  7-  for  every  one  of  the  houfe  of 
Jfr.el  which  ft  paratcth  himf  If  from  me,  and  fetteth  up  his  idols  in 
his  lea  rt  ,  and comCth to  a  Prophet,  to  enquire  of  him  concerning 
mt\  (  an    excellent   defcription  of  a  hypocrite;  he  is  one  that 
denies  God  his  heart  (referving  it  for  his  idols,  his  lulls )  yet  is 
as  forward  as  any ,  to  enquire  after  God  m  his  Ordinances.) 

/ 


girt  about  with  truth,  §<p 


1  the  Lord  will  anfwer  him  by  my  J  elf.  And  how  will  he  anfwer 
him  ?  And  I  will  fet  my  face  againft  that  man ,   and  will  mak,' 
him  a  figne,  and  a  provtrby  and  I  will  cut  him  off  fy-omthe  micfi 
of  my  people ,  and  ye  Jhsll  know  that  I  Am  the  L<,rdy  ver.  8.  that 
is,  my  judgements fhall  be  fo  remarkable  on  him,  that  he  fhall  be 
aipeilacleof  my  wrath  for  others  to  lee,  and  fpeak  of.    Thus 
God  payes  the  hypocrite  often  in  this  life ,  as    Ananias  and  Sa- 
phira,  who  died  by  the  hand  of  <Ud  with  a  lie  {licking  in  their 
throats ;  and  Judas  who  purchas'd  nothing  by  his  hypocritical 
trade  but  a  halter  to  hang  himfelf  withal;  his  playing  the  hy- 
pocrite  with   Chrift ,   ended  in  his    playing  the  Devil  upon 
himfelf,  when  he  became  his  own  executioner.    But  if  the  hy- 
pocrite at  any  time  (kals  out  of  the  world  ,  before  his  vizard  falls 
off,  and  the  wrath  of  God  falls  on  him ,  it  will  meet  him  fure 
enough  in  hell ,  and  it  will  be  poor  comfort  to  him  there,  to 
think  how  he  hath  cheated  his  neighbours ,  in  arriving  at  hell, 
whom  they  fo  confidently  thought  under  fail  for  heaven.  The 
good  o:inion  which  he  hath  left  of  himfelf  in  thofe  that  are  on 
earth,  will  cool  no  flames  for  him  in  hell,  where  lodgings  are 
taken  up,  and  bsfpoken  for  the  hypocrite,  as  the  chief  gueit  ex- 
pelled in  that'infernal  court ;  all  oth^r  finners  feem  but  as  young- 
er brethren  in  damnation  to  the  hypocrite,  under  whom  as   the 
great  heire ,  they  receive  every  one  their  portion  of  wrath , 
bequeathed  to   them    by    the   juftice   of  God  ,     CMatthcw 
24.  ^  1.    there   the   evil    fervant   is  threatned  by   his  Matter 
that  I e  will  cat  him  afnnder-,  and  po'nt  him  his  portion  with  hy- 
p:cr'tes. 

Q.X/?.  But  why  fhould  God  be  fo  angry  with  the  hypocrite  ?  G)uca 
he  feemes  a  tame  creature  to  other  finners,  that  like  wilde  beafts  ~  J  ' 
rage,  and  raven,  notfeacingto  open  their  mouth  like  fomany 
wolves  againft  heaven ,  as  if  they  would  teare  God  out  of  his 
throne  by  their  blasphemies,  and  horrid  impieties.  The  hy- 
pocrire  is  not  thus  woaded  withimpudency,  to  finneatnoone- 
day ,  and  fpread  his  tent  with  Abfdom  on  the  houfe  top  :ifhe 
be  naught,  it  is  in  a  corner,  his  maiden-blufh  modefty  will  not 
fuffer  him  to  declare  his  finne^ndbefeenin  the  company  of  ic 
abroad  ;  nay,  he  denies  himfelf  of  many  fmnes ,  which  others 
mainraine  ;  and  walks  in  exercife  of  many  duties ,  which  the 
Atheiftical  fpirits  of  the  world  deride ,  and  fcorn :  why  then 

O  2  fhould 


i  o o  Having  y  our  leyns 


{houldthe  hypocrite  that  lives  Ike  a  Saint  to  others,  be  more 
diliaftful  to  him  \ 

,  r  Avf#.  Indeed  the  hypocrite  at  rirft  blujli  may  be  taken  for 

^W'  a  kinde  of  Saint,  by  fuch  as  fee  only  his  out-lide,  as  he  paileth 
by  in  his  holy-day  drefle,  which  ht  is  beholden  to,  for  all  the  re- 
putation he  hath  in  ihe  thoughts  of  o. hers,  and  therefore  is  fitly  by- 
one  called  the  grangers  Sair^J  but  a  Devil  to  thole  that  know 
him  better  :  He  is  like  fome  coining  creeple,  thit  isfaine  to 
borrow  help  from  art,  to  hide  in:  deie&s  of  nature  ;  iuch  as 
falfe  hair  to  cover  his  baldneffe ,  an  artificial  eye  to  -blind  his 
blindneiie  from  ethers  hght;  and  the  like  for  other  pa;  ts,  here's 
much  ado  made  to  commend  him,  for  tome  beautiful  penon  to  o- 
thers ;  but  what  a  monfter  would  this  man  appear,  fhould  one  but 
fee  him  through  the  key- hole  as  he  is  in  his  bed- chamber jwheFe  all 
thefe  are  laid  afide }  Truly  ,  fuch  a  one  ,  and  farre  more  fcareful, 
would  the  hypocrite  be  found ,  when  out  of  his  acting  robes, 
which  he  makes  ufe  of  onely,  when  he  comes  forth  upon  the 
ftage  to  play  the  part  of  a  Saint  before  others.  It  were  enough 
to  afrighrus,  only  to  fee  the  hypocrite  uncaied-,  what  then  will 
it  be  to  himfelf,  ,when  he  fhall  be  laid  open  before  men,  and 
Angels ■?  fo  odious  this  generation  is  to  Ood,  tha:  it  is  not  fjfe 
ftanding  near  them  ;  Oliofe>  that  knew  Corah,  hatha*,  and  Kb.- 
ram  better  than  the  people ,  ( who  taken  with  their  feem- 
ing  zetl ,  flock't  after  them  in  throngs)  commands  them  to 
depart  from  the  tents  of  thofe  wicked  men, except  they  had  a  mind 
to  be  confumed  with  them;  fuch  horrid  hypocriiie  he  expected 
vengeance  would  foon  overtake.  But  that  it  may  appear  to  be 
a  finne  exceeding  firiful ,  1  fhall  give  a  few  aggravations  of^it, 
in  which  ib  many  reafons  will  be  wrapt  why  it  is  fo  oJious 
to  God. 

fir  ft,  J:yp(cn(ic  is  a  Cm  that  offers  violence  to  the  very  light  of 
nature-,  That  light  which  convinced!  us  there  is  a  God,  tells  us 
he  is  to  be  ferv'd,  and  that  in  truth  alfo,  or  all  is  to  no  purpo.e. 
A  lie  is  a  finne  that  would  fiie  on  the  face  of  a  Heathen  ,  and 
hypocriiie  is  the  loudeft  lie ,  becaufe  it  is  given  to  God  himfelf;  fo 
Peter  told  that  diffembling  wretch ,  Ktts  5.  3.  Why  hath  Satan 
filled  thy  heart  to  lie  to  the  holy  Ghojl  ?  v.  4.  thm  haft  tied  not  to  man, 
but  mt»  God. 
2.  Secondly ,  hypcrifit  cannot  fo  properly  be  faid  to  be  one  fingle 

fin 


1. 


girt  about  with  truth  jo  i 


finne,  as  the  finfulnefl'e  of  other  finnes;  it  is  among  finnes,  as  fiir 
cerity  a  r.ong  graces;   now  that  is  not  one  grace  but  an  orna- 
ment, that  beautifies  and  graces  all  other  graces.     Thepreci- 
oufnefle  of  fa  'tl.  is ,  that  it  is  unfeigned,  an  J  of  love  to  be  vviiir 
out  dillim ulation.     Thus  the  odioulneffe  of  finnes  is,  when  they 
are    commited    in    hypocrihe.     'David  aggravates  tj)e  finne  of 
thofe  jeering  •companions,  who  made  him  their  table  talk    and 
could  not  taite  their  cheer  except  feafone'd  whth  feme  fait  jeft 
quibbl'd  out  at  him,  with  this,  that  they  were  kypecrit  c.d  mockers. 
Pfalme    35.  16.  they  did  it  ilyly,  and  wrapt  up  their  feoffs  ('tis 
like)infuch  language  as  might  make  fome  think,  (who  did  not 
well  obferve  them)  that  they  applauded  him.     There  is  a  way 
of  commending,  which  fome  have  learnt  to  ufe,  when  they  mean 
to  ca(t  the  greater  fcorn  upon  thofe  they  hate  bitterly,  and  thefe 
hypocritical  mockers  deferve  the  chaire  to  be  given. them  from 
all  other  fcorners.    Feavers  are  counted  malignant,  according  to 
the  degree  of  putrifaition  that  is  in  them.    Hjp.crife  is  the 
very  putrifaction ,  and  rottennefle  of  the  heart;  the  more  of 
this  putrid  Iturf  there  is  in  any  finne,  the  more  malignant  it  is.' 
David  fpeaks  of  the  iniqu'ty  of  his  y/wf, Pfalme  32.  5.  /  acknow- 
ledge my  fwne  unto  thee,  ar.d  mm;  iniquity  have  J  not  hid,  if  aid 
1  will  conftfje  my  tranfgrtflions  unto  the  Lord,  and  thou  for  gaze  ft  ths 
in:qttity  of  my  finne.     This  finne  feems  very  probably  to  nave  taen 
his  adultery  with  Batkfheba,  and  murder  of  Vriah,  by  his  long 
keeping  fder.ee, stx.  3.  by  the  pardon  he  had  immediately  given 
in  upon  coif  .fling,  ver.  5.  which  we  know  Nathan  delivered  to 
htm ,  and  by  his  further  purpofe  to  continue  conferring  of  it, 
which  appeared  by  the  mournful  Pfalme  51.  that  followed  upon 
his  diicourfe  with  Nathan.   Now  David  to  make  the  pardoning 
mercy  of  God  more  illuftrious,  faith,  he  did  not  only  for-ive 
his  finne,  but  the  iniquity  of  his  finne;  and  what  was  that/  fure- 
ly  the  worft  that  can  be  faid,  of  that  his  complicated  finne,  is, 
that  there  was  fo  much  hypocrifie  ink,  he  wofully  jugled with 
God  and  man  in  it;  this  I  do  not  doubt  to  fay,  was  the  iniquity 
of  his  fmne ,  and  put  a  colour  deeper  on  it  than  the  blood  which 
he  flied.    And  the  rather  I  lay  the  accent  there,  becaufe  God 
himfelf,  when  he  would  fet  out  the  heino'c  fnelle  of  this  finne, 
feems  to  do  it  rather  from  the  hypocriiie  in  the  fa3,  than  the 
fad  it  felf ,  as  appears  by  the  teflimony  given  this  holy  man, 

1  Kings 


io2  Having  your  loyns 


\l\tngs  I  ^.^.David  did  that  which  was  right  in  the  eyes  oftheLord, 
and  turned  rot  a/ide  from  any  thing  that  he  commanded  him  all  the 
dayes  of  his  life  ^  five  only  in  the  metier  of  Uriah  the  Hirtite;  were 
there  not  other  wry  fteps  that  David  took  bolides  this  ?  doth 
the  Spirit  of  God  by  excepting  this  declare  his  approbation  or 
all ,  that  elfehe  ever  did  ?  no  fure  ,  the  Spirit  of  God  records  o- 
ther  hnnes,  that  efcapt  this  eminent  fervantof  the  Lord;  But 
all  thofe  are  drown'd  here,  and  this  mentioned  as  the  only 
ftaine  of  hir  life.  But  why  ?  furely  becaufe  there  appear'd  lelle 
lincerity  ,  yea  more  hypocrifie  in  this  one  finne,  than  in  all  his 
o[ her  put  together ;  though  David  in  them  was  wrong  as  to 
the  matter  of  his  actions,  yet  his  heart  was  more  right  inrhe 
manner  of  committing  them.  But  here  his  lincerity  was  fad- 
Jy  wounded,  though  not  to  the  total  deftru&ion  of  the  habit, 
yet  to  lay  it  in  a  long  fwoon,as  to  any  actings  thereof.  And  truly 
.  the  wound  went  very  deep  when  that  grace  was  (tabb'd  in  which 
did  runne  the  life-  blood  of  all  the  reft.  We  fee  then,  God  had 
reafo.i  (though  his  mercy  prompted  him,  yea  his  Covenant 
obliged  him,  not  to  let  hischildedie  of  this  wound,  I  mean  fi- 
nally mifcarry  of  this  finne ,  either  through  want  of  repentance 
on  the  one  hand,  or  pardoning  mercy  on  the  other)  fo  to  heal 
it,  that  a  fcarre  might  remaine  upou  the  place,  a  mark 
upon  the  fin,  whereby  others  might  know  how  odious  hypocrihe 
is  to  God. 

Thirdly,  thofe  considerations  which  may  feem  at  firft  tolef- 
fen ,  and  pare  off  fomething  from  rhe  heinoufneffe  of  the  hypo- 
crites finne,  wVs.  that  he  walks  in  a  religious  habit,  hath  a  forme 
of  piety  which  others  want ,  performes  duties  that  others  neg- 
lect •,  Thefe  and  the  like ,  are  fo  farre  from  taking  from ,  thac 
they  adde  a  further  weight  of  aggravation  to  it.  Let  us  confi- 
der  the  hypocrite  in  a  twofold  refpe&,  and  this  will  appear  ei- 
ther in  things  he  trades  about ;  or  fecondly  in  the  things  he 
layes  claime  to  ;  thefe  are  both  high  ,  and  (acred;  and  a  finne  in 
thefe,  can  be  no  ordinary  finne.  The  things  he  trades  in,  are 
duties  o:  Gods  worfhb  ;  the  things  he  layes  claime  to ,  are 
relation  to  God  ,  intereft  in  (Thrift  ,  confolations  of  the  fpirit, 
and  the  like  ;  thefe  arc  things  of  high  price  ;  a  mifcarriage  a- 
bout  th-fe  ,  muftbe  fomewhat  futable  to  their  high  nature.  As 
is  the  wooll,fothc  thread,  and  cloth  courfeorfine.   The  profane 

perfon 


girt  about  with  truth.  10 


perfon  pretends  not  to  thefe,  he  crnnot  ipin  fo  fine  a  thread,  be- 
©aufe  the  work  he  deals  in  is  courferrall  his  impieties  will  not  have 
fo  high  f  rice  of  wrath  fet  upon  them,  which  he  hath  (being  igno- 
rant of  God,  and  a  ftranger  to  the  waves  of  God  J  committed ,  as 
the  hypocrites. 


SECT.    I. 

Firft,  the  hypocrite  trades  in  the  duties  of  Gods  worihip. 
fudat  fits  down  with  the  reft  of  the  Ape  flies  at  the  Palfeover,  and 
bids  himfelf  welcome  as  confidently,  as  if  he  were  the  beft  gueft, 
the  holieft  of  all  the  company.  The  proud  Tharifee  gets  to  the 
Temple  as  foon  as  the  broken-hearted  Publican :  but  what  work 
doth  the  hypocrite  make  with  thefe  things  ?  that  would  be 
known  indeed.  Sad  work  (the  Lord  knows)  or  elfe  God 
would  not  fo  abominate  them,  as  to  think  he  hears  a  dog  bark, 
or  a  wolfe  howle  all  the  while  they  are  praying.  We  think 
'David  had  a  curious  hand  at  the  Harp,  that  could  pacifie  the  e- 
vil,  raging  fpiritof  melancholy  Saul;  But  what  a  harfh  unhap- 
py ftroke  have  they  in  the  duties  of  Gods  worfhip,  that  are  able 
to  make  the  fweet  meek  Spirit  of  God  angry,  yea,  break  out  in- 
to fury  agoinlt  them?  And  no  wonder  if  we  confider  but  thefe 
two  things. 

Firft,  the  hypocrite  does  no  leffe  than  mock  God  in  all  hisdu- 
ties,  and  of  all  things  God  can  leaft  bear  that;  God  will  not  be 
mocked.  Chrift  preached  this  doctrine ,  when  he  curfedthe  fig- 
tree  ,  which  did  by  her  green  leaves  mock  the  paflenger,  making 
him  come  for  fruit,  and  go  aihamed  without  any;  hid  it 
wanted  leaves  as  well  as  fruit,  it  hadefcaped  that  curie.  Every 
lie  is  a  mocking,  of  him  to  whom  'tis  told  ;  becaufe  fuch  a  one 
goes  to  cheat  him,  and  thereby  puts  the  fool  upon  him;  why 
haft  thou  mcck^dme  (faid  'Dalilah  to  Samffon  )  and  told  me  lies, 
judg.  1 6.10.  as  if  fne  had  faid  fas  is  ufual  upon  the  like  with  us) 
do  you  make  a  fool  of  me  ?  I  leave  it  to  the  hypocrite  to  think 
ferioufly  what  he  is  going  to  make  of  God ,  when  he  puts  up 
his  hypocritical  fervices.  Gods  command  was,  none  fhould  ap- 
pear befsre  him  empty ;  this  the  hypocrite  doth ,  and  therefore 
mocks  God,  he  becomes  indeed  fuil-mouthed,  but  empty-hearted. 

As 


4  0a  Having  your  kyns 


z. 


As  to  the  formality  of  a  duty  he  oft  exceeds  the  fmcere  Chri- 
iiian  j  be,  if  any,  may  rruly  be  called  a  LMaJlcr  ofC'v  monicrbz* 
caufe  all  that  he  entertains  God  with  in  duty,  lies  in  the  court- 
ihip  of  his  tongue  and  knee.  How  abhorrent  this  is  to  Cod, 
may  eafily  be  judged  by  the  difdaine ,  which  even  a  wife  man 
would  exprefle  to  befo  ferved  ;  better  to  pretend  no  kindnefle, 
than  pretending  to  intend  none ;  'tis  the  heart  God  looks  at 
in  duty  j  if  the  wine  be  good,  he  can  drink  it  out  of  a  wodden 
cup;  but  let  the  cup  be  never  fo  guilded,  ar.d  no  wine  in  it,  bo 
makes  account  that  man  mocks  him  that  would  put  it  into  his 
hand.  It  was  Chritfs  charge  again!*  Sardis,  Rev.  3.  2.  /  have 
not  fonnd  thy  workj  prfett  before  <]od;  1  have  not  found  them 
<sr«<7jAtip«|uW,  full  before  God,  as  the  Original  hath  it.  Sincerity 
fills  our  duty  s  and  ail  our  actions ;  and  mark  that  phrafe  be* 
fore  God ,  which  implies  that  this  Church  retained  fuch  an  out- 
ward forme  of  devotion ,  as  might  keep  up  her  credit  before 
men ;  fbe  had  a  name  to  live  ,  but  her  works  were  not  foil  be- 
fore God;  he  pierced  them  deeper  than  mans  probe  could  go,  and 
judgeth  her  by  what  he  found  her  within. 

Secondly,  the  hypocrite  performes  the  duties  of  Gods  worfliip 
on  fome  bale  defigne  or  other ,  and  this  makes  him  yet  more 
abominable  to  God  ,  who  difdains  to  have  his  holy  Ordinances 
proflituted  to  ferve  the  hypcrites  iuft ;  ufed  only  as  a  (tream 
to  turn  about  his  mill ,  and  handfomly  effect  his  carnal  projects, 
When  Abfolom  had  formed  his  plot ,  within  his  own  natural 
bofome ,  and  was  bigg  with  his  treafon ,  as  ever  Cocatrice 
was  with  her  poyfonous  egge ,  to  Hibron  he  goes  in  all 
haft,  and  that  (forfoothjto  pay  an  old  vow,  which  in  the  time 
of  his  affliction  he  had  made  to  the  Lord,  2  Sam  1  j.io,n,Wha 
would  not  think ,  the  man  was  growu  honeit,  when  he  begins 
to  think  of  paying  his  old  debts?  but  the  wretch  meant  no-> 
thing  iefle  ;  his  errand  thither  was  to  lay  his  treafon  under  the 
warme  wing  of  Religion  ,  that  the  reputation  he  fhould 
gaine  thereby ,  might  fielp  the  former  to  hatch  it.  And  I  wi& 
that  as  Abfolom  died  without  a  ionpeto  keep  his  name  in  te-» 
membrance ;  Co  that  none  had  been  left  behind  to  inherit  hb 
curled  hypociine  ,  that  the  world  might  have  grown  into  a  hap- 
py ignorance  of  fo  monftrous  a  fmne;  but  al*s ,  this  is  but  avajn 
Willi,  vlyity  imi  ip  Tcmpfyirt  ven',t »  this  kind  of  bypoerifl?  ye; 

lives, 


"'■  '^'  -"»-- 


girt  about  with  truth,  lQf* 

lives,  yea  comes  as  boldly  to  out-face  God  in  hisworihipas  c- 
ver;    many  making  no  better  ufe  of  the  exercife  of  it,  then  fome 
do  of  their  Sedans,  to   carry  them   unfeea  to  the  enjoyment  of 
their  luft.     And  is  it  any  wonder,    that  God  who  hath  appoint 
ed  his  Ordinancesfor  fuch  high  and  holy  ends,    fhould  abhorre 
the  hyprocrite,  who  thus  debafeth  them  in  the  fervice  of  the  de^ 
yillf    Did  you  invite  fome   toacotfly   feaft  at  your  houfe,  who 
infteadoi  feeding  on  the  dainties   you  have  provided  for  them 
fliould  take  and  throw  all   to  rkir  dogs  under  the  table,    bow 
would  you  like  your  gueft?    The  hypocrite  is  he  that  cads  Gods 
holy  thm°s  to  his  dogs.    God    invites   Us   to  his  Ordinances,  as' 
toanchreajt,  where  he   is  ready  toer.tertaineus,  in   fwet§ 
communion  with  himfelf;  What   horrid  impiety  is  it  tbenthar 
the  hypocrite  commits?  who  whenheisfet  at  Gods  table  feeds 
not  of  thefedanties   himfelf  but  throws  all  tobisju^s  ;  fom* 
to  his  pride,  and  fome  to  hi?    covetoufneflej    propounding 
himfelf  no  other  end  in  coming  to  them,  than   to  make  pro, 
vihon  for  thefe  lufc ,  as  Hamw  and  Severn  his  fbnne",  who 
when  they  would  perfwade  the  people  of  their  Ciry  tofubmit 
to  circumcifion  ufed  tbi^as  tne  great  argument  to  move  them, 
that  they  fliould  grow  rich  by  the  hand.    If  every  maleamonl 
w  be  circumvfed,  as  they  are  circwwiftd ,  Jha/l  not  their  t  mtl 
and  thetr  fabftance,  a*d  every  b  a:  of  theirs  be  ours  f  Gen  ?4 
ai,  Z?<     A  goodly  Argument,  was  k  not  in  a  bufinefle  S 
iuch  a  high  nature,  as  coming  under  a  folemne  Ordinance? 
they  rather   fpeak   as   if  they  were  going  to  a  Horfe-market' 
or  Cow-fare,  than  to  a   religious  duty,     Truly,  thoueh  moft 
hypocrite  have  more  wit,  than  thus   to  print  their  thSu°hts 
and  let  the  world  reade  what  is  writ  in  their  hearts  ,  yet  as 
Queen  CAUry  faid  of  Callu ,  if  fre  were   ript   up  it  would 
be  found  in  her  heart;  fo  fome  fuch  low  things ,  as  vain-°Io, 
ry,  worldly  profit,  &c.  would  be  found  engraven  in  the  breaft 
of  all  hypocrites,  as  that  which  they  moft  aime  at  in  thedu* 
ties  of  Religion,  ^WM 


V  SECT' 


2. 


i  o 6  Having  your  leyns 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly,  confider  the  hypocrite  in  the  things  he  layes  claim 
to,  and  they  are  no  fmall  priviledges ;  relation  to  Cod,  i  ber- 
eft in  Chrift ;  who  more. forward  to  Saint  himfelf,  to  pretend 
to  the  graces  and  comforts  of  the  Spirit  than  the  hypocrite  ? 
as  we  fee  in  the  Pharifees,  whofe  great  defignc  was  to  gee  a 
name  ,  and  that  not  fuch  as  the  great  ones  of  the  earth  have 
for  prowefle,  worldly  majefty  and  the  like,  but  for  fanc"tit;  -  id 
holinefle  ;  and  they  had  it ,  if  it  would  do  them  any  good. 
Verily,  faith Chrift,  they  have  their  reward.  Mat.  6.  2.  Ihey 
would  be  thought  for  great  Saints,  and  fo  they  are  by  the 
multitude,  who  did  fo  applaud  them  for  their  holineffe,  which 
faced  their  outfide,  that  they  had  a  proverb,  If  but  two  could 
be  faved,  one  of  the  two  (hould  be  a  ¥  hart-fee.  We  read  of 
fomethat  profejfe  they  know  (jod,  but  \n  works  tl.ey  deny  him% 
Tit.  i.  16.  they  boldly  brag  of  their  acquaintance  with  God, 
and  would  be  thought  great  favourites  of  his,  though  their 
lives  are  <^4nt'podees  to  heaven  :  fo  %jz\^.g.\\Q  meet  with  fome 
that  fay  they  are  Jews ,  and  are  not,  but  lie  They  dwell  fure  by 
ill  neighbours,  none  would  fay  fo  much  for  them,  but  them- 
felves;  the  hypocrite  is  fo  ambitious  to  pane  for  a  Saint,  that 
he  commonly  is  a  great  cenfurer  of  the  true  graces  of  others  , 
as  too  much  bindring  rhe  prompt  it  of  his  own  ;  like  Herod , 
yvho  (as  Effb'tu  writes  )  being  doubled  at  the  b.ifenefle  of  his 
own  birth,  burnt  the  fe,v:  ancient  Genealogies ,  the  better  t« 
defend  his  own  pretended  noble  defcent.  VVho  now  is  able  t© 
give  a  full  accent  to  this  highr^ribingfinne  of  the  hypocrite.' 
&  is  a  imne  that  highly  reproa'chech  God,  to- have  fuch  a 
vile  wretch  claime  kindred  with  him.  Chrift  indeed  isnot^- 
fozn.ed  to  ,sM  trie  pooreil  Saints  brethren,  but  he  difdaines  to 
nave  his  name  feen  upon  a  rotten-hearted  hypocrite  •,  As  Prin- 
ces to  bave  their  effigies  ftathp'c  onbafe  mettals  ;  what  /corne 
was  pur  upon  that  mock-Prince,  Perkjn  iVarb  c^y  who  (ha- 
ving got  fome  fragments  of  Co.  t-fhip,  and  tutor'd  how  to 
a£t  his  part)  was  j  refented  to  the  world  as  fonne  to  Ed- 
ward the  fourth  of  this  Nation,   but  when  he  had  aped  awhile 

the 


girt  about  wit/j  truth,  \  o- 


the  Rate  of  a  Prince,  was  taken,  and  with  his  bafe  ignoble  pe- 
degree  (writ  in  great  letters)  pin'dathis  back,  Tent  about,  that 
where  ever  he  came,he  might  carry  his  {hame  with  him, till  in  the 
endhe  wasfent  to  act  the  laft  part  of  his  play  at  the  Gallows. 
But  what  is  all  this  to  the  hypocrites  portion  ?  who  for  abufing 
others  here  with  a  feeming  fan#ity,  as  if  indeed  he  was  of  hea- 
venly extraction,  a  childe  of  God,and  here  of  glory  Avail  be 
brought  at  the  great  day  to  be  hided,  and  hooted  at  by  men 
and  Angels,  and  after  he  hath  been  put  to  this  open  (hame,  be 
thrown  deepeft  into  hell.  Of  all  Tinners  he  doth  moft  mifchief 
in  this  world,  and  therefore  fhall  have  moll  torment  in  the  o- 
ther.  There  is  a  double  mifchief  which  none  ftand  at  like  ad- 
vantage to  do  as  the  hypocrite  by  his  feeming  Saintfhip.  The 
one  he  doth  while  his  credit  holds,  and  he  pafleth  for  a  childe 
of  God  in  the  opinion  of  his  neighbours ;  the  other  when  his 
reputation  is  cracked,  and  he  difcovered  to  be  what  he  is,  a  hypo- 
crite. The  mifchief  he  doth  when  his  mask  is  on,  is,as  a  decei- 
ver ;  ^Machevil  knew  what  he  did  in  commending  to  Princes  a 
refemblance  of  Religion,  though  he  forbade  any  more ;  It  hath 
been  found  the  moft  taking  bait ,  to  decoy  people  into  their 
{hare,  who  come  in  apace,  when  Religion  is  the  flag  that  is  fee 
up.  Ehud  could  not  have  thought  on  a  furer  key  to  open  all 
doors,  and  procure  him  admittance  into  KingJEg/cwr  prefence, 
than  to  give  out  he  had  a  meflase  from  the  Lord  to  him ;  this 
raifed  fuch  an  expectation,  andbred  fuch  a  confidence,  that  room 
is  made  for  him  ;  prefently  all  depart,  and  he  left  alone  with  the 
King;,  yea,  the  King  will  rife  to  hear  this  meffage  that  comes 
from  the  Lord,  and  fo  gives  him  a  greater  advantage,  to  run  him 
into  the  guts;had  not  fome  in  our  dayes  pretended  highly  to  Saint- 
fhip, I  doubt  not,  but  they  would  have  found  the  door  ihuq, 
where  now  they  have  too  much  welcome,  andfindeiteiiieto 
procure  belief  to  their  errours.  Even  the  Ele£t  are  in  fome  dan- 
ger, when  one  cried  up  for  a  Saint,  is  the  ieflenger  that  brings 
the  errour  to  town,  and  that  under  the  noc:':on  of  a  meflage  from 
God;  I  confefle  the  hypocrite  adts  his  part  fo  handfomly,  that 
he  may  do  fome  good  accidentally,  his  glittering  profelfion,' 
heavenly  difcourfe,  excellent  gifts  in  prayer  or  preaching  may 
ffe6t  much  the  fincere  foul,  and  be  an  occafion  of  real  good  to 
his  foul,  as  the  ftage-player,  though  his  tears  be  counterfeit, 

p  2  may 


i  o  8  Having  y  our  leyns 


may  (Ur  up  by  his  feeining  patfion ,  real  farrow  in  his  fpe£tators, 
fo  as  to  make  them  weep  in  earned;  thus  the  hypocrite  acting  his 
part  with  falie  affections,  may  be  a  means  to  draw  forth,  and  ex- 
cite the  ChrilHans  true  graces ;  but  then  is  fuch  a  one  much  more 
in  danger  to  be  enfnared  by  hiserrour,  becaufe  he  will  not  be 
readily  fufpirious  of  any  thing  that  he  brings ,  whom  he  hath 
found  really  helpful  to  his  grace  or  comfort ;  and  thus  the  good 
the  hypocrite  doth  ,  makes  him  but  able  to  do  the  greater  hurt 
in  the  end.  Sifera  had  better  have  gone  without  faets  butter  and 
milk,  than  by  them  to  be  laid  afleep againft  Hie  came  with  her 
naile;  and  it  had  been  farre  happier,  for  many  in  our  dayes,  not  to 
have  tafted  of  the  gifts  ,•  and  teeming  graces  of  fame,  than  to 
have  been  fo  taken  with  this  fweet  wine,  as  to  drink  themfelves 
drunk  into  an  admiration  of  their  perfons ,  which  hath  laid  them 
afleep ,  and  thereby  given  them  whom  they  have  applauded  fo 
much,  but  advantage  the  moreeafily  to  fallen  their  nail  to  their 
heads,  errours  I  mean,  to  their  judgments.  The  other  mifchief  the 
hypocrite  doth,  is,  when  discovered,  and  that  is  ashe  is  a  fcandal  to 
the  wayes  of  God,  and  fervants  of  God.  It  is  faid  of  Sampfon^  the' 
dead  which  he  Jlcw  at  his  death  ^  were  more  than  the)  which  which  he 
flew  in  his  life,  Judg.  1 6.  ?di.  Truly  the  hypocrite  doth  more  hurt 
whenheisdifcovered,  which  rs  the  death  of  his  profeilion ,  than 
whenhefeemedtobealive.  The  wicked  world  that  are  not  long 
feeking  a  ftarfe  to  beat  the  Saints  with,  have  now  one  put  into 
their  hand  by  the  hypocrite.  Ohow  they  can  run  diviiion  upon 
this  harfh  note,  and  befmear  the  face  of  all  profeflbrs  with  the  dirt 
they  fee  upon  one  fa  He  brothers  coat,  as  if  they  could  take  the 
length  of  all  their  feet  by  the  meafure  of  one  hypocrite;  hence 
comes  fuch  bafe  language  as  this ;  they  are  all  of  a  pack,  not  one 
better  than  another;  Indeed  this  is  very  abfurd  reafoning,  as  if  one 
fhuld  fay,  no  coyn  were  currant,  and  right  lilver,  becaufe  now  and 
then  abrade  (hilling is  found  amongft  the  reft;  but  this  language 
fits  the  mouth  of  the  ungodly  world  ;  and  woe  be  to  the  man  that 
makes  thefe  arrows  for  them  by  his  hypocrihe,  which  they  fhoot  a- 
gainft  the  Saints;  better  he  had  been  thrown  with  a  milftone  about 
his  neck  into  the  fea,  than  have  lived  to  give  fuch  an  occafion  for 
the  enemy  toblafpheme. 


CHAPC 


girt  about  with  truth  j  Oo 


CHAP.  X. 

Where  all  are  Jiirred  up  to  put  themfelves  upon 
the  tryai  whether  fincere  or  nofr  three  Argu- 
ments ufed  to  provoke  to  the  work,  and  four e 
folfe  Characters  by  which  the  hypocrite  flatters 
himfelf  into  a  conceit  of  being  upright. 

SEcondly  ,  doth  fincerity  cover  alia  Saints  infirmities?  this     yr    2t 
fhews  how  behooful  it  is  for  every  one  to  try  his  waves 
and  fearch  narrowly  his  heart ,  whether  he  be  fincere  or  Hy- 
pocritical. 


■IN- 


SECT. I. 


Flrfl  ,  all  depends  on  it ,  even  all  thou  art  worth  in  another 
world*  'tis  thy  making  or  marring  for  ever,  Pfa/me  125.  5. 
Do  good^O  Lord,  jo.  them  that  are  upright  in  heart',  asforfuch  as 
turne  afide  to  crooked '  wayes ,  the  Lord  will  lead  them  forthwith 
the  workers  of  Iniquity ;  that  is  the  end  the  hypocrite  is  fure  to 
come  to;  he  would  indeed  then  faine  pafle  for  a  Saint,  and 
crowd  in  among  the  godly,  but  God  [ball  lead  him  forthwith 
workfrs  of  iniquity ,  company  that  better  befits  him ;  tis  fin- 
cerity  (hall  carry  it  in  that  day.  I  will  come  (faith  Paul)  1  Cor. 
4.  19.  to  you  fhortly^  and  will  know ,  not  the  ifecch  of  them  that 
are  puffed  up  ,  but  the  power  \  for  the  Kingdom e  of  God,  is  not  in 
fVord,  but  power  ;  What    mil  ye?  fhall  I  come  umojou  with  a 

rod> 


h 


no 


Having  your  loyns 


rod,  or  in  love  ?  Oh  friends,not  Pauljoui  Chri,ft  will  Shortly  come  • 
unco  us,  and  he  will  know  nor  the  fpeech ,  and  toothing  language 
of  fuch  as  are  puffed  up  with  an  empty  name  of  profeftion,but 
will  know,the  power,  gage  the  heart,  and  fee  what  is  in  ic :  now 
will  ye  that  he  come  with  a  rod,  or  in  love.-'  to  judge  you  as  hy- 
pocrites ,  or  to  give  you  the  Enge  of  a  faithful  fervant  >  doth 
not  he fpend  his  time  ill,  that  tak:s  pains  in  his  trade,  and  hys 
out  all  his  (tock  upon  fuch  a  commodity,  which  when  heo^ens 
his  ftall,  will  be  feized  for  falfe  ware,  and  he  clapped  up  for  a- 
bufingthe  countrey  ?  all  th.u  ever  the  hypocrite  did,will  in  the 
great  day  of  Ch rift  be  found  counterfeit,  andhefureto  Belaid 
by  the  heels  in  hell,  for  going  about  to  cheat  Gcd  and  man; 
every  mans  works  fhall  then  be  manifcft,  that  day  fhall  declare  it. 
Even  the  fmcere  Chriftian  where  he  hath  tampered  with  hypo- 
criiie,  fhall  lofe  that  his  work,  but  the  hypocrite  with  his  work 
z  his  foul  alfo. 
2>  Secondly,  confider  hypocrifie  lies  clofe  in  the  h:art  •,  if  thou 

beeft  not  very  careful,  thou  mayeft  eafily  pafle  a  falfe  judgment 
on  rhy  felf;  they  who  were  fent  to  fearch  the  cellar  under  rhe  Par- 
liament, at  firft  law  nothing  but  coals  and  winter  provifion,  bm: 
upon  a  review,  when  they  came  to  throw  away  that  fhjrfe,  they 
found  all  but  provifion  for  the  Divels  Kitchin  ;  then  the  myftery 
of  iniquity  was  uncafed,  and  the  barrels  of  powder  appear 'd.How 
many  are  there,  that  from  fome  duties  of  piety  fiiey  perform, 
fome  feeming  zeal  they  exprcflfe  in  profeffi  on  ,    prekntly  cry 
omnia  bee,  and  are  fo  kinde  to  themselves,  as  to  vote  themfelves 
good  Chriftians,  who,  did  they,    but  take  the  pains  to  throw 
thefe  afide,  they  might  finde  a  foule  hypocrite  at  the  bottome 
of  them  all ;  hypocriile  often  takes  up  her  1  od5ing  next  door  to 
iincericy,  and  fo  (he  paffes  unfound,  the  foul  not  fufpe&ing  hell 
can  be  fo  near  heaven.     And  as  hypocrii.ie,  fo  Sincerity  is  hard 
to  be  ciifcovered ;  this  grace  often  lies  low  in  the  heart,  (like  the 
fweet  violet  in  fome  valley,  or  near  fome  b;ook  )    hid  wirh 
thorns  and  nettles ;  infirmities  I  mean  ;  fo  that,there  requires 
both    care  and   wifdome ,    that  we  neither  let  the  weed  of 
hypocrifie  Hand ,    nor  pluck   up  the    herb  of   i:race  in  its 
ftead. 

Thirdly,  'cis  feafibl  j;I  do  not  fet  you  about  an  endlefl'e  work; 
the  heart  of  man  I  confeflcis  as  a  ruffled  skeine  of  filk ,    not  ea- 

fijy 


girt  about  with  truth.  %  1 1 

fily  unfnarled,  yet  with  a  faithful  ufe  of  the  means ,  it  may 
be  dif-intanglec^and  wound  up  on  the  right  bottom  of  fincerky  or 
hypocrifie.  Joby  when  Satan  and  his  cruel  friends  laboured  to 
roylehisffiritmoft,  and  muddy  the  ftream  of  his  former  ceurfe 
and  condition,  (by  throwing  their  objections  as  fo  many  ftones 
into  it;  )  yet  he  could  fee  this  precious  gem  at  the  bottome, 
fparklingmoft  brightly;  yz&yHez*kjah  in  the  very  brim  of  the 
grave,  recreates  his  fpirit  with  it.  Indeed  (friends )  this  is  a  fouls 
encouragement,  that  it  fhall  not  want  Gods  help  in  this  fearch, 
if  it  goes  about  it  with  honeftdefires.  A  Jufitce  will  not  onely 
give  his  warrant  to  fearch  a  fufpicious  houfe,but  if  needbe,wiH 
command  others  to  be  aiding  to  him  in  the  bulinefle;  Word, 
Minifters,  Spirit,. all  thou  fhalt  have  for  thy  afilftance  in  this 
work;  only  have  a  care  thou  dolt  not  mock  God  in  the  bu- 
fineffe  ;  that  foul  deferves  to  be  damned  to  this  finne,  who  in 
the  fearch  for  hypocrifie  plays  the  hypocrite ,  like  a  naughty , 
dilhoneft  Conftable  that  willingly  over-looks  him  whom  he 
fearcheth  for,  and  then  fayes  he  cannot  finde  him. 

Now,  for  the  fuller  fatisfaction  in  this  poinr,and  help  in  the 
tryal ,  becaufe  'tis  that  which  both  good  and  bad  are  miftaken 
in ;  the  carnal  wretch  flattering  himfelf,  his  heart  is  good  and 
boneft;  thefincere  foul  kept  under  fear  of  being  a  hypocrite; Satan 
abufing  them  both  •,  I  fhall  therefore  fir!!  lay  down  the  grounds  of 
an  hypocrite  with  which  he  fhores  up  his  rotten  houfe,and  fhew 
the  falfities  of  them. Secondly,!  will  lay  down  the  grounds  of  the 
weak  Chritiiam  fear  for  his  being  a  hypocrite,  and  the  vveaknefle 
of  them  ;  Thircly,fome  politive  difcoveries  of  fincerity,whtch  no 
hypocrite  ever  did  or  can  reach  to. 


SECT,  II. 

Firftfot  the  hypocrite,he  will  ftand  upon  his  defence ;  hi j  heart 
rs  lincere ;  well,  how  will  he  prove  it  ? 

Firft,the  hypocrite  will  fay,Sure  I  am  no  hypocrite,for  I  cannot  r; 

endure  it  in  another. 

zAnfw.Tlvs  is  not  enough  to  clear  thee  from  being  a  hypocrite,       Ar.fw. 
except  thou  canit  fhew  thou  dolt  this  from  aholygroun  j.    phft 
thatask't  feUnadab  whether  his  heart.was  right,  carried   at  that 

ftme 


H2  Having  your  loyns 

fame  time  a  falfe  one  in  his  own  breaft.  It  is  very  ordinary  for 
a  man  to  decry  that  in  another,  and  fmartly  to  declaim  againll 
it ,  which  he  all  the  while  harbours  himfefr.  How  fevere  was 
Judah  again!*  Tamar  \  he  commands  in  all  hafte  to  burne  her,  - 
(jen.  38.  24.  who  would  not  have  thought  this  man  to  be  chalk  r 
yet  he  was  the  very  perfon  that  had  defiled  her.  There  may  be 
a  great  cheat  in  this  piece  of  zeal ;  fometimes  the  very  place  a 
man  is  in ,  may  carry  him  as  the  prtmum  mobile  does  the  ftars, 
in  a  motion  which  his  own  gevitu  and  liking  would  never  lead 
him  to ;  Thus  many  that  are  Magistrates  give  the  Law  to 
drunkards  and  fwearers ,  meerly  to  keep  the  decorum  of  thei  r 
place ,  and  fhun  the  clamour  that  would  atife  from  their  neglect, 
who  can  poffibly  do  both  when  they  meet  with  place  and  com- 
pany fit  for  their  purpofe.  Some  their  zeal  againll  anothers  fin 
is  kindled  at  the  difgrace  which  reflets  upon  them  by  it,  in  the 
eye  of  the  world;  and  this  falls  out,  when  the  finne  is  publick, 
and  the  perfon  that  committed  it  ftands  related;  this  is  conceiv'd 
to  be  ftidahs  cafe ,  who  was  willing  his  daughter  fhould  betaken 
out  of  the  way,  that  the  blot  which  fhe  had  brought  on  his 
family ,  might  with  her  be  out  of  fight.  Some  again  finde  it 
a  thriving  trade ,  and  make  this  advantage  of  enveighing  a- 
gainft  others  faults ,  to  h'de  their  own  the  better ,  that  they 
may  carry  on  their  own  defignes  with  lefle  fufpicion.  Abfa- 
bm  afperfeth  his  fathers  government,  as  a  ftirroptoheiphim- 
felf  into  the  faddle.  fefhu  lov'd  the  Crown  more  than  he  ha- 
ted Je^abds  whoredomes ,  for  all  his  loud  cry  againft  them. 
In  a  word  (for  tis  impolTible  to  hit  all )  there  may  be  much 
of  revenge  in  it,  and  the  perfon  is  rather  fhot  at,  than  his  ' 
finne ;  this  was  obferv'd  of  Antony's  zeal  agaimt  Augvfttts ,  o~ 
dit  tyr annum,  amavit  tyrannidem ;  he  hated  the  Tyrant ,  but 
lov'd  well  enough  the  tyranny. 
2*  Secondly ,  faith  the  hypocrite ,  I  am  bold  ,  and  ftarlelTe  in 

dangers  ,  lure  I  am  no  hypocrite  ;  FearfHlnejfe  furprifth 
the  hypocrite  :  But  'tis  the  righteous  that  is  bold  as  A 
Lion, 
.yfxfo,  Anf».  The  better  way  fure,  were  to  try  thy  boldnefle  by  thy 
hncerity,  than  to  conclude  thy  fincerity  by  thy  boldnefle.  Truly, 
confidence,  and  a  fpirit  undaunted  at  death  and  danger,  are  glo- 
rious things ,  when  the  Spirit  and  Word  of  Chrift  ftand  by  to 

vouch 


girt  about  with  truth. 


vouch  them  f  when  the  creature  cau  give  fome  account  of  the 
hope  thae  is  in  him,  as  Paul  who  (hews  how  he  came  by  it.  ]  his 
Chriftian  (not  Romane)  courage,  %j>rrt.  5.1, 2, 3 , 4.  many  roomes 
he  pafleth  before  he  comes  to  this,  which  indeed  joynes  upon 
heaven  it  felf-,  faith  is  the  key  which  lets  him  into  all.    Firft,  ic 
opens  the  door  of  juftification ,  and  lets  ic  into  a  ftateo    peace, 
and  reconciliation  with  God  through  JefusChriftv  btingj^fiified 
by  faith,  we  have  peace  with  God  through  our  Lord  fefus  Chrift^vj. 
through  this  he  pafleth  on  to  another,  the  prefence-chamber  of 
Gods  favour,  and  is  admitted  nigh  unto  him,  as  a  traitor  once  par- 
doned is,  by  whom  alfo  we  have  accefs  by  Hm  into  this  grace  wherein 
weftandyv.  2.  that  is,  we  have  rot  only  our  finnes  pardoned,  and 
our  perfons  reconciled  to  God  by  faith  in  Chrift,  but  now  un- 
der Chrifts  wing ,  we  are  brought  to  court  as  it  were,  and  ftand 
in  his  grace  as  favourites  before  their  Prince-  this  opens  into 
a  third  ,  and  rejojce  in  the  hope  of  glory  •  we  do  not  only  at  prefent 
enjoy  the  grace  and  favour  of  G  od ,  and  communion  with  him 
here,  but  have  from  this  a  hope  firmly  planted  in  onr  hearts  for 
heavens  gloty  hereafter.    Now  he  is  brought  to  the  moft  inward 
•  roorne  of  all ,  which  none  can  come  at ,  but  he  that  goes  through 
all  the  former,  ver.  3.  And  not  only  fo,  but  we  glory  in  tribulations 
alfo.     If  thou  haft  not  entred  at  thcfe  doors ,  thou  art  a  thief 
and  a  robber  -,  thou  getteft  thy  confidence  too  quickly  to  have 
it  brought  to  thy  hand  by  God  5  if  God  means  thee  well  for 
eternity ,  hee'le  make  thee  fmart  for  this  thy  boldnefle ,  as 
he  did  Jacob  for  ftealing  his  fathers  blefling^  and  therefore  con- 
tent not  thy  felf  with  a  bare  boldnefle  and  confidence  in  d  an gersj 
but  enquire  whether  it  hath  a  Scriptute  bottome,  and  bafts  to 
ftand  on ,  or  whether  the  pillars  fupporting  it ,  be  not  igno- 
rance in  thy  minde,  and  ftupidityin  thy  confeience  •,  if  the  lat- 
ter, thon  art  in  a  fad  condition;  thy  boldnefle  will  laft  no  long-  1  Sam/a  j  %y 
er  than  thou  feeft  it  doth  in  one  that  is  drunk,  who  when  he 
is  wine-fprung  thinks  (as  they  fay,  he  can  skip  over  the  Moonej 
and  ventures  to  go  without  fear  upon  precipices,  and  pit-fals^  but 
when  fober,  trembles  to  fee  what  he  did  in  his  drunken  fit.  Nabal 
that  fcar'd  nothing  when  drunk,  his  heart  dies  within  him,  and 
became  as  aftone,  at  the  ftory /*%<*/ told  him  in  the  morning, 
when  the  wine  was  gone  out  of  him-,  therefore  as  he  when  his 
cauie  mifcarried  through  the  fkepinefle  of  the  Judge  on  the         2. 

,     Q^  Bench, 


I  I 


Having  your  loyns 


"^^T appeal' d  from  the  Judge  ajlecf  to  the  Judge  awake-,  fo  do 
I  here  with  you,  that  through  thcprcfcnt  ftuptdityof  confcu 
cnce  are  bold,are  fearleffe  of  death ,  and  from  this  plead  your 
uprightnefie. '  I  appeal   from  your  confcience  afleep ,  to  the 
fentence  it  will  give  when  it  fhallbe  awake,  which  I  wi(h  may 
be  in  this  world  >  that  you  may  fee  your  miftake  where  you  may 
amend  it. 
Q«fA»3*         Thirdly^  Aire  faith  another,  I  am  not  an  hypocrite ,  for  I 
perform  fecret   duties    in  my   clofet  ;    the    hypocrite   he   is 
no  body,  except  on  the  ftage  .  it  is  the  brand  of  the  hypo- 
crite, he  courts  the  world  for  itsapplaufe,  and  therefore  does  all 
abroad. 
a  r    i  Anfre.  Though  the  total  neglect  of  fecret  duties  in  Religi- 

' ]     on  fpeaks  a  perfon  to  be  an  hypocrite,  yet  the  performing  of 
duties  in  fecret ,  will  not  demonstrate  thee  a  fincere  perfon  -y 
hypocrifie  is  in  this  like  the  frogs  brought  on  Egypt,  no  place 
was  free  of  them,  no  no*  their  bed-chambers ;  they  crept  into 
their  moft  inward  rooms,  and  fo  doth  hypocrific  into  clofet- 
duties ,  as  well  as  publick-,  indeed  though  the  place  be  fecret 
where  fuch  duties  are   pej  formed ,  yet  the  matter  may  be  fo 
handled,  (and  is  by  fome  hypocrites )  that  they  are  not  fecret 
in  their  clofets  •,  like  the  hen  who  goes  inro  &  fecret  place  to 
lay  her  egge ,  but  by  her  cackling  tells  all  the  houfe  where  (he 
is  ,  and  what  (he  is  doing.    But  where  this  is  not,  'tis  not  e- 
nough^  for  we  muft  not  think  but  fome  hypocrites  may  and  do  fpin 
a  thread  finer  than  other-;  in  all  arts  there  are  fome  exceed  o- 
thers ,  and  fo  in  this  trade  of  hy poena. ;  the  groffe hypocrite 
whofe  drift  is  to  deceive  others ,  his    Religion  commonly  is- 
all  without  doors  ^  but  there  is  an  hypocrite  that  labours  to  keep 
a  faire  quarter  with  himfclr,and  is  very  defirous  to  make  confci- 
ence on  his  fide ,  which  to  procure,  hee'l  go  to  the  utmoft  link 
of  his  chaine,  and  do  anything  that  may  not  fcparate  him  and 
his  beloved  liits-,  now  fecret  prayer  and  other  duties,  maybe 
fo  perLo  med ,  as  that  they  (hall  not  more  prejudice  a  mans 
lufts  than  any  other-  \is  not  the  fvvord ,  though  very  (harp, 
that  kilL  -  but  the  force  that  it  is  thruft  withal j  indeed  there 
are  fome  fecret  duties ,  as  examination  of  our  hearts,  trying  of 
our  wa\s,  and  ferious  meditation  of  thethrearningsoftheWord, 
ftgainft  fuch  ilnnes  as  we  fndeinour  own  bofornes,  with  doie- 

appli- 


girt  about  with  truth.  u* 


application  of  them  to  our  felves,  would  put  finnehard  toifj 
but  the  hypocrite  can  lay  this  fvvord  fo  eafily  and  favourably 
on,  that  his  lufts  (hall  not  cry,  oh,  at  it-  therefore  dill  there 
needs  a  melius  inquirendum ,  a  fuller  fearch  before  thou  canft 
come  oft. 

Fourthly,  fure  I  am  not  an  hypocrite,  for  I  do  not  only  pray  Qiieft.4> 
(and  thatinfecrettooj  againft  my  finnes,  but  I  alfo  fi^hca- 
gainft  them ,  yea  and  that  to  good  purpofc  j  for  1  can  (hew 
you  the  fpoiles  of  my  »  &oi.  thai'I  have  got  over  fome  of 
them.  There  was  a  time  I  couid  not  go  by  the  Me  houfe,  hut 
my  luft  bid  me  ftand;and  pull'd  me  in,  I  ut  now  I  thank  God,  I 
have  got  fuch  a  maftery  of  my  drunken  luft ,  that  I  can  pafle  by 
without  looking  in. 

sAnfw.  'Tis  good  what  thou  do'ft  fay,  and  I  wi(h  all  thy  drun-  jprw 
ken  neighbours  could  fpeak  as  much,  that  when  the  Magnate 
will  not,  or  cannot  fpoile  that  drunken  trade,  they  that  keep  thofe 
(hops  for  the  Devil,might  even  (hut  up  their  windows  for  want  of 
cuftomers.  But  is  it  not  pity  that  what  is  good  fhouid  be  marr'd  in 
the  doing  ?  yet  'tis  too  common,  and  may  be  thy  cafe. 

Firft,  let  me  ask  thee  how  long  it  hath  been  thus  with  thee,lufts         i, 
(as  to  the  actings  I  mean)  are  like  agues,  the  fit,  is  not  always  on, 
and  yet  the  man  not  rid  of  his  difeafe,,  and  fume  mens  luft  like 
fome  agues  have  not  fuch  quick  returnes  as  others,    ".he  river  doth 
not  move  alwayes  one  way-,  now 'tis  coming,  anon  falling  wa- 
ter, and  though  it  doth  not  rife  when  it  ftlls ,  yet  it  hath  not  loft 
its  other  motion.    Now  the  tide  of  luft  is  up,  and  anon  'tis  down, 
and  the  man  recovles  and  feems  to  run  from  it ,  but  it  returnes  a- 
gainupon  him  •,  who  would  have  thought  to  have  feen  Pluraoh  in 
in  his  mad  fit  again,  that  fhouid  have  been  with  him  in  his  good 
mood  when  he  bid  CMcfes  and  the  people  go  ?  but  alas  the  man 
was  nor  altered  •.  thus  may  be  when  a  ftrong  occafion  comes,  this 
(like  an  eafteily  wind  to  fome  of  our  porrsj  will  bring  in  the  tyde 
of  th;  luft,  fo  ftrongly,  that  thy  foul  that  feem'd  as  clear  of  thy 
luft  as  the  naked  fands  are  of  water,  will  be  in  a  few  moments  co- 
vered, and  as  deep  under  their  weves  as  ever.    But  the  lonfer  rhe 
banks  have  held,  the  better  ^  yet  (houldft  thou  nevermore  be 
drunk  as  to  the  outward  fulfilling  of  the  luft,  yet  this  is  not  enough 
to  dear  thee  from  being  an  hypocrite. 

Secondly,  therefore  let  me  ask  thee  what  was  the  great  mo*         2.' 

Q^2  tive 


!  1 5  Having  your  loyus 


tive  to  take  thee  off.     ri  hat  may  be  as  bad  (in  fome  fenfe)  which 
keeps  thee  from  the  Ale-houfe  now ,  as  that  which  heretofore 
drew  thee  to  it.     'Tis  ordinary  for  one  luft  to  fpoile  anothers 
market  •,  he  that  (hould  fave  his  money  from  guzling  it  down 
his  throat,  to  lay  on  more  finery  on  his  back ;  what  doth  this 
man  but  rob  one  luft  to  facrifice  it  to  another  ?  whether  was 
it  God  or  man,  God  or  thy  purfe ,  God  or  thy  pride ,  God  or 
thy  reputation  that  knockt  thee  off?  if  any  but  God  prevail'd 
with  thee  ^   Hypocrite  is  a  name  will  better  now  become  thee 
than  when  in  the  Ale  houfe.    Again,  if  God,  what  apprehenfions 
of  God  were  they  that  did  it?  fome,  the  wrath  of  God  for 
fome  particular  finne  hath  fo  fhakt  (that  as  one  feared  with 
an  apparition  in  a  roome,  cares  not  for  lying  there  any  more) 
fo  they  dare  not ,  at  leaft  for  a  long  time  be  acquainted  with 
that  praftice  again;  and  as  it  is  not  the  roome  bujt  the  appa- 
rition ,  that  the  one  diflikes  •,  fo  not  the  finne ,  but  the  wrath 
of  God  that  haunts  it,  which  the  other  flees  from.     In  a  word, 
may  be  thou  haft  laid  down  this  finful  practice;  but  didft  thou 
hate  it ,  and  love  God,  and  fo  leave  it  ?  Thou  art  become  ftrange 
to  one ,  have  you  not  got  acquaintance  with  any  other  in  the 
roome  of  it  ?  thou  haft  laid  down  the  commillion  of  an  evil, 
but  haft  thou  taken  up  thy  known  duty  ?  he  is  a  bad  husband 
that  drains  his  ground,  and  then  neither  fows  nor  plants  it: 
It's  all  one  if  it  had  been  under-water,  as  drain'd  and  not  im- 
proved ;  what  if  thou  ccafe  to  do  evil  (if  it  were  poffible)  and 
thou  learn'ft  not  to  do  well?  'tis  not  thy  fields  being  clcare 
of  weeds ,  but  fruitful   in  corne ,  pays  thy  rent ,  and  brings 
thee  in  thy  profit;  nor  thy  not  being  drunk,  unclean,  or  any 
other  finne,  but  thy  being  holy,  gracious ,  thy   having  faith 
unfeigned ,  pure  love  and  the  other  graces  which  will  prove 
thee  found  ,  and  bring  in  evidence  for  tby  intereft  in  Chrift, 
and  through  him  of  heaven. 


CHAP. 


girt  about  with  truth. 


"7 


^5&8    ^3*3*35 


CHAP.     XL 


The  n>ebk  grounds  whereby  tempted  fouls  argue  a- 
gainfl.  their  ownuprightneffe, 

WE  proceed  to  the  falfe  grounds  from  which  fincere  foul* 
do  many  times  go  about  to  prove  themfdves  hypocrites, 
yea  for  a  while  conclude  they  are  fuch. 
Firft,  fure  I  am  an  hypocrite  faith  the  poor  foul,  or  elfe  I  ftiould 
not  be  as  I  am ;  God  would  not  thus  follow  me  on  with  one 
blow  after  another ,  and  fuffer  Satan  alfo  to  ufe  me  as  he  doth  : 
This  was  the  grand  battery  Jobs  friends  had  againft  his  fincerity- 
and  fometimes  Satan  fo  far  prevails,  as  to  make  the  fincere  foul  kt 
it  againft  his  own  breaft,  faying  much  like  him,  If  God  be  with  us, 
why  is  all  this  befallen  m}  If  God  be  in  us  by  his  grace,  why  ap- 
pears he  againft  us  ? 

%Anfa.  This  fire  into  which  God  cafts  thee,  proves  thou  haft 
drofle;  and  if  becaufethou  art  held  long  in  the  furnace,  thou 
fliouldft  fay ,  thou  hadft  much  drofie ,  I  would  not  oppofej  but 
how  thou  fhoulft  fpell  hypocrite  out  of  thy  affli&ions,  and 
troubles ,  I  marvel  j  The  wicked  indeed  make  much  ufe  of  this 
argument  to  clap  hypocrite  on  them ;  but  the  Cbriftian  me- 
thinks  fhould  not  ufe  it  againft  himfelf,  though  the  Barbarians 
prefently  gave  their  verdict  upon  fight  of  the  Viper  on  Pauls 
hand,  that  he  was  a  murderer,  yet  Paul  thought  no  worfe  of 
himfelf  for  it.    Chriftian,  give  but  the  fame  counfel  to  thy  fclf, 
when  in  affliction  and  temptation,  that  thou  ufeft  to  do  to  thy 
fellow-brethren  in  the  fame  condition,  and  thou  wilt  get  out  of 
thisfoare^  dareft  thou  think  thy  neighbour  an  hypocrite,  meerly 
from  the  hand  of  God  upon  him?  no  I  warrant  thee,  thou  ra- 
ther 


i. 


An  fa  I 


i '. 


8  Having  your  lojns 


thee  pvcieLt  him  ,  and  helpelt  him  ko  anfwer  the  doubts  that  arife 
in  his  (pirit  from  this  very  argnment.    Jt  would  rnak^  one  fmile 
to  fee  how  handfomly  and  roundly  a  Chriftian  can  untie  the 
knots  and  fcrupks  of  another  •  who  afterward,  when  brought  in- 
to the  like  condition,  is  gravell'd  with  the  fame  himfelf-,  he 
that  helpt  his  friend  over  th<-;  (tile  ,  is  now  nnable  to  ftride  ic 
himfelf •  God  fo  orders  -things  that  we  (houid  need  one  another. 
She  that  is  mid-wife  to  others,  cannot  well  do  that  office  to 
her  fclf;  Nor  he  that  is  the  mefTenger  to  bring  peace  to  the  fpi- 
rit  of  another,  able  to  fpeak.  it  to  his  own-  the  cafe  is  clear,  Chri  - 
ftian  •,  affliction  cannot  prove  thee  an  hypocrite,  which  wert  thou 
without  altogether,  thou  mighft  fafer  think  thou  wert  a  baftard  ; 
the  cafe  I  fay  is  clear,  but  thy  eyes  are  held  for  fome  further  end 
God  hath  to  bring  about  by  thy  affliction,    But  may  be  thou 
vultfay,  'tis  not  limply  the  affliction  makes  thee  think  thus  of 
thy  felf  •  but  becaufe  thou  art  fo  long  afflicted ,  and  in  the 
dark  alfo ,  as  to  any  fenfe  of  Gods  love  in  thy  foul.    Thou  haft 
no  fmiles  from  Gods  fweet  countenance  to  alleviate  thy  afflicti- 
on ,  and  if  all  were  right ,  and  thou  a  fincere  child  of  God, 
would  thy  heavenly  Father  let  thee  lie  groaning  ,  and  never 
look  in  upon  thee  to  1/ghten  thy  affliction  with  his  fwcec  pre- 
fer.ee?  As  to  the  firft  of  thefe,  ("the  length  of  thy  affliction.) 
I  know  no  ftandard  God  hath  fet  for  to  meafure  the  length 
of  his  Saints  erodes  by  ^  and  it  becomes  not  us  to  make  one  our 
felves  j  which  we  do ,  when  we  thus  limit  his  chaftifements  to 
time ,  that  if  they  exceed  the  day ,  we  have  writ  down  in  our 
own  thoughts ,  (which  is  like  to  be  (hort  enough ,  if  our  hafty 
hearts   may  appoint)  then  we  are  hypocrites.    For  the  other 
thou  muft  know,  God  can  without  any  impeachment  to  his 
love  hide  it  ior  awhile^  and  truly  he  may  take  it  very  ill,  thac 
his  children  who  have  fecurity  enough  given  them,  for  his  loving 
them  (befides  the  fenfible  manifestation  of  it  to  their  fouls)  fhould 
call  this  in  queftion,  for  not  coming  to  vifk  them,  and  take  them 
-     upinhisarmes,  when  they  would  have  him  :  In  a  word,  may  be 
thy  affliction  comes  in  the  nature  of  purging  Phyfick,  God  inter  ds 
to  evacuate  fome  corruption  by  it,  which  endangers  thy  fpiritual 
health,  and  hinders  thy  thriving  in  godlinefle.  Now  the  manifefta- 
t'on  of  his  love  God  may  referve  (as  Phyficians  do  their  cordials) 
Co  be  given  when  the  Phifick  is  over. 

Second 


girt  about  with  truth.  in 


Secondly,  I  fear  I  am  a  hypocrite,  faith  the  tempted  foul ;  why 
elfe  are  there  fuch  decays  and  declenfions  to  be  found  in  mc  ?  J  f  is 
the  character  of  the  upright,that  hegoes  from  ftrength  to  ftrength, 
but  I  go  backward  from  ftrength  to  weakneffe.    Some  Chriftians 
they  arre  like  thofe  that  we  call  clofe  men  in  the  world-,  if  they 
lofe  any  thing  in  their  trade,  and  all  goes  not  as  they  would  have 
it ,  we  are  fure  to  hear  of  that  over  and  over  again  •,  they  fpeak 
of  their  loflfes  in  every  company^  but  when  they  make  a  good  mar- 
ket, and  gaines  come  in  apace,  they  keep  this  tothemfelves,  not 
forward  to  fpeak  of  them.    If  Chriftians.  would  be  ingenuous, 
they  fhould  tell  what  they  get,  as  what  they  lole.  But  to  take  it 
for  granted,  that  thoudoeft  finde  a  decay ,  and  direft  our  anfwer 
toit.  , 

Anfw.  t.  I  grant  it  as  true,  that  the  fincere  foul  grows  ftrong-   Anfw.i, 
er  and  ftronger^  But  how  ?  even  as  the  tree  grows  higher  and 
bigger,  which   we  know  meets  with  a  fall  of  the  leaf,  and 
Winter,  that  for  a  while  intermits  its  growth  -}  thus  the  fincere 
foul  may  be  put  to  a  prefcnt  ftand  by  fome  temptation  ^  as  Peter ^ 
who  was/ar  from  growing  ftronger  when  he  fell  from  profefling, 
to  denying;  from  denying  Chrift,  to  f  wearing,  and  curling  if  he 
knew  him-  yet  as  the  tree,  when  Spring  comes,  revives  and  gains 
more  in  the  Summer  than  it  lofeth  in  the  Winter  ^  fo  doth  the 
fincere  foul,  as  we  fee  in  Peter,  whofe  grace  that  fquatted  in  for  a 
while,  came  forth  with  fuch  a  force,  that  no  cruelty  from  men 
could  drive  it  in  ever  afte^  fhaking  temptations  end  in  fettlement, 
according  to  the  Apoftles  prayer,  i  Pet.  5.  10.  The  God  of  a!!  grace 
after  yeh.iveftiffered  awhile ,;»,»%  you  perfttt,  jlabtifb,  flrengthen, 
fettle  joti.  1 

Secondly  ,  there  is  great  difference  between  the  decay  of  a  Cm-  2. 
cere  foul,  and  of  an  hypocrite.  The  hypocrite  declines  out  of  an 
inward  diilike  of  the  wayesof  God,  hence  they  are  called  bact^- 
flidcrs  in  heart,  Prov.  14. 14.  So  long  as  they  ferv'd  his  luft,and 
contributed  any  help  to  the  obtaining  his  worldly  intereft,  fo 
long  he  had  a  feeming  zeal^  but  that  argument  taken  away,  he 
begins  to  remit  by  degrees ,  tiil  he  comes  to  be  key-cold ,  yea  as 
heartily  lick  of  his  profeflion ,  as  ^Amnon  of  7 amar ;  when  the 
hypocrite  begins  to  fall ,  hegoe*  apace,  like  a  ftone  down  the  hill, 
knows  no  ground  but  the  bottom-,  now  fpeak  freely  poor  fonf, 
dareft  thou  fay  that  there  is  an  inward  diflike  to  the  wayes  of 

God? 


i  10 


having  your  loyns 


God  •,  may  be  thou  doeft  pray ,  not  with  that  heat  and  fervency 
which  thou  haft  ,  but  is  it  becaufe  thou  doeft  not  like  the  duty  as 
formerly  ?  thou  doeft  not  hear  the  Word  with  fuch  joy  ,  but 
doeft  thou  not  therefore  hear  it  with  more  forrow  ?  In  a  word  , 
canft  thou  not  fay  with  the  Spouie  ,  when  thou  fleepeft  ,  thy  heart 
ivakfth ,  Cant.  5. 2.  that  is,  thou  art  not  pleafed  with  thy  pre- 
sent declining  ftate,  but  heartily  wifheft  thou  wcrt  out  of  it }  as 
one  that  hath  a  great  defire  to  rife,  and  be  at  his  work  (his  heait 
is  awake  )  but  he  is  not  able  at   prefent  to  fhake  off  that  fleep 
which  binds  turn  down^  this  will  clear  thee  from  being  an  hy- 
pocrite. 
3*  Thirdly  ,  I  fear,  fairh  the  poor  foul,  I  am  an  hypocrite.,  becaufe 

I  have  fuch  a  divided  heart  in  the  duties  I  performe  •,  I  cannot  for 
my  life  enjoy  any  privacie  with  God  in  duty ,  but  fowe  bafe  luft 
will  be  crowding  into  my  thoughts  when  I  am  at  prayer ,  hearing 
of  the  Word,  or  meditating ;  now  I  am  lift  up  wich  a  felf-applaud- 
ing  thought,  anon  caft  down  to  the  earth  with  a  worldly 
thought,  what  with  one  and  another ,  little  refpite  have  I  from 
fuch  company.  And  do  fuch  vermin  breed  any  where  but  in  the 
dunghil  of  a  falfe  hypocritical  heart  ? 
r^fpfi,  Anfw.  Woe  were  it  to  the  beft  of  Saints,  if  the  meer  rifing  and 

ftirringof  fuch  thoughts  as  thefe  ( or  worfe  than  thefe)  did  prove 
the  heart  unfound;  take  heed  thou  concludeft  not  thy  ftate 
therefore  from  the  prefencc  of  thefe  in  thee  ,  but  from  the 
comportment  and  behaviour  of  thy  heart  towards  them.  An- 
fwer  therefore  to  thefe  few  interogatories ,  and  pofiibly  thou 
mayeft  fee  thy  (incerity  through  the  mift  thefe  have  raifed  in 
the  foul. 

Firft,  what  friendly  welcome  have  fuch  thoughts  withtbee, 
1.  when  they  prefent  themfelves  to  thee  in  duty  '?  Are  thefe  the 

guefts  thou  haft  expected  and  trimmed  thy  roome  for  ?  didft 
go  to  duty  to  meet  thofe  friends,  or  do  they  unmannerly 
break  in  upon  thee,  and  forcibly  carry  thee  (asChrift  foretoldof 
Pettr  in  another  cafe  J  whither  thou  wouldft  not  ?  if  fo,  why 
fhouldft  thou  bring  thy  fincerity  into  difputc?  doeft  thou  not 
know  the  Devi!  is  a  bold  intruder ,  and  dares  come  where  he 
knows  there  is  none  will  bid  him  fit  down  •  and  that  foul  a- 
lone  he  can  call  his  own  houfe,  where  he  findes  reft,  Luke 
12.24.  fuppofe  in  your  family,  as  you  are  kneeling  down  to 

prayer 


girt  about  tviib  truth,  g  i  i 


priyer,  a  company  of  ro^fters  (hould  ftand  nr.d-.-r  your  window, 
and  all  the  while  \  ou  arc  praying  ,  they  iTiouid  be  roaring  and 
hollowing,  this  could  not  bit  muchd;fturb  you  ;  but  would  y  u 
from  the  disturbance  they  make,  fall  to  q  ie!rion  your  fincerity 
in  the  duty  ?  truly  "Lis  all  one  whether  the  difturbance  be  in  the 
room  or  in  the  bofome,  lb  the  foul  likes  the  one  no  more  than  he 
doth  the  other. 

Secondly  ,  doeft  thou  fit  contented  with  this  company ,  cr  ufe  2, 
all  the  mea.  s  thou  canft  to  get  rid  of  them  ,  as  foon  as  may  be  ? 
Sincerity  cannot  fit  Itili,  to  fee  fuch  doings  in  the  foul,  but  as  a 
faithful  fervant  when  thieves  break  into  his  mafters  houfe,  though 
over-powred  with  their  ft rength  and  multitude,  that  t,e  cannot 
with  his  own  hands  thruft  them  out  of  doores;  yet  he  will  fend 
out  fecretly  for  help  ,  and  raife  the  town  upon  them  •,  pra\  er  is 
the  fincere  fouls  meflenger ,  it  pofts  to  heaven  with  full  fpeed  in 
this  cafe ,  counting  it  felf  to  be  no  other  than  in  the  belly  of 
hell  with  Jonah  %  while  it  is  yokt  with  fuch  thoughts,  and  as 
glad  when  aid  comes  to  refcue  him  out  of  their  hands,  as  Lot  was 
when  Abraham  recovered  him  from  the  Kings  that  had  carried  him 
away  prifoncr. 

oljett.  But  may  be  thou  wilt  fay ,  though  thou  dareft  not  Otyft; 
deny  ,  that  thy  cry  is  fent  to  heaven  againft  them,  yet  thou  hear- 
eft  no  news  of  thy  prayer ,  but  continued  ftill  peftred  wirh  them 
as  before,  which  encreafeth  thy  fear ,  that  thy  heart  is  naught,  or 
elle  thy  prayer  would  have  been  anfwered,and  thou  delivered  from 
thefe  inmates. 

Anfa>.  Paul  might  as  well  have  faid  fo ,  when  he  befought  Anfwl 
the  Lord  thrice,  but  could  not  have  rhe  thorn  in  his  flefh  plukt 
out ,  2  Cor.  12.  8.  he  doth  not  by  this  fhew  thee  to  be  an  hypo- 
crite, but  gives  thee  a  fair  advantage  of  proving  thy  felf  fincere, 
not  much  unlike  his  dealing  with  the  Israelites ,  before  whom 
he  did  not  ("as  thev  expe&edj  haitily  drive  out  the  Nations, 
but  left  them  as  thornsin  their  fides ,  and  why  ?  hear  the  reafon 
from  Gods  owu  mouth,  Judges  i.  22.  that  through  thm  I  may 
frove  Jfrael ,  whether  they  will  i{eep  the  way  if  thp  Lord  to  wali^ 
therein ,  as  their  fathers  did  keep  it ,  or  not.  Thus  Go."1  leaves 
thefe  corruptions  in  thee ,  to  prove  whether  thou  wilt  atlaftfall 
in  ,  and  be  friends  wirh  them  ,  or  maintaine  the  conflict  with 
them,  and  continue  praying  againft  them,  by  which  perfeverance, 

R  v  thou 


122 


Having  your  loyns 


thou  wile  prove  thy  felt  to  be  indeed  upright.    A  falfe  heart 
will  never  do  this.     He  is  foon  anfwered9vthat  doth  not  cor- 
dially defire  the  thing  he  asks.    The  hypocrite,  when  he  prayes  . 
againft  his  corruption  ,  goes  of  his  conferences  errand  ,  not  his 
wills-  juft  as  a  (enfant,  that  doth  not  like  the  me/Tage  hjs  Ma- 
ftcr  fends  him  about,  but  dares  notdifpleafe  him,  and  therefore 
goes,  and  may  be  knocks  at  the  mans  door  whether  he  is  fent, 
yet  very  faintly ,  loth  he  fhould  hear  him  j  all  that  he  doth,  is 
than  he  may  but  bring  a  faire  tale  to  his  Mafter  ;^by  faying  he 
was  there;  even  fo  prayes  the  hypocrite  only  to  Ito^p  the  mouth 
of  his  conscience  with  this  flam  ,  that  he  hath  pray'd  againft  his 
luft  •,  glad  he  is  when  'tis  over,  aud  more  glad  that  he  returnes 
re  infetta.     Obferve  therefore  the  behaviour  of  thy  heart  in 
prayer ,  and  judge  thy  felf  finccre ,  or  not  fincere  by  that,  not  by 
the  prefent  fuccefle  it  hath.    God  can  take  it  k;ndly  that  thou 
askeit,  what  at  prefent  he  thinks  better  to  deny  than  give.  Thou 
wouldft  have  all  thy  corruptions  knockt  down  at  one  blow, 
and  thy  heart  in  a  pofture  to  do  the  work  of  thy  God  without 
any  flop ,  or  rub  from  luft  within,  or  Devil  without;  wouldft  thou 
not ?  (Jod  highly  approves  of  your  zeal ,  as  he  did  of  <Davids 
who  had  a  minde  to  build  him  a  Temple-,  but  as  he  thought  not 
fit  that  the  houfe  fhould  in  Davids  time  be  reared  (leferving  it 
for  the  peaceful  reigne of  Solomon)  fo  neither  doth  he,  that  this 
thy  requeft  fhou'd  be  granted  in  this  life 3  having  refer v'd  this 
immunity  as  an  efpecial  part  of  the  Charter  of  the  City  that 
is  above ,  which  none  but  glorified  Saints,  who  are  inhabitants 
there,  enjoy  ;  he  hath  indeed  taught  us  to  pray  (let  thy  will  be 
done  on  earth  as  it  is  done  in  heaven  )  but  we  muft  expect  the 
full  anfwer  to  it  when  wc  come  there.     But  learn  therefore 
poor  foul,  to  take  this  denyal  as  TtAviA  did  his ;  becaufe  God 
would  not  let  him  build  the  houfe  in  his  dayes,  he  did  not  there  ore 
quefrlon  the  love  and  favour  of  God,  neither  did  he  defift  from 
preparing  materials  for  it-,  but  did  wha   he  might  towards  it, 
though  he  might  not  what  rk  would;  far  be  it  from  thee  alfo,  that 
thou  fhouldeft  for  this  either  caft  away  thv  confide  nee  on  God, 
or  1  y  afide  thy  endeavour  for  God ,  in  mortifying  thy  cor- 
ruptions ,   and  adding  to  the  ftore  thou  haft  at  prefent  or  his 
graces ,  which  (though  now  imperfect,  an..-!  unpolifht  )  he  will 
aaake  ufe  of  in  the  heavenly  building  which  he  intends  thee 'or, 

where 


girt  about  roiih  truth.  122 

where  all  the  broken  pieces  (as  I  may  fo  fay  )  of  our  weak 
graces  fhall  be  fo  improved  by  the  power  a:  d  w.fdomofGod, 
that  they  (ball  make  up  one  glorious  ftmcture  of  per  fed  holimfle, 
more  to  be  admired  by  Angels  in  heaven  ,  rw.  the  rare  workma.i- 
fhipofit,  than  Solomons  Temple  was  on  earth  by  men,  when  in  its 
full  glory. 

Ob).  Oh  but,  faith  the  tempted  foul,  I  have  fometimes  inward  Qi>  ~ 
checks  from  my  own  confcience  that  this  duty  f  did  hypocritically,      ^   '4 
and  in  that  adion  there  was  much  falfenefTe  of  heart  dticovered  it 
i elf,  and  if  my  heart  condemn  me,  how  can  it  be  othcrwife ,  but  I 
muft  needs  be  an  hypocrite  t 

Anfw..  I  fhall  help  to  refolve  this,  by  laying  down  two  diftin-     Anfw 
#ions,  and  applying  them  to  the  cafe  in  hand.  J 

Firft ,  we  muft  diftinguifh  between  confcience  proceeding  by  a 
right  rule  in  its  judgment,  and  confcience  proceeding  by  a  falfe 
rule. 

Secondly,  between  a  confcience  that  goes  by  a  right  rule ,  and 
isalfo  rightly  informed  how  to  ufe  it ;  and  a confidence  that  judg- 
eth  by  a  right  rule,  but  is  not  rightly  informed  in  its  ufe.  Fiift,  to 
apply  the  firft. 

Firft,  then  confcience  proceeds  by  a  right  rule,  when  it  grounds        r 
its  charge  upon  the  Word  of  God  ^  for,  being  but  an  under-of- 
ficer ,  it  is  bound  up  to  a  Law  by  which  it  muft  proceed,  and 
that  can  be  no  other  than  what  God  appoints  it,  who  gives  it 
coRjmiilion ,  and  puts  it  in  office ;  and  that  is  the  Word  of  God, 
and  that  only ;  So  that  we  are  to  give  credit  to  our  confidences, 
commanding  or  forbidding,  condemning  or  acquitting  us ,  when 
k  can  (hew  its  warrant  from  the  Word  of  Cod  for  thefe  -^  other* 
wife  as  fubje&s  that  are  wronged  in  an  inferiour  Court ,  a. id 
cannot  have  juftice  there ,  may  appeal  higher  •  fo  may  and  oughc 
we  from  confcience  to  the  Word  of  God.    And  you  muft  know 
confcience  is  a  faculty  that  is  corrupted  as  muck  as  any  other  by 
nature   and  is  very  oft  made  ufe  of  by  Satan    to  deceive  both 
good  and  b3d,  godly  and  ungodly.     Many  that  now  their  con« 
faences  (they  fay)  fpeak  peace  to  them  ,  will  be  fjund  meerly 
cheated  an  *  gull'd  ,  when  the  books  (hall  be  op^n'tl  •  no  fuch 
dfcharge  will  then  befoundentredin  the  booko.  rVWord,  as 
corfcience  hath  putinto  their  hand.     A  nd  many  gracious  f  u!s, 
who  paft  their  dayes  in  a  continual  fear  of  their  fpiriual  ftate, 

R  2  and 


,3  4.  Having  your  loyns 


and  were  kept  cham'd  in  the  dark  dungeon  of  a  troublefome  con* 
faence  ,  (hall  thin  be  acquitted,  and  have  their  action  againlt  Sa- 
tan for  falfe  imprifonment ,  and  aqufing   their  conferences  to 
the  difturbing  their  peace,     And  now  let  me  ask  thee  poor  foul, 
who  fayeit ,  thy  conlcience  checks  thee  for  an  hypocrite  ;  art  thou 
a  convicted   h\  pocrite   by  the  Word  ?  Doth  conlcience  fhew 
thee  a  wcrd  from  Chiifts  Law,  that  proves  thee  fo?  or  rather 
doth  not  Satan  abufe  thy  own  fearfulneffe  ,  and  play  upon  the 
tendernefle  of  thy  fpirit ,  which  is  fo  deeply  pofTeft  With  the 
fenfe  of  thy  finn^s,  that  thou  art  ready  to  beleeve  any  motion 
in  thee  ,  that  tells  any  evil  of  thee?  I  am  fure  it  is  oft  fo-,  the 
fea;.s  and  checks  which  fome  poor  fouls  have  in  their  bofomes, 
are  like  thofc  reports  that  are  now  and  then  raifed  of  fome 
great  news ,  by  fuch  as  have  a  mind  to  abufe  the  countrey  •,  A 
talk  and  murmur  you  (hall  have  in  every  ones  mouth  of  it,  but 
go  about  to  follow  it  to  the  Spring  head  ,  and  you  can  finde  no 
ground  of  it,  or  Authour  of  credit  that  will  vouch  it.    Thus 
here,  a  bruit  there  is  in  the  tempted  Chriftians  bofome,  and  a 
noife  heard  aj  it  were  continually  whifpering  in  his  eaies,  1  am 
an  hypocrite ,  my  heart  is  naupht;  all  I  do  is  difTembling^  but  when 
the  poor  creature  in  carneft  fets  upon  the  fearch ,  to  finde  out 
the bufinefTe ,  calls  his  foul  to  the  bar,  and  falls  to  examine  it 
upon  thofe  interrogatories ,  which  the  Word  propounds  for  trial 
of  our  fincerity ,  he  can  fallen  this  charge  from  none  of  them  all 
upon  himfelf;  and  at  laft  comes  to  finde  it  but  a  falfe  alarum 
of  hell,  given  out  to  put  him  to  fome  trouble  and  affrightmentfor 
the  prefent ,  though  not  hurl  him  in  the  end  ^  like  the  Politicians 
/I         lye,  which  though  it  be  round  falfe  at  laft,  yet  doth  them  fome 
fervice  the  time  it  is  beleeved  for  true.    As  one  ferious  queftion, 
fuch  as  this,ferioufly  put  to  a  grolTe  hypocrite,is  able  to  make  him 
fpeechlefle  5  what  promife  in  all  the  Bible  haft  thou  on  thy  fide 
for  thy  fab  ation  ?  fo  it  is  enough  to  deliver  the  troubled  foul  from 
his  frars  of  b  ing  an  hypocrite,  if  he  would  but  as  David ,  ask  his 
foul  a  Scripture  reafon  for  his  difquietraents  ?  Why  art  thou  caft 
down  0  my  foul \md  why  art  thou  di [quieted  within  me  ?  The  finccre 
foul  hath  firm  ground  for  his  faith  at  bottom,  however  a  little  dirt 
is  caft  by  Satan  over  ir,  to  make  him  afraid  of  venturing  to  fet  his 
foot  on  it. 

Second- 


girt  about  with  *rutb.  I  2  5 


Secondly ,  we  muft  diftingufh  between  a  confcienee  rightly  2. 
informed  ,  and  a  confcienee  mif-informed.  A  confcienee 
may  be  regular,  fo  as  to  choofe  the  right  rule,  but  not  rightly 
informed  how  to  ufe  this  rule  in  his  particular  cafe.  Indeed  Jn 
the  Saints  trouble  of  fpirit,  confcienee  is  full  of  Scriprurefome- 
times ,  on  which  it  grounds  its  verdid  •,  but  very  iii  interpret- 
ed •,  O.  iaith  the  poor  foul,  this  place  is  againft  me,  Pfetime  32,  « 
Elejfed  is  the  man  unto  -wham  the  Lord  iwputeth  not  initji.it y9 
find  in  wbo/e  fpirit  there  ts  no  guile.  Here ,  faith  he  ,  is  a  de- 
fc.ipcion  of  a  (ir.cere  foul  ,  to  be  one  in  whofe  fpint  there  is 
no  guile  •,  but  I  finde  much  guile  in  me ,  therefore  I  am  not 
the  Sincere  one  :  Now  this  is  a  very  weak*,  yea ,  falfe  infe- 
rence. By  a  fpirit  without  guile,  is  not  meant  a  perfonthat 
hath  not  the  leafl:  deceitfuineflc  and  hypocrifie  remaining  in 
his  heart  •  this  is  fuch  a  one ,  as  none  fince  the  fall  ( but 
Chrift  himfelfej  was  ever  found  walking  in  moral  flefh. 
To  be  wi:hout  finne  9  and  to  be  without  guile ,  in  this  (trier 
fence  are  the  fame-  A  Pre  ogative  here  on  earth  peculiar  to 
the  Lord  Chrift ,  2  Peter  2.  22.  who  did  no  finne ,  nether  was 
gnile  found  in  hit  month.  And  therefore  when  we  meet  with 
the  fame  phrafe  attributed  to  the  Saints,  as  to  Levi ,  Malachi 
2.  6.  Iniquity  was  net  found  in  his  lips.  And  to  Nathaniel^ 
John  I.  47.  Behold  an  I  [rat  lite  indeed,  in  whom  there  is  no 
guile',  we  muft  fenfe  it  in  an  inferiour  way,  that  may  fuice 
with  their  imperfect  ftate  here  below  and  not  (  put  that 
which  onely  was  Chrifts  Crown  on  earth  ,  and  is  the 
glorified  Saints  robe  in  heaven ,  to  weare)  on  the  weak  Chrii 
itian  while  militant  on  earth ,  not  only  with  a  Devil  without, 
but  a  body  of  finne  within  him.  Wipe  thine  eyes  again  f  poor 
foul  J  and  then,  if  thou  readeft  fuch  places,  wherein  the  SpiriC 
of  God  fpeaks  fo  highly  and  hyperbolically  of  his  Saints 
grace ,  thou  (halt  fiude  he  doth  not  afiert  the  perfection 
of  their  grace  ( free  from  all  mixture  of  finne )  but  ra- 
ther to  comfort  poore  drooping  fouls,  and  crolle  their 
mif-giving  hearts  (which  from  the  prefence  of  hypocrifie  are  rea- 
dy to  over-look  their  fincerity  as  none  at  all )  he  expref- 
fcth  his  high  efteeme  of  their  little  grace,  by  fpeaking  of 
it  as   if  it  were  perfed  ,  and  their  hypocrifie  none    at  all 


a6  Having  your  loyns 


O  Chriftian ,  thy  God   would  have  thee  know  that  thou  do- 
eft  not  more  over-look  thy  little  grace  for  fear  of  the  hypo- 
crifie    thou  find' ft  mingled  with  ft ,  than  he  doth  thy  great 
corruptions,   for  the  deare   love  he  beares  to   the  little   yet 
true   grace   he    fees   amidft    them.       ^Abraham    loved    and 
owned   his   kinfrr.an  Lot  when  a  prifoner,  carried   away  by 
thofe  HeAthen   Kings  •,    fo   does    thy  God    thy  grace  (neere 
in   blood   to    him  )  when   fadly  yoked    by    the   enemy  in 
thy    own    bofome  ;    and  for    thy    comfort    know  ,    when 
the    books  (hall  be    opened  ,    the    Word ,   and  alfo   that 
of  thy  own  conference  in   the  great  day  of  Chrift,      Chrift 
will  be  the  Interpreter  of  both  ;     Not  the    fence    which 
thou  haft   in   the    diftemper  of  thy  troubled    foule   ( when 
thou  readeft  both  with    Satans   glofle  )  put   upon    them , 
(hall  ftand  ;  But  what  Chrift  (hall  fayi  and   to  be  fure  he 
hath  already  declared  himfelfe   fo  great  a   friend   to  weake 
grace  ,   when  on  earth  ,   by   his    loving   converfe  with   his 
difciples  ,    and    free    teftimony    he    gave  to    his    grace   in 
them    ("  when  God   knowes  they   were   but   raw  and  weak 
Chriftians,    both  as  to   their  knowledge  and   practice )  that 
(poor  foul)  thou  need' ft  not  fcare,   be  will   then  and  there 
condemne ,  what  here  he  commended  and  fo  dearly  embraced. 
Yea ,  he  that  took  moft  care  for   his  little  Lambs  how  they 
might  be  ufed  gently,  when  he  was  to  go  from  them  to  hea- 
ven ,    will  not  be  unkinde  himfelf  to  them  at  his  returnc  I 
warrant  thee. 


CHAP. 


girt  about  with  truth. 


127 


CHAP.     XII, 

Four  Characters  of  Truth  of  heart  or  fwcerky. 


HAving  broke  the  flattering  glafles  wherein  hypocrites  ufe  to 
look,  till  they  fall  in  love  with  cheir  own  painced  faces  and 
conceit  themfelves  fincere  -r  as  alfo  thofe  which  disfigure  the  fweec 
countenance  and  natural  beauty  of  the  fincere  foul,  fo  as  to  make 
it  bring  the  grace  of  God,  which  fhines  on  it  into  queftion,  I  r  ow 
proceed  to  draw  a  few  lineaments,  and  lay  down  ibme  undoubted 
Characters  of  this  truth  of  heart,  and  godly  fincerity,  whereby  we 
may  have  the  better  advantage  of  ftating  every  one  in  his  own 
condition. 


•\r:zzx. 


SECT.     I. 

Firft  ,  a  fincere  heart  is  a  new  heart-  hypocrifie  is  call'd  the 
eld  leaven,  l  fir.  5.7.  fnrge  em  therefore  the  old  leaven ,  that 
ye  may  be  a  new  lump.     Dough  once  foured  with  leaven,  will 
never  lofe  the  tafte  of  it;     Neither  will  corrupt  natureceafe 
to  be  hypocritical,  till  it  ceafe  to  be  corrupt  nature-,  either  the 
heart  muft  be  made  new,  or  it  will  have  its  old  quality-   there 
may  be  fome  art  ufed  to  conceal'it,  and  take  away  its  tfriavo- 
rinefie  from  others  for  a  wMe-,  as  flowers  and  perfumes  caft  about 
a  rotten  carcafie  may  do  its  fente^yet  both  the  rocten  carcalTc  and 
the  coirupt  heart  remain  the  fame.    Thev  fay  of  the  Peaac ;, 
that  roft  him  as  much  as  you  will,  yet  his  flefh  (when  cold)  w  1 
be  raw  again ;  truly  thus  let  a  carnal  heart  do  what  it  plea: ».5- 
force  upon  it  fcif  never  fuch.  an  high  ftraine  of  feeming  piety,  io 

that 


r« 


%1 


g  Having  your  loyns 

that  it  appears  tire  hoc  with  zeal ,  yet  ft  ay  a  little,  and  it  will 
come  to  its  old  complexion ,  and   difcovcr  it  fehe  to  be  but 
what  it  was,  naught  and  falfej  one  heart  ,  and  a  new  hea  t, 
both  are  covenant-mercies,  yea,  fo  promifed,  that  thenewis 
promifed  in  order  to  the  making  of  the  heart  one,  Ezel^.  u.   9. 
/  will  give  them  we  hearty  and  I  will  pat    a  new  jpirit  in  j »*, 
and  I  veill  take  away  the  flexj  heart ,  &c.  Cod  promifeth  he 
will  give  them  one  lpirit,  that  is,  a  finccre  fpirit  to  God  and  man-, 
contrary  to  a  divided  heart ,  a  heart  and  a  heart ,  the  mark  or 
hypocrite.    But  how  will  he  give  it.?  he  tells  ihem,  J  will  give 
yon  a  new  (pirit ,  and  how  will  he  do  that?    /  will  ta\e  away 
the  heart  of  flone ,   and.  give  you   a   heart   if  fl(Jh  -y  upon  which 
words  one  very  well  thus  glofTeth ,    I  will  give  you  one  heart, 
which  that  I  may  fo  do ,  I  will  caft  it  anew  j  and  that  I  may 
do  this  alfo ,  I  will  melt  and  [often  it ;  as  one  that  having 
many  pieces  of  old  fijver4  or  plate  lying  by  him,  which  be  in- 
tends to  put  into  one  bowlc ,  he  full  refolves  to  caft  it  anew, 
and  to  that  end  throws  it  into  the  fue  to  melt,  and  fo  at  laft 
diuts  up  all  in  one  piece.    Indeed  by  natu«  e  mans  heart  is  a  very- 
divided  broken  thing ,  fcatter'd  and  parceled  out ,  a  piece  to 
this  creature,  and  a  piece  to  tbat  luft.    One  while  this  vanity 
hires  him  fas  Leah  did  facet/  of  Rachel)  anon  when  he  hath  done 
fome  drudgery  for  that ,  he  lets  out  himfelf  to  another ,  thus 
divided  is  man  and  his  affedions-  Now,  the  E led  (whom  (  od 
hath  decreed  to  be  vefTels  of  honour ,  confecrated  for  his  ho  - 
ly  ufe  and  fervice  )  he  throws  into  the  fire  of  his  Word  ,  that 
being  there  foftened  and  melted ,  he  may  by  his  transforming 
Sririt  Jcaft  them  anew ,  as  it  were  into  a  holy  oneneflc  j    fo 
that  he  who  before  was  divided  from  God ,  and  loft  among  the 
creatures,  and  his  lufts  ('that  fh  red  him  among  them,)  now 
his  heart  is  gathered  in  to  God  from  them  all  •,  it  looks  with 
a  fingle  eye  on  God,  and  ads  for  him  in  all  that  he  doth-, 
if  therefore  thou  wouldeft  know  whether  thy  heart  be  fincerc, 
enquire  whether  it  be  thus  made  new.    Hath  God  thrown  ihee 
into  his  furnace  ?  did  ever  his  Word  like  fire,  take  hold  upon 
thee,  fo  as  to  foftcn  thy  hard  heart,  and  melt  thy  droflie  fpirir, 
that  thou  now  feeft  that  defperate  hypocrific,  pride,  unbelief, 
and  the  like,  which  before  lay  hid,  like  droiTe  in  the  mettal,  be- 
fore the  fire  findes  it  out  ?  and  not  onely  fceft  it ,  but  feeft  it 

fever, 


girt  about  with  truth.  i  2o 

fever,  and  feparate  from  thy  foul,  th.it  ihou  who  before  tiidft 
blefle  thy  felt  as  in  a  good  condition,  now  bewailed  thy  folly 
for  it,  heartily  confefling  what  an  umavoury  creature  thou  were 
to  God  in  all  thoudidit;   the  things  which  appear'd  fo  gaudy 
and  fair  in  thy  eye,  thy  civil  ri.bteoufnetie,  keeping  thy  Church, 
flubbering  over  a  few  duties  in^thy  family,  tint  for  them  thou 
thoughteii  heaven  was  as  it  were  in  morga^e  to  th:e  ;  dolt  thou 
lament  to  think  how  thou  didil  mock  God  wi:h  :hefc hypo- 
critical pageants  abroad,  while  thy  lid   vere  emertain'd  with- 
in doors  in  thy  bofome,  there  fuck'ng  the  heart-blood  of  thy 
dearelt  aflfedlions }  In  a  word,  canft  thou  fay  that  thou  art  not 
only  melted  into  forrow  for  thefe,  but  that  thou  flndeft  thy  heart 
(  which  was  fo  divided  and  diftraited  betwixt  lufts  and  creatures ) 
now  united  to  fear  the  Name  of  GodfHaft  thou  but  one  defign, 
that  above  all  thou  purfuefl,  and  that  to  approve  thy  felf  ro 
God,  though  with  the  dilpleahng  of  all  befide?  one  love,  how 
rhou  mayeft  love  Chrift,  and  be  beloved  of  him  ?  if  the  rtreams 
of  thy  affeilions  be  thus(by  the  mighty  power  of  God  renewing 
thee  )  gather'd  into  this  one  channel,  and  with  a  fvveet  violence 
run  this  way ,  then  bJefled  art  thou  of  the  Lord ;  thou  art  the 
fincere  foul  in  his  account,  though  much  corruption  be  found 
in  thee  Hill,  that  is  foyling  thy  ltreame,  and  endeavouring  to 
ftop  the  free  courfe  of  thy  foul  God-wards ;  this  may  put  thee 
to  fome  trouble,   as  the  mountains  and  rocks  do    the  river- 
water  running  to  the  Sea,caufmg  fome  windings  and  turnings  in 
its  courfe,which  elfe  would  go  the  nearer   way  even  in  a  direct 
line  to  it ;  fo  thy  remaining  corruptions  may  now  and  then, 
put  thee  out  of  thy  way  of  obedience  ;  but  fmcerity  will  (  like 
the  water )  on  its  ;ourny  for  all  this,  and  never  leave  till  it 
bring  thee  (  though  with  fome  compatie)   to  thy  God,whom 
thou  haft  fo  imprinted  in  thy  heart,  as  he  can  never  be  forgot  by 
thee.     But  if  thou  never  hadll  the  hypocrite  of  thy  heart  thus 
difcovered,  and  made  hateful  to  thee,  nor  a  new  principle  put 
into  thy  boibme,to  turn  the  tide  of  thy  foul  contrary  to  the  na- 
tural fall  of  thy  affections  ;  only  thou  from  the  good  opinion, 
which  thou  hart  of  thy  ftif  (  becaufe  of  fome  petty  flouriiftes, 
thoumakeftin  profeiticn)  takelHt  for  granted  thou  artfincere, 
and  thy  heart  true,    1  dare  pronounce  thee  an  unclean  hypo- 
crite ;  the  world  may  Saint  thee  polfibly,  but  thou  wile  never 

S  (as 


i  30  Having  your  loyns 


2. 


(as  thou  art  )  be  fo  in  Gods  account;  when  thou  haft  tricked 
and  fpruced  up  thy  felf  never  fo  finely  into  the  fafhion  of  a 
Chriutifl)  ftill  thou  wilt  have  but  a  Saints  face,and  an  hypocrites 
heart.  It  is  no  matter  what  isthe  figne,  though  an  Angel  that 
hangs  wichout,if  the  Divel  and  finne  dwell  within.  New  trim- 
mini;  upon  an  old  garment  will  net  make  it  new,  only  give  it  a 
new  fhape  ;  and  truly  it  is  no  good  husbandry  to  bellow  a  great 
deal  of  co:l  in  fining  up  an  old  iuit,  that  will  drop  in  a  while  to 
tatters  and  rags,  when  a  little  more  might  pur  chafe  a  new  one 
that  is  lafting.  And  is  it  not  better  to  labour  to  ■get  a  new 
heart,  that  all  thou  dosft  may  be  accepted  and  thou  faved,than  to 
lofe  all  the  pains  thou  takeft  in  Religion,  and  thy  felf  alfo  for 
want  of  it  ? 


SECT.   2. 

Secondly,  a  fincere  heart  is  a  plain  heart,  a  fimple  heart  fine 
plicis,  a  heart  without  folds;    the  hypocrite  is  of  the  Serpents 
brood,he  can(as  the  Serpent)  (hrink  up,or  let  out  himfelf  for  his 
advantage,  unwilling  to  expofe  himfelf  much  to  the  knowledge 
of  others ;  and  he  has  reafon  to  do  fo  ;  for  he  knows  he  hath 
moft  credit  where  he  is  leaft  known :  the  hypocrite  is  one  that 
digs  deep  to  hide  his  counfeljifay  29.  I  $.  the'r  heart  is  deep.  Pfal. 
64. 6.  their  meaning  and  intent  of  heart  lies  no  body  knows 
how  far  diftant  from  their  words ;  a  fincere  heart  is  like  a  clear 
ftreame  in  a  brook ;  you  may  fee  to  the  bottome  of  bis  plots 
in  his  words,  and  take  the  meafure  of  his  heart  by  his  tongue.  I 
have  heard  fay,  that  difeafes  of  the  heart  are  feen  in  fpots  of 
the  tongue;  but  the  hypocrite  can  ihew  a  clear  tongue,  and  yet 
have  a  foul  heart ;  he  that  made  that  proverb,   loquere  ut  te 
videam,  (pe^kjhat  I  may  feeyo»,  did  not  think  of  the  hypocrite, 
who  will  fpeakthit  you  fhall  not  fee  him.-  Thethickeft  clouds 
that  he  hath  to  wrap  up  hisvilany  in,  are  his  religious  tongue 
andfandyprofeflion.    Woulditthou  know  whether  thou  haft  a 
true  heart  in  thy  bofome?  look  if  thou  haft  a  plain  dealing  heart; 
f:e  them  joyn'd,2  Cor.i.  12.  Paul  and  the  reft  of  the  faithful  mef- 
fengersof  Chrift,had  their  convention  among  the  Corir.thians, 
in  fimpllcity  and  godly  finer V/7.  They  had  no  clofe  box  in  the  ca- 
binet 


girt  abont  with  truth.  131 


binet  of  their  hearts,  in  which  they  cunningly  kept  any  thin^ 
conceal'dfrom  them  of  then  defigns,as  the  falfe  Apoftles  did? 
Now  this  plain-dealing  of  the  (incere  heart  appears  in  thefe  three 
particulars. 

F 'it fly  a  fincere  heart  deals  plainly  with  it  felf,  and  that  in  two 
things  chiefly. 

Firft,  in  fearching  and  ranfaking  its  own  felf,  this  it  doth  to 
itsutmott  skill  and  power.     It  will  not  be  put  oft*  with  preten- 
ces, or  fuch  a  mannerly  excufe  as  Rachel  gave  Laban,  when 
at  the  lame  time  fhe  fate  brooding  on  his  Idols.  No,  an  account 
it  will  have  of  the  foul,  and  that  fuch  a  one  as  may  enable  k 
to  give  a  good  account  to  God,  upon  whofe  warrant  it  does  its 
office  ^   O  the  fear  which  fuch  a  one   Chews ,    leaf*  any  Juft 
fhould  Tcapeitseye,  and  lie  hid  C  as  Saul  in  thefturre)  or  that 
any  the  leaft  grace  of  God  fhould  be  trodden  on  regardlefly  by 
belying  or  denying  it!    W  hen  David  found  his  thoughts  of  God 
(  which  ufed  to  recreate  him, and  be  his  moft  pleafing  company,) 
occaiion  fome  trouble  in  his  Cpint,cPf. 77. 3.  I  though  on  (jod^and 
was  troubled ;  this  holy  man(wondering  what  the  matter  uSould 
be  J  do  but  fee  what  a  privy  fearch  he  makes ;  he  hunts  back- 
wards and  forwards,  what  Gods  former  dealings  had  been,  and 
commur.es  with  his  hearty  and  maizes  diligent  fearch  there,z\<5.ne- 
ver  gives  over  till  he  brings  it  to  an  'flue  ;  and  finding  the  diftur«- 
berof  hispeacetobeinhimfelf,  he  is  not  fo  tender  of  his  repu- 
tation, as  to  think  of  fmothering  the  bufineffe,  orfmoothing  it 
over;  but  attaches  the  thief,  indites  his  fin,  and  confeffeth  the 
fa£t,  to  the  juftifying  of  God, whom  before  he  had  hard  thoughts 
of,  v.  lo.?s4nd  I  fiid,  this  is  my  infirmity. h%  if  he  had  faid,Lord, 
now  I  fee  the  Jonas  th.it  caufed  the  ftorme  inmybofome,  and 
made  me  fo  uncomfortable  in  my  affliction  all  this  whilej'tis  this 
unbelief  of  mine,  that  bowed  me  down  to  attend  fo  to  the  for- 
row  and  ienfe  of  my  prefent  aff.iition,    that  it  would  not 
fuffer  me  to  look  up  to  former  experiences ;   and  fo  while 
I  forgat  them,  I  thought  unworthily  of  thee  ;   here  was  an 
honeft  plain-dealing  foul  indeed;  what  a  kin  art  thou  O  man  to 
holy  David  ?  is  this  thy  way  in  fearching  of  thy  foul  ?  doft  thou 
do  it  in  earneft,  as  if  thou  wert  fearching  for  a  murderer  hid  in 
thy  houfe,  as  willing  to  finde  out  thy  fin,  as  ever  Papift  in  Queen 
<JM tries  dayes  was  to  finde  Poteliants,   whom  to  difcover 

S  2  they 


I* 


12,2 


Having  your  loyns 


they  would  runne  their  fvvorcis  and  forks  into    beds  and  hey- 
movvs,  leart  they  fhould  be  there  ?   Or  when  thou  goeft  about 
this  work  art  thou  loth  to  look  too  far,    lelt  thou  ihouldft  fee 
whit  thou  wouldit  willingly  over- look,   or  afraid  to  fray  too 
long,  lelt  confcience  fhouldmakeanunpleafingrepo  tto  thee? 
Tertulllan  faidof  the  Heathen  perfecutors  ,    mlHrrwrt  auihe 
quod  i-.u4.itum  damn  are  non  poJfint.Uhzy  would  not  l^z  the  Chri- 
liians  be  heard,  becaufe  they  could  not  then  ealily  have  had  the 
face  to  condemne  them,  their  caufe  would  have  appear'd  fo  jutf- 
the  contrary  here  is  true,  the  hypocrite  dares  not  put  his  (fate 
upon  a  fair  trial,   becaufe  then  he  could  not  handfomly  efcape 
condemning  himfelf.    But  the  fincere  ioul  is  fo  zealous  to  know 
itsjtrue  ttate,ihat  when  he  hath  done  his  utmoit  himfelf  to  finde 
it  out,  and  upon  this  privy  fearchhis  confcience  clears  him 
yet  he  contents  not  himfelf  here,bur  jealous  led  feif- love  mi<mr! 
blinde  his  eyes,  and  occafion  too  favourable  a  report  from  his 
confcience,  he  calls  in  help  from  heaven,  and  puts  himfelf  upon 
Gods  review  j  Tfal.  1 3  9.  2 1 .     T>o  not  I  hate  thm  that  hate  thee? 
and  am  1  not  grieved  with  thofe  that  rife  up  again  ft  thee  ?  ver.  22 
His  own  confcience  anfwers  to  it  :    I  hate  them  with  a  per  fed 
hatredyl  count  them  mine  enemtes.Yzt  David  not  wholly  fatisfied 
wkh  his  own  fingle  teftimony,  c&lh  out  to  God,  ver.  2  r%  Search 
me  O  Gody  and  know  my  heart ;  fee  if  there  be  any  wlcl^d  way  In 
me;  and  wife  phyficians  will  not  truft  their  ovVn  judgments  a- 
bout  the  ftate  of  their  own  health  -?  nor  Lncere  Chriitfans  them- 
felves  about  their  fouls  welfare  ;  'tis  God  that  they  attend  to  •  his 
judgment  a  lone  concludes,  and  determines  them;   when  they 
have  pray'd,   and  open'd  their  cafe  to  him  ( v\  ith  1>avtd  J  they 
lifkn  what  he  will  fay  ;   therefore  you  fhajl  finde  them  puttiL 
themfelves  under  the  moftfearching  Miniitery,  from  which  they 
never  come  more  pleafed,trun  when  their  confeien ces  are  ttript 
naked,  and  their  hearts  expofed  to  their  view ,   as  the   woman 
of  Samaria,  who  commended  the  Sermon,   and  Chriil  that 
preach't  it,  for  this  unto  her  neLhbours,that  he  kad  told  her 
Mil  that  ever  fhe  had  done,  J  oh.  4.  29.  whereas  a  falfe  heart  lfkes 
not  to  hear  of  that  eare  ;    he  thinks  the  preacher  commits 
atrefpaffe,  when  he  comes  upon  his  ground,  and  comes  up 
clofe  to  hi?  confcience,    and  if  he  could,   he  would  have  an 
action  againft  him  for  it .     ibis  (luck  in  H^-ods  ftcmach ,    that 

John 


i 


girt  about  with  truth.  122 


John  fhould  lay  his  finger  on  his  fore  place ;  though-  he  fear'd 
him  being  confcious,  yec  he  never  loved  him,  and  therefore 
was  foon  perfwaded  to  cut  off  his  head,  which  had  fo 
bold  a  tongue  in  ic  ,  that  duift  reprove  his  inceftuous 
bed. 

Secondly,  the  true  heart  fhews  its  plain  dealing  with  its  Ct\{, 
as  in  fearching,  fo  in  judging  it  felf,   when  once   teftimony 
comes  in  clear  againftit,  and  confcience  tells :  Soul,  in  this  du- 
ty thou  betrayecft  pride,  in  that  affliction  frowardnefle  and  im- 
patience ;  fuch  a  one  is  not  long  before  it  proceeds  to  judgment, 
and  this  it  doth  with  fo  much  vehemency  and  feverity  ,  that  it 
plainly  appears, zed  for  God  (whom  he  hath  difhonoured)  makes 
him  forget  all  felf-pity;he  lays  about  him  in  humbling  and  abafing 
himfelf,as  the  fo  s  of  Levi  in  executing  juftice  on  their  brethren, 
who  knew  ntiti.tr  brother  nor  fijler  in  that  act;truly  fuch  an  hero- 
ick  ait  is  this  of  the  fincere  foul  judging  it  felf;he  is  fo  tranfport- 
ed  and  cloathed  with  a  holy  fury  againft  his  (in,  that  he  is  deaf  to 
the  cry  of  flefh  and  blood,  which  would  move  him  to  think  of 
a  more  favourable  fentence.     /  have  Jinn  d(  faith  rDavid)agair-fi  z  Sam.  1 1, 
the  Lord ;  in  another  place,  I  have  (inn  d greatly,  and  done  very  *Sam.  j4. 
foolijhlyy  in  a  third,  he  as  unworthy  of  a  mans  name,  takes  p^-  71*  *** 
bead  tohimfelf,  Jo  foo/i(h  was  I  and  ignorant,  as  a  beaji  before 
thee.     But  a  falfe  heart,if  confcience  checks  him  for  this  or  that, 
and  he  perceives  by  this  inward  murmur  in  his  bofome,which  way 
thecaufewillgo,  if  he  proceeds  fairely  onto  put  himfelf  upon 
the  tryal ,"  the  Court  is  fure  to  b*  broke  up,  and  all  put  off  to  a- 
nother  hearing,whicb  is  like  to  be  at  teifure  ;  fo  that  as  witnefles 
with  delays  and  many  put  oflfs,grow  at  lafl  weary  of  the  work,and 
will  rather  flay  at  home  than  make  their  appearance  to  little  pur- 
pofe ;    fo  confcience  ceafeth  to  give  evidence  where  it  can- 
not be  heard,  or  when  heard,  can  have  no  judgment  againft  the 
offendour. 

Secondly,a  true  heart  is  plain  as  with  its  felf,fo  with  God  alfo ;  2* 

feveral  ways  this  might  appear;rake  one  for  all  j  and  that  is  in  his 
petitions,and  requefts  at  the  Throne  of  grace  ;  The  hypocrite  in 
prayer  juggles,he  asks  what  he  would  not  thank  God  to  give  him; 
there  is  a  myftery  of  iniquity  in  his  praying  againft  iniquity.Now 
this  will  appear  in  thele  twoparticulars,whether  we  be  plain- 
Jaearted  in  our  requeftsornot. 

S   3  FSrft, 


54  Having  your  loyns 


Firft,  obierve  whether  thou  beeft  deeply  atfliiled  in  fpirir, 
when  thy  requeft  is  not  anfwered;  or  regard'u  no.  what  fuc- 
cefle  it  hath ;  iuppofe  it  be  a  finne  thou  pray^ft  againft,  or  fome 
grace  thou  prayeft  for ;  what  is  thy  temper  .ill  th^  whil.  thy  mef- 
fenger  (lays,  efpecially  if  it  belong?  thot.  ivefk ,  and  cor- 
ruption abares  not,  grace  grows  not ;  now  thy  '  ^ocriiie,  or 
fincerky  will  appear ;  if  fincere,every  mo  r  oz  an  houre, 

everyhourea  day,  a  year  till  thou  hear^;  news  from 

heaven;  hope  deferred  will  makerhe  heart  hok  ;  -)th  not  the 
Tick  man  that  fends  for  the  Phyfician  ,  thi  long  for  his 
coming  ?  O  he  is  afraid  his  meflenger  fhould  mm :  of  him,  or 
that  he  will  not  come  with  him,  or  that  he  thall  «.«ie  before  he 
bring  his  Phyfick ;  a  thoufand  fears  difturb  him,  and  make  him 
paffionately  wifh  he  were  there  ;  thus  the  fincere  foul  paiferh 
thofe  houres  wirh  a  fad  heart,  that  it  lives  without  a  return  of  its 
requeft  ;  I  am  a  woman  (Taid  Hannah  to  Eli)of  a  forrowful  fpi- 
rity  iSam.i.i^.  and  why  lb?  alas  fhe  had  from  year  to  year 
prayed  to  God,  and  no  anfwer  was  yet  come ;  thus  faith  the 
foul,  I  am  one  of  a  bitter  fpirit,  I  have  pray'd  for  a  foft  heart, 
a  believing  heart  many  a  day  and  moneth,  but  'tis  not  come; 
I  am  afraid  I  was  not  fincere  in  the  bufinefle,  could  my  requeft 
fo  long  have  hun£  in  the  clouds  elfe  ?  fuch  a  foul  is  full  of  fears 
and  troubles;  like  a  Merchant  that  hath  a  rich  Ship  at  Sea, 
who  cannot  fleep  on  Land,  till  he  fee's  her  or  hears  of  her ;  but, 
if  when  thou  haft  fent  up  thy  prayer,  thou  canft  caft  off  the 
care  and  thoughts  of  the  bufinefle,  as  if  praying  were  only  like 
childrens  fcribling  over  pieces  of  paper,  which  when  they  have 
dene,  they  lay  alide  and  think  no  more  of  them  :  If  thou  canft 
take  denials  at  Gods  hands  for  fuch  things  as  thefe,  and  blank 
no  more  than  a  cold  fuitor  doth  when  he  hears  not  from  her 
whom  he  never  really  loved,  ic  breaksnot  thy  reft,  imbitters  not 
thy  joy,  afalfeheartfet  thee  on  work.  And  take  heed,  that 
inftead  of  anfwering  thy  prayer,God  doth  not  anfwer  the  fecret 
deiireof  thy  heart,  \\hich  fhould  he  do,  thou  arc  undone  for 
ever. 

Secondly,  obferve  whether  thou  ufeft  the  means  to  obtain 
that  which  thou  prayeft  God  to  give.  A  falfe  heart  fits  ftill 
it  felf,  while  it  fets  God  on  work  ;  like  him,  that  when  his  Cart 
wasfetinaflough,cryed,  Jupiter  help,  ,but  would  not  put  his 

own 


girt  about  with  truth.  125 


own  (houlder  to  the  wheel ;  if  corruptions  may  be  mortified, 

and  kill'dfor  him,as  Goliah  was  for  the  ljraelites(hz  like  them, 

looking  on,  and  not  put  to  ftrike  ftroke)  fo  it  is ;  but  for  any 

encounter  with  them,  or  putting  himfelf  to  the  trouble  of  u- 

ling  any  means  to  obtain  the  vi&ory,  he  is  fo  eaten  up  with 

floth  and  cowardize,  that  it  is  as  grievous  he  thinks,  as  to  fit  ftill 

in  flavery  and  bondage  to  them.    But  a  fincere  foul  is  confciea- 

tioufly  laborious.     Let  us  I'ift  up  our  hearts  with  cur  hands  unto 

the  Lor^  Lam. 3. 41.  that  is,  faith  Bern,  oremus  &  lai >or emus.  Lam ••?•  41* 

Let  us  pray  and  ufe  the  endeavour;   the  hypocrites  tongue 

wasges  ,    but    the    fincere  fouls   feet   walk  ,    and  hands 

work. 

Thirdly, the  fincere  foul  difcovers  its  plainneffe  and  fi  mplicity  * 

to  men.  We  had  our  converfation  among  you  (  faith  Paul  to 
the  Corlnthiam  Jin  {implicit y^  and  godly  fincerity,not  in  flefhly 
wifdome.  The  Chriftian  is  one  that  cannot  fubject  his  heart  to 
his  head,  his  conference  to  his  policy ;  he  commits  himfelf  to 
God  in  well  doing,  and  fears  not  others,  if  he  be  not  confeious 
to  himfelf;  and  therefore  he  dares  not  make  a  hole  in  his  con- 
fcience  to  keep  his  skin  whole,  but  freely  and  openly  voucheth 
God  without  dilfemblin^  his  profeflion :  while  the  hypocrite 
fhifts  his  fails,  and  puts  forth  fuch  colours,  as  his  policy  and 
worldly  intereft  advifeth  ;  if  the  coaft  be  clear,and  no  danger  at 
hand,  hee'l  appear  as  Religious  as  any  ;  but  no  fooner  he  makes 
difcovery  of  any  hazard  it  may  put  him  to,  but  he  tacks  about, 
and  fhapes  another  courfe,  making  no  bones  of  jugling  with 
God  and  man ;  he  counts  that  his  right  road  which  leads  to  his 
temporal  fafety ;  but  quite  contrary  the  upright,  Prov.  16.  i-j. 
The  high-way  of  the  upright  is  to  depart  from  evil.  This  is  the 
road  that  this  true  travellour  jogges  on  in  ;  and  if  he  be  at  any 
time  feen  out  of  it,  'tis  upon  no  other  account,  than  a  man  that 
hath  unwillingly  loft  his  way,  never  quiet  till  he  ftrike  into  it  a- 
gain. 


SECT. 


1 56  Having  your  loyns 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  the  fincere  crue- hearted  Chriftian  is  uniform.  As 
truth  in  the  doctrine  differs  in  this  from  its  oppoiite,  rhat  it  is 
one,  erronr  diverfe  ;  there  is  no  harmony  among  errours,  as  a- 
mong  truths ;  fo  truth  of  heart ,  or  fmcerity  is  known  from 
hypocrilie  by  the  fame  character.  Indeed  truth  in  the  heart  is  but 
the  copy  and  tranfcript  of  the  other ;  they  agree  as  the  face  in 
the  glalle  doth  with  the  face  in  the  man  that  look-in  it,  or  as 
the  image  in  the  wax  with  the  fculpture  in  the  feal,  fro  n  which 
it  is  derived;  therefore  if  truth  in  the  Word  be  uniform  and  har- 
monious,than  truth  in  the  heart  which  is  nothing  but  the  impref- 
fion  of  that  there  muftalfo  be  fo.  A  lincere  Chriftian  in  the  te- 
nure of  his  courfe  is  like  himfelf,  pir  un  us  colons  or'one  colour, 
not  like  your  changeable  {tuffes  fo  died,  that  you  may  by  wa- 
ving of  them  divers  ways,  fee  diver  colours. 

There  is  a  three-fold  uniformity  in  the  fincere  Chriflians  obe- 
dience ;  he  is  uniform,  quoad,  object  urn  ^  [nhjetlum  &  cWaim- 
fiantias  obedient';*.,  As  to  the  obpet,  fubjjc},  andfeveral  circum- 
liances  that  accompany  his  obedience. 

Firft,  as  to  the  6>£/r£f,the  hypocrite  in.ieed  is  in  with  one  du- 
ty,and  out  with  another ;  like  a  globous  body,  he  toucheth  the 
Law  of  God  in  one  point,  (fome  particular  command  he  feems 
zealous  for )  but  meets  not  in  the  reft ;  whereas  the  fincere 
heart  lies  clofe  to  the  whole  Law  of  God  in  his  dehre  and  en- 
deavour. The  upright  mans  foot  is  faid  to  ft  and  in  an  even  place , 
pfal.  2^.-11.  he  walks  not  haltingly  a  *d  uncomelily  ;  as  thofe 
who  go  in  unequal  wayes,  which  are  hobling  ,  and  up,  and 
down  ;  or  thole  whole  feet  and  leggs  are  not  even,  (as  Solomon 
faith  )  the  Ifgges  of  tie  lame  are  not  evcnt  and  fo  cannot ftand 
in  an  even  pi  ice,  becaufe  one  is  long,  and  the  other  fhort ;  the 
f.ncere  mans  feet  are  even ,  and  le^gs  of  a  length  (as  I  may  lay) 
his  care  alike  confcieniious  to  the  whole  Will  of  God.  The  hy- 
pocrite'like  the  Badger,  harh  one  foot  fhorter  than  another; 
or  like  a  foun  red  horfehedoth  not  ftand  as  we  fay,  right  of 
all  fou  re  ;  one  foot  arleaft  you  ftiall  perceive  he  favours,  loth 
to  put  it  clown.    The  P,  artfees  pretended  much  zeal  to  the  firit 

Table 


girt  abont  with  truth.  i^y 


Table,  they prayd and fafted in  an  extraordinary  manner;   but 
they  pray'd  for  their  prey,  and  when  they    had  fafted  all  day, 
they  fup  at  the  poor  widows  coft,  her  houfe  they   mean  tode- 
voure.     A  fad  faft  that  ends  in  opprefiion,  and  onely  ferves  to 
get  them  a  ravenous  appetite,  tolwaliow  others  eftates  under 
a  pretence  of  devotion.  The  morahit,  he  is  very  punctual  in  his 
dealings  with  men,  but  very  theevifh  in  his  carriage  to  God  ; 
though  he  will  not  wron^  his  neighbour  of  a  farthing,he  flicks 
not  to  rob  God  of  greater  matters ;  his  love,  fear,  faith  are  duo. 
debt  to  God,  but  he  makes  no  confcience  of  paying  them.    It 
is  ordinary  in  Scripture  to  defcribe  a  Saint,  a  godly  perfon  by 
a  particular  duty,  a  fingle  grace ;  fometimes  his  Character  is, 
one  that  feareth  an  oath^EccicL  9.2.  fometimes  one  that  loves 
the  brethren,  1  John  3.14.  and  fo  of  the  reft  ;  and  why  ?  but 
becaufe  whereever  one  duty  is  confcientioufly   perform'd,rhe 
heart  ftands  ready  for  another.     As  God  hath  enacted  all  his 
commands  with  the  fame  authority,  (wherefore  'tis  faid,   God 
ffal^e  all  thefe  words  yExod.2o. i.  one  as  well  as  the  other.)  So 
God  infufeth  all  grace  together,  and  writes  not  one  particular 
Law  in  the  heart  of  his  children,  but  the  whole  Law,  which  is  an 
univerfal   principle,    enclining  the  foul  impartially  to  all; 
To  that  if  thou    likeft    not    all  ,     thou    arc    fincere   in 
none. 

Secondly ,  the  fincere  Chriftian  is  uniform,  quoad  fMbjeftttm; 
the  whole  man  (  fo  far  as  renewed  )  moves  one  way ;  all  the  2* 
powers  and  faculties  of  the  foul  joyn  forces,  and  have  afweec 
accord  together ;  when  the  undemanding  makes  difcovery  of  a 
truth,  then  confcience  improves  her  utmoft  authority  on  the 
willjcommanding  it  in  the  Name  of  God  ( whofe  officer  it  is)  to 
entertain  it;the  will  fo  foon  as  confcience  knocks,opens  her  felf, 
and  lets  it  in;  the  affections  like  dutiful  hand-maids,  feeing  it  a 
gueft  welcome  to  the  will,  ( their  Miftreffe)  exprefle  their  readi- 
ne(Te»to  wait  on  it,  as  becomes  them  in  their  places.  But  in  the 
hypocrite  it  is  not  fo;  there  one  faculty  fights  agiintt  another ; 
never  are  they  all  found  to  confpire  and  meet  in  a  friendly  vote; 
when  there  is  light  in  the  understanding,  the  man  knows  this 
truth  and  that  duty  ^  then  oft  confcience  is  brib'd  for  executing 
its  office,  it  doth  not  fo  much  as  check  him  for  the  neglect  of 
it;  truth  ftands  as  it  were  before  the  foul,  and  confcience  will 

T  not 


2  8  Having  your  loyns 


not  fo  much  befriend  it  as  to  knock,  and  rouze  up  the  foul  to 
let  it  in;  if  confcience  be  overcome  to  plead  its  caufe,  and 
fhews  fome  ailivity  inpreffing  for  entertainment,  itisfure  ei- 
ther to  hive  a  churlifh  denial  with  a  frown  for  its  pains,  in  be- 
in^  ibbufie  to  bring  fuch  an  unwelcome  gueil  with  it,  as  the 
froward  wife  doth  by  her  husband ,  when  he  brings  home  with , 
him  on"  fhe  do:h  not  like,  o:  elfe  a  fained  entertain- 
ment j  ths  more  fubtily  r_o  hide  the  fecret  enmity  it  hath  againft 
it. 

Thirdly,  quoad  circumfi  antics  obedient  it.     The  fincere  foul  is 
uniform  as  to  the  circumlfrnces  of  his  obedience  and  holy  walk- 
ing ;  fuch  as  are  time,  place,md  company,  and  manner ;  he  is 
uniform  as  to  time,  his  Religion  is  not  like  a  holy-day  fuit,  pijt 
on  onely  at  fee  rimes,  but  come  to  him  when  you  will ,  you 
fhallfinde him  clad  alike,  holy  on  the  Lords-d*y>  and  holy  on 
the  Txesk-daj  too,  Pfx/.  106.  3.    B  Icjfed  are  they  that  kee-p  judg- 
ment, and  he  that  dothr'ighteoufnejfe  at  al!t'mes>  'tis  a  fign  it 
is  not  a  mans  complexion,  when  the  colour  he  hath  while  he  fits 
by  afire  dies  away  foon  after.     There  are  fome  if  you  would 
fee  their  goodnefle,  and  be  acquainted   with  their  godlineffe, 
you  muft  nit  the  right  rime,  or  elfe  you  will  finde  none,  like 
fome  flowers  that  are  feen  but  fome  moneths  in  the  year ;  or 
like  fome  Phyficians  that  they  call  fore-noon  men,    they  that 
Would  fpeak  wirh  them  to  any  purpofe,  mult  come  in  the  morn- 
ing, becaufe  commonly  they  are  drunk  in  the  after- noon  ;  thus, 
may  be  in  the  morning,you  may  take  the  hypocrite  on  his  knee; 
in  a  Saints  pofture,but  when  that  fit  is  over,you  fhall  fee  little  of 
God  in  all  his  courfe  till  night  brings  him  again  of  courfe  to  the 
like  duty.  The  watch  is  naught  that  goes  onely  at   firft  winding 
up,andftandsall  the  day  after ;  and  fo  is  that  heart  fure,that  de- 
fires  no:  always  to  keep  in  fpi  itual  motion.  I  confefle  there  may- 
be a  great  difference  in  the  (landing  of  two  watchesjone  from  the 
very  watch  it  felf,becaufe  ic  hath  not  the  right  make,  and  this  will 
ever  do  fo  till  alter'd;  another  poffibly  is  true  work,  only  fome 
duli  clogs  the  wheels,  or  fall  hath  a  little  batter'd  it,  which  re- 
moved, it  will  go  well  again.     And  there  is  as  great  difference 
ipetv/een  the  fincere  foul  and  hypocrite  in  this  cafe  ;  the  fincere 
1.1  may  be  interrupted  in  its  f^iritual   motion,  and  Chrifiian, 
courfe,  but  it  is  from  feme  t  ^mpration  that  at  prefent  clogs  him, 

but 


girt  about  with  truth.  12a 


but  he  hith  anew  niture  which endines  to  a conftant motion 
inholineffe,  and  doth  upon  the  removing  the  prefent  impedi- 
ment ,  return  to  its  natural  exercife  of  godlineffe ;   but  the 
hypocrite   fails  in  the   very    conftitution  and  frame  of  his 
fpirit ;    he  hath  not  a  principle  of  grace  in  him  to  keep  him 
moving. 

Again  ,     the  hncere  Chriftian  is  uniforme ,    as  to  place 
and  company:  wherever  he  goes  he  carries  his  rule  with  him, 
which  fquares  him  ;   within  doors  amidft  his   neareft  relati- 
ons,   Davids    rcfolve    is  his  Pfaltne    iol.  2.     He  will  wa/l^ 
within  his  houfe  with  a  fsrfeflt  heart ;   follow  him  abroad,  he 
carries   his  confeience   with   him ,    and   doth    not   bid    it  ' 
( as  Abraham  his  fervants ,    when  afcending  the  Mount  ) 
toftaybehindetill  he  comes  back.    The  Romanes   had  a  Law 
that  every  one  ih ould  where  ever  he  went,  weare  a  badge  of 
bis  trade  in  his  hat,  or  outward  veftment,    that  he  might  be 
known.     The  fincereChriftian  never  willingly  lays  afide  the 
badge  of  his  holy  profefiiorr.     No  place  nor  company  turns  him 
out  of  the  way,  that  is  called  holy.  Indeed  his  confeience  doth 
not  make  him  foredo  his  prudence ;  He  knows  how  to  diftin- 
gtiilhof  place  and  place,  company  and  company;    and  there- 
fore when  caft  among  boyfterous  Tinners,    and  fcornful  ones, 
he  doth  not  betray  Religion  to  fcorn,  by  throwing  its  pearls  be- 
fore fuch  as  would  trample  on  them,  and  rent  him;  yet  he  is 
very  careful,  left  his  prudence  fhould  put  his  uprightneffe  to  a~ 
ny  hazard.     I  will  behave  my  {elf  wifely  (  faith  David  in  the 
forenamed  Pfal. )  in  a  perfett  way  ;  that  is,I  will  fhew  my  felf  as 
wife  as  I  can,fo  I  may  alfo  be  upright.  Truly  that  place  and  com- 
pany is  like  tbetotri  i  nor.e, unhabitable  to  a  gracious  foul,  where 
profanefs  is  fo  hot,that  fincerity  cannot  look  out  and  fhew  it  felf 
by  feafonable  counfel  and  reproof  with  fafety  to  the  Saint ;  and 
therefore  they  that  have  neither  fo  much  zeal  to  proteft  againil 
the  fins  of  fuch,  nor  fo  much  care  of  themfelves  as  to  withdraw 
from  thence,  where  they  can  only  receive  evil,  and  do  no  good, 
have  juft  caufe  to  call  their  fincerity  into  queftion. 


T  2  SECT, 


i  ao  Having  your  loyns 


SECT.  IV. 

Fourthly,  the  fincere  Chri(Uan  is  progreffive,  never  at  his 
journies  end,  till  he  gets  to  heaven  ;  this  keeps  him  alwayes  in 
motion,  advancing  in  his  defires  and  endeavours  forward ;  he 
is  thankful  for  little  grace,  but  not  content  with  great  meafures 
of  grace:  When  I  awake,  faith  David,  I  {hall  be  fatisfied  -with 
thy  Ukenefie,  PfaL  1 7.  1*.  he  had  many  a  fweet  entertainment 
at  the  houfe  of  God  in  his  Ordinances :  The  Spirit  of  God  was 
the  meflenger  that  brought  him  many  a  covereJ  difh  from 
Gods  Table,  inward  coniblations  which  the  world  knew  not 
of:  yet  David  has  not  enough,  'tis  heaven  alone  that  can  give 
him  his  full  draught.    They  fay  the  Gaules,   when  they  rltft 
taftedof  the  wines  of  Italy,  were  fo  taken  with  their  lufciouf- 
nefleandfweetneffe,  that  they  could  not  be  content  to  trade 
thither  for  this  wine,  but  refolved  they  would  conquer  the  land 
where  they  grew.    Thus,  the  fincere  foul  thinks  it  not  enough  to 
receive  a  little  now  and  then  of  grace,  and  comfort  from  hea- 
ven, by  trading  and  holding  commerce  at  a  diftance  with  God 
in  his  Ordinances   here  below ;  but   projects  and  meditates 
a    co.-.queft   of  that    holy   land,    and  blefled    place   from 
whence  fuch  rich  commodities  come,  that  he  may  drink  the  wine 
of  that  Kingdome  in  that  Kingdome.   *This  raifeth  the  foul  to 
high  and  noble  enterprizes,  how  it  may  attain  to  further  de- 
grees of  grace  every  day  than  other,  andfoclimbe  nearer  and 
nearer  heaven.    He  that  aims  at  the  Sky,  lhoots  higher  than 
he  that  means  only  to  hit  a  tree.     I  prejje   (faith  TS**/)   to- 
ward  tie    marl^,  for  the  price  of  the    high  calling  of  God  in 
Chnft  Jeffts,Vhi\.i.i  3  .others admir'd  Pettis  attainments  (O that 
they  had  Pauls  grace,  and  then  they  fhould  be  happy  1 )  but  he 
would  count  himielf  very  unhappy,  if  he  might  have  no  more  ; 
he  profefleth  he  hath  nor  apprehended  what  he  runs  for  ■>   the 
prize  (bndsnot  in  the  mid  way,    but  at  the  end  of  the  race, 
and  therefore  he  puts  on  with  full  fpecd,  yea,  makes  it  the  trial 
of  upnghtnefle  in  all,^fr.i  5.  Let  us  therefore  as  many  as  be  per- 
fect  (  that  is  fincere  )  be  thus  minded.     'Tis  the  hypocrite  that 
flints  himielf  in  the  things  of  God.    A  little  knowledge  he 

would 


girt  about  with  truth. 


would  have  that  may  hel^  him  to  difcourfe  of  Religion  among 
the  religious ;  and  for  more,  he  leaves  it  as  more  fitting  for  the 
preacher  than  himfelf.  Some  outward  formalities  he  likes,  and 
makes  ufe  of  in  profeffion,as  attendance  on  publick  Ordinances, 
and  fins  which  would  make  him  ftink  among  his  neighbours,  he 
forbears  ^  but  as  for  prefling  into  more  inward  and  nearer  com- 
munion with  God  in  Ordinances,labouring  to  get  his  heart  more 
fpiritual,  the  whole  body  of  linne  more  and  more  mortified, 
this  was  never  his  defign.  Like  fome  flighty  trades-man  that  ne- 
ver durft  look  fo  high  as  to  think  of  being  rich  ;  but  thinks  it 
well  enough  if  he  can  but  hold  his  fhop-doors  open ,  and 
keep  himfelf  out  of  jayle ,,  though  with  a  thoufand  fhifting 
tricks. 


CHAP.    XIII. 


A  word  of  direSiion  to  thofe  who  upon  tryal  are 
found  un found  and  falfe.  hearted 


141 


HAving  laid  down  Characters  of  the  fincere  heart,  it  will  be 
neceflary  to  make  fome  improvement  of  them,  as  the  re- 
port fhall  be  th.it  confcience  makes  in  your  bofomes,  upon 
putting  your  felves  to  the  tryal  of  your  fpiritual  ftates  by  the 
fame.  Now  the  report  that  confcience  makes  after  examina- 
tion of  your  felves  by  thofe  notes  prefixed,  will  amount  to  one 
of  thefe  three  inferences.Either  it  will  co  idemn  thee  for  an  hy- 
pocrite, or  pronounce  thee  a  finrere  Chriiiian  ;  or  thirdly,bring 
in  an  I^.noramus,and  leave  thee  in  doubt  whether  thou  beeft 
fincere  or  nor.  That  I  may  therefore  finde  thee,  Reader,at  one 
door,  if  I  mifiethee  at  another,  I  fhall  fpeak  feverally  to  all 
three. 
Firft,  to  fuch  who  upon  the  tryal  are  caft  ;  evidence  comes  in 

Tj  fo 


142  Having  yowr  loyns 


1. 


10  clear  and  ttrong  againd:  the  n,  that  their  confcience  cannot 
hold,  but  tell  them  plainly,  it  thcie  bsihe  marks  of  iincerity, 
then  they  are  hypocrites.  The  improvement  I  would  make 
of  this  tryal  tor  your  fakes  ,  is  to  t,ive  a  word*  of 
counfel  what  in  this  cafe  you  are  to  do,  that  you  may  become 
hncere. 

Fiflt,  get  thy  heart  deeply  affected  wirh  thy  prefent  difmal 
ftate.  No  hope  of  cure  till  thou  beett  chafed  into  fome  fence 
and  feeling  of  thy  deplored  condition.  Phyfcl^  cannot  be  gi- 
ven fo  long  as  the  Patient  is  afleep ;  and  it  is  the  nature  of  this 
difeafe  to  niake  the  foul  heavy  eyed,  and  difpofe  it  to  a  kind  of 
(lumber  of  confcience,  byrealbnof  the  flattering  thoughts  the 
hypocrite  hath  of  himfelf,  from  fome  formalities  he  performs 
above  others  in  Religion,which  fume  up  from  his  deceived  hear c 
( like  fo  many  pleafmg  vapours  from  the  flomac/t  to  the  head  J 
and  binde  up  his  fpiritual  fenfes  into  a  kinde  of  (nudity,  yea, 
caufe  many  pleafing  dreams  to  entertain  him  with  vain  hopes 
and  falfe  joyes,  which  vanifh  as  foon  as  he  wakes  and  comes  to 
himfelf.  The  pharifees  the  mofl  notorious  hypocrites  of  their 
age,  how  fall  afleep  were  they  in  pride  and  carnal  confidence, 
defpiting  all  the  world  in  conparifon  of  themfelves,  not  afraid 
to  commend  themfelves  to  Cod  ;  yea,-  prefer  themfelves  before 
others ;  Cod  I  tt)anl^  thcey  I  am  not  like  this  Publican ;  as  if 
they  would  tell  God,  they  did  look  to  finde  fome  more  refpect 
from  him  than  others  (fo  far  beneath  them)  had  at  his  hand? 
Therefore  Chrifl  in  his  dealing  with  this  proud  generation  of 
men,  ufeth  an  unufual  ftreine  of  fpeech  ;  his  voice  which  to  o- 
thers  was  flill  and  fcfr,  is  heard  like  thunder  breaking  out  of 
the  clouds  when  he  fpeaks  to  them  ;  how  many  dreadful  claps 
have  we  almoft  together  in  the  fame  Ckapter  fall  on  their  heads, 
out  of  the  mouth  of  our  meek  and  fweet  Saviour,  CMat.  ij. 
Woe  nntoyoH  Scribes  and  Tharifes,  no  lefTe  than  eight  woes 
doth  Chrii't difcharge  upon  them,  as  fo  many  cafe  fhot  toge- 
ther, that  by  multiplying  the  woes,  he  might  fhew,  not  only 
the  certainty  of  the  hypocrites  damnation,  but  precedency  alfo ; 
and  yet  how  many  of  that  rank  do  we  read  of  to  be  awakened 
and  converted  by  thefe  rouzing  Sermons  ?  fome  few  there  were 
indeed  that  the  difeafe  might  appear  not  incurable  ^  but  very 
few,  that  we  may  tremble  the  more  of  falling  into  it,  or  let- 


ting 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  a 


« 


ting  it  grow  upon  us.     Paer  learnt-  of  his  Matter  how  to  handle 
the  hypocrite,  who  having  to  do  wich  one  tar  gone  in  this  dif- 
eafe,  Simon  <JMagus,k&&  8.  z  i.  he  fteeps  his  words  as  it  were  in 
vinegar  and  gall.      lihon  hi-fi  neither  part  nor  lot  in  this  matte, 
for  ti'jj  heart  is  not  right  in  the  fight  of  God  ;  there  he  lays  the 
weight  of  his  charge,  that  he  carry'd  a  hypocritical  heart  in  his 
bofome,  which  was  a  thoufand  times  worfe  than  his  Simonaicai 
faft,  (  though  that  foule  enough  )  it  was  not  barely  that  fa&, 
but  proceeding  from  a  heart  inwardly  rotten  and  fa lfe  (which 
God  gave  Peter  an  extraordinary  fpirit  todifcern^  thatprov'd 
him  to  be    in  the  gall  of  bittcrwfi,  and  bond  of  iniquity  >y   only 
in  this  better  than  the  damned  fouls  in  hell ,  they  were  rn  the 
fire  ;  he  in  the  bond  of  iniquity  (like  a  fagot  bound  up  J  fit  for  it, 
but  not  ca{l  in  :  they  part  hope,  and  he  fo  much  left  as  might 
amount  to  a  perhaps  if  the  thought  of  his  heart  might  te  forgiven ; 
to  give  but  one  inftance  more,  and  that  is  of  a  whole  Church, 
hypocritical  Laodicea ,    the  Spirit  of  God  takes  her  up  more 
fharply  than  all  the  reft,  which  though  he  charged  with  fome 
particular  mifcarriages,  yet  flndes  fomething  among  them  he 
owns  and  commends :  But  in  her,becaufe  (he- was  conceited  al- 
ready (  as  this  leaven  of  hypocrifie  naturally  puffs  up  )  he  men- 
tions nothing  that  was  good  in  her,  left  it  Should  feed  that 
humour  that  did  fo  abound  already  ;    and  take  away  the  fmart- 
neflfe  of  the  reproof  which  was  the  only  probable  means  left  of 
recovering  her.  All  that  enclines  to  deep  is  deadly  to  a  Lethar- 
gicl^i  and  all  that  is  foothingand  cockering,dangerous  ro  hypo- 
crites.    Some  fay  the  fureft  way  to  cure  a  Lethargy,  is  to  turn 
it  intoafeaver  :  To  be  furethefafeft  way  to  deal  with  the  hy- 
pocrite, is  to  bring  them  from  their  falfe  peace,  to  a  deep  {^nfQ 
of  their  true  mifery.     Let  this  then  be  thy  rirrt  work  ;  aggravate 
thyfinne,  and  put  thy  foul  into  mourning  for  it ;  when  a  per- 
fon  who  was  by  the  rPriefl  (who  was  to  jud^e  in  cafe  of  leprofie) 
pronounced  unclean,  the  Leper  thus  convicted,  was  to  rend  Ins 
deaths,  ijo  bare-h°aded,and  put  a  covering  upon  hu  upper  lip,  (all 
ceremonies  ufed  by  mourners)and  to  cry  unclean,  u>:clean,lg.xiz. , 
13.4^.     Thusdo  thou  as  a  true  mourner,  (it  down  and  lament 
this  plague  of  thy  heart;  cry  Out  bitterly,  unclean,  unclean  /toefc.  if.  17. 
am,  not  fit  by  reafon  of  thy  hypocritical  heart  to  come  near 
<5od  or  his  Saints,  but  to  be  like  the  Leper ,  feparare  from 

both  -, 


i  a  a  Having  your  loyns 


both  ;  it  thou  hadit  fuch  a  loathfome  difeafe  reigning  on  thee, 
as  did  pollute  the  very  feat  thou  fit'ft  on,  bed  thou  lielt  in , 
and  drop  fuch  filthinefle  on  eveiy  thing  thou  comelt  near,  ('even 
into  the  meat  thou  eatelt,    and  cup  thou  drinkft  from)  that 
fhould  make  all  abandon  thy  natty  company,  how  great  would 
thy  forrow  be,  as  thou  didft  lit  defolate  and  muhng  alone  of 
thy  doleful  condition  ?  fuch  a  ftate  thy  hypocrifie  puts  thee  into; 
a  plague  it  is,  more  orrenlive  to  God  than  fuch  a  difeafe  could 
make  thee  to  men  •,  it  runs  like  a  filthy  foare  through  all  the  du- 
ties, and  goodly  coverings  that  you  can  put  over  it,   and  de- 
files them  and  thee  fo,  that  God  will  take  an  offering  out  of 
the  Divels  hand,  asfcon  as  out  of  thine,  while  thou  continued 
an  hypocrite;  and  did  the  Saints  of  Godfwith  whom  thou  haft, 
maybi,fo  much  credit,  as  to  be  admitted  to  joyn  with  them 
atprefent )  know  thee,  they  would  mak*  as  much  hafte  from 
thee,  as  from  him  on  whom  they  .ihould  fee  the  plague-tokens ; 
but  ihould  not  thy  difeafe  be  known  till  thou  art  dead,  and  fo 
thou  keep  thy  reputation  with  them  ;  yea,  poflibly  by  them  be 
thought  when  thou  dieft  a  Saint;  will  this  give  thee  any  con- 
tent in  hell,  that  they  are  fpeaking  well  of  thee  on  earth?  O 
f\, .         poor  cArlrtotle  (  faid  one)  t hou  art  praife  i  where  thon  art  not, end. 
burnt  where  thon  art !    he  meant  ic  was  poor  comfort  to  that 
great  Heathen  Phi/ofopher  to  be  admired  by  men  of  learning, 
that  have  kept  up  his  fame  from  generation  to  generation,   if 
he  all  the  while  be  miferable  in  the  other  world  :  So  here,0  poor 
hypocrite,  that  art  rankt  among  Saints  on  earth,  but  punilhta- 
mong  Divels  in  hell. 

Secondly,  when  thy  heart  is  deeply  afteeled  with  the  fin  and 
mifery  of  thy  hypocritical  heart,  thou  mult  be  convinced  of  thy 
inefficiency  to  make  a  cure  on  thy  felf.  Hypocrifie  is  like  a 
fi(r»Ia  fore,  it  may  feem  a  little  matter  by  the  fmall  orifice  it 
hath  ;  but  it  is  therefore  one  of  the  hardeft  among  wounds  to  be 
cured,  becaufeitisfohardtofinde.the  bottome  of  it.  O  take 
heed  thy  heart  doth  not  put  a  cheat  upon  thy  felf.*  It  will  be 
M  very  forward  to  promife  it  will  lie  no  more,  be  falfe  and  hy- 
pocritical no  more  ;  but  take  counfel  of  a  wife  man,  who  bids 
thee  not  rely  on  what  it  faith  ;  Has  a  fool  that  trulls  his  own 
heart,  prov;  28.  2.  O  how  many  die,  becaufe  loth  to  be  at 
pains  and  coft  to  go  to  a  skilful  Phylician  at  firft  ?  take  heed  of 


at 

of 

felf- 


girt  about  with  truth.  14 


felf-refolutions,  and  felf- reformations ;  fin  is  like  the  Kings-E- 
vil; Godmotourfelves,  can  cure  it.  He  that  will  be  tinker- 
ing wirh  his  own  heart,  and  no:  Peek  out  to  heaven  tor  help,  wil 
irfthe  end  finde  where  he  mends  one  hole,heel  make  two  worfe; 
where  he  reforms  one  fin,  heel  fall  into  the  hands  of  many  more 
dangerous. 

Thirdly,  betake  thy  felt  to  Chril*  as  thePhyfician,on  whofe 
skil  and  fauhfulnefle  thou  wik  rely  entirely  for  cure.     Sipere- 
ttnd'Am^  inter  peritiffimos  ;  if  thou  perifh,reiolve  to  pe.ifh  at  his 
door.     But  for  thy  comfort  know,  never  any  that  he  undertook, 
mifcarried  under  his  hand,  nor  ever  refuted  he  to  undertake  the 
cure  of  any  that  came  to  him  on  fuch  an  errand.  He  blamed  thofe 
hypocrites,  John  <j.  40, 43.    becaufe  they  were  ready  to  throw 
away  their  lives  >  by  t rutting  any  Bmperick^  who  tnould  come 
in  his  own  name  without  any  approbation  or  authority  from 
God  for  the  work,  but  would  hot  come  to  him  that  they  might 
have  life ,  though  he  came  in  his  Fathers  Name,  and  had  his 
feal  and  licence  to praclife  his  skill  on  poor  fouls  for  their  re- 
covery.   And  he  that  blamed  thofe  for  not  coming,  will  not , 
cannot  be  angry  with  thee  who  comeft.     It  is  his  calling ,  and 
men  do  not  ufe  to  thruft  customers  out,but  invite  them  into 
their  {hops.    When  Chrift  was  o:i  earth,  he  gave  this  reafon, 
why  he  converfed  fo  much  with  Publican:  and  finners,    and 
ib  little  among  the  pharifees,  becaufe  there  was  more  workMat'9;ii>**< 
for  him.     Men  fet  up  where  they  think  trade  will  be  quickeft. 
Chrijl  came  to  be  a  Vhyfician  to  fick  fouls ;  Pharifees  were  fo 
well  in  their  own  conceit,  th.u  Qkrift  favvhe  fhould  have  lit- 
tle to  do  among  them,   and  fo  he  apply 'd  himfelf  to  thofe 
who  were  more  lenhble  of  their  ficknefle.    If  thou  poor  foul, 
beeft  but  come  to  thy  felf  fofar,  as  to  groan  under  thy  curfed 
hypocriiie,  and  dire£teft  thefe  thy  groans  in  a  prayer  to  hea- 
ven for  Chriits  help,  thou  lhalt  have  thy  Phyficun  foon  wirh 
thee,  never  fear  it.     He  hath  not  fince  he  afcended,liid  down 
his  calling,  but  full  follows  hisp:a£Uce  as  clofe  as  ever; we 
finde  him  fending  his  advice  from  heaven  in  rrnr  excellent  re- 
ceipt, Rev.  i.  to  Latdic.-a,  what  fhe  fhoulddofor  her  recove- 
ry out  of  this  very  difeafe  of  hypocrihe.     1  cou.fel  thee  to  buy 
of  me  gold  trji'd  in  the  fire,  tbattlou  mayfl  fa  rich,  and  white 
rayment  that  thou  mayefl  be  cloathsd,  ere.     As  if  he  had  faid, 

U  Laodiceaj 


^5  Waving  your  loyns 


Laodicca,  thou  traded  in  falfe  ware,  deceiving  thy  felt"  and 
others  w'uh  appearances  for  realities ,  counterfeit  graces  for 
rrue  ;  thy  gold  is  droiTe,  thy  garments  rotten  rags,which  do  nor 
hide,  but  difcover  thy  ihamc  ;  come  to  me,  and  thou  fhak  have 
that  which  is  for  thy  turn,  and  berter  cheap  alio;  for  though, 
here  is  mention  of  buying  ;  no  more  is  meant  than  toco  Tie 
with  a  buyers  fpirit,  valuing  Chrid  and  his  grace  fo  high  ,  that 
if  they  were  ro  be  bought,  though  with  all  th*  money  in  thy 
purle,  yea,  blood  in  rhy  veines,  thou  wouldft  have  them,  and 
not  go  home ,  and  fay  thou  wert  hardly  ufed.  Tis  the 
thirdy  foul  that  fhall  be  fatisfted  ;  only  look  thy  third  be  right 
and  deep. 

Firfiy  right ,  a  heart  third,  and  not  (imply  a  conscience  third. 
Tis  a  very  different  heat  that  caufeth  the  one  and  the  other. 
Hell  fire  may  enflame  the  confeience,  fo  as  to  make  the  guilty 
Tinner  third  for  Chrifts  blood  to  quench  the  torment  which 
the  wrath  of  God  hath  kindled  in  his  bofome.    But  'ris  heaven 
fire,  and  only  that  which  begets  a  kindly  hear  in  the  heart,  that 
breaks  out  in  longings  of  foul  for  Chrift  and  his  Spirit  with  fweet 
cooling  dews  of  grace  to  flack  and  extinguifh  the  fire  of  iuft 
and  fin. 
Againjook^it  be  dfe^.Phyfkians  rell  us  of  a  third  which  comes 
(I         from  the  drinefTe  of  the  throat,  and  not  any  great  inward  heat 
of  ihedomack;  and  this  third  may  be  quench 't  with  a  gargle 
in  the  mouth,  which  is  fpir  our  again,  and  goes  not  down.  And 
truly  there  is  fomething  like  this  in  many  that  fit   under  the 
preaching  of  the  Gofpel.    Some  IiDht  touches  are  now  and 
then  found  upon  the  fpirits  of  men  and  women,  occasioned  by 
fome  fpark  that  falls  on  their  affe&ions  in  hearing  rhe  Word, 
whereby  they  on  a  fudden  exprefle  fome  deiires  after  Chrid  and 
his  grace,  that  you  would  think  they  would  in  all  hade  for  hea- 
ven i  but  being  flighty  flafhes,  and  weak  velleities,  (rather  than 
ftrongvolirions,  and  deep  defircs,  )  their  heat  is  foon  over,  and 
third  quench'c  with   a  little  p  relent  fweetnefie   they   fade 
while  chey  jrre  hearing  a  Sermon 6f  Chrid  ('which  they  fpir  out 
-  again  as  foon  as  they  are  gone  homealmod)  as  well  as  may  be, 
though  they  never  enjoy  more  of  him.     Labour   therefore  for. 
fuchadeepfenfeof  thy  own  wretchednefle  by  reafon  of  thy 
hvpocrilie,  and  of  Chrids  excellency  by  icifon  of  that  fulneHe. 

of 


girt  about  with  truth. 


of  grace  in  hi  n,  which  makes  him  able  co  cure  thee  of  thy  di- 
ftemper;  that  as  a  man  throughly  achirft  can  be  concent  wi'h 
nothing  but  drink,  and  not  a  [IaU  Of  that  neither,  but  a  full 
fatisfyirg  draught  whatever  it  colts  him.  .•  So  thou  mayeft  not 
bz  biib'a  with  any  thing  befides  Chrift  and  his  fanclifying  grace, 
nor  with  gifts,  profcifion  or  pardon  it  felf,  (if  it  could  bz  fever'd 
from  grace  )  no  not  with  a  litrle  fprinkling  of  grace,  but  long 
for  whole  floods,  wherewith  thou  mayeft  be  fully  purg'd  and 
freed  of  thy  curfed  lult  which  now  fo  fadly  oppreffech  thee. 
This  frame  of  fpiric  would  put  thee  under  the  promife  (  heavens 
fecurity  )  that  thou  iTialt  noc  lofe  thy  longing ;  if  thou  fhouldft 
askhlver  and  gold,  and  feek  any  worldly  enjoyment  at  this  rate, 
chou  migh'ft  Ipend  thy  breath  and  pains  in  vain ;  God  might 
let  thee  roar  (like  'Dives  in  hell  J  in  the  mid'ft  of  thofe  flames 
which  thy  covetous  Iuft  had  tkindled,  without  affording  a  drop 
of  that  (  to  cool  thy  tongue  )  which  thou  fo  violently  panteft 
after.Butif  Chrifl  and  his  grace  be  the  things  thou  would'!*  have, 
yea,  muft  have ;  truly  then  thou  flialt  have  them.     CM  at.  $.  6. 
Bleffed  are  they  which  do  hunger  and  third  after  rightewfnefsy 
for  they  fhall  be  fatisfed. 


47 


CHAP.    XIV. 


An  Exhortation  to  thofe  who  upon  tryal  art 
found  to  be  true  in  heart  ,  or  ftneere  to 
rveare  this  belt  clofe  girt  to  them  in  the 
daily  exercife  of  it ,  with  direBions  for  that 
purpofe. 


I 


Come  to  the  fecond  fort,  fuch  (I  mean;  whofe  conferences 
upon  diligent  enquiry,  give  a  fair  teftimony  for  their  fin- 

U  2  ceriry, 


^8  Having  your  loyns 


cerity,  that  their  hearts  are  true  and  uprigh;.     That  which  I 
have'by  way  of  Counfel  to  leave  with  them,  is,   tolled  this  belt 
which  they  have  about  them,  cloie  in  the  exercife  and  daily 
pra£tife  of  it.     Gird  this  belt,  I  fay,  clo'.e  torheej  that  is  be 
very  careful  to  walk  in  the  daily  practice  ?nd  exercife  of  thy  up- 
rightnefle.     Think  every  motnin^ thou  ait  not  dreft  till  this 
girdle  be  put  on.     The  proverb  is  true  here,  ungirt ,    u;.b!es~l  ■ 
thou  art  no  company  for  God  that  day,  is  which  thou  art  in- 
fmcere.    If  ^Abraham  will  walk  with  God,  he  mult  be  upright 
and  canft  thou  live  a  day  without  his  company  ?    R*cl:el  paid 
dear  for  her  mandrakes  to  part  with  her  husband  for  them  •  a 
worfe  bargain  that  foul  makes,  that  to  purchafe  fome  worldly 
advantage,  pawns  its  fmcerity ;  which  gone,  God  is  fure  to  fol- 
low after.     And  as  thou  canttnot  walk  with  God,  fo  not  ex- 
pe£l  any  bleflingfrom  God  ;  The  promifes  like  a  box  of  preci- 
ous oyntment,  are  kept  to  be  broke  over  the  head  of  the  up- 
right,  CM.'Cah  2.  -j.  Do  not  my  words  do  good  to  h';m  that  walketh 
uprightly  f    And  fure  it  is  ill  walking  in  that  way ,     where 
there  is  found  no  word   from    God  to  bid  us  good  fpeed  • 
fome  are  fo  fuperftitious ;    that  if  a  hare  croffeth    them " 
they  will  turn  back,   and  go  no  further  rhat   day.     But   a 
bold  man  is  he ,   that  dares  go  on  when  the  Word  of  God 
lies  crofie  his  way.     Where  the  Word   doth  not   blefle       it 
cur.eth ;   where  it  promifeth  not,   it  threatens;    A  foul  in 
its  upri^htneffe,  approving  its  felf  to  God,   is  fafe,   (  like  a 
travellour  going   about   his    lawful  bufinefle   betwixt    Sunne 
and  Sunne  )   if  any  harme  or  Jolfe  comes  to  luch  a   foul 
God  will  bear  him  out ;   the  promife  is   on   his  fide      by 
pleading  it  he  may  recover  his  Jolfe  at  Gods  hands,' Vvho 
ftanf's  boun-.  to  keep  him  harmleife.     See  to  this  purpofe, 
cPfi.;?yte  S'4.  i>.  But  ; hey  ar«  Directions,  not  Motives,  Iamin 
this  place  to  <ave, 

■ 


SECT. 


girt  about  with  truth,  I  aq 

SECT.  I. 

-F/V/?,  therefore  if  thou  wouldYc  walk  in  the  exercife  of  thy  x 

fincerity,  Walk^in  the  view  of  Cod.  ,  That  of  Lutier  is  molt 
true,  Omnia  prAcepta  funt  in  pri-  .0  tahquam  capue.  All  the 
commands  are  wrapt  up  in  the  firit ;  for  (  faith  he  )  all  finne  is 
a  contempt  of  God ;  and  fo  we  cannot  break  any  other  com- 
mands, but  we  break  the  firft.  Wethink^amife  of  Gody  before 
we  d'J  amijfe  againft  Cod  -t  this  God  commended  to  ^Abraham 
infiar  om?nnniyo£  fovereign  ufe  to  preferve  his  fincerky  •  fValk_ 
before  mc,and  be  thou  pipaght^Gcn.  1 7. 1  .This  kept Mofes  his  girdle 
ftreight,  and  dofe  to  his  loynes,  that  he  was  neither  bribed 
with  the  treafures  of  Egypt ,nor  brow-beaten  out  of  his  fincerky, 
with  the  anger  of  fo  great  a  King,  Heb.  11.  27.  for  l.e  eidured 
as  feeing  him  who  was  invifble.  He  had  a  greater  than  Pharaoh 
in  his  eye,  and  this  kept  him  righr. 

Firfi,  walk  (  ('Ir'ftian  )  in  the  view  of  Gods  omnifcience, 
this  is  a  girding  confideration  ;  fay  to  thy  foul>cn^,  vldet  Dens , 
take  heed,  God  feeth ;  it  is  under  the  rofe  ( as  the  common 
phrafe  is )  that  treafon  isfpoken,  when  Subjects  think  they  are 
far  re  enough  fromtheir  Kings  hearing  ;  but  did  fuch  know  the 
Prince  tobe  under  the  window,  or  behinde  the  hangings,  their 
difcourfe  would  be  more  loyal.  This  made  David  fo  upright 
in  his  walking,  Pfalme  11  p.  168.  /  have  kept  thy  precepts , 
for  all  my  wayes  are  before  thee.  If*  Alexanders  empty  chair 
(  which  his  Captains  when  they  met  in  counfel  fate  before  them) 
did  awe  them  fo,as  to  keep  them  in  good  order  ;  What  would 
it,  for  to  fet  God  looking  on  us  in  our  eye?  The  J  ewes  cove- 
red Chrifis  face,  and  then  buffeted  him.  So  does  the  hypo- 
crite ;  he  flrft  faith  in  his  heart,  God  fees  not ,  or  at  leaft  he 
forgets  that  he  fees,  and  then  makes  bold  to  finne  againft  him;  w  , 
like  that  fooliQi  4/W,which  runnes  her  head  among  the  reeds,      r  *l 

and  thinks  her  felf  fafe  from  the  fouler ;  as  if  becaufe  fhe  did 
not  fee  him ,  therefore  he  could  not  fee  hejr.Ti  mihi  abfcond-m, 
nan  me  tibi,  Aug.  1 may  hide  thee  from  my  eye,   bnt  not  my  [elf  y,  l 
from  thine.     Thou  mayeft  (  poor  creature  )  hide  God  by  thy 
ignorance  and  atheifme,  fo  that  thou  fhalc  not  fee  him ,  but 

11  3  thou 


!^o  Having  your  loyns 


thou  canlt  notfoas  hefhall  nor  fee  thee.     <•////  things  arc  na- 
ked And  opened  tint 9    bsejesvf  hnn^vith  whom  >rc  have  to  do.O 
remember  thou  hail  to  do  with  Cod  inall  thoudoert,  whether 
thou  b :elt  in  fho?  or  clofet,Church  or  Marker; and  he  will  hive  ro 
co  with  thee,  for  he  fees  thee  round,  and  can  tell  rion  whence 
thou  come  t,  when  (like  Gt&azil  before  his  mailer)  chov  entreft 
into  his  prefence,  and  ltand'jldemirely  before  him  in  his  wor- 
flup,  as  if  thou  had'il  been  no  where;  then  he  can  tell  thee 
thy  thoughts,  and  without  any  labour   of  pumping  them  out 
by  thy  confeflion,  let  them  in  order  before  thee;   yay  thy 
thoughts  that  are  gone  from  thee  (like  Nebuchadnc^ars  dreame 
from  him  )  and  thou  haft  forgot  whit  they  were  atfuch  a  time, 
and  in  fuch  a  place,  fourty,  fifty  years  ago,  God  hath  them  all 
in  the  light  of  his  countenance,  as  atomes  are  in  the  beams 
of  theSunne,  and  he  can,  yea,  will  give  thee  a  fight  of.  them, 
that  they  fhall  walk  in  thy  confeience  to  thy  horrour,  as  John 
Baptists  ghoitdidin  Herods. 

Secondly  fvalhjn  the  view  of  his  providet/ce^.nd  care  over  thee; 
when  God  bids  Abraham  be  upright,  he  (lengthens  his  faith  on 
him  ;    /  am  Cjod  Almighty,  wa/l^befortme,  and  be  perfe£t>ZS  if  he 
hadfaid,  aft  thou  for  me,  and  I  will  take  care  for  thee  ;  when 
once  we  begin  to  call  his  care  in  queftion  towards  us,  then 
will  our  hnceriry  fairer  in  our  walking  before  him  ;  hypocrifie 
lies  hid  in  diitrult  and  jealouhe  as  in    its  cau'fe  ;  if  the  foul 
dare  not  rely  on  Hod,  it  cannot  be  long  true  to  God.  ^Abr^iham 
was  jealous  of  Ablmclech,  therefore  hediiVembled  with  him;thus 
do  we  with  God;  we  doubt  Gods  care,  and  then  live  by  our 
wit,  and  carve  for  our  felves  •  unmake  us  gods  (Tay  they  )#e  ks-ow 
not  what  is  becom*  of  (JMofes,  The  unbelieving  ftysjfrit  againft 
the  command  of  God,  keep  CManna  while  the  morrow, £xod. 
16.19.  and  why/ but  becaufe  they  had  not  faith  to  trull  him  for  a- 
ncrher  meal  .•  This  is  the  old  weapon  the  Divel  hath  ever  ufed 
Job  »:  9.        to  keat  theChriflian  out  of  his  finceriry,  with,  cu-rfe  Coiy  and 
die,  faid  he  ro  Jo  '>  by  his  wife.     As  if  {he  had  faid,  what  ?  wilt 
yet  hold  the  Caflleof  thy  fincerity  for  God  ?    Captains  think 
they  may  yield,  when  no  relief  comes  to  them;  and  Subject 
make  account,  if  the  Prince  protect  not  them,  they  are  not 
boun-J  to  ferve  him.Thou  hart  lain  thus  Iom;  in  an  affii&ed  ftate, 
beficged  clofe  with  forrows  on  every  hand,  and  no  news  to  this 

day 


girt  about m\h  truth.  \2i 


day  comes  from  heaven  of  any  care  that  God  takes  for  theejrher- 
fore  curfe  GW,W^;yea,Chrift  had  him  ufing  the  fame  engine 
to  draw  him  off  from  his  faithfnlnefs  to  his  Father ,  when  he  bade 
him  turn  (tones  into  bread.  We  fee  therefore  of  what  import- 
ance it  is  to  {lengthen  our  faith  on  the  care,  and  providence  of 
God  for  our  proviiion  and  protection*,  which  is  the  caufe  why 
God  hath  made  fuch  abundant  provifion  to  fhut  all  doubting, 
and  fear  of  this  out  of  the  hearts  of  his  people.  Thepromi- 
{qs  are  fo  fitly  placed,  thatasfafe  harbours,  upon  what  coaft 
foever  we  be  failing,  f  condition  we  are  in  J  if  any  ftorme  arife 
at  Sea,  or  enemy  chafe  us,  we  may  put  into  fome  one  or  o- 
therof  them,  andbefafe,  though  this  one  were  enough,  could 
wefindeno  moretoferve  our  turn,  zChron.16.  9.  The  eyes 
of  the  Lord  run  to  and  fro  throughout  the  whole  earthy  to  {hew  him- 
felf flrong  in  behalf  of  them  (  or  ftrongly  to  hold  with  them  ) 
whofe  heart  is  perfect  towards  him  :  God  doth  not  fet  others  to 
watch,  but  his  own  eyes  keep  Sentinel  ;  now  to  watch 
with  the  childe,  like, the  own  mother,  there  is  the  imme- 
diacy of  his  providence  >  we  may  fay  of  fincere  fouls,  what  is 
faid  of  Canaan ,  Deut.  1 1.9,10.  it  n  a  /W(fothey  are  a  people) 
the  Lord  himfelf  car eth  for, his  eyes  are  alw ayes  on  them.  Again, 
his  eyes  run  to  and  fro,  there  is  the  vigilancy  of  his  providence; 
no  danger,  no  temptation  fmdes  him  napping,  but  as  a  faithful 
watchman  is  ever  walking  up  and  down,  fo  the  eyes  of  God 
runne  to  and  fro ;  He  that  keepeth  Iftde/fthz  fincere  foul  which 
is  the  lfraelite  indzQ^)  jball  f.eit her flumber mr  fleep, Vfo\.  1 2 1.4. 
that  is,  not  little  nor  much  •  not  flumber  by  day,  or  fleep  by 
night ;  two  words  are  there  ufed,  one  that  Signifies  the  fliorr. 
fleep  ufed  in  the  heat  of  the  day,  the  other  for  the  more  found 
deep  of  the  night. 

Thirdly^  throughout  the  whole  ea:th,  there  is  the  univerfalityi 
and  extent  of  Gods  care  ;  'tis  an  encompalfmg  providence,  it 
walks  the  rounds ;  net  any  one  fincere  foul  left  out  the  line  of 
his  care.  He  has  the  number  of  them  to  a  man,  and  all  are  a- 
like  cared  for.  We  diffiguie  the  beautiful  face  of  Gods  provi- 
dence, when  we  fancy  him  to  have  a  cart  of  his  eye,  and  care 
to  one  more  than  another. 

Fourthly,  to  (hew  himfelf  (it  ovg  in  the  behalf  of  them  ^  there  is 
:he  efficacy  of  his  care  and  providence; his  eyes  do  not  runne  to 

and 


jsa  Having  your  loyns 


zni  fro  to  efpy  dangers*  and  only  tell  us  what  they  are ;  As 
the  Sentinel  wakes  the  City  when  an  enemy  comes,  but  cannot 
defend  them  from  theii  fury.  A  childe  may  do  this,  yea,  the 
Getfe  did  this  for  Romes  Capitol.  But  God  watcheth  not  to  tell 
us  our  dangers,  but  to  fave  us  from  them  ;  the  Saints  mu(t  needs 
be  a  hap?J>  people,  becauje  a  people  faved  by  tl.  e  Lord,  Deut. ;  3 .  29. 
God  doth  not  only  fee  with  his  eyes,but  alio  rights  with  his  eyes. 
He.°ave  fuch  a  look  to  the  Egyptians,  as  turn'd  the  Sea  on  them 
to  their  destruction. 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly  ,  labour  to  act  from  love ,  and  nor  fear.  Slavidi 
fear,  and  Sincerity  cannot  agree ;  if  one  be  in  the  increafe,the 
other  is  in  the  waine  alwayes.    See  them  oppofed,  2  Tim.  1 .  7. 
God  hath  not  given  m  the  spirit  of  fear,  but  of  power, of  love,  and 
of  a  found  mmde,  that  is,  (ulcere  ;  where  he  implies  that  fear  is 
weak  and  impotent,  eafily  feared  from  God,his  truth,  and  fer- 
vice;   and  not  fo  only,  but  unround  alto;  not  truiiing  fuch  a 
one  with  any  great  matter.     The  flave,  though  he  works  hard, 
(  becaufe  indeed  he  dares  no  other )  yet  is  foon  drawn  into  a 
confpiracyagainft  his  Mafter ,  becaufe  he  hates  him  while  he 
fears  him  ;   we  fee  this  only  among  the  Turks >  (  againft  whom 
thofcChriiiians  ufed  as  abfolute  flaves  by  them  in  their  Gailies, 
do,  when  they  have  advantage  in  fight ,   ofcen  purchale  their 
own  liberty,  by  cutting  the  throats  of  their  tyrant  Mailers )  bur 
alfo  in  Kingdomes ,  where  Subje&s  rather  fear  than  love  their 
Princes ,  how  ready  they  are  to  invite  another  into  the  Throne, 
or  welcome  any  that  fhould  court  them  ;  Thus  fait  and  loofe  will 
he  be  with  God ,  that  is  prickt  on  with  [he  Swords  point  of 
his  wrath  ,  and  not  drawn  with  the  cords  of  his  love,     \f-ael\s 
an  example  beyond^parallel  for  this ;  When  God  flew  them,  they 
fought  after  I  im,nevertl:ele(ithey  didflatt.rhim  with  their  mouth, 
And  they  lied  unto  him  with  their  tongue ;  for  their  heart  vfxi  rot 
r  ght  w  th  AH»,Pfal.78.?4, 3  y.  they  feared  God,  and  loved  their 
lufts,  an  J  therefore  they  betray'd  his  glory  at  every  turn,  into 
their  band*;  as  Herod  did  Johns  head,  whom  he  fear 'd,into  her 

hands 


girt  about  with  truth.  i  5  3 


hands  whom  he  loved.     And  truly  there  is  too  much  of  this 
llivilli  fear  to  be  found  in  the  Saints  boibmes,  or  elfe  the  whip 
fhould  not  be  fo  often  in  Gods  hand.     We  finde  God  checking 
his  people  for  this,  and  make  their  fervile  fpirit  the  reafon  of 
his  feverity  cowards  them.  Is  Ifrael  afervunt>  a  home-bom  flave* 
why  is  he  ff  oiled}  Jer.  2.  i4.Asif  God  had  faid,  what  is  the  rea- 
fon that  I  mult  ufe  thee,  who  art  my  dear  childe,  as   courfly  as 
if  thou  were  a  fervant,    a  flave,    laying  on  blow  after  blow 
upon  thy  back  with  fuch   heavy    judgments }  would'ft  thou 
know.'' read  ver.l-j.  Hfft  thou  not  procure!  this  to  thy  felf  y  in  that 
thou  hail  for faken  the  Lord  thy  God^when  he  led  thee  by  the  way  } 
Thou  mayeft  thank  thy  felf  for  this  my  unufual  dealing  with 
thee.    If  the  childe  will  forget  his  own  ingenuity,  and  nothing 
but  blows  will  work  with  him,then  the  father  muft  deal  with  his 
childe  according  to  his  fervile  fpirit.    When  God  led  Ifrael 
by  the  way,  as  a  father  his  childe  lovingly,  he  flung  from  him  ; 
and  if  they  would  not  lead  by  love,  then  no  wonder  he  makes 
them  drive  by  fear.    O  Chriitian,  a&  more  by  love,  and  thou 
wilt  fave  Gods  putting  thee  into  fear  with  his  whip ;    love  will 
keep  thee  clofe  and  true  to  him.     The  very  character  of  love 
is,  it  feeks  not  her  own,  i  Cor.  1 3.  <j.  and  what  is  it  to  be  fincere, 
but  when  the  Chriftian  feeks  Chrifts  interert  ,   and  not  his  own  ? 
Jonathan  loved  David  dearly,  this  made  him  incur  his  fathers 
wrath,  trample  on  the  hopes  of  a  Kingdome  which  he  had  for 
him  and  his  po'rerity,   rather  then  be  falfe  to  his  friend.   Lot  de- 
livers up  his  daughters  to  theluftof  the  Sodomites,  rather  than 
his  guefts.     S..mffon  could  not  conceal  that  great  fecret  from 
Dalilah  whom  he  loved,wherein  his  flrength  lay,though  it  was 
as  much  as  his  life  was  worth  to  blab  it  to  her.    Love  is  the  great 
conquerour  of  the  world.    Thus  will  thy  foul  be  enflamed  with 
love  to  Chrirt,  let  all  thy  worldly  incereft  adrift ,   rather  then 
put  his  honour  to  the  lealt  hazard.     Abraham  did  riot  more  wil- 
lingly put  his  facrincing  knife  to  the  Rams  throat  to  fave  his  dear 
Jfaacs  life,  then  thou  wilt  be  to  facrifice  thy  life  to  keep  thy  fin- 
cerity  alive.  Love  is  compared  to  fire  ;  the  nature  of  which  is, 
to  affimulare  to  its  felf  all  that  comes  near  it,  or  to  confume 
them  r  It  turns  all  into  fire  or  allies;  nothing  that  is  heterogene- 
ous can  long  dwell  with  its  own  fimple  pure  nature.    Thus  love 
to  Chrift  will  not  fufter  the  near  nighbourhood  of  any  thing 

X  in 


j«*4  Having  your  loyns 


in  ics  bofome,  that  is  derogatory  to  Chrift ,  either  ic  will  re- 
duce or  abandon  it,  be  it  pleafure,profit,or  whatever  elfe;  Abra- 
ham who  loved  Hagar  and  l(hmael  in  their  due  place,  when 
the  one  began  to  juftlewirh  her  miftrefle,  and  the  other  jeere 
and  mock  at  Jfaac,  he  packs  them  both  out  of  dores ;  love  to 
Chrift  will  not  fuflfer  thee  to  fide  with  any  thing  againft  Chrift, 
but  take  his  part  with  him  againft  any  that  oppofe  him,  and  To 
long  thy  fincerity  is  out  of  danger. 


SECT.   III. 

Thirdly,meditate  often  on  the  fimplicity  and  fincerity  ofGods 
3'         heart  to  his  Saints  j  what  more  powerful  consideration  can  be 
thought  on  to  make  us  true  to  God,  than  the  faithfulnefle  and 
truth  of  God  to  us?e/^p/««,though  as  vile  a  difTembler  as  liv'd, 
yet  when  Hufhai  came  out  to  him,  he  fufpe&ed  him,  2  Sam. 
16.I  j.  And  ay4bfalomfaid  to  Httfbai>fs  this  thy  hindneffe  to  thy 
friendlvohy  wentesl  thou  r.ot  out  to  thy  friend  ?  his  own  confeience 
told  him,  it  was  horrible  bafeneile    for   him  that  had  found 
'David  fuch  a  true  friend,  now  to  joyne  in  rebellious  arms  a- 
gainfthim;  and  though  zAbf.rfom  that  laid  this,did  offer  great- 
er violence  to  this  Law  of  love,  yet  hequeftion'd,    it  feems, 
whether  any  durft  be  fo  wicked  beiides  himfelf.  When  therefore 
(  Chrifrian  )  thou  findeft  thy  heart  warping  into  any  infincere 
prailice,  lay  it  under  this  confideration ;  and  if  any  thin«  of 
God  and  his  grace  be  in  thee,  it  will  unbend  thee,and  brin° 
thee  to  rights  again.    Ask  thy  foul ,  //    this  thy  kjndneffe  to 
thy  friend   ?    fuch    a  friend   as  God  hath  been ,    is  ,     and 
furely  will  be  to  thee  for  ever  ?   God,  when  his  people  linne 
toputthemtotheblufli,  asks  them  whether  he  gives  them  a- 
ny  caufe  for  their  unkinde  and  undutiful  carriages  to  him ;  Thus 
faith  the  Lord ,  what  iniquity  haze  your  fathers  foxnd  in  mrythat 
ti  ey  are  gone  far  from  n,e  f  Jer.2.«;.So  (Jftiofis  intending  to  pay 
Jfrael  home.  (  before  he  goes  up  and  dies  on  Nebo  J  for  all  their 
hypocrite, murmuring,  and  horrible  rebellions  againft  God,  all 
along  from  firft  fetting  out  of  Egypt  to  that  day,  he  brings  in 
their  charge,  and  draws  out  the  jfc  veral  inditements,  that  they 

were 


girt  about  with  Irnth.  155 


were  guilty  of.  Now  to  adde  the  greater  weight  to  every  one , 
he  in  the  fore  front  of  allhnf.v.-ch,  fhevvs  what  a  God  he  is, 
that  they  have  done  all  this  againfh 

He  makes  way  to  the  declaiming  againft  their  finnes,by  the 
proclaiming  the  glory  of  Godagaiuil  whom  they  were  com- 
mitted, Dent.  32.  3.  /  wiR  pub/.fh  the  Name  ofG/od}  afcribe  ye 
greatneffe  to  our  God  ^  And  very  obfervable  it  is,what  of  Gods 
Name  hepublifheth,  the  more  to  aggravate  their  fins,  and  help 
them  to  conceive  of  their  heinous  nature.  Ver.^.He  is  thy  rock^ 
his  work^is  perfeSi  ;  cx^  God  of  'tr nth ,  and  without  iniquity,  juft 
and  right  is  he.Hc  choofeth  to  inftance  in  the  truth  and  hncerity 
of  Gods  heart  to  them  in  all  his  difpenfations ,  as  that  which 
might  make  them  moft  afhamed  of  their  doings.  Now  becaufe 
this  one  confederation  may  be  of  fuch  ufe  to  hedge  in  the  heart, 
and  keep  it  clofe  to  God  in  Hncerity,  I  {hall  (hew  wherein  the 
truth  and  fincerity  of  Gods  love  appears  to  his  Saints,  every  one 
of  which  will  furnifli  us  with  a  (trong  argument  to  be  fincere 
and  upright  with  God. 

Firft,  the  hncerity  of  Gods  heart  appears  in  theprinciple         *• 
he  ails  from,  and  ends  he  aims  at  in  all  his  difpenfations.  Love 
is  the  principle  he  conftantly  acts  from ,  and  their  good  the  end 
he  propounds ;  from  thefehe  never  fwerves :  the  fire  of  love  ne- 
ver goes  out  of  his  heart,  nor  their  good  out  of  his  eye:  when 
he  frowns  with  his  brow,  chides  with  his  lips,  and  ftrikes  with 
his  hand,  even  then  his  heart  burns  with  love,  and  his  thoughts 
meditate  peace  to  them.  Famous  is  that  place  for  this  purpofe, 
jer.  24.  ^ .  /  will  acknowledge  them  that  ar.  carried  away  captive  of  Jerem.    14.  $, 
fuda.h^whom  I  have  fent  out  of  this  place  into  the  land  of  the  Chal- 
deans for  their  good)  1  willfct  mineeyes  on  1 1' em  for  good;  and  this 
was  one  of  the  hSarpeft  judgments  God  ever  brought  upon  his 
people,  and  yet  in  this  he  is  defignin  g  mercy,  and  profiting 
how  to  ^o  them  good ;  foin  the  Wilde rneiTe,  when  they  criecl 
out  upon  UWofes  for  bringing  them  thither  to  kill  them,  they 
were  more  afraid  then  hurt;  God  wifht  them  better  than  they 
dreamed  of;  his  intent  was  to  humble  them,that  he  might  do  them 
good  in  the  latter  end  :  So  fincere  is  God  to  his  people,  that  he 
gives  his  own  glory  in  hoifage  to  them  for  their  fecurity  ;   his 
own  robes  of  glory  are  lock't  up  in  their  profperity  and  falva- 
tion.-  he  will  rot,  indeed  he  cannot,  prefent  himfelf  in  all  ^is 

X  2  mas- 


156  Having  y  our  loyns 


magnificence,  and  royalty,  till  he  hath  made  up  his  intended 
thoughts  of  mercy  to  his  people  ;  he  is  pleafed  to  prorogue 
rhe  time  of  his  appearing  in  all  his  glory  to  the  \vorld,till  he  hath 
actually  accomplifh't  their  deliverance,  that  he  and  they  may 
come  forth  together  in  their  glory,  on  the  fame  day,  Tfal.  10  2. 
1 6.  When  the  Lord  (ball  build  up  Zion,he  jhall  appe.  r  in  hi*  glory. 
The  Sun  is  ever  glorious  in  the  mod  cloudy  day,  but  it  appears 
not  fo  till  it  hath  fcattered  the  clouds  that  muffle  it  up  from  the 
fight  of  the  lower  world  ;  God  is  glorious  when  the  world  fees 
him  not ;  but  his  declarative  glory  th.n  appears ,  when  the 
glory  of  his  mercy,  truth  and  faithfulnefle  break  forth  in  his 
peoples  falvation.  Now  what  (hame  mult  this  cover  thy  face 
witn,(0  Chrijlian)\t  thou  fhouldft  notfincerely  aim  at  thy  Gods 
glory,  who  loves  thee  ;  yea,  all  his  children  fo  dearly,  as  to  fhip 
his  own  glory  and  your  happineffe  in  one  bottom,  that  he  can- 
not now  lofe  the  one,  and  fave  the  other? 
[2",  Secondly,the  truth  and  fmcerity  of  God  to  his  people  appears 

in  the  opennefle  and  plainneffe  of  his  heart  to  them.  A  friend 
thatisclofe,  and  referv'd,  defervedly  comes  under  a  cloud  in 
the  thoughts  of  his  friend ;  but  he  who  cameras  it  were,  a  win- 
dow of  chryftal  in  his  breakthrough  which  his  friend  may  read, 
what  thoughts  are  writ  in  his  very  heart,  delivers  himfelf  from 
the  leaft  fufpition  of  unfaithfulnefle.  Truly  thus  open-hearted 
is  God  to  his  Saints. The  f  cret  of  the  Lord  is  upon  them  that  fear 
him.  He  gives  us  in  his  key,  that  will  let  us  into  his  very  heart, 
and  acquaint  us  what  his  thoughts  are  ;  yea,  were  towards  us , 
before  a  ftone  was  laid  in  the  worlds  foundation  ,  and  this  is 
no  other  than  his  Spirit,  I  C°r-  \-  one  ^t-o  knows  the  diepthwgs 
of  Cjod ;  for  he  was  at  the  coun'el  table  in  heaven,where  all  was 
tranft&ed :  this  his  Spirit  he  employed  to  put  forth  and  pub- 
lish in  the  Sa  iptu  re  ( indited  by  him  J  the  fubftance  of  thole  coun- 
fels  of  love,  which  had  part  between  the  Trinity  of  perfons  for 
our  falvation;  and  that  nothing  may  be  wanting  for  our  fatif- 
fa&ion,  he  hath  appointed  the  fame  holy  Spirit  to  abide  in  his 
Saints,  that  as  Chriit  in  beaven.prefents  our  defires  to  him,fo  he 
may  interpret  his  minde  out  of  his  Word  to  us ;  which  Word  an- 
fwers  the  heart  of  God ,  as  face  anfwers  face  in  the  glafle. 
There  is  nothing  deferable  in  a  true  friend,as  to  this  opennefs  of 
heart,but  God  performs  in  a  tranfeendent  manner  to  his  people; 

if 


girt  about  with  truth.  157 


if  any  dinger  hangs  over  their  heads,  he  cannot  conceal  it ;  by 
them  (faith  David)  is  thyfervar.t  w^rW>fpeaking  of  the  Word 
of  God;one  meffenger  or  other  God  will  fend  to  give  his  Saints 
the  alarum,  whether  their  danger  be  from  finne  within,  or  e- 
nemies  without.  He^ek'tah  was  in  danger  of  inward  pride,  God 
fends  a  temptation  to  let  him  know  what  was  in  Lis  heart,  that  he 
might  by  falling  once,  be  kept  from  falling  again.     Satan  had  a 
project  againtt  Peter,  Chritt  gives  him  notice  of  it,  Luke  22. 
If  any  of  his  children  by  finne  difeife  him,  he  doth  not  (as  falfe 
friends  ufe  )  diflemble  the  difpleafure  he  conceives,  and  carry  it 
fair  outwardly  with  them,  while  he  keeps  a  fecret  grudge  a- 
gainft  them  inwardly ;  no,  he  tells  them  roundly  of  ir,    and 
corrects  them  foundly  for  it ;   but  entertains  no  ill  will  againft 
them  ;  and  when  he  leads  his  people  into  an  afflicted  ftate,  he 
loves  them  fo,  that  he  cannot  leave  them  altogether  in  the  dark, 
concerning  the  thoughts  of  love  he  hath  to  them  in  delivering 
them;  but  to  comfort  them  in  the  prifon,  doth  open  his  heart 
before-hand  to  them,  as  we  fee  in  the  greatelt  calamities  that 
have  befallen  the  fewijk  Church  in  Egypt  md~BafyIon,as-alio  the 
Gofpel-Church  under  Antichrift.  The  promifes  for  the  deliver- 
ance out  of  all  thefe,  were  expreft  before  the  fufferings  came  : 
whenChrift  was  on  -earth,  how  free  and  open  was  he  to  his 
difciples,  both  in  telling!  them  what  calamities  fhould  betide 
them,  and  the  blefled  ifliie  of  them  ail,  when  he  fliould  come 
again  to  them.?  and  why ?   but  to  confirme  them  in  the  per- 
fwafion  of  thefincerity  of  his  heart  towards  them,   as  thofe 
words  import,  John  1 4.  If  it  were  not  fo,  I  would  haze  told  yon  : 
As  if  he  had  faid,  it  would  not  have  confifted  with  the  fincere 
love  I  bear  to  you,  to  hide  any  thing  that  is  fit  for  you  to 
know,  from  you,  or  make  them  otherwife  then  "they  are  ; 
and  when  he  doth  conceal  any  truths   from   them  for  the 
prefent,  fee  his  candour  and  (incerity,  opening  the  reafon  of  his 
vailing  them,  to  be  not  that  he  grurcht  them  the  communica- 
tion of  them,  but  becaufe  they  could  not  at  prefent  bear  them. 
Now  (  Chnftian  )  improve  all  this  to  make  thee  more  plain- 
hearted  with  God.     Is  he  fo  free  and  open  to  thee,and  wilt  thou 
be  referv'd  to  him  ?  Doth  thy  God  unbofome  his  minde  to 
thee,  and  wilt  not  thou  poure  out  all  thy  foul  to  him?  dareft 
thou  not  trult  him  with  thy  feciets,  that  makes  thee  privy  to 

his 


1 58  Having  your  loyns 


his  counfels  of  love  and  mercy?  In  a  word,  dared  thou^for 
fhame  go  about  to  harbour  and  hide  from  him  any  traicerous 
luft  in  thy  foul,  vvhofe  love  will  not  fuffer  him  to  conceal  any 
danger  from  thee?  God  who  is  lb  exact  and  true  to  the 
Law  of  frienduSip  with  his  people,  expe&s  the  like  ingenuity 
from  them. 

Thirdly  ,the  fincerity  of  Gods  heact  and  affection  to  his  people 
appears,  in  tha  unmoveablenefle  of  his  love.  As  there  is  no 
fhadow  of  turning  in  the  being  of  God,fo  not  in  the  love  of  God 
to  his  people;  there  is  no  vertical  point;  his  love  ftandsftill, 
like  the  Sun  in  Glbeahy  it  goes  not  down,  or  declines,  but  con- 
tinues in  its  full  ftrength,  £py  $4.7.  with  ever  la  fling  kjttdxe >Jfc 
will  I  haze  mercy  on  thee ^  faith  the  Lor -d,  thy  %jdeemer.  Sorry 
man  repents  of  his  love,  the  hotteft  affection  cools  in  hisbo- 
fome;  love  in  the  creature  i,s  like  fire  on  the  hearth,  now  blazing, 
anon  blinking,  and  going  out;  but  in  God,  like  fire  in  the  E- 
lement  that  never  fails.  In  the  creature,  'tis  like  water. in  a  Ri- 
ver, that  falls  and  rifeth  ;  but  in  God,like  water  in  the  Sea,  that  is 
always  full,  and  knows  no  ebbing  or  flowing.  Nothing  can 
take  off  his  love  where  he  hath  placed  it ;  it  can  neither  be 
corrupted  nor  conquered;  attempts  are  made  both  waves,  but  in 
vain. 

F/V#,- his  love  cannot  be  corrupted;  There  have  been  fuch, 
that  havedared  to  tempt  God,  and  court,  yea,  bribe  the  holy 
one  of  Ifrael  to  defert  and  come  off  from  his  people.  Thus 
Balaam  went  to  win  God  over  to  Balakj  fide  againft  Ifrael  ; 
'  which  to  obtain,  hefpared  no  coft,  but  built  Altar  after  Altar  , 
and  heaped  facrifice  upon  facrifice ;  yea,  what  would  they  not 
have  done  to  have  gain'd  but  a  word  or  two  out  of  Gods 
mouth  agajntt  his  people  ?  but  he  kept  true  to  them  ;  yea,  left 
a  brand  of  his  difpleafure  upon  that  Nation  for  hiring  Balaam^ 
and  fending  him  on  fuch  an  errand  to  God,  Dent.  33.4.  This 
paflage  we  finde  of  God  minding  his  people,to  continue  in  them 
a  p:rfwafion  of  his  fincere,ftedh(Uovetothem.cJT£  'c.ih  6.%. 
O  my  people  remember  what  Balak^  King  of  Moab  confnltedy  and 
what  Balaam  tke  fonneof  Beor  anfwered  h  m,  from  Sh, turn  unts 
$'/?al;  and  why  fhould  they  remember  this?  th.it ye  may 
kl'ow  the  rightco'ytfneffe  ef  the  Lord  ,  that  is,  that  you  may  know 
how  true  and  faithful  a  God  I  hive  been  to  you  •  Sometimes  he 

makes 


girt  about  with  truth.  \cq 


makes  ufe  of  it  to  provoke  them  to  be  fin  cere  to  him,  as  he  in 
that  prov'd  himfelf  to  them,  Jojh.  24.  9.  he  ceils  them  how 
Balai^  lent  Balaam  to  fet  God  a  curling  them,  but ,  faith  the 
Lord,/  would  not  hearken  to  him, but  made  him  that  came  to  curfe 
you  with  his  own  lips  entail  a  blefling  on  you  and  yours;  and  why 
is  this  ftory  mention'd  f  fee  ver.  14.  'How  therefore  fear e  the 
Lord,  and  ferve  him  in  fincerity  and  truth.  A  mod  natural  and 
reafonable  inference  from  the  premifes  of  Gods  truth  and  faith- 
fulnefife.  O  Chriftian,  would'ft  thou  have  thy  love  to  God  made 
incorruptible  ?  enbalme  it  often  in  thy  thoughts  with  the  fweec 
fpices  of  Gods  fincere  love  to  thee,which  is  immortal,  and  can- 
not fee  corruption.  Believe  God's  true  to  thee,  and  be  falfe  to 
him  if  thoudareft.  It  is  a  folgecifme  and  barbarifme  in  love,' 
to  return  falfenefle  for  faithfulnefle. 

Secondly,  the  love  of  God  to  his  Saints  cannot  be  conquered. 
That  which  puts  it  hardeft  to  it,  is  not  the  power  of  his  peoples 
enemies,  (  whether  men  or  divels, )  but  his  peoples  fins.     God 
makes  nothing  of  their  whole  power  and  wrath,  when  com- 
bined together ;  But  truly  the  finnes  of  his  people,  thefe  put 
omnipotency  it  felf  to  the  trial.    We  never  hear  God  groaning 
under,  or  complaining  of  the  power  of  his  enemies,  but  often 
fadly  of  his  peoples  finnes  and  unkindneffes;    thefe  load  him, 
thefe  break  his  heart,  and  make  him  cry  out  as  if  he  were  at  a 
Hand  in  his  thoughts,  ( to  ufe  a  humane  expreflion  )  and  found  it 
not  eafie  what  to  do,  whether  love  them,  or  leave  them;  vote 
for  their  life  or  death  ;  well,  whatever  expretfions  God  ufeth  to 
make  his  people  more  deeply  refent  their  unkindneflfes  (hewn  to 
him,  yetGodi>notatalofle  what  to  do  in  this  cafe  ;  his  love 
determines  his  thoughts  in  favour  of  his  covenant-people,  when 
their  carriage  leaftdeferves  it,  Hofea  11.  9.   The  Divel  thought 
he  had  enough  againd  fofhitah,  when  he  could  finde  fome  filth  2ech,  , 
on  his  garment  to  carry  this  in  a  rale,   and  tell  God  what  a 
dirty  cafe  his  childe  was  in;  he  made  juft  account  to  have  fet 
God  againft  him,  but  he  was  milUken  ;  for  inllead  of  provo- 
king him  to  wrath,  it  mov'd  him  to  pity ;  inftead  of  falling  out  . 
with  him,  hefindesChriftpraying'forhim.  Now  improve  this 
in  a  meditation,  Chriftian.  Is  the  love  of  God  fo  unconquerable, 
that  thy  very  finnes  cannot  break,  or  cut  the  knot  of  that  cove- 
nant which  ties  thee  to  him  ?  and  does  not  it  flume  thee  that 

thou 


160  Having  your  loyns 

thou  (houldft  be  fo  faft  and  loofe  with  him  ?  thou  fhouldeft 
labour  to  have  the  very  image  of  thy  heavenly  fathers  love 
more  clearly  ftampt  on  the  face  of  thy  love  to  him.  As  nothing 
can  conquer  his  love  to  thee,  fo  neither  let  any  thing  prejudice 
thy  love  to  him  ;  fay  to  thy  foul,  ihall  not  I  cleave  clofe  to 
God,  when  he  hides  his  face  from  me,  who  hath  not  call  me  off, 
when  I  have  finfully  turn'd  my  back  on  him  i  lhall  not  Lgive 
teftimony  to  his  truth,  and  name  ( though  others  defert  the  one, 
and  reproach  the  other)  who  hath  kept  love  burning  in  his  heart 
to  me,  when  I  have  been  difhououring  him?  what,  God  yet 
on  my  fide,  and  gracious  to  me  (after  fuch  backflidings  as  thefej 
and  fhall  1  again  grieve  his  Spirit ,  and  put  his  love  to  flume 
with  more  undutifulncfle  ?  God  forbid ,  this  were  to  do  my  ut- 
moft  to  make  Cod  acceflary  to  my  finne ,  by  making  his  love 
fevvel  for  it. 


SECT.    IV. 

Fourthly )  beware  of  prefumptuous  finnes;thefe  give  the  deep- 
eft  wound  tc  uprightnefle ,  yea  ,  are  ihconfirtentvYith  it, /*/<*/. 
I  p.1"  I  y.  K  ep  back^thy  fcrvant  from  preftmptuom  finne  s ,  let 
tl  em  not  have  dominion  over  me ;  then  (ball  I  be  upright.  One 
ftngle  a&  of  prefumption,is  incontinent  with  the  actual  exercife 
of  uprightneffe  ;  as  we  fee  in  David ,  who  by  that  one  foul  fin 
of  murther,  loft  the  prefent  ufe  of  uprightnefle,  and  was  in  that 
particular  too  like  one  of  the  fools  in  Jfraej, and  therefore  ftands 
as  the  only  exception  to  the  general  teftimony  which  God 
gave  unto  his  uprightnefle,  i  Kings  1  %.<$.  David  did  that  which 
was  r' git  in  the  tyes  of  the  Lord^nd  turn'd  net  a  fide  from  dny  thin? 
thzt  he  commanded  him  all  the  dayes  of  his  lifcy  faveonly  in  the 
matter  of  Uriah  the  Hittite.  That  is,there  was  no  fuch  preem- 
ption in  any  other  finne  committed  by  him  ,  and  therefore  they 
are  heredifcounred  fas  to  this)  that  they  did  not  make  fuch  a 
breach  on  his  uprightnefle,  as  this  one  finne  did.  And  as  one 
a&.of  a  fmne,prefumptuoirs,  is  inconfiftent  with  actual  upright- 
nefle ;  fo  habitual  uprightnefle  is  very  hardly  confiftent  with 
habitual  preemption;  if  one  a6t  of  a  prefumptuous  finne,  and 

as 


girt  about  with  truth.  \6i 


as  I  may  fo  fay,  one  lip  of  this  poyibnous  cup,  doth  fo  fadly 
infedt  the  fpirics  of  a  gracious  penon,  and  change  his  complexi- 
on, that  he  is  not  like  himfelf ;  how  deadly  mult  it  needs  be 
to  all  uprightnefle,  to  drink  from  day  to  day  in  it  ?  And  there* 
fore  as  D.miel  purpofed  in  his  I.  e art, that  he  would  not  defile  />*;#- Dan,  *S, 
[elf  with  the.  portion  of  the  Kings  meat,  fo  do  thou  daily  put  thy 
felf  under  fomefuch  holy  bond,  that  thou  wilt  not  defile  thy 
felf  with  any  prefumptuous  finne;  for  indeed  this  is  proper- 
ly the  Kings  w>eat,  I  mean  the  Divels,  (  that  Prince  of  dark- 
neflejwho  can  himfelf  commit  none  but  prefumptuous  fins,and 
chiefly  labours  to  defile  fouls  by  eating  of  thi;  his  difh;fay  as  Att- 
Jlm  in  another  c&teyerrare  pofium,H<t.re-^  u  cjfe  nolo,!  may  erre, 
but  I  am  refolv'd  not  to  be  an  Hereti'que.  I  may  have  many 
failings,  but  by  the  grace  of  God,  Tie  labour  that  I  be  not 
a  prefumptuous  finne  r ;  and  if  thou  wouldft  not  be  in  a  pre- 
fumptuous finne,  take  heed  thou  makeft  not  light  of  lefTe  infir- 
mities :  when  Davids  heart  fmote  him  for  rending  the  skirt  of 
Saul,  heftop't,andmade  a  happy  retreat,  his  tender  confcience 
giving  him  a  privy  check  for  rending  his  skirt,  would  not  fuf- 
fer  him  to  cut  his  throat,  and  take  away  his  life,which  was  better 
thanrayment:  But  at  another  time,  when  his  confcience  was 
more  heavy  eyed,  and  did  not  do  this  friendly  office  to  htm, 
but  let  him  fhoot  his  amorous  glances  after  Batifheb.>y  without 
giving  him  any  alarum  of  his  danger ;  the  good  man  (  like  one 
whole  fenfes  are  gone,  and  head  dizzy  at  the  firft  trip  upon  a 
Iteephill  )  could  not  recover  himfelf,  but  tumbled  from  one 
finne  to  another,  till  at  lalt  he  fell  into  the  deep  pit  of  murder. 
When  the  River  is  frozen,  a  man  will  venture  to  v  alk,  an  i  run 
where  he  durfl  not  let  his  foot,  if  the  yce  were  bu-  melted  or 
broke.  O  when  the  heart  of  a  godly  man  himfelf  is  fo  hardned 
that  he  can  {tend  on  an  infirmity  though  n.  :er  fo  little,  and  his 
confcience  no:  crack  under  him,  how  far  he  may  go  ?  I  tremble 
to  think  what  fin  he  may  fall  into. 


SECT. 


i 


i  $2  Having  y  our  Uyns 


SECT.  v. 

-  Fifthly,  get  above  the  love  and  fear  of  the  world.  The  Chri- 

ftians  fincerity  is  not  eclipft  without  theinterpoiition  of  the 
earth  betwixt  God  and  his  foul. 

Firfty  the  love  of  the  world,  this  is  a  fit  root  for  hypocrifie 
to  grow  upon ;  if  the  hearr  be  violently  fet  on  any  thing  the 
world  hath,  and  it  comes  to  vote  peremptorily  for  having  ir,  I 
muft  be  worth  fo  much  a  year,  have  fuch  honour ;  and  the  crea- 
ture begins  with  cAhab,  to  be  fick  with  longing  after  themjthen 
the  man  is  in  great  danger  to  take  the  firttill  counfel  that  Sa- 
tan or  the  flefh  gives  him  for  the  attaining  his  ends,  though  pre- 
judicial to  his  uprightneffe.  Hunters  mind  not  the  way  they  go 
in,  (  over  hedge  and  ditch  they  leap  )  fo  they  may  have  the 
hare. 

2*  It  is  a  wonder,  I  confefle,tbat  any  Saint  fhould  have  fo  ftrong 

a  fcent  after  the  creature,  that  hath  the  favour  of  Chrifts  oint- 
ments poured  into  his  bofome.  One  would  think  the  fweet  per- 
fume, which  comes  fo  hot  from  thofe  beds  of  fpices,  the  pro- 
tnifes  fhould  fpoil  theChriftians  hunting  game  after  the  creature, 
and  one  fcent  fhould  hinder  the  taking  in  the  other  -^  The  purer 
fweetnefles  that  breath  from  Chrift  and  heaven  in  them,  fhould 
fo  fill  the  Chriftians  fenfes ,  that  the  other  enjoyments  ('being 
of  a  more  grolfe  and  earthy  favour)  fhould  flnde  no  pleating  re- 
sentment in  bis  noftrils ;  which  indeed  is  moft  true  and  certain 
fo  long  as  the  Christian  hath  his  Spiritual  fenfes  open,  and  in 
exercife  :  But  alas,  as  upon  fome  cold  in  the  body,  the  head  is 
ftopt,  and  the  fenfes  bound  up  from  doing  their  office  ;  fo 
through  the  Chriltfans  negligence,  a  Spiritual  diliemper  is  eafily 
got,  whereby  thofe  fenfes  (graces  I  mean )  which  fhould  judge 
of  things,  are  fadly  obllructed,  and  now  when  the  Chrifiian 
is  not  in  temper  for  enjoying  thefe  purer  fvveetneffes ,  the  de- 
vil haTh  a  faire  advantage  of  ftarting  fome  crearure-en;oyment, 
and  presenting  it  before  the  Chrittian,which  the  flefh  foon  fcents 
and  carries  the  poor  Christian  after  it,  till  grace  comes  a  little 
to.its  temper,  and  then  he  gives  over  the  cha  e  with  flume  and 
forrovv. 


girt  about  with  truth.  165 


Secondly ,  get  above  the  tear  of  the  world.  The  tear  of  man 
bring?  a  filare.  A  coward  will  run  into  any  hole  (though  never 
fodiflionorable)  lb  he  may  fave  himielf  from  what  he  fears; 
and  when  the  hoiieft  are  under  the  power  of  this  temptation, 
they  are  too  like  other  men;  Abraham  in  a  pang  of  fear  dinem- 
bles  with  AbimcUch^  yea/P ear ,when  not  his  iiie,but  his  reputa- 
tion feem'd  to  be  in  a  little  danger,  did  not  '^doTo/V/V,  t»alk^ 
uprightly  according  to  the  truth  if  the  Gofpel ,  he  did  not  foot  it 
right,  as  became  io  holy  a  man  to  do,  but  took  one  ftep  forward, 
and  another  back  again,  as  if  he  had  not  iiked  his  way ;  now  he 
will  eat  with  the  Gentiles ,  and  anon  he  withdraws ;  now , 
what  made  him  diflernble ,  and  his  feet  thus  double  in  his  go- 
ing )  nothing  but  a  quahne  of  fear  that  came  over  his  heart,  as 
you  may  fee  Gal.  2.  12.  compared  with  verf.  14.  fearing  them 
which  were  of  the  circumci/ton,  dilTembled,  and  drew  others  in- 
to a  party  with  him. 


SECT.  VI- 

Sixthly,  andlafUy  ;  keep  a  drift  eye  over  thy  own  heart  in 
thy  daily  walking ;  hypocrihe  is  a  weed  with  which  the  beft 
foile  is  fo  tainted ,  that  it  needs  daily  care  and  drilling  to  keep 
it  under.  He  that  rides  on  a  ftumbler ,  had  need  have  his  eye 
on  his  way  ,  and  hand  on  his  bridle ;  fuch  is  thy  heart  ChaiUan, 
yea  it  oft  (tumbles  in  the  faireft  way,  when,  thou  leaftfeareftk; 
look  to  it  therefore,and  keep  a  drift  rein  over  it,-)  Q TDD-} 3 23 
above  all  keeping  ,  keep  thy  hearty  Prov.  4.  2j.  The  fervant 
keeps  his  way  when  he  travels  in  his  Meiers  company ,  but 
when  fent  of  an  errand  alone  ,  thenherpth  his  vagaries;  ma- 
ny a  wry  ftep  may  be  prevented,  and  extravagancy  in  thy 
daily  walking  ,  didft  th  \i  walk  in  company  with  thy 
felfe  (  I  mean  obferve  thy  felfe  and  way)  .In  this  fenfe, 
moft  in  the  world  arebehdes  rhemfelves,  Grangers  to  their 
own  walking,  as  much  as  to  their  own  faces ;  every  one  that 
lives  with  them,  knows  them  better  then  the mfelves, which  is  a 
horwble  (hame.    And  let  not  fo  vaine  an  opinion  finde  place 

Y  2  with 


1 64  Having  your  loyns 


with  thee ,  that,becaufe  fincere,  thou  needft  not  keep  fo  i\iiSt 
an  eye  over  thy  heart ;  at  if  thy  heart  which  is  gracious ,  could 
not  play  falfe  with  God  and  thee  too ;  doth  not  Solomon  brand 
him  on  the  fore -head  for  a  foole  ,  that  trufts  their  own  heart? 
if  thou  beeft,  as  thou  fayeft,  fincere,  I  cannot  believe  felf-love 
fhould  fo  farprevaile  with  thee;  they  are  the  ignorant  and 
profane  whofe  hearts  are  ftark  naught ,  that  cry  them  up  for 
|jood  :  But  it  is  one  part  of  the  goodnefle  of  a  heart  made 
truly  good  by  grace,  to  fee  more  into,  and  complain  more  of 
its  own  naughtinefle.  Bring  thy  heart  therefore  often  upon 
the  review,  and  take  its  accounts  folemnly ;  he  takes  the  way 
to  make  his  fervant  a  thief ,  that  doth  not  ask  him  now  and  then  • 
what  money  he  hath  in  his  hand.  I  read  indeed  of  fome  in 
good  ftkeidda's  d?.yes  that  were  trufted  with  the  money  for  the 
repai  of  the  temple ,  with  wh»m  they  did  not  fo  much  as  rec- 
kon how  they  laid  it  out;  for  they  dealt  faithfully,  2  Kings  12. 
it.  but  thou  had'rt  not  beft  to  do  fo  with  thy  heart,  left  it 
fet  thee  on  fcore  with  God ,  and  thy  own  confcience  more 
than  thou  wilt  get  wiped  out  in  haft.  Many  talents  God  puts 
into  thy  hand ,  Health  ,  Liberty,  Sabbaths,  Ordinances,  com- 
munion of  Saints  and  the  like,  for  the  repair  of  thyfpiritual 
Temple ,  the  work  of  grace  in  thee ;  ask  now  thy  foul ,  how 
every  one  of  thefe  are  laid  out ;  may  be  thou  wilt  finde  fome 
of  this  money  fpent ,  and  the  work  never  a  whit  the  more  for- 
ward :  It  tfands  thee  in  hand  to  look  to  it,  for  God  will  have  an 
account,  though  thou  arc  fo  favourable  to  thy  deceitfol  heart  tq 
call  for  none, 


H;  a  p 


girt  about  with  truth. 


CHAP.     XV. 

Connfel  and  comfort  to  thofe  who  are  flncere , 
but  drooping  doubting  fouls  ;  who  neither  are 
condemned  abfolutely  in  their  consciences  for 
hypocrite sy  mr  fully  abfolvd  from  the  fufpiti-. 
en  of  it  in  their  own  thoughts. 


WE  have  done  with  the  fecond  fort  of  perfons ;  Thofe, 
who  upon  fearch  finde  their  confciences  bearing  witnefs 
for  their  uprightnefle. 

There  is  a  third  fort  remains  yet  to  be  fpoken  to , .  and  they 
are  doubting  fouls,  who  are  indeed  fincere,  but  dare  not  be  per- 
fwaded  to  think  fo  well  of  themfelves.  They  come  from  the 
trial  which  they  were  defired  to  put  themfelves  upon,  and  bring 
in  an  ignoramus^  we  know  not  whether  we  be  fincere  or  no. 
Nowtothefe  I  would  give  thefe  words  of  counfel ,  and  the. 
lord  give  his  bleflmg  with  them. 


'65 


SECT.  I. 

Take  heed  Satan  doth  not  draw  you  to  conclude  you  are 
hypocrites,  becaufe  you  are  without  the  prefent  evidence  of 
your  fincerky.  Tofayfo,  were  to  offend  againft  the  genera- 
tion of  Cods  dear  children,  many  of  whom  mult  (it  this 
were  a  true  inference  from  fuchpremifes  )  pafle  the  fame  fen- 
tence  upon  themfelves ;  for  fuch  precious  fouls  there  u;e,from 

Y  3  whofe 


c. 


1 56  Having  your  loyns 


whole  eyes  the  trmh  of  their  grace,  and  hncerity  of  their 
hearts  is  at  this  day  hid ,  and  yet  are  not  widiojt  either. 
The  P  triarcks  had  their  money  all  day  bound  up  in  their  lacks 
as  they  travelled ,  thotgh  they  did  not  know  this,  till  they 
came  to  their  Inns  and  orieii'd  them.  Thus  there  is  a  treafure 
of  fincerity  hid  in  many  a  foul,  but  the  time  to  open  the  fuck,and 
let  the  foul  know  its  riches  is  not  come.  Many  are  now  in  hea- 
ven, have  fhot  the  gulf,  and  are  fafely  landed  there,  who  were 
fadly  toft  with  fears  all  along  their  voyage  about  the  truth  of 
grace  in  them  ;  faith  unfaigned  puts  a  foul  into  the  Ark  Chrift  ; 
but  it  doth  not  hinder  but  fuch  a  one  may  be  Sea-fak  in  the 
Ship  ;  'tis  Chrifts  work,  not  graces,  to  evidence  it  felf  to  our 
eye  fodemonltratively  as  to  enable  us  to  own  it.  Befides,  an 
organ  fitly  difpofed,there  is  required  a  light  to  irradiate  the  mt- 
d'lum  ;  fo  befides  truth  of  grace,  it  is  necetfary  there  bethefpiric 
being  another  light,  for  want  of  which  the  foul  is  benu  hted  in 
its  thoughts,  andmuft  cry  for  another,  and  he  no  other  then 
the  holy  Spirit  to  lead  him  into  the  light.  This  is  the  great 
mefienger  which  alone  is  able  tojheiv  a  man  his  uprightnefi-,  but 
as  rhe  eye  may  be  a  feeing  eye  in  the  dark,when  it  doth  nor  fee  a- 
ny  thing ;  Co  there  may  be  truth  of  grace,  where  there  is  not  pre- 
fent fenle  of  th.it  truth;  yea,  the  creature  may  be  pallionately 
hunting  from  Ordinance  to  Ordinance,  to  get  that  uncericy 
whtch  it  already  hath;  as  fonnetimes  you  may  have  feen.  one  feek 
very  earneftly  all  about  the  houfe  for  his  hat,  when  at  the  fame 
:  time  he  hath  it  on  his  head  ;  well,  lay  down  this  as  a  real. truth  in 
thy  foul;I  may  be  upright,though  at  prefent  I  am  not  able  to  fee 
it  clearly  ;  This,  though  it  will  not  bring  in  a  full  co:nfo:r,yec 
it  may  be  fome  fupport  till  that  come;  as  a  lliore  to  thy  weak 
hor.fi,  though  it  does  not  mend  it,  yet  it  will  underprop 
and  keep  it  {landing  till  the  maiter-work-man  comes,  the  holy 
Spirit^  whowith  one  kinde  word  to  thy  foul,  is  able  to  fet  thee 
right  in  thy  own  thoughts,  and  make  thee  {land  lirong  en  the 
promise,  the  onely  true  bafis  and  foundation  of  folid  coiM'brr. 
B'  nor  more  cruel  to  thy  foul  (O  Ch-rift'ian)  then  thou  wo  1  [eft 
to  i  /  friends',  ( lliall  I  fay)  yea,thy  enemies  body  ;  fhoulu  ne, 
thou  didtt  not  much  love,  lie  fick  in  thy  houfe,  yea,  fo  fick  thit 
if  you  fhouldask  him  whether  he  be  alive,  he  could  not  tell  you 
(  his  fenfes  and  fpeech  being  both  at  prefent  gone)  would  you 

pre- 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  6 


prefently  lay  him  out ,  and  Coffin  him  up  for  the  grave,  be- 
caufe  you  cannot  have  it  from  his  own  mouth,  that  he  is  alive  ? 
Surely  nor.  O  how  unreasonable  and  bloody  then  is  Satan,  who 
would  prefently  have  thee  put  thy  felf  into  the  pit-hole  of 
defpaire,  becaufe  thy  grace  is  not  fo  ftrong  as  to  fpeak  for  it 
felf  at  prefent  ? 


SECT.  TV 


Let  me  fend  thee  back  upon  a  melius  inquirendum-,  look  once 
again  more  narrowly ,  whether  Satan,  that  JoaI?,  hath  not  the 
great  hand  in  thefe  queftions  and  fcruples  ftarted  in  thy  bo- 
fome  about  thy  (incerity,  meerly  as  his  laft  defigne  upon  thee, 
that  he  may  amufe  and  diftrait  thee  with  falfe  fears,  when  thou 
wilt  not  be  flatter'd  with  fa Ife  hopes  f    The  time  was    thou 
wert  really  worfe,  and  then  by  his  means  thou  thought'!*  thy 
felf  better  than  thou  wert.    And  now  fince  thou  hart  chain'd 
thy  way ,  difown'd  thy  former  confidence,  been  acquainted  with 
Chrift ,  and  got  fome  favour  of  his  holy  ways  in  thy  fpi  ric,  fo  as 
to  make  thee  ftrongly  breath  after  them ,  thou  art  affrighted 
with  many  apparitions  of  fears  in  thy   fad  thoughts,    if  not 
charging  thee  for  a  hypocrite,yet  calling  in  queftion  the  truth  of 
thy  heart.     Tis  worth  (I  fay)  the  enquiring,  whether  it  be  not 
the  fame  hand  againe ,  the  Devil,  though  knocking  at  another 
door-  no  player  hath  fo  many  feveral  drefles  to  come  in  upon 
the  ftage ,  as  the  Devil  hath  formes  of  temptation,  and  this  is  a 
fait  which  he  very  ordinarily  hath  been  known  to  wear :  if  it 
were  thy  cafe  only,  thou  mi^ht'ft  have  more  fufpitibn ,  left 
thefe  fears  fhoul  be  the  juft  rebukes  of  thine  own  faJfe  heart ; 
but  when  thou  findeft  many  of  thy  fellow-brethren  (whofe  fin- 
ceritythou  dareft  not  doubt ,  though  thou  faveft  not  fo  much  . 
charity  for  thy  felf  J  their  complaints  fo  meet  with  thine,  that 
no  key  (though  made  on  purpofe)  can  more  fit  all  the  wards  of 
a  lock,than  'heir  condition  doth  thine;this  I  fay  may  well  make 
thee  fet  about  another  fearch  to  finde  whether  he  be  not 
come  forth  a  lyin^  fpirit,  to  abufe  thy  tender  fpirit  with  fucfr 
news,  as  he  knows  worfe  cannot  come  to  thy  ears ,  that  thou  ; 

doeft 


,  58  Having  your  loyns 


doeitnoc  love  Jeius  Chrilt  as  thou  pretendeft  ;   and  deceiveft 
but  thy  felf  to  think  otherwiie  ;  Thus  this  foul  l -iric  ( like  a 
brazen-fac'd  whore  that  lays  tier   childe  at  an  honeltperfons 
door)  doth  impudently  charge  many  with  that  which  they  are 
little  guilty  of,  knowing  that  lb  much  will  likely  (lick  of  his  bold 
accufation  ,  to  the  poor  Chriilianslpirit , as  iliall  keep  the  door 
open  to  let  in  another  temptation  which  he  much  delires  to  con- 
veigh  into  his  bofoine  by  the  favour,  and  under  the  fhadow  of 
this,  and  it  is  ordinarily  this ;  To  fcare  the  Chritiian  from  du- 
ty ,and  knock  off  the  wheels  of  his  chariot,  which  ufed  fo  often 
to  carry  him  into  the  prefence  of  God  in  his  Ordinances,  meer- 
ly  upon  a  fufpition  that  he  is  not  fincere  in  them,  and  better 
ftay  at  home  without  hearing,  or  joyning  with  Gods  people  in 
any  other  duty,  than  go  up  and  l"hew  the  naughtinefle  of  thy 
heart,  faith  the  Divel.     Had  the  Serpent  a  fmoother  skin,  and 
a  fairer  tale  when  he  made  Eve  put  forth  her  hand  to  the  for^ 
bidden  fruit,  than  he  comes  with  in  this  temptation,to  perfwade 
the  poor  Ch rift ian  not  to  touch,  or  tafte  of  that  fruit  which 
God  hath  commanded  to  be  eaten ;  Ordinances  I  mean  to  be  en- 
joyed by  thee  ?  yzi(Chrijlian)  thou  haft  reafon  fif  I  miftake 
not )  to  blelle  God,  if  he    fuffers  thy  enemy  fo  far  to  open  his 
minde,  by  which  thou  mayeft  have  feme  light  to  difcover  the 
wick^dneile  of  his  defign,  in  the  orner  temptation  of  question- 
ing thy  fincerity.     Doll  thou  not  now  perceive  poor  foul,what 
made  the  loud  cry  of  thy  hypocriiie  in  thy  fears  ?  the  Divel  did 
not  like  to  fee  thee  fo  buiie  with  Ordinances,  nor  thy  acquaint- 
ance to  grow  fo  faft  with  God  in  them  ;  and  he  Anew  no  way 
but  this  to  knock  thee  off.    Bite  at  his  other  baits  thou  wouldft 
not ;  Hnne,  though  never  fo  well  cook't  and  garnilVt ,  is  not  a 
difti  for  thy  tooth,(he  fees)  and  therefore  either  he  muftafright 
thee  from  thefe  by  troubling  thy  imagination  with  fears  of  thy 
hypocrifie  in  them  ,   or  elfe  he  may  throw  his  cap  at  thee,and 
give  thee  for  one  got  out  of  his  reach;    doft  thou  think  poor 
foul,  that  if  thy  heart  were  fo  falfe  and  hypocritical  in  thy 
duties,  that  he  would  make  all  this  buile  about   them  ?    He 
doth  not  ufe  to  mifplace  his  batteries  thus ,  to  mount  them, 
where  there  is  no  enemy  to  offend  him  ,   thy  hypocritical  pray- 
ers and  hearing  would  hurt  him  no  more,  than  if  none  at  all. 
Neither  doth  he  ufe  to  be  fokinde,  as  to  tell  hypocrites  of  the 

falfe- 


girt  about  with  truth.  1 6^ 

falfenefleof  their  hearts,  this  is  the  chaine  with  which  he  harh 
them  by  the  foot,  and  'tis  his  great  care  to  hide  it  from  rherri, 
lelt  the  ratling  of  it  in  their  confcience  awaken  them  to  one 
endeavour  to  knock  it  off,  and  lb  they  make  an  efcape  out  of 
his  prilbn.  Be  therefore  of  good  comfort  (  poor  foul  )  if  thy 
confcience  brings  not  Scripture  proof  to  condemn  thee  for  an 
hypocrite  ,  fear  not  the  Divels  charge  ;  he  ihall  not  b*  on 
the  Bench  when  thou  comefko  be  tried  for  the  life  ;  nor  his  te- 
ftimony  of  any  value  at  that  day;  why  then  lhould  his  tongue  be 
any  (lander  to  thee  now  > 


SECT.     III. 

Neglect  no  means  for  the  getting  thy  truth  of  heart  and  fin-  , 

cerity  evidenced  to  thee ;  it  is  to  be  had.  This  is  the  white  /tone 
with  the  r,eiv  nan.e  in  it, which  no  map  knoneth  but  t.e  that  receives 
it,  promifed,  Rev.  2.  17.     And  I  hope  thou  doft  not  think 
this  to  be  fuch  an  ens  rations,  an  imaginary  things  as  the  Phi- 
lofophers  ftoneis,  which  none  could  ever  fay  to  this  day,  that  he 
had  it  in  his  hand.     Holy  Paul  he  had  this  white  (tone  fparkilng 
in  his  confcience  more  glorionfly  than  all  the  precious  Hones 
in  cAarons  breft-plate.   2  Cor.  1.  12.  Our  njoycing  is  this,  the 
teflimony  ofourconfc  e;  c,  that  in  fm^l  city  and  godly  Jincerity  we 
have  had  our  converftt'on  in  the  world.     And  Job  ( fure)  was 
not  without  itjwhen  he  durft  with  fuch  a  confidence  appeal  to  the 
thoughts  that  .God  himfelf  had  of  him;  even  then  when  God 
was  ranfaking  and  fearching  every  corner  of  his  heart  by  his 
heavy  hand,  fob.  10.7.    11  on  knowefi  that  1  am  not   wicked ; 
mark,he  doth  nor  deny  he  had  fin  in  him,that  you  have  again  and 
again  confeflfed  by  him  ;  but  he  was  not  wcl^d,  i.  e.  a  rotten- 
hearted  hypocrite  ;  This  he  will  ftand  to,  that  God  himfelf  will 
not  fay  fo  of  him ;  though  (  for  his  trial  )  the  Lord  gives  way 
to  have  him  fearch't  to  l\op  the  Divels  mouth,  and  flume  him, 
who  was  not  afraid  to  lay  fufpition  of  this  fpiritual  felony  to  his* 
charge. 

Obyett.  But  may  be  thou  wilt  fay,thefe  were  Saints  of  the  high-        obi. 
eft  form^nd  though  they  might  come  to  fee  their  fincerity, 

Z  and 


i  jo  Raving  your  loyns 


and  have  this  white  floi.e  in  their  bofom-S;    yet    fuch  Jew- 
els cannot  be  expected  to   be  worue  by    ordinary    Chrifti- 
ans. 
Anfv  ts4',;frv.  For  anfwer  to  this,conlider  that  the  weakeft  Chriftian 

in  Gods  family  bath  the  fame  witnefie  in  him  that  thofe  had, 
I  John  j.lo.He  that  bcieveth  on  the  Sonus  of  <j od  hath  the  wit- 
nejfe  in  him.  Mark,  'tis  indefinite,  ?  1^/7  o*e  that  bclleveth\  not 
rhiseminent  Chriftian,  or  that,  but  everyone.  Tie  witnejfe , 
the  fame  Grift  and  Spirit  dwell  in  thy  heart,  that  do  in  the 
hi^heft  Saint  on  earth  ;  the  fame  blood  thou  haft  to  fprinkie,  and 
the  lame  water  to  wafli  thee ;  thefe  can,  and  will  (  when 
the  Lord  pleafes  )  teftifie  as  much  for  thy  grace  and  (incerity  as 
it  doth  for  theirs.  Only  as  witneffes  that  are  in  a  Court,  ftay 
till  the  Jud^e  call  them  forth  ;  th^n,  and  not  till  then,  do  they 
give  their  teftimony ;  fo  do  thefe,  and  God  may,  and  doth  ufe 
his  liberty,  when  he  will  do  this ;  as  on  the  contrary ,  every 
wicked,  impenitent  finner  carries  a  wirnefle  in  his  own  bofome 
that  will  condemn  him;  but  this  doth  not  alwayes  fpeak,  and 
prefently  make  report  of  the  fad  news  k  hath  to  tell  the  finner, 
that  is,  when  Gdtf  calls  a  Court,  and  keeps  his  private  Seffions 
in  the  finners  foul,  which  is  at  his  pleafure  to  appoint  the 
time.  Only  means  rauft  not  be  negIe&ed,of  which  I  fhall  pro- 
pofe  a  few. 

1.  Reach  forth  Chriftian  (forfuchlmuft  call  thee,  whether 
thou  wilt  own  the  name  or  no  J  to  further  degrees  of  grace.  The 
more  the  childe  grows  up,  the  more  it  coiies  to  its  right  com- 
plexion, and  fo  doth  grace.  There  is  fo  much  flavilh  fear , 
felfifhneiTe,  with  other  imperfections  at  prefent  (  like  fo  much 
fcurf)  on  the  face  of  this  new  born  babe  of  grace,  that  they 
do  hide  its  true  favour,  which  by  degrees  will  weir  off  as  ic 
grows  up;  yeaj  thefpiritual  reafon  of  a  Chriftian  ripens,  as 
the  whole  body  of  grace  grows,  whereby  he  is  more  capable,by 
iefle£lingo:-i  his  own  action^  to  judge  of  the  objections  Satan 
makes  again'}  his  finceriry  ;  fo  that  if  you  would  not  be  always 
toffcd  co  and  fro  with  your  own  fluctuating  thoughts ,  whether 
hncere  or  not;  be  not  alwaye?  children  in  grace.,  but  grow  up 
to  hLher  llacure,  and  thou  wilt  grow  above  many  of  thy  fears; 
for,by  the  fame  light  that  thou  findeft  the  growth  of  thy  grace, 
thou  mayeft  fee  the  truth. of  ic  alfo.    Though  it  be  hard  in 

the 


1. 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  7 1 


the  crepttfc#/xm  ,  or  firft  break  of  day  ,  to  know  whetheiitbe 
day-light  or  night-light  that  (Lines ;  yet  when  you  fee  the  light 
evidently  grow  and  unfold  it  felf,  you  by  that  know  it  to  be  - 
day.  Paint  doth  not  grow  on  the  face  fairer  then  it  was ,  nor 
do  the  armes  of  a  childe  in  a  picture  get  ftrength  by  (landing 
there  monethsand  years ;  does  thy  love,  hope,  humility,  gojly 
forrow  grow  more  and  more  (poor  foul)  and  yet  quertion  what 
it  is,  whether  true  grace  or  not  ?  this  is  as  marvellous  a  thing , 
that  thou  ftiould'ft  not  know  what  thy  grace  is ,  and  whence , 
as  it  was  that  the  J  ewes  (hould  not  know,  who  Chriil 
was ,  when  he  had  made  a  man  borne  blinde  fee  fo  cleer- 
ly  John  9. 

2.  Readily  embrace  any  call  that  God  fends  thee  by  his  2. 
providence  for  giving  a  proof  and  experiment  of  thy  fincericy. 
There  are  fomefew  advantages  that  God  gives,  which  if  embra- 
ced and  improved  ,  a  man  may  come  to  know  more  his  own 
heart,  and  the  grace  of  God  therein,  than  in  all  his  life  be- 
fides.  Now  thefe  advantages  do  lie  wrapt  up  in  thofe  feafons, 
wherein  God  more  eminently  calls  us  forth  to  deny  our  felves 
for  his  fake.  Be  but  ready  to  entertaine  ,  and  faithful  to  obey 
that  heavenly  call,  and  thou  wilt  know  much  of  thy  hearr. 
Partly,  becaufe  grace  in  fuch  a&s  comes  forth  with  fuch  glory  , 
that  (as  the  Sunne  when  it  fhines  in  a  clear  day  J  it  expofeth 
it  felfe  more  viiibly  to  the  eye  of  the  creature ,  as  alfo  becaufe 
God  choofeth  fuch  feafons  as  thefe  for  to  give  his  teftimony  to 
the  truth  of  his  childrens  grace  in,when  they  are  moll  eminent- 
ly exercfiing  of  it  in  this  way."W  hen  does  the  mafter  fpeak  kindly 
to  his  fervant,  and  commend  him,  but  when  he  takes  him  moft 
diligent  in  it  ?  then  he  faith,  Well  done  good  and  faithful  fervant. 
May  be  fometime  or  other,  God  is  calling  thee  to  fuch  an  ait  of 
felf-denial,  wherein  ( if  thou  wilt  anfwer  Gods  call)  thou  muft 
trample  upon  fome  dear  enjoyment  or  other,  as  credit,  eftate, 
may  be  a  fvveet  childe ,  a  dear  wife  ,  yea,  may  be  thou  canft  not 
do  the  work  God  calls  thee  to,but  with  hazard  to  them  all,rhefe 
and  more  too.  Well  friend,  be  not  fick  to  think  of  thy  great 
ftrei^ht,  or  diiquieted  at  the  fight  of  his  providence ,  that  now 
(lands  at  thy  door ;  didti  thou  know  what  errand  it  comes  a- 
bout,  thou  wouldft  invite  it  in,  and  make  it  as  welcome  as  A- 
braham  did  the  three  Angels ,  whom  he  featled  in  his  tent  fo 

Z  2  freely. 


7 1  Having  y  our  leyns 

freely  .He  tell  thee  what  God  fends  it  for;  and  that  is,  to  bring 
rhee  to  a  fight  of  thy  fincerity ,  and  acquaint  thee  with  that 
grace  of  God  in  thee ,  whofe  face  thou  haft  fo  long  defired  to 
iee.  This  providence  brings  thee  a  chariot  (to  allude  to  fofephs 
waggons  fent  for  old  Jacob)  wherein  thou  mayett  be  carried  to 
fee  that  grace  alive,  whofe  funeral  thou  haft  fo  long  kept  in 
thy  mournful  foul ,  and  does  not  thy  fpirit  : revive  at  the 
thought  of  any  means  whereby  thou  mayeft  obtains  this?  *A- 
braham ,  he  was  call'd  to  offer  up  his  fonne  ,  and  went  about  it 
in  earneft  ;  fuch  a  piece  of  felf-denial  God  could  nor  let  paffe 
without  forr.e  mark  of  honour ;  and  what  is  it  he  gives  him , 
but  his  teftimony  to  his  uprightnefle  ?  Gen.  22. 12.  hay  not  thy 
hand  tip on  the  lad,  for  now  I  know  thon  fear  eft  wf,  feeing  tl.ot*  haft 
not  withheld thy  fonne ,  thy  onely  fonne ,  from  me.  Why?  God 
knew  this  before;  yes,  but  he  fpeaks  it  that  Abraham  may  hear, 
and  take  it  from  Gods  mouth' that  he  was  fincere.  May  be  thou 
art  called  to  deny  thy  own  education  and  principles  fuckt  in  by 
it;  thy  own  company;  croffe  the  judgement  of  thofe  thou  highly 
efteemeft;  yea  thy  own  wiiciome  and  reafon  to  entertain  a  truth, 
or  take  up  a  practice  meerly  upon  the  account  of  the  Word^which 
if  thou  canfi  do,  and  that  without  aftetoion  of  Angularity,  or 
an  humor  of  pride  blowing  thee  that  way,  tis  an  a&  of  deep  felf- 
denial,and  goes  moft  croife  to  the  molt  ingenuous  natures,  who 
are  afraid  of  drawing  eyes  after  them,  by  leaving  their  company 
to  walk  in  a  path  alone,  yea  very  loth  ro  oppofe  their  judge- 
ment to  others ,  more  for  number  and  parts  then  their  own  ; 
in  a  word,  who  love  peace  fo  dearly,  that  they  can  be  willing  to 
pay  any  thing  but  a  finne  to  purchafe  it ;  in  thefe  ir  mull  needs 
be  great  felf-denial ,  and  therefore  fuch  have  the  greater  ground 
to  expect  Gods  evidencing  thei  r  fincerity  to  them.  He  did  it 
to  Nathaniel ,  who  had  all  thefe  bars  to  keep  him  from  cor  ng 
toChrift,  and  believing  on  him  ;  yet  he  did  both,  andCnrift 
welcomes  him  with  a  high  and  loud  tefthiony  to  his  up<  ightnefs; 
Behold  an  lfraelite  indeed,  in  whm  tie  e  is  #0  guile  ^  joh.T.47. 
May  be  again  ;  The  thing,God  would  have  chee.deny  thy  feL?in,. 
is  thy  wrarh  and  revenge,which  to  give  thee  a  fair  occafion  to  do- 
with  the  greater  demomiration  of  thy  fincerity ,  he  puts  thy 
enenyinto  thy  power,  and  lays  hi  m  boun  \  -sit  were  unde'"  thy 
hand;  yea,fo  ocders  i:  in  his  providence,  th  it  thou  mayeft  have 

U  tny 


girt  about  with  truth.  1 7  3 

thy  will  on  him  with  little  noife ,  or  if  it  be  known,  yet  the  no- 
torious wrongs  he  hath  done  thee,  and  lome  circumi  tances  nV 
the  providence  that  hath  brought  him  into  thy  hand,  concur  to 
give  thee  an  advantage  of  putting  fo  handfome  a  colour  upon 
the  bufinefie  , .  as  thall  apologize  for  thee  in  the  thoughts  of 
thofe  that  hear  of  it,  making  them  efpecially,  f  who  look 
not  narrowly  into  the  mattery1  rather  obferve  thejuftice  of 
God  on  thy  enemies  judgemenr  befallen  him, than  thy  injuftice, 
and  fin,who  wert  the  inilrument  to  execute  it.  Now,  when.the 
way  lies  fmooth  and  faire  for  thee  to  walk  in,  and  thy  own 
corruption  calls  thee  forth,  yea  ufeth  Gods  Name  in  the  matter, 
to  make  thee  more  confident,  faying  to  thee,  as  they  to  David , 
1  Sam.  -4*  Behold  the  day  is  come  wher  eln  God  hath  delivered,  thy 
enemy  into  thy  hand ,  that  thou mayrfldo  to  him  as  fe.  meth good  in 
t  him  eyes'.  Now,  if  thou  can  ft  with-ftand  the  temptation,  and 
inftead  of  avenging  thy  felf  upon  the  perfon,chy  ene  t  y, revenge 
thy  felf  on  thy  revenge  (thy  greater  enemy  of  the  two  )  by  pay- 
ing good  into  thy  adverfaries  bofome  fot  the  evil  he  hath  dons 
thee ;  and  when  thou  haft  done  this,  canft  'fcape  another  ene- 
my in  thy  return  (1  mean  pride)  fo  as  to  come  out  of  the  field 
an  humble  con<]uerour,  and  confecrate  the  memorial  of  this  vi- 
ctory,not  to  thy  own,but  praifeof  GodsName(as  Goliahs  fword* 
which  wa^,  xiot  kept  by  David  at  his  own  home  f  to  fhew  what  he 
had  done,but  in  the  tabernacle  behind  theEphod,as  a  memorial  of 
what  God  had  done  by  it  in  Davids  hand)  Thou  haft  done  that 
which  fpeaks  thee  fincere,  yea  high  graduate  in  this  grace,  and  lSam.  zi»9« 
God  will  fooner  or  latter  let  thee  know  fo.  Davids  fame  founds 
not  loader  for  his  victories  got  in  the  open  field ,  over  hi<:  flain 
enemies,  than  it  doth  for  that  he  got  in  the  cave  (though  an  ob- 
fcurehole)  over  his  own  revenge,  in  fearing  the  life  of  Sanly 
fin  which  you  have  the  cafe  in  hand  every  way  fitted  .)By  the  re- 
nown of  his  bloody  battels,  he  got  a  gre.it  name,  like  unto  the 
,namc  of  the  grert  men  tbai'are in  the  earthy  2  Sam. 7.9.  But  by 
thi->  noble  ait  of  his  felt-denial ,  he  got  a  name,  °rear,  like  unto 
the  name  of  thofe  that  are  famed  for  their  holine^  in  the  Scri- 
pture ;  and  rather  then  (David  fhall  not  have  the  commendati- 
on of  this  piece  of  felf-denial,  God  will  fend  it  to  him  in  the 
mouth  of  his  very  enemy ,  v/ho  cannot  hoi  I  'though  by  it  he 
proclaimes  his  own  ihame  andwickednefle)  but  he  muft  jufti- 
ne  him  as  a  holy  righteous  man,  1  Sam.  24. 1 7.  zArd  t:e  (that 

Z,  3 


k-A  Having  your  lops 


is  Saul)  [aid  unto  David,   thou   art    tnore    righteous  then   /, 
for  thou  haft  rewarded  me  good ,  whereas  I  have  rewarded  thte 

evil. 

3,  Continue  thou  to  wait  upon  God  in  all  the  wayesof  his 
Ordinances,  every  one  in  their  ieafon  ;  when  ever  thou  comefl 
to  get  the  comfortable  fi°ht  of  thy  fincerity ,  it  is  the  Spirit  of 
God  that  muft  befriend  thee  in  it,  or  elfe  ,  like  Ha  gar  ,  thou 
mayeft  fit  by  the  well  and  not  find  it ;  thou  mayeft  round  thy 
field  again  and  againe,  but  not  finde  the  treafure  hid  in  ir.   Ic  is 
the  Spirit  of  God  by  which  we  know  the  things  that  are  freely 
given  us  of  Gody  iCor. 2.  i*.  Nowthe J/>r/V  iitsinthe  Ordi- 
nances fas  a  CMinifler  of  flute  in  his  offc  -)  whether  we  muft  re- 
fort ,  ifvve  will  have  the  truth  of  our  graces  ("chat  are  our  evi- 
dences for  heaven)  fealed  to  our  confeience;.  Thither  go  there- 
fore, yea,  there  wait;  for  thou  knowefl  not  (as  the  Wife  man 
faith  of  fowing  feed,  Scclef.  \,U%)  whether  thy  waiting  on 
this  or  that,  now  or  then,  fhall  profper  and  be  fuccefleful  to  thee 
for  this  end.    It  is  enough  to  confirm  ,  yea,  quiet  and  comfort 
thee  in  thy  attendance,  that  thou  art  at  the  right  door,  and 
though  thou  knocked  long  &  heareft  no  news  of  his  coining,  yet 
Judo,  j  i<       tnou  can^  noc  *-av  f°  long(like  Eglom  ferva»ts)th*t  thou  need 'It 
be  afriamed.    They  indeed  waited  on  a  dead  man ,  and  might 
have  flood  long  enough  before  he  had  heard  them ,  but  thou 
on  a  living  God ,  that  hears  every  knock  thou  giveft  at  heaven- 
gate  with  thy  prayers  and  tears,  yea,  a  loving  God  ,  that  all  this 
while  he  aits  the  part  of  a  ftranger  (Tike  fofcph  to  his  brethren  J 
yet  is  fo  big  with  mercy ,  that  he  will  at  laftfallon  thy  neck  and 
eafe  his  heart,  by  owning  of  thee  and  his  grace  in  thee.    Lift  up 
thy  head  then  poor  drooping  foul,  and  go  with  expectation  of 
the  thtrg;  but  remember  thoufet'A  not  God  the  time:  The 
Sunne  rifeth.at  his  own  hour ,  what  ever  time  we  fet  it.     And 
when  God  fhall  meet  thee  in  an  Ordinance  fas  fometimesno 
doubt,  Chrillian,  thou  find'ft  a  heavenly  light  irradiating,  and 
influence  quickning  thy  foul  while  hearing  the  Word,  or  may 
be  on  thy  knees  wreflling  with  God  )  this  is  a  fweet  advantage 
and  feafon  thou  fhould'ft  improve  for  the  fatisfying  thy  fouk  ; 
as  when  the  Sunne  breaks  out,  then  we  runne  to  the  Dial  to 
know  how  the  day  goes,  or  when  (as  we  are  fitting  in  the  dark ) 
one  brings  a  candle  into  theroome,  then  we  beflir  our  ielves 

to 


girt  about  with  truth.  \yt 


to  look  for  the  thi  ng  we  mifle ,  and  Toon  finde  what  we  in  vain 
groped  for  in  the  dark;  fo  mayettthou  poor  foul  (as  many  of 
rhy  dear  brethren  and  fitters  before  thee  have  donej  know  more 
of  thy  fpiritual  ttate  in  a  few  moments  at  fuch  a  time,  than  in 
many  a  day  when  God  with-draws ;  carefully  therefore  watch 
for  fuch  feafonsand  improve  them ;  but  if  God  will  hide  thy 
treafure  from  thy  fight ,  comfort  thy  felf  with  this,  God  knows 
thy  uprightnetTe  though  wrapt  up  from  thine  own  eyejfay  as  1)a- 
vldy  Pfal.  142.  2.  Wi  en  my  fpirit  tvas  ovtrrehtlmed  within  ms , 
tie  n  thou  kneweft  my  path.     And  God  will  do  with  thee,  not 
by  the  falfe   accufations  thou  bringettin  again!!  thy  felf  fas  it 
is  to  be  feared  forne   have  fuflfered  at  mens  hands  J  but  by 
the   tettimony   which   his    all-feeing   eye   can  give   to  thy 
crace. 


CHAP.  XVL 

Wherein  the  fecond  reafon  of  tin  Metaphor  is 
open'di  why  pncerity  is  fit  out  by  the  foul' 
diers  belt ,  viz.  frod  the  eftablijhing  and 
flrengtbning  nature  of  thitgrace  >  particularly  > 
of  a  preferring  firength  it  hath  y  with  fome 
fpecial  Seafons  wherein  the  Hypocrite  {alls 
of 

HAvin^  difpatcht  the  lirft  reafon   why  iim-erity  is  com-- 
pared  to  the  fouldiers  girdle  or  belt,  and  difcouried  of 
this  grace  under  that  notion  ;  We  proceed  to  the  fecond  ground 
or  reafon  of^ne  Metaphor  faJferi  from  the  other  ufe  of  the  foul- 
aicrs  girdle,which  is  r©  ftrtn^then  his  loyns,  and  fatten  his  armor 

(over 


1  y6  Having  your  loyns 


('over  which  icgo;s^  clofeio  him  ;  whereby  he  is  more  able 
to  march,  and  (trong  to  fiDht.  Girding  in  ScrLxure-phrafe  im- 
ports ftrength,  Pf.il.  18.  ^9.  liouhcft  girded  me  mthftiengfb 
unto  battel.  Job  I  2.  2 1 .  lie  aeakeveth  the  ftrength  of  the  might;  ; 
'  in  the  Hebrew  it  is,  he  /oofeth  their  girdle ;  to  which  life  or"  the 
girdle,  fincerity  doth  bear  a  fit  analogy.  It  is  a  grace  than  efta- 
blifherh  and  firengthens  the  Chriftiun  in  his  whole  coiKfe  ;  as 
on  the  contrary ,  hypocrifie  weikens  and  unfettles  the  heart ; 
a  double-minded  man  is  wifta  le  in  all  his  wayes.  As  it  is  in  bo- 
dies, fo  in. fouls.  Earthly  bod'cs,  becaufe  mixt,  are  corruptible ; 
whereas  the  heavenly  bo.  ies,  being  fimple  and  unmixt,  they  are 
not  tubjeil  to  corruption  j  To  much  a  foul'hath  of  heavens  pu- 
rity and  incorrupriblenefs  as  it  hath  of  fincerity.  (J race  be  with 
nil  them  that  lot  e  oir  Lord  f-fuf  Chr  ft  in  fir.cerlty,  t*  cC^b±%<x\a.  y 
with  incorruption  ,  Ephef.  6.  24.  The  ftrength  of  every  grace 
lies  in  che  fincerity  of  it-,  fo  that  without  any  more  ado,  the 
point  which  offers  it  felf  to  our  consideration  from  this  fecond 
notion  of  the  girdle,  is  this ; 
Note,  Note,Thit  fincerity  doth  not  only  cover  all  our  other  infirmi- 

ties, but  is  excellent,  yea,  neceiVary  to  eftablifh  the  foul  in,  and 
ftrengthen  it  for  its  whole  Chriftian  warfare.  The  integrity  of 
the  upright  fh  all  guide  tl  em  ,  but  the  pcrverfnefs  of  tranfgrcffors 
fha/l  drftrry  themfrov.t  1. ;.  The  hypocrite  falls  l"hamefully,and 
comes  to"n.U'ght  with  all  his  lliifts  and  ftratagems  to  lave  him- 
feif;  whereas  fincerity  carries  that  foul  fafe ,  that  dare^  follow 
its  conduit  above  all  dangers,  though  in  themidiiot'  them. 
But  to  open  the  point,  There  is  a  threefold  ftrength  fincerity 
brings  with  it,  which  the  falfe  hypocritical  heart  wants.  1.  A 
preferring  (trength.  2.  A  recovering  ftrength.  ^.  A  com- 
forting (kength. 
*•  Firft,  fincerity  hath  a  preferring  ftrength  to  keep  the  foule 

from  the  defilements  of  finne  ;  when  temptation  comes  on 
furioufly,  andchargcththe  foul  home,  a  falfe  heart  is  put  to 
the  run,  it  cannot  polTibly  ftand  ;  we  are  told  of  Jfr^.els  hypo- 
crifie, Pfa/me-jS.$.  they  were  a  generation  that  fet  not  their 
heart  aright,  and  what  follows  ?  w/ofe  fpirit  re  as  not  ft:  d? a  ft 
with  (]od ;  {.tones  that  are  not  fet  right  on  the  foundation,  can- 
not Hand  ft  rong  or  long  ••  you  may  fee  more  of  this  bitter  fruit 
growing  on  the  hypocrites  branches  in  the  fame  pfal.  v.  %6}^j. 

They 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  yy 


Tfaj  turned  be.ckj,  and  dealt  an  faith f illy ;  they  wer:  turned  aflde 
ikj  a  dcce'tfiil  bow  ;  when  the  bow  is  unbent ,  the  rift  it  hath 
may  be  undifcern'd,  but  go  to  ufe  it  by  drawing  the  arrow  to 
the  head,  and  it  flies  a  pieces;  thus  do:h  a  falfe  heart  when 
put  to  the  trial.  As  the  Ape  in  the  fable,dreft  like  a  man,  when  /l 
nuts  are  thrown  before  her,  cannot  then  dhfemble  her  nature 
any  longer,  but  ihews  her  felf  an  Ape  indeed  ;  a  falfe  heart  be- 
wrays it  felf  before  'tis  aware,  when  a  fair  occasion  is  prefented 
for  its  luft  ;  whereas  fincerity  keeps  the  foul  pure  in  the  face  of 
temptation.  Prov.  10.  9.  He  that  realketh  uprightly-,  tvalheth 
fnrely;  that  is,  he  treads  ftrong  on  the  ground,  like  one  whofe 
feet  are  found,  though  ftones  lie  in  his  way,  he  goes  over  thera 
fafely  ;  but  he  that  per verteth  lis  way  jhall  be  known, like  one 
that  hath  fome  corn  or  other  aile  about  his  feet,  though  in  green 
fmooth  way  he  may  make  a  fhift  to  go;  yet  when  he  meets 
with  hobling  ftony  way,  he  prefently  comes  down,  and  falters. 
Now  that  this  preferving  ftrength, which  fincerity  girds  the  foul 
with,  may  better  appear ,  it  will  be  requisite  to  inftance  in 
fome  of  thofefeafons  wherein  fincerity  keeps  the  foul  from  the 
power  of  temptation  ;  as  on  the  contrary ,  when  hypo- 
crilie  ccvardly  and  tamely  yields  the  foul  up  into  ics 
hands. 

Firft,  a  falfe  heart  ufually  ftarts  afide,  and  yields  to  finne, 
when  it  can  hide  it  felf  in  a  crowd,  and  have  ftore  of  company, 
under  which  it  may  fhroude  it  felf.  The  hypocrite  fets  his 
Watch,  not  by  the  Sunne/the  Word  I  mean  J  but  by  the  Town- 
clock;  what  molt  do,  that  heel  be  eafily  perfwaded  to  do; 
vox  popull  is  his  vox  Dei  :  therefore  you  feldome  have  him 
fwim  againft  the  tyde  of  corrupt  times ;  light  things  are  carried 
by  the  ftreame,  and  light  fpirits  by  the  multitude.  But  the 
iincere  ChrilUan  is  mafly  and  weighty ;  hee'l  fooner  fink  to  the 
bottome,  and  yield  to  tde  fury  of  a  multitude  by  fuffe  ring  from 
them,  than  float  after  their  example  in  finning  with  them.  The 
hypocrite  hath  no  inward  principle  to  a&  him,and  therefore  like 
the  dead  rifh,  muft  drive  with  the  current ;  But  fincerity  being 
a  principle  of  divine  life,  directs  the  foul  to  its  way,  and  im- 
proves it  to  walk  in  it,  without  the  help  of  company  to  lean  on* 
yea,  againft  any  oppofition  it  meets.  fo(httah  fpake  what  was  in 
his  heart,  when  cen  or  twelve  that  were  fent  with  him,  per- 

A  a  ceiving 


j  8  Havwg  y  our  loyns 


ceiving  on  which  fide  the  winde  lay,  accommodated  themfelves 
to  the  humour  of  the  people,  Numb.  14.  7.  The  falfe  Prophets 
pleafing  words,  with  which  they  clawed  ^Ahabs  proud  humour, 
could  by  no  means  be  brought  to  lit  good  CMicaiahs  mouth, 
»  Km°s  at.  though  he  (hould  make  himfelf  very  ridiculous  by  choofing  to 
ftand  alone,  rather  than  fall  in  with  fo  goodly  a  compa- 
ny, four  hundred  Prophets,  who  were  all  agreed  of  their  ver- 
dict. 

Secondly,  a  falfe  heart  yields,   when  fame  comes  with'  a  bribe 
in  its  hand;  none  but  Chrift,  and  fuch  as  know  the  truth,  ask 
isinjefus,  can  f come  the  Divels  offer  omnia,  fuc  dtlo^aH  tl.efe 
will  I  give  to  thee.  The  hypocrite,  let  hi  m  be  got  pinacle  high 
in  his  profeflion,yet  will  make  h arte  down  to  his  prey,  if  it  lies 
fair  before  him ;  one  that  carries  no:  his  reward  in  his  bofome, 
that  counts  it  not  portion  enough  to  have  God  and  enjoy  him, 
may  be  bought  and  fold  by  any  huckfter,   to  betray  his  foul , 
God,  and  all.    The  hypocrite  when  he  feems  molt  devout,  waits 
but  for  a  better  market,  and  then  hee'l  play  the  Merchant  with 
f  n         his  profeffion ;  there  is  no  more  difference  betwixt  an  hypocrite 
and  anApoftate,  than  betwixt  a  green  Apple  and  a  ripe  one, 
come  awhile  hence,  and  you  will  fee  him  fall  rotten-ripe  from 
his  profefiiori.    fudas  a  clofe  hypocrite,  how  foon  an  open 
T-raitour  ?  And  as  fruit  ripens  fooner  or  later,   as  the  heat  of 
the  year  proves ;  fo  doth  hypecri/ie,  as  the  temptation  isitrong. 
or  weak ;  fome  hypocrites  go  longer  before  they  are  discover- 
ed, than  others ;   becaufe  they  meet  not  with  fuch  powerful 
Temptations  to  draw  out  their  corruptions.    It  is  obferv'd,  that 
>-x         the  fruits  of  the  earth  ripen  more  in  a  week,  when  the  Sun  is 
in  conjunction  withthe  dog  Starre,  than  in  a  moneth  before  ; 
when  the  hypocrite  hath  a  door  open'd  by  which  he  may  enter 
into  pofleflGon  of  that  worldly  prize  he  harh  been  projecting  to 
obtain,  now  his  luft  within,and  the  occalion  without  are  in  con- 
junction, aud  his  day  haftens  wherein  he  will  fall.     The  hook 
is  baited,  and  he  cannot  but  nible  at  it.  Now  fincerity  preferves 
the  foul  in  this  houre  of  temptation.  David  prays,  Pfal.  26.  9. 
that  God  would   not  gather  his  foul  with  fnxersjvhofc  right  han.l 
is  full  if  bribes  ;  fuch  as  for  advantage ,  would  be  bribed  to  fin, 
to  which  wicked  gang  he  oppofeth  himfelf,  zer.  11.  but  As  fgr 
r»s  J  will  rralk^in  my  integrity  ;  where  he  tells  us,what  kept  him 

f.om 


girt  about  with  truth .  1 7  ^ 


from  being  corrupted  and  enticed,  as  the/  were  from  God,  k 
was  his  integrity  •  a  foul  walking  in  its  integrity  will  take  bribes, 
neither  from  men,  nor  finne  it  (elf,  and  therefore  he  faich,^-.  12. 
/  is  foot  flood,  in  an  even  place  jx  as  fo.ne  read  it,w?  f  ot  ftar.deth  in 
right eoufrejfe. 

Thirdly,  the  hypocrite  yields  to  the    temptation,  when  he  3< 

may  finne  without  being  control'd  by  man,  which  falls  out  in 
a  double  cafe  :  Firft,  when  he  may  embrace  hisluftin  afecrec 
corner,  where  the  eye  of  man  is  not  privy  ro  it.  Secondly , 
whenthegreatnefleof  his  place  and  power  lifts  him  above  the 
ftioke  of  juftice from  mans  hand ;  in  both  thefe  he  difcovers 
his  bafenefle,  but  fincerity  preferves  the  foul  in  both. 

Firft,  fee  how  the  hypocrite  behaves  hirnfelf,  when  he  thinks   >      r  • 
he  is  fafe  from  mans  fight.   Ananias  and  Saphiras  care  was  to 
blinde  mans  eye,  by  laying  fomeof  their  eftates  at  the  Apofiles 
feet,  and  having  made  fure  of  this  (as  they  thought)  by  drawing 
this  curtain  of  their  feeming  zeal  berween    it   and   them , 
they  pocket  up  the  reft  without  trembling  at ,   or  thinking  of 
Gods  revenging  eye  looking  on  them  all  the  while ;  and  boldly, 
when  they  have  done  this,  prefent  themfelves  to  Piter ,as  if  they 
were  as  good  Saints  as  any  in  the  company.  The  hypocrite  ftands 
more  on  the  laving  of  his  credit  in  this  world,  than  the  faving 
of  his  foul  in  the  other  j  and  therefore  when  he  can  enfure  that, 
hee'l  not  ftick  to  venture  the  putting  of  the  other  to  the  hazard, 
which  fhews  he  is  either  a  flatAtheift,  and  doth  not  believe 
there  is  another  world  to  fave  or  damn  his  foul  in  ;  or  on  pur- 
pofe  ft.mds  aloof  off  the  thoughts  of  it,  knowing  it  is  fuch  a 
melancholy  fubjecl,  and  inconfiften:  with  the  way  he  is  in,  that 
he  dares  not  fuffer  his  own  confeience  to  tell  him  what  it  thinks 
of  it ;  and  fo  it  comes  to  palle  that  it  hath  no  power  to  awe, 
andfwayhim,  becaufe  it  cannot  be  heard  to  fpeak  for  it  felf. 
Now  fincerity  preferves  the  foul  in  this  cafe ;  it  was  not  enough 
that  fofephs  Marter  was  abroad,  fo  long  as  his  God  was  prefent. 
How  can  I  do  this  great  wickedn?jfeiand  fmnc  again fl  God  I  Gen. 
39.  8.  Mark,  not  againfthis  Mafter,but  against  God  ;  fincerity 
makes  faithful  to  man,  but  for  more  than  mans  fake  ;    foftp'h 
ferv'd  his  Mafter  with  eye-fervice ;  he  had  God  in  his  eye,when 
Totiphar  had  not  him  in  his ;  happy  are  thofe  Mafters  that  have 
any  will  ferve  them  with  this  eye-fervice  of  fincerity. 

A  a  a  Sc- 


^Q  Having  your  loyns 


Secondly,  the  hypocrite  it"  he  cannot  get  out  of  mans  fight, 
vet  may  he  but  ftand  out  of  the  reach  of  his  arme  and  power,it  is 
as  well  for  his  turn,  and  doth  often  difcover  him.  How  unwor- 
thily and  cruelly  dealt  Lab  an  with  Jacob,  cheating  him  in  his 
wife,opprefling  him  in  his  wage.-, by  changing  it  ten  times  ?  alas, 
he  knew  \a:ob  was  a  poor  fhiftleile  creature,in  a  grange  place, 
unable  to  conteft  with  him,  a  great  man  in  hisCountrey.Some 
Princes,  who  before  they  have  come  to  their  power  and  great- 
neffe  have  feem'd  humble  and  courteous,kinde  and  merciful  ,juft 
and  upright ;  as  foon  as  they  have  leap't  into  the  faddle,  got  the 
reins  of  government  into  their  hand,  and  begun  to  know  what 
their  power  was,  have  even  rid  their  Subjects  off  their  legs  with 
oppreflion  and  cruelty,  without  all  mercy  to  their  eitates,  liber- 
ties and  livesjfuch  inftances  the  hiftory  of  the  world  doth  fadly 
abound  with ;  even  Nero  himfelf,  that- plaid  the  part  of  a  Divel 
at  latt ,  began  fo ,  that  in  the  Roman  hopes  he   was   hug'd 
for  a  State- Sa'mt  ;    fet  but  hypocrifie  upon   the  Stage   of 
power   and   greatnefle ,  and  it  will  not  be  long  before  its 
mask  falls  oft*.    The  prophet  meant  thus  much ,    when  he 
made   only   this   reply  to  Ha^aels  feeming  abhorrency   of 
what  he  had  foretold  concerning  him,  2  Kings  8. 1 3.  The  Lord 
hath  jberved  me  that  thonfhalt  be  King  over  Syria,  as  if  he  had 
faid,  Ha^ael,  thou  never  yet  didft  fit  in  a  Kings  Chaire,  and 
knoweft  not  what  a  difcovery  that  will  make  of  thy  deceitful 
heart. Mark  from  whence  %jhoboam$  revolt  from  God  is  dated, 
2  Chron.\2.i.It  came  to  pa  ft  when  Rehoboam  hadefiablifhed  the 
Kingdome,and  had  ftrengtheted  himfelf, he  forfoof^  the  Law  of  the 
Lord.VoWcy  bade  him  conceal  his  intentions,while  he  had  ferled 
himfelf  m  his  Throne,leli  he  fhou Id  have  hazarded  his  Crown; 
but  that  fet  on  fure,  and  his  party  made  ftrong,  now  all  breaks 
out ;  like  a  falfe  Captain  who  victuals  his  Caftle,  and  furniiheth 
it-  with  all  kinde  of  provifion  and  ammunition;and  then,and  not 
till  then  declares  himfelf  a  Traitor,  when  he  thinks  he  is  able  to 
defend  his  treafon.     But  here  alfo  fincerity  preferves  the  graci- 
ous foul ;  two  famous  inftances  we  have  for  this ;  one  in  fofepb 
who  had  his  unnatural  brethren,   that  would  once  have  taken 
auay  his  life  ;  )C\,\\'ao  did  tharwhich  mi^hc  have  proved  worfe, 
for  all  that  thoy  knew  fbaibaroufly  fell  him  as  a  flave  into  a 
ftrange  land  j  thefe  he  had.ftiangcly  brought  into  his  hands, 

while 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  g 


while  he  was  in  all  his  honour  and  power  in  Eg?pt;and  now  when 
he  might  have  paid  them  in  their  own  coyne,  without  any  fear 
or  controle  from  man,  behold  this  holy  man  is  lift  above  all 
thoughts  of  revenue  ;  he  pays  their  cruelty  in  his  own  tears,  not 
in  th^ir  bloodjhe  weeps  over  them  for  joy  to  fee  them. that  once 
had  no  joy  till  they  had  rid  their  hands  of  him ;  yea,  when  their 
own  guilt  made  them  afraid  of  his  prefence,  meafuring  him  by 
their  own  revengeful  hearts,  how   loon  doth  he  deliver  th^Ti 
from  all  fears  of  any  evil  intended  by  him  againft  them  ?  yzay 
he  will  not  allow  tbem  to  darken  the  joy,  which  that  day  had 
with  them  brought  to  him,  fo  much  as  by  exprefling  their  ovyn 
grief  before  him,  for  their  old  cruelty  to  him ;  fo  perfect  a  con- 
queft  had  he  got  of  all  revenge,GVtf.45.  ^.     And  what  prelerv'd 
him  in  his  houre  of  great  temptation  ?  he  told  them,  GW.42.I8. 
This  do  and  live,  for  I  fear  God^zsit  hehadfaid,  though  you 
be  here  my  prifoners  at  my  will  and  mercy ,for  all  that  you  can  do 
to  refift,yet  I  have  that  which  binds  my  hands  and  heart  too,from 
doing  or  thinking  you  evil.  /  fear  God.  This  was  his  prefervative, 
he  fincerely  fear'd  God.     The  other  inftance  is  'Hjhemiahflo- 
vernourof  that  colony  of  fews,  which  under  the  favour  of  the 
Perjian  Princes  were  again  planting  their  native  Country  ;  by  his 
place  he  had  an  advantage  of  opprefling  his  brethren,if  he  durft 
have  been  fo  wicked ;  and  from  thofe  that  had  before  him  been 
honour'd  with  that  office,  he  had  examples  of  fuch  as  could  noc 
only  fwallow  the  common  allowance  of  the  govemour,withouc 
riling  in  their  conferences  (  which  fhew'd  a  aigelUon  ftrong  e- 
nough,confidering  the  peeled  ftate  of  the  feivs  at  that  time  )  but 
could  when  themfelves  had  fucktthe  milk,let  their  cruel  fervants 
fuck  the  blood  of  this  poor  people  alfoby  illegal  exacYionsjfo  that 
^hemiah  coming  after  fuch  oppreflbrs,  if  he  had  taken  his  al- 
lowance, and  but  eafed  them  of  the  other  burdens  which  they 
groaned  unier,no  doubt  he  might  have  pall  for  merciful  in  their 
thoughts  ;but  he  durft  not  go  fo  far.  A  man  may  poilibly  be  an  op- 
preffor  in  exacting  his  own. Nehemiah  knew  they  were  not  in  cafe 
to  pay,  and  therefore  he  durft  not  require  it.     But  as  one  who 
comes  after  a  bad  husband  chat  hath  driven  his  land,  and  fuckc 
out  the  heart  of  it,cafts  it  up  tallow  for  a  time  till  it  recovers  its 
loll  ftrength,  fo  did  Ntheminh  fpare  this  opprefled  people ;  and 

A  a  3  what 


i8a 


Having  your  loyns 


what,  I  pray,  wasitpreferv'd  him  from  doing  as  the  reftjiad 
done  ?  See  Nehem,  5. 1  5.  ##^  I  did  r.ot  fo^cctttje  of  the  fear  of  tl.  e 
Lord.Thz  man  was  honeft,his  heart  toucht  with  a  fincere  fear  of 
God,and  this  kept  him  right. 


CHAP.    XVII. 

Of  a  recovering  flrength    that  fincerity   hath, 
and  whence. 


2.  {"Econdly,  fincerity  hath  a  recovering  Hrength  with  it  -y  when 
j^  it  doth  not  priviiedge  from  falling,  yet  it  helps  up  again, 
whereas  the  hypocrite  lies  where  he  falls,  and  peritheth 
where  he  liesjwho  therefore  is  faid  to  full  intom ij "chief ,  Pro  v.  24. 
1  <5.The  fincere  foul  falls  as  a  Traveller  may  do,  by  (tumbling  at 
fome  ftone  in  his  path,but  gets  up,and  goes  on  his  way  wich  more 
care  and  fpeed ;  the  other  falls,  as  a  man  from  the  top  of  a  Maft, 
that  is  ingulphed,  part  all  recovering  in  the  devouring  Sea.  He 
falls  as  Haman  did  before  UWordecaiywhen  he  begins,he  Rays 
not,  but  falls  till  he  can  fall  no  lower.  This  we  fee  in  Saul% 
whofe  heart  was  never  right ;  when  once  his  naughty  heart  dis- 
covered it  felf,  he  tumbled  down  the  hill  apace,  and  ftop'c  not, 
but  from  one  finne  went  to  a  worfe :  and  in  a  few  years  you  fee 
how  far  he  was  got  from  his  firft  ftage,  where  he  firft  took  his 
leave  of  God.  He  that  fhould  have  told  <SW,  when  he  betray- 
ed his  diftruft  and  unbelief,  in  not  flaying  the  full  time  for  Sa- 
muels coming  (  which  was  the  firft  wry  ftep  taken  notice  of  in 
hisApoftafie)  that  he,  who  now  was  fo  hot  for  the  worftiip  of 
God,  that  he  could  no  tftay  for  the  Prophets  coming, would  ere 
long  quite  give  it  over,yea,fall  from  enquiring  of  the  Lord,to  ask 

counfel 


girt  about  with  truth.  183 


counfelof  theDivel,  by  feeking  to  a  Witch, and  from  feeking 
counfel  of  the  Divel,  fitiould  at  the  laft  and  worft  acl  of  his  bloo- 
dy tragedy,  with  his  own  hands  throw  himfelf  defperately  into 
the  Divels  mouth  by  felf-murder.  Surely  he  would  have  ftranged 
at  it  mere  zhm  Haz*el  did  at  the  plain  character  E/ifha  gave  of 
him  to  his  face.    And  truly  all  the  account  we  can  give  of  it , 
is,  that  his  heart  was  naught  at  firft;  which  Samuel  upon  that 
occafion  hinted  to  him,  1  Sam.  13.  when  he  told  hkn,  tie  Lord 
had f ought  him  a  mm  cft:r  his  ownl.eart  j  David  he  meant,  who 
afterward  fell  intoafinne  greater  as  to  the  matter  of  the  fa&, 
then  that  for  which  Saul  was  rejected  of  God,  and  yet  having 
but  an  habitual  lincerity,  as  the  root  of  the  matter  in  kirn,  hap- 
pily recovered  out  of  it,  for  want  of  which,  hypocritical  Saul 
mifcarried  finally  j  fo  true  is  rfeac  proverb,  that  frofi  and  fraud 
have  dirty  ends ;  Now  there  is  a  double  reifon  for  this  recover- 
in0  ftrength  of  fincerity  ;  one  taken  from  the  nature  of  lincerity 
itielf;  the  other  from  the  promife  by  God  fetled  on  the.  foul 
where  fincerity  is  found. 

Firft,  from  the  nature  of  fincerity  itfelf;  fincerity  is  to  the 
foul,  as  the  foul  is  to  the  body  :  Jtisafparkof  divine  life  kind- 
led in  the  bofome  of  the  creature  by  the  Spirit  of  God.  It  is 
the  feed  cfGod  remaning  in  the  Saint,  I  John  3.9.  Now  as  the 
feedcaftinto  the  womb  of  the  earth,  and  quickned  there  by 
the  influence  of  heaven  upon  ic,  doth  put  forth  its  head  frefh, 
and  green  in  the  Spring  after  many  a  cold  nip  it  hath  had 
from  the  Winter  i  fo  doth  fincere  grace  after  temptations  and 
falls,when  God  looks  out  upon  it  with  the  beams  of  his  exciting 
grace ;  but  the  hypocrite  wanting  this  inward  principle  of  life, 
doth  not  fo ;  he  is  a  Chriftian  by  Art,  not  by  a  new  nature  , 
dreft  up  like  a  Puppet,  in  the  fafnion  and  outward  fhape  of  a 
man,that  moves  by  the  jimmers  which  the  workman  fattens  to  ir, 
and  not  inform 'd  by  a  foul  of  its  own,and  therefore  as  fuch  an  i- 
mage,when  worn  by  time,or  broken  by  violence,  can  do  nothing 
to  renue  it  felf,but  crumbles  away  by  piece-  meals,till  it  comes  at 
laft  to  nothing  ;  fo  doth  the  hypocrite  wafte  in  his  profeffion 
without  a  vital  principle  to  oppofe  his  ruine  that  is  coming  up- 
on him. There  is  great  difference  between  the  wool  on  the  rheeps 
back,  which  fhorne,  will  grow  again,and  the  wool  of  the  fheeps 
skin  on  a  wolfs  back  ;    clip  that,and  you  fball  fee  no  more  grpvv 

in 


i» 


84  having  your  loyns 


in  us  roorft.    The  hncere  Chriitian  is  the  foeep,  the  hypocrite  is 

the wolt  clad  111  rheilieeps skin;  the  aopli«iion  o:  it is  obvi- 
ous. 

2#  Secondly,  the  fincere  foul  is  under  a  promifc,and  promifes  are 

rcftorativc,  W.15,.7.7'^  Z^,  of  the  Lord  ,s  perfect  convent 
tkefoHl  Hcbr.a^D  reftorlng  the  fiu/.  It  fercheth  back  the 
foul  to  life,  as  a  ftron-  cordial  one  in  a  fainting  fit,  which  vertue 
is  proper  to  the  promiflory  part  of  the  Word,and  therefore  fo  to 
be  taken  in  this  place.  Now  the  hncere  foul  is  th^  only  right  heir 
of  the  promiies  Many  fweet  promifes  are  laid  in  for  thefnW 
fuccour  and  auxiliary  aid  to  bring  them  off  all  their  dangers  and 
temptations  Pro,,  28.18.Wfc/.  ,^hupr:aJt/y  (h,/l  f  f^d 
Now  mark  the  oppohttcn^/^ 

thatisJfuddenly,irrecoverably,7,^.2o'Mi//;  J%  '™' 
pe>feft  man,  neither  wilt  he  help  the  evil  doers  •  fie  will  nor  dC 
them  by  the  hand,//^.that  is/o  help  them  Z  ^SSfc 
nay  the  hypocrite  is  not  only  deHitute  of  a  promue  for  hifhe  p 
■but  lies  alio  under  a  curfe  from  God.    Great  pains  we  finde  hS 

till10 17  B'ij&rt  Wh£n  h^  hath  d°»l'<™^t«% 
pa-m  fiard;  he  holds  ,t  fift  b*t  it  fatmvdmtJ*  S  I r 

w;cked,Vul.37A6.biit  why?fee  the  reafon  ver  1  n  t  r  I  L       J 

The  righteous  map  in  that  Pialme  is  the  upright;  by  :h :  wl  -I  T\, 
meantthe  ypocnte    A  little  truegrace  mix?  w th' much  corr up 
tioninthefincereChriiban,  is  better  than  the  hypocrites  r ches 
f great  raith,2eal  and  devotion,)  he  bra*,  fn  nf   riw  u    , 

Wordwasfentto  mate  thm  E»de  v)t  I      '  toTwhom  '*><= 

■  breaks  the  fincer?  £ni  ,  •    2  /  /    '    •  y  6^> I0-  Jt  m«'ts  and 

with  a  naughS  heart  V&k  *  Ku>^^9-  but  meeting 

w  cJk  fame  Jem  ?'„»',     £"S  ex?ed,nS'y>  ■  Wary 
*«=J<ws,/«ww.4i.20i  be/ore  the  Sermon  they  fpeak 


girt  about  with  truth.  185 


fj&Xywhutever  Godfa:th,:hcy  ml  dkjbut  whenSermon  is  done,rhey 
are  further  off  then  ever,  from  complying  with  the  command  of 
God.  The  hypocrke,he  hears  for  the  vyorfe,  prays  for  the  worfe, 
faits  for  the  worie:  every  Ordinance  is  a  wide  door ,  to  let  Satan 
in  more  fully  to  poflefs  him,  as  Judas  found  the  fop. 


CHAP.  XVIII. 

Of  afupporting  and  comforting  property  fincerity 
hathy  Jherrn  in fever al particular  inflames. 

THirdly,  fincerity  hath  a  fupporting,  comforting  vertue  ;  It 
lifts  the  head  above  water,  and  makes  the  Chridian  float  a 
top  the  waves  of  all  troubles,with  a  holy  prefence,  and  galantry 
of  fpiric,  Pfalyi  I .  24.  unto  the  ap  rig  ht  tktre  anfah  light  in  dark^ 
ncf-  ;  not  only  lii>ht  after  darknefle ,  when  the  night  is  yaft , 
bur  m  darfzjrejfe  zlfo  ;  Cut  of  the  cater  comes  meaty  nndou.  r  tlx 
firo^yfrv  etmffe.  Thofe  afflictions  which  feed  on,  yea,  eat  out 
the  hypocrites  heart,  the  fm  cere  foul  can  feed  on  them,  fuck 
fweetne.Ve  from  them ,  yea,  hathfucha  digeftion,  that  he  can 
turn  tnem  into  high  nourifhmenc  both  to  his  grace  and  com- 
fort. A  naughty  heart  is  merry  onely  while  his  carnal  cheer  is 
before  him,  Hofea  2.1 1.  Go  J  tells  Ifracly  ie  wlHtake  <m  tjf  her 
fc-flsy  and  all  her  mlnh  jhail  ceafe;  her  joy  is  taken  away  with 
the  cloth;  fmcerity  makes  the  Chriftian  fuig  ,  whenhehatk 
nothin;  to  his  fupper.  David  was  i  <  none  of  the  be(t  cafe  when 
in  the  caw,  yet  we  r.ever  fln^e  him  merrier;  his  heart  makes 
fweeter  rriuiick  then  ever  his  Harp  did,  T /"<?/.  $7.7.  CMy  heart  is 
fix  ^ ,  P  uW,  my  he  irt  is  fixeJ>  I  will  Jlttg  and  give  fratp  ;  The 
hypocrites  joy,  like  the  ft.in.js  of  muficai  ir.ftrumeats,  crack  in 
wet  weather ;  bur  finceriry  keeps  the  foul  in  tune  in  all  weather: 
The.yare  unfo una  bodies  that  fympathize  with  the  feaibn,cleerly 

Bb  in 


$5  Having  your  loyns 


in  fair,  but  ill  and  full  of  aches  in  foul;    fo  the  unfound 
hearr ,  a  few  pinching  providences  fet  him  going ,  kill  him  as 
a  fharp  winter  doth  weak  bodies;  whereas  the  fincere  foul,never 
is  more  haile,  nevermore  comfortable;  afflictions  do  him  but 
this  courtefie,  to  call  in  his  affections,  which  in  the  fummer  of 
pvofperity  werepolfibly  too  much  diifufed  and  fcattered  amon^ 
creature  delights ,  and  unite  ihem  more  entirely  and  clofely  up- 
on Chrift ,  into  whofe  bofome  it  goes  as  directly  whenttorms 
corners  the  Bee  to  its  hive ;  and  he  mull  needs  be  comfortable, 
that  hath  io  foft  a  pillow  to  lay  his  head  on  as  Chrills  lap  ;  fince- 
rity  keeps  the  fouls  mouth  open,  to  receive  the  fweet  confola- 
tions  that  drop  from  Word  and  Spirit ;  indeed  all.the  promifes 
are  directed  to  fuch.     But  hypocrilie  is  like  the  fquinancy  in 
the  throat  of  the  fick  man,  he  burns  withi  ',and  can  «et  nothing 
dowftHto  quench  the  fire  which  his  fins  have  kindledin  his  foul. 
Confcience  tells  hiai,  when  fweet  promifes  are  ojfefd,  theie  are 
not  for  me  ,  1  have  dealt  falfely  with  God  and  man;  it  is  the  fin- 
cere  foul  God  invites,  but  I  am  a  rotten-hearted  hypocrite :  And 
how  much  fhort  comes  fuch  a  poor  wretch  of  Dives  his  mifery 
in  hell,  I  pray  ?  Dives  burns,  and  hath  not  a  drop  to  quench  his 
tongue  ;  The  hypocrite  in  affliction  rie  btkrnsroo,  and  hath  in- 
deed, not  a  drop,  but  a  river,  a  fountain  full  of  water ,  yea,  of 
blood  prefented  to  him ,  but  he  cannot  drink  it  down,  he  can- 
not rnafo  any  ufe  of  it  for  his  good ;  his  teeth  are  fetfoclofej 
no  key  can  open  them  ,  his  hypocrilie  flares  him  in  the  face  , 
it  lies  like  a  maftiffe  at  his  door ,  and  will  fuffer  no  comfort  to 
come  neer  him.    And  which  is  worft,  he  that  hath  no  bread,  or 
he  that  hath  and  cannot  eat  it?  none  to  witty  and  cunning  as-the 
hypocrite  in  profperity  to  ward  off  the  reproofs  ,  to  fhift  from 
the  counfels  of  the  Word ;  and  in  affliction ,  when  confcience 
awakes ,  none  fo  skilful  to  difpute  againft  the  comforts  of  the 
Word.    Now  he  is  Gods  clofe  prifoner,  no  comfort  can  come 
at  him  ;  if  God  fpeak  terror,  who  can  fpeak  peace?  Lam.  3.65. 
give  them  forrow  of  heirt,  thy  cttrfe  unto  tl*m;  forrow  of  heart  is 
the  hypocrites  curfe  from  God  in  affliction,  and  what  God  lays 
on,  flicks  clofe.     The  word  for  forrow  in  the  Hebrew  fi°nifies 
f\  a  fhield  that  fenceth,  and  covers  over,  and  doth  (faith  one  up- 

on this  place) denote  that  difeafe  Phyhdans  call  arAiac.iy.xflio , 
which  fo  oppreflerh  the  heart,  that  it  is  covered  font  fcato  ,  as 

with 


girt  about  with  truth,  1 8  <? 


with  a  ftiield  or  lid  over  it ,  and  keeps  all  relief  from  the  heart; 
niches  the  forrow  of  the  hypocrite  in  affliction,  when  once  his 
conference  avvakes,and  God  fills  him  with  the  amazing  thoughts 
of  his  own  fins,  and  Gods  wrath  purfuing  him  for  them.  But 
I  fhall  defcend  to  inftance  in  a  few  particular  kinde  of  affli- 
ctions, and  (hew  what  comfort  attends  fincerity  in  them 
all. 


SECT.    I. 

Firft,fincerity  fupports  and  comforts  the  foul  under  reproaches 
from  men.    Thefe  are  no  petty  trials :  they  are  reckon 'd  among 
the  Saints  martyrdomes,H^.n.36.  called  there  cruel  ntockjngsi 
yea,not  unworthy  to  be  recorded  among  the  fufferings  of  Chrift; 
the  matchlefle  patience  and  magnanimity  of  his  Spirit,  appear- 
ed not  onely  in  enduring  the  croffe ,  but  in  de [fifing  the  fhame, 
which  thefoule  tongues  of  his  bloody  enemies,  loaded  him  un- 
mercifully with ;  mansafpiring  minde  can  leaft  brook  (hame ; 
credit  and  applaufe  is  the  great  idol  of  men  that  ftand  at  the 
upper  end  of  the  world  for  parts  or  place ;  give  but  this,  and 
•what  will  not  men  do  or  fuffer  ?  One  wifer  then  the  reft , 
could  fee  this  proud  humor  in  Diogenes  ,  that  endured  to  ftand    I'L 
naked,  embracing  a  heap  of  fnow  while  he  had  fpeftators  a- 
bout  him  to  admire  his  patience  (  as  they  thought   it)  and 
therefore  was  ask't,  Whether  he  would  do  thm^if  he  had  none  tafec 
him:  The  hypocrite  is  the  greateft  credit-monger  in  the  world, 
'tis  all  he  lives  on  almoft ,  what  the  breath  of  mens  praife  fends 
him  in ;  when  that  fails  ,  his  heart  faints ;  but  when  it  turns  to 
fcorn  and  reproaches,  then  he  dies,  and  needs  muft ,  becaufe  he 
has  no  credit  with  God,  while  he  is  fcorn'd  by  man;  whereas 
fincerity  bears  up  the  foul  againft  the  winde  of  mans  vain  breath, 
becaufe  it  hath  conscience  ,  and  God  himfelf  to  be  his  com- 
purgator ,  to  whom  he  dare  appeal  from  mans  bar.    O  how 
fvveetly  do  a  good  confeience,  and  the  Spirit  of  God  witneffing 
with  it,  fealt  the  Chriftian  at  fuch  a  time  !  and  nomatter  for  the 
hail  of  mans  reproaches  that  rattle  without,  while  the  Chriftian 
is  fo  merry  within  doors.    David  is  a  pregnant  inftance  for 

Bb  2  this, 


§g  Having  your  loyns 


this,  Pfal.41.11.  By  this  I  know  that  thou  favourefi  me,  becaufe 
wine  enemy  doth  not  triumph  over  me.     How  David}  does  not 
thy  enemy  triumph  over  thee  ?  I  pray  fee  the  condition  he  at 
prefent  was  in  ;  he  had  fallen  into  a  great  fin ,  and  the  hand  of 
God  was  on  him  in  a  difeafe,  chaflifing  him  lor  it,  as  appears , 
rer.  4.  his  enemies  from  this  take  advantage  to  fpeak  him  all 
to  naught ;  vtr,  5.  Mire  enemies  fa.ik.evi I  of  me  -,  no  doubt , 
charging  him  for  an  hypocrite;when  they  come  to  viiit  him,  it  is 
hut  together  fome  matter  of  reproach,  which  they  prefently 
blab  abroad,  v.  6.  yea,  they  are  not  afhamed  to  fay,  zer.  8.  that 
an  evil  difeafe,  or  as  it  isinthe  Hebrew,  a  thing  of  Belial  ("that  is 
his  fin)  cteayethto  him-,  now  God  hath  met  with  him,  now 
helieth,  hefhalLrifeno  more;  yea,  his  familiar  friend,  in 
whom  he  trufted ,  ferves  him  as  ill  as  the  worft  of  his  enemies , 
verf.9.  was  ever  poor  man  lower  ?  and  yet  can  he  fay  his  ene- 
my triumphs  not  over  him  ?  his  meaning  therefore  we  muft  take 
thus ;  That  norwithftandingall  thefe  reproaches  eift  upon  him  ; 
yet  his  fpirit  did  not  quaile ,   this  was  above  them  all ;  God 
kept  that  up,  and  gave  him  fuch  inward  comfort ,  as  wiped  oft" 
their  fcorn  as  faft  as  they  threw  it  oi* ;  theii  reproaches  fell  fas 
fometimes  we  feefnow)  melting  as  fart  as  they  fell,  none  lay 
upon  his  fpirit  to  load  and  troubleit.     And  how  came  David 
by  this  holy  magnanimity  of  fpirit ,  thefe  inward  comforts  ? 
ver.  1 2.  he  tells  us,  As  for  me, thou.  ttphoLieft  me  in  my  integrity  , 
andjetteft  me  before  thy  face  forever.     As  it-he "nicMaid,  thou 
doelt  mot  by  me,0  Lord,as  mine  enemies  do  ;  they  pick  but  my 
worft,and  revile  me  for  it;  if  there  be  but  one  fore  plat,one  fin- 
fulpart  in  my  life,  like  flies,  they  light  there;but  thou  overlook- 
eft  my  finful  flips  andf  ulings,pa:doning  them,  and  takeft  notice 
of  my  uprightneflfe ,  which  amidft  all  my  infirmities  thou  up- 
holder, andfofet'ftme  before  thy  face,  communicating  thy 
love  and  favour  to  me  notwithftanding  the  fins ,  thar  are  found 
mingled  with  my  courfe  of  obedience ;  this  k*pt  up  the  holy 
mans  fpirit,  and  makes  him  end  the  Pfalme  joyfully,  verfei$. 
Blejfed  be  the  Lord  God  of  Jfrael  from  everlafling  to  everlafling. 
We  live  fChriftiansJ  in  reproaching  times ;  he  that  is  foovec 
dainty  of 'his  name,  that  he  cannot  bear  to  fee  fome  dirt ,  and 
that  good  {lore  too,  caft  upon  his  back  by  reviling  tongues,  muft 
feck  a  path  to  travel  inby  himfelf.  to  heaven  ;  but,  for  thy  com- 

forc 


girt  about  with  truth.  j  g9 


fort  fChriftian)  fincerity  ,though  it  cannot  privilege  thee  from 
travellers  fare,  and  keep  thee  from  being  dafht  with  calumnies 
yet  it  will  do  thee  this  kinde  office ,  that  the  dirt  which  li°hts 
ou  thy  coat  fihall  notfoak  into  thy  foul  to  damp  thyjoy,  lind 
chil  thy  inwatd  comfort.  Reproaches  without  may  be  comforta- 
bly endured,  yea  triumphantly  worn  as  a  crown,  if  they  meet 
not  with  a  reproaching  confcience  within.    Yea,  fincerity  will 
do  more  then  this  comes  to ,  it  will  not  onely  comfort  thee 
under  the  perfecut ion  of  the  tongue, but  hand  a/fo'ynot  only  quench 
the  fire ,  which  from  thence  is  fpit  on  thy  face  ,  by  tongues 
fet  on  fire  by  hell ;  but  it  will  comfort  thee  in  the  very  mouth 
of  fireitfelf,  if  God  fhall  fuffer  thee  by  perfecutors  to  be  caft 
into  it ;  fincerity  makes  thee  indeed  fearful  to  fin;0,thou  dareft 
not  touch  one  of  thefe  coalsjbut  it  will  make  thee  bold  to  burn 
and  even  hug  joyfully  the  flames  of  martyrdome  when  c^lVd  to 
them.    So  little  afraid  was  that  fincce  fervant  of  Chrift,  an  I- 
tailian  Martyr,  Mr. Fox  records ,among  many  other  undaunted 
champions  of  the  truth,  that  when  the  Magiitrate  of  the  place 
('where  he  was  to  be  burned  )  and  the  officers  of  the  Blfhop  that      A 
condemned  him,were  in  a  hot  conte{f,wrangIing  which  of  them 
fhould  pay  for  the  wood  that  fhould  make  the  fire  for  his  burn- 
ing j  he  pleafantly  fent  to  defire  ^them,  They  would  not  fall  out 
upon  that  occafton,  for  he  would  take  Ojf  the  burden  from  them  both 
and  be  at  the  cofl  himfelf.  BleffeeUbul  !  he  made  not  fo  much 
ado  of  fpending  his  blood  and  facrificing  his  life,as  they  about  a 
few  pence  wickedly  to  procure  the  fame. 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly,  fincerity  girds  the  (but  with  comforting  ftrengrh,        2. 
when  conflicting  with  affliction  from  the  hand  of  God.    Many 
are  the  forts  of  affliftions  with  which  God  exercifeth  his  fincere 
fervants ;  to  najne  a  few ; 

Firft,  when  the  Lord  toucheth  his  outward  man,  by  fickriefle  ; 
or  his  inward  man,  by  fpiritual  conflicts ;  fincerity  is  a  eom- 
fortable  companion  in  both.  The  hypocrite  above  all,  feares 
falling  into  GodsTunds,  and  well  he  may ,  for  he  is  able  to  do 

him 


( g0  having  your  loyns 


i. 


h'rm  molt  hurt  :  therefore  no  fooner  God  takes  hold    of  his 
collar,  either  of  theie  waves ,  but  his  joy  gives  uptheGhoIl; 
he,  like  fome  murderer  (whole  doom  is  writ  ^  laine  in  the  Law; 
oives  himfelf  fot  a  dead  man ,  when  once  he  is  clapt  up  in 
prifon.     This  made  ^Kuch  a  wondesling  to  his  wife,  becauie 
he  held  up  his  holy  courfe ,  when  bitrer'd  fo  fadfy  by  the  arfii- 
£tins  hand  of  God,with  renewed  aini&ions ;  D>ft  tlon  yet  hold 
thy  integrity  ?  what,  nothing  but  blows  come  from  Gods  hand , 
and  yet  continue  to  blefle  him  ?  this  was  ftrange  to  her,  but  not 
to  him,  who  could  call  her  foolijh  woman  for  her  pains  ?  but  not 
charge  God  foolifhly  for  all  he  fmarted  fo  under  his  hand : 
Sincerity  enables  the  Chriftian  to  do  two  things  in  this  cafe , 
which  the  hypocrite  cannot.    To  fpeakgood  of  God  ,  and  to 
expect  good  from  God ;  and  the  foul  cannot  be  uncomfortable  , 
though  head  and  heart  ake  together ,  which  is  able   to.  do 
thefe. 

Fir  fly  lincerity  enables  the  Chriftian  to  think  and  fpeak  weU 
of  God.     A  falfe-hearted  hypocrite,  his  countenance  falls,and 
his  heart  riles,  yea,  fwells  with  venome  agtin(t  God ,  though 
he  dare  not  alwayes  let  it  drive  out  of  his  mouth  ,  yet  he  has 
bloody  thoughts  againft  him  in  his  heart.    Haft  thou  found  me , 
O  my  enemy  ?  faith  the  wretch;  he  loves  not  God,  and  there- 
fore a  good  thought  of  God  cannot  dwell  in  his  foul;  all  that 
God  has  done  for  him,  though  never  fo  bountifully,  'tis  forgot- 
ten and  imbitter'd  with  the  overflowing  of  his  gall  at  the  pre- 
fent  dealings  of  God  to  him,  he  frets  and  fumes;  you  (hall  hear 
him  fooner  curfe  God,then  charge  himfelf ;  but  the  fincere  foul 
notififheth  moft  fweet  and  amiable  apprehenfions  of  God , 
which  binde  him  to  the  peace,  that  he  dare  not  think  or  fpeak 
unbefeeming  the  glery  or  goodneflfeof  God ,  as  we  fee  in  Da- 
vid, Plal.  39.  9.  I  was  dumb  and  opened  not  my  mouth ,  became 
tl.ou  Lord  did]}  it.    This  holy  man  had  a  breach  made  both 
inhisbodyandfpiritat  this  time;  he  was  fick  and  fad,  yet  he 
remembers  from  whofe  hand  the  blow  came  i  That  Lorddidft 
?f.-  Thou,  whom  I  love  dearly,  and  fo  can  take  it  kindly;  thou 
whom  1  have  offended,  and  fo  take  it  patiently  1  yea,  thou  who 
mighteft  have  caft  me  into  a  bed  of  flames,  inftead  of  my  bed  of 
ikknefs  ,*and  therefore  I  accept  thy  csrre£tion  thankfully. Thus 

•  he 


girt  about  with  truth.  \  p  t 


he  catches  the  blow, without  retorting  it  back  upon  God,  by  any 
quarreling  difcontented  language. 

Secondly,  fincerity  enables  the  foul  to  expect  good  from  God, 
when  his  hand  prefleth  hardeft  on  body  or  foul,  Pfalme  38.  Ne- 
ver was  David  in  a  worfe  cafe  for  body  and  foule ;  it  would 
break  a  flinty  hea :t  to  read  the  fad  moans  that  this  throbbing 
foul  makes,  in  the  anguifh  ot  his  flefh,  and  bitter  agony  of  his 
fpirit ;  one  would  have  thought  they  had  been  the  pangs  of  a 
foul  going  away  in  defpair ;  yet  even  in  this  great  ftorme ,  we 
finde  him  calling  out  his  ("heat  anchor  of  hope ,  and  that  takes 
fure  hold  of  God  for  his  mercy,  ver.  1  $.  In  thee  O  Lord  do  I 
hope,  thoH  wilt  hear,0  Lord  my  (jod.     This  expectation  of  good 
from  God  corrects  and  qualifies  the  bitternefle  that  is  upon  his 
palate  t  from  his  p relent  forrow ;  fo  Pfalme  40. 1 7.  1  am  poor 
and  needy  ,  yet  the  Lord  th'wketh  upon  me.     My  (iate  at  prefent  is 
fad  enough,  but  my  comfort  is,  I  am  not  caft  out  of  his  minde,I 
know  his  thoughts  are  at  work  to  do  me  good.    Holy  fob  proves 
that  he  is  not  an  hypocrite  (as  his  friends  uncharitably  charged 
himj  by  this  confidence  he  had  on  God  in  the  depth  of  all  his 
afflictions,  Job  13.  j  5,  16.  Though  he  flay  me,  yet  will  Itrufi  in 
him.     1  will  maintain  my  wayes  before  him,  he  alfo  jhill  be  my 
falvation,  for  an  hypocrite Jhall  not  come  before  htm.    As  if  he  had 
£tid,if  I  were  not  fincere,I  durit  not  appeal  thus  to  God,  &  com- 
fortably believe  while  God  is  killing  of  me,  that  he  would  yet 
fave  me;  for  an  hypocrite fhall  not  come  before  him,  that  is,  he  dare 
not  thus  trurt  himfelf  in  Gods  hands,  and  acquifce  in  his  promife 
when  his  neck  is  on  the  block,and  Gods  knife  at  his  throat;  no,if 
he  could  he  would  never  come  in  his  fight ,  his  conscience  tells 
htm  God  knows  him  too  well,to  intend  him  any  good,and  there- 
fore when  God  begins  to  lay  his  hand  on  him  (except  his  confci- 
ence  be  dedolent  and  feared  (  which  is  the  curfe  that  God  now 
and  then  brands  the  orofle  hypocrite  with  J  he  prefently  hath 
the  fent  of  hell-fire  in  his  foul,  in  a  fearful  expectation  thereof, 
and  looks  on  thefe  prefent  afflictions ,  though  but  a  cloud  of  a 
handbreadch,  asihofe  which  will  fpread further  and  further  till 
the  fhades  of  that  everlafiing  night  overtake,  and  encompaffe 
him  in  hells  utter  darkneffe. 

SECT. 


2. 


t  g  3  Having  your  loyns 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  fincericy  comforts  the  Chriftian, ■  when  he  wants  fuc- 
cefle  vifibly  to  crown  his  endeavors  in  his  place  and  calling.    A 
oreat  affliction  no  doubt  to  a  gracious  foul ;  As,  when  a  Minifter 
of  the  Gofpel  fpends  his  strength  ,  and  fwailes  out  his  life  to  a 
oain-faying  people ,  that  fit  like  Recks  and  (tones  under  his  Mi- 
niftry ,  no  more  moved  then  the  feats  they  fit  on,  and  the  pillars 
they  lean  to,  ignorant  and  profane  he  found  them ,  and  fnch  he 
fees  he  is  like  to  leave  them ,  after  twenty  years,  may  be  almoft 
twice  told,  fpent  among  them.  This  mult  needs  be  a  heart-aking 
trial  to  one,  that  God  hath  given  a  companionate  heart  to  fouls; 
It  colts  the  mother  no  fmall  pains  to  bring  forth  a  living  chnVfbut 
what  are  the  bitter  throws  of  one  that  travels  with  a  dead  child  ? 
fuch  is  the  travail  of  a  poor  Minifter  with  a  dead-hearted  people, 
yet  the  portion  of  none  of  the  meaneft  of  Gods  meffengers  ; 
indeed  God  fets  his  molt  eminent  fervants  about  thf  hardeft 
work. 

Now  fincerity  lightens  this  affliction,  and  fends  in  that  which 
may  cheer  the  foul  under  it.    Paul  Caw  he  fhould  nor  carry  all  to 
heaven  with  him  he  preacht  unto,to  many  theGofpel  was  a  favor 
ef  death  fwto  death.  The  fweet  perfume  of  the  Gofpel  proved  a 
deadly  fcent  to  haften  and  herghten  their  damnation  ;  this  could 
not  be  but  fad  to  fo  tender  a  Phyfician,  to  fee  his  Patienrsdie 
under  his  hands ;  jet  he  thaxkj  God,  that  makes  him  triumph  In 
Chrift,  2  Cor.  2.14.  But  how  can  he  do  this?  poor  fouls  drop 
to  hell  from  under  his  Pulpit  hearinghim,  and  he  triumph  ?  this 
has  ftrangeas  to  fee  the  father  follow  his  childes  mournful 
hearfe,  not  weeping,  but  fingihg  and  dancing.     Mark,  and  the 
wonder  will  ceafc;  he  doth  not  triumph  that  they  periilv&nt  that 
he  is  not  guilty  of  their  blood;  not  that  they  are  damned,  but 
that  he  fincerely  endeavored  their  falvation,  ve ,f  1  7.  For  we 
are  not  as  many, which  corrupt  the  Hard  of  Go  iy  but  as  of  (iticer  ■  7, 
•but  as  of  Godwin  ti  e  ight  of  God  fpe  kjve  in  (  h-  ft  ;  had  ¥r.td 
dropt  fomc  wilde  gourd  of  error  into  his  doctrine  ,  o-  min  Jed 
fome in.  rec'ienr  of  his  own  ,  with  what  Chrift  the  great  Phy- 
fic'utf'  lud  ordered,  he  would  have  had  little  lift  to  triumph  ; 

but 


gin  about  with  truth.  1 9  3 


but  preaching  pure  Gofpel,  and  that  purely  ,with  a  fincere  heart  ,* 
he  might  triumph  in  Chrift,  that  made  him  faithful,  and  fhali 
triumph  over  them  when  he  meets  them  again  at  the  great  day 
at  the  bar  of  Chrift,  where,  to  their  face  he  fliall  witnefs  againft 
them,  and  vote  with  Chrift  for  their  eternal  deftruclion.    Me 
thinks  I  hear  all  the  faithful  Minifters  of  Chrift,  giving  an  ac- 
count to  him,  on  whofe  errand  they  were  lent,  in  the  language 
of  feremiah's  prayer,  fer.lj.  16. Lord,  we  have  not  dejired  this 
restful  day  thou  kr.oweft,  which  now  hath  taken  hold  of  thefe 
wretched  fouls,  and  which  we  warn'd  them  of;  that  which  came 
out  of  our  lips  (in  our  preaching  to  them)  was  right  before  thsej 
the  life  of  their  fouls  was  dear  and  precious  to  us  j  we  could  have 
facrificed  our  temporal  lives  to  fave  the  eternal  life  of  their 
fouls ;   but  nothing  we  could  fay  or  do,would  ftay  them,  to  hell 
they  would  go,  over  all  the  prayers,  tears  and  intreaties  out 
of  thy  Word,whkh  flood  in  their  way.     This  will  make  the  fin- 
cere  Minifters,  of  Chrift  lift  up  their  head  with  joy,  and  fuch  for- 
lorne  wretches  hang  down  their  heads  with  fhame  to  lookChrift 
or  them  in  the  face,  though  now  they  can  brazen  it  out  with 
an  impudent  fore-head.So  for  Parents  and  OHafters  ;  fincerity 
in  your  relations  will  comfort  you,  though  you  fee  not  your, 
feed  come  up  which  you  have  fown  upon  them  in  your  godly 
examples,  holy  inftruftions,  and  feafonable  corrections.  David 
was  one  that  walkt  in  his  houfe  with  a  prfeU  heart ,Pfal.  Ioi.2. 
careful  in  the  nurture  of  his  children,as  appears  in  his  pious  coun- 
felto  Solomon,  2  Chron.  28.  9.  (  though  not  without  failings ) 
But  many  of  his  children  were  none  of  the  beft;  one  inceftuous, 
another  embrewing  his  hands  in  his  brothers  blood ,  a  third 
catching  at  his  Crown  traiteroufly  while  his  father  was  alive, 
which  made  this  holy  man  fadly  fore-fee  how  the  fquares  would 
go  when  he  was  dead  and  gone;  yet  in  this  great  diforder  of  his 
family,  how  comfortable  do  we  finde  him  on  his  dying-bed  .? 
Though  my  honfe  ke  notfo  with  Godyyet  he  hath  made  with  me  an 
everlafting  Covenant, ordered  in  all  things  and  fure,2Sa.n\.i^.%. 
furely  he  had  done  his  duty  fincerely,  this  was  his  evidence  for 
his  intereft  in  the  Covenanted  the  Covenant  was  all  his  defire 
and  falvation. 

In  a  word,  in  times  of  pubiick  calamity,  when  the  flood  of 
Gods  wrath  comes  rowling  in  upon  a  Nation,  like  waves  irre- 

C  c  fiftibly 


q  ^  Having  y  our  leyns 


fiiubly  at  the  wide  breach,  which  the  high  crying  fins  of  the 
times  make,  and  the  few  righteous  that  are  found  upon  the 
place,  labour  to  ftand  in  the  gap,  by  their  prayers  begging  the 
life  of  the  Nation;  but  God  will  nor  hear,  (foribitio:iietimes 
falls  our,  though  they  were  like  Noah,  Job  and  Daniel,  greatly 
beloved  of  God,  that  no  bayle  will  be  taken  for  a  Nation  under 
arrelt  of  Gods  judgments ;  )   even  then  fincerity  will  be  a  fweec 
fupport  while  we  lharc  with  others  in  the  common  calamity. 
Jeremiah,  he  beftirr'd  him  2ealoufly  for  God  in  teftifying  againft. 
the  fins  of  the  times,  and  for  the  people  faithfully  and  earneftty 
with  God  by  prayer ;  but  he  coul  J  neither  convert  them  by  his 
preaching,nor  divert  the  wrath  of  God  by  his  praying.  The  J  eves 
bid  him  hold  his  peace,and  prophecy  no  more  againft  them;God 
ftops  his  mouth  alfo,  and  bids  him  pray  no  more  for  them.  Now 
in  this  difmalftate  of  things,  what  ealeth  his  forrowful  heart, 
fwolne  with  grief  for  their  finnes  and  judgments  haftening  upon 
them,  like  an  Eagle  to  her  prey  ?  Truly  nothing  can,  but  the  re- 
membrance of  his  fincerity  to  God  and  man  in  thole  debauched 
iYKits^Jer.\i6.io.%jmemiiir  that  I  flood  up  before  thee  to  ffeaJ^ 
good  for  thtm,and  to  turn  away  thy  wrath  ftomtl  em.  As  if  he{  had 
faid,0  Lord,though  I  cannot  prevail  with  this  rebellious  genera- 
tion to  repent  of  their  finnes,or  with  thy  Ma  jetty,  to  repent  of 
thy  wrath  gone  out  by  an  irreversible  decree  againlt  them  ;  yet, 
remember  that  I  have  been  faithful  in  my  place  both  to  thee,and 
them; whereas  ©n  the  contra  :y,horrour  and  amazement  of  fpiric 
is  the  portion  ( in  fuch  times  of  publick  calamity  )  of  hypocrites, 
as  we  fee  in  Pafhurjzr.  20.  who  was  a  man  that  bare  great  fway 
at  Court  in  Jeremiahs  time,  a  bitter  enemy  to  him,  and  the 
meffage  he  brought  from  God  to  Ae  Jews,laDouring  to  footh  up 
the  King  and  Princes  with  vain  hopes  of  golden  days  comino-  ; 
(point  blank  againft  the  Word  of  the  Lord,in  the  mouth  oijere- 
miah)M\d  what  becomes  of  him  when  the  ftorm  falls  on  that  un- 
happy people  ?  Jeremiah  tells  him  his  doom,  ^.4.  that  God  will 
make  him  a  Magor  Miffabib,  aterrourto  himlelf;  Hefhould 
not  only  fhare  in  the  common  calamity,  but  have  a  brand  of 
Gods  efpecial  wrath  fee  upon  him  above  others. 


SECT. 


girt  about  rpit/j  truth.  j  £  c 


SECT.    IV. 

Fourthly,  fincerity  girds  the  Chrillian  with  ftrength  of  com- 
fort, when  deprived  of  thofe  opportunities  which  fometime 
God  had  intrufted  him  with  for  ferving  of  him.    An  affliction 
(confidered  in  it  felfjfo  grievous  to  a  gracious  foul>that  he  knows 
none  he  fears  more ;  he  could  choofe  any  (might  he  be  his  own 
carver )  before  it ;  to  be  poor,  difgraced,  persecuted,  any  thing, 
rather  than  be  laid  afide  as  a  broken  inftrument,  unferviceable 
to  his  God.    Indeed  he  values  his  life,  and  all  the  comforts  of 
/t,  by  the  opportunities  they  aford  for  the  glorifying  God. 
David  flops  the  mouth  of  his  foul,  which  began  to  whifper 
fome  difcontented  language,with  this,  that  he  Jhould  yet  praife 
GodJPkl.+i.Why  art  thou   difcjuieted  O    my  foul}    I  jh. ill  yet 
praife  him.  All  is  well  with  rDavid,  and  no  caufe  of  difquiec 
in  his  foul  (  whatever  befides  goes  crofTe  to  him  )  may  "he  but 
praife  God,  and  have  opportunity  of  glorifying  him.    fofephy 
when  God  had  16  flrangely  raifed  nimpinacle  hi6h    as  I  may  fay, 
to  honour  in  a  flrange  land,  he  doth  not  blefle  himfelf  in  his 
preferment,  carnally  to  think  how  great  a  man  he  is,  but  inter- 
prets the  whole  feries  of  providence,  bringing  him  at  laft  to 
that  place  (  wherein  he  flood  compeere  to  a  mighty  King  )  to 
be  no  other  than  giving  him  an  opportunity  of  being  emi- 
nently ferviceable  to  God  in  the  prefervation  of  his  Church, 
which  was  at  that  time  contain 'd  in  his  fathers  family.    God 
hath  fent  me  hither  fait%\\£jbefpfe  yonjo  preferve  yon  a  posterity 
in  the  earthed  to  fave  yonr  lives  by  a  gre:-.t  dehverance^Gon. 
4?.  7.  This  holy  man  made  hb  place,  give  place  to  the  work,  he 
was  call'd  to  ■  !o  in  it  for  God,  counting  the  honour  of  his  ho- 
nour, to  lie  in  the  opportunity  he  had  by  it,  of  ferving  God 
and  his  Church.     It  muft  therefore  needs    be  a  fad  amnion 
to  a  Saint,  wh^n  fuch  opportunities  are  taken  from  him,  thin 
at  any  time  he  hath  enjoy 'd.    But  fmcerity  can  make  good  work 
of  this  alfo,if  God  will  have  it  fo.     'Tis  fad  to  the  Chriftian 
to  be  Uidafide,  but  ic  is  comfortable  to  him  to  remember,  that 
when  he  was  nor,  he  did  not  melt  his  talents  away  in  (loth,  or 
wafte  them  away  in  riot,  but  was  faithful  in  improving  them 

C  c  2  for 


9  5  Having  y  our  leyns 

for  God ;  he  counts  it  his  affliction  that  God  imploys  him  not 
as  he  hath  done  ^  but  he  is  not  forry  that  God   can   do  his 
work  wi:hout  him ;  yea,  it  is  a  Tweet  comfort  to  him,  as  he 
lies  at  the  graves  mouth,  to  think  that  the  glory  of  God  fhall 
not  go  down  to  the  grave  with  him;  though  he  dies,  yet  God 
lives  to  take  care  of  his  own  work;  and  it  is  not  the  cracking  of 
one  firing,  or  all  that  can  mar  the  mullck  of  Gods  providence, 
who  can  performe  his  pleafure  without  ufing  any  creature  for 
his  inftrument.    In  a  word,  'tis  fad  to  him  to  be  taken  from 
any  work  wherein  he  might  more  eminently  glorifie  God,  yet 
this  again  comforts  him  that  God  counts  that  done ,   which 
the  Chriftian  fincerely  deftres  to  do.    Davids  good  will  in  defi- 
ling to  build  the  Temple,  was  as  much  in  Gods  account,  as  if 
he  had  done  it ;  many  fhall  be  at  the  laft  day  rewarded  by  Chrift, 
for  cloathing  and  feeding  the  poor,  who  when  on  earth  had 
neither  cloaths  nor  bread  to  give,  yet  having  had  a  heart  ta 
give,  fhall  be  reckon'd  amongft  the  greateft  benefactors  to  the 
poor.    This  appears  from  Mat.  2  ?.  34.  where  Chrift  is  re- 
prefented,fpeaking  not  to  fome  few  Saints  that  had  great  eftates 
to  beftow  on  charitable  ufes,  but  to  all  his  Saints,    poor 
as  well  as  rich;  Then  jball  the  King  fay  unto  them  on  his  right 
hand,  Come  ye  bleffed  of  my  F  ather,hhtrh  the  K ingdo  me  prepa- 
red for  yoHy&c.  For  I  was  an  hungred,and  ye  gave  memeat,&*c. 
^        Mark ;  not  ye  that  were  rich,  but  ye,   that  is,  all,  fuch  as  had 
bread,  you  gave  that  out ;  you  that  had  not  bread  or  money 
to  give,  (  when  you  could  not  draw  out  yourpurfe,  you)   yet 
drew  out  your  fouls  to  the  hungry  ;    Hear  this ,  O  ye  precious 
fouls  that  God  hath  made  fincere,  and  take  comfort;    Maybe 
you  ftand  low  in  the  world,  your  calling  is  mean,   your  eftate 
next  to  nothing,which  makes  you  little  regarded  by  your  neigh- 
bours that  over-top  you.  Cantt  thou  fay,  though  thou  beeft  but  a 
fervant  to  fome  poor  Cobler,  that  thou  defireft  to  walk  in  the 
truth  of  thy  heart,  approving  thy  felf  to  God  in  thy  whole 
courfe  ?  This  Bird  will  fing  as  fweet  a  note  in  thy  breaft,  as  if 
thou  vvert  the  greateft  ^Monarch  in  the  world.     That  which 
brings  comfort  to  the  greateft  Saint  in  a  time  of  diftrelfe,  is  the 
fame  which  comforts  the  mcaneft  in  the  family,  and  that  is  the 
love  and  favour  of  God,intercft  in  Chrift,  and  the  precious  pro- 
mifes^which  in  him  are  Te  and  ^Amen.    Now  fincerity  is  the 

belt 


girt  about  with  truth. 


97 


beft  evidence  for  our  title  to  thofe.  It  will  not  be  fomuch 
inhfted  on,  whether  much  or  little  has  been  done  by  us,  as 
whether  tjiat  much  or  little  were  in  iincerity.  Well  done  good 
andfaithfulfervaM)  not  Well  done;thou  haft  done  great  things, 
ruled  States  and  Kingdomes,  been  a  famous  preacher  in  thy 
time,  &c.  but  thou  haft  been  faithful ;  and  that  thou  mayeft 
be,  that  ftand'ft  in  the  obfcureft  corner  of  the  world.  Good 
He^kjah  knew  this ,  and  therefore  on  his  fick-bed  he  dcth  not 
tell  God  of  his  great  fervices  he  had  done,  (  though  none  had 
done  more  )  but  only  defires  God  to  take  notice  of  the  truth 
and  iincerity  of  his  heart,  Remember  that  I  have  wallet  before 
thee  in  truth \and  with  a  f  erf  ell  heart \and  have  done  that  which 
is  good  in  thy  Jigh,  Efay  3  S.  3. 


CHAP.     XIX. 


A  brief  applicatory  improvement  of  the  point 
both   in  general    and  particular 
branches  alfo. 


IT  remains  that  the  point  be  applied  in  its  feveral  branches, 
which  were  three ;  fincerity  hath  a  preferving  ftrength ,  a 
reftoring'ftrength,  and  a  comforting  ftrength.  But  for  quick 
difpatch,  we  fttall  do  it  under  two  heads,  clapping  the  two  for- 
mer into  one. 

Firft,  therefore  hath  fincerity  a  [ftren^thning  vertue,  whereby 
it  either  preferves  the  foul  from  falling  into  finne,  or  helps  the 
Chriftian  fallen,  up  again. 

Firft,  this  afords  thee,  (ChriftianJ  a  further  difcovery  of  thy 
heart,  whether  fincere  or  not ;  put  it  here  upon  the  tryal. 
Doft  thou  finde  a  power  imparted  to  thee^  .whereby  thou  art 

enabled 


Vfe  C 


Having  your  loyns 


enabled  to  repel  a  cempcirion  to  fin,  when  thou  haft  no  weapon 
left  thee  to  defend  chee  againit  it,  but  the  command  forbidding 
k,  or  ibme  arrow  taken  ojjt  of  the  quiver  of  the  Gofpel,fuch  as 
the  love  of  Chiifi  to  thee,rhy  love  to  him,  and  the  like  ?  may  be 
the  temptation  is  hid  fo  cunningly.that  thou  mayelt  finr.e,  and 
fave  thy  credit  too,  having  a  back-door  open'd  to  let  thee  in 
to  it  fecretly.  Thou  (halt  hazard  nothing  apparently  of  thy 
temporal  concernment ;  yea,  rather  greatly  advantage  it,if  thou 
wilt  hearken  to  the  motion  •  only-God  ftands  up  to  oppofe  it, 
his  Spirit  tells  thee,  it  is  againft  his  glory,  inconfiftent  with  the 
duty  thou  oweft,and  love  thou  profefVeft  to  him.Now,fpeak  what 
thou  thinkeft  of  finning,  the  cafe  thus  ftated;  canft  thou  yet 
(land  it  out  valiantly,  and  tell  Satan,  finne  is  no  match  for  thee, 
till  thou  canft  have  Gods  confent,  and  reconcile  (inning  againft 
him,  and  loving  of  him  together?  if  fo,  bleffe  God  that  hath 
given  thee  a  fincere  heart, and  alfo  for  opening  fuch  a  window  as 
this  in  thy  foul,  through  which  thou  mayeft  fee  that  grace  to 
be  there,  which  feen,  is  the  taft  evidence  that  God  can  give 
thee  for  thy  intereft  in  him,  and  life  everlafiing  with  him.  Wert 
thou  an  hypocrke,thou  could'it  no  more  refift  a  finne  fo  offer'd, 
than  pouder,  fire  or  chaffe,  the  wirde. 

a^A/»,when  thou  art  run  down  by  the  violence  of  tempta- 
tion,whatisthe  behaviour  of  thy  foul  in  this  cafe?  dolt  thou 
rally  thy  routed  forces,  and  again  make  head  againft  thy  enemy 
fo  much  the  more  eagerly,  becaufe  foyled  fo  fhamefully  ?  or 
art  thou  content  to  lit  down  quietly  by  thy  loffe,  and  choofe 
rather  to  be  a  tame  flave  tothylult ,  than  tobe  at  any  further 
trouble  to  continue  the  war?  The  falfe  heart  indeed  is.  foon 
cowed,  quickly  yields  fubjeftion  to  the  Conquerour ;  but  the 
fine ere  Chriftian  gets  heart,  even  when  he  lofeth  ground;  up- 
rightnefle  makes  the  foul  rebound  higher  in  holy  purpofes  a- 
gainftfin,  by  its  very  falls  into  finne.  Job  40.  <>.  Oi.ce  have  I 
ffoken,{he  means  foohfkly^finffilly,)  but  I  ml)  not  nn fiver  ;  yea, 
tvs>icc,but  I  will  priceed  no  farther ;  This  made  holy  David  be^; 
of  God  to  be  flared  a  little  jhatk;  might  have  ti  r.e  to  recover 
bis  fhrtnnh  before  he  went  hence  ;  loth  he  was  to  go  beuen  out 
of  the  Held,  might  he  but  live  to  recover  his  lolles  by  repen- 
tance of,  and  ibme  victory  over  thofe  finnes  that  had  weak- 
ned  and  worfted  him,  than  death  fliould  be  welcome  ;  like  that 

brave 


girt  about  with  truth \  i  jp 


brave  Captain yw':o  vponrdei  in  fight >de 'fired  fame  to  hold  him  ftp,  /i 
that  he  might  but  fee  the  nemy  runne  before  he  died  ,  and  he 
fhould  clofe  his  eyes  in  peace.Dzzl  therefore  impartially  with  thy 
own  foul,which  way  do  thy  falls  and  failings  workpif  they  wear  off 
the  edge  from  thy  confcience,  that  it  is  not  fo  keen  and  fharp  in 
its  reproofs  for -finjif  they  bribe  thy  afte&ions,that  thou  beginneft 
to  comply  with  thofe  fins  with  which  formerly  thy  conteft  was, 
and  likeft  pretty  well  their  acquaintance ,  thy  heart  is  not 
right  j  but  if  ftill  thy  heart  meditates  a  revenge  on  thy  fin  that 
hath  over-powred  thee,  and  it  lies  on  thy  "fpirit  ( likeundigefted 
meat  on  a  lick  ftomack)  thou  canft  have  no  eafe  and  con- 
tent to  thy  troubled  ibul  till  thou  hall  clear 'd  thy  felt  of  it ,  as 
to  the  reigning  power  of  it ;  truly  then  thou  difcovereft  a  fincere 
heart. 

Secondly,  this  fhews  of  what  importance  it  is  to  labour  for  Vfe  i 
fincerity;  without  ic  we  can  neither  Hand  again/},  nor  rife 
when  we  fall  into  temptation  ;  whatever  thou  beg 'ft  of  God, 
forget  not  a  fincere  heart.  David  faw  need  of  more  of  this  grace 
than  he  had,  Pf1l.5lAO.Cre.4te  in  me  a  clean  heart  O  jodiand 
renew  in  me  a  right  fpirit ;  and  happy  was  it  for  him  he  had  fo 
much,  as  ro  make  him  delire  more  of  ic :  What  folly  is  it  to  build 
a  houfe  with  beams  on  fire  ?  The  hypocrites  building  muft  needs 
come  to  naught,  there  is  a  fire  unquencht ;  the  power  of  hy- 
pocrilie  unmortiried,  that  it  will  confume  all  his  goodly  profef- 
fion;he  carries  into  the  field  a  heart  that  will  deliver  him  up  into 
his  enemies  hands.  And  he  is  fure  to  be  overcome  to  whom  his 
own  fide  is  not  true. 

Thirdly,  blefleGod  O  fincere  Chriftian  for  this  grace ;  it  is  Vfe  3, 
a  blefling  invaluable,  Crowns  and  Diadems  are  not  to  be  com- 
par'dwithit.  In this,thou haft  a  heart  after  Gods  o^n  heart; 
a  heart  to  his  liking  ^  yea,  a  heart  to  his  /Ikenejfe.  Nothing 
makes  thee  liker  God  in  the  fimplicity  and  purity  of  his  nature, 
than  fincerity.  Truth  is  that  God  glories  in  ;  he  is  a  God  of 
truth.  When  Haman  was  bid  to  fay  what  fhould  be  done  :o  the 
man  that  the  King  delighted  to  honour,  he  thinking  the  King 
meant  no  other  than  himfelf, would  flieas  high  as  his  ambition 
could  carry  him,and  what  doth  he  choofe,but  to  becloath'd  wirh 
the  Kings  own  apparel  royal? When  God  gives  thee  fincerity,  he 
cloaths  thy  foul  with  that  which  he  wears  himfelf,  rvhe  ctoths 

himfelf  . 


"jT^  Having  your  loyns 


him  f elf  with  truth^  and  righteoufnejfe  as  a  garment. By  this  thou 
art  made  a  Conquerour,  greater  than  ever  ^Alexander  vva^  ;  he 
overcame  a  world  of  men,  but  thou  a  world  of  lufts  andDivels. 
Did  one  blefle  God  at  the  tight  of  a  toad,  that  God  made  him 
a  man,  and  not  a  toad  ?  how  much  more  thankful  oughteft 
thoutobe,to  God  who  hath  made  thee, that  werr  a  hypocrireby 
nature  (which  is  far  worfe)  an  upright  Chriftian  ?  It  is  a  notable 
fl         faying  of  LaBantim^Si  nemo  eft^qxin  emori  malit^quam  con- 
verti  in  aliquant  Beftia  figuramtfuamvis  hominis  mentem  fit  habi- 
furputfuanto  miferius  ejl  in  homwisjigHra  ammo  effe  efferato  f  If 
(faith  \\€)a  man  would  cl  oofe  d:athyratl.er  than  to  have  the  face  and 
jhape  of 'a  beast fkongh  he  m'-gh  withdlkeey  the  foul  ofman>  ho.v 
much  more  miserable  k  it  under  thefhape  of  a  man^  to  carry  the  heart 
of  a  beafi  ?  yet  fuch  a  one  is  the  hypocrite,yea  worfejhe  doth  only 
under  the  {hape  of  a  man,but  in  the  difguile  of  a  Saint,  carry  a 
beaftly  filthy  heart  within  him. 
Vfe  4.        Fourthly,  let  this  encourage  thee  who  art  fincere  againft  the 
fears  of  final  Apoftafie.    Though  fincerity  doth  not  priviledge 
thee  from  falling,  yet  thy  Covenant-ftate  which  thou  art  in  (  if 
fincerej  fecures  thee  from  final  Apoftafie.  Becaufe  thyftockof 
grace  in  handisfmall,  thou  queftioneft  thy  perfevering ;  can 
thefe  weak  legs  (  thinkeft  thou  )  bring  me  to  my  journies  end; 
thefe  few  pence  in  my  purfc  ( little  grace  in  my  heart )  bear  my 
charges  all  the  way  to  heaven,througn  fo  many  expences  of  trials 
and  temptations?  Truly  no,  if  thouwertto  receive  no  more 
than  thou  haft  at  prefent;  the  bread  thou  haft  in  the  cupboard 
will  not  maintain  thee  all  thy  life;  but  (  foul )  thou  haft  a  Cove- 
nant will  help  thee  to  more  when  that  grows  low ;    hath  noc 
God  taught  thee  to  pray  for  thy  daily  breads  and  doft  thou  not 
finde  that  the  bleffing  of  God  in  thy  calling  diligently  followed, 
fupplies  thee  from  day  to  day  ?  And  haft  thoa  not  the  fame 
bond  to  fue  for  thy  fpiritual  daily  bread  ?  haft  thou  not  a  Father 
in  heaven,  that  knows  what  thou  needeft  for  thy  foul  as  well  as 
body  *  haft  thou  not  a  dear  brother,  yea5  husband  that  is  gone 
to  heaven,  where  plenty  of  all  grace  is  to  be  had,  and  that  on 
purpofe  on  his  childrens  errand,  that  he  might  keep  their  fouls 
graces  and  comforts  alive  in  this  neceffitous  world  ?  All  power 
is  in  hi*  hands,  he  may  go  to  the  heap,  and  fend  what  he  pleafe 
for  your  fuccour,  and  can  you  ftarve  while  he  hath  fulnelTe  of 

grace 


girt  about  with  truth.  2  C I 

grace  by  him  that  hath  undertaken  to  provide  for  you,  Lu\c 
10.  3  <j.  The  two  pence  which  the  Samaritan  leit,were  noc 
enough  to  pay  for  cure  and  board  of  the  wounded  man  ;  there- 
fore he  pafleth  his  word  for  all  that  i.e  jhould  need  be  fides  ; 
Chrift  doth  not  only  give  a  little  grace  in  hand,  but  his  bond  for 
more  to  the  fincere  foul,  even  as  much  as  will  bring  them  to 
heaven,  P/V.84.  I 1  .Gtace  and  glory  h?  will  give>  and  no  good  thing 
will  he  with-}. old  fism  them  that  walk^nprighiy. 

Fifthly,  take  heed  of  refting  on,  or  glorying  in  thy  fincerity.  Vfe  5 
'Tis  trwe,  it  will  enable  thee  to  refill  temptations,  and  recover 
out,  when  in  temptation ;  but  who  enables  that  ?  where  grows 
the  root  that  feeds  thy  grace  ?  not  in  thy  own  ground,  but  in 
heaven;  it  is  God  alone  that  holds  thee  and  it  in  life ;  he  that 
gave  it,  is  at  colt  to  keep  it.  The  Lord  is  thy  ftrengthja  him  be 
thy  fong ;  What  can  the  Axe,  though  fharp,  do,  without  the 
Workman  $  Shall  the  Axe  fay  I  have  cut  down,  or  the  Chizel, 
I  have  carv'd  ?  is  it  not  the  skill  and  art  of  the  Workman  rather? 
when  able  to  refift  temptation,  fay,  The  Lord  was  on  my  fide •,  or 
tlfe  I  hr.d  fallen  -,  Set  up  an  Eben-Ez-cr^  and  write  on  it,  hi- 
therto the  Lord  hath  helped  me. 

Though  God  promifeth  in  the  Pfj/me  even  now  cited,to  give 
orace  and  glory  to  the  upright ;  yet  he  will  not  give  the  glory 
of  his  grace  to  uprightneffe ,  2  Sam.  22.  24.  we  have 
David  ailerting  his  uprightneife ,  and  how  he  waspreferv'd 
by  it,/  was  nlfo  upright  before  him^and  have  kept  me  from  mine 
im({<Atj,vzii<z  25.  he  declares  the  fruit  of  his  uprightnefie,hcw 
God  bare  tellimony  to  it  by  rewarding  him  for  it,  in  vindicating 
him  before,  and  giving  him  victory  over  his  enemies.  7  b.r.fore 
the  Lord  hath  recommenced  n.e  according  to  my  rightco'ifneffe-,  ac- 
cording to  my  cleanncjfe  in  his  eye-fight. Now  left  he  fhould  fet  up 
himfdf,or  applaud  kis  own  uprightnelle  to  the  prejudice  of  Goes 
grace,  he  fweetly  corrects  and  bounds  thefe  pailages,  v.  32.  God 
is  my  (her.gth andpv.vtr,and he  malzetb  my  n>.iy  pe^f'fl.  As  if  the 
holy  man  had  faid,  I  rjray  miftake  me  not,  I  do  not  afcribe  the 
victory  over  my  enemies  within  me  or  without,  to  my  felf  and 
my  uprightneffe ;  no,  God  did  all,  he  is  my  rtrength  and  power, 
yea,  it  is  ne  that  makes  my  way  perfect ;  if  1  be  f  nee  re  more  then 
others  in  my  way  J  muft  thank  him  for  it,  for  he  makes  my  way 
perfect.  He  found  mc  at  firft  as  crooked  apiece,  and  walking  in  as 

D  d  crooked 


3  0  2  Having  y  our  leyns 


crooked  ways  as  any  other,  but  he  made  me  and  my  way  perfeft 
-andltrait.     Had  God  pleafed,  he  could  have  made  Saul  as  per- 
fect as  D*-z//V;had  God  left  Davidfiz  would  have  been  as  croak- 
ed and  falfe- hearted  as  SattU 

The  laft  branch  of  the  point  was,  fincerity  hath  a  comforting 
fir:ngth  in  all  forts  of  affliction.  The  Applicatory  improvement 
cf  which  fhall  be  only  this. 
<£;  r(  Let  it  reach  us  not  to  fear  affliction ,  but  hypcrlfie.VtzWz\z  ic 

f  friends  jafflic'tion  is  a  harmlefle  thing  to  a  fincere  fouI;it  cannot 
be  fo  great  as  to  make  it  inconfiftent  with  his  joy  and  comfort ; 
a  gracious  foul  in  the  moft  fharp  affii&ron  can  fpare  his  tears  and 
pity  to  bellow  them  on  the  hypocrite,  when  in  all  his  pomp  and 
glory  ;  he  hath  that  in  his  bolome  that  gives  him  more  comfor- 
table apprehenfions  of  his  own  afflic~tion,then  ftanders  by  have5o: 
can  have  of  therrf- which  made  once  a  holy .man(f when  the  pangs 
of  death  were  on  him)to  ask  a  fervant  of  his,vveepingby  his  bed- 
fide  for  hivi^tvhat  fhc  meant  by  her  fears ,faying,»<?z erf ear  that  my 
heavenly  Father  wiH  do  w?  any  hurt.  Indeed  affliction  is  not  joy- 
ous to  the  flelh,  which  hatrunade  fome  of  Gods  dear  children 
awhile  to  fhrink,  but  after  they  have  been  acquainted  with  the 
work,  and  the  comforts  which  God  beftows  on  his  poor  pri- 
foners  through  the  grate,  they  have  learn't  another  tune,  like 
the  bird  that  at  flrft  putting  into  the  Cage  flutters, and  fhews  her 
diflike  of  her  reftraint,but  afterwards  comes  to  fing  more  fweet- 
ly,  than  when  at  liberty  to  flie  where  fhe  pleafed.  Be  not  there- 
fore fo  thoughtful  about  affliction,  but  careful  againft  hypo- 
crftie'j  if  the  bed  of  affliction  proves  hard  anduneafieto  thee, 
it  is  thy  felf  that  brings  with  thee  what  makes  it  fo.    Approve 
thy  felf  to  God,  ancttruft  him  who  hath  promifed  to  be  his 
Saints  bed-maAer  in  affli^iea,  to  make  it  foft  and  eafie  for  thee. 
O  what  a  cutting  word  will  it  be  in  a  dying  houre,  when  thou 
art  crying,  Lord,  Lord,  mercy  on  a  poor  creature,  to  hear  the 
Lord  fay,  I  know  thee  not;  'tis  not  the  voice  of  a  fincere  foul,buc 
an  hypocrite  that  howlesoji  his  bed  of  forrow?  what  then  wilt 
thou  do,  when  fallen  into  the  hands  of  God,  with  whom  thou 
hall  but  jugled  in  thy  profcfiion,  and  never  fincerery  didft  love  ? 
if  that  fpeech  was  fo  confounding  to  the  Patriarchs,  I  amjofeph 
whom  y oh  fo/d,ihzt  ihzy  could  not  endure  his  prefence,knowing 
iheirowngbjlt;  how  intolerable  wilUc  be  to  hear  from  Gods- 
own 


The  breajl-plate  ofrighteoufneffe. 


ac3 


own  mouth  fuch  language  in  a  time  of  diftrefle ;  I  am  God 
whom  you  have  mock't,'abufed  and  fold  away  for  the  enjoyment 
of  your  Ms,  and  do  you  now  come  to  me  ?  Have  I  any 
thing  for  you  but  a  hell  to  torment  you  into  all  eter- 
nity? 


Verse    14/ 

And    having    on   the   breajl-plate   of   righte* 
onfhefje. 

tHefe  words  prefent  us  with  a  fecond  piece  of 
Armour  commended  to ,  and  charged  upon  all 
Ch  rifts  fouldiers,  oA  breaft-plate,  andthemet- 
tal  it  is  to  be  made  of,  Rightewfmfe.  Con- 
cerning which,  a  double  enquiry  would  be 
made.    Firft,what  right s^ufm^e  ishereiatend 

ed.    Secondly,  why  compared  to  this  piece  of  the  fouldiers  Ar* 

mour,the  Breaft-plate. 


Dda 


CHAP. 


QCa  And  having  on 

fcfr.0ictf.m<j.  ctocr.cr.  Qxhfcih  fr.fc&w.ti:  oichio;cr.aichtr.c^ch)C7i 
CHAP.   L 
Contains  the  Explication  of  the  words. 


F 


Trft,  what  is  the  righteouf/iefi  here  meant  ?   the  Scripture 
fpeaks  of  a  twofold  right  eou[r,ej\e%  the  one  legale  the  other 
evangelical. 

Firfty  a  legal  righteonfnejfe^  that  which  God  required  of  man 

1  •        in  the  Covenant  of  Works,.&>zw. io,$.Mofes  dcfcribeth  the  right  e- 

cufnefi  which  «  of  the  Lawjhat  the  man  which  dQth  thofe  things 

fhall  live.    Three  things  concur  to  make  up  this  Law-righte- 

oufnefle. 

Firft,  an  obedience  abfolutely  perfect  to  the  Law  of  God, 
that  is  perfect  extenjizi ,  in  regard  of  the  objeit  ;  intenfi-dt  in 
regard  of  the  fubjec-tjthe  whole  Law  mult  be  kept  with  the  whole 
heart;  the  leaft  deleft  either  of  part  or  degree  in  the  obedience 
fpoiles  all. 

Secondly,  this  perfect  obedience  to  the  Law  of  God  mutt  be 
ferfonally  performed  by  him  that  is  thus  righteous.  The  man 
that  doth  t  he  fe  things  (hall  live  ','m.  that  Covenant  God  had  but 
mans fingle bond  for  performance,  (no  furety  engaged  with 
him  )  fo  that  God  having  none  elfe  to  come  upon  for  the 
default,  it  was  necefiary  (except  God  will  lofe  his  debt )  to  exa& 
itperfonally  on  every  man. 

Thirdly,  this  perfect  perfonal  obedience  mufi  be  perpetual. 
This  Law  allows  no  after-game ;  if  the  Law  be  once  broken, 
( though  but  in  one  wry  thought)  there  is  no  place  for  repent- 
ance in  that  Covenant,  though  it  were  attended  with  a  life  after- 
ward never  fo  exact  and  fpotlefle.  After-obedience,  which  but 
due,  cannot  make  amends  for  former,  difobediencej  he  doth  not 
fatisfie-the  Law  for  killing  a  man  once,  that  dorh  lb  no  more. 
How  defperate  were  our  condition,  if  we  could  no:  be  lifted  in 

Chriils 


the  breajl-plate  of  righteottfaeflh.  205 

Chrifts  mufter-rolf,  till  we  were  provided  cf  fuch  abreaft-piate 
as  this  is?  Jdim  indeed  had  fuch  a   righteoufnefle  made  to 
his  hand,  his  heart  and  the  Law  were  unilbns ;  it  anfwered  it,as 
face  anfwers  face  in  a  glafie ';  it  was  as   natural  to  him  to  be 
righteous,  as  now  it  is  to  his  posterity  to  be  unrighteous.    God 
was  the  engraver  of  his  own  image  upon  man,  which  conffted 
in  righteoufnefle  and  holineffe;  and  he  who  made  all  fo  perfect, 
that  upon  a  review  of  rhe  whole  Creation,  he  neither  added, 
nor  altered  any  thing,but  fa»  all  very  good,   was  not  lefle  curi- 
ous in  the  mafter-piece  of  all  his  work,/;*  made  man  perfecl.But 
tAdam  finn'd,and  defiled  our  nature ;  and  now  our  nature  defiles 
us,  fo  that  never  lince  could  <lA dams  plate  (righteoufnefle  I 
mean  )  fit  the  breaft  of  any  meer  man ;  if  God  would  fave  all 
the  world  for  one  fuch  righteous  man,  (  as  once  he  offer'd  to  do 
Sodom  for  ten)  he  could  not  be  found.     The  <^4pft!e  divides 
all  the  wo:  Id  into  fw  and  Ge,  ti/e,  Rom.  3 .  9.   he  is  not  afraid  to 
lay  them  all  in  the  dirt,  they  are  all  under  finne,  there  is  nor.c 
righteous^  no  not  one.     Not  the  braggert  Phi/ofopbcr  among  the 
ijentiles,  nor  theprecifeft  *Tha-/'fe  among  the  Jews;  we  may 
go  yet  further,not  the  holieft  Saint  that  ever  lived  can  Hand  righ- 
teous before  that  bar.     Enter  not  into  judgment  with  thy  fer- 
vant,  (faith  David)  for  in  thy  fight ft. ill  no  living  man  he  juftifitd-, 
Pfal.  143.  2.     God  hath  nailed  that  door  up,  that  none  can 
for  ever  enter  by  a  Law-righteouinefie  into  rife  and  happinefle. 
This  way  to  heaven  is  like  the  Northen  pafiage  to  the  Indies^ 
whoever  attempts  it,is  furetobe  frozen  up  before  he  gets  half 
way  thichsr.  + 

The  fecond  righteoufnefle  which  the  Scripture  fpeaks  of,   is  2 

an  evangelical  righteoufaejfe.  Now  this  alio  1st irofold  ;  A  r'ijtli^ 
teoxfneffe  imput idjr  imparted  j  Tin  imput  ed  rig/  teoptfneJfey  is  that 
which  is  wrought  byChrift  for  the  believer ;  "the  imparted,  that 
which  is  wrought  by  Chrift  in  the  believer.  The  firft  of  there 
the  imtutedrightcau,fncffe^\s  the  righteoufnefs  of  our  juftiheation, 
that  by  which  the  believer  (lands  juft  and  righteous  before  Go.}, 
and  is  called  by  way  of  dillin&ion  from  the  latter ,  tie  righte- 
oafneife  of  G^3Rom.^.2T.  Rom. 10.3.  Notasif  the  other  righ- 
teoufneiTe  were  not  of  God  alio  ;  But, 

Firft,  tacaufe  this  is  not  only  wrought  by  Chrift,  but  alfo 
perform'd  in  Chriit,  who  U  God  •  and  not  inherent  in  us,  though 

D  d  3  for 


Q06  And  having  on 

for  us ;  fo  that  the  benefit  of  it  redounds  by  faith  to  us ,  as 
if  we  had  wrought  it;  hence  Chrift  is  call'd  the  Lord ofir  right.* 
euf'cjfe. 

Secondly Jozoiufe  this  is  the  righteoufnefle,  and  not  the  other, 
which  God  hath  ordained  to  be  the  meritorious  caufe  of  the  ju- 
ftification  of  our  perfons,  and  alfo  acceptation  of  our  inherent 
righteoufnefle  imparted  by  him  to  us.  Now  this  righteoufnefs 
belongs  to  the  fourth  piece  of  zArmonr^thefh^eld  of  /W^indeed 
we  finde  it  bearing  its  name  from  that  grace,  TZ^om.q.  1 1.  where 
it  is  called  t/ertghteoftfnejfeoffaithjxc&iife  apprehended  and  ap- 
plied by  faith  unto  the  foul ;  the  righteoufncffc  therefore  which 
is  here  compared  to  the  foeafl-pUte ,  is  the  latter  of  the  two, 
and  that  is  the  righteoufnefle  of  our  fanctification, which  I  called 
a  righteoufnefle  imparted,  or  a  righteoufnefle  wrought  by  Chrift 
in  the  believer.     Now  this  take  thus  defcribed. 

It  is  a  fupernatural  principle  of  a  new  life,planted  in  the  heart 
of  every  childe  of  God  by  the  powerful  operation  of  the  holy 
Spirit,  whereby  they  endeavour  to  approve  themfelves  to  God 
and  man,  in  performing  what  the  Word  of  God  requires  to  be 
performed  to  both.  Briefly  let  us  unfold  what  is  rolled  up  in  this 
defcription. 
x .  Firft,  here  is  the  efficient  >  or  workman,  the  hlj  Spirit  -t  hence 

it  ky  the  feveral  parts  of  holinelTe  are  called/rw/r/*/  the  Spirit , 
Gal.  <?.22.  if  the  Spirit  be  not  at  the  root,  no  fuch  fruit  can  be 
feen  on  the  branches  as  holinefle  ;  fenfttai,  and  not  having  the 
Spirit  are  infeparably  coupled,  fade  19.  Man  by  his  fall  hath  a 
double  lofle ;  Gods  lo«e  to  him,  his  likenefle  to  God.  Chrift 
reftores  both  to  his  children,thefir{t  by  his  righteoufnefle  im- 
puted to  them  ;  the  fecond  by  his  Spirit  re-imparting  the  loft 
image  of  God  to  them ,  which  conf  (Is  in  righteoufnefle  and  true 
holinefle ;  who,  but  a  man  can  impart  his  own  nature,and  be°et 
a  childe  like  himfelf?  and  who,  but  the  Spirit  of  God  can  make 
a  creature  like  God,  by  making  him  partaker  of  the  divine  na- 
•    ture  f 

a.  SecondIy,here  is  the  work  produced.  A  fnpernatura/  principle 

of  a.  new  l.fe  ; 

1 .  By  a  principle  of  life,I  mean,an  inward  difpofition  and  qua- 
lity, fweetIy,powerfully  and  conftantly  inclining  it  to  that  which 
is  holy ;  fo  that  the  Chriftian  ( though  paffive^in  the  produ£i- 

on^ 


the  breajl-plate  of  righteokfneffe.  207 

on  J  is  afterward  active,  and  co-working  with  the  Spirit  in  alj 
anions  of  holinefie,not  as  a  life-lefs  inftrument  is  in  the  hand  of 
aMufitian,  but  as  a  living  childe  in  the  band  of  a  father;  there- 
fore they  are  faid  to  be  led  by  the  Sp.'rit^Rom.  8. 

2.'Tis  a  principle  of  new  hfe,the  Spirits  work  was  not  to  chafe 
and  recover  what  was  fwooning,  but  to  work  a  life  de  novo,  in 
a  foul  quite  dead  ;  you  hath  he  qn  ck^nsd  who  were  dead  in  tref- 
paffes.'ihz  Divel  comes  as  an  Oratour  to  perfwade  by  argument, 
when  he  tempts;  the  Spirit  as  a  Creatour  when  he  converts. 
The  Divel  draws  forth  and  enkindles  what  he  findes  raked  up  in 
the  heart  before  .•  But  the  holy  Spirit  puts  into  the  foul  what  he 
findes  not  there,  called  in  Scripture  the  feed  of  God>i  Joh.3.9. 
(fhrift  form'.d  in  you, Gal.4.19.  the  new  crevturefj?\.6.\\.  the 
Lave  put  by  God  into  the  inner  man^  Jerem .  31.33  .which  Paul  calls 
the  Lave  of  the  Sprit  of  life  in  Chr'fi  J<?yVr,Rom.8.2. 

3.  It  is  a  fupernatural  principle  by  which  we  diftinguirh  it 
from  aAdams  righteoufnetfeandholine{fe,which  was  connatu- 
ral to  him,  as  now  fin  is  to  us;  and  had  he  Rood,  would  have 
been  propagated  to  us ,  as  naturally  as  now  his  finne  is. 
Holinefle  was  as  natural ^  to  ^Adr/ns  foul  ,  as  health  was 
to  his  body,they  both  refulting  exprirxiplis  rettt  confiitnt is ,from 
principles  pure  and  right  difpofed. 

Thirdly,here  is  the  foil  or  fubject  in  which  the  Spirit  plants  this  ?• 

principle  of  holinef»//»f  ehilde  of  God ;  Becaufe  ye  are  fonnesyhe 
hath  Jent  the  Spirit  of  his  Sonne  into  your  hearts,  Gad. 4.6.  noc 
a  ehilde  in  all  his  family  that  is  unlike  his  father,**  is  the  heaven- 
ly, fo  are  they  that  are  heavenly ,and  none  bur  children  have  this 
ftamp  of  true  holiaeflfc  on  them.  As  the  Apoftle,  Rom.  8.  9. 
concludes,  we  have  not  the  Spirit  if  we  le  m  the  fiejh,  (that  is 
in  an  unholy  finful  ftate  )  fo  he  concludes,  we  are  not  his  (  chil- 
dten)if  we  have  not  his  Spirit  thns  transforming  and  fan&ifying 
us.  There  is  indeed  a  holinefle  and  fan&ifi cation  taken  in  a 
large  fenfe,  which  may  be  found  in  fuch  as  are  not  children,  fo  all 
the  children  of  believers  are  holy,  1  C°r-j-  who  are  not  all  chil- 
dren of  God;  yea,  falfeprofeffors  alfogaine  the  name  of  be- 
ing fan&ified,  Heb.  10.  29.  becaufe  they  pretend  to  befo;  but 
that  which  the  Scripture  calls  righteoufnefle  and  true  holinefs, 
is  a  fculpture  the  Spirit  ingraves  on  none,  but  the  children  of 

God,  . 


QCy  And  having  on 

God.  The  Spirit  fanctihes  none  but  whom  Chrift  prays  his 
Father  to  fancYifie,  an  J  they  are  his  peculiar  number  given  of 
God  to  him,  John  17. 

Fourthly,  here  is  die  effiracy  of  this  principle,  planted  by  the 
Spirit  in  the  heart  of  a  childe  of  God,  whereby  he  erdctvonn-. 
As  the  heart  which  is  the  principle  of  natural  life  in  the  body 
from  the  inhiiion  of  natural  life,is  ever  beating  and  working,  io 
the  principle  of  new  life  in  the  foul  ever  endeavouring.  The  new 
creature  is  not  (lill-born  ;  true  holinefle  is  not  a  dull  habit, 
that  fleeps  away  the  time  wkh  doing  nothing.  The  woman 
cured  by  Ch rill, rofe  up  prefently  and  min  fired  uvto  tf.em,Ma.t.%. 
No  fooner  this  principle  is  planted  in  the  heart,  but  the  man 
fifeth  up  to  wait  on  God,  and  a£  for  God  with  all  his  might 
and  main;  the  feed  which  the  fanctifying Spirit caiHn to  the 
foul,  is  not  loft  in  the  foile,  but  quickly  Ihewsitis  alive  by  the 
fruit  it  bears. 

Fifnhly,here  is  the  imperfect  nature  of  this  principle;as  it  (hews 
its  reality  by  endeavouring^o  its  imperfe£tion,that  it  enables  but 
to  an  endeavour,  not  a  full  performance.     Evangelical  holinefle 
rather  makes  the  creature  willing,  than  able  to  give  full  obedi- 
ence.The  Saints  heart  leaps  when  his  legs  do  but  creep  in  the  way 
of  Gods  commandments.  Mary  zsk't  where  they  had  laid  Clmifl\ 
meaning  ( ir  feems )  to  carry  him  away  on  her  ihouklers,whi"ch 
llie  was  nor  able  for  to  do;  her  affections  were  Wronger  than 
her  bick.Tbat  principle  of  holinefle  which  is  in  the  Saint,makes 
hiui  life  at  that  dury  which  he  can  little  more  than  flir.    F,iul  a 
Saint  of  thefirit  magnitude,  he  gives  us  his  own  character,  with 
oihir  eminent  fervants  of  Chriit,  rather  from  the  fincerity  of 
their  will  and  endeavour,  than  perfection  of  their  wok,  He'. 
1^.8.  Pray  for  m,for  we  trvfl  we  have  a  good  corfcierce^in  all 
things  willing  to  live  honejily  ;  he  doth  not  fay  in  all  things  we 
do  livehonedly,  as  if  noltep  were  taken  awry  by  them.     No 
he  durft  not  fay  ib  for  a  world,  but  thus  much  he  dares  aflert  for 
hixfelf  and  brethren,  that  they  were  willing  in  nil  things  to  do 
what  was  holy  and  righteous ;   where  willing  is  not  "a  weak 
liitlefle  velleiry,  but  a  will  exerted  in  a  vigorous  endeavour;k 
weighs  as  much  in  an  impartial  eare,  as  that  of  the  fame  <7W, 
Acts  24.  16.  herein  do  I  exe.e'fe  my  fe/f;  he  was  fovVJMittg,  as 
to ule his  belt*  care  and  labour  in  the  waves  of  holinefle,  arid 

having 


the  breaflfplate  of  right  eoufnefje.  ,  309 


having  this  teftimony  in  his  own  bread .  he  is  not  afraid  to  lay 
claimtoagoodconfcicnce ,  though  he  doth  not  fully  attain  to 
that  he  delires  -t  We  trxftwe  have  agsod  confcience,  willing,  &c. 
he  means  in  the  favourable  interpretation  of  the  Coipel ,  for  the 
Law  allows  no  fuch  good  confcience. 

Sixthly,  here  is  the  uniformity  of  this  principle  in  its  a&ings^  tf. 

To  God  and  man  ^  true  holineffedoth  not  divide  what  God  joyns 
together, God  fiake  all thefe  wcrds^  Exod.  20.  Firft  table  and  fe- 
cond  alfo.  Now  a  truly  fanctified  heart  dares  not  skip,or  blot  one 
word  God  hath  writ,  but  defires  to  be  a  faithful  executor  to  per* 
forme  the  whole  will  of  God. 

Seventhly,  here  is  the  order  of  its  a&ing,  as  u  God  andmanfoy         j\\ 
firft  to  God,  and  then  to  man  •,  yea,  to  God  in  his  rigbteoufnefle 
and  charity  to  man*  2  Cor.  8.5 .  firft  gave  their  own  f elves  to  the 
Lord9and  unto  m  by  the  Will  of  God.    God  is  firft  fervM,  and  man 
in  obedience  to  the  will  of  God. 

Eighthly,here  is  the  rule  it  goes  by  9what  theWerdofGod  requires;         « 
Apo&eriphal  holinefsis  no  true  holinefs,we  cannot  write  inReli- 
gion  a  right  line  without  a  rule, or  by  a  falfe  one.  And  all  are  falfe 
rules  befidesthe  Word|7»  theLaw^andto  the  teftimony  jf  they  (peal^ 
not  according  to  thuWordJt  is  becaufe  there  is  no  light  in  them.\C8. 20 

The  fecond  thing  to  be  enquired,  is,  why  right eeufneffe  and  ho- 
linejfe  are  compared  to  the  breaft-plate.  And  that  is  for  a  twofold 
ufe  that  the  fouldier  makes  of,  and  benefit  he  receives  from  this 
piece  of  Armour. 

Firftjthebreaft-plateprefervesthe  moft  principal  part  of  the 
body,  and  that  isthebreaft,  where  the  very  vitals  of  man  are 
clofely  coucht  together,  and  where  a  (hot  and  ftab  is  more  deadly 
than  in  other  parts  that  are  remote  from  the  fountaineof  life. 
A  man  may  out-  live  many  wounds  received  in  the  armesor  legs, 
but  a  ftab  in  the  heart  or  other  vital  parts  is  the  certain  meffenger 
of  death  approaching.Thusrighteoufnefleand  holinefle  preferve 
the  principal  part  of  a  Chriftian  ,  his  foul  and  confcience  j  We 
live  or  die  fpiritually  ,  yea  eternally ,  as  we  look  to  our  fouls 
and  confcienccs.  '  Tis  not  a  wound  in  eftate,  credit^  or  any  o- 
ther  worldly  enjoyment  that  kills  us  in  this  fenfe.  Tbefe  touch 
not,  hazard  not  the  Chriftians  life  any  more,  than  the  (having  of 
the  beard,  or  pairing  of  the  nailes  do  the  mans;  fpiritual  vitals  are 
feated  in  the  foul  and  confcience  •  it  muft  be  a  fpiritual  dagger 

E  e  that 


2io  Andbavwg  on 

that  ftabs  thele,  and  that  only  isfinne,  which  is  faid  to  hmtfvr 
'  the  precious  life,  Proverbs  6.  26  .  1  his  is  the  dart  that  ftrikes 
the  young  man  through  the  liver ,  whohafteth  to  his  luft,as 
the  bird  to  the  fnare  ,  and  knmcth  not  that  it  is  fcr  his  life  , 
proverbs  7.  Now  righteoufnefle  and  holinetfe  defend  the 
confeience  from  all  wounds  and  harmes  from  finne ,  which 
is  the  weapon  Satan  ufcth  to  give  the  confeience  its  deadly 
Itab  with. 

Secondly  ,.  the  breaft-flate  by  defending  this  principal  part, 
emboldens  the  fouldier,  and  makes  him  fealeffe  of  danger, 
and  that  is  as  neceflary  in  fight  as  the  other-,  it  is  almoft 
all  one  for  an  army  to  be  killed  or  cowed  j  A  dead  fouldier 
flain  upon  the  place  t  will  do  in  a  manner  as  much  good  ,  as 
a  dead-hearted  fouldier  that  is  difmayed  with  fear  •,  his  heart 
is  killed  while  he  is  alive  •,  And  a  naked  breaft  expofcth  the 
unarmed  fouldier  to  a  trembling  heart;  whereas  one  other- 
wife  cowardly,  having  his  breaft  defended  with  a  plate  of 
proof,  will  the  more  boldly  venture  upon  the  pikes*  Thus 
righteoufnefle  by  defending  the  confeience,  fills  the  creature  with 
courage  in  the  face  of  death  and  danger,  whereas  guilt  (which 
is  tbenakednefleofthe  foul)  puts  the  (louteftfinner  into  a  fha- 
kingfit  of  fear.  The  wicked  flee  when  no  man  purfuet  h,  but  the 
z3  1.!  rigbttow  are  bold  as  a  lion.  They  fay  (heep  are  feared  with 
the  clatter  of  their  own  feet  as  they  run,  fo  is  the  (inner  with  the 
din  of  his  guilt.  No  fooner  »s?dam  faw  his  plate  off,  and  himfelf 
to  be  naked,  but  he  is  afraid  at  Gods  voice,  as  if  he  had  never  been 
acquainted  with  him.  Never  can  we  recover  truly  our  courage, 
till  we  recover  our  hchnefle.-  Jfonr  heart  condemn  us  notfhen  have 
7i>g  h/dnejfe  with  God,  I  John  3..  21. 


CHAP. 


the  bre aft-  plate  ofrighteoitfnejje. 


211 


7777$7$$ 


CHAP.  II. 

A  fbort  point  from  the  connexion  of  this  piece  of  Ar- 
mour with  the  firft ;  Rigbteoufnejfe  with  Truth, 


Note] 


THe  words  thus  opened,  theObfervations  are  noweafie  to 
be  drawn  from  them^  but  the  copulative,  And ,  with  which 
this  piece  of  Armour  is  fo  clofely  buckled  to  the  former  ,  bids  us 
make  a  little  ftand ,  to  take  notice,  how  lovingly  truth  and  holinefs 
are  here  conjoyn'd  like  the  fifter-curtains  of  the  Tabernacle  (fo  2(S*' 

called  in  the  Hebrew)  and  'tis  pity  any  (hould  unclafp  them,which 
God  hath  fo  fitted  each  to  other.  Let  that  then  be  the  not-e  from 
hence. 

Note.     That  truth  and  holinefle  muft  go  together. 

Firft ,  Take  truth  for  truth  of  Aoclrine.  An  orthodox  judg- 
ment ,  with  an  unholy  heart ,  and  ungodly  life,  is  as  uncomely  as 
a  mans  head  would  be  on  a  beafts  (boulders.  That  man  hath 
little  caufe  to  brag,  that  what  he  holds  is  truth,  if  what  he 
doth  be  wicked  j  poore  wretch  ,  if  thou  beeft  a  flave  to  the  De- 
vil, it  matters  not  to  what  part  thy  chaine  is  fattened, whether 
head  or  foot  -y  he  holds  thee  as  fure  to  him  by  thy  foot  in  thy 
practice,  as  he  would  by  thy  head,  if  heretical  and  blafphemous; 
yea ,  thou  art  worfe  on  it  in  fome  refpe&s,  than  they  who  are 
like  themfelves  all  over.  Thy  wickednefie  is  greater ,  becaufc 
commit  ted  in  the  face  of  truth;  many,  the  miftakes  of  their  er- 
roneous judgements ,  betray  them^  unto  the  unhohnefTe  of  their 
practice .  their  wicked  lives  are  the  conclufion  which  follows 
neceffarily  upon  the  premifes  of  their  errours  ^  but  thy  judge- 
ment lights  thee  another  way  (except  thou  meancft  further  to 

Ec  i  ac- 


2 , 2  And  having  on 


accumulate  thy  fin  by  fathering  thy  unholineffe  on  truth  it  feif ) 
They  only  miffe  their  way  to  heaven  in  the  dark,or  are  mifled  by 
afalfelight  of  an  erroneous  judgment,  which  pb fli by  rectified , 
would  bring  them  back  into  the  path  of  holinefs,but  thou  finncft 
by  the  broad  light  of  truth,  and  goeft  on  boldly  to  hell  at  noon- 
day-, like  the  Devil  himfelf,  who  knows  truth  from  errour  well 
enough ,  but  hates  to  be  ruled  by  it.    Should  a  Minftrel  fing  to 
a  fweet  tune  with  her  voice ,  and  play  to  another  with  her  hand 
that  is  harfh  and  difpleafing  -,  fuch  mufick  would  more  grate  the 
judicious  eare,  than  if  (he  hadfung  to  what  {he  plaid?  Thus 
to  fing  to  truth  with  our  judgement,  and  play  wickednefle  with 
our  heart  and  hand  in  our  life,  is  more  abhorring  to  God  and 
all  good  men,  than  where  the  judgement  is  erroneous,  as  well 
as  the  life  ungodly.     Nahajh  had  not  enraged  David  fo  much, 
if  he  had  come  with  an  army  of  twenty  thoufand  men  into  the 
field  againft  him  -y  as  he  did  by  abufing  his  Embafladours  fo  bafe- 
ly.    The  open  hoftility  which  many  expreffe  by  their  ungodly 
lives,  does  not  fo  much  provoke  God,  as  the  bafe  ufage  they 
give  to  his  truth  ,  which  he  fends  to  treat  with  them  j  yea,  in 
them.     This  kindles  the  fire  of  his  wrath  into  a  flame  to  pur- 
pofe,  when  he  fees  men  put  fcorne  upon  his  truth,  by  walking 
contrary  to  the  light  of  it,  and  imprifoning  it  from  having  any 
command  over  them  in  their  lives,and  yet  own  it  to  be  the  truth 
of  God. 

Secondly,  take  it  for  truth  of  heart,  and  fo  truth  and  holmefle 
muft  go  together.    In  vaine  do  men  pretend  to  fincerity ,  if 
they  be  unholy  in  their  lives.     God  owns  no  unholy  fincerity. 
The  termes  do  clafh  one  with  another ;  fincerity  teacheth  the 
foul  to  point  at  the  right  end  of  all  itsadions,  the  glory  of  God  j 
now  it  is  not  enough  to  fee  the    ght  end  before  us,  but  to  walk 
inthcright  way  to  it-,  we  fh«iIncve»-comeat  Gods  glory  out  of 
Gods  way  ^  holineflermd  righteoufnelTe  is  the  fincere  mans  path 
fet  b^  God  as  a  caufie  on  w^  if  h  he  is  towaJk  both  to  the  glorifying 
ofGod,and  the  being  glorified  byGod.Now  he  that  thinks  to  find' 
a  fliorter  cut,and  a  neerer  way  to  obtain  this  end,than  thiswav,h« 
taks  but  pains  co  undo  bimfeif  As  he  finds  a  new  way  of  glorifying 
G<  d,  which  God  hath  not  chalkt,  io  he  muft  finde  a  new  heaven 
wh  c b  God  hath  not  prepared,  or  elfe  he  muft  go  without  one  to 
icward  him  foi  his  paines.    O  friends  /  look  to  finde  this  ftamp 

of 


the  breaft-plate  of  right  eonfnejft.  21 


of  righteoufnefle  and  holinefs  on  your  fincerity.The/>m/fr£faich, 
hell  is  full  of  good  wifhes,  of  fuch,  who  now  (when  'cis  coo  lace, 
wiQi  they  had  afted  their  pare  otherwife  when  on  earth  ,  than 
they  did.  And  do  you  not  think  there  are  there ,  more  than  a 
good  ftore  of  good  meanings  alio  ?  fuch  who  pretended ,  when 
on  earth,  they  meant  well,  and  their  hearts  were  honeft ,  howe- 
ver it  hapt  that  their  lives  were  otherwife  >  what  a  ftrange  delu- 
fion  is  this  ?  if  one  (hould  fay,  though  all  the  water  the  bucket 
brings  up,  be  naught  and  (linking,  yet  that  which  is  in  the  well  is 
all  fweet,  who  would  believe  him  ?  Thy  heart  upright,  and  thy 
meanings  good,  when  all  that  proceeds  from  thy  heart  in  thy 
life  is  wicked,  how  can  it  be  f  who  will  believe  thee  ?  furely  thou 
doeft  not  thy  felf. 


CHAP.III. 

Wherein  the  grand  point  from  the  words  is  laid 
down^  that  the  Chrifiians  efpecial  care  jhonldbe 
to  keep  on  hk  breajl-plate,  i.  e.  maintaine  the 
power  ofholinejje  in  his  conversation %  with  the 
fir  ft  reason  of  the  point  taken  from  God>  his  de- 
fign  as  to  this. 


IT  is  now  time ,  having  meafured  the  ground,  to  lay  the  bot- 
tome  ftone,  on  which  the  ftru&ure  from  thefe  words  is  to  be 
reared.  I  thought  to  have  drawn  out  fevcral  points  as  diftind 
foundations  to  build  our  difcourfe  upon^  but  {hall  now  rather 
choofe  to  unite  all  in  a  (ingle  point  (as  one  main  building.) 
though  I  make  a  few  more  roomes  therein,  to  entertaine, 
what  elfe  ftiouid  have  been  handled  feverally.  The  point 
is  this. 

Ee  3  Tott. 


0  1 *  And  having  on 

~-«  rjT"         cI)<$r.  That  he,  who  means  to  be  aCbriftian  indeed,  muft  en- 
deavour to  maintain  the  power  of  holinefle  and  rigbteoufnefTe 
h  his  life  and  converfation.     This  is  to  have  the  breaft- plate  of 
righteoulneiTe ,  and  to  have  it  on  alfo  j  he  is  a  holy  righteous 
man  that  ha:h  a  work  of  grace  and  holinefle  in  his  hearths  he 
a  living  man  that  hath  a  principle  of  life  inhm  •.  but  he  main- 
tains the  power  of  holinelTe  that  exerts  this  vigoroufly  in  his  dai- 
ly walking,  as  he  the  power  of  natural  life,  in  whom  the  prin- 
ciple of  life  feated  in  the  heart  impowers  every  member  to  do 
itsparticular  office  in  the  body  ftrenuoufly.    Thus  walkt  the  fri- 
mtive  £  hriftians  Qn  whofe  veines%  faith  ferom,  the  bloed  of  Qkrift 
Was  yet  warm e)theit  great  care  wa9  to  keep  on  this  breaif-plate 
of  righteoufnefle  clofe  and  entire,  that  it  neither  might  loofen 
by  negligence,  nor  be  broken  by  prefumptuous  finning -y  the 
character  then  a  Saint  was  known  by  from  other  men,  was  his 
ho'y  walking,  Luke  1. 1 5.  There  'tis  faid  of  Zacharias  and  E- 
lizabeth,   7  bey  vette  both    righteous  before  God ,  walking  in  all 
the  Cwvdvdments  and  Ordinances  of  the  Lord  blameltffe.  This 
was  alfo  holy  Pauls  every  days  cxercife,  to  have  alwajes  a  cenfei* 
ence  void  of  offence  towards  God  and  man,  Afts  24.  Never  did  any 
more  curioufly  watch  the  health  of  their  body,  than  he  attended 
to  the  health  of  his  foul,  that  no  unholinefle,  or  unrighteoufnefle 
(which  is  the  only  bane  of  it)  might  diftemper  and  defile  it.  And 
truly  we  who  come  after  fuch  holy  ones  in  the  fame  profeflion,  do 
binde  our  felves  to  our  good  behaviour,  that  we  will  walk  holily 
and  righteoufly  as  they  did.    The  point  carries  its  evidence  on  its 
fore  head,  and  needs  rather  preffing ,  than  proving  •,  and  there- 
fore I  may  be  pardoned  if  the  demon  ft  rations  of  the  point  be 
handled  as  well  as  motives  to,  as  reafons  for  the  duty,  which  will 
fpare  work  in  the  Application.  Reafons  of  the  point  fhall  be  ta- 
ken from  feveral  heads. 
1.  Firft,  in  regard  of  God,whofe  great  defigne  is  to  have  his  peo- 

ple a  holy  people.  This  is  enough  to  oblige,  yea  to  provoke  e- 
vcry  Chriftian  to  promote  what  God  hath  fo  ftrongly  fet  upon 
his  heart  to  eflfecft.  He  deferves  to  be  cafheer'd  ,  that  endea- 
vours nottopurfuewhat  his  General  declares  to  be  his  defigne. 
And  he  to  have  his  name  blotted  out  of  Chrifts  mufter-roli, 
whofe  heart  ftandsnot  on  tip-toes  ready  to  march,  yea,  to  run 
on  his  defigne.     It  is  an  honourable  Epitaph  which  Paul  fets 

on 


the  breafi  -plate  of  right  eon fnejfe ,  2  I 


on  the  memory  of  David  long  before  deceafed,  Attsi^.  ?6. 
that  he  in  hk  own  generation  fcrv'd  the  will  of  God  ^  he  made  it 
the  bufineflfe  of  his  life  to  carry  on  Gods  defignes.  And  all  gra- 
cious hearts  toucht  with  the  fame  loadftone  of  Gods  love  ftand 
to  the  fame  point".  All  the  private  ends  of  a  fince  e  foul  are 
(wallowed  up  in  this  ,  that  he  may  do  the  will  of  God  in  hk  gene- 
ration. This  he  heartily  prayes  for,  Thy  will  he  done,  this  is  his 
ftudy  to  finde  what  is  the  good  and  acceptable  will  of  God^  which 
is  the  very  caufe  why  he  loves  the  Bible  above  all  other  books 
of  the  world  be/ide,  becaufe  in  none  but  that  can  he  finde,  whac 
is  the  minde  and  will  of  God  concerning  him.  Now  I  (hall  en- 
deavour to  (hew,  that  this  is  the  great  defigneof  God  to  have 
his  people  holy.  It  runs  like  a  filvet  thread  through  all  Godso- 
ther  defignes. 


SECT.     I. 

fFirft ,  it  appears  in  his  very  decrees,  which  (fo  far  as  they  are 
printed  and  expofed  to  our  view  in  the  Scripture)  we  may  (afe- 
ly  look  into.  What  was  God  driving  at  in  his  electing  fome  out 
of  the  lump  of  mankinde  ?  was  it  only  their  impunity  he  defiredB 
that  while  others  were  left  to  fwim  in  torment  and  mifery,  the/ 
(hould  only  be  exempted  from  that  infelicicy  ?  no  fure  •  the  A^ 
poftle  will  tell  us  more,  Ephef.  1.4.  He  hath  chojen  m  in  him  be- 
fore the  foundation  of  the  world ,  that  wefljould  be  holy.  Mark,  not 
becaufe  heforefaw  that  they  would  be  of  themfelves  holy ,  but 
that  they  (hould  be  holy ;  this  was  that  God  refolved  he  would 
make  them  to  be.  As  if  fome  curious  workman  feeing  a  Forreft: 
growing  upon  his  own  ground  of  trees  (all  alike,  not  one  better 
than  another)  (hould  mark  fome  above  all  the  reft,  and  fet  them 
apart  in  his  thoughts,  as  tefolving  to  make  fome  rare  pieces  o£ 
workmanftiip  of  them.  Thus  God  chofe  fome  out  of  the  lump  oi 
man-  kinde,whom  he  fet  apart  for  this  purpofe,  to  carve  his  own 
image  upon  them ,  which  confifts  in  righteonfneiTe  and  true 
holinefle;  a  piece  of  fuch  rare  workmanfliip,  which  when  God 
hath  finifht,  and  (hall  (hew  it  to  men  and  Angels,  will  appear  to 
exceed  the  fa  brick  of  heaven  and  earth  it  felf. 

SECT, 


2 1 6  And  having  on 


SECT.    II. 

Secondly,  it  was  his  defigne  in  Tending  his  Sonne  into  the 
world.  It  could  be  no  fmall  occafion  that  brought  him  hitber. 
God  wants  not  fervants  to  go  on  his  ordinary  errands.  The 
glorious  Angels,  who  behold  his  face  continually ,  are  ready  co 
flie  where-ever  he  fends  them.  But  hereGcdhada  workto 
do  of  fuch  importance ,  that  he  would  put  truft  not  in  his  fer- 
van's,  but  his  Sonne  alone  to  accomplifh.  Now  what  Gods 
defign  was  in  this  great  work,will  appear  by  knowing  whatChrift 
was ,  for  they  were  f  both  Father  and  Sonne)  agreed  ,  what 
{hould  be  done  before  he  came  upon  the  ftage  of  action.  See  ther- 
fore  the  very  bottom  ofChrifts  heart  in  this  hisgreat  undertaking 
open'd  ,  Titus.  2.  14.  He  gave  himfelf  for  us^that  he  might  re- 
deem us  from  all  iniquity^  and  purine  unto  himfelf  a  peculiar  pecple 
zealous  of  good  worlds  j  Had  man  kept  his  primitive  r  ghteoufnefs, 
(Thrifts  paine  and  paincs  had  been  fpared.  It  was  mans  loft 
holinefle  he  came  to  recover.  It  had  not  been  an  enterprize 
becoming  the  greatnefle  and  holinefle  of  fuch  a  one  as  the  Son 
of  God  to  engage  for,kfle  than  this.  Both  God  and  man,bc- 
tween  whom  Chrift  comes  to  negociate,  call  for  holinefle.  Gois 
glory,  mans  happinefle^neither  of  which  can  be  attain'd,  except 
holinefle  be  reftored  to  man.  Not  Gods  glory,  who  as  he  is 
glorious  in  the  holinefle  of  his  own  nature  and  works,  fo  is  he 
glorified  by  the  holinefle  of  his  peoples  hearts  and  lives ;  were  it 
poflible  (which  is  the  heighth  of  all  blafphemy  but  to  think,) 
that  the  holinefle  of  God  could  be  feparatcd  from  any  of  his 
attributes  or  works  ^  God  himfelf  would  ceafe  to  be  glorious; 
his  fovercignty  would  degenerate  into  tyranny,  his  wifdom  in- 
to craft,  his  juftice  into  cruelty,  &c.  Now  the  glory  of  all 
Gods  attributes  and  works,  refulting  from  his  holinefle  in  them 
all,  it  follows  that  then  we  glorifie  God,  when  we  give  him  the 
glory  of  his  holinefle,  and  who  but  a  holy  creature,  will  or  can 
do  that  ?  while  man  ftands  under  the  power  of  finne,  how  can 
he  give  God  the  glory  of  that ,  which  his  own  finful  nature 
makes  him  defie,  and  hate  God  (or  ?  Had  Chrifts  defigne  there- 
fore been  to  procure  man  a  pardon,  and  not  reftore  his  loft 
4.  ho- 


t  he  brejft-plate  of  right  eouftieffe.  5 1 7 

holinefle,  he  had  been  but  a  CM.nfier  of  fim.es,  and  inftead  of 
bringing  glory  to  God,  he  had  fee  hnne  in  the  Throne,  and 
only  obtain'd  a  liberty  for  the  creature  todiilionojr  God  with- 
out controll.  Again,  mans  nappinelte  co  Jd  no:  have  been  ob- 
tain'd without  a  recovery  of  his  loft  holinefle.  Maas  happi- 
liefle  ftands  in  his  likeneffe  to  God,  and  fruition  of  uod ;  he 
muft  have  the  firft,  before  he  can  enjoy  the  latter;  he  muft  be 
like  God,  before  God  can  take  any  liking  in  him;  and  God 
rnuft  take  full  content  in  man,  before  he  admits  him  to  the 
enjoyment  of  himfelf,  which  that  he  may  do ,  Chrift  under- 
takes to  make  his  people  holy,  as  God  is  holy.  You  fee  now 
what  was  the  great  defigne  that  the  heart  of  Chrift  was  fo  full 
with,  to  make  us  a  holy  people.  Well  therefore  may  the  A- 
poftle  bring  in  that  heavy  charge  againft  all  unholy  profeflours, 
which  he  doth  with  tears,  Phi/.  3.  18.  That  tbiy  are  enemies 
of  the  Croffe  of  Chrift-.  Chrift  came  to  deftroy  the  works  of 
the  Divel ;  The  loofe  unholy  walker,  he  goes  about  to  deftroy 
the  work  of  Chrift.  The  Lord  Jefus  lays  down  his  heart-blood 
to  redeem  fouls  out  of  the  hand  of  finne  and  Satan,  that  they 
may  be  free  to  ferveGod  without  fear  in  holinefle;  and  the 
loofe  Chriftian,(if  I  may  call  himfo)  denies  the  Lordtha  b3ught 
him,  and  delivers  up  himfelf  bafely  unto  his  old  bondage,  from 
which  Chrift  had  ranfom'd  him  with  fo  great  a  fumme  j 
vvhofe  heart  doth  not  tremble  at  fuch  horrid  inDrati- 
tude?  *  * 


SECT.    III. 

Thirdly,  it  is  Gods  great  defigne  in  the  regenerating  work 
of  the  Spirit  on  the  hearts  of  his  people,to  make  them  righteous, 
and  fit  them  to  walk  holily  before  him,  £**£  )6:  i6>  27.  where 
Godpromifeth  a  new  heart,  and  to  put  his  Spirit  into  tkem',m& 
why  will  he  do  this  ?  that  he  may  caufe  them  to  walk^  in  his  fla- 
ttttes,  keep  his  judgments,  and  do  the  v.  An  old  hea*t  would  hive 
ferved  well  enough  to  have  done  the  Divds  drudge  y  withal.  But 
God  intending  them  "for  more  high  and  noble  employments© 
lift  up  their  head  out  of  fins  pnfon,  and  prefer  them  to  his 

F  f  own 


3  x  g  And  having  on 

ownfervice,  therefore  he  throws  away  their  goale  cloaths, and 
beautifies  them  with  the  graces  of  his  Spirit,  that  their  hearts 
may  fuit  their  work.     When  God  ordered  the  Temple  to  be 
b.  it  with  fuch  cuiious  care  and  coilly  materials, he  declared  that 
he interidecfk  for  holy  ufe;  Thar  was  not  10  glorious  as  the 
ipiritual  Temple  of  a  regenerate  heart  is,which  is  \ht  norhmanfktp 
of  God  />/«;/*//,  Eph.2,10.  and  for  what  intent  rear'd  by  htm, 
if  we  read  on,we  may  tee>('reated  in  thrift  Jefus  unto  gooAixorkjy 
which  Coi  hath  fwc-orda'.r.ei  that  we  (hott/d  vcall^  in  them.   This 
accents  the  unrighteoufneffe  and  unholinefle  of  a  Saint  with  a 
circumflex,  it  lays  a  deeper  aggravation  I  mean  upon  his  finne, 
than  others,  becaufe  committed  againft  fuch  a  work  of  theSpiric 
as  none  have  in  the  world  befides.   A  finne  acted  in  the  Temple 
was  greater  than  if  the  fame  had  been  by  a  Jew  committed  in  his 
private  dwelling,  becaufe  the  Temple  was  a  confecrated  place. 
The  Saint  is  a  confecrated  perfon,and  by  a&s  of  unrighteoufnefle 
he  profanes  Gods  Temple  j  The  finne  of  another  is  theft,  be- 
caufe he  robs  God  of  the  glory  due  to  him;but  the  fin  of  a  Saint  it 
facriledge,becaufe  he  robs  God  of  that  which  is  devoted  to  him 
in  an  efpecial  manner.Better  not  to  repent  at  all,  than  to  repent 
of  our  repentance; not  to  vow  and  dedicate  our  felves  to  him,and 
after  this  to  enquire  how  we  may  evade  and  repeal  this  a&;fuch  a 
one  tells  the  world  h«  findes  fome  iniquity  in  (W,that  alters  his 
opinion  and  practice  formerly  taken  up  by  him.    In  a  word,  the 
Saint  is  not  only  by  the  Spirit  confecrated  to  God,  but  by  the 
Spirit  indued  with  a  new  life  from  God;  yon  hath  he  qtiicknd, 
who  were  dead  in  treffafies  and  fins  Jbph. 2. 1. A  noble  principle 
of  high  extrac"tion,given  you  on  a  high  defigne,  that  you  jfhould 
live  up  to  that  principle  in  righteoufneffe  and  holineffe;  when 
God  breath'd  a  rational  foul  into  man,  he  intended  not  that 
he  fhould  live  with  the  beafts,  and  as  the  beafts;  nor  that  thou 
(hould'tt  have  thy  converfation  as  ameer  carnal  man  doth,  but 
that  as  thou  haft  received  Cl.rftyfo  tkon{honldftwalk^inhim,Co\. 
2. 6.  The  Ayoftle  blames  the  ( orinthians  for  living  below  them- 
felves,  and  like  the  poor-fpirited  men  of  the  world  in  their 
corrupt  pailions  :  Are  ye  not  carnal^and  walk^  as  men}  I  Cor.  3.2. 
when  thou  Chriftian  afteft  unholily ,  thou  finneft  at  a  high 
rate  indeed;  o,  hers  fin  againft  the  light  of  God  in  their  confei- 
ences,there  is  the  furthest  they  can  go;  but  thou  finn'ft  againft  the 

life 


the  breafl-plate  of  right  eonfnefje.  g  I  g 

life  of  God  in  thy  very  hear r.  The  more  unnuurai  any  ail  h, 
the  more  horrid.  Tis  unnatural  tor  a  man  to  be  cruel  to  his 
own  flefh  ;  for  a  woman  to  go  about  to  kill  the  childe  in  her 
womb  !  O  how  your  ears  tingle  at  fuch  a  flagitious  aft ,  what 
then  art  thou  going  to  do,  when  by  thy  unholy  walking  thou 
art  killing  the  babe  of  grace  in  thyioul?  Is  Herod  mark'c  for 
a  bloody  man  that  would  have  butcher 'd  Chrift  newly  born  in 
the  worldpand  canft  thou  without  horror  attempt  the  murdering 
of  Chrift  newly  form'd  in  thy  heart  ? 


SECT.  IV. 

Fourthly,  it.  is  the  great  defigne  God  drives  ac  in  his  Word 
and  Ordinances,  to  make  his  people  holy  and  righteous.    The 
Word  of  God,  'tis  both  feed  to  beget,  and  food  to  nourifh 
holineiTe  begotten  in  the  heart ;  every  part  of  it  contributes  to 
this  defign  abundantly.  The  preceptive  part  affords  a  perfect  rule 
of  holineiTe  for  the  Saint  to  walk  by,  not  accommodated  to  the 
humours  of  any,  as  mens  laws  are,  who  make  their  laws  as 
Taylours  their  garments,  to  fit  the  crooked  bodies  they  are  for, 
fo  they  the  crooked  minde  of  men.The  commands  of  God  gra- 
tifie  the  lufts  of  none,  they  are  futed  to  the  holy  nature  of  God, 
not  the  unholy  hearts  of  men.  The  promifes  prefent  us  with  ad~ 
mirable  encouragements  to  toll  and  allure  us  on  in  the  way  of 
holineiTe ;  all  of  them  fo  warily  laid,that  an  unholy  heart  cannot 
without  violence  to  his  confcience,  lay  chime  to  any  one  of 
them,  (God  having  fet  that  flamiug  fword,confcience,in  the  fin- 
ners  bofome,  to  keep  him  off  from  touching  or  tailing  the  fruit 
of  this  tree  of  life  J    and  if  any  profane  heart  be  fo  bold , 
while  he  is  walking  in  the  ways  of  unrighteoufnefle,  to  finder 
any  of  the  treafure  that  is  lock't  up  in  the  promifes ,  it  doth  not 
long  flay  in  i heir  hands,  but  God  fooner  or  later,  makes  them 
throw  it  away  as  Judas  his  thirty  p  eces^hzir  confciences  telling 
them  they  are  not  the  right  owners;  falie  comforts  from  the 
promifes,  like  riches  (  which  Solomm  fpeaks  o£)makc  themfefocs 
w'mgs  and  fie  art.iy  from  the  unholy  wretch,when  he  thinks  he 
ismoftfureof  them.    *Again,  the  threat  nings^  the  mimtory 
part  of  the  Word,  this  runnes  like  a  devouring  gulph  on  either 

Ff2  fide 


220  And  having  on 


fide  of  the  narrow  path  of  holineileand  righreoufnefle  ,   ready 
tofwallowupevery  foul  that  walks  cot  therein,   Rom.  i.  j8. 
For  the  wrath  of  God  ii  reiealed  jrom  heaven  agdinSb  attungodU- 
neffe  e.nd  mrigkteottfxeffe  of  men.  To  the  promiffory  and  mina- 
tory is  annexed  the  exemplary  part  of  the  Word,  .as  book-cafes 
to  confirm  our  faith  concerning  the  truth  and  certainty  of  both. 
The  promifesthey  areback't  with  the  examples  of  holy  men  and 
women,  who  have  beaten  the  path  of  holineflfe  for  us,  and 
through  faith  a,nd  patience  in  their  holy  courfe,  have  at  iaft  ob- 
tain 'd  the  comfort  of  the  promifes  in  heavens  bluTe,  to  the  un- 
fpeakable  encouragement  of  all  that  are  afcending  the  hill  after, 
them  .To  the  threatnings  are  annext  many  fad  examples  of  unholy 
fouls,  who  have  undone  themfelves,and  damned  their  own  fouls 
in  unholy  wayes,  whofe  carcail'es  are.  as  it  were  thrown  up®n 
theuSoreof  the  Word,  andexpofed  to  our  view  in  reading  and 
hea-  ing  of  it,that  we  may  be  kept  from  being  ingulft  in  thofe  'fins 
that  were  their  perdition,  i  Cor-  lo.6.  Thefe  were  our  examples  jo 
the  Intent  rve  Jhoald  not  lufi  after  evil  things  as  they  alfro  lufled. 
Thus  we  fee  how  the  whole  compofure  of  the  Scripture  befriends 
hclincffe,  and  fpeaks  what  thedefignof  God  therein  is,  which 
yet  to  carry  on  the  more  ftrongly,  God  hath   appointed  many 
holy  Ordinances  to  quicken  the  Word  upon  our  hearts. .  Indeed 
all  of  them  are  but  the  Word  in  feveral  forms,  Hearing,  Pray- 
er, Sacraments,  Meditation,  holy  Conference ;  the  Word  is  the 
fub;e6t  matter  of  them  all ;  only  as  a  wife  Phyjician  doth  prepare 
the  fame  drug  feveral  wayes,  fometimes  to  be  taken  one  way, 
fometime  another,  to  make  it  more  effectual,  and  refrefh  his 
Patient  with  variety  5  fo  the  Lord  conlulting  our  weaknefle,dorh 
by  his  Word  adminirtring  it  ro  us  now  in  this,  and  anon  in  that 
Ordinance  for  our  greater  delight  and  profit,  aiming  ftillatthe 
fame  end  in  all,  even  the  promoting  of  holinefie  in  the  hearts 
an   lives  of  his  people  ;    what  are  they  all  but  as  veins  and, 
arteries,  by  which  Chrift  conveighs  the  life-blood  and  fpirits 
of  holinellc  into  every  member  of  nis  myllical  body  ?  The  Church 
i  thegyden,  Chrilt  the  fountain,  every  Ordinance  as  a  pipe 
fro  a  hi  n,  to  w  tc-r  all  rhc  beds  in  this  garden  ;  an  :  why ,   but 
to  .a.ake  th^rn  more  abundant  in  the  fruits  of  righteoufnefle  ? 

SECT, 


the  breaft-plate  of  right eohfnejje. 


225 


SECT.   V. 

Fifthly,  'tis  his  defign  in  all  his  £  rovidences.  <jAll  things  (that 
is,  ail  providences  efpecially  )  veark^  together  for  good  to  th.m  that 
loveGody  Rom.  8.  28.    and  how  do  they  work  for  their,  good, 
but  by  making  them  more  good  and  more  holy?  providences 
are  good  and  evil  to  us  as  they  rinde,  or  make  us  better  or  worfe; 
nothing  is  good  to  him  that  is  evil*    As  God  makes  ufe  of  all 
thefeafonsof  the  year  for  the  harveft,  the  froft  and  cold  of  the 
Winter  as  well  as  the  heat  of  the  Summer; fo  doth  he  of  fair  and 
foul,  pleafing  and  unpleafing  providences  for  promoting  holi- 
nefle;  Winter-providences  kill  the  weedsof  lufo,and  Summer- 
providences  ripen  and  mellow  the  fruits  of  righteoufnefs;when 
ne  affli&s/tis  for  our  profit  to  make  us  partakers  of  his  holineffej 
Heb.  1  2. 10.  Afflictions-  Bernard  compares  to  the  Tcz,e!y  which 
though  it  belharp  and  fcratching,  is  to  make  the  cloth  more  pure 
and  fine.    God  would  not  rub  fo  hard  if  it  were  not  to  fetch 
out   the  dirt  that  is  ingrained  in   our  natures.     God  loves 
purity  fo  well, he  had  rather  fee  a  hole  trunafpotinhischilds 
garments;  when  he  deals  more  gently  in  his  providences,  and 
lets  his  people  fit  under  the  funny  bank  of  comforts  and  enjoy- 
ments, fencing  them  from  the  cold  blafts  of  afniition  ,    'tis  to 
draw  forth  the  fap  of  grace,  and  haften  their  growth  in  hoh\. 
nefie.     ?<?«/  underftood  this,  when  he  befought  the  Saints  at 
Row  yty  the  mercies  of  God  to  prefent  their  bodies  a  living  facri- 
f\ceyholy  and  acceptable  to  § o^,Rom.  12. 1. Implying,that  mercies 
camefromGodto  us  on  this  very  errand;  God  might  reafon- 
ably  expect  fuch  a  return.  *  The  Husband-man ,  when  he  lays 
his  compoft  on  his  ground,  looks  to  receive  it  at  harveft  again 
in  the  fuller  crop ;  and  fo  doth  God  by  his  mercies;  therefore 
he  doth  fo  vehemently  complain  of  Ifraels  ingratitude,  Hofea 
2.8.   She  did  not  k^ore  that  1  gave  her  come  and  winey  and  oyley 
and  Multiplied  her  fih(r,whicb  they  prepared  for  Baal.God  took 
it  ill,  and  well  might  he,  that  they  fliould  entertain  Baal  at 
his  coft  i   if  God  fends  in  any  cheer  to  us,   he  would  have  us. 
know  that  it  is  for  his  own  entertainment;  he  means  to  come 
and  fup  upon  his  own  charge.     And  what  difh  is  it  that  pleaf* 

F  f  3  .  eth  j 


332 


And  having  on 

eth  Gods  palace  >  Surely,  he  that  would  not  have  his  people  eat 
of  any  unclean  thing,  will  not  himfelf.  Th;y  are  the  pkafant 
fruits  of  holinelfe  and  righteoufnefle,  which  Chriit  coxes  into 
his  garden  to  feed  on,  CW.5.1.  /  am  came  ino  my  gard^my 
Sijter,  my  Sfoufe,  I  have  gathered  my  myrrhe  ar.d  my  fricCyl  have 
eaten  my  honey  with  my  koney-mnb ;  I  have  dmnl^my  wir.e  with 
my  milkj 


3|?33?  'S|£  3|£3£t  4£t  • 


CHAP.     IV. 


'the  fecond  reafon  why  the  Chriflian  (hould  wear 
this  breaji-plate  of  right  eoufnejfe  ,  and  main- 
taine  the  power  of  holineffe  fo  careful- 
ly ,  taken  firom  Satans  great  defigne  a- 
gainjl  it* 

r^Econdly,  in  regard  of  Satan,  whofe  defigne  is  as  much  a- 
2.  j^  gainft  the  Saints  holineffe,  as  God  is  for  it.  He  hath  ever 
a  nay  to  Gods  yea ;  if  God  be  for  holinefle ,  he  muft 
needs  be  againft  it ;  and  what  {hould  be  our  chief  care  to  de- 
fend, but  that  which  Satans  thoughts  and  plots  are  moft  laid 
to  aflault  and  florme  ?  There  is  no  creature  the  Divel  delights 
fo  to  lodge  and  dwell  in,  as  man;  when  he  enters  intoo- 
ther  creatures,  it  is  but  one  defign  againft  man ;  as  when  he 
entred  the  Serpent,  it  was  to  deceive  Eve:  The  [wine,  CM- at. 
8. 3  2.  he  pofleiTt  them  on  a  defigne  to  difpofleffe  the  Girgefexes 
of  the  Gofpel ;  but  might  he  choofe  his  own  lodging,  none 
pleafeth  him  but  manjand  why  ?  becaufe  man  only  Is  capable  by 
bis  rational  foul  of  finne  and  un  righteoufnefle.  And  as  he  pre- 
fers mm  to  quarter  in  above  alt  inferiour  creituresj  fo  he  had 

rather 


the  breaft-plate  of  righteonfnejji.  223 


rather  poffefie  the  fouls  of  men  tkan  their  bodies  j  none  but 
the  beft  room  in  the  houfe  will  ferve  this  unclean  fpirit  to 
vomit  his  blafphemies,  anclfpitout  his  malice  in  againftGod; 
and  why  ?  butbecaufe  the  foul  is  the  proper  feat  of  holinefle 
and  finne.  This  one  gives  as  the  reafon  why  amongft  all  the 
wayes  that  Satan  plagued  fob,  he  did  not  choofe  to  make  a  for- 
cible entry  into  his  body,  and  pofTelle  him  corporally ;  for 
certainly  he  might,  that  being  fhort  of  taking  away  his  life  fthe 
only  thing  referv'dby  God  out  of  his  commiffion  )  and  being 
in  his  power,  fure  it  was  not  to  fpare  fob  that  trouble  ;  i*o  pity 
dwells  in  a  Divels  heart ;  but  the  very  reafon  feems  to  be  what 
an  Ancient  hath  note;dThe  Divel  waited  for  higher  preferment, 
heho^edtopofiefiehisfoul,  which  he  longed  for  a  thoufand 
times'more  ;  he  had  rather  hear  fob  himfelf  blafpheme  God, 
while  he  was  compos  mentis  $\%  own  man,than  himfelf  in  fob  ro 
belch  out  blafphemies  againft  God,  which  would  have  been  the 
Divels  own  finne,  and  not  fobs.  Thus  you  fee, 'tis  holinefle  and 
ri^hteoufneflehisfpighcis  at;  no  gaine  comes  to  the  Divels 
puke,  no  victory  he  counts  got ,  except  he  can  maki  the 
Chriftian  lofe  his  holinefs.He  can  allow  a  man  to  have  any  thin?, 
or  be  any  thing,  rather  than  be  truly,  powerfully  holy.  It 'is 
not  your  riches  and  worldly  enjoyments  he  crutches  fo  much 
as  your  holinefle.  fobfov  ought  we  know,  might  have  enjoy 'd 
his  flocks  and  herds,  his  children  and  fervants,  without  any 
difturbance  from  hell,  if  the  Divel  had  not  feen  him  to  be  a 
oodly  man,0#r  fearing  fjcd^nd  efckewing  evil.This  anger'd  the 
wicked  fpirit;  now  he  tries  a  fall  with  fob,  that  if  poffible,he 
may  un-faint  him,  and  defpoile  him  of  his  breaft-plate  of  righ- 
teoufneffe.  His  plundering  of  his  eftate,  butchering  his  chil- 
dren, carbonadoing  (as  I  may  fay)  his  body  with  fore;  and 
boiles,  (which  were  as  fo  many  deep  flafiics  in  his  flefh)  was  but 
like  fame  thieves  cruel  ufage  of  men  whom  they  would  rob,  on 
a  defisne  to  make  them  confeffe  and  deliver  up  their  treafure ; 
woulcfbut  fob  have  thrown  the  Divel  his  purfe,  his  integrity  I 
mean,  and  let  Satan  carry,  away  his  good  confcience  ,  Satan 
would  foon  have  unbound  him,  and  not  have  cared  if  he  had 
his  eftate  and  children  again.  Thevvolfe  tears  the  fleece,  that 
he  may  come  to  raven  on  the  flefh,  and  fuck  the  blood  of  the 
fheep  ;  The  life-blood  of  holinefle  is  that  which  this  hellifh 

murderer 


aQ4  And  having  on 


murderer  longs  to  luck  out  of  the  Chriftians  heart.  It  is  riot 
a  form  of  godlinefle,  or  goodly  fhews  of  righteoufnefle  the 
Divel  malignes,but  the  power ;  not  the  name,but  the  n:w  nature 
it  felf  blings  this  Lion  fell  out  of  his  Den.  Satan  can  live  very 
peaceably  as  a  quiet  neighbour  by  the  door  of  fuch  as  will  content 
themfelves  with  an  empty  name  of  proteftion  ;  this  alters  not 
his  property,  nor  toucheth  his  copy-hold.  Jttdas  his  profefii- 
on  (  he  knew  )  did  nor  put  him  a  (tep  out  of  his  way  to  hell ; 
the  Divel  can  Chew  a  man  a  way  to  damnation  through  duties 
and  Ordinances  of  Gods  worfhip.  That  covetous,  trayterous 
heart  which  fuda4  carried  with  him  to  hear  Chrifts  Ser- 
mon, and  preach  his  own,  held  him  faft  enough  to  the  Divel; 
and  therefore  he  gives  him  line  enough,  liberty  enough  to  keep 
his  credit  awhile  with  his  fellow  Apo.tles ;  he  cares  not  though 
others  think  him  a  difciple  of  Chrift,  fo  he  knows  him  to  be  his 
own  Have. 

In  a  word,  it  is  not  a  fuperftitious  holinefle  which  ofrends- 
him;  how  can  it  ?  when  he  is  the  inliitutor  of  it  himfelf,  and 
that  on  a  fubtile  defign  to  undermine  the  true  genuine  holinefle 
in  the  hearts  of  men;  and  by  this  time  the  Church  of  Chrifl 
hath  found  how  deep  a  contrivance  it  is.  This  in  all  ages  hath 
be^n  to  the  power  of  holineiTe,vvhat  the  Ivy  is  to  the  Oak  ; 
the  wanton  embraces  of  this  mock-holineiTe  about  Religion, 
hath  killed  the  heart  of  Scriptural  holinefle  where-ever  it  hath 
prevail'd}  'tis  to  the  true  holinefle  as  the  concubine  is  to  the 
true  wife,  who  is  fure  to  draw  the  husbands  love  from  her.  This 
brat  the  Divel  hath  long  put  out  to  nurfe  to  the  'R^omijh  Churchy 
which  hath  taken  a  great  deal  of  pains  to  bring  it  up  for  him; 
and  no  wonder  when  /lie  is  fo  well  paid  for  its  maintenance, 
it  having  brought  her  in  fo  much  worldly  treafure  and  riches. 
No,  'tis  holineile  in  its  naked  Simplicity,  as  it  is  founded  upon 
Scripture-bottome,  and  guided  by  Scripture-rule,  that  he  is  a 
fworne  enemy  a^ainfl.  Indeed  this  is  the  flag  which  the  foul 
hangs  out,  and  by  which  it  gives  defiance  to  the  Divel,  no  won- 
der if  heflrives  to  fhoot  it  down.  Now,  and  not  till  now  the 
ceaturc  really  declares  himfelf  a  friend  to  God,  and  ;n  enemy 
to  the  ^in^dome  of  darknelTe  ;  and  here  is  the  grounJ  of  that 
quarrel,  which  will  never  ceafe  fo  long  as  he  continues  an  un- 
clean fpirit,  and  they  to  be  the  holy  ones  of  Cod.  zAHtb«t  will 

lilC 


the  brejfl-plate  of  right  eoufnejje.  %  2  e 


live  godly  in  Chr  ft  Jcfus  Jha'l  fajfer perfection ,  2  Tim.  $.  12. 
Markfirtt,  whac  it  is,  that  aiakes  the  Divei  and  his  inilaamems 
takearmes,  and  breath  (laughter  againlt  Chriliians,    'Us  their 
goMintffe ;  many  fpecious  pretences  perfecutors  have  to  cftfguife 
their  malice ;  but  the  Spine  of  God  chat  looks  through  all  their 
hypocritical  mufflers,  is  privy  to  the  cabinet  counleis  of  their 
hearts,  and  thofe  infiru&ions  which  they  have  from  the  Dive!, 
that  worketh  lb  mightily  in  them,he  tells  us,  l.&that  will  live  god- 
ly,  fhall  be  perfected ;  down-right  godlinefle  is  the  Butt  they 
level  their  arrows  at.    Again,obferve  the  kinae  of  godlinefle  at 
which  their  blood  rifes,  <fAll  xh&t  mil  live  godly  in  Chrift  feftts. 
There  are  more  forts  of  holinefs  and  godlinefs  in  the  world  rh?n 
one  ;  But  all  may  have  faire  quarter  at  the  Divels  hands,  except 
this  godlinefle  inChriftJefus.  The  Dive  1  hath  an  implacable 
malice  againft  Chrift ;  he  hates,as  I  may  fo  fay,every  letter  of  his 
name ;  that  godlinefle  which  is  learnt  of  him,  and  derived  from 
him,  he  oppofeth  to  death.  Chrifiian  blood  is  fweet  to  his  tooth, 
but  the  blood  of  the  Chriftians  godlinefle  is  far  fweeter.  He  had 
rather  (if  he  could^kill  that  than  them,  rather  draw  the  Christi- 
an from  his  godlinefle,than  butcher  him  for  it  j  yet  that  he  may 
notftandout,  hee'l  play  at  fmall  game,  and  exprefle  his  cruelty 
upon  their  bodies,  but  it  is  when  he  cannot  come  at  their  fouls, 
Heb.l  1.1,-1. They  were  fawn  aj under ,were  temptedywere  flain.Thzt 
which  thefe  bloody  men  principally  defised,  was  to  draw  them  in 
to  fin,and  make  Apoftates  of  them ;  and  thrrefore  they  tempted 
them  before  they  flew  them.    The  Divel  accounts  that  the  com- 
pleatvi&cty,  when  he  can  defpoile  them  of  their  Armour,  and 
bribe  them  from  their  ftedfaftnefle  in  their  holy  profeflion.  Let 
her  be  defiled^and  la  her  eye  lookjtp  to  Z/o#,Micah  4.  7.  he  had  ra- 
ther fee  Saints  defiled  with  unrighteoufnefle  and  fin,  than  defiled 
with  their  blood  and  gore.  Perfecution^  he  hath  learnt)  doth  but 
mow  the  Church,  which  afterward  comes  up  the  thicker  for  it , 
'tis  unholinefle  that  ruines  it.  Perfecutors  doth  but  plough  Gods 
field  for  him,  while  he  is  fowing  it  with  the  blood  that  they 
let  out;  but  profanefle  that  roots  it  up,  and  lays  all  wafte,  con- 
ferences and  Churches  alfo. 


CHAP. 


a6 


And  having  on 


mffMi   iiMu  iWii  «7ir;-«  «.ai»»< ff«ht»  nr.4bt   f  j 
-^  ?gCr  cTy-i  ^\.  vW  ^YV   .  I 


I. 


CHAP.      V. 

The  third  reafon  taken  from  the  excellency  of  rtgh- 
teonfnejfe  and  holineffe. 

THirdly,  in  regard  of  holinefle  it  felf;  The  incomparable 
excellency  whereof  commands  us  topurfue  ir,  and  en- 
deavour k  with  our  utmoft  care  and  (Irength. 

Firft,  it  is  an  excellency  peculiar  to  the  ratioml  creature. Jnfe- 
riour  creatures  have  a  goodneffe  proper  to  them,  but  intellectual 
beings  are  only  capable  of  an  inward  holineil'e.   God  hw  every 
cr:ature  he  made  to  be  good\on\y  Angls  rn&Mdn  to  be  holy  ; 
and  if  we  part  with  holinefle  that  ts  our  crown,  we  become 
worfe  than  the  be.ifts  tbemfelves ;  yea,  it  is  holinefle  and  riDh- 
teoufnefle  that  makes  one  man  differ  from  another  in  Gods  ac- 
count.   We  go  by  a  ralfe  heart,  when  we  value  men  by  their  ex- 
ternal advantages.     All  iiind  on  a  level  as  to  God,  till  holinejle 
be  fuper-added.  Princes  in  whom  is  feared  the  Soveraign  power, 
claim  as  their  prerogative,  to  fet  the  jult  value  on  all  coyn,what 
every  piece  fhall  go  for;  this;  penny,  and  that  a  pound;  much 
more  furely  doth  it  belong  to  Cod  to  rate  hi^  creatures;   and 
he  tells  us,  The  righteous  is  more  excllent   than  his  »:igl:bour^ 
ProV.  1 2.   The  tongue  if  tl  e  yifl  is  as  choxc  [ilve;\bnt  the  heart  of 
the  wicked  is  little  worth yProv.io.2o.  The  Spirit  of  God  com- 
pares the  righteous  to  filver  and  gold,  the  precioufdt  of  metals , 
*  which  above  all  other  metals  are  of  fuch  .accc.mt ,     that  only 
money  made  of  filver  and  gold  is  currant  in  all  Countreys ;  Ho- 
lineffe will  go  in  both  worlds ;  but  external  excellencies,fuch  as 
worldly  riches,  honours,  &c.    like  leather  and  brafle-mdney, 
are  of  no  efteem  but  in  this  beggarly  lower  world. 

Secondly,  it  is  holinefle  chat  is,  though  not  our  plea,  yet  our 
evidence  for  heaven  $  without  holincfe  mnc  (hall  fee  Cod.  Hea- 
ven 


the  breaji-plate  tf  right  eonfneffe.  227 

ven  is  a  City  where  righteoufnefle  dwells-  Though  God  fuffers 
the  earth  to  bear  for  awhile  unholy  men,  (  which  it  doth  not 
without  fweating  undet  their  weight,  and  groaning  tor  be  rid 
of  this  load, )  yet  fure  he  will  never  pefter  heaven  with  fuch  a 
crew.  Before  Emch  ms  translated  to  heaven,  he  walk't  holily 
with  God  on  earth,  which  made  Goddefire  his  company  fo  foon. 
O  friends!  do  we  like  an  empry  profeiTion,  fuch  a  Religion  as 
will  leave  usfhortof  heaven  ?  or  can  we  reasonably  expect  a 
difpenfation  above  others,  that  we  fhould  commence  glorified 
creatures  in  heaven,  without  keeping  our  acts,  and  performing 
the  exercifes  of  godlinede,  which  God  hath  laid  upon  thofe 
that  will  ftand  Candidates  for  that  place  >  Certainly  what  God 
hath  writ  in  his  Word  as  to  this,  {hall  ftand.  He  will  not  make 
a  blot  in  his  decrees  for  any ;  which  he  (hould,  did  he  alter  the 
method  of  falvation  in  the  leatf.  Either  we  muft  therefore  re- 
nounce our  hopes  of  coming  rhicher,  or  refolve  to  walk  in  the 
path  of  holinelfe  that  will  lead  us  thither.  That  is  vain  breath 
which  lets  not  the  failes  of  our  affections  a  [,oing,  and  our  feet  a 
travelling  thither,  where  we  would  be  at  la(t. 

Thirdly,  it  is  holinefle,  and  thac  maintain'd  in  its  power,  that  3. 

capacitates  us  for  communion  with  God  in  this  life.Communion 
with  God  is  fo  delirable,  that  many  pretend  to  it,  that  know  not 
what  it  means;like  fome  that  brag  of  their  acquaintance  with  fuch 
a  greit  man,who  may  be  never  law  his  face,or  were  admitted  in- 
to his  company  ;  the  Spirit  of  God  gives  the  lie  to  that  man,who 
faith  he  hath  any  acquaintance  with  God,whilw  he  kec.)s  his  ac- 
quaintance with  any  un  righteoufnefle,  a  fob. 1.6.  If ->*><-■  f<Y  we  have 
fellorvlhii)  with  htmyznd  walk,  /«  dtrkncjfe^ive  //f.The  Apollle  is 
willing  to  palfe  for  a  loud  liar  htmfelf.if  he  wa:ks  in  darknefle,and 
pretends  to  have  fellowillib  with  God.  How  can  they  walk  to- 
gether that  are  not  agreed  ?  communion  is  founded  on  union  , 
and  union  upon  likenefle.  And  how  like  are  God  and  the  De- 
vil, holiriefle  and  unrighteoufneffe  one  to  the  other  ?  There 
is  a  valt  difference  between  convening  with  Ordinances,  and 
having  communion  with  God.  A  man  may  have  great  acquaint- 
ance with  Ordinances,  and  be  a  great  Granger  to  God  ac  the 
fame  time  \  every  ones  that  goes  to  Court,  and  hangs  a- 
bout  the  Palace,  doth  not  fpeak  with  the  Prince;  and  what 
forry  things  are  Ordinances  without  this  communion  With  God? 

Gga  Ordi- 


22 


g  And  having  on 


Ordinances  arc  as  it  were  the  Exchange,where  holy  fouls  trade 
yvith  God  by  his  Spirit  tor  heavenly  creatures,  from  which  they 
come  filled  and  enriched  with  grace  and  comfort.  Now  what 
does  the  unholy  wretch  ?  truly  like  fome  idle  perfons  that  come 
and  walk  among  Merchants  on  the  Exchange,  but  have  no  bufi- 
neffe  there,  or  commerce  whereby  they  get  any  advantage.    An 
unholy  heart  hath  no  dealings  with  God,  he  takes  no  notice  of 
God,  maybe,  to  be  fure  God  takes  no  fueh  notice  of  him,  as  to 
communicate  himfelf  gracioufly  to  him.    Nay,fuppofe  a  perfoa 
habitually  holy,  but  under  the  power  of  forae  temptation  for  the 
prefent ;  whereby  he  defiles  himfelf  ,he  is  in  this  cafe  unfit  to  have 
any  friendly  communion  with  God.     nA  rigl  teous  man  fulling 
do,vn  before  thtw-ckedjs  ( faith  Solomon)  as  a  troubled  fount ainyand 
a  corrupt  Jpringj>vov.2<$.26.  much  more  is  he  fo  when  he  falls 
down  before  the  wicked  one,and  yields  to  his  temptation,  now 
his fpirit is  royl  and  muddied;  and  if  we  will  not  ufe  the  water 
of  afpring  (  though  in  it  felf  pure  and  wholefome  )  when  it  is 
troubled,  or  drink  of  that  veflel  that  runs  thick,  but  ftay  while 
it  be  fettled  and  comes  clear  j  can  we  wonder  if  Godrefufeth 
to  tafte  of  thofe  duties  which  a  godly  perfon  performs ,  be- 
fore the  ftreame  be  cleared,  by  the  renewing  of  his  repentance 
for  his  fin  ? 
a.  Fourthly,  holinefleinthepowerof  it  is  necefTary  to  the  true 

peace  and  repofeof  the  foul.  I  do  not  fay  our  peace  isbottom'd 
on  the  righteoufnefie  of  our  nature  or  holinelTe  of  our  lives,  yet 
it  is  ever  attended  with  thefe,  No  peace  to  the  wicked  faith  my 
Cod.    We  may  as  foon  make  the  Sea  alwayes  flill,  as  an  unholy 
heart  truly  quiet ;  from  whence  come  the  inteftine  wars  in  mens 
bofomes,  that  fet  them  at  variance  with  themfelves,  but  from 
their  own  lufis  ?  thefe  break  the  peace,  and  keep  the  man  in  a 
continual  tempeft.   As  the  Spirit  of  holinefie  comes  into  the 
heart  and  the  Scepter  of  Chrift,  (which  is  a  Scepter  of  righteouf- 
nefle)bc-ars  fw:y  in  the  Iife;fo  the  ftorme  abates  more  and  more, 
till  ir  be  quite  down,  which  will  not  be  while  we  are  fhort  of 
heaven;  There  only  is  perfect  reft,  becaufe  perfect  holinefle: 
"Whence  thofe  frights  and  fears  which  make  them  aAIagor 
CM'iffdibj'.rror  round  *.W.,they  wake  and  fleep  with  thefcent 
of  hell-fire  about  them  continually  ?  O  'tis  their  unholy  courts,, 
and  unrighteous  ways  that  walks  in  their  thoughts ;  as  Johns 

ghoft 


the  breajl-plate  of  righteoiijheffe.  22 

ghoftin  Hero  is.    This  makes  men  difconrenred  in  every  con" 
dition ;  They  neither  can  reliili  thefweetnefs  of  their  enjoy- 
ments,not  bear  the  bitter  tafte  of  their  afflictions.   I  know  the  re 
are  wayes  to  ftupifie  the  confcience,  and  binde  up  for  a  time  the 
fenfes  of  an  unholy  heart,that  it  iliall  not  tcs.1  its  own  mifery;but 
thevertueof  this  opium  isibonfpent,  gnd  then  the  wretch  is 
upon  the  wrack  again,  and  his  horrour  returns  upon  him  with 
a  greater  paroxifme ;  an  example  whereof  I  have  heard.    A  no- 
torious drunkard  who  ufed  ('when  told  of  his  ungodly  life)  ro 
fliake  off  all  the  threatnings  of  the  Word,  that  his  friends  would 
have  fattened  on  his  confcience,  as  eafily  as  Taul  did  the  viper 
from  iiis-hand ,  bearing  himfelf  upon  a   prefumptuous  hope 
of  the  mercy  of  God  in  Chriit.    It   pleafed  God  to  lay  him 
fome  while  after  on  his  back-by  lickuefle,  which  for  a  time  fea- 
red his  old  companions  (brethren  with  him  in  iniquity)  from 
viiiting  him,  but  hearing  he  was  cheerly  and  pleaiant  in  his  fick- 
nefle,  ventured  to  fee  him,  whom  they  found  very  confident  of 
the  mercy  of  God,  whereby  their  hands  were  much  ftrengthen- 
ed  in. their  old  wayes,  but  before  he  died,  this  tune  was  chang- 
ed to  purpofe,  his  vain  hopes  vaniih't,   his  guilty  confcience 
awaken'd,  and  the  poor  wretch  roafted  in  the  fcorching  flames 
of  his  former  ungodly  practices,  now  ready  to  dye,  cries  out  de- 
fpairingly.     O  Sirs,.  I  had  prepared  a  plainer,  and  thought  all 
was  well,  but  now  it  will  ftick^no  longer  ;  his  guilty  confcience 
rub'd  it  oft",  as  faft  as  he  clapt  ic  on.    And  truly  (  friends  )   you 
will  iinde  the  blood  of  Chrift  himfelf  will  not  cleave,  to  a  foul 
that  is  in  league  with  any  way  of  flnne  and  unrighceoufnefle  5 
God  will  pluck  fuch  from  the  homes  of  this  Altar,  that  flie  to 
it,  but  not  from  their  unrighteoufnelTe,  and  flay  them  infighc 
of  this  San6^uary  they  boldly  truft  to ;  you  know  the  meflage 
Solomon  fent  to  <ss4donijah,If  thou fkerre ft  thy  felf  a  worthy  man, 
not  a  hair*  of  thy  head  fhall  fallout  if  widkedneffe  fhitll  be  found  in 
thee^thou  fhalt  furely  dye.    In  vain  do  men  think  to   fhroud 
themfelves  under  Chrifts  wing  from  the  hue  and  cry  of  their  ac- 
cufing  eonfeience, -while  wickednefle  Andes  a  Sanctuary  in  them, 
Chrift  never  was  intended  by  God  to  fecure  men,  in  their  un- 
righteoufnefle,  but  tofave  them  from  it. 
Fifthly,  holinefle  has  a  mighty  influence  upon  others,  when>        ^; 

G  g  3  this 


q;,o  And  having  on 


this  appears  with  power  in  the  live?  of  Chri(Uans,ic  works  migh- 
tily upon  the  fpirits  of  men  ;  this  flops  the  mouths  of  the  un- 
godly, who  are  ready  to  reproach  Religion ,   and  throw  the 
dirt  of  profeflbrs  hnnes  on  the  face  of  profeflion  it  felf.     They 
fay  frogs  will  ceafe  croaking ,   when  a  light  is  brought  near 
unto  them.    The  lighyof  a  holy  converfation  hangs  as  it  were 
a  padlock  on  profane  lips ;  yea,  it  forceth  them  to  acknowledge 
God  in  them.     Let  your  light  fo  fhitst  before  wer?%  that  tl.  ey  may 
fee  yoHr  good  works  ^and  glorife  yotir  Father  which  is  in  heaven^ 
Mat.$.i6.yeamore,this  would  not  only  (top  their  mouths,but  be 
a  means  to  open  their  very  hearts  to  the  embracing  of  Chriit,  and 
his  grace  ;  onereafonwhy  fuchfhoals  of  fouls  came  into  the 
net  of  the  Gofpel  in  primitive  times,  was  becaufe  then  the  Di- 
vinity of  the  Gofpel-do&rine  appear'd  in  the  divinity   and 
holinefle  of  ChrilHans  lives.    fujfm  Cfttartyr  when  converted, 
profefled,77wf  the  holinefje  which  fhined  m  Christians  lives  and 
patience  ^that  triumphed  over  their  enem  es  cruelty  at  their  deaths , 
made  him  conclude  the  doctrine  of  the  Gojpel  ivas  truth.YteyfuI'an 
himfelf,  as  vile  a  wretch  as  he  was,  could  fay,  that  the  Chri- 
itian  Religion  came  to  be  propagated  fomuch,  Propter  Chrifti- 
anorum  erga  omnes  beneficia^becaufeChrifiians  were  a  people  that 
did  good  to  all,and  hurt  to  none.  I  am  ill  re  we  hn  }e  by  woful  ex- 
perience that  in  thefe  debauch't  times,    wherein  Religion  is  fo 
befpattered  with  frequent  fcandals,  yea,  a  common  loofnefie 
of  profeflbrs,   'tis  hard  to  get  any  that  are  out,to  come  under  the 
net  of  the  Gofpel.Some  beafts  there  are,  thar  if  they  have  once 
blown  upon  a  pafdure,  others  will  hardly  eat  of  that  grade  for 
fome  while  after.     Truly  I  have  had  fome  fuch  fad  thoughts  as 
thefe  concerning  our  unhappy  tiines,that  till  the  ill  favour  which 
the  pride,  contentions,errours,and  loofnefle  of  profcflfors  now 
adays,havc  left  upon  the  truths  and  Ordinances  ofChrift  be  worn 
ofV,there  is  little  hopes  of  any  great  co.r.ings  in  of  new  converts. 
The  Minifter  cannot  be  alwayes  preaching  ;  two  or  three  houres 
may  be  in  a  week  he  fpends  among  his  people  in  the  Pufpit, hold- 
ing the- glaffe  of  the  Gofpel  before  rhur  faces;  but  the  lives 
of  profeflbrs,  thefe  preach  all  the  week  long ;  if  they  were  but 
holy  and  exemplary,they  would  be  as  a  repetition  of  the  Preach- 
ers Sermon  to  their  families  and  neighbour  among  whom  they 

con- 


the  breaft-plate  of  right eohfneffe.  251 

converfe  and  keep  th~  found  of  his  doctrine  continually  ringing 
in  their  ears ;  This  would  give  Chrillians  an  admirable  advantage 
in  doing  good  to  their  carnal  neighbours  by  counfel  and  reproof, 
which  now  is  feldome  done,  and  when  done,  ic  proves  to  little 
purpofe,  becaufe  not  back't  with  their  own  exemplary  walking, 
Jt  behoves  him  (tilth  7  e  tuHiax^ths.t  would  eonnfetor  reprove  a- 
noth  rjo  guard,  btt  sferch^.woritAie p  opux  converfafo'iis,  ;.e  d tla 
facta  dcu'.cnt'bus  :rub.fcat,tjv',th  the  r.uthor.ty  of  hU  own  convey- 
f.aion,/efl  watt'ng  th~t,whct  /  e  fay  es, puts  himfelf  to  the  blu(h. 
We  do  not  love  one  that  hath  a  (Unking  breath  fliould  come  very 
near  us;  and  truly  we  count  one  comes  very  near  us  that  re- 
prove uis;  fuch  therefore  had  need  have  a  fweet  fcented  life. 
Reproofs  are  good  phylick,  but  they  have  an  unpleafing  farewel ; 
'tis  hard  for  men  not  to  vomit  them  up  on  the  face  of  him  that 
gives  them  ;  now  nothing  is  more  powerful  to   keep  a  reproof 
from  thus  coming  up,  than  the  holinelfe  of  the  perfon  that  re* 
prove?.      Let  the  nghtenu  fmite  me  (  faith  David  )  it  Jh all  be  a 
lejftdft  jje  ;  and  let  him  reprove  me, it  (hall  be  an  excellent  oyle  which 
(h.ill  not  breaks  my  head,Vh\.  141.  5.    See  how  well  it  is  taken 
from  fuch  a  hand,  from  the   authority   that  holineffe  carries 
with  it.    None  but  a  vile  wretch  will  finite  a  righteous  man  with 
reproach,  for  fmiting  him  with  a  reproof ,  if  foftly  laid  on,  and 
like  oyle  fomented,  and  wrought  into  him,  (  as  it  fnould  )  with 
compaflion  and  love  to  his  foul.     Thus  we  fee  how  influential 
the  power  of  holineffe  would  be  into  the  wicked  ;  neither  would 
it  be  lelfe  upon  our   brethren  and  fellow-ChritUans.    When 
oneChriftian  fees  holineffe  fparkle  in  the  life  of  another  he  con- 
venes with,  hefhallflndehisown  grace  fpring  within  him,  as 
the  babe  in  Shzabetb  at  the  falutation  of  CMary.     Truly  one 
eminently  holy  is  enough  to  put  life  into  a  whole  fociety  ;    on 
the  contrary,  the  errour  or  lcofneflfe  of  one  profeflbr,endan- 
gers  the  whole  company  that  are  acquainted  with  him.    There- 
fore we  have  fo  ftriil  a  charge,  Heb.  12.  follow  p$ace  and  holi- 
neffe-,  looking  diligently  left  any  man  jail  of  the  grace  of  jodylefi  any 
root  of  bitternef?  (fringing  up  trouble  you^and  thereby  many  be  de- 
fled.     Itisfpoken  toprofelTors:  The  Heathens  drunkennefle, 
uncleannefle,  unrighteous  walking  did  not  fo  much  endanger 
them;  but  when  a  root  of bittemeffe  ff rings  up  among  profeflbrs 
themielves,  this  hazards  the  defiling  of  many,    A  fcab  oh  the 

wolfs 


g29  4nd  having  on 

■  ..-olfsbackisnot  To  dangerous  to  the  fheep,  becaufe  they  will 
not  eafily  be  drawn  among  fuch  company;  but  when  it  gets 
into  the  ilock ,  among  profeflors  that  feed  together  ,  pray , 
bear,  and  walk  infellowfhip  together,  now  is  the  fear  it  will 
fpread.     A  loofe  erroneous  profeffour  doth  the  Divel  morefer- 
vice  in  this  kinde ,  than  a  whole  troo^of  fuch  as  pretend  to 
no  Religion.     The  devil  get  no  credit  by  them.     There  are 
many  errors  and  finful  pracWes  which  have  long  lain  upon  his 
hands,  and  he  could  not  put  them  off,  till  he  found  this  way 
to  imploy  fome  profeiTors  as  his  Brokers  to  commend  them  to 
others,  and  difperfe  them  for  him:  And  if  fuchdonotenfnare 
and  defile  others  by  their  unholy  walking  ,  to  be  fure  they  grieve 
their  hearts,  and  put  them  to  iliame  in  the  world.   O  how  Chri- 
iUans  hang  down  their  heads  upon  the  fcandai  of  any  of  their 
company  ?  as  all  the  Patriarchs  were  troubled,  when  the  cup 
wasfoundinoneof  their  fack?.     And  'tis  no  fmall  matter  to 
.  make  fad  the  hearts  of  Gods  people.    In  a  word,  he  that  keeps 
not  up  in  fomemeafure,  the  power  of  a  holy  life,  renders  him- 
felfe  ufelefle  and  ^profitable ;  would'tt  thou  pray  for  others  ? 
A  Heat hen  could  bid  a  wicked  man  hold  his  peace ,  and  not  let  the 
Qvds  k>.ow  I.  e  was  in  thejhif  when  a  florm  was  on  them  :  Would'ft 
thou  fpeak  a  word  of  comfort  to  any  mournful  foul  ?  O  how 
unfavoury  are  comforts  idropping  from  fuch  a  mouth  ?  would'ft 
thou  counfel  another  ?  Thy  friend  will  think  thou  doeft  but  jd\ , 
whatever  thou  fayeft  in  commendation  of  holinefle,  he  will  not 
believe  that  thou  thy  felf  doeft  think  it  good ,  for  then  thou 
would'ft  take  that  thy  felfe  ,  which  thou  commendeft  to  ano- 
ther. 
6.  Sixthly,  holinefle  and  righteoufnefle ,  they  are  the  pillars  of 

Kingdomes  and  Nations;  who  are  they  that  keep  the  houfe  from 
falling  on  a  peoples  head,  bur  the  righteous  in  a  Nation?  ten 
righteous  men  f could  they  have  been  found  in  Sodom)  had  blown 
over  the  ftorme  of  fire  and  brimftone,  that«ina  few  houres  en- 
tomb'd  them  in  their  cwn  afhes ;  yea,  the  deftroying  Angels 
hands  were  tyed  up  as  it  were,  while  but  one  righteous  Lot  was 
among  them.  Ha. fie  thee ,  lean  do  nothing  till  thou  bee/}  cyme  thi- 
ther,Gen.  1 9.22.  Kehoboam^nd  his  Kingdom  for  three  years  were 
fben.;,thened,  and  might  have  been  three  and  twenty ,  if  he  had 
not  by  his  un righteoufnefle  pull'd  it  down  upon  .himfelf  and 

people ; 


the  brejfl-pUte  ofrigbteoufneffe. 


people  ;  for  his  unhappinefle  is  dated  from  the  very  time  of 
his  departure  from  God.  2  O  *?*•  U.  \  6.  fofiah  when  he  came 
to  the  Crown,found  the  Kingdome  of  fudah  tumbling  a^ace  to 
ruine,  yet  becaufe  his  heart  was  fee  for  God,  and  prepared  to 
walk  before  him,  God  took  his  baile  fa?  I  may  o  fay)  for 
that  wretched  people,  even  when  they  were  under  anarreft 
from  God,  and  almolt  at  the  priion  door,  fothu  their  iafe- 
ry  was  in  a  manner  bound  up  in  his  life ;  for  foon  aftei  his  de- 
ceafe  all  went  to  wrack  amon^  them.  It  was  an  luroick  fpeech 
of  Luther,  whofore-faw  a  black  cloud  of  Gods  judgments 
coming  over  the  Land  of  §  ermaKy  ybut  told  fome  of  his  friends, 
that  he  voonld  do  his  beft  to  keep  it  from  falling  in  his  dayes  ;  yea  , 
he  believ'd  it  fhould  not  \  d^.,  faid  he,*>/*«  1  am  gone,  let  them 
'that  come  after  me  look^  to  it.  This  poor  Nation  of  Snglavd , 
hath  for  many  generations  in  a  fuccefiion,  had  a  number  of 
precious,  rignteous  ones,  who  have  through  Gods  grace,  walkt 
clofe  with  God,  and  been  kept  in  a  great  degree  unfpotted  from 
the  defilements  of  the  ungodly  times  they  lived  in.  Thefe  were 
the  Atlaffes  of  Their  feveral  ages ;  thefe  have  oft  found  favour 
of  God  to  beg  the  life  of  this  Nation,when  its  neck  hath  been 
on  the  very  block.  But  they  are  gone,  or  wearing  away  apace, 
and  a  new  generation  coming  in  their  room  ;  unhappy  would 
the  day  be  called  when  you  were  born,  if  you  fhould  be  the 
men  and  women  that  by  degenerating  from  the  power  of  holi- 
nefle,  fhould  cut  the  banks  (  which  was  their  chief  care  to  keep 
up)  and  fo  let  in  a  defolating  judgment  to  overflow  the  Land. 
That  heire  we  count  unworthy  of  his  birth  and  patrimony  ,who 
by  his  debauched  courfes,  prodigally  makes  away  that  eftate, 
which  by  the  care  and  providence  of  his  Anceftours,was  through 
many  defcents  at  Iaft  tranfmitted  to  him ;  but  together  with  the 
honour  of  the  family,  unhappily  ends  io  him.  If  ever  any  age 
was  like  to  do  thus,  by  the  place  of  their  nativity,  this  pre- 
fent,  wherein  our  fad  lot  is  caft  to  live,  is  it.  Hew  low  is  the 
power  of  holinefle  funk  among  us,  to  what  it  was  but  in  the 
laft  gen  nation?  Religion  alas  runs  low  and  dreggy  among 
profeflbrs ,  God  he  know?,  that  will  not  long  fuflfer  it.  If  E- 
grft  knows  a  dearth  is  coming  by  the  low  ebbing  of  NHhs^ 
furely  we  may  fee  a  judgment  to  be  coming  by  the  low  fall  of  the 

H  h  power 


3  2  a  And  having  on 

power  of  godlinefle.     There  are  °reat  complaintfrof  what  men 
have  loft  in  thefe  hurling  times ;  fome  bemoan  their  loft  places 
and  eftates ;  others  the  loft  lives  of  their  friends  in  the  wars;but 
profeftbrs  may  claim  juftly  the  ficft  place  of  alt  the  mourners 
of  the  times,  to  lament  their  loft  love  to  the  truths  of  Chrift, 
worfhip  of  Chrift,  fervants  of  Chrift  ;  yea,that  univerfal  decay 
which  appears  in  their  holy  walking  before  God  and  man.  This 
is  fad  indeed;  but  that  which  addes  a  fearful  aggravation  to 
this,  is,  That  we  degenerate,  and  grow  loofe  at  a  time  when 
we  are  under  the  higheft  engagements  for  holinefle  that  ever 
people  did.    We  are  a  people  redeem'd  from  many  deaths  and 
dangers. .   And  when  better  might  God  expect  us  to  be  a  righ- 
reous  Nation  ?  It  is  an  ill  time  for  a  perfon  to  fall  a  ftealing  and  - 
pilfering  again,  as  foon  as  the  rope  is  off  his  neck,  and  he  lee 
fafely  come  down  that  ladder  from  which  he  was  even  now 
like  to  be  turned  off.    Surely  it  added  to  righteous  Noah's  fin, 
to  be  drunk  as  foon  almoft  as  he  wasfet  on  (hore,  when  a  little 
before  he  had  feen  a  whole  world  (inking  before  his  eyes, 
and  he,  the  priviledg'd  perfon,  left  by  God  to  plant  the  world 
again  with  a  godly  feed.    O  Sirs,  the  earth  hath  hardly  yet 
drunk  in  the  Rivers  «f  blood  that  hath  been  (hed  in  our  Land. 
The  Cities  and  Towns  have  hardly  got  out  of  their  mines, 
which  the  miferies  of  war  laid  them  in.    The  moanes  of 
the  fatherlefle  and  husbandlefTe ,    whom  the  Sword  bereav'd 
of 'thefe.  their  deareft   relations,  are  not  yet  filenced  by 
their  own  death;  yea,  can  our  own  frights  and  fcares  which 
we  were  amazed  with,  when  we  faw  the  Nation  (  like  a  candle 
lighted  at  both  ends  j  on  a  flame,and  every  day  the  fire  coming 
nearer  and  nearer  to  our  felves,  be  fo  foon  forgotten?  Now, 
that  at  fuch  a  time  as  this,  a  Nation,  and  that'  the  profeffing 
part  of  it  fhould  grow  loofer,  more  proud,  covetous  >  conten- 
tious, wanton   in   their  principles,  and  caielefle  in   their 
lives,    this   muft   be  far   a  lamentation.    We   have  little 
caufe  to  boaft  of  our  peace  and  plenty  ,    when  the    refult 
of  our  delivc:ance  is  to  deliver  us  up  to  commit  fuch  abo- 
minations; this  is  as  if  one  whofe  quartane  ague  is  ^one, 
b,  t  leaving  him   deep  in  a  dropfie,  fhould  hrag^e  his  ague 
filth  left  nim,  little  thinking  that  when  it  went,  it  left  him  a 

worfe 


the  brejft'plate  ofrighteoufoejjh.  2  3  ■> 

worfe  guett  in  its  place.  An  unhappy  change,  God  knows  it  is, 
to  have  war ,  peftilence,  and  famine  removed,and  to  be  left 
fwolne  up  with  pride,  errour  and  libertinifme.  Again,  we  are  a 
people  who  have  made  more  pretentions  to  righteoufndFe  and 
holineffe,  than  our  fore-fathers' ever'  did.  What  elfe  meant 
the  many  prayers  to  God,  and  petitions  to  man  for  Reforma- 
tion? what  interpretation  could  a  charitable  heart  make  of 
our-putting  our  felves  under  the  bond  of  a  Covenant,to  endea- 
vour for  perfonal  Reformation,  and  than  National,  but  that 
we  meant  in  earneft  to  be  a  more  righteous  Nation  than 
ever  before?This  made  fuch  a  loud  report  in  forreign  parts;  that 
our  neighbour-Churches  were  fet  a  wondering  to  think  what 
thefe  glorious  beginnings  might  ripen  to;  fo  that  now  (having 
pi't  forth  thefe  leaves,  and  told  both  God  and  man  by  them , 
what  fruit  was  to  be  looked  for  from  us)  our  preient  ftatgmuft 
needs  be  nigh  unto  curling,  fordifappointingthe  juft  expecta- 
tions of  both.  Nothing  can  fave  the  life  of  this  our  Nation , 
or  lengthen  out  its  tranquillity  in  mercy  to  it,  but  the  reco- 
very of  the  much  decayed  power  of  holinefle.  This  as  a  fpring 
of  new  blood  to  a  weak  body,  would  (though  almoft  a  dying) 
revive  it,  and  procure  many  happy  dayes ;  yea,  more  nappy 
dayes  to  come  over  its  head  than  yet  it  hath  feen;  but  alas  ! 
as  we  are  degenerating  from  bad  to  worfe,  we  do  but  die 
lingeringly,  every  day  we  fetch  our  breath  ihorter  and  fliorter; 
If  the  Sword  (hould  be  but  drawn  again  among  us,we  have  hardly 
ftrength  to  hold  out  another  fit.  —  r 


C  H  A  P. 


a%6 


And  having  on 


CHAP.    VI. 


Contains  the  frjiinftance  wherein  the  Chrijiian  is  to 
exprejje  the  power  of  holineffe^and.that  k  in  his 
behaviour  towards  fin  y  Branch' t  into  fever al 
particulars,. 


s. 


THe  fecond  particular  into  which  the  point  was  branched, 
comes  now  to  be  taken  into  hand;  and  that  was  to  in- 
stance in  Tome  particulars,  wherein  every  Chriflian  is  to  exprefle 
the  power  of  a  holy  and  righteous  life.Now  this  I  fhall  do  under 
feveral  heads. 

Firrt,  Chriftian,  be  Aire  thou  maintained  the  power  of  holi- 
netfe  in  thy  conteft  with  linne,  which  thou- art  to  exprefle  in  thefe 
particulars  following. 

Firft,  thou  muft  not  only  refufe  to  commit  broad  (ins,  but 
fhun  the  appearance  of  fin  alfo;  this  is  to  walk  in  the  power 
of  holinsfle.  The  Dove  doth  not  only  flie  from  the  Hawk,  but 
will  not  fmell  fo  much  as  of  a  fingle  feather  that  falls  from 
the  Hawk.  It  fhould  be  enough  to  fcare  the  holy  foul  from 
any  enterprize,  if  it  be  but  male-  color atum-.  We  are  command- 
ed to  hate  the  garment  Jpotted  with  the  flfjh,  Jude  2}.  A  clean- 
ly perfon  will  not  only  refufe  to  wallow  in  the  rJi:ng-hill  ( he  is 
abeaft  indeed  )  but  is  careful  alfo  that  he  doth  not  get  fo  much 
as  a  fyot  on  his  cloaths  as  he  is  eating  his  meat.  TheChn- 
ftians  care  fhould  be  to  fceep,  a$  his  confcience  pure,  fo  his 
name  pure,  which  is  dons  by  avoiding  all  appearance  of  evil, 
Bernards  three  queftions  are  worth  the  asking  our  ielves  in  any 
entcrprize.     t/in  Uceat  ?  an  deceat  i  an  expediat  ?  Is  it  lawful? 

may 


the  breafl-plate  of  right  eonfnejje.  237 

may  I  do  it,  and  not  fin?  Is  it  b  cowing  me  a  Christian ■'?  may 
Idoit,and  not  wrong  my  profeflion  ?  that  work  which  would 
fuit  a  mean  man,  would  it  become  a  Prince  ?  Should  [nch  a  oxc 
as  I  flee*  faid  Ndemiah  nobly.  Laftly,//  it  expedient}  may  I  Nehem.d,  n. 
do  it,and  not  offend  my  weak  brother  >  There  are  fome  things  we 
muftdeny  our felves of  for  others  fake;  though  a  man  could 
fit  his  horfe,  and  run  him  full  fpeed  without  danger  to  himfelf  j 
yet  he  fhould  do  very  ill  to  come  fcouring  thorow  a  Town  ,  / 

where  children  are  in  the  way,  that  may  be  (before  he  is  aware,) 
rid  over   by  him,    and  fpoiled.    Thus   fome  things   thou 
mayeft  do,  and  without  finne  to  thee,  if  there  were  no  weak 
Chriftians  in  thy  way  to  ride  over,  and  fo  bruife  their  tender 
confeiences,  and  grieve  their  fpirirs.    But  alas!  this  is  too  nar- 
row a  path  for  many  fhaleing  profeflbrs  to  walk  ia  now  adays; 
they  muft  have  more  room  and  fcope  for  their  loofe  hearts,  or 
elfe  they  and  their  profeflion  mult  part.    Liberty  is  the  Diana 
of  our  tiraes.    O  what  Apologies  are  made  for  fome  fufpicious 
practices?  Ion? hair,  gaudy garifh apparel,  fpotted  faces,naked 
breafts!  thefe  liave  been  call'd  to  thenar  in  former  times,  and 
cenfured  by  fober  and  folid  Chriftians,  as  things  at  leaft  fufpi- 
cious, and  of  no  good  report ;  but  now  they  have  hit  on  a  more 
favourable  jury,  that  finde  them  not  guilty;  yea,  many  arefo 
fond  of  them,tnat  they  think  Chriliian  liberty  is  wronged  in  their 
cenfure ;  Profeflbrs  are  fo  farre  from  a  holy  jealoufie ,  that 
(hould  make  them  watch  their  hearts,  left  they  go  too  far ,  that 
they  ftretch  their  confeiences  to  come  up  to  the  full  length 
of  their  tedder;as  if  he  were  the  brave  Chriftian  that  could  come 
neareft  the  pit  of  fin,  and  not  fall  in ;  as  in  the  Olympian  games, 
he  wore  the  Garland  away,that  could  drive  that  his  Chariot  nea» 
reft  the  mark;and  not  knock  on  it;if  this  were  fo,  Taul  miftook .. 
when  he  badeChriftians  abftainfrom  all  appear arc e  ef  *W,iThef. 
<;.  22.  he  ihould  rather  have  faid  by  thefe  mens  divinity,  ab- 
stain not  from  the  appear  axc^onb]  take  heed  of  what  is  in  it  0:\{ 
groflely  evil ;   but  he  that  can  venture  on  the  appearance  of  e- 
vil,under  pretence  of  libercy,may,for  ought  I  know,commit  that 
which  is  more  groffely  evil, under  fome  appearance  of  good;  it  is 
not  hard,  (if  a  man  will  be  at  the  coft)  to  put  a  good  colour  on  . 
a  rotten  ftuff,  and  practice  alio. 
Secondly,  thou  muft  not  only  endeavour  againft  allfijQjbut        %i 

H  h  3  that 


3^8  4^  having  on 


chit  on  noble  principles,  h-rc  iies  the  power  of  holineffe.  Ma- 
ny forbear  co  linne  upon  fuch  an  unworthy  account  that   God 
will  not  thank  :hiin  for  ic  another  day.     As  ic  is  in  a&ionsof 
piety  and  charity,  God  make?  no  account  of  them,  except  he 
beintercftcdinihem;  when  .we  fall  or  pray,  God  asks,   do 
Zeoh.  7.  5.     jo*  faft  and  pray  f»  mey  even  to  me  ?  when  we  give  almes,*  cup 
Ma.  is.    41.  of  cold  water  tor  his  fake, "iven  in  name  of  a  dtfcip/e,  is  more 
valued  by  him  than  a  cup  of  gold  for  private  and  low  ends  •,  fo 
in  fin,  God  looksthat  his  authority  (hould  conclude,   and  his 
love  conftraine  us  to  renounce  it ;  before  the  Commandments 
(  as  Princes  before  their  Proclamations  prefix  their  Armes  and 
Royal  Names)  God  fees  his  glorious Name,GW  ffake  all  thefe 
words > and  faidy&c.  Exod.  20.  and  why  this.'    But  that  we 
{hould  fan&ifie  his  Name  in  all  we  do.     A  Mafter  may  well 
think himfelf  defpifed  by  that  fervant  that  ftill  goes  on,  when 
he  bids  him  leave  off  fuch  a  work,  but  has  done  prefently  at 
the  entreaty  of  another.    O  how  many  are  there  that  go  on  to 
finne,  for  all  that  God  fayes  to  the  contrary ;  but  when  their 
~  credit  bids  for  lhame  of  the  world  to  give  over  fuch  a  pra&ice, 
they  can  knock  off  prefently;  when  their  proHt  fpeaks,  'tis  heard 
and  obey 'd.    O  Sirs,  takeheedof  this,God  expects  his  fervants 
(hould  not  only  do  what  he  commands,  but  this  at  his  command, 
and  his  only.     And  as  in  attaining  from  evil,  fo  in  mourning 
for  finnes  committed  by  us ;  if  we  will  be  Chrillians  indeed,we 
mufttakein,  yea,  prefer  Gods  concernments  before  our  own. 
Indeed  it  were  to  be  wiuYc,  that  fome  were  fo  kinde  to  their 
own  foals  as  to  mourn  for  themfelves  when  they  have  finn'd; 
that  they  would  cry  out  with  !/<*#/«■£,  Gen.  4.  23.  I  have  jlain 
a  man  to  my  wounding,  and  a  young,  m\an  to  my  hurt.     Many  have 
fuch  brawny  confeiences ,   they  do  not  fo  much  as  complain 
they  have  hurt  themfelves  by  tneir  finnes ,    but  little  of  the 
power  of  holineffe  appears  in  all  this ;   There  may  be  a  great 
cry  in  the  confeience,  I  am  damned,  I  have  undone  my  (tlf; 
and  the  dishonour  that  is  caft  upon  God  by  him ,  not  laid  to 
heart.    You  remember  what  foab  faid  to  David,  taking  on  hea- 
vily for  z/lbj atom's  death,     /  perceive  (  faid  he  )  if  *^bfsl»m 
had  been  alive \and  all  we  had  died  this  day, then  it  had  pleafed  thee 
well,  2  Sam.  1 9.  6.  Thus  we  might  fay  to  fuch  felvifh  mourn- 
ers, We  perceive  that  if  thou  couldft  but  favc  ihQ  life  of  thy  foul 

from 


the  breaft-plate  of  right  eoufneflh.  2  3  9 


from  eternal  death  arid  damnation,  though  the  glory  of  God 
mifcarry'd,  thou  could 'ft  be  pleafed  well  enough.     But  know 
that  a' gracious  fouls  mourning  runs  in  another  channel.    *A- 
ga'wfi thcc,thec only  haze  IJinnedjs  holy  Davids  moane.     There 
is  a  great  difference  between  a  fervant  that  works  for  another, 
and  one  that  is  his  o£vn  man  (as  we  fay)  the  latter  puts  all 
his  |pfTes  upon  his  own  head ;  fo  much  faith  "he,  I  have  loft  by 
fuch  a  fhip  ,  fo  much   by  a  bargain ;    but  th*  fervant  that 
trades  with  his  Mafters  ftock,  he,  when  any  loffe  comes,  puts  ic 
on  his  Mafters  account,So  much  I  have  loft  of  my  Mafters  goods. 
G  Chriftian  think  of  this;  thou  art  but  a  fervant,  all  the  flock 
thou  tradeft  with,  is  not  thine,  but  thy  Godsend  therefore  when 
thou  falleft  into  any  finne,bewaile  it  as  a  wrong  to  him ;  So  much 
alas,  I  have  difhonour'd  my  God,  his  talents  I  have  wafted,  his 
Name  I  have  wounded,  his  Spirit  I  have  grieved. 

Thirdly,  he  muft  not  only  abftaine  from  acting  a  finne,  but 
alfo  labour  to  mortifie  it.    A  wound  may  be  hid,  when  'tis  not 
heal'd ;  cover'd,and  yet  not  curedjfome  men  they  are  like  unskil- 
ful Phyficians, who  rather  drive  in  the  difeafe,than  drive  out  the 
caufe  of  the  difeafe .-  corruption  thus  left  in  the  bofome,  like 
lime  unflaked,  or  an  humour  unpurg'd,  is  fure  at  one  time  or 
other  to  take  fire  and  break  out,  though  now  it  lies  peaceably, 
as  powder  in  the  barrel,  and  makes  no  noife :  I  have  read,that 
the  opening  of  a  Cheft  where  fome  cloaths  were  laid  up ,  (not 
very  Well  aired  and  cleared  from  the  infection  that  had  been  1 
in  the  hdufe  )  was  the  caufe  of  a  great  plague  in  fo»icc9  after 
they  had  Iain  many  yerrs  thCre^ithout  doing  any  hurt.   I  am 
fure  we  fee  for  want  of  true  mortification,  many  after  they  have 
walkt  fo  long  unblameably,  as  to  gain  the  reputation  of  being 
Saints  in  the  opinion  of  others,  upon  fome  occafion,  like  the  o-  - 
pening  of  the  Cheft,  have  fallen  fadly  into  abominable  pracYi- 
ces;and  therefore  it  behoves  us  not  to  fatisfie  our  felves  with  any  . 
thing  lefle  than  a  work  of  mortification,  and  that  followed  on 
from  day  ro  day.  I  proteft  faith  PW,by  my  rejoycing  in  Ghrift,  I 
die  daily;  here  was  a  man  walkt  in  the  power  of  holinefle ;  finne 
is  like  the  Beaft,  %ev.  13.5.   which  feem'd  at  one  time,as  if  it: 
would  presently  die  of  its  wound  ,  and  by  and  by  it  was  ftrange- 
ly  healed  fo  is  to  recover  again  ;  many  a  Saint  for  want  of  keep- 
ing a  ftreight  reine,  and  tHat  c©n(Untly,Qver  fome  corruption, 

which 


Q,0  And- having  on 


which  they  have  thought  they  had  got  the  maftery  of,  hive  been 
thrown  out  the  faddle,  and  by  it  drag'd  dangeroufly  into  tem- 
ptation,  unable  to  refift  the  fury  of  Tuft  when  it  has  got  head, 
till  they  have  broken  their  bones  with  fome  fad  fall  into  fin; 
if  thou  wouldft,Chriftian,  fhew  the  power  of  holinelfo,  never 
»ive  over  mortifying-work,  no,  not  when  thy  corruptions  play 
leaft  in  thy  fight.  He  that  is  indin'd  to  a  difeafe,gout,rtone  or  the 
like,  he  muft  not  only  take  phyfick  when  he  hath  a  fit  actually 
upon  him ,  but  ever  and  anon  fliould  be  taking  fomething 
good  againft  it ;  fo  fhould  the  Chriftian ,  not  onely  when  he 
findes  his  corruption  ftirring,  but  every  day  keep  his  foul  in 
a  courfe  of  fpiritual  phyfick,againft  the  growing  of  it ;  this  is  ho- 
linefle  in  its  power.     Many  profeflbrs  do  with  their  fouls  in 
this  refpeft,  as  deceitful  Chyrurgions  with  their  Patients ;   Lay 
on  a  healing  plainer  one  day,  and  a  contrary  the  next  day,  that 
fets  the  cure  back  more  than  the  other  fat  it  forward  •,  take  heed 
of  this,except  thou  meaneft  not  only  to  brinj;  the  power  of  ho- 
lineflfe  into  danger,  but  the  very  life  and  truth  of  it  into  que- 
ftion  in  thy  foul. 

Fourthly,  he  muft,  as  endeavour  to  mortinecorruption,fo  to 
grow  and  advance  in  the  contrary  grace.  Every  fin  hath 
its  oppofite  grace ,  as  every  poyl'on  hath  its  antidote  ;  he 
that  will  walk  in  the  power  of  hoIinefTe,  muft  not  only  labour 
to  make  avoidance  of  fin,  but  togitpolleflionfor  the  contra- 
ry grace.  We  read  of  a  houfe  that  flood  empty,  Matth.  12.  44. 
7  he  mclean  Jpirit  went  car, but  the  holy  Spirit  came  not  in.  That 
is,  when  a  man  is  a  meer  negative  Chriftian,  he  ceafeth  to  do 
evil  in  fome  waves  he  hath  formerly  walk'tin,  but  he  learns 
not  to  do  food.  This  is  to  lok  heaven  with  fhort  fhooting ; 
God  will  not  ask  us  what  we  were  nor,  but  what  we  were ; 
nottofwear  and  curfewill  not  ferve  our  turn  ;  but  thou  wilt  be 
askt,Didft  thou  blefleand  fan&ifie  Gods  Name  f  It  will  not 
fuflncethou  did'ft  not  perfe cute  Chrift,  but  did'ft  thou  receive 
him  ?  Thou  didft  not  hate  his  Saints,  but  did'ft  thou  love  them  ? 
Thou  did'ft  not  drink  andfwill,  but  wer't  thou  fill'd  with  the 
Spirit?  He  is  the  skilful  Phyfician,  who  at  the  fame  time  that 
he  evacuates  the  difeafe,  doth  alfo  comfort  and  ftrengthen  na- 
ture. And  he  the  true  Chriftian,  that  doth  not  content  himfelf 
with  a  bare  laying  afide  evil  cuftomes  and  praclifes,  but  labours 

to 


the  breafl  plate  ofrighteonftiefs.  2  q.  1 


to  walk  in  the  cxercife  of  the  contrary  graces.  Art  thou  dif- 
compofed  with  impatience,  haunted  with  a  discontented  fpi  it, 
under  any  affliction  ?  think  it  not  enough  to  lilence  thy  heart 
from  quarrelling  with  God-,  but  leave  not  till  thou  canft  bring 
it  fweetly  to  relic  on  God.  Hoi.  David  drove  it  thus  far,  bePft™  4x.fi 
did  not  only  chide  his  foul  for  being  difquieted,  but  he  char- 
ges it  to  truft  in  God.  Haft  thou  any  grudgings  in  thy  heart  a- 
gainft  thy  brother?  think  it  not  enough  to  quench  thefe  fpark* 
of  hell-fiiei  but  labour  to  kindle  a  heavenly  fire  of  Jove  to 
him ,  fo  as  to  fet  thee  a  praying  heartily  for  him.  1  have  known 
one,  that  when  he  had  Tome  envious  unkinde  thoughts  it  iring  in 
him,  againft  any  one  (as  who  fo  holy  as  may  not  rinde  fuch  ver- 
mine  fomtimes  creeping  about  him?)he  would  not  ftay  long  from 
the  Throne  of  grace,  where  that  he  might  enter  the  ftronger 
proteft  againft  them  ,  would  moft  earneft  ly  pray  for  the  en- 
crcafe  of  thofe  good  things  \n  them ,  which  he  before  had 
feem'd  to  grutch ,  an4  fo  revenged  himfelfe  of  thofe  en- 
vious luftings,  which  at  any  time  rofe  in  his  heart  againft 
others. 

Fifthly ,  he  muft  have  a  publick  fpirit  againft  the  finnes  of  o-  5 . 
thers  A  good  fubjed  doth  not  only  labour  to  live  quietly 
under  his  Princes  government  himfelf,  but  is  ready  to  fervc 
his  Prince  againft  thofe  that  will  not.  True  holineffe  (as 
true  charity )  begins  at  home ,  but  it  doth  not  confine  it 
felf  within  its  own  doores.  It  bath  a  zeal  againft  Gnne  a- 
broad.  He  that  is  of  a  neutral  fpirit ,  and  Gallio  like ,  cares 
not  what  difhonour  God  hath  from  others,  calls  in  queftion 
the  zeale  he  expreiTeth  againft  finne  in  his  own  bofome. 
When  David  would  know  the  temper  of  his  own  heart , 
the  furtheft  difcovery  by  all  his  fearch ,  that  he  could  make 
of  the  (incerity  of  it,  is  his  zeal  againft  the  finnes  of  others. 
*Do  I  net  hate  them,  0  Lor^  that  hate  thee  ?  and  am  I  not 
grieved  with  thofe  that  rife  up  againft  thee  ?  I  hate  them  with 
a  ferfetl  hatred,  1  count  them  mine  enemies,  Pfalme  139. 
21,22.  having  done  this ,  he  intreats  God  himfelfe  to  ran- 
fack  his  heart ;  Search  me ,  and  try  me  O  God ,  if  there  be 
any  wicked  way  found  in  me,  &e.  verfe  23.  as  if  h«  had 
faid,  Lord,  my  line  will  not  reach  to  fathome  my  heart  any 

I  i  fur- 


04^ 


And  having  on 

further,  and  therefore  ;f  it  be  poflible  that  yet  any  evil  way  may 
(hroud  it  felf  under  this,  tell  me,,  and  lead  me  into  the  way 
everlafting. 
•  Sixthly,  the  Chriftian t  when  he  (hews  mofr  zeal  againft 
finnc ,  and  hath  grcateft  victory  over  it ,  even  then  muft  he 
renounce  all    fiduciaty   glorying  in  this.    The  excellency  of 
Cofpel  holmelle  confifts  in  felf-denial.     Though    1  were  p  rfell 
(faith  Job)  yet  would  1  not  kww  my  feu/,  Job  g.  it.  that  is, 
I  would  not  be  conceited  and  proud  of  my  innocence;  when 
a  man   is  lift  up  with   any  excellency  he  hath,  we  fay,  he 
knows  it  ^  he  hath  excelle.it  parts ,  but  he  knows  it ;  that  is, 
he  reflects  too    much    on  himfelf ,  and  fees  his  own  face 
too  oft  in  the  glafle  of  his  own   perfections.     They  who 
climb  lofty  mountains   finde  it  fafeft  ,  the  higher   they  a- 
fcend,  the  more  to  bow,  and  ftoop  with  their  bodies ;  and 
fo  does  the  Spirit   of  Chrift  teach  the  Saints ,  as  they  get 
higher  in  their  victories  over  corruption ,  to  bow  lowcft  in 
fel:-denial  :  jude  21.     The  Saints  are   bid  there  ,  To  keef 
themfelves  in  the  love   if  God ,  and  then  to  wait ,  and  loo\  for 
the   mere]   of  our    Lord   Jeftts  unto  cterna)  Iifey     And  He fe 4 
10   ver.  12.     Sowe    to   your  felves   in  right ecu fnejfe  ,  reap  in 
mercy.    We  fowe  on  Earth,  we  reap  in  Heaven.    The  feed 
we  are    to  fowe ,  is   righteoufneffe    and  holinefle  ,  which 
when   we   have  done  with  greateit  care  and  coft,  we  muft 
not  expect  our  reward  from  the  hand  of  our  righteoufnefle, 
but  C  ods  mercy. 


C   H    A  P. 


the  breaji  plate  ofrighteoufneffe.  24^ 


CHAP.  VII. 

4  fecondinflance  wherein  the  power  of  holiness  is 
to  appear  in  the  Chrtfluins  lifey  uc.in  the  duties 
of  Gods  worpip. 

CEcondly,  the  Chriftian  muft  exert  the  power  of  holineflein 
the  duties  of  Gods  worfhip.  The  lame  light  that  (hews  us 
a  God,  convinceth  he  is  to  be  worfhipt^  and  not  only  fo,  but  that 
he  will  be  worfhipt  in  a  holy  manner  alfo.  God  was  very  choice 
in  all  that  belonged  to  his  worfhip  under  the  Law.  If  he  hath  a 
Tabernacle,  the  place  of  worfhip,  it  muft  be  made  of  the  choicefl: 
materials  ^  The  workmen  employed  to  make  it,  muft  be  rarely 
gifted  for  the  purpofe  -,  the  facrifices  to  be  offer'd  up,  the  bcft  in 
every  kinde,  the  male*  of  the  flock,  the  beft  of  the  beafts,  the  fat 
of  the  inwards,  not  the  offals.  The  perfons  that  attend  upon  the 
Lord,  and  minifter  unto  him,  they  muft  be  peculiarly  holy.What 
is  the  Gofpel  of  all  this?  but  that  God  is  very  curious  in  his 
worfhip  ^  if  in  any  adion  of  our  lives  we  be  more  holy  than  o- 
thers,  fure  it  is  to  be  when  we  have  to  do  with  God  immediate- 
ly •,  Now  this  holinefTe  in  duties  of  worfhip  fhould  appear  in 
thefe  particulars. 

Firft,  in  making  confcience  of  one  duty  as  well  as  another;  t> 

the  Chriftian  muft  encompafle  all  within  his  religious  walk. 
It  is  dangerous  to  performe  one  duty ,  that  we  may  difpenfe 
with  our  felves  in  the  neglect  of  another.  Partiality  is  hateful 
to  God,  efpecially  in  the  duties  of  Religion,  which  have  all 
a  divine  ftamp  upon  them.  There  is  no  Ordinance  of  Gods  ap- 
pointment ,  which  he  doth  not  blefle  to  his  people ,  and  we 
muft  not  rejed  what  God  owns  •,  yea ,  God  communicates 

Ii  2  him- 


CAA  ^n^  ^av'in&  m 


Iiimfelf  with  great  \ariety  to  his  Saints,now  in  this/anon  in  that^ 
on  purpofe  to  keep  up  the  efteeme  of  all  in  our  hearts.     The 
Snoule  feeks  her  beloved  in  fecret  duties  at  home,  and  Hndes  him 
not ,  then  (he  goes  to  the  r/ublick,  and  meets  him  whom  her  ioul 
loves ,  Cant.  3 .  4.  Daniel  no  doubt  had  often  vifited  the  Throne 
of  grace,  and  been  a  long  trader  in  that  duty,  but  God  referv'd 
the  fuller  manikftation  of  his  love,  and  opening  fome  fecretsto 
h:m,  till  he  did  to  ordinary   prayer  joyne  extraordinary  fall- 
ing and  prayer  ^   Then  the  Commandment  came  forth  t  and  a 
meiTenger  from  heaven  d  fpatcht  to  acquaint  him  with  Gods 
minde  and  heart,  Dan. p.3 .  compared  with  y,  1% .  There  is  no  du- 
ty ,  but  the  Saints  finde  at  one  time  or  another ,  the  Spirit  of 
Godb  eathing  fwectly  in ,  and  rilling  1  heir  fouls  from  it,  with 
more  than  ordinary  reirelhing.    Sometimes  the  childe  fucks  its 
milk  from  this  breaft,  fometimes  from  that.  DAvid'm  medita* 
tion ,  while  he  was  muting  findes  a  heavenly  heat  kindling  in 
Pia;a.tj9. 5.tjhisbofome,tillat  laft  the  tire  breaks  out.     To  the  Eunuch  in 
A&>&.  z7>i8.  reading  of  the  Word,  is  fent  Philip  to  joyn  to  his  chariot  ^  tothe 
Luke  24.  55.    y4prj}jeS}  thrift  make*  known  him f elf  in  breaking  of  breads  The 
A6b  *t.V'    difciples  walking  to  Smatu  >  and  conferring  together,  prefently 
have  Chrift  fall  in  with  them ,   who   helps  them   to  untie 
thoi'e  knots,  which  they  were  pofedwirh.     Comeliw at  duty 
in  his  houfe  has  a  vifion  from  heaven,  todircft  him  in  the  way 
he  fhould  walk.    Take  heed  ,Chn  ftian ,  therefore  thou  neglefteit 
not  any  one  duty  ^  how  knoweft  thou ,  but  that  is  the  door 
at  which  Chrift  ftands  waiting  to  enter  at  into  thy  foul?  The 
Spirit  is  free  ,  do  not  binde  him  to  this  or  that  duty,  but  wait 
on  him  in  fell,    it  is  not  wifdomc  to  let  any  water  runne  befide 
thy  mill ,  which  may  be  ufeful  to  let  chy  foul  a  going  heaven- 
ward.   May  be,  (  hrift;an,  thou  firc'ft  little  in  thofe  dut.es  thou 
p?t  fojemeft,  they  aie  empty  breafts  to  thy  foul.    It  is-worth  thy 
enquiry,  whether  there  be  not  fome  other  thou  negle&cft.Thou 
heareit  the  Word  w  tb  little  profit  may  be^  I  pray  tell  me,doeft 
thou  not  neglect  Sacraments  ?  !  am  fure  too  rmny  do,  and  that 
upon   weak,  grounds   God   knowes.    And  wilt   chou  have 
Cod  meet  thee  in  one  Ordinance   who  doeft  nor  meet  him  in 
another  '<  or  if  thou  frequentelt  all  publick  Ordinances ,  is  not 
God  a  great  ftranger  to  thee' t  home,  in  thy  houfe  and  clofet;5 
what  communion  doeft  thou  hold  with  him  in  private  duties? 

Here 


the  breaft- plate  of  rightecnfneft*  3^5 


Here  is  a  hole  wide  enough  to  iofe  all  thou  gettcft  in  publi.k ,  if 
not  timely  mended.  Samuel  would  not  fit  down  to  the  ka& 
with  ';>/<- and  his  fonnes,  till  D.;W,  though  the  youngcft  f  nne, 
wa*fetchc,  who  was  the  only  fonne  that  was  wanting  If  tbou  %  sam.  16  1  r. 
would'ft  have  Gods  company  in  any  Ordinance,  thou  muft  wait 
on  him  in  all}  he  will  not  have  any  willingly  neglected.  O  fetch 
ba  k  that  duty  which  thou  haft  lent  away,though  leait  in  thy  eye, 
yet  it  may  be  'tis  that  God  means  to  crown  with  hischoiccfl  bil- 
ling to  thy  foul. 

Secondly,  in  a  dole ,  and  vigorous  purfuance  of  thofe  ends 
for  which  God  hath  appointed  them.  Now  there  is  a  double  end 
which  God  chiefly  aimes  at  in  dutiesof  his  worfhip.  Firft,  God 
intends  that  by  them  we  fliould  do  our  homage  to  him  as  our 
Sovereign  Lord*  Secondly,  he  intends  them  to  be  as  means  tho- 
rough which  he  may  let  out  himfelf  into  the  bofomes  of  his 
children,  and  communicate  the  choieeft  of  his  bleflingsto  them. 
Now  here  the  power  of  holinefle  puts  iorth  it  felf,  when 
the  Chriftian  attends  narrowly  to  reach  thcfe  ends  in  every  duty 
he  performes. 

Firft,  God  appointsthem  for  this  end, that  we  may  do  our  ho- 
mage to  him  as  our  ibvereign  Lord  •,  were  there  not  a  worfhip 
paid  to  God,  how  fhould  we  declare,  and  make  it  appear  that  we 
hold  our  life  and  being  of  him  ?  one  or"  the  firft  things  that  God 
taught  ^*w,and  Adam  hischildren,  was  Divine  worfhip.   Now 
if  we  will  do  this  holily,  we  muft  make  it  our  chief  care,  fo  to  per- 
forme  every  duty,  that  by  it  we  may  Janttifie  ha  Name  in  it,  and 
give  him  the  glory  due  unto  it.     A  fubjed  may  offer  aprefenc 
after  fuch  a   ridiculous   fafhion  to  his  Prince,  that  he  may 
count  himfelf  rather  fcornM  than  honoured  by  him,     The  foul- 
diers  bowed  the  knee  to  Chrift,  but  they  mocked  him,  M*tth. 
27.29.  and  fo  does  God  reckon  many  do  by  him,  even  while 
they  worfhip  him.    By  the  carriage,  and  behaviour  of  our 
felves  in  religious  duties,  wefpeak  what  our  thoughts  are  of  God  , 
himfelf.     He  that  performs  them  with  a  holy  awe  upon  his  fpi- 
tit,and  comes  to  them  filled  with  faith   and  fear,  with  joy  and 
trembling,  he  declares  plaintly  that  he  believs  God  to  be  a 
great  God  and  a  good  God,  a  glorious  Majefty  and  a  gracious ; 
but  he  that  is  flightly  and  flovenly  in  them,  tells  God  himfelf 

Ii  3  to 


1. 


24.6 


And  I. 


vowing  on 


to  his  face,  that  be  hath  mean,  and  low  thoughts  of  him.  The 
misbehaviour  of  a  perfon  in  Religious  duties ,  arifeth  from  his 
mifapprehenfions  of  God  whom  he  worfhips  What  is  engraven 
on  the  feal  ,  you  fhall  furely  fee  printed  on  the  wax.  And 
what  thoughts  the  heart  hath  of  Cod,  are  itamped  on  the  duties 
the  man  pcrformes.  Abel  fhcwM  himfelf  to  be  a  holy  mc-n,  and 
Cain  appear'd  a  wicked  wretch, in  their  faciifice  •  And  how  ?  but 
in  this,  that  Abelzxm'd  at  that  end  which  God  intends  in  his 
worfhip  ('the  fandtifying  his  name  J  which  Cain  minded  not  at 
all ;  As  may  appear  by  comparing  Abe l's  facririce  with  his ,  in 
two  particulars. 

Firft ,  Abel  is  very  choice  in  the  matter  of  his  facririce^  not  a- 
ny  of  the  flock  that  comes  firft  to  hand,  but  the  frilling*  •,  nei- 
ther did  he  offer  the  lean  of  them  to  God ,  and  fave  the 
fat  for  himfelf,  but  gives  God  the  beft  of  the  beft :  But  of 
GairSs  offering ,  no  fuch  care  is  recorded  to  be  t3ken  by  him; 
r  it  is  only  faid ,  that  he  brought  of  the  fry.it  of  the  grcund ,  an 

en  4.  3»  ♦•    offering  mto  the  Lord ;  but  not  a  word  that  it  was  the  frft  fruit, 
or  beft  fruit. 

Againe ,  Abel  did  not  put  God  offwith  a  beait  or  two  for  a 
facririce ,  but  with  them  gives  his  heart  alfo.  Bj  faith  Abel  of- 
fered unto  God  a  more  excellent  facrifice  then  Cain,  Heb.  I  t.  4. 
he  gave  God  the  inward  worfhip  of  his  foul-,  and  this  was  it 
that  God  took  fo  kindly  at  his  hands ,  for  which  he  obtained  a 
teftimony  from  God  himfelf,  that  he  was  righteous-,  whereas  Cain 
thought  it  enough  (if  not  too  much  )  to  give  him  a  little  of  the 
fruit  of  the  ground  ^  had  the  wretch  but  confidered,  who  God 
was ,  and  what  his  end  in  requiring  an  offering  at  his  hands ,  he 
could  not  have  thought  rationally  ,  that  a  handful  or  two  of 
corn  was  that  which  he  prized,  or  lookt  at  any  further,  than  to 
be  a  figne  of  that  inward  and  fpi ritual  worfhip,  which  he  expe- 
cted to  come  along  with  the  outward  Ceremony.  But  he 
fhewed  what  bafe  and  unworthy  thoughts  he  had  of  God ,  and 
acordingly  he  dealt  with  him.  O  Chriftians,  remember  when 
you  engage  in  any  duty  of  Religion  ,  that  you.  go  to  do  your 
homage  to  God  ,  who  will  be  worfhiptlike  himfelf.  Cur  fed  be 
the  deceiver  which  hath  in  his  flocl^a  male  ,  and  facrififeth  unt0 
the  Lcrd  a  corrupt  thing  -}  for  I  am  a  great  King,  fiith  the  Lord 


the  breafl-plate  of  righteoufnejje.  ^aj 

of  Hofis  ,  and  my  Name  is  dreadful  amtng  the  Heathen.  This 
made  David  fo  curious  abouc  the  Temple ,  which  he  had  in  his 
heart  to  build ,  becaufe  the  PaLce  was  net  for  man,  but  the  Lord 
God,  i  Chron.  29  1 .  therefore  verfe  2.  he  faith,  He  prepared  with 
all  his  might  [or  the  houfeof  his  Cjed.  Thusfhould  the  gracious' 
foul  fay,  when  going  to  any  duty  of  Religion^'  Tis  not  man,  but 
the  Lord  God ,  I  am  going  to  minifter  unto ,  and  there- 
fore I  muft  be  ferious  and  folemne,  holy  and  humble, 
&c. 

The fecond  end,  God  hath  appointed  divine  Ordinances,  and  2. 

religious  duties  for,  is  to  be  a  meanes  whereby  he  may  let  out 
himfelf  to  his  people ,  and  communicate  the  choiceft  of  his  blef- 
fingsinto  their  bofomes.   There  (faith  the  Pfalmift,  fpeaking  of 
thcraountaine  ofZicn,  where  the  Temple  flood,  the  place  of 
Gods  worihip,^  commended  he  the  blefjing,  even  life  forever- 
more,  Pfalme  1 3  3 . 3.  that  is,  he  hath  appointed  the  ble/fing  of  life 
fpiritual,  grace,  and  comfort,  which  at  laft  fhall  fwell  into  life 
eternal ,  to  iflue  and  ftreame  thence.     The  Saints  ever  drew 
their  water  out  of  thefe  wells.     7 'heir  fuls  fhall  live  that  feek 
the  Lord,  Pfalme  67.32.  and  their  fouls  muft  needs  die  that  feek 
not  God  here.     The  husbandman  may  as  well  exped  a  crop 
where  he  never  ploughed  and  fowed^nd  the  trades-man  to  grow 
rich,  who  never  opens  his  (hop  doores  to  lee  cuftomers  in,  as  he 
to  thrive  in  grace,  or  comfort ,  that  converfeth  not  with  the 
duties  of  Religion.    The  great  things  God  doth  for  his  people, 
are  got  in  communion  with  him.    Now  here  appears  the  power 
of  holinefle ,  when  a  foul  makes  this  his  hufinelfe,  which  he  fol- 
lows clofe,  and  attends  to,  in  duties  of  Religion,  to  receive  fome 
fpiritual  advantage  from  God  by  them^  as  a  Scholar  knowing  he 
is  fent  to  the  University  to  get  learning,  gives  up  himfelf  to  pur- 
fue  this,  and  negle&s  other  things-,  'tis  not  riches,  or  pleafures  he 
looks  after ,  but  learning.     Thus  the  gracious  foul  beftirs  him, 
and  flies  from  one  duty  to  another,  as  the  Bee  from  flower 
to  flower,  toftnreitfelf  with  more  and  more  grace-,  'tis  not 
credit  and  reputation  ,  to  be  thought  a  great  Saint ,  but  to  be 
indeed  fuch  ,  thathetakes  alltrispains  for..    TheChriftian  is 
compared  to  a  Merchant  man  that  trades  for  rich  pearles  -,  he  is. 
to  go  to  Ordinances ,  as  the  Merchant  that  fuiles  from  port  to 
port,  not  to  fee  places,  but  to  take  in  his  lading,  feme  here,  fon.e 

there,. 


2^ 


Ami  bavino  on 

o 

there.  A  Chriftian  fhould  be  as  much  afhamed  to  return  em- 
pty from  his  traffique  with  Ordinances ,  as  the  Merchant  to 
come  home  without  his  lading,  tut  ala<  /  how  little  is  this 
lookt  a^ter  by  many  that  pafTe  for  great  prorelfours,who  are  like 
fomeidleperfons  that  come  to  the  market,  not  to  buy  provili- 
on ,  and  carry  home  what  they  want ,  but  to  gaze  and  look 
upon  what  is  there  to  be  lold  ,  to  no  purpofe ;  O  my  brethren, 
take  heed  of  this.  IdlenefTe  is  bad  any  where,  but  worft  in  the 
market-place,  where  fo  many  are  at  work  before  thy  eyes, 
whofe  care  for  their  fouls  both  addes  to  thy  finne,  and  will  ano- 
ther day  to  thy  ftiame.  Doeft  thou  not  fee  others  grow  rich 
in  grace,  and  comfort,  by  their  trading  with  thole  Ordinances, 
from  which  thou  comeft  away  poor  and  beggarly  ?  and  can'ft 
thou  fee  it  without  blufliing  ?  if  thou  had'it  but  a  heart  to  pro- 
pound the  fame  end  to  thy  foul,when  thou  comeft,  thou  might'ft 
fpecd  as  well  as  they.  Cod  allows  a  free  trade  to  all  that  do 
value  Chrift,  and  his  grace  according  to  their  precioufnefTe. 
Hoy  every  one  that  u  athirfi%  ceme  ye  to  the  water j,  and  he  that  hath 
no  money ,  come  ye^buj \and eat  jea^ccme  buy  wine  andmil\  without 
money ,  and  without  price,  Efay  55.1.  "I  he  Spirit  of  God  fcems  in 
the  judgement  of  fome  to  allude  to  a  cuftome  in  maritmeTewns, 
when  a  (hip  comes  with  xommodities  to  be  fold,  theyufeto 
cry  them  about  the  Town ,  Oh  all  that  would  have  fuch  and 
fuch  commodities,  let  them  come  to  the  water-fide,  where 
they  arc  to  be  had  at  fuch  a  price.  Thus  Chrift  calls  every  one 
that  fees  his  need  of  Chrift,  and  his  graces,  to  the  Ordinances, 
where  thefe  are  to  be  freely  had  of  all  that  come  to  them, 
for  this  very  end. 


CHAP. 


the  breafi-plate  of  right  eon fmjje,  340 


CHAP.  VIII. 

A  third  injiance  wherein  the  power  of  holinefs 
tnnfi  appearand  that  is  in  the  Chriftian  J  worldly 
employ  men  ts. 


THirdly,  the  Chriftian  muft  exprefTe  the  power  5  f  holinefTe 
in  his  particular  calling  and  worldly  employments,  that 
therein  he  is  converfant  with.  HolinefTe  mnft  be  writ  upon  thofe, 
as  well  as  on  his  religious  duties.     He  that  obferves  the  Law  of 
buildingjs  as  exad  in  making  a  kitchin.as  in  making  a  parlour  •  fo 
by  theLaw  ofChriftianity,we  muft  be  as  exad  in  our  worldly  bufi- 
nefs,as  in  duties  of  wotftilp.Beje  holy  in  all  manner  ofcottverfation, 
iPet.1.15.  We  muft  not  leave  our  Religion,  as  fome  do  their 
Bibles  at  Church-  As  in  man,  the  higheft  faculty(which  is  reafon) 
guides  mans  loweft  adions ,  even  thofe  which  are  common  to 
beafts(fuch  are  eating,  drinking,  and  fleeping  )  man  doth  (that 
is,  fhould,  if  he  will  deferve  his  own  name)  exercife  thefe  ads 
as  Reafon  direds,  he'lhould  (hew  himfelf  in  them  a    rational 
creature  j  fo  grace  that  is  the  higheft  principle  in  a  Chriftian,  is 
to   fteere  and  guide  him  in  thofe  adionsthat  are  common  to 
man  as  man.     The  Chriftian   is  not  to  buy  and  fell  as  a  meere 
man,  but  as  a  Chriftian  man.     Religion  is  not  like  that  Statef- 
mans  gown,  which  when  he  went  to  recreate  himfelf.   he  would 
throw  off,  and  hy^There  lie  Lord  treafurer  a  while ;  No,  where- 
ever  the  Chriftian  is,  what-ever  he  is  a  doing  ,  he   muft   keep 
his  Religion  on,  I  mean  do  it  holily.     He  muft  not  do  that  in 
which  he  cannot  (hew  himfelf  a  Chriftian.  Now   the  power  of 
holinefTe  puts  forth  it  felf  in  ourparticular  callings  thefe  ways,but 
take  them  conjuvttive,  the  beauty  of  holinefs  appears  in  the  fyme- 
try  of  all  the  parts  together. 

.     Kk  Firft, 


otfo  And  having  on 


Firit,   when  the  Chriftian  is  diligent  in  his  particular  calling-, 
when  God  calls  as  to  beChriftians,  hecalls  us  indeed  out  of  the 
worM^astoouraflfecYions^but  not  out  of  the  world,  as  to  era- 
ploymerrt.    It  is  true,  when  Eli/ha  was  called,he  left  his  plough, 
and  the  Jpofiles  their  nets,  but  not    as  they  were  called  to  be 
<aints,  butbecaufe  they  were  called  to  office  in    thq  Church, 
(  though  fome  in  our  dayes  could  Hnde  in  their  hearts  to  fend  the 
officers  of  the  Church  to  the  plough  again  )  but  upon  how  lit- 
tle reafon  let  themfelves  judge  ,  who  rinde  one  trade   (if  it  be 
well  followed,  and  managed  with  afullftockj  enough  to  find 
them  work  all  the  week-,  and  fare  the  Minifter,  that   has  to  do 
with,  yea,  provide  for  more  fouls,  then  they  bodies,raay  find  his 
head  and  heart  as  full  of  work  in  his  calling,  from  one  end  of  the 
year,  as  any  of  them  all  -,    but  I  am  fpeaking  to   the  private 
Chriftian.  •    T  hou  canft  not  be  holy,if  thou  beett  not  diligent  in  a 
particular  calling.The  law  of  man  counts  him  a  vagranr,tbat  hath 
not  a  particular  abiding  place^  and  the  Word  of  God  counts  him 
a  diforderly  perfon  that  hath  not  a  particular  calling ,  wherein 
to  move  and  ad  for  Gods  glory,  and  the  good  of  others.    We 
hear  there  are  fome  which  walk,  diforderly  among  you, ,  working  not 
at  all,  2  Thef.  3 . 1 1 .  God  would  have  his  people  profitable,  like 
the  fheep  which  doth  the  very  ground  good  it  feeds  on.    Every 
one  ihould  be  the  better  for  a  Chriftian.     When  Onefmtu  was 
Philemon  u.  converted,  he  became  profitable  to  Paul  and  Philemon  alfo-,  to 
Paulas  a  Chriftian,  to  Philemon  as  a  fervant  •  grace  made  him 
of  a  run  away,  a  diligent   fervant.    An    idle  profefTour  is  a 
fcandalous  profeiTour.  An  idle  man  does  none  good,and  himfelf 
mofthurt. 
2  Secondly,  when  he  is  not  only  diligent ,  but  for  confeience 

fake.  There  are  many  are  free  enough  of  their  paines  in 
their  particular  callings,they  need.no  fpur  •,  but  what  fets  them 
on  work  ?  Is  it  confeience,  becaufe  God  commands  it  ?  Oh  not ! 
then  they  would  be  diligent  in  their  general  calling  alfo^  They 
would  pray  as  hard  as  they  work  •,  they  then  would  knock  oft, 
as  well  as  fall  on  at  Gods  command ;  if  confeience  were  the  key 
that  oper/d  their  (hop  on  the  week  day,  it  would  (hut  it  on 
the  Lords  day.  When  we  fee  a  man,  like  theHawk,flieaf'er  the 
worlds  prey,and  w.ll  not  come  tti  Gods  lure,  though  confeience 
bids  in  his  name  Come  off,  and  wait  on  thy  God  in  this  duty  in 

thy 


the  breajl-p/ate  of  righteoujheffe.  2  <  i 

thy  family,  that  in  thy  clofet. but  ftil!  goes  on  his  worldly  chafe ; 
He  (hews  plain  enough  whofe  errand  he  goes  on,  not  of  con- 
fcience,but  his  lufts.  But  if  thou  wile  walk  in  the  power  of  holi- 
neiTe,  thou  muft  be  diligent  in  thy  calling  on  a  religious  account^ 
that  which  makes  thee  ferv entin  prayer,  muft  make  thee mt  fiotk-  . 
fall  in  buftne^e.  Thou  mayrt  fay.This  is  the  place  God  hath  fet  me 
in,  lam  but  hisfervant  ia  my  own  (hop,  and  here  I  muft  ferve 
hirn  as  I  would  have  my  prentice  or  childe  ferve  me,  yea, 
much  more,  for  they  are  uot  mine  fo  much  as  I  am 
his. 

Third ly,when  he  expeds  thefuccefleofhis  labour  from  God, 
and  accordingly,  if  he  fpceds  gives  his  humble  thanks  to  God. 
Indeed  they  go  together^  he  that  doth  not  the  one,  will  not  the 
other.    The  worlding  that   goes  not  through  his  clofet   by 
prayer,  into  his  fhop  in  the  morning,  when  he  enters  upon  his 
buiinefTe,  no  wonder  if  he  returns  not  at  night  by  his  clofet,  in 
thaokfulncffe  to  God.    He  began  withouc  God,  it  wereftraage 
ifhefhouldend  in  him.    The  ipider  that  fpins-  her  web  out  of 
her  own  bowels ,  dwells  in  it  when  (lie  hath  done-  and    men 
that  carry  on  their  enterp.izes  by  their  own  wit  and  care,  en- 
title themfelves  to  what  they  think  they  have  done  •  they  will 
fooner  facrifice  fas  they  to  their  net  and  drag)  to  their  own  wif- 
dome  and  induftry,  then  to  God-,  fuch  a  wrerch  1  have  lately  j0[,.8i 
beard  of  in  our  dayes,  who  being  by  a  neighbour  excited   toHabak.  i. «?» 
thank  God    for  a  rich  crop  ot  come  he  had  {landing  on  his 
ground,  atheiftically  replied  j  Thank  God  ?  nay,  rather  thkinf?  my 
dung-cart.  1  he  fpeech  of  a  dung-hill  fpiric,  more  filthy  then  the 
muck  in  his  cart-,  Bur.  if  thou  wilt  beaChriftian,  thou  muft  ac- 
knowledge God  in  all  thy  wayes  ,    not   leaning    to  thy  on>n  under- 
filling ;  and  this  will  direct  thee  to  him,  when  fucceflfe  crowns 
thy  labours^  to  crown  God  with    the  praife.     Jacob  laboured   as 
diligently,  and  took  as  much  pains  for  theeftate  he  had  at  laft , 
as  another,  yet  laying  the  foundation   of  all  in  prayer,  and  ex- 
pecting the  bleffing  from  heaven,  Gen.  2%.  20.  he  afcribes  all 
that  faire  eftatc  he   at  laft  was  pofleft  of,  to    the  mercy    and 
truthofGod,whomhehadinhispoor  ftate  (when  with  his  pil- 
grim ftaff,he  was  travelling  to  iadan-Aran)  engaged  by  a  folemn 
vow  to  provide  for  him,  Gen.  32.10. 
.  When  the  Chriftian  is  content  with  the  portion(little  or  much) 

Kk2  that 


2*2  And  having  on 


that  God  upon  his  endeavours  allots  him  »  not  content  becaufc 
he  cannot  have  it  otherwife.  Nectfiity  was  the  Heathens 
School-matter  to  teach  contentment-  but  faith  mult  be  the  Chri- 
ftians,  whereby  he  acquiefces  in  the  diipofitions  of  Gods  provi- 
dence with  a  fweet  complacency  as  in  the  Will  of  God  concern- 
ing him.  Here  is  godlineiTe  in  triumph^  when  the  Chriftian  can 
carve  contentment  out  of  Gods  providence,  whatever  the  difli 
is  that  it  fets  before  him  ;  if  he  gath  ers  little,  he  lacks  not,  but  is 
fatisfied  with  his  fhort  meal ;  if  he  gathers  much,he  hath  nothing 
over^  I  mean,  not  more  then  his  grace  can  well  digeft,  and  turn 
to  good  nouriftiment  ^  nothing  over,  that  turns  to  bad  humors 
of  pride  and  wantonnelTe.  This  was  the  pitch  Paul  attained 
unto  ,  Phi.  4. 14.  He  knew  how  to  abound,  and  how  to  want.  Take 
contentaton  from  godlineiTe,and  you  take  one  of  the  bcft  jewels 
away  {hewearsinherbofom.GW//>«,jfc  w*^  contentment  it  great 
gaine  ^  not  godlinefTe  with  an  eftate,  but  godlineffe  with  content- 
ment, 1  Tim  6.16. 

Fifthly ,when  the  Chriftians  particular  calling  doth  not  encroach 
5-  upon  his  general.  Truly  this  requires  a  ftrong  guard.  The 
world  is  of  an  encroaching  nature^  hard  it  is  to  converfc  with  it, 
and  not  come  into  bondage  to  it;  as  H  agar  (  when  Abraham 
ihewM  her  fome  refped  more  then  ordinary  )  began  to  conteft 
with,  yea,  crow  over  her  Miftrejfe  ^  fo  will  our  worldly  employ- 
ments juftle  with  our  heavenly,  if  we  keep  not  a  ftri&hand  o- 
verthem.  Now  the  power  of  holineflfe  appears  here  in  two 
things;  flrft,  when  the  Chriftian  fuffers  not  his  worldly  bufinefs 
to  cat  up  his  time  for  communion  with  God,  but  keeps  it  in- 
violable from  the  facrilegious  hands  of  the  world.  The  Chri- 
ftian may  obferve  (that  if  he  will  liften  to  it,) he  (hall  never  think 
of  fetting  about  any  religious  dutie,  but  fome  excufe  or  other  (to 
put  it  off)  will  prefent  it  elf  to  his  thoughts-,  This  thing  muft 
be  juft  now  done,  that  friend  fpoken  with  ,  or  cuftomer  waited 
for ;  fo  that  (as  the  Wife  man  faith  )  he  that  obferve th  the  wind 
jhatlnut  fowe,  end  he  that  rega^deth  the  clouds  JhaH  not  reap,  Eccl. 
11. 4  fo  he  that  will  regard  wkichisownfloth,  worldly  intereft,  • 
and  flefhly  part  fuggt  fts  5  he  fnall  never  pray,  meditate,  or  hold 
communion  with  Cod  many  other  religious  duy;  O  'tis  fad! 
wl  en  the  mafter  nuft  ask  the  man  leave  when  to  eat,  'and  when 
not}  when  the  Chriftian  muft  take  his   orders  fiom  the  world  , 

when 


the  breaft-plate  of  right eoufnejfe.  2^3 

when  to  wait  on  God  and  when  not,  whereas  Religion  fhould 
give  Law  to  that.     T  hen  holinefle  is  in  its  power  (  as  Samplon  m 
hisftrength  )  when  it  can  fnap  afunder  thefe  excufes  that  wOi<Jd 
keep   him    from  his  God  ,  as    eafily  as  he   did   his  cords 
of  flax ;  when  the  Chriftian   can    make    his    way  into   the 
prefence  of  God,  through  the  throng  of  worldly   encumbran- 
ces j  'Behold  (  faith  *David  )  1  have  in  my  trouble  prepared  for  the 
beufe  of  the  Lord  an  hundred  thoufand   talents  of  gold,  and  a  thou- 
[and  thoufand  talents  of  fiver ,  &c.    I  Chron.22.14.He  had  ways 
enough  to  have  difpofed  of  his  treafures,   if  he  would  have  been 
difcouraged  from  the  work ;  he  might  have  had  a  fair  apology 
from  the  Warres  he  was  all  his  reign  involved  in ,  (  which  were 
continually  draining  his  Exchequer)  to  have  fpared  this  coft. But 
as/Rjme  (hew'd  her   puifTance  in  fending  fuccours  to  Spaine  t 
when  Hannibal  was  at  her  gates;  fo  T>avid  would  (hew   his 
zeal  for  God  and  hishoufe,  by  laying  afide  fuch  vaft  fummes 
for  the  building  of  a  Temple  in  the  mid'ft  of  the  troubles   and 
expences  of  his  Kingdome.    He  is  the  Chriftian  indeed   that 
lays  afide  a  good  portion  of  time  daily,  in  the  midft  of  all  his 
worldly  occafions  for  communion  with  God  ;  whoever  he  com- 
pounds  with   and  pays  ftiort,  be  dares  not  make  bold  with 
God,  tofervehimby  halves.    He  {hall  have  his  time  devoted 
to,  him,  though   others  are  put  off  with  the  lefle  ^  like  that 
devout  man,  who  when  his  time  for  his  devotions  came,  what 
company  foever  he  was  with  ,  would  take  his  leave  of  them  with 
this  faire  excufc,  he  had  a  friend  that  ft aid  to  {peak^tvith  him  (he 
meant  his  God) .    Secondly,  when  his  worldly  employments  da 
not  turn  the  edge  of  his  affections ,  and  leave  a  bluntneffe  up- 
on his  fpirit,  as  to   holding  communion  with  God;    here  is 
holineffe  in  the  power-,  as  the  husband,when  he  hath  been  abroad 
all  day,  in  this  company  and  that,  yet  none  of  thefe  makes  him 
love  his  wife  and  children  the  leffe^  when  he  comes  home  at  nighr, 
he  brings  his  arfe&ions  to  them  as  entire  as  when  he  went  out  • 
yea,  he  is  glad  he  is  got  from  all  others  to  them  again.    This  is  a. 
fwcet  frame  of  fpirit  indeed  ^  but  alas  how  hard  to  keep  it  ?  canft 
thou  fay,OChriftian,after  thou  haft  paft  a  day,amidft  thy  worldly. 
profits,  and  been  entertained  with  the  delight  and  pleafures  which. 
thy  fulleftate  affords  thee,  that  thou  bring'ft  thy  whole  heast  to 

thy 


c-  .  And  having  on 

thy  God  with  thee,  when  at  night  thou  returneft  into  his  pre- 
fence  to  wait  on  him  >  Thou  canft  fay  more  then  many  can,  that 
have  fomc  good  in  them.  O  'tis  hard  to  converfe  with  the  world 
all  day,  and  (hake  it  off  at  night,  fo  as  to  be  free  to  en  joy  priva- 
cy with  God.  The  world  does  by  the  Chriftian,  as  the  little 
child  by  the  mother ;   if  it  cannot  keep  the  mother  from  going 

out,  then  it  will  cry  after  her  to  go  with  her^  if  the  world  can- 
not keep  us  from  going  to  idigious  duties,  then  it  will  cry  to  be 
taken  along  with  us ,  and  much  ado  to  part  it  and  the  affe- 

dions. 
Fourthly,  the  Chriftian  muft  exprefle  the  power  of  holinefle 

in  his  carriage  and  behaviour  to  others^nd  they  are  either  within 

doors,  or  without. 

CHAP.IX. 


Of  exp  retting  the  power  of  bolinefs^  in  and  to  our 
family  Relations. 


i.  "T^Irft,  to  his  family  relations.  Much,  though  not  all  of  the 
X  power  of  godlinefle  lies  within  doors,  to  thofe  that  God  hath 
there  rela'edusunto.  It  is  in  vain  to  talk  of  holinefle,  if  we 
can  bring  no  letters  teftimonial  from  our  holy  walking  with  our 
relations.  O  'tis  fad,when  they  that  have  reafon  to  know  us  beft, 
(  by  their  daily  converfe  with  us )  do  fpeak  leaft  for  our  godli- 
nefle- few  fo  impudent  as  to  come  naked  into  the  ftrects-  if 
men  have  any  thing  to  cover  their  naughtinefTe.they  will  put  it  on 
when  they  come  abroad.  But  what  art  thou  within  dcores .? 
what  care  and  confciencc  to  difchargc  thy  duty  to  tby  neer  re- 
lations ?  He  is  a  bad  husband,  that  hath  money  to  fpend  among 
company  abroad,  but  none  to  lay  inprovifions  to  keep  his  fa- 
mily 


the  breaft-plate  of  rigbteonfaefje.  2  5  «> 


mily  at  home.     And  can  he  be  a  good  Chriftian  that  fpends  all 
his  religion  abroad ,  and  leaves  none  for  his  neareft  relations  at 
home  ?  That  is  a  great  zealot  among  ftranger*,  and  little  or  no- 
thing of  God  comes  from  him  in  his  family  ?  yea,  it  were  well , 
if  fome  that  gain  the  reputation  for  Chriftians  abroad,  did  not 
fall  ftiort  of  others,  that  pretend  not  to  proreffion  in  thofe  mo- 
ral duties,  which  they  ftiould  performe  to  their  relations ;  There 
are  fome,  who  are  great  ftrangers  to  profeflion  ,  who  yet  arc 
loving  and  kinde   in  their  way  to  their  wives ;  what  kinde  of 
profeflbrs    then  are  they,  who  are  dogged  and  cnrrifti  to  the 
wife  of  their  bofomes  ?  who  by  their  tyrannical  lording  it  over 
them,  imbitter  their  fpirits,  and  make  them  cover  the  Lords  Al- 
tar with  tears  and  weeping?  There  are   wives  to  be  found  that 
are  not  cl  amorous,  petvifh,  and  froward  to  their  husbands,  who 
yet  are  far  from  a  work  of  true  grace  in  their  hearts ;  do  they  then 
walk  as  becomes  holinefle,  who  trouble  the  whole  houfe  with 
their  violent  paflions?  There  are  fervants  who  from  the  autho- 
rity of  a  natural  confcience,  are  kept  from  railing  and  reviling 
language,  when  reproved  by  their  matters ;  And  fhall  not  grace 
keep  pace  with  nature?  Holy  David  knew  very  well,  how  neer 
this  part  of  the  Saints  duty  lies  to  the  very  heart  of  go  dlinefle-, 
and  therefore  when  he  makes  his  folemn  vow,  to  walk  holily 
before  God,  he  inftanceth  in   this,  as  one  ftage  whereon  he 
might  eminently  difcover  the  gracioufnefle  of  his  fpirit,    /  will 
wal\withinmyhoufe  with  a  perfect  heart ,  Pfal,  1 01.2.  But  toin- 
ftance  in  a  few  particulars  wherein  the  power  of  holinefle  is  to  ap- 
pear as  to  family  relations; 

Firft,  In  the  choice  of  our  relations,/ uch  I  mean  as  are  elegible. 
Some  are  not  in  our  choice.    The  childe  cannot  chufe  what  f,t-         *• 
therhewill  have,  nor  the  father  what  child.  But  where  God  al- 
lows a  liberty,  he  expects  a  care. 

Firft,  art  thou  godly ,andwanteft  a  fervice?  O  take  heed,  thou  #1 
fheweft  thy  holinels  in  the  family  thou  choofeft,&the  governors 
thou  put/ft  thy  felf  under.  Enquire  more  whether  it  be  a  health- 
ful air  for  thy  foul  within  door?,then  for  thy  body  without.  The 
very  ferceleffe  creatures  groan  to  ferve  the  ungodly  world,and(if 
capable  of  choofing)  wou'd  count  it  their  liberty  to  ferve  the 
formes  of  Gody  Rom.  8.  2i.  And  wilt  thou  voluntarily  ,  when 
thou  mayft  prevent  it,  runne  thy  ielf  under  the  government  of 

fiuh 


a  ,-6  And  having  on 


fuch  as  are  ungodly,  who  ait  thy  felf  a  child  of  God  ?  'Tis 
hard  to  fcrve  two  matters,  though  much  alike  in  difpofition: 
But  impoflible  to  ierve  thofe  two,  a  holy  God,  and  a  wicked  un- 
godly manor  woman,     fo    as  to   pleafe  them  both.  But,  if 
thou  beeft  under  the  roof  of  fuch  a  one,  forget  not  thy  duty 
to  them,  thouph  they  do  forget  their  duty  to  God  -,  poflibly  thy 
faithfulnefle  to  them,  may  bring  them  to  enquire  after  thy  God, 
for  thy  fake,  as  Nebuchadnezzar  did  for  Daniels.     No  doubt 
wicked  men  would  take  up  Religion  and  the  wayes  of  God  more 
ferioufly  into  their  confideration,  if  there  were  a  more  heavenly 
luftre  and  beauty  upon  Chriftians  lives  in  their  feveral  relations 
to  invite  them  thereunto  *  fometimes  a  book  is  read  the  fooner 
*  for  the  fairneffe  of  the  characters,  which  would  have  been  not 
much  lookt  in,  if  the  print  had  been  naught.  O  how  oft  do  we 
hear,  that  the  thoughts  of  Religion  are  thrown  away  with  ftorn 
by  wicked  Matters,  when  their  profeffing  fervants  are  taken  falfe# 
appear  proud  and  undutiful ,  flothful  or  negligent  ?  what  then 
follows,  But  is  thisyour  Religion  ?  God  keep  me  from  fuch  a 
Religion  as  this.    O  commend  the  wayes  of  God  to  thy  carnal 
and  ungodlly  Matter  or  Miftris  by  a  clear  unblotted  converfation 
in  thy  place-     But  withal  let  me  tell  thee ,  if  (doing  thy  utmoft 
in  thy  place  to  promote  Religion  in  the  family  )  thou  fecft  that 
thefoile  is  focold  that  there  is  no  vifible  hope  of  planting   for 
God,  it  is  time,  high  time  to  think  of  tranfplanting  thy  felf; 
for  it  is  to  be  fear'd ,  the  place  which  is  fo  bad   to  plant  in  , 
will  not ,  cannot  be  very  good  for  thee  to  grow  and  thrive 
in. 

Art  thou  a  godly  Matter  >  when  thou  takeft  a  fervant  into  thy 
houfe,  chooleforCjodas  well  as  thy  felf.  Remember  there  is 
work  for  God  to  be  done  by  thy  fervant,  as  well  as  thy  felf^  and 
(hall  he  be  fit  for  thy  turne,  that  is  not  for  his  ?  Thou  defireft 
the  work  ftiould  profper  thy  fervant  takes  in  hand-,  doeft  not? 
and  what  ground  haft  thou  from  the  promife  to  hope  that  the 
work  (hould  profper  in  his  hand,  that  (innesallthe  while  he  is 
doing  of  it  ?  the  plowing  of  the  wicked  is  finne ,  Prov.  2 1.4.  A 
godly  fervanr  is  a  greater  blefiing  then  we  think  on.  He  can 
work,and  fet  God  on  work  alfo  for  his  makers  good,  Gen.24.1 2 . 
0  Lord  God  of  my  M after  Abraham  ,  /  pray  thee  fend  me  good 
fycidihU  day,  and /hew  kjndnrjfc  unto  my  Mafter.  And  fure,he  did 

his 


the  breafl-piate  ofrighteoufneffe.  qz- 

his  Matter  as  much  fervice  by  his  prayer,  as  by  his  prudence  in 
that  journey ;  it*  you  were  but  to  plant  an  Orchard,  you  would 
get  the  belt  fruit  trees,  and  not  cumber  your  ground  with^crabs. 
There's  more  loife  in  a  graceleiTe  fervant  in  the  houfe,  than  a. 
fruitleifetreein  the  Orchard.    Holy  David  obferved  while  he 
was  az  Sauls  Court  the  mi.chief  of  having  wicked  and  ungodly 
fervants,(for  with  fuch  was  that  unhappy  King  fo  compaifed,that 
David  compares  his  Court  to  the  protane  and  barbarous  Hea- 
thens, among  whom  there  was  fcarce  more  wickedneife  to  be 
foundjPfil.I  zo.6.fVo  u  me  that  I  fopurne  in  Mefbechfhat  1  dwell 
r<i  tlcg  tents  of  Kedar  ;  that  is^among  thofe  who  were  as  prodi- 
gioufiy  wicked  as  any  rhere.)And  no  doubt, but  this  made  this  gra- 
cious man  in  his  banifhment  before  he  came  to  the  Crown  (  ha- 
ving feen  the  evil  of  a  disordered  houfe  )  to  refolve  what  he  will 
do, when  God  inould  make  him  the  head  of  fuch  a  royal  family, 
Pf.loi.j.  He  that  mwkith  dece  t  jhall  not  dwell  within  rky  Lonfe;  le« 
that  telle th  lies  ft  all  not  tarry  mmy  fight  .He  inttanceth  in  thofe 
fins,  not  as  if  he  would  ipend  all  his  zeal  againtt  thefe,  but  be- 
caufe  he  had  obferv'd  rhem  principally  to  abound  mSauls  Court, 
by  which  he  had  fufter-ed  fo  much,as  you  may  perceive  by  Tfal. 

I  20.  2,  3. 

Arc  thou  godly  ?  fhew  thy  felf  foin  the  choice  of  husband  or 
wife.  1  am  fiure,  if  fome  ( and,  thofe  godly  alio)  could  bring  no 
other  teftimonial  for  their godlinefle,  th.m  the  care  they  have 
taken  in  this  particular  yk  might  juflly  be  call'd  into  queftion  both 
by  themfelves  and  others.There  is  no  one  thing,  that  gracious 
perfons  (even  thofe  recorded  in  Scripture  as  well  as  others)  have 
fhewn  their  weaknefle,  yea,  given  offence  and  fcandal  more  in, 
than  in  this  particular,  Ihefois  of  Cjodftw  that  tie  daughters 
if  men  -onre  fairey  Gen.  6. 2.  one  would  have  thought  the  fons 
of  Go  i  inould  have  look't  for  grace  in  the  heart,  rather  than 
beauty  in  the  face;  but  we  fee,  even  they  fometime;  turn  in  at 
the  faired  i:gne,  without  much  enquiring  what  grace  is  to  be 
found  dwelling  within,  but  Chriftian,  let  not  the  mifcarriage 
of  any  in  this  patticular  (  how  holy  ibever  otherwifc)  make 
thee  lelfe  careful  in  thy  choice.  God  did  not  leave  their  pra- 
ctice on  record  for  thee  to  follow,  butfhun.  He  is  but  afloven- 
ly  Chriftian  that  will  fwallow  all  the  Saints  do,  without  paring 
their  a&ions.    Is  k  not  enough  that  the  wicked  break  their 

L  1  necks 


0<8  And  having  on 

necks  over  the  fin?  of  Saints?  but  wilt  thou  run  upon  them 
alfo  to  break  thy  fhins  ?  point  not  at  this  man,  and  that  godly 
woman,  facing,  they  can  marry  into  fuch  a  profare  family,and 
lie  by  the  lide  of  a  drunkard,  iwearer,  &c.  Look  to  the  iuleO 
Chilian,  if  thou  wilt  keep  the  power  of  holinefle.That  is  clear 
asaSur.-b.am  writ  in  the  Scripture,  Be  not  unequally  yoked  toge- 
ther with  unbeliever s\f or  what felioirjhip hath  righteottftiefi  with 
unrivl.teoi-fncjfe}  2Cor.6.i4.  and  where  he  gives  the  Widow 
leave  to  ma>ry  again,  he  ftill  remembers  to  bound  this  liberty : 
to  whom  fie  wi%only  in  the  Lord,i  Cor.7, 39.  Mark  that,  in  the 
Lordy  that  is,  in  the  Church-,  all  without  the  faith,  are  without 
God  in  the  world.     The  Lords  kindred  and  family  is  in  the 
Church ;  you  marry  out  of  the  Lord,  when  you  marry  out  of 
the  Lords  kindred ;  or  in  the  Lor^that  is,in  the  fear  of  the  Lord, 
with  his  leave  and  liking.     The  Parents  confent  is  fit  to  be  had, 
we  all  yield*  and  is  not  thy  heavenly  Fathers  ?  And  will  he  ever 
give  his  confent  thou  fhould'fi  bellow  thy  felf  on  a  beaft,a  fot,an 
earth-worme  ?  holy  men  have  paid  dear  for  fuch  snatches  •  what 
awoful  pligue  was  Dalilah  to  Sampfon}mdMichalnonz  of  thz 
greateft  comforts  to  David ;  had  he  not  better  have  married  the 
pooreft  Damofel  in  Ifraelji godly  (though  no  more  with  her  but 
the  cloaths  on  her  back  )  than  fuch  a  fleering  companion,  that 
mock't  him  for  his  zeal  to  his  God  ? 

Secondly,  in  labouring  to  interefi  God  in  our  relations.  The 
Chriftian  cannot  indeed  propagate  grace  to  his  childe,  nor  joynr 
tirjhis  vwfeinbisholinelTe,  as  he  may  in  his  lands;  yet  he  mutt 
do  hi  --  urmoft  to  entitle  God  to  them.    Why  did  God  command 
lAb'aham  th?t  all  his  houfe  fhould  be  circus  cifed?furely  he 
would  have  hi  n  go  as  far  as  he  could  to  draw  them  into  affinity 
with,inci  relation  to  GbdiNeai  rci  tuons  call  for  dear  aflfettiom. 
Grace  doth  not  tea^h  us  to  love  the  n  lette'  than  we  did,  but  to 
love  them  better.     It  turns  our  love  into  a  fpi ritual  channel, 
and  m?.kes  us  chiefly  dei:re  their  etemlgood  ;   what  fingular 
thingelfe  isin  the  Cfri;u;ns  love  ^bove  others?   Do  not  the 
Heathens  lay  up  eftates  for  their  children    here/  are  not  they 
caref  .1  for  their  feivanrs  bicks  and  bellies,  as  well  as  orhers  ? 
yes   fure,    bur    your  care   null   exceed  theirs.    I   remember 
^Aupuft.-se    fsxMkin   how  hLhlyfome  commended  his  fathers 
coft  and  cure  to  educate  him,  even  above  his  eftate  ,  makes  tfo\s 

fad 


?.• 


the  breafi-plat'e  of  right  eoufnejfe.  250 

fad  complaint,*:///?*  Interea  non  facxgeret  Tatcr^ejtiaHs  credere, n 
tibi^dHn^moio  jj]'e/x  diprtm9vel pot  us  de[ertus  a.  cpihura.  ttta  De~ 
us  !  tvl.ercM  ( faith  he)  my  "fathers  drift  mall  was  rot  to*  traine 
meap  for  thee  1  his  project  ,vas,trur  I  might  be  eloquent ,  an  O- 
rmtour^not  aChrljtian.     O  my  brethren,  it  God  be  worth  your 
acquaintance^  he  not  worth  theirs  ahb,that  are  fo  near  and  dear 
ro  you  t  one  houfe  now  holds  you,  would  you  noi  have  one  hea- 
ven receive  you  ?  can  you  think  (  w'rhour  trembling  )   that 
thofe  who  live  together  in  one  family,  fhouid,  when  the  houfe 
is  broken  up  by  death,  go  one  to  hell.   ?.nothir  to  heaven  ? 
furely  you  are  like  to  have  little  joy  from  them  on  earth ,    who 
you  fear  fhall  not  meet  you  in  heaven.    By   Lycnrgm  his  Law, 
the  father  that  gave  no  learning  to  his  chiiae  when  young ,   was 
to  lofe  that  fuccour  which  was  due  fro  n  his  chilce  to  him  in  his 
old  age.    The  righceoufneflfe  of  that  Law  though  I  dare  not 
aflert,  yet  this  I  may  fay,  what  he  uiijuftly  commanded,  God 
doth  moft  righteoufly  fuffer ;  that  thofe  who  do  not  teacji  their 
children  their  dvty  to  God,  lofe  the  honour  and  reverence  which 
fliould  be  paid  them  by  their  childrenjand  fo  of  other  relations 
alfo.     " 

Thirdly,  take  heed  thy  relations  be  not  a  fnare  to  thee,  or  3. 

thou  to  them.There  arefuch  fad  families  to  be  found,who  do  no- 
thing elfe  but  lead  one  another  into  temptation,by  drawing  forth 
each  the  others  corruption,from  one  end  of  the  year  to  the  o- 
ther-,  what  can  we  call  fuch  families  tmtfo  many  hells  above 
ground?A  man  may  live  with  as  much  fafety  to  his  body  in  a  peft- 
houfe,  as  he  can  there  to  his  foul.  And  truly  the  godly  are  not 
fo  far  put  of  dmger,  but  that  the  Divel  may  make  ufe  of  their 
paflions  to  royle  and  defile  one  another.  I  am  fure  he  is  very 
ambitious  to  do  them  a  mifchief  this  way,  and  too  often  prevail?. 
Abrahams  fear  laid  the  fnare  for  Sarah  his  wife,  whowaseafily 
perfwaded  to  diflemble  for  him  fhe  loved  fo  dearly,  Gen.  12.23. 
And  R.beccr.hs  vehement  affection  to  j^c^together  with  the 
reverence,both  her  place  and  grace  commanded  in  fatobs  heart, 
made  him  of  a  plain  man  become  the  fubtle  man,  to  deceive  his 
father  and  brother ;  which,  though  it  was  too  broad  a  fin  for 
himatfirftpropofal  tofwallow,  as  appears,  Gen.  27. 12.  I  fall 
feem  to  h'm  to  be  a  deceivcr^and  I  (hall  brina ^  curfe  vpon  me\ani 
not  a  buffing ;  yet  with  a  little  art  ufed  by  his  mother,  we  fee 

L  1  2  the 


a5o  And  having  on 


the  paflagc  was  widened,  and  down  it  went  for   all  his  fir/1 
ftreiningat  ic ;  and  yet  both  godly  perfons.    Look  therefore 
to  thy  felf,  that  thou  doft  not  bring  fin  Upon  thy    relations. 
It  would  be  a  heavy  affliction  to  thee,  co  lee  thy  wife,  childe  or 
fervant  fick  of  the  plague,which  thou  brought  'it  hone  to  them, 
or  bleeding  by  a  wound  which  thou  unawares  gaveft  them  ;  A- 
las,  betcer'thus,  then  be  infected  with  (in,    wounded  with  i;uilt 
by  thy  means.    And  be  as  careful  to  antidote  thy  foul  agnail 
receiving  infection  from  them,  as  breathing  it  on  them.  Thy 
love  is  great  to  thy  wife;  O  let  ic  not  make  rhe  apple  of  tem- 
ptation the  more  r'aire  or  deferable,  when  offer'd  to  due  by  her 
hand.  Thou  lovelt  thy  felf,  yea,  thy  God  too  Iitt1e,if  her  fo  much 
as  to  fin  for  her  fake.     Thou  art  a  dutiful  wife,  but  objy  in  the 
Lord  ;take  heed  of  turning  the  Yxblts  of  the  Comm.!Hdr/,c>;ts,by 
fettingthe  fevtmh  before  the  frft.  Befure  to. fa ve  Gods  ftake, 
before  thou  payed  thy  obedience  to  thy  husband;  fay  to  thy 
foul,  Can  I  keep  Gocls  command  in  obeyiiv;  my  husbands  ?    in 
payingpf  debts,  thole fliould be  h>fidifclnrgj<J,  which  are -due 
Dy  the  moft,  and  tho'c  the  grcatell  obligations'.  And  to  whom 
thou  art deeplieft bound,  God  or  thy  husband, is eallc  ro  refolve, 
thus  in  all  other  relations.     Go  as  far  with  thy  relations  as  thou 
canW  travel  in  Gods  company,! nd  no  further ,  as  thou  would'il 
not  leave  thy  holineife  and  lighteoufneffe  behind  thee ,   the 
Joileof  which  is  coo  great,  that  thou  fhou Id 'ft  expect  they  can 
recompence  unto  thee. 

Fourthly,  rben  holinene  is  inks  power  as  ro  cur  relations, 
when  theChriftian  is  careful  co  improve  the  graces  of  his  relati- 
ons, and  get  what  good  from  them  he  can  while  they  are  with 
them;May  be  thou  haft  a  holy  father,a  gracious  husband  o  ■  wife  ; 
let  it  be  but  a  fervant  in  the  family  rhat  is  godly ,  there  is  good 
to  be  got  by  bis' gracious  conversion,  fpeeches,  and  holineile 
like  oyncment,  will  betray  it  felf  where  ever  it  ftays  awhile.  O 
Chriftian,  if  any  fuch  holy perfonbe  with  thee  in  the  family, 
obferve  what  fuch  a  one  in  his  fpeeches,  duties  of  worfhip,  be- 
haviour under  affliction,  rcceit  of  mercies,  returns  of  Sabbaths 
and  Ordinances,  and  fuch  like  affords  for  thy  inltru&ion,  quick- 
ning  and  promoving  in  the  ways  of  holincfle.The  Troph;  bade 
the  Widow  bring  all  the  veifels  fhe  had  or  could  borrow,  r© 
catch  what  fhould  fall  from  the  pot  of  oyle  that  flbe  had  in 

the 


---      II, 


the  breafi-plau  ofrighttoufiieffe.  a  6 1 


the  houfe,  and  therewith  pay  her  debts,  z  Kings  4.3.  Truly,  I 
think  it  were  good  counfel  to  fome  that  complain  (or  may 
juflly  if  they  do  not )  ho y  poor  and  beggarly  they  are  in  grace ; 
to  make  an  improvement  of  that  holy  oyle  of  grace  which 
drops  from  the  jips  and  lives  of  their  godly  relations  ;    Fer  your 
memories, confcicnces,heaiTs  and  affections, as  vefTels  to  receive 
alltheexprellionsof  holineffethat  come  from  them  ;  thy  me- 
mory, lefthitkeepan.i  rerain  trte  infractions,  reproofs,  com- 
forts drawn  by  them  out  of  the  Word  ;  rhy.confcience,  that  ap- 
plies rhefe  to  thy  o.vn  foul,  till  from  thence  they  riiiiil  into  thy 
affections,  and  choubecomelt  in  love  more  anymore  with  ho- 
linelfe  thy  own  felt,  from  their  recommendation  of  it  to  tbee.4t 
is  a  fad  thing  to  conlidcr  what  different  ufe  a  naughty  heart 
makes  of  the  c,itcs  and  graces  of  the  godly  with  whom  they 
live  fas  they  Darkle  forth  J  to  what  an  humble  hncere  one  doth. 
A  naughty  heart  does  but  envy  and  maligne  fuch  a  one  the  more, 
and  inltead  of  getting  good,is  made  worfe  ;  whereas  the  fincere 
foul  he  labours  to  treafure  up  all  for  his  good.  When  fofeph  told 
his  prophetick  dreame  to  his  brethren,  their  envy,  which  before 
lay  fmothering  in  rheir  breads,  took  ftre  prefently,and  awhile 
after   flamed  forth  into  that  unnatural  cruelty  pra&ifed  up- 
on him  by  them.     There  was  all  the  ufe  they  made  of  it;   but 
of  good  Jacob,  'tis  faid,by  way  of  oppofition  to  them,(7f«.37.i  1. 
Hjs  brethren  envied  him.,  but  his  father  observed    the  [tying ; 
he  laid  it  up  for  future  ufe,as  that  which  had  fomething  of  God 
in  it.     ThusChriftian,  do  thou  by  the  holy  breathings  of  the 
Spirit  inthofe  thou  liveft  with. 

Note  the  remarkable  paflages  of  their  gracious  conventions, 
as  thou  would'ft  do  the  notions  of  fome  excellent  book,which  is 
not  thme  own,b«t  lent  thee  for  a  time  to  perufe  :  Indeed  upon  . 
rhefe  termes,  and  no  furer,  do  we  en;oy  out  gracious  friends  and 
Felations.They  are  but  lent  us  frM  a  while,  and  improve  themjOT 
not  improve  them,  they  will  be  call'd  for  ere  long ;  And  will 
it  be  for  thy  comfort  to  part  with  them,  before  thou  {halt  had  a 
heart  to  get  good  by  them  ?  It  was  a  folemn  fpeech  of  that  Re- 
verend, holy  man  of  God,  Mr.  Bolton,  to  his  children,  when  on 
his  death-bed,  I  charge  yon  O  my  children,  not  to  meet  me  at 
the  great  day  before  Utoriftf  Tribunal  in  a  Chr'ftkff?,gracclej[c 
condition.  God  keeps  an  exai*  account  of  the  means  he  affords 

L  1  5  us 


a6a  And  having  on     \ 

us  for  our  falvation,  and  the  lives  of  his  holy  fervants  are  not 
of  the  loweft  rank ;  you  (hall  obferve  that  God  is  very  curious 
in  Scripture  to  record  the  time  how  long  his  faithful  fervancs 
lived  on  earth;  and  fure  among  other  reafons,  he  would  have  us 
know,  that  he  means  to  reckon  with  thoie  that  lived  with  them, 
for  every  year,  yea,  day  and  houre  they  had  them  among  them. 
They  fhall  know  they  had  a  Prophet,  a  father,  husband,  that 
were  godly,  and  that  they  had  them  fo  long,  and  Go  J  will  know 
of  them  what  ufe  they  made  of  them. 


5Xr«     i  jaiiii  tfnTrt  IWW>  *^^S*  rV9**9*  .r^*ii  rfM  CI.  jflffft.  **•*«    #»  Jv*i  tiiil— |  r-O***"  f&jtA 


CHAP.    X. 

Of  exercifing  the  power  of  holinefje  in  our  carriage 
to  our  neighbours  without  doors. 

SEcondly,  thy  f  i^hteoufneffe  to  others  muft  not  ftay  within 
doors,  but  vcalk  out  into  the  ftreets,md  vifit  thy  neighbours 
round.Thy  behaviour  to,  and  converfation  wiih  them  muft 
be  holy  and  righteous.In  Scripture, R/gl  teottf»cjfrymd  living  righ- 
teoufly,  do  oft  import  the  whole  duty  of  the  Chriftian  to  his 
neighbour;  And  fo  (lands  diitingutfhed  from  F/^/,  which  hath 
Cjod  for  its  immediate  ohjcft^vA  fobriety  or  temperance,  which 
immediately  refpe£tsour  felves.See  them  altogether,  Jit.  2.  12. 
where,theg7vcf  of  God  that  bringcth  falvationj.s  faid  to  teach  us  to 
live  foberly,righteoufly,and  godly  in  this  prefent  world.  He  that 
would  be  the  death  of  all  thefe  three,needs  do  no  more  but  (fib 
one  of  them,  no  matter  which  ;  the  life  of  holineife  will  run 
out  at  any  door,  here  or  there,  where  ever  the  wound  is  gi- 
ven.t  Tis  true  indeed,  there  is  a  moral  righteoufnelfe,  which 
leaves  us  fhort  of  true  holinefle ;  but  no  true  holindfe  that 
leaves  us  fhort of  moral  righteoufnefTe.  Though  ihe  ienfitive 
foui  be  found  in  a  beaft  without  the  rational,  yet  the  rational 

foal 


.**■ : ■ — p 

the    breaft-plate  of  right eon fneffe.  q6i 

foul  is  not  found  in  man  without  the  fenfitive.  Grace  and  E- 
vangelical  holinetfe  being  the  higher  principle,includes  and 
comprehends  the  other  within  it  felf.  This  is  the  dignity  and 
honour  due  to  Chriftianity,  and  the  principle  it  hyes'down  in 
the  Gofpel,  (the  enemies  of  it  being  judges )  that  though  fome 
who  profefle  it,  are  none  of  the  beft,  yet  they  learn  not  their 
unrighteoufneffe'of  it;moft  true  it  is  what  one  faith, No  Chrifti- 
an  can  be  bad,  except  he  be  an  hypocrite.  Either  therefore  re- 
nounce thy  baptifme,  or  abominate  the  thoughts  of  all  unrigh- 
ceoufnefTe;  to  be  fure  thou  migh'tt  efcape  better,  if  thou 
would'ft  let  the  world  know  thou  did'ft  claime  no  kindred  with 
Chrifi,  before  thou  pracli'feft  fuch  wickednefle  ;  fome  are  unre- 
folved  where  to  finde  AriBides,  Socrates,  C'ato,  and  fome  few 
other  Heathens  eminent  for  their  moral  righteoufnefs,  whether 
in  heaven  or  hell;  but,  were  there  ever  any  that  doubted  what 
would  become  of  the  unrighteous  Chriftian  in  the  other  world  f 
Hell  gapes  for  thefe  above  all  others;  -Know  yon  not  (  faith  the 
Apofile)  that  the  mrighteoiu  fhall  not  inherit  the  K'ngdome 
of  God}  i  Cor.6.9.  as  if  he  had  faid,Sure  you  have  not  fo  farre 
loll  the  ufe  of  your  reafon,  to  think,  that  there  is  any  room  for 
fuch  cattel  as  thefe  in  heaven.  And  if  not  the  unrighteous , 
what  crevife  of  hope  is  left  for  their  falvation,whofe  unrighte- 
oufncffe  hath  a  thcufand  times  more  malignity  in  it,  than  any 
others  in  the  world  is  capable  of  ?  the  heathen  fhall  for  their 
un righteoufnefs  be  endited,and  condemned'as  rebels  to  the  Law; 
fo  fhall  the  unrighteous  Chrituan  alfo,  and  that  more  deeply. 
But  the  charge  which  is  incomparably  heavkft,  and  will  lay 
weight  upon  him  far  above  the  other,  is,  that  which  the  Gofpel 
brings  in,  That  by  his  unrighteoufnelfe  he  hath  been  an  enemy 
to  the  crojfe  of  Christ ,  Phil  3.1  g.  Indeed, if  .1  man  had  a  minde 
to  fhew  his  defpight  ro  the  heighth  againft  Chrift  and  hU  coffe, 
theDivelhimfelf  could  not  help  him  to  exprefTe  it  more  fully, 
than  to  cloatb  him  felf  with  a  gaudy  profelTion  of  the  Gofpel, 
and  with  this  wrap't . i bout  him,  toroulehimfelf  in  the  kennel 
of  fordu  bafe  practices  of  imrighreoufnefle.  O  how  it  makes 
the  proptane  world  blafpheme  the  Name  of  ChrLft,  and  abhor 
the  very  profeffion  of  him ,  when  they  fee  any  of  this  fifth 
upon  the  face  of  their  converfation,who  take  the  Name  of  Saints 
to  ihemfelves  moie  than  others  do!  what?  {hall  that  tongue 

lie 


4$*  And  having  on 

Vie.  to  man,  chat  even  now  pray'd  f'o  earnetUy  to  God  ?  thofe 
eyes  be  fenc  on  lufts  o:  envies  errand ,  that  a  few  moments  pait 
thou  tookeft  orf  the  Bible  from  reading  thofe  facred  Oracles  ? 
Thofe  hands  in  thy  neighbours  pocket  to  rob  him  of  his  eitarc, 
which  were  not  long  ago  (Uetch't  forth  fo  devoutly  to  heaven  ? 
Thofe  legs  carry  thee  to  day  into  thy  fhop  or  market  to  cheat 
and  cozen,  which  yefterday  thou  wenteli  with  to  wrorfhip  God 
in  the  publick  ? 

In  a  word,  doft  thou  think  to  commute  with  God,  fo  as  by  a 
greater  fembiance  of  outward  zeal  to  God  in  the  firll  Table,  co 
obtain  a  diipenfation  in  point  of  righteoufneflc  to  man  in  the 
fecond  ?  Will  thy  pretended  love  to  God  excufe  the  malice  and 
rancour,  which  thy  heart  fwells  with  againft  thy  neighbour  ?  thy 
devotion  to  God,  difoblige  thee  from  paying  thy  debts  to  man? 
God  forbid  thou  fhoukTft  think  fo  ^   but  if  thou  dolt,  Peters 
counfel  co  Simon  M*ftuj&  mine  to  thee,  Repent  of  this  thy  mck? 
ednsfs, and  pray  God,f  perhaps  the  thought  of  thy  heart  may  he  for- 
glvm  thecr  Ac~ls  8 .  n.  In  the  Name  of  God  I  charge  every  one 
that  wears Chiias  livery,  to  make  confidence  of  rhis  piece  of 
righteou.hdle.as  you  would  not  bring  upon  your  heads  the  ven- 
geance of  God  for  all  thofe  biafpbemie.s,  which  the  nakedneffe 
of  fome  profeilbrs  in  this  particular,  yea,  bale  practices  of  fomc 
hypocrites,  have  given  occafion  to  be  belched  out  by  rhe  ungod- 
ly world  againft  Chrift  and  the  good  wayes  of  hoiineilc.    Now 
the  power  of  holinefle  (  as  to  this  particular )  will  bepreierv'd, 
when  thefe  two  things  are  look'c  ro. 

Firlt,  when  our  care  is  uniform,  and  equally  dii}  ibuted^ro  en- 
deavour the  pciforming  of  one  duty  we  owe  ro  our  neighbour 
as  well  as  a  -other.  For  we  mult  know.there  is  a  «ghceoufnefs 
thai  (as  one  faith  J  runs  through  every  precept,  as  it  were  the 
veins  of  every  Law  in  the  fttmk  i  able ;  and  calls  far  obedience 
due  to  Parents  Natural,  Civil,  Ecclehallical,  in  the  fifth  Com- 
mard;our  care  topreferve  our  neighbours  life  in  the  fixth,  chafti- 
tyin  the  feventh,eftate  in  the  eighth,  good  name  in  the  ninth. 
Andourdefiresiri  their  due  bounds, again!*  coveting  what  is  our 
neighbours  in  the  tenth.  Now  as  health  in  the  body  is  preferv'd 
by  keeping  thepaflages  of  life  open^for  the  fpirirs  freely  to  move 
from  one  part  to  anothcr( which  once  obftru&ed  from  doing  their 
oUkc  in  any  part,the  health  of  the  body  is  prefencly  in  danger;) 

fo 


the  breaft- plate  of  righteoufneffe.  %£« 

fo  here  the  fpirit  and  life  of  holinefle  is  preferved  in 
the  ChriiUan ,  by  a  holy  care  and  endeavour  to  keep  the 
heart  free  and  ready  ta  pafle  from  doing  one  duty 
he  owes  his  neighbour  to  another,  according  to  the  fe- 
veral  walks  that  are  in  every  command  for  him  to  move 
in. 

Secondly,  as  our  care  muft  be  uniform ;  fo  the  mozive 
and  fpring  within  that  fets  us  at  work,and  makes  allthefe  wheels 
move ,  muft  be  evangelical.  The  command  is  a  road  in 
which  both  Heathen,  Jew  and  Chriftian  may  be  found 
travelling  :  How  now  fhall  we  kno,v  the  Chriftian  from 
the  other,  when  Heathen  and  Jew  alfo  walk  along  with 
him  in  the  fame  duty,  feem  as  dutiful  children,  obedi- 
ent wives,  loyal  fubje&s,  loving  neighbours,  as  the  ChriiUan 
himfelf  ?  Truly  if  it  be  not  in  the  motive  from  which,and  end  to 
which  he  acts,  nothing  elfe  can  do  it.  Look  therefore  well  to 
this,  or  elfe  thou  art  out  of  thy  way,  while  thou  feemeft  to  be 
in  the  road.  It  is  very  ordinary  for  men  to  wrong  Chrift,  when 
they  do  [their  neighbour  right ;  and  this  is  done  when  Chrift 
is  not  interefted  in  the  action,  and  love  to  him  doth  not  move  us 
thereunto ;  without  this  thou  mayeft  go  for  an  honeft  Hea- 
then, but  canft  not  be  a  good  Chriftian;  fuppofe  a  fervant 
were  entrufted  by  his  Matter  to  go  and  pay  fuch  a  man  a  fum  of 
money,  which  he  doth,  yet  not  out  of  any  dutiful  refpeft  to  the 
command,  or  love  to  the  perfon  of  his  Matter,  but  for  fhame  of 
being  taken  for  a  Thief  :  In  this  cafe,the  man  fhould  have  his 
due^ut  his  Matter  a  great  deal  of  wrong ;  fuch  wrong  do  all  meer 
civil  perfons  do  the  Lord  Jefus ;  They  are  very  exacl:  and  righte- 
ous in  their  dealings  with  their  neighbours,  but  very  injurious 
at  the  fame  time  to  Chritt,  becaufe  they  do  not  this  upon  his  ac- 
count. This  makes  love  to  our  neighbour  evangelical ,  and  as 
Chrift  calls  it*  new  Commandment,  Job.  I  3.  when  our  love  to 
our  brother  takes  fire  from  his  love  to  us.  We  cannot  in  a  Go- 
fpel  fenfe  be  faid  to  do  the  duty  of  any  Commandment,except 
we  firft  love  Chrift,  and  then  for  his  fake  do  it  J J ye  love  me,  kesp 
my  Commandment s,  John  14.  i  %.  where  obferve ,  that  as  God 
prefixt  his  Name  before  the  decalogue ;  fo  Chrift  for  the 
fame  reafon  doth  his,  before  the  Chriftijns  obedience  to  any 

Mm  of 


3 £6  And  having  on 

of  them,  thatfo  they  may  keep  them  both  as  hk  Commartd- 
ments^nd  out  oilove  to  him^yho  hath  brought  us  out  of  a  worfe 
houfeof  bondage  than  Sgjft  was  to.  Jfrael. 


CHAP.    XI. 

Contains  nine  or  ten  directions  towards  the  help- 
ing thofe  that  dejire  to  maintain  the  power  of  a 
holy  right eons  conversation 

T  He-third  thing  propounded  in  handling  the  point,calls  now 
for  our  difpatcb  ;  and  that  is  to  lay  down  fo.me  directions 
by  way  of  coucfel,  and  to  help  all  thofe  that  defire  to  maintain 
the  power  of  holinefle  and  righteoufncfle  in  their  daily 
walking. 


SECT.     I. 

Firfl,  be  fure  thou  getteft  a  goo  J  foundation  laid,on  which 
may  be  rear'd  the  beautiful  flruc'ture  of .  a  holy  righteous 
converfation ;  and"  that  cp.n  be  no  lefle  than  the  change  of 
thy  heart  by  the  powerful  work  of  Gods  fanctifying  Spirit  in 
thee.  Thou  muft  be  righteous  and  holy,  before  thou  canit  live 
righteoufly  andhoiijy.  If  ihe  Ship  ruth  not  its  right  ma&e  at 
firft,  be  not  equally  poys'd  according  to  the  Law  of  that  Art, 
it  will  never  faile  trim ;  arid  if  the  heart  be  not  moulded  anew 
bythtw  •_;-.  of  the  Spirit,  and  fafhion'd  according  to 

the  I  •    :f  the  new  crcaturej  in  which  old  things  pajfe  array  i 

and 


the  breajl-plate  of  right  eonfnejfe.  ggj 

and  all  things  become  »<?n>,the  creature  will  never  walk  holily  j 

'tis  folid  grace  in  the  vejfel  of  the  heart  that  feeds  profeffion  in  2,Cor*  **  l7, 

the  /**#/>,  holineffe  in  the  life,  CHatth.z  <r.4.Now  this  thorough 

change  of  thy  heart  is  efpecialiyto  be  look't  at  in  thefe  two 

things. 

First^  that  there  be  a  change  made  in  thy  judgment  of,and 
difpofuion  of  heart  to  finne;  thou  haft  formerly  had  fuch  a  noti- 
on of  finnle  as  hath  made  it  defirable  ;  thou  haft  lookt  upon  it 
usEze  did  on  the  forbidden  fruit;  thou  haft  thought  it  ple.ifant 
to  the  eye, good  for  fad, and  worth  thy  choice  to  be  defired  of  thee; 
if  thou  continueit  of  the  fame  minde,thy  teeih  will  be  watering, 
and  heart  continually  hankering  after  it ;  thou  mayft  polfibly  be 
kept  from  exprefling  and  venting  the  inward  thought  of  thy 
heart  for  awhile;but  as  two  lovers  kept  afunder  by  their  friends, 
will  one  time  or  other  make  an  efcape  to  each  other,  fo  long  as 
their  affection  is  the  fame  it  was;  fo  wilt  thou  to  thy  luft;and 
therefore  never  reft  till  thou  canft  fay,  thou  doit  as  heartily, 
loath  and  hate  fin  as  ever  thou  loved'ft  it  before. 

Secondly,  look  that  there  be  fuch  a  change  in  thy  judgment 
and  hea  r,as  makes  thee  take  an  inward  complacency  and  delight 
in  Chrift,  and  his  holy  Commands.Then  there  is  little  fear  of  thy 
degenerating,  when  thou  art  tyed  to  him  and  his  fervice,  by  the 
heart-ftrings  of  love  and  complacency.  The  Divel  findes  it  no 
hard  work  to  part  him  and  his  duty,  that  never  joy'd,  nor 
took  true  content  in  doing  of  it.He  whofe  calling  doth  not  like 
him,nor  fit  his  gen'ms  (  as  we  fay  )  will  never  excel  in  it.  A  Scho- 
lar learns  more  in  a  week,  when  he  comes  to  relifh  learning,and 
ispleafed  with  its  fweet  tafte,  than  he  did  in  amoneth,when 
he  went  to  School  to  pleafe  his  Mafter,  (  whom  he  fcar'd  J  not 
himfelf.  Obferve  any  perfon  in  the  thing  wherein  he  takes  high 
content,  and  he  is  more  careful  and  curious  about  that  then  any 
other ;  if .  his  heart  be  on  his  Garden,  O  how  neatly  it  is  kept  1 
ir  fihall  lie  as  we  fay,  in  print;  All  the  rare  roots  and  Hips 
that  can  be  got  for  love  and  money,  fhall  be  fought  for.  Is 
it  beauty  that  one  delights  in?  How  curious  and  nice  is  fuch 
a  one  in  dreffihg  her  felf?  fhe  hardly  knows  when  {he  is 
fine  enough.  Truly  thus  it  is  here,  a  foul  that  truly  loves 
Chrift,  delights  in  holineiTe ;  all  his  ftrength  is  kid  out  upon 
them;  may  he  but  excel  in  this  one  thing,  be  more  holy, 

M  m  2  "  more 


I. 


a58  And  having  on 

more  heavenly ;  he  will  give  others  leave  to  run  before  him  in 
any  thing  elfe. 


SECT.    II. 

Secondly,  be  fure  to  keep  thy  eye  on  the  ri^ht  rule  thou  art 
to  walk  by.    Every  calling  hath  a  rule  to  go  by,  peculiar  to  its 
felf ,  which  requires  fome  ftudy  to  get  an  infight  into,  without 
which  a  man  will  but  bungle  in  his  work.     No  calling  hath  fuch 
a  fure  Rule  and  perfect  Law  to  go  by,  as  the  Chriftians ;  There- 
fore in  earthly  profeffions,  and  worldly  callings,  men  vary  in 
their  way  and  method ,  though  of  the  fame  trade,becaufe  there 
is  no  fuch  perfect  rule ,  but  another  may  fuper-adde  to  it.    But 
the  Chriftian  hath  one  ftanding  rule ,  the  Word  of  God,  able  to 
make  the  man  of  God  perfett ;  now  he  that  would  excel  'in  the 
power  of  holineffe  mutt  ftudy  this.     The  Thyfician  he  confuks 
with  his  Galen :  the  Lawyer  with  his  Litleton ;  and  the  Philofo- 
pher  with  his  tSfriftotle  ;  the  (JMafiers  of  thefe  slrts.How  much 
-more  ftiould  the  Chriftian  with  the  Word ,   fo  as  to  be  de- 
aermined  by  that,  and  drawn  by  that,  more  than  by  a  whole 
teame  of  arguments  from  men?  We  can  do  nothing  againfl  the 
truthybftt  for  the  trttth^  faith  Panly  2  Cor.  15.8.     O  Chriftian  ! 
when  credit  votes  this  way,   friends  and  relations  that  way ; 
when  profit  bids  thee  do  this,  and  pleafure  that,   fay  as  feho/ka- 
phat  concerning  Mi  cat  ah ,    Is  there  not  here  a.  Prophet  of  the 
Lord  befides,that  I  may  enquire  of  him  ?  1  Kings  2  2.>Isthere 
not  the  Word  of  God  that  I  may  bz  concluded  by  it,rather  than 
by  any  of  thefe  lying  Prophets  ?  Now  there  are  three  ways  th.it 
men  go  contrary  to  this  direction,  all  of  them  deftruitiveto  the 
power  of  holineffe  •,  fome  walk  by  no  rule  -/fome  by  a/W/>rulej 
and  a  third  by  t hv.tr ue  rule,  but  partially.     The  firft  is  the  An- 
tinom'ft  and  lake  tint ;  the  fecond is  the  foperftitio»s  zealot  j  the 
third  is  the  Hypocr:te ;  h>vare  of  all  thefe,except  thou  meaneft 
to  lay  th :  knif ;  to  the  throat  of  holinsfle. 
F  F    f*j  t  ke  he.drhoudoeft  not  takeaway  the  Rule  God fets 

before  thei,  wiih  the  tsfitimo-'-ift  and  Libertine^  who  fay  the 
Law  is  not  a  rufc  to  thcChrifuan.Thefe  muft  needs  make  crooked 

lines 


the  breafi-plate  of  righteonfnejfe.  26a 

lines  in  their  lives,  that  live  by  rote,  and  not  by  rule.  I  had 
thought,  Chrifi  had  baptised  the  L^and  Goi'peliz'd  ir,  both 
by  preaching  it  as  a  rule  of  holineil'e  in  his  Sermons,  Mat.  5. 2  7. 
and  by  walking  in  his  life  by  the  rule  of  it,  1  Ba .  2. 21 ,  22. That 
principle  therefore  may  be  indited  for  a  murderer  of  a  righteous 
andholylife,  which  takes  away  the  rule  by  which  it  flhould 
be  led.  This  is  a  fubtle  way  indeed  of  Satan  to  furpjize  the  poor 
creature,if  he  make  the  Chriftbn  travellor  weary  of  his  Liude  , 
and  once  fend  him  away, then  it  will  not  b~  longer  before  he  will 
wander  out  of  heaven-way ,and  fall  into  hell-roads.  The  Apoflle 
tells  us  of  a  generation  of  men,who  while  they  promife  tr.emjehcs 
liberty, are  themfelves  fervants  of  corruption,  2  P^t.2. 1  q.  T  uiy 
thefe  methinks  look  like  the  men,  who  flip  eft"  c he  yoke  oil  the 
command  under  a  pretence  of  liberty,  that  foon  have '  a  worfe 
yoke  on  in  its  room,  even  the  yoke  of  fin. 

Secondly,  take  heed  thou  walkeft  not  by  a  falfe  rule.     There         2. 
is  but  one  trite  rule,theWoi>d  of  God,and  therefore  we  may  foon 
know  which  is* falfe.     Ifaiah  8.20.  To  tfo  La&yand  to  theTe*- 
ftimony,tf  tkey  ffe-akjiot  according  to  this  Word,  it  is  bectufe  there 
is  no  light  in  them.    Pretend  not  to  more  ftrictnefle  than  the 
Word  will  vouch  ;  this  is  to  be  over-righteous  indeed, Ecd.j.  1 6. . 
Exceflfe makes  a  wonfier,zi  well  as  defect ;  not  only  he  that  hath 
but  one  hand,but  he  that  hath  three,  is  one.  There  is  a  curie  (co- 
red up  for  him  that  addes  to,  as  well  as.  for.  him  that  takes  fiow 
tfie  words  cf  this  ^o<?^.,Rev.22.i8.TheDivel  hath  had  of  old  a 
defign  to  undermine  Scriptural  hoIineffe,by  crying  up  an  f^Apo- 
rryphal  holinefle.     He  knows  too  well,thatas  dies  pot  by  feeth- 
ing  over,  puts  out  the  fire,  and  Co  comes  in  awhile  not  to  feeth 
at  all ;  thus  by  making  mens  zeal  to  boyle  over  into  afahe  pre- 
tended holinefle,  he  is  fure  to  quench  all  tnieholine<ie,and 
bring  them  at  laft  to  have  no  zeal,  but  prove  key-cold  Athens. 
The  Phanf.e  he   muft  eeke;out  the  command^  ot  God  with 
the  traditions  of  men ;  the  Payijt  (  his  true  fon  ami  heirejhath 
his  unwritten  verities,  holy  orders  and  rules  for  a  more  auftcre 
life,  than  ever  came.into  Gods  heart  to  require ;  and  of  late  the 
^tdurs  have  borrowed  many  of  their  fhredsfrom  them  both, 
with  which  they  are  very  buhe  to  patch  up  a  ridiculous  kinde  ot" 
Religion,  which  a  man  cannot  poflibly  taks  up,  till  he  hath  <irft  . 
fore-done,  hid  own  uiideriiaivJing,and  renounced  all  iuhjection  to  > 

.  M  m  3  the 


%  jo  And  having  on 


the  Word  of  God.    O  beware  of  awill-holinefs,anda  w/7/-»w* 
jhip  -,  it  is  a  heavy  charge  God  puts  in  againft  lfraely  Hofea  8. 14. 
Jfrael  hath  forgotten  his  Maker>and  baildeth  Temples .This  may 
fecm  ftrange,  forget  God,  and  yet  fo  devour,  as  to  build  Tem- 
ples ?  yes,  fhe  built  them  without  warrant  from  God ;  God 
counts  him felf  forgot,  when  we  forget  his  Word,  and  keep  not 
clofe  to  that.    It  is  laid  at  Jeroboams  door  as  a  great  fin^that 
he  offered  upon  the  <iAltar  which  he  made  at  Bethel,inlhe  month 
which  he  had  devifed  In  his  heart  ,i  King. t 2. 3  3. he  took  coun- 
fel  of  his  own  heart,  not  of  God  when  and  where  to  offer.     A 
holinefle  whick  is  the  device  of  our  heart,is  not  the  holinefle  af- 
ter Gods  heart ;  the  curfe  that  falls  upon  fuch  bold  men,  is,  that 
while  they  feek  to  eftablifh  a  holinefle  of  their  own, they  fubmit 
not  to  the  true  holineffe  God  requires  in  his  Word  ;  God  juftly 
gives  them  over  to  real  unholineife,  for  pretending  to  a  fur- 
ther holinefle  than  they  fhould:  witnefs  thofe  finks  and  common 
fhoals  of  all  abominations  ( religious  houfes  1  mean,as  they  are 
called  by  the  T apish s )  which  being  the  inflitutions  of  men  ,  for 
want  of  the  fait  of  a  divine  warrant  to  keep  them  fweet,have  run 
into  filthinefle  and  corruption.  God  will  not  endure  his  creature 
ihould  be  a  felf-mover;    it  is  a  greater  fin  to  do  what  we  are  not 
commanded,  than  not  to  do  what  we  are  commanded  by  God  ; 
as  it  is  in  a  fubjccl:  to  prefume  to  makeLaws  of  his  own  head,than 
not  to  obey  the  Law  his  Prince  ena£ts ;    by  letting  up  a  holi- 
nefle of  our  own,  we  take  Gods  Mint  as  it  were  out  of  his  hand, 
to  whom  alone  it  belongs  to  ftamp  what  is  holy,and  what  not. 

Thirdly,ufe  not  the  true  rule  partially  ;  to  be  partial  in  pra- 
<5tifing,is  as  bad  as  to  be  partial  in  handling  of  the  Lavvjthis  made 
thePriefts  contemptible,  Mal.2.9.  an<l  fo  wU  that,  the  ptofef- 
four  to  God  and  man  ;  fquare  the  whole  frame  of  thy  life  by  rule, 
or  all  is  to  no  purpofe.  Divers  mcafwcs  are  as  an  abomination  to  the 
Z<?r^,Prov.2o.io.He  is  the  honed  man  in  his  dealings  with  men, 
that  hath  but  one  meafure,  (and  that  according  to  the  Law)which 
he  ufeth  in  his  trade.  And  he  is  the  holy  man  that  ufeth  but  one 
rule  for  all  his  a£ions,and  that  no  other  than  the  Word  of  God. 
Ohowfulfom  was  the  fnvs  hypocrilie  to  Gods  ftomack,  that 
durfl  not  go  into  the  judgment-hall,  for  fear  of  rendering  rhem- 
felves  unclean  ?  Joh.  18.  but  made  no  fcruple  of  embruing  their 
hands  in  Chriils  blood ;  and  the  Pharifees,  who  obierved  the^ 

rule 


the  breaft-plate  of  righteottfneffe.  271 

rule  of  the  Law  ftri6lly,in  tything  annife  and  cummin,  but  di- 
fpenced  with  themfelves  in  the  weightier  matters  of  the  Law :  O 
beware  of  this  as  thou  lovdt  thy  fouls  life  ;  you  would  not  thank 
that  cuftomer  who  comes  into  your  fhop,and  buys  a  penni-worth 
of  you,  but  Heals  from  you  what  is  worth  a  pound  ■-,  or  him  that 
is  very  punctual  in  paying  a  fmall  debt  he  owes,  only  that  he  may 
cet  deeper  into  your  book,  and  at  laft  cheat  you  of  a  greater 
fumme.  This  is  horrid  wickednefTe  to  comply  with  the  Word 
in  little  matters,  on  a  defigne  that  you  may  covertly  wrong 
Goi  in  greater. 


SECT.    III. 

Thirdly,  propound  a  right  end  to  thy  felf  in  thy  righteous 
holy  walking;and  here  be  fure  thou  ftandft  clear  offa  legal  end;do 
not  think  by  thy  righreoufneflfe  to  purchafe  any  thing  at  Gods 
hand.Heaven  Hands  not  upon  fale  to  my.ThewagesofJw  is  death, 
bat  the  gift  of  God.  is  eternal  life  through  Jefus  ^hrifrour  Lord, 
Rom.  6.  What  God  fold  to  Chrift,he  gives  to  us.  Chrift  was  the 
purchafer,  believers  are  but  heirs  to  what  he  hath  bought,  and 
muft  claim  nothing  bur  in  his  right ;  by  claiming  any  thing  of 
God  for  our  righteoufnefle,we  {hut  our  felves  out  from  having 
any  benefit  of  his  •  we  cannot  be  in  two  places  at  the  fame  time; 
if  we  be  found  leaning  on  our  own  houfe,we  cannot  alfo  be  found 
in  Chrift ;  Paul  knew  this,  and  therefore  renounceth  the  one, 
that  he  may  be  entitled  to  the  other,  Vhil.i  .8,9.  It  is  Satans  po- 
licy to  crack  the  breaft-plate  of  thy  own  righteoufnefle,  by  beat- 
ing it  out  further  than  the  mettal  will  bear ;  Indeed  by  trufting 
in  it  thou  deftroyett  the  very  nature  of  it ;  rhy  righteoufnefle  be- 
comes unrighteourneiTe,and  thy  holincfle  degenerates  into  wick- 
ednefTe ;  what  greater  impiety  than  pride  I  fuch  a  pride  as  rants 
it  over  Chrift,  and  alters  the  method  which  God  himfelf  hath 
fet  for  faving  fouls  ?  O  foul !  if  thou  wouldft  be  holy,  learn  to 
be  humble.  They  are  clafp't  together, Micah  6.  8.  what  dnh 
the  Lord  require  of  thee  but  to  do  jufily,love  mercy, and  to  walk^ 
humbly  with  thy  (]od  ?  and  how  he  that  trufts  in  his  own  ho- 
linefle,  fhould  be  (aid  to  walk  humbly,  it  cannot  enter  into  our 

heart 


Q-a  And  having  on 


heart  to  conceive.  God  fees  not  thee  to  earn  heaven  by  thy  ho- 
lineflCjbut  thereby  to  ihew  thy  love  and  thankfulnefle  to  Chrift 
that  hath  earned  it  for  thee.     Hence  the  great  argument  Chrift 
ufeth  to  provoke  his  difciples  to  holincfle,is  love, 7/  ye  love  mey 
keep  my  Commandments,  John  14  As  if  he  had  faid,  You  know 
v*hat  I  came  into  the  world,and  am  now  going  out  of  the  world 
for;  both  upon  your  fervice,for  whom  I  lay  down  my  life,  and 
take  it  up  again,  that  I  may  live  in  heaven  to  intercede  for  you ; 
if  thefe,  and  the  blefled  fruits  you  reap  from  thefe,  be  valued  by 
you,   love  me;  and  if  ye  love  me,  teftifie  it  in  keeping  my  Com- 
mandments.    That  is  Gofpel-holinefle  which  is  bred  and  fed  by 
this  love,  whenall  theChriftiandoth,isby  him  offered  up  as  a 
thankfgiving  facrifice  to  Chrift/^  loved  m  to  death. 1\\x&  the 
Spoufe  to  Chrift,  Cant-1*1 2*  twill  give  thee  my  loves ;  what  the 
means  by  her  loves,  fhe  exprefl"eth,trr.  13.  zA  11  manner  ofplea- 
far.t  frwtSjnew  and  old  which  J  have  laid  tip  for  thee, O  my  belo- 
ved.   In  ver.  18.   (he  had  profefledher  faith  on  Chrift,  and 
drunk  deep  of  his  love,and  now  to  rebound  his  love  in  thank- 
fulnefs,{he  beftirs  her  felf  to  entertain  him  with  the  pleafant  fruits 
of  his  own  graces,  as  gathered  from  a  holy  converfation,  which 
(he  doth  not  lay  up  to  feed  her  pride,  and  felf-confidence  with, 
but  referves  them  for  her  beloved,  that  he  may  have  the  entire 
praife  cf  them. 


SECT.  IV. 

Fourthly,  often  look  on  the  perfect  pattern  which  Chrift  in 
his  own  example-hath  given  thee  for  a  holy  life.  Our  hand  will 
be  as  the  Copy  is  we  write  after ;  if  we  fet  low  examples  before 
us,  it  cannot  be  expected  we  fhould  rife  high  our  felves ;  and  in- 
deed the  holieft  Saint  on  earth  is  too  low  to  be  our  patterne, 
becaufe  perfection  in  holinefle  muft  be  aimed  at  by  the  weak  >ft 
Chriftian,  2  Cor.  7. 1.  and  that  is  not  to  be  found  in  the  beft  of 
Saints  in  this  lower  world.  CMofcs  the  meekeft  man  on  earth, 
at  a  time  his fpirit  is  ruffled  ;  and  Peter  the  fore-man  of  the  A- 
pofiles^doih  not  alwayes  0'f  $o<m<ffiv}  foot  it  right  Recording  to  the 
Ciofpel,GW.2.i4.  and  he  that  would  follow  him  then,  is  fure  to 

£0 


the  breafi'plate  ofrighteonfmffe.  372 

go  out  of  his  way  .The  good  fouldier  follows  his  file-leader,  nor. 
when  he  runs  away, but  when  he  marches  after  his  Captain  order- 
ly,l  C»r.  1 1.  i.Se  ye  followers  of  rne,M  I  alfo.  amofChriftjthz 
comment  muft  be  followed  no  further  than  it  agrees  with  the 
text.  The  Mafter  doth  not  only  rule  the  Scholars  book  for  him, 
but  writes  him  a  copy  with  his  own  hand.Chrifts  command  is  our 
rule,his  life  our  copy^if  thou  wilt  walk  holi!y,thou  muft  not  only 
endeavour  to  do  rvhat  Ch:  ift  commands,but  as  Chrift  himfelf  did 
itjthou  muft  labour  to  lhape  every  letter  in  thy  copy,  action  in 
life,in  a  holy  imitation  of  Chrift,  By  holinefle  we  are  the  very 
'image  of  OW/?,Ro:n.8.29.  We  reprefent  Chrift,  and  hold  him 
forth  to  all  that  fee  us.  Now  two  things  go  co  make  a  thing  the 
image  of  another. F/r/?,  likenefle.  JVc<?»d//,derivation ;  it  muft 
not  only  be  like  it,but  this  likenefle  muft  be  deduced,and  derived 
from  it;  fnowand  milk  are  both  white  alike,  yet  we  cannot  fay 
that  they  are  the  image  one  of  another,becaufe  that  likenefle  they 
have  is  not  derived  either  from  other.     But  the  picture  which  is 
drawn  every  line  by  the  face  of  a  man,this  may  properly  be  calFd 
the  image  of  that  man,after  whofe  IikenefTe  it  is  made.  Thus  true 
holinefle  is  that  which  is  derived  from  drift,  when  the  foul  fets 
Chrift  in  his  Word,and  Chrift  in  his  example  before  him,  fas  one 
would  the  perfon,whofe  picture  he  intends  to  draw  jand  iabours 
to  draw  every  line  in  his  life  by  thefe.O  this  is  a  fweet  way  indeed 
to  maintain  the  power  of  holinefle !  when  thou  art  tempted  to  a- 
ny  vanity ,  fet  Chrift  before  thy  eye  in  his  holy  walking ;  ask  thy 
foul,  Am  I  in  this  fpeech, action,  company  I  confort  with,  like 
Chrift?  did  he,  or  would  he,if  again  to  live  on  earth,do  as  I  do  ? 
wouldnot  he  be  more  choice  of  hi;  words  than  lam ?did ever  fuch 
a  vain  fpeech  drop  from  his  lips?  would  he  delight  in  fuch  com- 
pany as  I  do.?  fpend  his  time  upon  fuch  trifles  and  impertinent 
cies  as  I  do  ?  would  he  beftow  fo  much  coft  in  pampering  of  his 
body,  and  fwallovv  down  his  throat  at  one  meal,  what  would 
feed  many  poor  creatures  ready  to  ftarve  for  want  ?  would  he 
be  in  every  fafhion  that  comes  up,though  never  fo  ridiculous  and 
oflfenfive  >  fhould  cards  and  dice  ever  have  been  found  in  his 
hands  to  drive  time  away?  And  (hall  I  indulge  my  felf  in 
any  thing  that  would  make  me  unlike  Chrift  ?  God  forbid.    We 
think  it  enough  if  we  can  quote  fuch  a  good  man  or  great  pnr> 
feflbr  to  countenance  our  prac"uce,and  fo  are  led  into  tempta- 

N  n  t     tion. 


27  4  And  having  on 


tion.ButChrilthn,  if  thy  confcience  tells  thseChrift  likes  not 
fuch  doings,  away  with  them,  though  thou  could'ft  produce  the 
example  of  the  eir.inenteft  Saint  in  the  Countrey  to  favour 
them.Thou  knoweft  fome  poflTibly  of  great  name  for  profefilon, 
that  have  catt  off  duties  in  their  families;but  did  not  Chrift  fhew 
an  efj.  ecial  care  of  the  Apolibs  which  lived  under  him,and  were 
of  hi*  family?  often  praying  with  them, repeating  tothexi,and 
further  opening  what  he  preach't  in  publick,keeping  the  Pafleo- 
ver  with  them(as  his  houfhoId)according  to  the  Law  of  that  Or- 
cinancejfAW.i^.Thoufeeit  fome  turn  their  back  on  the  pub- 
lick  aflemblies,  under  a  pretence  of  finful  mixtures  there  that 
would  defile  them.- Did  our  Lord  Jefus  do  thusfwas  not  he  in  the 
Temple,  and  in  the  Synagogues,holding  communion  with  them 
in  the  fervice  ofGod  which  was  for  the  fubftance  there  preferved, 
though  not  without  fome  corruptions  crept  in  among  them  f  Q 
Chrittian,  ftudy  Chrifts  life  more,  and  thou  wilt  foon  learn  to 
mend  thy  own. Summa-  %jligionis  efl  imitari  quern  colts. li  is 
the  very  fumme  and  top  of  Religion  to  be  as  like  the  God  we 
worfhip  as  may  be. 

Fifthly,  walk  dependingly  on  God.The  vine  is  fruitful  fo  long 
as  it  hath  a  pole,  or  wall  to  run  upon,  but  without  fuch  a  help  ft 
would  foon  be  trod  under  foot,  and  come  to  nothing  j  It  is  not 
in  man  to  direlt  his  own  way\Multa  bonafaeit  Dew  in  homine^quA 
non  facit  hcmo;mllazerofaclt  homo^qus.  non  facit  Veus  ut  faciaty 
slugufllxm.  There  are  many  good  things  that  God  doth  in  man, 
which  man  has  no  hand  in ;  but  there  is  no  good  and  holy 
action  that  man  does,but  God  does  enable  him  to  do  it  :  As  was 
faid  of  that  Cj  reel  an  Captain,  Parmenio  did  many  exploits  with- 
out Alexander,^  Alexander  nothing  without  Parmenio.  If  thou 
wilt  therefore  maintain  holineffe  in  its  power ,  acknowledge  Cod 
in  allthy  ways,and  lean  not  to  thy  own  wderftandingfitov .3.<j,6.He 
is  ready  to  help  them  that  engage  him,but  counts  himfelfcharg'd 
with  the  care  of  none  but  fuch  as  depend  on  him.  The  Chriftians 
way  to  heaven  is  fomething  like  that  in  our  Nation,  (called  the 
fVrfhe  j)v\  here  the  fandsf  by  reafon  of  the  Seas  daily  overflowing) 
do  fo  alter,trut  the  travellour  who  paft  them  fafely  a  month  ago, 
cannot  without  great  danger  venture  again,  except  he  hath  his 
t:uide  with  him.\Vhere  then  he  found  fume  Land,poiTibly  a  little 

after, 


the  hrejft- plate  of  right  eoufnejje.  375 

after,  coming  fas  may  meet  with  a  devouring  quick- fand.  Truly 
thus  the  Chriftian  who  gets  over  a  duty  at  one  Lime  with  fonie 
facility  ,his  way  fmooth  and  plain  before  him,  at  another  tine 
may  find  a  temptation  in  the  fame  duty  enough  to  fee  him,  if  he 
had  not  help  from  heaven  to  carry  him  fafe  out  of  the  danger.  O 
Chriltian,it  is  not  fafe  for  thee  to  venture  one  ftep  without  thy 
ftay,  thy  hand  of  faith  leaning  on  thy  beloveds  arme  :  Truft  to 
thy  own  legs  and  thou  fallen1 ;  ufe  thy  legs,but  truft  to  his  arme, 
and  thou  art  fafe. 


SECT.    V. 

Sixthly,  look  to  thy  company,  who  they  are  thou  conforteft 
tvith;flee  unholy  company,as  baneful  to  the  power  of  godiinefs; 
be  but  as  careful  for  thy  foul,as  thou  would'ft  for  thy  body  ;  durft 
thou  drink  in  the  fame  eup,or  fit  in  the  fame  chaire  with  one  that 
hath  an  infectious  difeafe  ?  And  is  not  fin  as  catching  a  difeafe 
as  the  plague  it  felf  ?  Daretf  thou  come  where  fuch  ill  fcents  are 
to  be  taken,  as  may  foon  infeS  thy  foul  ?  of  all  trades  it  would 
not  do  well  to  have  the  Collier  and  F  telle r  live  together ;  whac 
one  cleanfeth,  the  other  will  crock  and  fmutch.  Thou  can 'ft  not 
be  long  among  unholy  ones,  but  thou  wilt  hazard  the  defiling  of 
thy  foul,  which  the  holy  Spirit  hath  made  pure :  and  he  did  not 
walhthee  clean,  to  runns  where  thou  ftiould'it  be  made  foule  \ 
to  be  fure  thou  (halt  have  no  help  from  them  to  advance  thy  ho- 
linefle  ;  and  truly  we  fhould  not  chooie  that  fociety  where  we 
may  not  hope  to  make  them,  or  be  made  our  felves  better  by 
them.  'Tis  obfervable  what  the  Spirit  of  God  notes  concerning 
t/fbrahamJtAzh.ii.g.He  foournedin  the  land  of  promt fe  as  in 
afirange  C'oantrejydwelling  in  Tabernacles  with  Jfaac  and  facoby 
heires  of  the  fame  promt  fe. Hz  is  not  faid  to  dwell  with  the  Native! 
of  that  Land,^  with  Jfaac  and  Jacob  heires  of  tie  fame  promlfc 
with  him.  astbraham  did  not  feek  acquaintance  with  the  Hea- 
then; no,  he  was  willing  to  continue  a  ltranger  to  them,but  he 
liv'd  with  thofe  thar  were  of  his  own  family,and  Gods  family  al- 
fo.  Chriftians  are  a  company  of  themfelves,^^  4.23.  being 
Ut  go,  they  went  to  their  own  comf*nj\  who  Jriould  believers 

N  n  2  joyn 


276  And  having  on 


joyn  themfelves  to,  but  believers?As  P.wlhidyhavejot4  not  a  wife 
man  among  you^  but  you  mufl  go  to  Law  before  unbelievers}  fo 
may  1  fay  to  thee  Chriftun,Is  there  never  a  Saint  in  all  the  town 
that  thou  can 'ft  be  acquainted  with,  fit  and  difcourfe  with,  but 
you  muft  joyn  with  the  profane  and  ungodly,amongft  whom  you 
live?  no  wonder  thy  holmeffe  thrives  no  better,  when  thou 
breathelt  in  wicked  company,  that  is  like  the  Eaft-wind,  under 
which  nothing  grows  and  profpers. 

Sevenrhly,  get  fome  Chriftian  friend  (  whom  thoumayert 
truft  above  others  )  to  be  thy  faithful  Monitor.  O  that  man  hath 
a  great  help,  for  the  maintaining  the  power  of  godlinefle,  that 
has  an  open- hear  ted  friend,  th.it  dare  fpeak  his  heart  to  him.    A 
ftander  by  fees  more  fometimes  by  a  m:n,than  the  sWor  can  do 
by  himfelf,and  is  more  fit  to  fUdsC  of  his  actions  than  he  of  his 
own;  fometimes  felf-Iove  blinds  us  in  our  own  caufe,  that  we 
feenotourfelvesfo  badas  wearej  and  fometimes  we  are  over 
fufpitious  of  the  worft  by  our  fdves,which  makes  us  appear  to  our, 
felves  worfe  than  we  are.  Now  that  thou  mayeft  not  deprive  thy 
felt*  of  fo  great  help  from  thy  friend,  be  lure  ro  keep  thy  heart, 
ready  with  meeknefle  to  receive,  yea,  with  thankfulneife  em- 
brace a  reproof  from  his  mouth.  Thofcthu  cannot  bearplain- 
dealing,hurt  thcmfelves  moft;  for  by  this  they  feldome  hear  the 
truth.    He  that  huh  not  love  enough  to  give  a  reproof  fea- 
fonably  to  his  brother,  nor  humility  enough  to  bear  a  reproof 
from  him,  is  not  worthy  to  be  called  a  Chiftian;  By  the  firft 
he  fhews  himfelf  a  hater.  o?  his  brother ,Lev.  1 9. 1 7.by  the  fecond, 
he  proves  hi mfe If  a  fcorner,  Prov.g.  Holy  David  profefled  he 
would  take  it  as  a  kindnelfe  for  the  righteous  to  fmite  him,  yea, 
as  kindly  as  if  he  broke  a  box  of  precious  oyle  upon  his  head, 
which  was  atr.ongft  ih:  Jew  a  high  expreliion  of  love,  Pfil. 
14T.  «;.  And  he  made  his  word  good  ;  he  did  not(as  the  Paptsls 
do  by  theit  holy  water)  commend  it  highly,  but  turn  away 
his  face,  when  it  comes  to  be  iprinkledonhin.     No,  z/?b:gal 
and  Nathan  who  reprove!  him,one  for  hi;  bloody  intentions 
agamtt  l^abal  and  his  family  ;  the  other  for  his  bloo  -"y  fȣfc  up- 
on Vr'uih^  they  borhfped  well  in  their  erranJ.     The  fi  -ft  pre- 
vented the  fact  intended  by  her  feafonbl-  rep^oo"  :   the  fe- 
cond recovered  him  out  of  that  difmal  hnn^  of,  mun 'er.wb^rcfri 
he  had  lain  fome  months  without  coming  fo  farre  to  huifelf  a? 

to 


■  'I  ■  1 1.. 

the  breajt-plate  of  righteonfneffe .  377 


ro  repent  of  it,for  ought  that  we  read  ;  and  which  is  obfervable, 
they  did  not  only  prevail  in  the  bufinefle,  but  indeared  them- 
felves  by  this  their  faithfulnefle  to  his  loul,  fo  unto  him,  that  he 
takes  her  to  be  his  wife,  and  him  to  be  of  his  moft  privy  counfel 
to  his  dying  day,  1  Kings  1.2  7,;?  2. Truly  it  is  one  great  reafon, 
why  the  falls  of  profeflbrs  are  fo  frequent  in  our  dayes,and  thei? 
recoveries  fo  rare  or  late  ;  becaufe  few  in  thefe  unloving  times 
are  to  be  found  fo  faithful,  astodothisChnftian-ofrice  of  re- 
proof to  their  brethren  ;  they  will  fooner  go,  and  tatle  of  it  to 
others  to  their  difgrace,than  fpeak  of  it  to  tbemfelves  for  their 
recovery.  Indeed  by  telling  others,  we  obfkucl  our  way  from 
telling  th  *  perfon  himfelf,  with  any  hope  of  doing  him  good.  It 
will  be  hard  to  make  him  believe  thou  comeft  to  heal  nisfouJ, 
who  halt  already  wounded  his  name. 


SECT.    VI. 

Eighthly,  be  often  fcrioufly  thinking  how  holily  and  ri.jite-  ~. 
oufly,  you  will  in  a  dying  houre  wifh  you  had  lived.  They  who 
no  v  think  it  matters  not  much,what  language  drivelsfrom  them, 
what  company  they  walk  in,  what  they  bufie  their  time  about, 
how  they  comport  with  CJod  in  his  worihip,  and  with  man  in 
their  dealings,  but  live  at  large,  and  care  not  much  which  end 
goes  foremoit;  yea,wonder  at  the  niceneflfe  and  zeal  of  others, 
as  if  there  were  no  pace  would  carry  them  to  heaven  but  the  gal- 
lop ;  when  once  death  comes  fo  near  as  to  be  known  by  its  own 
grim  face,and  not  to  report  of  others,when  thefe  poor  creatures 
fee  they  muft  in  earnefl  into  another  world  without  any  delay, 
and  their  niked  fouls  muft  return  to  God  that  gave  thcmj.0  hear 
what  interpretation  he  will  put  upon  the  courfe  and  tenure  of 
their  walking,  and  accordingly  to  parte  an  irrevocable  fentence 
of  life  or  death  upon  them  ;  now  their  thoughts  will  begin  to 
change,  and  take  up  other  notions  of  a  righteous  anJ  holy 
life  than  ever  they  had  before.'Tis  obierved  among  the  Pavijhs^ 
that  many  Cardinals,  and  other  great  ones,  who  would  think 
their  cotvle  and  religious  habit  ill  become  them  in  their  health,yet 
are  very  ambitious  to  die,  and  be  buried  in  them,as  commonly 

Nn  1  they 


278  And  having  on 

they  arc.     Though  this  be  a  foppery  in  it  felt,  ye  t  it  helps  us  to 
a  notion  coniiderable.     They  who  live  wickedly  and  ioofly,  yec 
like  a  religious  habit  very  well,  when  to  go  into  another  world. 
As  that  young  gallant  faid  to  his  fwaggerin g  companion,  (  after 
they  had  vilited  Ambrofe  lying  on  his  dying-bed,  and  faw  how 
comfortably  he  lay  triumphing  over  death  now  approaching ;  ) 
O  that  I  mi  git  live  rvitb  tkee,ar.ddie  with  cyimbrofe  \  vain  wilh  \ 
would'lt  thou  O  man,  not  reap  what  thou  fowelt,  and  finde 
whit  thou  layett  up  with  thy  owa  hands  ?  doft  thou  fowe  cockle, 
andwouldll  reap  wheat?  doll  thou  fill  thy  chert  with  dirt,  and 
expect  to  finde  gold  when  thou  openeftit?  cheat  and  gull  thy 
felf  thou  mayeli,  but  thou  canft  not  mock  God,  who  will  pay 
thee  in  the  fame  coyn  at  thy  death,  which  thou  treafuretfup  in 
thy  life1.    There  are  few  fo  horribly  wicked,  but  the  thoughts  or- 
deal awes  themjthey  dare  not  fall  upon  their  wicked  practices, 
till  they  have  got  fome  diftance  from  the  thoughts  of  this.  Chri- 
fhan,walk  in  the  company  of  it  every  day  by  ferious  meditation, 
and  tell  me  at  the  weeks  end,  whether  it  doth  no::  keep  worfe 
company  from  thee. 
gl  Ninthly,  improve  the  Covenant  of  grace  for  thy  affiftanceM 

thy  holy  courfe.  (JAlofes  himfelf  had  his  holineile  not  from  the 
Law,  but  Gojpiel.  Thofe  heroick  acts,for  which  he  is  recorded  as 
one  fo  eminently  holy,  they  are  all  attributed  to  his  faith,  Heb. 
11.24,  25.  By  faith  tJMofcs  did.  vjga\  and  by  faith  that,to  (hew 
from  whence  he  had  his  ftrength  ;  now  the  better  to  improve 
the  Covenant  of  grace  for  this  purpofe,Confider  thefe  three  par- 
ticulars. 

firft,  that  God  in  the  Covenant  of  grace  hath  promifed  to 
furnilh  and  enable  his  children  for  a  holy  life,  £sr^.  36.  27.  I 
will  pit  my  Spirit  within  you,  crnA  canfe  yon  to  wall^  in  my  Sta- 
tutes. ^Thisis  a  way  that  God  hathby  himfelf.  The  mother  can 
take  her  chiide  by  the  hand  to  lead  it,  but  not  put  ftrength  into 
his  feeble  joynts,  to  make  him  go.  The  Prince  can  give  his 
Captains  a  Commiilion  to  fight*,  but  not  courage  to  fight.  There 
is  a  power  goes  with  the  promife  ;  hence  it  is  they  are  called 
cxc.ed  yi(  art\it\*7id  precious  prwtr.fes,  { becaufe  given  for  this  very 
end  )  that  by  thefe  we  might  be  made  partaken  of  the  divine  na- 
ture, 2  Per.  f.;..  «nd  therefore  we  are  not  only  preft  toholineffe 
Fi  Mfc the  command,  but  efpecrally.  from  the  promife,  2  C'or.7.1. 

Having 


the  breaji-plate  of  right  eottfoejft.  27a 

Having  therefore  theft  promt fes}(hz  means  to  help  and  encourage 
US  J  let  us  cle.wfe  our  J 'elves  from  all  filth  we ffe  of  tbefiefh  avd 
Jfir  it, perfecting  hollneffe  in  tbifear  of  God.  O  tisgODi  travel- 
ling in  his  company  that  prom ife rfi  lo  pay  our  charges  all  the 
way ;good  working- tor  him  rhat  promifeth  to  work  all  our  wo;  kf or 
*j,Phil.  2.  i?,  i  ?. 

Secondly ',  God  hath  laid  up  in  Chrift  a  rich  and  full  treafure  of 
grace  to  fupply  thy  wants  continually,  i  Col.  19.  It  p'afcd  the 
Father  that  in  him  fhould  all  f nine  \i  *6p.//.FulnefTe,alI  fulnefs, 
all  fulnefs  dweIling;not  the  fulnefs  of  a  land-flood,up  and  down, 
not  tbefulnefTe  of  a  vefiel,  to  ferve  his  own  turn  only,but  of  a 
fountain  that  lends  itftreames  to  others  without  ftreightning 
or  lelTening  its  own  ftore.  Indeed  'tis  a  fulnefle  purpofely  Mi- 
nifterial,  as  rheSunne  hath  not  its  light  for  its  fe If,  but  for  the 
lower  world,  called  therefore  pg® ,  becaufe  it  is  the  great 
Minifter  and  fervant  to  hold  forth  light  to  the  world.  Thus 
Chrift  is  the  Sunne  of  ri^hteoufneflTe,dirrufing  his  grace  into  the 
bofomes  of  his  people.  Grace  is  faid  to  be  poured  into  his  1'psj.o 
let  us  know  he  hath  it,  not  to  keep  to  himfelf,but  to  impart,  that 
of  his  falneffe  ne  may  receive  grace  ftr  grr.ee. 

Thirdly >  every  childeof  Godhath  notonely  a  right  ra  this 
fulnefle  in  Chrift,  but  an  inward  principle   ( which  is  faith  ) 
whereby  he  is  by  the  inftinc-t  of  the  new  creature  taught  to  fuck 
and  draw  grace  from  Chrift ,  as  the  childe  doth  nourishment  in 
the  womb,  by  the  navel ftring from  the  mother;   and  there- 
fore poor  foul,  if  thou  wouid'ft  be  more  holy,  believe  more, 
fuck'morefrom  Chrift.     Holy  David,  Pfal.  1 1<5.  afeted  with 
the  thoughts  of  Gods  gracious  providence,in  delivering  him  out 
of  his  deeper  diftrefle, takes  up  (  as  the  beft  meflenger  he  could 
fend  his  thanks  to  heaven  by)  a  ftrong  refclution  for  a  holy 
life,i>.Q.  /  will  walk^before  the  Lord  in  the  Land  of  the  livino; 
he  would  fpend  his  dayes  now  in  Gods  fervice ;   but  left  we 
Ihould  think  he  was  rafh,  andfelf-confidenr,  he  addes  ver.  10. 
I  believed,  therefore  have  I  fj>chn.    Firft,he  acted  his  faith  on 
God  for  ftrength,  and  then  he  promifeth  what  he  will  do.     In- 
deed r he  Chriiiian  is  a  very  beggarly  creature  considered  in  him- 
felf;  he  is  not  afliarned  to  confelle  it;what  he  promifeth  to  ex. 
pend  in  any  holy  duty,  is  upon  the  credit  of  his  Saviours  purfe, 
who  he  humbly  believes,  will,  bear  him  out  in  itwitnafltfHng 
gface..  Tenth  ly, 


o8o 


And  having  on 


Tenthly,  fortifie  thy  felf  againft  thofe  difcouragements  by 
which  Satan,  if  pollible,  will  divert  thee  from  thy  purpofe, and 
make  thee  lay  afide  thisbreaft-plate  of  ri^hteoufneffe  and  holi- 
nefTe  as  cumberfome,yea,prejudicial  to  thy  carnal  intereftsrNow 
the  better  to  arme  thee  againft  his  aflaults  of  this  kinde,  I  (hall 
inftance  two  or  three  great  obe&ions  whereby  he  fcares  many 
from  this  holy  walking,  and  alfo  lend  a  little  help  to  wreft  thefe 
weapons  out  of  thy  enemies  hand,  by  preparing  an  anfwer  to 
them  againft  he  comes. 


CHAP.    XII. 

Wherein  the  firft  policy  orftratagem  of  Satan  is  de- 
feated^ which  he  nfetb  to  mahg  the  Chriflian 
throw  away  his  breaji-plate  of  righteoufneffe^  as 
that  which  hinders  the  pleasure  of  his  life. 


ARahU  i   p*^'  ^acan  'i^ours  t0  picture  a  holy  righteous  life  with 
%A»  'J/    fuch  anauftere,foureface,thatthe  creature  may  be  out  of 

love  with  it.O  faith  he,if  you  mean  to  be  thus  precife  and  holy  , 
then  bid  adue  to  all  joy ;  you  at  once  deprive  your  felves  of  all 
thofe  pleafures  which  others  pafie  their  days  fo  merrily  in  the  en> 
braces  of,that  are  not  fo  ftreight-Iaced  in  their  con-fciences. 

How  true  a  charge  this  is  that  Satan  lays  upon  the  ways  of  ho- 
lineffe,  we  fhall  now  fee;  And  truly  h:that  defires  to  fee 
the  true  face  of  holinefle  in  its  native  hue  and  colour,(Tiould  do 
well  not  to  truft  Satan,  cr  his  own  carnal  heart  to  draw  its 
picture.  I  fhall  deal  with  this  objection;  Firft,  by  way  of 
concelfjon  •  there  are  fome  pleafures  ("if  they  may  be  to  called) 
chat  are  inconiiftem  with  the  power  of  holinefle ;  whoever  will 

take 


the  breajl-plate  of  right  eoufnejfe.  3  g  j 

take  up  a  purpofe  to  live  righteoufly  ,  he  muft  (hake  hands  with 
them,  and  they  are  of  two  forts. 


SECT.  I. 

Firft,  all  fuch  pleafures  a9  are  in  them felves  finful;  godiineflc       . 
will  allow  no  fuch  in  thy  embraces .      And  art  thou  not  fhrewd-      dnfrr.z 
ly  hurt  (  doeft  think)  to  he  denied  that  which  would  be  thy  bane 
to  drink  >  would  any  think  the  father  cruel,  that  (hould  charge 
his  childe,not  to  dare  fo  much  as  tafte  of  any  rats-bane  ?  truly  I 
hope,you  that  have  paft  under  the  renewing  work  of  the  Spirit , 
can  call  finne  by  another  name  then  pleafure.    lam    fure  Saints 
in  former  times,  have  not  counted  themfelves  tyed  up,  but  faved 
from  (iich  pleafures.    The  bondage  lies  in  ferving  them,  and  the 
liberty  ot  being  faved  from  them,  77/-.  3  .2.  The  ApoiHe  bemoans  . 
the  time,  when  himfelf  and  other  Saints  were  foolifh,    deceived  , 
ferving  divers  lufis  and  pleafures  .  and  he  reckons  it  among  the 
prime  benefits  thes,  receiv'd  by  the  grace  of  the  Gofpel,  to  be  de- 
livered from  that  vaffa.'age,  v.$.  But  according  to  bis  mercy  be 
favedus  (how.'  not  by  pardoninpthem  only,butj  by  the  wajbing 
f>f  regeneration,  and  renewing  of  the  holy  Ghofi.     However  the  de- 
vil makes  poore  creatures  expect  pleafure  in  finne,  and  promifeth 
them  great  matters  of  this  kinde  •,  yet  he  goes  againft  his  confer- 
ence ,  and  his  own  prcfent  fence  alfo.    He  doth  not  finde   finne 
fopleafanta  morfel  to  his   own  tafte,  that  he  fhould  need  to 
commend  ic  upon  this  account  to  others-,  finnes  pleafure  is  like 
the  pleafure  which  a  place  in  the  Weft- Indies  afords  thole  that 
dwell  in  it  j     There  grows  in  it  mod  rare  lufciousfiuit  ,  but 
thefe  dainties  arc  io  fauced  with  the  intolerably  fcorching  heat 
of  the  Sunne  by  day,and  the  multitude  of  a  fort  ofcreatuies  fling- 
ing them  by  nighr,  that  they  can  neither  well  ear  by  day ,  nor 
fleep  by  night,  to  digeft  their  fwcet  meats  •,   which   made  thej 
Spaniards   call  the  place,  C°mfitsinhell\  and  truly  what  are  the- 
pleafures  of  finne,  but  fuch  comfits  in  hell  ?  there  is  fome  carnal 
pleafure  they  have,  which  deiightsa  rank  fenfual  palate  -y  but  they 
are  fe  v'd  in  with  the  fiery  wrath  of  God,  and  flinging   of  a 
guilty  reft: efle  confidence ;  and   the  feares  of  the  one ,   with 
the  anguifh  of  the  other ,  are  able  fure  to  raelc  and  wafte 

Oo  away 


2g3  J  rid  having  on 

away    that    little    joy   and  pleafure    they   bring   to     the 
fence. 

Secondly  ,there  are  pleafures  which  are  not  in  their  own  nature 
finful ;  fuch  are  creature  comforts  and  delights .  The  finne  lies  as 
to  thefe,  not  in  the  u(ing,but  in  the  abufing  of  them,which  is  done 
two  ways. 

Firfi,  when  a  due  meafure  is  not  kept  in  the  ufe  of  them  •,  he 
cannot  live  holily  and  rightevttfly  in  this  prefent  world,  that  lives . 
rot  foberly  alfo.    Godlinefle  will  allow  thee  to  tafte  of  thefe 
pleafures  as  fauce,  but  not  feed  on  them  as  meat.    The  rich  mens 
charge^  ames  5.5.  runnes  tbus,^  have  lived  in  pleafure  on  earthy 
they  lived  in  pleafures,  as  if  they  had  lived  for  them,  and  could 
notlive  without  them^  when  once  this  wine  of  creaturccon- 
tents  fumes  up  to  the  bra  i  n,intoxicates  the  mans  judgement,  that 
he  begins  to  doat  of  them,  and  cannot  think  of  parting  with 
them  to  enjoy  better,  but  cries  loth  to  depart  j  as  thole  Jewes 
in  Babylon  who  (beginning  to  thrive  in  that  foyle  )  were  very 
willing  to  ftay  there,  and  lay  their  bones  in  Baby  Ion  for  all  feru- 
falem,  which  ihey  were  called  to  return  unto ;  then  truly  they 
are  pernicious  to  the  power  of  holineffe.    Though  a  mafter  doth 
not  gri.tch  his  fervant  hn  meat  and  drink,  \  et  he  will  not  like  it , 
if  when  he  is  to  go  abroad,  his  fervant  be  laid  up  drunk,  and 
diffabled  from  waiting  on  him  by  his  temperance  ^  And  a  drun- 
ken man  is  as  fit  tp  attend  on  his  mafter,  and  do  his   bufinefTe 
for  him,  as  a  Chriftian  over-charged  with  the  pleafures  of  the 
creature,    is  to    ferve  his  God    in    any   duty  of    godli- 
neffa. 

Secondly ,  they  are  finfnl  when  not  rightly  timed  ;  fruit  eat  out 
ofits  feafon  is  nought.  We  read  of  a  time  to  embrace,  and  a  time 
to  forbear  1  there  are  fome  feafons  that  the  power  of  holineife 
calls  off,  and  will  not  allow,  what  is  lawful  at  another  time. 
As  firft.  on  the  Lords  day,  now  all  carnal  creature  pleafures  are 
out  of  lea 'on.  Gof  calls  cs  then  to  higher  delights,  he  expeds 
we  fhould  \:y  the  other  aftde,  and  not  put  olk  palates  out  of 
raftewirh  tho'clower  pl.afures,  that  we.  mayr.he  better  rjelifli 
his  heavenly  dainties,  tfaiah  58.  23.  If 'thou  tn  nc  away  thy  (cot 
from  the  Sabbath,  from  doing  thy  pleafure  on  my  holy  dajy  an&  call 
the  Sabbath  a  ddi/J  t,  the  holy  if  the  Lord  honourable,  and  Jhalt 
honour  hirr^  not  dJr>g  thy  own  rvayes  ymr  finding  thy  w-n  fleafure  , 

nor- 


the  breaft- plate  of  right eottfnefje.  2 8 

rter fp eakjng  thy  own  words ,  then   Jbalt  thou  delight  thy  fe/fin  the 
Lord.    Mark,  we  can  neither  talk  the  fweetnefle  of  communion 
with  God,  nor  pay  the  honour  daeto  God  in  fandifying   his 
day,  except  we  deny  our  felves   in   our  carnal  delights.    If 
a  King  fhould  at  fome  certain  times  of  the  year  ,  invite  fome  of 
his  poor  fubjeds  to  lit  and  feait  with  him  at  his  own  royal    ta- 
ble, theyfhould  exceedingly  difhonour  their  Prince,  and  wrong 
themfelves to  bring  their   ordinary  mean  fare  with   them  to   , 
Court.     Do  glorified  Saints  in  heaven  call  for  any  of  their  carnal 
delights,or  mifle  them,while  they  are  taken  up  in  heaven  praifing 
God,  and  feeding  on  the  joys  that  flow  from  the  full- eyed  vifion 
of  God  ?  and  doth  not  God  make  account  he  gives  you  to  enjoy 
heaven  in  a  figure,when  he  admits  you  the  fervice  of  his  holy  day? 
Secondly,in  dayes  of  folemn  failing  and  prayer,we  are  then  to  af- 
flict our  fouls  •  and  creature-pleafurcs  will  fit  that  work  no  bet- 
ter^  than  a  filvcr  lace  would  do  a  mourning  fuite.     Thirdly,  in 
times  of  pubiick  calamity  in  the  Church  abroad ,  efpecially  at 
home;  and  this  a  gracious  heart  cannot  but  count  reafonablethat 
hefhoulddenyhimfelfjOratleaft  tieuphimfelf  to  a  very  (hort 
allowance  in  his  creature-delights,  when  Chrift  in  his  Church  lies 
a  bleeding,fympathy  is  a  debt  we  owe  to  our  fellow  Saints,Chrift 
myftical.  And  truly  the  cords  of  others  afflictions ,  will  belittle 
felt  through  our  fort  downy  beds,if  we  indulge  our  felvesCl  mean) 
to  a  full  enjoyment  of  our  eafe,  and  carnal  delights.  What  child 
that  is  merry  and  pleafant  in  his  own  houfe,  and  hath  a  father  or 
mother  lying  at  the  fame  time  in  great  mifery  at  the  point  of 
death,  (but  unknown  to  him)  will  not  when  the  doleful  news  at 
laft  comes  to  him,  change  his  noat,  yea,  mourn  that  he  did  not 
know  it  fooner ,  and  had  not  rather  have  been  weeping  for ,  and 
with  his  dear  relations  in  the  houfe  of  mourning,  than  palling  a- 
way  his  time  pleafantly  at  home  >    Hitherto  I  have  anfwered  by 
conccfiion,  confeffing  what  pleafures  the  power  of  a  holy  &  righ- 
teous life  denies  and  forbids,  and  I  hop^  they  appear  to  be  no  o- 
ther  than  fuch  as  may  without  any  loffe  to  the  believers  joy,  be 
fairly  difmifTed. 


O02  SECT. 


3_ 


ag  a  ytf»d  having  on 


SECT.     II; 

Now  in  the  fecond  place  I  come  to  anfwer  by  way  of  negation; 
though  a  holy  righteous  life  denies  the  Chriftian  the  pkafures 
forementioned,  yet  it  doth  not  deprive  him  of  any  true  pleafure 
the  creature  affords,  yea,  fo  far  from  this,  that  none  doth  or  can 
enjoy  the  fwectnefTeof  the  creature,  like  the  gracious  foul  that 
walks  in  the  power  of  holinefle,as  will  appear  in  thefe  two  parti- 
culars. 

Firft,  the  gracions  perfon  hath  a  more  curious  palate  ,  that 
fks  him  to  tafte  a  further  fweetnefie  in,  and  fo  draw  more  plea- 
fure from  any  creature-enjoyment,  hen  an  unholy  perfon  can  do. 
The^  flie  findes  no  honey  in  the  fame  flower  from  whence  the  Bee 
goesladenaway  ^  no:  can  an  unholy  heart  tafte  that  (weetnciTe 
which  the  Saint  doth  in  a  creature  •  he  hath  indeed  a  natural 
fleftily  palate ,  whereby  he  relifheth  the  groiTe  carnal  pleafure 
the  creature  affords,  and  that  he  makes  his  whole  meal  on;  but 
a  gracious  heart  taftes  fomeching  more  •,  All  Ifrael  drank  of  the 
rock,  and  that  rQckjvasCbrift,   i  C  orinth.  10  4.  But  did  all  that 
tailed  the  water 6     natural  fweetneffe,  tafte  Chrift  in  it?  no  alas, 
they  were  but  a  few  holy  fouls  that  had  a  fpiritual  palate  to  do 
this.     Sawpfoyjs  father  and  mother  ate  of  the  honey    out  of  the 
lions  carcafle  as  well  as  Samffon ,  and  may  be  lik'd  the  tafte  of 
it  for  honey  as  well  as  Sampfon,  yet  he  took  more  pleafure  fure 
than  they  r  he  tafted  die  fweetneiTe  of  Gods  providence  in  it,that 
had  delivered  him  from  that  very  lion  that  now  affords  him  this 
honey, J*dg.  i4r 

Secondly,  the  Chriftian  has  more  true  pleafure  from  the  crea- 
ture then  the  wicked,  as  it  comes  more  refined  to  him  then  to 
the  other.  The  unholy  wretch  fucks  ^regs  and  all  •  dregs  of  fin, 
and  dregs  of  wrath,  whereas  the  Chriftians  cup  is  not  thus  fpi- 
ced  Firft,  dregs  of  finne,  the  more  he  hath  of  the  creatures  de- 
lights given  him,  the  more  he  finnes  with  them.  O  'tis  fad  to 
think  what  work  they  make  in  his  naughty  hearty  they  are  but 
fewel  for  his  lufts  to  kindle  upon^  away  they  runne  with  their 
enjoyments,  as  the  prodigal  with  his  bagges,  or  like  hogges  in 
fhaking  time,  no  light  is  to  be  had  oi  them,  or  thought  of  their 

return , 


the  breafl-plate  of  righteonfnejfe.  2  8 1 


return,  as  long  as  they  can  get  any  thing  abroad  ,  among  the 

delights  of  the  world.  None  fo  prodigiouily  wicked,as  thofe  that 

are  fed  high  with  carnal  pleafurcs.     1  hey  art  to  the  ungodly  as 

the  dung  and  ordure  is  to  the  fwine,  which  grows  fat  by  lying 

in  it;  fo  their  hearts  grow  gnjfe  and  fat,  their  confeiences  mere  ftu- 

pid,and  fenfleiTe  iniinne  by  then-,  whereas  the  comforts   and 

delights  that  God  gives  in  to  a  holy  foul  by  the  creature,  turn  to 

fpi  itualnounfhmentto  his  graces,  and  draw  thefe  forth  into 

exercifc,  as  they  do  the  ochers  luft.    Secondly,  d  egs  of  wrath. 

the  Jfraelites  had  little  pleafure  from  their  dainties ,  when  the 

wrath  of  God  fell  upon  them,  before  they  could  get  them  down 

their  throats.    Thefinners  feait  is  no  fooner  ferved  in,  but  divine  pl.1l.78.  $0. 

juftice  is  preparing  to  fend  up  i  reckoning  after  it  •  and  thefear- 

ful  expectation  ot  this,  cannot  but  fpovle  therafte  of  the  other. 

But  the  gracious  foul  is  entertained  upon  free  co  ft  ;  no  amazing 

thoughts  need  difcompofe  his  ip.ri',  foasto  break  his  draught , 

or  make  him  fpill  any  of  the  comfort  of  his  prefent  en'oyment 

from  the  fear  of  an  approaching  danger.     All  is  well,  the  coaft 

is  clear-,  he  may  fay  with  David,  I  will  lay  me  down  in  peace  and 

fieep,  for  thou  Lord  makeft  me  dwell  in  fafetj  ,  Pfal.4.z>.laft  -y  God 

will  not,  all  befidecannot  break  his  reft  ^  As   the  unicorne  heals 

the  waters  by  dipping  his  horn  in  them,  that  all  the  beafts  may 

drink  without  danger/o  Chrift  hath  healed  creature-enjoyments/ 

that  there  is  no  death  now  in  the  Saints  cup. 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  I  anfwer  by  way  of  affirmation.  The  power  of  ho-  Anfw.i, 
HnefTeisfo  far  from  depriving  a  man  of  the  joy  and  pleafure  of 
his  life,  that  there  are  incomparable  delights  and  pleafures  pe- 
culiar to  the  holy  life,  which  the  gracious  foul  findesm  the  ways 
of  righteoufnefle,  enjoys  by  it  felf ,  and  no  ftranger  intermeddles 
with.  They  l«e  inward  indeed,  and  therefore  the  world  fpeak*  fo 
wildly  and  ignorantly  concerning  them.  They  will  not  believe 
they  have  fuch  pleafures  till  they  fee  them  j  and  they  (hall 
never  fee  them  till  they  believe  them.  The  Rowan  fouldie  s 
when  they  cntred  the  Temple,  and  went  into  the  holy  of  holieft; 

feeing 


„  g  5  And  having  on 

fec.ng  there  no  image,  astheyufedto  have  in  their  own  Idola- 
trous lemyles,  gavcoucin  a  jeer,  chat  the  Jews  worfhipt  the 
clouds.     Truly  thus,  bccaufe  the  pleafures  of  righteoufnefle  and 
holineiTe  are  not  fo  groife,  as  to   come  under  the'  cognizance 
of  the  worlds  carnal  lenfes,  (as  their  brutifli  ones  do)  therefore 
they  laugh  at  the  Saints,   as  if  their  joy  were  but  the  childe  of 
fancy,  and  that  they  do  but  embrace  the  cloud   inftead  of  }um 
her  felf,  a  phantaftick  pleafure  for  the  trse.     But  let  furh  know 
that  they  carry   in  their  own  bofome,  what  will   help  them  to 
think  the  pleafures  ofa  holy  life  more  real  than  thus.     The  hor- 
rour  (  I  mean  J  which  the  guilt  of  their  unholy  and  unrighteous 
lives,  does  fometimts  fill  their  amazed  confcicnces  with,  though 
there  be  no  whip  on  their  back,  and  pain  in  their  flefh,tells  them 
that  the    peace   which  refults  from  a  good  confciencc,  may  as 
well  fill  the  ibul  with  fweet  joy,  when  no  carnal  delights  contri- 
bute to  the  fame.    There  are  three   things  confidered  in  the  na- 
ture ofa  holy  righteous  life,  that  are  enough  to  demonftrate  it 
tobetheonly  pleafant  life.    It  isa  life  from  God  -t  it  is  a  life 
with  God  j  it  is  the  very  life  of  God. 

Fit  ft,  it  is  a  life  from  God.and  therefore  muft  needs  be  pleafant 
andjoyou?.    Whatever  God  makes  is  good  and  pleafant  in  its 
kinde.    Now  life  is  one  of  the  choiceft  of  Gods  works,  infomuch 
that  the  pooreit,fillieft  gnat,  orfiie  in  this  refped,   exceedsthe 
Sunne  in  its  meridian  glory.    To  every  life  God  hath  appointed 
a  pleafure  futable  to  itskinde^  The  beads  have  a  pleafure  futablc 
to  the  life  of  beafts,  and  man  .much  more  to  his.    Now  every 
creature  (we  know  )  enjoys  the  pleafure  of  its  life  beft,  when  it 
is  in  its  right  temper  •,  if  a  beaft  be  fick,  it  droops  and    groanes ; 
and  fo  does  man  alfo ;  no  dainties,fports,or  mulick  pleafe  a  man 
that  is  ill  in  his  health.    Now  holinefTe  is  the  due  temper  of  the 
foul,  as  health  is  of  the  body,and  therefore  a  holy  life  muft  needs 
be  a  pleafant  life.  Adam(\  hope)in  Paradife,before  (in  fpoyl'd  his 
temper,liv'd  a  pleafant  life.  When  the  creature  is  made  holy,  then 
he  begins  to  return  to  his  primitive  temper,  and  with  it  to  his  pri- 
mitive joy  and  pleafure.     O  firs,  men  fall  out  with  their  outward 
conditions,&aredifcontented  at  their  rank  &  place  in  the  woridj 
but  the  fault  lies  more  inward^The  fhoe  isftreight&good  enough, 
but  the   foot  is    crooked  that  weares  it  ^  all  would  do  well',  if 
thou  wert  well;  and  thou  wilt  never  be  well,  till  thou  art  righte- 
ous and  holy.  Sc- 


the  breaji  -plate  of  righteonfnejfe ,  2  8  7 


Secondly,  it  is  a  life  with  Go^a  gracious  foul  he  walks  in  Gods 
prefence,  and  keeps  communion  with  him.     If  you  would  meet 
a  Saint,  you  know  his  haunt,  what  company  he  keeps,  1  \ohn.  1.3. 
That  ye  may  have  felhwfoip  with  us^andttuly  our  frflrwfiip  is  with 
the  father,  and  with  his  Some  fefta  Chrifi.  See  the  ingenuity  of  a 
holyfou^  truly  our  fellowftiip  is  with  C^od,  we  teliyouno  lye. 
An  unholy  heart  dares  not  be   thus  free,  (I  warrant  you  )  and 
tell  what  company  his  foul  walks  with  from  day  to  day.     We 
fee  there's  no  danger  of  going  among  holy  men,  they  will  bring 
you  acquainted  with  no  ill  company  j  they'l  carry   you  to  God 
where  their  great  refort  lies.     And  tell  me  now,  muft  not   that 
man  live  a  pleafant  life,  that  walks  with  God  ?     Let  it  be  but  a 
man  you  ride  with  in  a  journey,  one  that  loves  you  well,  and  is 
able  to  entertainc  you  with  good  and  chearful  difcouife^  doth 
not  the  delight  you  tike  in  his  company,  ftrangely,  yet  fweetly 
beguile  you  ofthetedioufneffe  of  the  way?  O  what  joy  muft 
then  God  bring  with  him  ,  to  that  foul  he  walks  with  ?  Bleffed 
isthepetple  (faith  the  Pfalmift)  that  i^now  that  joyful [ottttd ,  they 
/ball  walk,  O  JLord^in  the  light  of  thy  countenance  j    in  thy  Name 
Jhallthey  rejoyce  all  the  day.    The  found  of  the  trumpet ,  which 
called  them  to  their  religious  affemblics,  iscalled  there  the  joyful 
found,  becaufe  in  his  worfhip,  God  did   cfpecially  manireft  h<m- 
felf  to  his  people.    The  heaven  of  heavens  is  to  be  where  the 
Lord  is-  furely  then,  that  which  the  Saint  hath  of  Gods  prefence 
here,  is  enough  to  make  the  Chriftians  life  joyoui.    O  Chrifti- 
ans,  is  it  not  fweet  to  walk  with  God,  to  God;  To  walk  with 
God  here  below,  by  his  adifting,  comforting  prefence,    to  God 
manifeitinghimielfin  all  his  glory  above  in  heaven?    6  all  you, 
that  are  for  pleafant  profpect9  in  your  walks,  and  out  of  your 
windows,  fee  here  one  that  the  World  cannot  match;    The 
profpeft  that  a  gracious  foul  hath,  walking  in  the  paths  ofrighte- 
oufneffe,  he  may  fee  God  walking  with  him;  as  a  friend  with  his 
friend,  andmanifefting  himfelftohim,  Pfalme  5o.^.laft:  yea,  he 
hath  not  only  the  fweetneffe  of  Gods  prefent  company  with  him, 
but  he  bath  the  goodly  profpeft  ofheaven  before  him,  whether 
God  is  leading  him ,  and  in  this  way  orholinefle  will   certainly 
bring  him  at  laft.    Whereas  the  unholy  wretch ,  walking  in  the 
company  of  his  lufts,  though  th.yfweeten  his  mouth  with  a  little 
frothy  pleafure  at  prefent  (that  foone  is  melted  off  his  tongue , 

and 


agg  And  having  on 

and  the  taftc  forgot)  yet  they  (hew  him  the  Region  of  darknefs 
before  him,  whither  they  will  bring  him,and  where  they  will  leave 
bim,  to  repent  of  his  dear  bought  pleaiures  in  torments  eafclefle 
and  endlelTe. 

Thirdly  ,  it  is  the  life  of  God  himfelf.    Read  the  expreffion, 
EphefA.1%-  alienated  fnm  the  life  ef God.     That  is,  the  lite   of 
godlinelTe^a  holy  life  is  the  life  ofGod,but  how.' not  only  asUod  is 
theAuthouvofitjfoheisofthcbeaftslifCi  thus  the  wicked  are 
not  alienated  from  the  life  of  vood,  for  they  have  a  natural  life 
which  God  gave  them.    Buttheexpreflion  carries  more  in  it, 
and  that  is  this;     The  life  of  God,  is  as  much,  as  a  hfe  life  the  life 
yrhich  God  himfelf  lives.    He  is  a  living  God,  and  his  lite  is  a  holy 
life  •,   holinefle  is  thv  lire  of  his  life.     Now,  I  pray  fnends,do  you 
not  think  God  himfelr  lives  a  life  of  pleafure?and  what  is  the  plea- 
fureo  his  life  but  holinefle  ?    He  takes   pleafure  in  the  graces 
of  his  Saints,  Pfalme  i^9-4-  how  miich  more  in  his  own  eflen- 
tial  holinefle,  from    whence  thofe  beames,  which    (ht  e  fo 
bcautitully  to  his  eye  in  his  children,  were  at  firft  (hot  ?    Thou 
(wh<  ever  thou  beeft  )  haft  an  art  above  God  himfelf,  if  thou 
canft  fetch  any  true  pleafure  out  of  unholinefle ,  and  unrighte- 
ouincfle ;   and  let  me  tell  thee  alfo,    it  is  not  the  loweft  of  blaf- 
phemies,  for  thee  to  charge  the  way  of  righteoufnefle  and  holi- 
nefle, to  be  an  enemy  to  true  pleafure;  form  that  thou  charg- 
ed  God  himfelf  to  want  true  joy    and  pleafure ,     who  has 
no  pleafure ,  if  holinefle  will  not  yield  it.     But  a  way    wirh  fuch 
putrid  fturTc   as  this  is.    The  Devils  and  damned  fouls  them- 
ieives  that  hate  God   with  the  moft   perfect  hatred    of   a- 
ny  other,  yet  they  dare  not  fay,  they  cannot  fay   fo.     They 
know  God  to    be  glorious  and  happy,   yea  ,  glvieu*  in  kli- 
fteffe  ;     an  I    the  crearures    bltfle  and   glory  to    cor.lift    in  a 
participation   of  that  holinefle ,  wh'ch   makes   Cod    himfelf 
fo  bleff.dand  glorious.     This,   t  hriftian,  is  the  utm  ft  that 
can  be  fad  of  thy  happihefs,  either  here,  or  in  heaven  here- 
after.    That  makes  thee  glorious,  which  makes  God  glorious; 
T1  y  jo-  and  pleafure  is  of  the    fame  kind    with  the  pleafure 
God  delights  himfelf  in.    Pfalme  j6.  b>.     7 hou  fbalt  make  them 
drml^  of  the  tiver  of  t!:y  pieafures.     Mark  that  phrale ,  the  river 
(jfthyi/-afu>es.    Cod  hath  his  pieafures,  and  God  gives   his 
Saints  to  drink  of  his  pieafures.    This  is  the  fweet  accent  of  the 

Saints 


the  breafl  plate  of  right e oh  fnefje.  a  8  y 

Saints  pleafures.  When  a  Prince  bids  his  ferranrs  carry  fuch  a 
man  down  into  the  Cellar,  and  !e».  him  drink  of  their  beare  or 
wine,  this  is  a  kindneiTe  from  io  <"--,.  fa  parfonage  to  be  valued 
highly.  But  for  the  Pnncetofethimat  his  own  rable  ,  and  let 
him  drink  of  his  own  wine,  this  I  hope  is  far  more.  VVfen  God 
gives  a  man  eihte,corne, and  wine,  and  oyie,  the  comforts  of  the 
creature,  he  eutertaines  the  man  but  in  the  common  Cellar  j  fuch 
as  havernonebut  carnal  enjoyments,  they  do  but  fit  with  the  fer- 
vants,  and  in  fome  ienfual  pieafures ,  they  are  but  feliow-com- 
moners  with  the  beafts.  But  when  he  beftows  nis  grace,  beauti- 
fies a  foul  with  holineflfc,  now  he  prefers  the  creaiure  the  higheft 
it  is  capable  of,  he  never  fends  this  rich  cloathing  to  any  ,  but  he 
means  to  fet  fuch  by  him,  at  his  own  table  with  him  ,  in  heavens 
glory. 


444444»444444444"4£&A44444  f-4t44 

CHAP.  XIII. 

Wherein  k  defeated  Satans  fecondwile  by  'which 
he  would  cheat  the  Chrifiian  of  hk  breajl- 
plate  y  prefenting  it  as  prejudicial  to  hk  world- 
ly profits, 

gEcondiy  ,  if  thou  doeft  not  ftumble  at  this  ftone,  the  Devil  vflfr*^  3' 

hath  another  ac  hand  to  throw  in  thy  way.  He  is  not  fo  un- 
skilful a  fowler ,  as  to  go  with  one  fingle  (hot  into  the  field,  and 
therefore  expeft  him,  as  foon  as  he  hath  difcharged  one,  and  mift 
thee,  to  let  flie  at  thee  with  a  fccond;  and  tell  thee,  this  holy  life, 
and  righteous  walking,  thou  had'ft  belt  never  meddle  with  it,ex- 

•     P  p  cept 


Q90  And  having  on 


cept  thou  meaneft  to  undo  thy  felf ,  and  all  that  depend  on  thee. 
Look  upon  the  rich  (will  he  fay)  and  great  men  in  the  world^ 
how  doeft  think  thefe  heapt  together  fuch  vaft  eftatcs,  and  raifed 
their  families  to  fuch  dignity  and  grandure  in  their  places  ?  was 
it  by  their  righteoufnclle  and  holineffe  >  alas !  if  they  had  been 
fo  flrait  laced  in  their  confcienccs ,  as  thou  muft  be  (if  thou  ticft 
thy  felf  up  to  the  rules  of  a  holy  life)  they  had  never  came  to 
fo  good  a  market  for  this  world  as  they  have  done  ;  and  if  thou 
wilt  thrive  with  them,  thou  muft  do  as  they  have  done,  throw  off 
this  breaft- plate  of  righteoufnefTe  quite  ,  or  unbuckle  it,  that  it 
may  hang  loole  enough ,  to  turn  afide  when  an  advantage  is 
offered ,  or  elfe  you  may  fhut  up  your  (hop-windows ,  and 
give  over  your  trade ,  for  all  you  are  like  to  get  at  the  years 
end- 
Anfrv.  Anfaer.   To  defend  thee  (Chriftian)  againft  this  aflault, 

take  thefe  few  confiderations ,  from  which  it  will  not  be 
hard  to  draw  an  anfwer ,  that  will  ftop  the  mouth  of  this 
objection. 
I,  Firft ,  confider  it  is  not  ncceffary  that  thou  ftiould'ft  be  rich^ 

but  it  is  neceflary  thou  thould'ft  be  holy ,  if  thou  meaneft  to  be 
happy.  You  may  travel  to  heaven  with  never  a  penny  in  your 
purfe ,  but  not  without  holinefTe  in  your  heart  and  life  al- 
io. And  wifdom  bids  thee  firft  attend  to  that  which  is  of  great- 
eft  neceffity. 
,  2;  Secondly ,  heaven  is  worth  the  having ,  though  thou  go- 

eft  poor  and  ragged,  yea,  naked  thither.  There  are  fome 
in  the  world ,  tbac  will  accept  Gx)ds  offer  thankfully,  may 
they  be  admitted  into  that  globus  Cit<*,  though  Cod  doth 
tot  bribe  them,  and  toll  tLm  along  thither  with  ^reat  eftates 
here.  And  therefore  for  frame  r  iolve  to  be  holy  atallper- 
adventures.  Do  not  ftand  indenting  wifh  -  od  for  that,  winch 
if  you  weie  actually  polled  of,  and  loved  him,  you  would 
leave,  and  throw  at  youi  heeles  with  fcorne,  rather  than 
part  with  him. 
Thirdly,  a  little  of  the  world  will  give  thee  content  jf  holinefle 
3-.  be  kept  in  its  power,  asfewcloaths  will  ferve  a  haile  ftrong 

man^  and  better  is  the  warmth  that  comes  from  blood  and 
Spirits  within,  than  a  load  of  deaths  without.    Better,  I  trow, 

the 


the  breaft  plate  ofrigbteoufnefs.  2  c  1 

the  content  which  godlineffe  gives  the  Chriftian  in  his  poverty, 
than  the  content  (if  there  befucha  thing  in  the  world)  which 
the  rich  man  hath  from  his  wealth.  Godlineffe  with  content  is 
great  gain.  The  holy  p:rfonis«.heoniy  contented  man  in  the 
world.  Paul  tells  us,  he  had  learnt  in  vrhatjoevir  ftate  he  was,  to 
be  content ,  iJhil.  4.  1 1.  hut  if  you  ask  him,  who  was  his  made*, 
that  taught  h.m-this  hard  leffen,  hee'l  tell  you,  he  had  it  not  by 
fitting  at  G amain  Is  feet,  bui  Chnfts,  ver.  13.  /  can  do  all  things- 
through  Cbrift  lb"*  ftr(ngih-m  me.  What  the  7Jkilofip'cr  faid 
in  a  brag,  that  the  hoi,  foul  'n  truth  and  fobe^neffe  can  fay 
through  Chrift,  when  he  is  loweft  and  pcoreft,  that  his  heart 
and  his  condition  are  matches.  We  would  count  him  a 
happy  man,y?Z/e  mundi ,  that  can  live  of  himfelf  without  trading 
or  borrowing,  or  that  when  he  would  buy  or  purchafc,  hath  rea- 
dy cafh  for  the  purpofeinhis  coffers,  when  he  would  indulge 
his  fanciful  appetite  with  varieties,  hath  all  within  his  own  pale, 
what  rarities  the  fevcral  elementscanaford,  and  needs  not  to 
fend  abroad  to  this  market  and  that  for  provifion.  Godlinefle 
is  fo  rich  a  continent,  that  it  is  able  to  maintain  the  Chriftian  of 
its  own  growth ,  as  I  may  fay ,  and  out  of  its  own  ftore  >  with 
all  that  his  gracious  heart  can  defire ,  without  begging  at  the 
creatures  doore ,  and  hazarding  unworthily  his  hohneiTe  to  at- 
taine. 

Fourthly,  confider  what  a  dear  bargaine  they  have,  who  part        4* 
with ,  or  pawne  their  breaft- plate  of  righteoufneffe  for  the 
worlds  riches  ^  which  will  appear,  Firft,  in  the  finne*  Second- 
ly ,  in  the  heavie  curfe  that  treads  upon  the  heeles  of  that 
finne. 

Firft ,  it  is  a  great  finne  •  the  Devil  lure  would  tempt  Chrift 
to  no  fmall  finne-  wefindehim,  hu^e  4.  laying  this  golden  bait 
before  him  ,  whenhe/?^»V  him  all  the  Kingdomes  of  thert>er!d9 
and  promifed  them  all  unto  him ,  if  he  would  fall  down  and 
uorfbip  him.  Whatwasthe  foul  fpirits  defigne  in  this  demand, 
but  to  draw  Chrift  to  acknowledge  him  the  Lord  of  the  world, 
and  by  worftiipping  him ,  to  declare  that  he  expected  the 
good  things  of  the  world ,  not  from  God ,  but  him?  Now 
truly  ,  every  one  that  by  unrighteoufieffe  feeks  the  worlds  pelf, 
he  goes  to  theDevil  for  it ,  and  doth  worfhiphim  (in  effect.,) 

Pp  2  He 


2Q3  Andhavingon 

He  had  as  good  fpeakout,  and  fay  he  acknowledges  not  God, 
but  the  Devil  to  be  Lord  of  the  world,  and  to  have  the  difpofing 
of  it'  for  he  doth,  what  God  interprets  fo.Now,how  much  better 
is  it'  to  have  poverty  from  God.,  than  riches  from  the  Devil? 
Here  is  a  daring  fin  with  a  witnelTc ,  at  one  clap  to  takeaway 
Gods  Sovereignty,  and  beftow  it  upon  the  Devil,  to  do  what  he 
pleafe  with  the. world. 

Secondly  ,  it  is  a.  foolrfh  finne^  I  Tim.  6.  9.  They  that  trill 
be  rich  (that  is,   by  right  or  wrong)  fall  into  temptation  and  a 
fnare  %^and  into  many  folifh  lufts;  What  greater  folly,  than  to 
play  the  thiefc  to  acquire  that  which  is  a  mans  own  alrea- 
dy Mf  thou  bceft  a  Saint  ,  all  is  thine  the  world  hath.  Ged- 
liwffe  hath   the  promife   cf  the   life  that   now  is ,  and   of  that 
rvkich  is  to  come ,  1  Tim.  4.  8.  If  riches  be  good  for  thee, 
thou  (halt  have  it ,  for  that  is  the  tenure  of  temporal  pro- 
mifes,  and  if  it  be  not  thought  good  by  God  (who  is  beft 
able  to  judge)  to  pay  thee  the  promife  in  Jpecie,  in  kinde,  then 
another    promife  comes   in  for  thy  reliefe,  which  allures 
thee  thou  fhalihave  money  worth,  Hebrewes  13.  5,  Let  jour 
converfation   be   without   covetsufnejfe  ,    and   be    content    nith 
ftich   things   as   jcu    have  ,    for  he    hath  faid  ,  /  will  never 
leave  thee  nor  forfa\e  thee.     If  God  hath  given  thee  riches, 
but  calls  thee  to   part  with  it  for  his  Names  fake ,  then  he 
gives  thee  his  bond  upon  which  thon  mayeft  recover  thy  lofie, 
with    a    hundred-fold   advantage  in  this  life,  befides    eternal 
life  in  the  wtrld  to  come ,Mattr.ew  19.29.  And  he  is  a  fool  with  a 
witnefle,  that  pa^ts  with  (;ouspromifes,  for  any  fecurity  the 
Devil  can  give  him. 

Thirdly,  unrighteous  game  will  appear  to  be  a  dear  bar- 
gainee fivm  the.heavie  curfe  that  clcu.s  un.o  it.     1  he  curfe 
cf  X  od  is  in  the  houfe  tftbe  kicked,  Proverbs  3.  33.    'But in 
the  houfe  of  the  righteom  tbtre  is  much  treafitre^  Proverbs  15.  6. 
you  may  come  to  the  right  ous  man,  &nd  finde  (poiTibly)  no 
money  in  hiv  houfe,  but    you  are  fute  to  finde  a  trtafure^ 
whe  eas  there  it  no  treafure  in  the  wicked  mans  houfe,  when 
much  gold  and  filvcr  is  to  be  found ,  becaule  the  curfe  of 
God  eats  up  all  h  s  gaires.    Gods  fork  follows  the  wicked's 
take.    It  is  molt   righteous  for  him  to  fatter,  what  (uch 

gather 


the  breajl- plate  of  right  eoufi  ejfe  295 

gather  by  unrighteoufnefle.  They  are  faid  therefore,  to 
conftilt  Jbame  to  their  bsufe ,  for  the  flone  out  of  the  tvaII  Jhall 
cry  ,  And  the  be  ante  cut  of  the  boufe  Jhall  an  fever  it , 
Hab.  2.  10.  O  who  ,  that  prizcth  the  comfort  or  his 
life,  would  though  for  tunnes  of  gold,  live  in  a  houfe  thus 
haunted  f  where  the  cry  of,  his  unrightcoufnefTe  follows  him 
into  every  ruome  he  goes,  and  he  doth,  as  it  were,  heare 
the  ftones  and  beames  of  his- houfe  groaning  under  the 
weight  of  his  finne  ,  that  laid  them  there  ^  yea  ,  fo  hateful 
is  this  finne.  to  the  righteous  Lord,  that  not  onely  they  who 
purfe  up  the  gaine  thus  got,  are  curfed  by  him,  but  alfo 
the  inftfumenrs  fuch  ufe  to  advance  their  unrighteous  pro- 
jects. The  poore  fervant  that  to  curry  favour  with  his  Ma- 
tter f  advanceth  his  eftate  by  fraud  and  unrigfreoufnefle , 
God  threatens  to  pay  him  his  wages ,  Zepbany  1 .  9.  1  will 
punifti  thofe  that  leap  on  the  threfhold,  which  rill  their 
Matters  houfes  with  violence  and  deceit.  This  is  fpoke  ei- 
ther of  fervants  ftanding  at  the  doorc  to  hook  in  cuftomcrs 
they  may  cheat  -^  or  elfe  of  great  mens  officers  that  came 
with  abfolute  power  into  mens  houfes  to  take  by  violence 
from  them  what  they  pleafed  h  Thefe,  though  their  Ma- 
tters pocketted  up  the  gaine ,  (hall  be  puniftit  h  Their  Ma- 
tters,  as  the  great  devourers ,  and  they  as  their  (harks  to. 
feck  and  provide  prey  for  them. 


Pp  3  CHAP. 


2  o  ±  And  hav  ing  on 

CHAP.    XIV. 

Wherein  is  defeated  the   third  ftratagem  Satan 

ufeth  to  dijarme  the  Cbriflian  of  his  breafi- 

plate ,    and  that  is  by  fearing  him  with  the  con- 

tradiSiioni  oppofition  and  fend  from  the  world 

it  brings. 


THere  is  yet  a  third  ftumbling-block,  which  Satan  ufcth  to 
lay  in  the  way  of*  a  foul  fetting  forth  in  this  path  of  righte- 
oufnefle  i  and  that  is  the  contradiction  which  fuch  a  one  is  fore 
to  meet  with  from  the  world.  O  faith  Satan ,  this  is  the  rea- 
dy way  to  bring  thee  under  the  la(h  of  every  tongue,  to  Iofc  the 
love  of  thy  neighbours,  and  contract  th\fcorne,  yea  hatred  of 
all  thou  liveft  among^  and  doeft  thou  not  (Jefire  to  live  friendly, 
and  peaceably  with  thy  neighbours  ?  can' ft  thou  beare  to  be 
hooted  at,  as  Lot  was  among  the  Sodomites ,and  Noah  amidft  the 
old  world,  that  were  all  of  another  way  ?  This  holinefTe  breeds 
ill  blood  where  ever  it  comes^own  that,and  you  bring  the  worlds 
Anfyv      *^s  ab°ut  your  ears  prefently. 

zAnfve.  Truly  though  this  be  a  forry  weak  objection  in  it  felf, 
yet  where  it  meets  with  a  foft  temper,  and  difpofition  tendered 
with  a  facility  of  nature,  one  in  whom  love  and  peaceful  incli- 
nations are  predominant ,  it  carries  weight  enough  to  amount  to 
a  dangerous  temptation^  No  doubt  Aaron  (tumbled  at  this 
ftone  in  the  bufinefle  of  the  golden  calfe.  He  did  not  pleafe  him- 
felf(furely)in  the  thing  ;  but  it  was  an  ad  meerly  complacen- 
tial  to  the  people,  as  appears  by  his  apology  to  Afofes ,  Exod. 
32.  22.  Let  not  the  anger  of  my  Lcrd  wax  hot-^theu  knowefi  tie 
people,  that  they  arefct  on  mlj chief.    As  if  he  had  faid,  I  did  n(  t 

know 


the  breaft-plate  of  rightecnpiefs,  395 

know  what  they  would  have  done  to  me  upon  ray  denial ;  what 
I  did  was  to  pacifie  them ,  and  prevent  more  trouble  from 
them.  There  is  need  we  fee  to  be  armM  againft  this  tem- 
ptation ,  wheh  that  thon  mayeft  be  ,  fcriouily  weigh  thefe 
two  particulars. 

1.  ThyGod(ChriftianJ  whom  thou  ferveft,  commands  the  *• 
tongues,  hands,  yea,  hearrs  of  all  men.  He  can  when  he  pleafes 
(without  the  leail  abating  in  thy  holy  courfc)  give  thee  to  finde 
favour  in  the  eyes  of  thofe  thou  moil  feareft,  Pr<w.  16.  7.  When 
a  mans  wayes  p/eafe  the  Lore/,  he  makes  even  his  enemies  to  be  at 
peace  with  him.  Laban  in  a  fury  purfues  Jacob  ,  but  God  meets 
him  in  the  way ,  and  gives  him  his  leffon ,  how  he  (hould  carry 
himfelf  to  the  good  man,  Gen.  3 1.  24.  and  v.  29.  he  doth  inge- 
nuoufly  confeffe  to  Jacob ,  what  turn'd  the  winde  into  a  warmer 
corner ,  and  made  him  fo  calme  with  him  ,  that  fet  out  fo  full  of 
rage,i/<=r.2Q.  It  is  in  the  power  of -my  hand  to  do  you  hurt,  but  the 
God  of  your  father  met  me  y 'eft er  -night*,  &c.  Thank  him  for 
nothing;  He  had  power  to  hurt  Jacob,  but  God  would  not  let 
him.  Mordecai ,  one  would  have  thought  took  thereadieft 
way  to  incur  the  Kings  wrath,  by  denying  Haman  that  reverence 
which  all  were  by  Royal  command  to  pay  him  •  but  the  holy  mans 
confeience  would  not  fufter  his  knee  to  bow^  and  yet  we  fee, 
when  that  proud  favourite  had  done  his  worft  to  be  reveng'd 
on  him,  he  was  forced  himfelf  to.  inherit  the  gallows,  intend- 
ed for  Mordecai,  and  leave  Mordecai  to  fucceed  him  in  the  Prin- 
ces favour.  Thus  God,  who  hath  a  key  to  Kings  breafts,  on 
a  fudden  lockt  Aha/buerm's  heart  againft  that  curfed  Amalekjte, 
and  open'd  ic  to  let  this  holy  man  into  his  roome.  O  who 
would  be  afraid  to  be  confeientious  ,  when  God  can  and  doth 
fo  admirably  provide  for  his  peoples  fafetie ,  while  they  keep 
clofe  to  him. 

Secondly,  fuppofe  thy  holy  walking  itirres  up  the  wrath  of  Zr 
ungodly  ones  againft  chee  •,  Know,  there  may  be  more  mercy  in 
their  hatred,  than  in  their  love.  Commonly  the  Saints  get  good 
by  the  wrath  of  the  wicked  ngainft  them,  not  fo  oft  by  their 
favour  and  friendftiip  ^  Their  difpleaiure  weakens  their  care . 
and  makes  them  more  accurate;  1  hus  'David  prayJd  God 
to  mafye  his  way  plain?  for  him,  becaufe  of  his  obferving  ene- 
mies ;  whereas  their  frjendfhip  too  oft  layes  it  aflcep3  and  proves 

a 


And  having  on 


a  fnare  to  draw  them  into  Tome  finful  compliance'with  them. 
Jehofijapbat  was  wound  in  too  far  by  hiscorrefpondanceAvith 
Abab  i  fo  hard  is  it  to  keep  in  with  God,  and  wicked  men  alfo, 
Lutberfrokft.  be  would  not  have  Erafmus  his  honmr  for  atvorld^ 
indeed  the  fricndfh'p  he  had  with,  and  refpeft  he  had  from  the 
great  ones  of  the  world,  made  him  mealy  mouth'din  thecaufc 
of  God,     The  CMoabites.  could  not  give  Ifraei  the  fall  at  armes 
length  ,  but  when  they  clofed  in  alliances  with  the  children  of 
Jfracl ,  then  they  were  too  hard  for  them  •  not  their  curfes, 
but  their  embraces  did  them  the  hurt.    Again,  we  can  never 
!ofethelove,or  incur  the  wrath  of  men,  upon  better,  and  more 
advantagious  termes,  than  for  keeping  our  breaft-plate  of  righ- 
teoufneffe clofe  to  as.     Firft,  when  we  lofe  for  this  any  love 
from  men ,  wc.gain  Gods  bleffing  inftead  of  it.    Blejfed  are  ye 
when  all  ntfnJpeA^evil  cfycu  falfelyfor  my  Nawesfal^e, M&t.^.i  I. 
Gods  bleftir.g  is  a  good  roof  over  cur  head  ,  to  defend  us  from 
the  ftorm  of  mans  wrath.    O  'tis  fad,  when  a  Chriftian  opens 
the  mouths  of  the  wicked,  by  fome  unholy  a&ion  to  fpeak  evil 
of  him  •,  no  promife  will  open  then  its  door  to  hide  thee  from  the 
itormof  their  railing  tongues  •  Man  reviles,  and  Godfrowns^ 
little  welcome  fuch  a  one  has,  when  hereturnes  home  to  look  in- 
to his  own  confeience ,  or  converie  with  his  God-  but  when 
'tis  for  thy  holinefle  they  hate  thee,  Godis  bound  by  promife 
to  pay  thee  love  for  their  hatred,  bleffing  for  their  curfing  ^  and 
truly  that  Courtier  has  little  caufc  to  complain,  that  for  a  little 
dif-refpeci  from  others,  that  cannot  hurt  him,is  advanced  higher 
in  his  Princes  favour.     Secondly,  while  thy  holy  walking  lofeth 
thee  fome  love  from  the  world,  it  gains ;  hee  the  more  reverence 
and  honour.  They  that  will  not  love  thee  becaufc  thou  art  holy, 
cannot  chufe  but  fear  and  reverence  thee  at  the  fame  time,  for 
what  they  hate  thee.     Let  a  Saint  comply  with  the  wicked,  and 
remit  a  little  of  his  holineflfe  to  correfpond  with  them,  helofes  by 
the  hand  (as  to  his  intereft,!  mean  in  them)  For  by  gaining  a  little 
falfe  love,  he  lofes  that  rue  honour,  which  inwardly  their  con- 
fcier.ces paid  tohis  hclinefle.  A  Chnftian  walking  in  the  power 
of  holinelTe,  is  like  S^mpjon  in  his  ftrength ,  the  wicked  fear  hirr^ 
but  when  he  fhews  an  impotent  fpirit  by  any  undecency  in  his 
'  xourfe  to  his  holy  pr ofeiTLn  •  then  prefently  he  is  raken  prifoner 
-by  them,  and  falls  under  both  the  lain  of  their  tongue,  and  fcorn 

of 


the  breaji'plate  of  *  right eonfnejfe.  257 

of  their  hearts.    They  can  now  dance  about  fuch  tone  ,   and 
make  him  their  Maj  -game ,  whefe  holinefle  even  now  kept 
them  in  awe.    It  is  not  poverty,  or  the  bafenefs  of  thy   our- 
ward  ftate  in  the  world ,   will  render  thee  contemptible  %  fo 
long  as  thou  keep'ft  thy  breaft-plate  of  righteoufnels  on.    There 
fits  Majefty  in  the  brow  of  holinefs  though  clad  in  rags.  Righte- 
ous *Dav /^commands  reverence  from  wicked  Saul.    The  King 
himfelf  does  this  homage  to  his  poore  exiled  fubjed,  i  Sam. 
24.17.     He  wept iandfai&tocDavid,thon  art  mortriglteoHS  than 
J.  Ai,  this  is  as  it  (hould  be,  when  carnal  men  are  forced  to 
acknowledge,  that  they  are  out- (hot   by   the  holy  lives  of 
Chriftians ;    O  Chriftians,  do  fome  fingular  thing,  what  the 
beft  of  your  mearly  civil  neighbours  cannot  do ,  and  you  fit 
fure  in  the  throne   of  their  confeiences,  even  when  they  throw 
you  out  of  their  hearts  and  affections ;    fo  long  as  the  Ma- 
gicians did   fomething  like  the  miracles  Mcfes  wrought,  they 
thought  themfelves  as  good  men  as  he,  but  when  they  were 
non-pluft  in   the  plague  of  lice,  and  could  not  with  all  their  art 
produce  the   like,  they  acknowledged  the  finger  of  God  to  he  in 
it,  Exod.8. 16.    Do  no  more  than  carnal  men  do,  and  you 
ftand  but  level  with  themfelves  in   their  opinions  of  you ,  yea , 
they  think  themfelves  better   than  you ,   becaufe  they  equal 
you,  who  pretend  to  holinefle  more  then  they.    It  isexpeded, 
that  every  one  in  the  calling  he  profefleth ,  fhould  more    than 
a  little  exceed  another  that  is  not  of  that  calling,  which  if  he 
do  not,  he  becomes  contemptible. 


Q.q  CHAP. 


3j8 


And  having  on 


CHAP.    XV. 
Contains  two  Vfes  of  the  point. 

WE  come  to  the  Application,  in  which  we  (hall  be  the  (hor- 
ter,  having  fprinkled  foraething  of  this  nature  all  along 
as  we  handled  the  doctrinal  part. 


^ECT.     I. 


Vfe. 


Fid*, for  Information  in  two  particulars. 
/>>/£,  Are  we  thus  to  endeavour  the  maintaining  of  the  power 
of  holinefle?  Then  fure,  there  isfuch  a  thing  as  right eoufneflc 
andunrighteoufnefTe,  holineiTe&.ndfinne  that  oppofethit;  yet 
there  is  a  generation  of  men  that  make  thefe  things  to  be  meer 
fancies,  as  if  all  the  exiftence  they  had,  were  in  the  melancholy 
imaginations  of  fome  poor-fpirited  timerons  men,  who  dr.ame 
of  thefe  things,  and  then  are  feared  with  the  bug-bears ,  that 
their  own  foolifti  thoughts  reprefcnt  to  them.     Hence  fome  a- 
mongus,  have  dared  to  make  it  their  boaft  and  glorying,  that 
they  have  at  laft  got  from  under  the  rondrtge  of  that  tyrant  con- 
fcier.ee-,  they  can  now  do  that  which  we  call  fwearing,  lying, 
yea,  what  not  ?  without  being  bearded  and  checkt  by  an  imperi- 
ous confcicr.ee ;  Yen,  that  there  is  no  finne  to  any  but  him  that 
ft  fo.    Thefe  aidworfe  tools  than  he  the  Pfalmifi   fpeaks 
of,  Pfalme  14. 1.      re  doth  hxxtfay  inbis  hearty  there  is  no  God; 
but  thefe  tell  die  world  what  fools  they  are,  and  cannot  hide  their 
fh;  me.     1  do  r  of  mention  thefe  h  much  to  conftre  them  ■  That 
weie  to  as  little  purpofe,  as  :o  go  prove  there  ii  a  Sunne  fhining 

in 


the  breafl-plate  of  right eonfnejfe.  2  %  9 

in  aclearday,  becaufe  a  mad  frant'ck  man  denies  it;  but  ra- 
ther to  arted  your  hearts  with  the  abominations  of  the  times,ye 
holy  ones  of  God-,  Ohow  deep  afleep  were  men,  that  the  c- 
nemy  could  come  and  fowe  fuch  tares  as  thefe  amongft  us  /  Per- 
haps ihey  thought  fuch  poyfonous  feed  would  not  grow  in  our 
foyle  ,  that  hath  had  fo   much  labour  and  coft  beitowed  on  it 
by  Chrifts  husbandmen-,  that  fuch  ftrong  dclufions  would   ne- 
ver go  down  with  any  that  had  been  ufed  to  fo  pure  a  Gofpel- 
diet^    But  alas,  wefeebywoful  experience,  that  as  a  plague 
when  it  hits  into  a  City  that  ftands  in  the  pureft  aire,  oft  rageth 
more  than  in  another  place  j   fo  when  a  fpirit  of  deluiion  tails 
upon  a  people  that  have  enjoy'd   moft  of    the  Gofpel ,  it 
grows  moft  prodigious.  It  makes  ms  even  tremble  to  think  what 
a  place  of  nettles,  England  that  hath  fo  long  continued  (without 
wrong  to  any  other  Church  Chrift  hath  in  the  world)  one  of  his 
faireft,  fruitfulleft  garden-plots  may  at  laft  become ,  when  I  fee 
what  weeds  have  fprung  up  in  our  days.    I  have  heard  that  reve- 
rend and  holy  M  after  Greenham  ftionld  fay,  he  feared  rather  A~ 
tbeifme  then  Popery  would  be  England*  ruine.    Had  he  lived  in 
our  difmal  dayes,  he  would  have  had  his  fears  much  encreafed. 
Were  there  ever  more  Atheifts  made  and  making  in  England 
fince  it  was  acquainted  with  the  Gofpel ,  then  in  the  compafle  of 
a  dozen  years  laft  paft  ?  I  have  reafon  to  think  there  were  not ; 
when  men  fhall  fall  fo  far  from  profefiion  of  the  Gofpel ,  and 
be  fo  blinded,  that  they  cannot  know  light  from  darkneiTe,  righ- 
teoufneffe  from  unrighteoufnefTe,  are  they  not  far  gone  in  Athe- 
ifme  >    This  is  not  natural  blindnelTe^  for  the  Heathen  could  tell 
when  they  did  good  and  evil,  and  fee  holineffe  from  finne,  with- 
out Scripture  light  to  (hew  them,  Rom.  2. 24,1 5.  no,  this  blind- 
nefTe  is  a  plague  of  God  fallen  on  them  for  rebelling   againft 
the  light  when  they  could  fee  it.    And  if  this  plague   fhould 
grow  more  common  ,  which  God  forbid,  woe  then  to  Eng- 
land. 

Secondly,  if  we  be  to  maintaine  the  power  of  hojin.fle ;  then  2. 
furely  it  is  pofTible^  God  would  not  command  what  he  doth 
not  enable  his  own  peculiar  people  to  do-,  only  here  you  muft 
remember  carefully  the  diitinction  premifed  in  the  opening  of 
the  text,  between  a  legal  righreoufneife,  and  an  evangelical  righ- 
eeoufnefie.    The  latter  of  which  is  fo  farre  from  being  unattain« 

Q<j  2  able, 


*00  And  having  on 

able  •  that  there  is  not  afmcere  Chriftian  in  the  w.rld  ,    but  is 
truly  holy  in  this  fenfe  ^  that  is,  he  doth  truly  defirc  ,  confcio- 
nably  endeavour  (  withfomefuccelTeofhis  endeavour  through 
divine  grace  aflifting  )  to  walk  according  to  the  rule  of  Gods 
Word.     I  confefsallChrifts  Scholars  are  not  of  the  fame  form; 
all  his  children  are  not  of  the  fame  ftature  and  ftrength  ;  fome 
foot  it  more   nimbly  in   thewayes  of  holinefs  than  other  ;  yet 
not  a  Saint  but  is  endued  with  a  principle  of  life,  that  fets  him 
at  work  for  God,  and  to  defire  to  do  more  than  he  is  able.     As 
the  feed,  though    little  in  it  felf,  yet  hath  in  it  virtually  the 
bignefsand  hcighth  of  a  grown  tree,  towards  which   it  is  put- 
tingforth  with  more  and  more  ftrength  of  nature  as  it  grows; 
fo  in  the  very  firft  principle  of  grace  planted  at  converfion,  there 
is  perfection  of  grace  contain'd  in  a  fenfe,  that   is  a  difpofition 
putting  the  creature  forth  in  defires  and  endeavours  after  that 
perfection  to  which  God  hath  appointed  him  in  Chrift  Jefus. 
And  therefore  Chriftian,when  ever  fuch  thoughts  of  the  impoffi- 
bility  of  obtaining  this  holinefs  here   on  earth  are  fuggefted  to 
thee ,  rejed  them   as  fent  in  from  Satan,  and  that  on  a  defign 
to  feed  thy  own  diftruftful  humour  (  which  he  knows  they  will 
fuit  too  well,  as  the  news  of  Gians  and  high  walls     that  the 
fpies  brought   to  the  unbelieving   lfraelites  did  them  .  )  and 
all  to  weaken  thy  endeavours  after   holinefs ,  which  he  knows 
will  furely   prove  him  a    lyar.    Do  but   ftrongly  refoive  to 
be  confeiencious  in  thy  endeavours   with  an  eye  upon  the  pro- 
mife  of  help,  and  the  work  will  go  on   thou  nced'ft  not 
fcare  it.      For  the  Lord   God  ii  a  Murine  and  a  fhield ,     he 
yvill  give  grace  and  glory  ,    and  no  good    thing  will   he   with- 
hold from  them  that  voal\  uprightly,     Pfalme   ^4.  I  J.     Mark 
that ,  grace  andglory ;    that  is  ,  grace  unto  glory  ^    hee'l  ftill  be 
adding  more  grace  to  that  thou  haft,  till  thy  grace  on  earth  corn- 
menceth  glory  in  heaven. 


SECT.    Ih 

Vfe  *»         Secondly,  for  Reproof  of  fevcral  forts  of  pcrfons, 

Firft, 


the  breuji-plate  of  right  eoufneffe.  g  0  f 

Firft,  allthofc  who  content  themfelves  with  their  unholy         I# 
ftate  wherein  they  are  j  fuchisthe  ftate  of  every  one  by  nature. 
Thefe  alas  are  fo  far  from  maintaining  the  power  of  hohnefs, that 
they  are  under  the  power  of  their  lufts  •  They  give  law  to  them, 
and  cut  out  all  their  work  for  them,  which  they  beftow  all  their 
time  to  make  up.     And  is  not  that  a  lad  life  (firsj  which  is  fpent 
about  fuch  filthy  beaftly  work  as  finne  andunrighteoufnefs  is  ? 
well  may  the  bond  of  iniquity,  and  the  gall  of  bitternefs  be  joyn'd 
together,  iftsS.zi.    TheApoftle  is  thought  to  allude  zoDeut. 
29.18.  where  allfinne  and  unrighteoufnefs  is  called  a  roct  that 
beareth gall  and  rvormxvcod.     He  that    plants    fin  and  unholinefs, 
and  then  thinks  to  gachcr  any  other  chan  bitter  frfrit  f  r  all   his 
labour ,  pretends  to  a  knowledge  beyond  God  himfelf,  who  calls 
that  the  natural  fruic  which  grows  from  this  root ,  is  gall  and 
wormwood  ;  who  would  look  for  musk  in  a  dogges  kennel  ?  that 
thou  mayeftfooner  find  there  ,  than  any  true    fweetnefs  and 
comforc  in  unholinefs.  The  Devil  may  poflibly  for  a  time  fophi- 
fticatc  with  his  cookery  and  art ,  this  bitter  morfel,  fo  that  thon 
ftialc  not  have  the  natural  tafte  of  it  upon  thy  palate:    But,  as 
lAbner  faid  to  foab  ,  2  Sam.2.26.  k»oweJi  thon  not  th*t  it  will  be 
bitternefs  in  the  latter  end  ?     In  hell  all  the  fugar  will  be  melted 
wherein  this  bitter  pill  was  wrapt-,  then,  if  not  before,  thou 
wilt  have   the  true  relifti  of  that  which  goes  down  now   fo 
fweetly.     O  how  many  are  there  now  in  hell  curling  their  feaft 
and  feaft-maker  too  1  Do  you  think  it  gives  any  eafe  to  the 
damned  to  think  what  they  had  for  their  money?  I  mean  what 
plcafures,  profits,  and  carnal  enjoyments  they  once  had  on  earth, 
for  which  they  now  pay  thofc  unfpeakable  torments  that  arc  upon 
them ,  and  (ball  continue  fr>r  ever  without  any  hope  or  help  ? 
No,  it  encreafcth  their  pan  beyond  all   our  conceit,  that  they 
fhould  fell  their  precious  fouls  facheap,in  a  manner  fo-  a  fong,and 
lofe  heaven  &  blefP  dnefs,  becaufe  they  would  not  be  holy,which 
how  the  learn  too  late ,  was  it  fclf  (how  ever  they  once  thought 
otherwife)  a  great  part  of  that  bleflednefs,  and  now  torments 
them  to  confider,  they  put  it  from  them  under  the  noti  m  of  a 
burden  and  a  bondage     But  alas,  alas !  how  few  though. s  do 
unholy  wretches  fpend  wirhthemfclves,  in  confidenng  what  is 
doing  in  anorher  world?  They  fee  finners  die  daily  in  the  pro- 
fecution  of  their  lufts,  but  do  no  more  think  what  is  become  of 

CL4  3  thera,t 


-02  And  having  on 


them  ,  ( that  they  are  in  hell  burning  and  roaring  for  their  finne) 
then  the  rifh  in  the  river  do  think  what  is  become  of  their  fellows 
that  were  twitcht  up  by  their  gills  from  them,  even  now  with 
the  anglers  hook,  and  caft  into  the  teething  pot  or  frying-pan 
alive:  No,as  thofe  filly  creatures  are  ready  ftill  to  ruble  and  b:tc  at 
the  fame  hook  that  ftruck  their  fellows  •,  even  fo  are  men  and 
women  forward  to  catch  at  thofe  baits  ftill  of  finful  pleafure*, 
and  wages  of  unrighteoufnefle,  by  which  fo  many  millions 
of  foules  before  them  have  been  hookt  into  hell  and  damna- 
tion. 
2.  Secondly,  thofe  who  are  as  unholy  as  others ,  naked  to  Gods 

eye,  anciSatans  malice-,  but  to  fave  their  credit  in  the  world, 
weare  fomething  like  a  breaft-plate ,   a  counterfeit  holineile , 
which  does  them  this  fervice  for  the  prefent,  they  are  thought  to 
be  what  they  are  not,  veriljthej  have  their  reward,  and  a  poor 
one  it  is  ^  for  the  Lords  fake  conlider  what  you  do,  and  tremble 
at  it  •,  you  do  the  Devil,  Gods  great  enemy,  double  fervice,  arid 
God  double  dii-fervice.    As  he  that  comes  into  the  field,  and 
brings  deceitful  armes  with  bira  •,  he  draws  his  Princes  expecta- 
tion towards  him  ,  as  one  that  wou'd  do  fome  exploit  for  him  , 
but  means  nothing  fo-,  yea,   he  hinders  fome  other  that  would 
be   faithful  to   his  Punte  in  that  place,    where  he  a  tray- 
tor   now  (lands  ;  fuch  a  one  may  do  his  prince  more   mif- 
chiefthen  many  who  cowardly  ftay  at  home,  orrebellioufly  run 
over  to  the  enemies  fide,  and  tell  him  plainly  what  they  mean  to 
c!o.    O  friends  be  ferious,  if  you.  will  trade  for  holinefs ,  let  it 
be  lot  trite  holincjfe,  as  it  is  phrafed,  Efhef,  4.24.  put  on  the  new 
wan  ,  which  after  God  is  created  in    righteetifnejje  and  true  hoii- 
nejfe •  wherein  two  phrafes  are  obfervable-,  it  is  called  »he  new 
manafttrdd ,  that  is,  according  to  the  likenelTe  of  God  ■  fucfc 
afculptureonthefoulor  image,  as  is  drawn  after  Cod,  as  the 
pi&ure  after  the  face  of  the  man.  Again,  true  htlixeJ[etQT  holinefs 
of  truth .  either  refpeding  the  Word,  which  is  the  rule  of  holi- 
nefs, and  then  it  means  a  scripture  holinefs,  no:  Pharifaical  and 
traditional ;  orelfeitrefpeds  the  heart,  which  is  the  feat  of  truth 
or  falfehood;  trucholineflein  thisfenfeis  holinefTe  and  righte- 
oi'fneflc  in  the  heart-,  there  rm.ift  be  truth  of  holinefs, in  the  in- 
ner parrs  •   many  a  mans  beauty  of  holinefs  is  but  like  the  beauty 
of  his  bodyi  skin  deep,  all  on  thcout-fide.    Ripthemoft  beauci- 


the  breaft-plate  of  right  eoufneffe.  202 

fulbody,  and  that  which  was  fb  faire  without,  will  be  found 
within  when  open'd ,  to  have  little  befides  blood  ,    filrh ,  and 
ftench  •  fo  this  counterfeit  holinefs  when  unbowerd,  and  in- 
fide  expofed  to  view,  will  appear  to  have  hid  within  it ;  nothing 
but  abundance  of  fpiritual  impurities  and  abominations.     God 
(faid  Paul)  to  the  high  Prieft,  (ball finite,  fiall  [mite  thee ,  thok 
yphit ed 'rt> all ,  Ads  23.  3.    Thusfay  I  to  thee,0  hypocrite,  (7od 
(hall  fofmite  thee  thou  whited  wail,  or  rather  painted  Sepulchre, 
that  thy  paint  without  in  thy  profeffion,doth  not  now  more  dazle 
the  eyes  ©f  others  into  admiration  of  thy  fanctity,  then  thy  rot- 
tennefs  within  (which  then  (hall  appear  wifhoutjwiilmake  thee 
abhorred  and  loathed  of  all  that  fee  thee. 

Thirdly,  thofe  who  are  fo  far  from  being  holy  themfel ves,that 
they  mock  and  jeer  others  for  being  fo.    This  breaft-place  of 
righteoufnetfe  is  of  fo  bafe  an  account  with  them,  that  they  who 
wear  it  ih  their  daily  converfation,  do  make  themfelves  no  lefTe 
ridiculous  to  them,  then  if  they  came  forth  in  a  fooles  coat,  or 
werecladina   drefle  contrived  on  pu^pofe  to  move  laughter; 
when  fome  wretch  would  fet  a  Saint  moft  at  naught,  and 
reprefenthim  asanobjed  of  greateft  fcorne  ;  what  is  the  lan- 
guage he  wraps  him  up  in  ?  but  there  goes  a  holy  brother ,  one 
©f  the  pure  ones .    His  very  holineiTc  is  that  Which  he  thinks  to 
dTgrace  him  with.    This  (hews  a  heart  extreamly  wicked  h  there 
is  a  further  degree  of  wicked  tie  fle  appears  in  mocking  holinefle  in 
another,then  harbouring  unholinefle  in  a  mans  own  bofome.Tbat 
man  hath  a  great  antipathy  indeed  againft  a  difh  of  mear ,  who 
not  only  himfelfrefufeth  toeatofit,  but  cannot  bear  the  fight 
of  it  on  anothers  trencher  without  vomiting.     O  how  defperate- 
ly  wicked  is  that  man,  with  whom  the  very  fence  and  fight  of 
holinefTe  at  fuch  a  diftance  works  fo  ftrange    an   effecT: ,   as 
to  make  him  caft  up  the  gall  and  bitternefs  of  his  fpirit  3gainft  it? 
The  Spirit  of  God  b?ftows  the  chair  upon  thi*  fort  of  finners,  and 
fets r  hemabove  all  their  brethren  in  mia/j^y  ,as  moft  deferving  the 
place.     'Bl'Jfcdis  the  rtfak  that  vralkrrh  nrt  in    the  counfel  of  the 
unfoJlr^  no  flar.dcth  in  rhc  rray  rf '[inxjr?,  r.:>r  fitteihin  the  feat  of 
thefcornfwl,   Pfal.  1.  1,     1  hefcorner  here  is  fet  as  Chair  man  at 
the  counfeUTableof  finners^fomeread  the  word  fat<fcotnfa{,rh&> 
toHcal  mockers  Th-j-re  is-  mite  A  a  deviHfh  wit  that  fome  (hew  in 
tfieif .mocks ac'hoftnefc .they  co.1:?  1  KfcfiJ  di'pfide.ta  pobfhingtliofe 

darts-. 


Q£  And  having  on 


darts,  which  they  (hoot  againft  theSaincs.  The  Septuagim  read 
it  the  chaire  of  pejHlent  ones.    Indeed  as  the  plague  is  the  moft 
mortal  among  dii'eaies,  fo  is  a  fpirit  of  fcorning  among  finncs: 
As  few  recover  out  of  this  finne ,  as  any  whatever  bcfides.     The 
Scripture  fpeaksofthis  fort  of  finners  as  almoft  free  among  the 
dead  •,  as  little  hope  of  doing  them  good  for  their  fouls ,   as  of 
thofc  for  iheir  bodies ,  who  cannot  keep  the  Phyfick  adminiftrcd 
to  them,  but  prefently  caft  it  op  before  it  hath  any  operation 
on  them;  and  therefore  we  are  even  bid  to  fave  our  phyfick,  and 
not  fo  much  asbeftow  a  reproof  on  them,  left  we  have  it  caft 
on  our  taces ,     Reprove  not  a  [corner ,  Left  he  hate  theet  Prov. 
p.  7.    Allwecando,  is  to  write,  Lord  have  mercy  on  them,  upon 
their  door.    I  mean,  rather  pray  for  them,  than  fpeak  to  them. 
There  hath  of  old  been  this  fort  of  finners  mingled  amongft  the 
godly.     A  mocking  ljhmael  in  Abrahams  family,  Gen.11.9. 
And  obfervable   it  is,  what   interpretation  the  Spirit  of  God 
makes  of  his  fcornful  carriage  towards  his  brother, Gal.  4.  29. 
As  then,  he  that  was  borne  after  thefie/b;  perfected  him  that  was 
born  after  the  Spirit ;  even  fo  it  is  now.     Pray  mark  ,  Firft,  what 
was  the  ground  of  the  quarrel ;  it  was  this,  his  brother   was 
borne  af  er  the  Spirit^  and  this,  he  being  born  after  the  fleQi,  ha- 
ted.    Secondly,  obferve  how  the  Spirit  of  God  phrafeth  this 
his  fcornful  carriage  to  his  brother;     it  is  called  perfecuting 
him. 

To  aggravate  the  evil  of  a  fcornful  fpirit ,  and  a  mocking 
tongue,  which  (lands  for  fo  little  a  finne  in  the  worlds  account- 
book  (who  count  none  perfecutors,  but  thole  that  draw  blood, 
for  Religion)  God  would  have  the  jcercrand  fcoffer  know  a- 
mong  what  fort  of  men  he  fhall  be  ranked,  andtryed  at  Chrifts 
bar,  no  lefs  finners  than  perfecutors :  But  this  I  conceive  is  not 
all;  this  mocking  of  holinefs  is  called  perfecuting ,  becaufc 
there  is  the  feed  of  bloody  pei  fecution  in  it.  They  who  are  fo  free 
of  their  tongue  to  jeer,and  (hew  their  teeth  in  fleering  at  holinefs, 
would  fatten  their  teeth  alfo  on  it  if  they  had  power  to 
ufecheir check- bone.  Laftly,  obienethis  was  not  barely  the 
crofle  difpofition  of  lfhmaels  perfonal  peevifh  and  froward  tem- 
per, fo  to  abufc  his  brother,  bunt  is  laid  as  the  charge  ef  all 
wicked  men;  ashedidperfecutehis  brother,  becaufe  after  the 
Spirit,  even  fit  is  now -%  this  mocking  fpirit  runs  jn.  a  blood  ^  the 

whole 


the  bre aft- plate  of  righteonfnejje.  305 

whole  litter  are  alike ;  and  if  any  feem  more  ingenuous  and 
favourable  to  the  holy  ones  of  God,  we  muft  fetch  the  region 
from  fome  other  head  than  their  finful  nature  ;    God  rides  fome 
of  them  with  a  curb  bit,  who  though  they  open  not  their  hearts 
to  Chrift  favingly,  yet  truth  is  got  lb  far  into  them  by  a  powerful 
conviction,  that  it  makes  confcience  fay  to  them  concerning 
their  holy  neighbours,what  Pilatts  wife  by  mefTage  laid  to  her 
husband  of  Chni\yHave  thou  nothing  to  do  with  thefe ; uft  men,  for  Mat.  zy.  19. 
/  have  fujfered  much  concerning  them.  But  though  there  were 
ever  mockers  of  holinefs  among  the  Saints,  becaufe  there  were 
ever  wicked  to  be  their  neighbours;yet  the  Spirit  of  God  prophe- 
cieth  of  a  fort  of  mockers  to  come  upon  the  itage  in  the  hi}  days, 
that  fhould  differ  from  the  ordinary  feoffors  that  the  people  of 
God  have  been  exercifed  with.  And  (till  the  Iaft  is  the  worft  ;  you 
know>  thofe  who  mock  and  jeer  at  holinefs,  ufe  to  be  men  and 
women  that  pretend  nothing  toReligion  themfelvesjfuchas  walk 
in  an  open  defiance  to  God,-ind  wallow  in  all  manner  of  vvicked- 
•  nefs .-  But  the  Spirit  of  Go.1  tells  us  of  a  new  gang,that  fhall  mock  - 
at  holinefs  under  a  colour  of  holinelVe  ;  they  fhall  be  as  horri- 
bly wicked, fome  of  them,as  the  worft  of  the  former  fort  were, 
but  wicked  in  a  myftery.     fpift.  fude  ver.  17,  18.  But  bdoved^ 
remember  ye  tie  words  wh  ch  were  jfoken  before  of  the  Afoftles  of 
cur  Lord  fefa  Chrift  ;  how  that   they  told  you,  there  fhould  be 
mockers  in  the  iaft  time^who  (kould  wa/l^after  their  oK'n,u;igodly 
tufts.    But  mark,  Iett  we  fhould  expect  them  at  the  wrong  door, 
andfomiftake,  thinking  "they  fhould  ariie  as  formerly,  from 
among  the  common  fwearers,drunkards,and  other  notorious  fin- 
ners  among  us ;  he  in  the  next  words  gives  you  as  clear  a  chara- 
cter of  them>  as  if  they  carried  their  name  on  their  fore-head,z/. 
Ig.Thefe  be  they  who  fcparate  ti 'cmfelvesfer.fuilfiot  having  the 
Spirit.     Learned  Mafter  Perkins  reads  the  words  thus,  thefe 
be  Sctl-mxkers,  flc(hlv,  not  having  the  Spirit.  SecVmakers  ?  thofe 
that  feparatethemfclves?  do  not  our  hearts  tremble  to  fee  the 
mocke's  arrows  fhot  our  at  this  window  ?  Thefe  are  they  who 
pretend  more  to  purity  of  worihip  than  ochers,and  profeffe  they 
feparate  on  conferences  account,becaufe  they  cannot  fuffor  them- 
feivesfo  much  as  touch  them  that  are  unclean  by  joyning  with 
them  in  holy  Ordinances ;  And  they  mockers,   they  flefhly. 
Truly  if  the  Spirit  of  God  had  not  told  us  this,we  fhould  .have 

R  r  gone 


2o6  And  having  on 

o0ne  laft  into  their  tent  (as  Laban  did  into  Rachels  )  as  lead  fuf- 
pecVing  that  any  mocker  of  holinefs  could  ftay  rhere  ;  yea,  <^od 
forbid  that  we  fhould  lay  it  in  general,  as  rhe  charge  of  all  who 
have  feparatedfrom  communion  in  the  publick,  many  of  whom 
(my  conference  tells  me )  are  lovers  of  holinefle,and  led(though 
ouc  of  their  way  )  by  the  tendernefle  of  their  confcienccs,  which 
when  God  hath  better  enlightned,  will  bring  them  as  fad  back 
to  their  brethren,  as  now  kcar.icththem  from  them.     And 
truly,  I  think  it  might  give  a  great  lift  to  the  making  of  them 
think  of  a  return,  it"  they  would  but  in  their  fad  and  ferious 
thoughts  confider,how  far  many  of  thofe  who  went  out  from  us 
with  them  are  gone ;  even  to  mock  at  the  holinefle  of  thofe 
from  whom  once  they  parted,becaufe  they  were  not  holy  enough 
for  their  company  ;  ( Godthefearcherot'  hearts  knows  Ifpeak. 
this  with  a  fad  heart )  fo  that  were  they  to  come  and  joyne  with 
us  again  in  fome  Ordinances,  fuchfcandal  hath  been  given  by 
them,   that  they  who  durft  not  joyne  with  us,  ought  nor,  as  they 
are,  to  be  admitted  by  us.  How  many  of  thofe  have  you  heard  of 
that  began  with  a  feparation  from  our  afTemblies,  who  mock  at 
Sabbath?,  caft  off  family- duties,  indeed  all  prayer  in  fecretby 
themfelves,  yea,  dank  in  thofe  curfed  o^inions,that  make  them 
fpeak  fcornfully  of  Chritt  the  Sonne  of  God  himfelf,  and  the 
great  truths  of  the  Gofpel,  which  are  the  foundation  of  all  true 
holinefle  .;  ^o  that  now,  none  are  fo  great  an  object  of  their 
fcorn,  as  thofe  who  walk  moft  dole  to  the  holy  rule  of  the  Go- 
fpel :  Well  Sirs,  of  what  fort  foever  you  are,  whether  Atheiftical 
mockers  at  holineffe,or  fuch  as  mock  at  true  holinefle  in  the  dif- 
guife  of  a  falle  one,  take  heed  what  you  do,  'tis  as  much  as  your 
life  is  worth  :  Be  xot  deceived*  (jod  vr  til  not  be  mocked,  nor  fuffer 
his  grace  to  be  mocked  in  his  Saints.   You  know  how  dearly  that 
feoff  did  coft  them,  though  but  children  that  fpake  it  to  the 
Propher,  Co  up  thou  bald-l  cad, go  up  thou  bald-head,z  King.2.23. 
where,  they  did  not  only  revile  him  with  that  nick-name  of 
bald-head,but  made  a  mock  and  jeere  of  Elijah's  rapture  into 
heaven,as  if  they  had  faid,You  would  make  us  believe  your  Ma- 
iler is  gone  up  to  heavenjwhy  do  not  you  go  up  after  him,that  we 
may  be  rid  of  both  your  companies  at  once  ?  And  we  need  not 
wonder  that  thefe  children  fhould  rife  to  fuch  a  height  of  wicked- 
netfe  fo  foon,  if  you  obferve  the  place  where  they  liv'd  at,/to/W, 

which 


the  breaft-flate  of  right eoufnejje.  2  07 

which  was  moft  infamous  for  Idolatry ,and  one  of  the  two  Cities 
where  feroham  did  fet  up  his  calves,  1  King.  12.28.  fo  that  this 
feems  but  the  natural  language  which  they  learnt  (no  doubt)from 
their  idolatrous  parents.God  met  with  Michal  alio  for  defpifing 
her  husband,  meerly  upon  a  religious  account,becaufe  he  flhew'd 
a  holy  zeal  for  God,  which  her  proud  fpiric  (as  many  others 
fince  have  done  )  thought  it  too  mean  and  bafe  for  a  King  to  do. 
Well,v>  bat's  herpunifhrnenti*  Therefore  Michal  the  daughter  of 
Saul  had  no  childe  unto  the  day  of 'her  death. Thefervice  of  God 
was  too  low  for  aKing  in  her  chought:s,therefore  ihall  none  come 
out  of  her  womb  to  fit  on  the  Throne,  or  wear  a  Crown.  It  is 
great  wickednefie  to  mock  at  the  calamity  of  another.  He  that 
mock*  the  poor,reproacheth  his  cJ^^r,Prov.l^.5.  yea, to  laugh 
at  and  trinmph  over  a  Saints  finne  is  a  heavy  finne ;  fo  did  fome 
fonnes  of  Belial,  when  David  fell  into  that  fad  temptation  of 
Adultery  and  Murder. And  they  are  endited  for  blafpheming  God 
upon  that  account ;  what  then  is  it  to  mock  one  for  his  holinefs  ? 
fin  carries  fome  caufe  of  fhame,  and  gives  naughty  hearts  an  oc- 
casion to  reproach  him  they  fee  befmeared  with  that,  which  is 
£0  inglorious,  and  unbecoming,  efpecially  a  Saint.  But  holinefs," 
this  is  honourable,  and  ftamps  dignify  on  the  perfon  that  hath  it. 
It  is  not  only  the  nobility  of  thetreature^ut  the  honour  of  the 
mort  high  Go  J  himfelf;  fo  runs  his  title  of  honour  >  Who  is 
//%  thee,  glor'ota  in  holixejfc  ?  Exod.  T<y.  If.  fo  that  none 
can  mock  that,  but  upon  the  fame  account,  he  muft  mock  God 
infinitely  more,  becaufe  there  is  infinitely  more  of  that  holineft, 
which  he  jeers  at  in  the  creature,to  be  found  in  God,  than  all  the 
creatures,men  and  Angels  in  both  worlds  have  among  them  ;  if 
you  would  contrive  a  way  how  to  cart  the  greatelt  difaonour  up- 
on God,  poflible,  you  could  not  hit  on  the  like  to  this.  The  Eo- 
mans,  when  ihey  would  put  contempt  upon  any,  and  degrade 
them  of  their  nobility,  they  commanded  that  thofe  their  Statues 
and  Portrairures,  which  were  fet  up  in  the  City  or  Temples  to 
their  memory,fliould  all  be  broken  down.  Every  Saint  is  a  lively 
image  of  God;and  the  more  holy,thc  more  like  Godjwhen  thou 
therefore  put'(tfcorn  on  them,and  that  for  their  holineffe  ,  now 
thou  touCheftGods  honour  nearly  indeed;  will  nothing  lefle 
content  thee,  but  thou  mult  deface  that  image  of  his,  which  he 
hath  erected  with  fo  much  coft  in  his  Saints,on  purpofe  that  they 

IV  r  2  might 


gc8 


And  having  on 


might  be  a  praifc  to  him  in  the  ear  th  ?  was  it  fuch  horrible  wick- 
edneffe  in  thofe  Heathens,  to  c^fi  fire  mo  tie  Sanlinary^andto 
breakdown  the  curved  work  tl.ereof  with  axes  and  hammer j?Pfal. 
74.6,7.  of  which  the  Church  makes  her  moane,Tw.  10.  OGod, 
Low  long  jhMl  the  adverfary  reproach  }Jbali  the  enemy  blajpl  erne 
thy  Name  for  ever  ?  what  then  is  in  thy  divdlilh  malice,  vvhofe 
rageisfyent,  not  on  wood  and  Rones,  but  the  carved  work  of 
his  Spirit,  the  grace  and  holineflc  of  his  living  Tem- 
ples ? 


CHAP.  XVI. 

An  Exhortation  to  the  Saints  m  three 
Branches. 


Vfe  1. 


I. 


THirdly,  it  may  be  for  exhortation  to  the  Saints,  in  feveral 
particulars;  I  fhall  only  name  three ,becaufe  I  have  directed 
my  felf  in  the  whole  difcourfe  chiefly  to  them. 

Firft,blefl*e  God  th  at  hath  fumifh't  thee  with  this  breaft-plate ; 
can'ft  thou  do  leffe,  when  thou  feefi  fuch  multitudes  on  every 
hand  flaine  before  thy  face  by  the  deftroyer  of  fouls,  for  want  of 
this  piece  to  defend  their  naked  breath  again!}  his  murdering 
fhot?Had  God  made  thee  great  and  rich  in  the  world,but  not  ho- 
ly,he  had  but  given  thee  ftock  ro  trade  with  for  hell.Thefe  would 
have  made  thee  a  greater  booty  for  Satan,  and  only  procured  in 
the  end  a  deeper  damnation.  When  an  enemy  comes  before  a 
City  that  hath  no  walls  nor  armes  to  defend  it,  truly  the 
richer  it  is,  the  worfe  it  fares ;  when  Satan  comes  to  a  man  that 
hath  much  of  the  world  about  him,  but  nothing  of  God  in  his 
foul  to  defend  him ,  O  what  miferable  work  doth  he  make  with 
fuch  ?  He  takes  what  he  pleafeth,  and  doth  what  he  will;  purfe 
and  all  the  poor  wretch  hath  is  at  his  command :  Let  a  luft 

ask 


the  breajl-plate  of  right  eon fnejje.  2  Go 

ask  never  fo  unreaibnably,he  hath  not  a  heart  to  deny  it ;  though 
he  knows  what  the  gratifying  of  it  will  coft  him  in  another 
world,  yet  hee'l  damne  his  foul  rather  than  difpleafe  his  luft. . 
Uend  throws  half  his  Kingdome  at  the  foot  of  a  wanton  wench, 
if  fhe  will  ask  it ;  and  b^caufe  that  was  thought  too  little  by  her, 
hee'l  fairifice  his  whole  Kingdome  to  his  luft;  for  fo  much  the 
blood  of  foh/i  Baptifi  may  be  judg'd  to  have  .coft  him  in  this  life, 
being  (fo  wakeful  was  Divine  providence  Jlliortly  after  turn'd  out 
of  his  Throne,  behdes  what  he  payes  in  the  other.But  when 
God  made  thee  a  holy  man  or  wozian,  then  he  gave  thee  gates 
andbarrestc  thy  City,   thou  art  now  able  through  his  grace 
to  ftand  on  thy  defence,  and  with  the  continual  fuccours  hea- 
ven fends  thee  to  withftand  all  his  power.    Thou  wert  once  in-r 
deed  a  tame  (lave  to  him,  b.tnowheisafervantro  thee;    that 
day  thou  becameft  holy,  God  did  fet  thy  foot  on  the  Serpents 
head  ;  thy  lufts  were  once  his  ftrong  holds  with  which  he  kept 
thee  in  awe,  and  out  of  which  he  did  come  and  do  thee  fo  much 
hurt  >y  but  now  thefe  are  out  of  his  hand.  O  what  joy  is  there  in 
a  Town,  when  the  Caftle  that  commanded  it,is  taken,  from  the 
enemy  ?  Now  poor  foul,Satan  is  diflog'd  and  unkennel'd,  never 
more  iTiall  he  play  Rex  in  thy  foul  as  he  hajh  done ;  in  a  word, 
when  thou  wert  made  a  holy  righteous  perfon,  then  did  God 
begin  heaven  in  thy  foul;  that  day  thou  were  born  again,  an  heir 
to  heaven  was  born.    And  if  fuch  acclamations  be  at  the  birth 
of  a  young  Prince,  heir  to  fome  petty  territories ;  haft  not  thou 
more  caufe  that  then  had 'ft  heavens  glory  fettled  on  thee  in  re- 
version ?  efpecially  if  thou  confidereft  where  all  thy  inheritance 
lay  a  little  before,  that  thou  could 'ft  lay  claime  to.  Pan!  joy  us 
both  together  to  make  his  Doxology  full,  1  Col.  12.13.  g^ving 
thanks  unto  the  Father  which  hath  made  w  mettto  be  partakers  of     , . 
the  inheritar.ee  of  theSaints  in  light  \who  hath  delivered  w  from  the 
power. of  darkneffeyand  hath  tr  an  fated  us  into  the  iCingdome  of  his 
dear  Sok.O  bletled  change !  to  ftep  out  of  the  Divelsdark  dunge- 
on, where  thou  wert  kept  in  chains  of  iin  and  unrighteoufnette,. 
prifoner  for  hell,into  the  Kingdome  of  Chrifts  grace,where  thou 
haft  the  golden  chain  of  holin^fs  and  righteoufnefle  put  about  thy 
neck  as  heire  apparant  to  heaven;  fuch\honour  have  all  his 
Saints. 
Secondly,  look  thou  keepeft  thy  breaft-plate  on  Chriftian.         2; 

R  1  3  Need 


io  And  having  on 

Needwebidthefouldierbe  careful  of  his  armour, when  he  goes 
into  the  field?  canheeafily  forget  to  take  that  with  him,  or  be 
perfwaded  to  leave  it  behinde  him  ?  yet  lome  have  done  fo,and 
paid  dear  for  their  boldneffe.    Better  thou  endure  the  weight 
of  thy  plate,though  a  little  cumberfome  to  the  flefti,than  receive 
a  wound  in  thy  breaft  for  want  of  it :  Let  this  piece  fall  off,  and 
thou  canrt  keep  none  of  the  other  on.  If  thou  alloweft  thy  felf 
in  any  unholinefle,thy  fincerity,  that  will  prefently  be  call'd  into 
queftion  in  thy  confeience.  I  confefle  we  finde  that  Peter,*  little 
after  his  fad  fall  in  denying  of  his  Matter,had  the  teftimony  of  his 
uprightnefle:  John  20.  1 7.     Lord,  thou  knsivcfi  all  things,  thou 
knowefl  that  J  love  thee ;  after  Chritt  had  thrice  put  it  to  the  que- 
ftion, he  could  confidently  vouch  his  fincerity ;  but  we  muft 
know,  Fir  si ,  that  finne  was  not  a  deliberate  finne ;  the  poor  man 
was  furprized  on  a  fudden  ;  and  Secondly,  there  had  intervened 
his  bitter  forrow  between  his  finne  and  this  his  profeflion ;   and 
the  renewing  of  his  repentance  f  o  fpeedily,  conduced  much  to 
the  clearing  of  his  fincerity  to  his  confcience.But  David  found 
it  harder  work,  who  finn'd  more  deliberately,  and  lay  longer 
foaking  in  his  guilt,  as  you  may  perceive,  Pfal.  5 1 .  io.  where  he 
pleads  foearneftly, that  God  would  renew  a  right  ffirit  in  him, 
Again,the  Gofpel-fhooe  will  not  come  on  tny  foot  fo  long  as 
i well'd  with  any  hnful  humour  (  I  mean  any  unrighteous  or  un- 
holy practice  )  till  aflwag'd  and  purg'd  out  by  repentance.  Con- 
fider  the  Gofpel  in  its  preparation.  Art  thou  in  a  fit  cafe  to  fuffer 
chearfully  for  God,  or  patiently  from  God  as  thou  art  ?  no  more 
than  a  fouldier  in  a  difeafe  fick  abed,  is  to  take  a  hard  march; 
unhohnefle  renders  the  foul,  as  much  as  ficknefle  doth  the  body, 
and  indifpofeth  it  to  endure  any  hardfhip.     O  jfare  me  a  little, 
thtt  I  may  recover  myjlrength  before  I  go  /  c>ce,and  be  no  more,Vh. 
1,9.  13.     David  was  not  yet  recovered  out  of  that  fin,  which 
had  brought  him  exceeding  low,  as  you  may  perceive,  z\io,i  1. 
And  the  good  man  cannot  think  of  dying  with  any  willingnefle, 
till  his  heart  be  in  a  holier  frame  ;  and  for  the  pcc.ee  of  the  Goj}ely 
feren'ry  of  confcience,and  inward  joy,  alas,all  unholinefs  is  to  it 
aspoylonistothe  fpirics  which  drinks  them  up-,  throw  a  (tone 
into  a  brook,  and  though  clear  before,  it  prefently  is  royldand 
muddy.     He  will  ffeal^  -peace  unto  his   people,  but  let  them  not 
turn  again  to  folly,  pfal.  8?.  8.    Mark  nere,  what  an  item  he 

sives, 


the    bre  aft -plate  of  right  eoufneffe.  211 

°ives,  &t*t  let  them  not  f«r/*,and  as  if  he  had  (aid,upon  their  pe- 
ril be  it;  if  they  turn  from  holy  walking  to  foJJy ,  I'le  turn  from 
fpeaking  peace,  to  fpeak  terroar. 

Jgam^  by  thy  negligence  in  thy  Holy  walking,  thou  endan- 
gered thy  fait h  which  is  kept  in  a  good  confcience  as  the  jewel 
in  the  cabinet ;  faith  is  an  eye  ;  all  fin  and  unholineiTe  calls  a 
mift  before  this  eye.  A  holy  life  to  faith,is  as  a  clear  aire  and 
medium  to  the  eye;  we  can  fee  furtheft  in  a  clear  day;  thus 
faith  fees  furtheft  into  the  promife,  when  it  looks  through  a  ho- 
ly, well  ordered  conversion  ;  faith  is  a  fhield,and  when  does 
the  foulJier  drop  that  out  of  his  hand,  but  when  dangeroufly 
wounded?  And  if  faith  faile,  what  will  become  of  hope,  which 
han0s  upon  faith  and  draws  all  her  nourishment  from  her ,  as 
the  fucking  childe  doth  from  the  nurfe  ?  if  faith  cannot  fee  a 
pardon  in  the  prom  ife,  than  hope  cannot  look  for  falvation  j 
if  faith  cannot  lay  claime  to  Son- fiiip,  than  hope  will  not  wait 
for  the  inheritance ;  faich  tells  the  foul  it  hath  pesxc  with  G»4, 
than  the  foul  rejoiceth  in  tie  h<>pe  of  glory  ^Kom.  5.  And  now  Cbri- 
ftian,whathaft  thou  yet  left  for  thy  help?  wilt  thou  betake  thy 
felf  to  the  Sword  of  the  Spirit  ?  alas,  how  canft  thou  weild  it, 
when  by  thy  unholy  walking  thou  haft  lamed  thy  hand  of  faith 
that  {hould  hold  it  ?  This  Sword  hath  two  edges;  with  one  it 
heals,  the  other  it  wounds  -,  with  one  it  faves,  with  the  other  it 
damns.  O  'tis  a  dreadful  weapon  when  it  ftrikes  with  its  wound- 
in^  damning  fide ;  and  for  the  other  fide  thou  haft  nothing  to  do 
with  it,  while  in  any  way  of  unholinefle.  Not  a  kinde  word  in 
the  whole  Bible  fpoken  to  one  finning.  Now  poor  creature, 
think  and  think  again,  is  there  any  fin  worth  hazarding  all  this 
confufionand  mifchief,which  if  thoubeeftrefolved  to  have  it, 
will  inevitably  befal  thy  foul  > 

Thirdly,  be  humble  when  thou  art  mod  holy;  which  way  fo-  3, 

ever  pride  worksf  as  thou  (halt  hnde  it  like  the  winde,fometimes 
at  one  door,  fometimes  at  another )  refift  it.  Nothing  more 
baneful  to  thy  holinefs.  It  turns  righteoufnefs  into  hemlock, 
holinefs  into  fin:  Never  art  thou  Jefleholy,  than- when puft 
up  with  the  conceit  of  it;  when  we  fee  a  man  blown  up  and 
fwell'd  with  the  dropfie,  we  can  tell  his  blood  is  naught  and  wa-  0 
trifh  without  opening  a  veine  for  the  trial :  The  more  pride  puffs 
thee,  the  leflfe  pure  blood  of  holineiTe  thou  haft  running  in  the 

veines. 


,I2  And  having  on 

veines  of  thy  foul.     Behold  his  foul  which  is  lifted  up,  is  not  up- 
right,  Hab.  2. 4.  See  an  eccey  like  a  figne,  is  fee  up  at  the  proud 
mans  door,  that  all  paffengers  may  know  a  naughty  man  dwells 
there :  As  thou  wouldft  not  therefore,  not  only  enfeeble  the 
power  of  holineffe,  but  alfo call  inqueftion  the  truth,  of  thy 
holineffe,  take  heed  of  pride ;  fometimes  poffibly  thou  wilt  be 
ready  to  defpife  others,  and  bid  them  in  thy  thoughts  ftand  off, 
as  not  fo  holy  as  thy  felf;  this  fmells  of  the  Thar  if ee,  beware 
of  it.  It  is  the  nature  of  holineffe  to  deprefle  our  felves,  and  to 
give   our  brethren  the  advantage  in  meafuring  their  gifts  or 
graces  with  our  own;  In  lowlinejfe  of  minde  lit  each  esteem  other 
better  than  themfdves,  Phil.  2.  3.  At  another  time  poffibly  thou 
may'ft  finde  a  fpice  of  the  judiciaries  difeafe  tanging  about  thee, 
thy  heart  leaning  on  thy  righteoufneffe,  and  lifting  up  thy  felf 
into  confidence  of  it,  fo  as  to  expect  thy  acceptation  with  it,and 
falvation  from  God  for  that.    O  take  heed  of  this,  as  thou  lo- 
ved thy  life.     I  may  fay  to  thee,  as  Con  ft  art  me  did  to  Acet'ms 
the  Novatian ,  fet  then  up  thy  ladder  ^and go  to  heazen  by  thy  felf ", 
for  never  any  went  this  way  thither;  and  doiUhou  think  to  be 
the  only  man  that  fhall  appear  in  heaven  purchafer  of  his  own 
happinefle?>  go  firft  poor  creature,  and  meafure  the  length  of 
thy  ladder,  by  the  extent  of  the  holy  Law;  and  if  thou  findeft 
it  but  one  round  fhort  of  that,  thou  may'ft  certainty  conclude 
it  will  leave  thee  fhort  of  heaven  ;     if  therefore    thou  haft 
beheld  (to  allude  to  that  in  fob  ;i.  27. )  thy  ri°hteoufneflfe 
when  it  hath  fhined,  and  thy  holinefle  walking  in  its  bruhtneffe, 
and  thy  heart  thereby  hath  b^en  enticed  fecretly,  or  thy  mouth 
huh  kiffed  thy  hand  ;  know  this  is  a  great  wick^dneffe,  and  in 
this  thou  haft  deny'd    the  God   above.     Thou   haft   given  the 
higheft  part  of  Divine  worfhip  unto  a  creati*e,the  created  Son  of 
thy  inherent  holinefs,which  God  hath  appointed  fhould  be  given 
alone  to  the  increated  Sun  of  ri  hteoufneffe,  the  Lord  Jefus, 
the  l.o'd  our  righteoufneffe  Renounce  thy  plea(as  now  thou  haft 
laid  it)  for  life  and  falvation,  or  elfe  give  thy  caufe  as  loft. 
Now  the  more  effectually  to  keep  down  any  infurreition  of  pride 
from  the  conceit  of  thy  holinefle,  be  pleafed  to  take  often 
thefe     foul     humbling     Confiderations     into    thy    ferious 
»     thoughts. 
lt  Finl,think  frequently  of  the  infinite  holineffe  of. God ;  when 

men 


the  breafl-plate  of  right  eon fneffe.  g  r  3 


men  (land  high,  their  heads  do  not  grow  dizzy  till  they  look 
down ;  when  men  look  down  upon  thofe  that  are  worfe  than 
thcmfelves ,  or  leffe  holy  than  themfelves,  then  their  heads  turn 
round  ^  looking  u  p  would  cure  this  difeafe.  The  moft  holy  men, 
when  once  they  havefixt  their  eyes  a  while  upon  Gods  holinefs, 
and  then  looked  upon  thcmfelves,  they  have  been  quite  out  of 
love  with  themfelves ,  and  could  fee  nothing  but  unholinefTe  in 
themfelves.  After  the  viiion  the  Prophet  had  of  God  fitting  on 
his  Throne,  and  bis  heavenly  Minifters  of  State,  the  Seraphims 
.  about  him  covering  their  faces,  and  crying,  holy,  holy,  holy  is  the 
Lord  of  hoafts\  how  was  this  gracious  man  prefently  fmitten  with 
the  fenfe  of  his  own  viknefs.'they  did  not  more  cry  up  God  as  ho- 
ly, than  he  did  cry  out  upon  himfelf  as  unclean  %  Efay  6  4,  5.  So 
fob,  Now  my  eye  feet  b  thee,  wherefore  I  abhor  my  j e  If ,chz\>. 41. $  ,(5 . 
Never  did  the  good  man  more  loath  himfelf  for  the  putrid  foars 
of  his  ulcerous  body,  when  on  the  dung -hill  he  fate  and  fcraped 
himfelf,  than  now  he  did  for  the  impurities  of  his  foul  ^  we  fee 
our  felvesinadarkroom,andwethinkweare  fine  and  clean  ^  but 
would  we  compafs  our  (elves  with  the  beamesofGois  glorious 
Ma  jefty  and  holinefs ,  then  the  Sun  rays  would  not  difcover 
more  atoms  in  the  aire,  than  the  holinefs  of  God  would  convince 
of  finne  to  be  in  us.  But  'tis  the  trick  of  pride  not  to  come  where 
it  may  be  out>fhined ;  it  had  rather  go  where  it  (hall  be  adored, 
then  where  it  is  fure  to  be  put  to  fhame. 

Secondly,of  ten  meditate  of  the  holinefs  of  mans  innocent  ftate.  2, 

It  is  true,,  now  if  a  believer,  thou  haft  a  principle  of  holinefs 
planted  in  thee ;  but  alas,  what  is  that  at  prefent  to  what  thy  na- 
ture once  rmd.J  They  who  faw  the  (econd  Temple,  and  remembred 
not  the  firft  which  Solomon  built,  they  thought  it  no  doubt  a 
glorious fabiique^  Butothers,  whofeeyes  had  fecn  the  (lately 
work  and  goodly  buildings  of  the  other,  could  not  but  rejoyce 
with  teares  in  their  eyes,  Ezra  3.12.  Alany  of  the  Priejls  and 
Levitts  ,and  chief  of  the  fathers^  who  were  ancient  men,  that  had  feen 
the  firft  houfe,  when  the  foundation  of  this  houfe  was  laid ,  wept  with 
a  loud  voice.  O  it  revived  the  fad  thoughts  of  the  facking  of  that 
glorious  ft  iucl:ure  •  andfo  may  this  little  beginnings'upon  a  new 
foundation  of  the  new  Covenant,  remmdethee  with  forrow  to 
think  of  the  mines,  that  man  in  all  his  glory  fell  into  by  Sa- 
tans  policy  ^  'tis  true,  in  heaven  thou  (halt  have  the  odds  of  A- 

Sf  dam 


,i^  And  hazing  onj&c. 


dam  in  Paradue  ^  but  thoulhalt  have  many  a  weary  ftep  before 
thou  getteft  up  that  hiil  ^  when  a  man  that  hath  had  forae  thou- 
fands  ayear,  hath  now  but  a  few  pounds  per  annum  allowed  him, 
and  the  reft  fequefted  from  him  for  thirty  or  fourty  years:  it 
is  fad .  though  comforcable  alfo ,  to  think  it  fhall  at  laft  returne 
(  and  may  be  with  a  great  over-plus)  but  at  prefent  he  is  put  to 
many  ftraits,  and  fame  to  make  a  hardfhift  toiubthorow,  foas 
to  live  any  thing  like  his  noble  defcent  and  family.  Thus  it  is 
joyous  to  the  Saint  to  think  of  heaven,  when  all  his  means  fhall 
come  into  his  hands  j  but  truly  his  imperfect  grace,  and  the  ma- 
nyexpencesheisat  (from  afili&ions  at  Gods  hands,  temptati- 
ons at  paeans  mutinies  and  inteftine  broiler  from  remaining  iufts 
within  doores)  do  put  him  into  many  fad  ftraits,  that  the  poor 
foul  is  ft  in  oft  to  fnap  fhort  in  his  comfort,  yea,much  adoe 
he  hath  to  krep  {hop  windows  open  with  the  little  ftock  he  hath; 
hence  the  Ch.  iftians  getting  to  heaven ,  is  fet  out  as  a  bufinefs  of 
fo  much  diEculry.  If  the  righteous  fcarcelj  be  faved,  where  (ball 
the  ungodly  ana  the  [inner  appear?  I  Pet.  4.  1 8 .  The  wife  Virgins 
had  no  oyle  to  fpare  ^  the  Cbriftian  fhall  hold  out ,  and 
that  is  even  all.  Think,  of  this  and  let  thy  plumes 
fall. 

Thirdly, often  meditate  of  thy  own  perfonal  mifcarriages/  fpe- 
ciall]  in  thy  unregenerate  ftate.  This  kept  Paul  fo  humble ; 
how  oft  does  his  unregenerate  wicked  converfation  rife,  though 
not  in  his  confidence  to  darken  his  comfort ,  yet  in  his  rhinde  to 
qualife  the  thoughts  offvis  gifts  and  grace,  1  Cor.  15.  o,  10. 
where  he  fpeaks  how  he  laboured  more  then  them  all :  O  how  he 
way-lays  his  pride ,  that  poffibly  might  follow  fuch  his  glorying 
too  ciofe  at  the  heels,  and  therefore  before  he  dares  fpeak  a  word 
o!  his  prefent  holinefs,  he  bolts  the  door  upon  pride,  and  rirft 
falls  upon  the  ftory  of  that  b'ack  part  of  his  life  ^  O  how  hebat- 
tesrs  his  pride,  and  fpeaks  h  mfeifail  to  naught  /  no  enemy  could 
have  drawn  hisf/i&urc  with  a  blacker  coale,i/.  7.  he  calls  him- 
felf  one  born  cm  of  time,  ver  9  f  r  I  <mthe  leaft  of  the  4p*ftles , 
no:  meet  to  be' culled  an  Apcfi!--..  beca^f  /persecuted  the  Church  of 
God  5  and  now  having  (uftkiemly  beimearcd  and  doufed  himfelf 
inthepudd'eof  hisforr  fr  flnncs,  how  hun  bly  djth  the  holy 
man  fpeak  ol  his  trarfce.ndent  graces?  v.  1  o  By  thegwe  of  God, 
Jam  that  I  am,  and  J  laboured  more  abundantly  than  they  all ,  yet 

not 


The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


315 


not  \  but  tbegrace  of  God.     O  this  is  the  way  of  killing  this  weed 
of  pride,  to  break  op  our  hearts  and  turn  the  infide  outward  , 
I  mean  ,  humble  and  abafe  our  (elves  for  our  former  abominati- 
ons.    Pride  will  not  eafily  thrive  in  a    fode    where  this  plough 
often  walks.    Pride  is  a  worme  that  bites  and  gnaws  out  the 
heart  of  grace :    Now  you  know  they   are  bitter  things  thsc 
muft  break  the  bag  of  wormes  that  are  gathered  in  the  ftornack; 
all  fweet  things  nourifli  them  ;   they  are  bitter  that  fcatter  and 
kill  them.    OChriftian,  take  fome  quantity  of  this  aloes  often, 
and  with  Gods  bleffing  thou  fhalt  finds  eafro  that,  which  if  a 
Chriftian,  thou  art  troubled  withal.    And  do  not  think,  thac 
this  worme  breeds  only  in  children ,    weak  Chriftians ,   and 
young  novices-,  I  confefTeitis  the  moft  ordinary  difeafe  of  that 
age  j  but  aged  and  ftronger  Chriftians  are  not  out  of  danger.  Old 
David  had  this  worm  of  pride  crawling  out  of  his  mouth,  when 
he  bade  foab  number  the  people ;     And  doeft  not  thou  too  oft 
take  thy  felfe  in  numbering  the  duties  and  good  works  thou  haft 
done,  and  the  fufferings  thou  haft  endured  for  thy  God,  with 
fome  fecret  (elf-applauding  thoughts  that  tickle    thee  from 
them? 


Ve  r  s  e  15. 

And  your  feet  (hod  with  the  preparation  of  the 
Go/pel  of  peace. 


(His  verfe  prefentsus  with  the  thir A  piece  of  armour 
in  the  Chriftians  Panop'y.  A  (biritual  Jhoe9 
fitted  to  his  foot,  and  to  be  worne  by  him,  fo 
long  a s  he  keeps  the  field  againft  finne  and  Satan. 
And  yourftetpjod,  &c.  We  (hall  caft  the  Words 
intodiftindqueftionsor  enquiries,  from  the  re- 
solution of  w"ich,  will  refult  the  feveral  points  to  be  infifted 
on.  S  f  2  Firft, 


gi6  TbeGojpel  of  peace. 


Firft,  what  is  meant  by  the  G  oft  el  ? 

Secondly ,  what  by  peace,  and  why  attributed  to  the  Go- 
fpel ? 

Thirdly,  what  the  feet  here  mentioned  import ,  and  what 
grace  is  intended  by  the  preparation  of  the  Cojpel  of  peace  , 
which  here  is  compared  to  the  ftioe ,  and  fitted  forthefe 
feet? 

Quett.  i.  What  is  meant  by  the  Gofpel  ? 

tAnfa. Gofpel,  according  to  the  notation  of  the  original  word, 
ivayyihiov  f  fignifies  any  good  news,  or  joyful  mefl'age  -,  fo  Jer. 
20.  15.  curfed  be  the  man  who  brought  tydings  to  my  father, 
faying,  a  wan-  childe  is  born  to  thee ,  to  make  him  glad.  Septuagint, 
h  iv&yyihicrtt piv@-  to)  W7?j.  But  ufually  in  Scripture,  it  is  re- 
ft rain'd  by  way  cf  excellency,  tofignifiethe  do&rine  of  Chrift  , 
and falvation by  him  to  poor  finners.  /  bring  you  glad  tydingt 
(faidthe  An^el  to  the  (Viepher^ls )  of great  joy,  Luke  2.  10,  And 
V.lli  he  zddelh,  unto1  you  is  born  a  Saviour,  which  is  Cbrifhtht 
Lord.  Thus  'tis  taken  in  this  place,and  generally  in  the  New  Te- 
ftament,  and  affords  this  Note, 

ct-»  ftp  &-y»  -t;&  fn  «?£2»  sit  *<&  Hvt  *&■* 

mfcvo  mfc»  ktzAvv  r*«w.  g-.itx  w  n  y>l^  *•?«>  £kj  jj?Jv 

«P  *T  *£  *jp  ££  ri*  §k$»Gg9  §*J 


CHAP.  I 

Wherein  the  gladfome  news  that  the  Gofpel  brings y 
is  declared  from  the  five  particular sy  requtfite 
to  fill  up  tbejoyfulnejje  of  a  vieffage ;  with  a  word 
to  fiir  up  our  bowels  in  pitying  thofe  that  never 
heard  any  ofthk  news. 

&ote'  VTO/f.  The  revelation  of  Chrift,and  the  grace  of  God  through 
J_\|him,  is  without  compare  thebeft  news  and  joyfuilcft  ty- 
dings that  poor  finners  can  hear.    Itwfuchameiige3asnogood 

news 


The  Co /pel  of  peace.  ~ 1  7 

news  can  come  before  it ,  nor  no  ill  news  follow.     No  good  news 
can  come  before  it  •,  no,  not  from  God  himfelf  to  the  creature  • 
He  cannot  iflue  out  any  bleiling  to  poor  finners,  till  he   hath 
(hewn  mercy  to  their  f  >uls  in  Chrift. .     Gvd be  merciful  to  tu>  and 
bkffe  at,  and  caufe  his  face  tofljine  upon  /«,  Pfal.  67.   I . 

Firft,  God  forgives,  then  he  gives-,  till  he  be  merciful  to  par- 
don our  iinnes  through  Chrift  ,  he  cannot  blefe ,  or  look  kindly 
on  us  ii.nners.  All  our  enjoyments  are  but  bleflings  in  bullion, 
till  Gofpel-grace,  pardoning  mercy,  ftamp  and  make  them 
currant  ■  God  cannot  fo  much  as  beare  any  good  will  to  us,  till 
Chrift  makes  peace  for  us  ;  on  earth  peace,  good  will  to  men ,  Lake 
2, 14.  And  what  joy  can  a  (inner  take,  though  it  were  to  hear  of 
a  Kingdome  befallen  to  him,  if  he  may  not  have  it  with  Gods 
goodwill  ? 

Againe,  Noiilnews  can  come  after  the   glad-tidings  of  the 
Gofpel,  where  belicvingly  embraced.     Gods  mercy  in  Chrift, 
alters  the  very  property  of  all  evils  to  the  believer.     All  plagues 
and  judgements  that  can  befall  the  creature  in  the  world,  when 
baptized  in  the  ftream  of  Gofpel-grace,  receive  a  new  name,  come 
on  a  new  errand  ,  and  have  a  new  tafte  on  the  believers  palate ; 
as  the  fame  water  by  runqing  through  fome  Mine,  gets  a  tang 
and.a  healing  vertue ,   which  before  it  had  not:     Efaj  32  23. 
The  inhabitant  /hail  not  fay  I  am  fie  1^;  the  people  that  dwell  therein 
floall  be  pardoned  their  iniquity .     Obferve,  he  doth  not  fay,  they 
Jhallnotbefick^i  Gofpel-grace  doth  not  exempt  from  afflictions- 
but  they  /hall  net  fay  1  am  ftck_-     They  fhall  be  fo  ravifhed  with 
the  joy  of  Gods  pardoning  mercy,  that  they  (hall  not  complaine 
of  being  fick;  this,or  any  other  croffe  is  too  thin  a  veile  to  darken 
the  joy  of  the  other  good  news.    This  is  fo  joyful  a  meflage 
which  the  Gofpel  brings ,  that  God  would  not  have  Adam  long 
without  it,but  open'd  a  crevis  to  let  fome  beams  of  this  light  (that 
is  fopleafant  to  behold )  into  his  foul,  amaz'dwith  the  terrour 
of  Gods  prefence  j  without  which,  as  he  was  turned  out  of  Para- 
dife,  fo  had  he  been  turned  into  hell  immediately,  for  fuch  the 
world  would  have  been  to  his  guilty  confeience.    This  is   the 
news  God  ufed  to  tell  his  people  of  (on  a  defign  to  comfort  them 
and  cheer  them  )  when  things  went  worft  with  them  ,  and  their 
affaire;  were  at  the  loweftebbe  ,  7/^.7.14.  CMicah$.$.  This  is 
the  great  fecrct  which  God  whifpers  by  his  Spirit  in  theeareof 

thofe 


2f^  The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


chofe  only  he  embraces  with  his  fpecial  diftinguiftung  love , 
Lnks10'  li-  *  Cor. 2. 1 2  fo  that  ic  is  made  the  fad  lign  of  a  foul 
markt  out  for  hell,  to  have  che  Gefpel  hid  from  it,  z  Cor  4.  $ .  To 
winde  up  this  in  a  few  words,  there  meet  all  the  properties  of  a 
joyful  meftage  in  the  glad  tydingsof  theGofpel.  Five  ingredi- 
ents are  definable  in  a  meflage,  yea,  muilTali  confpire  to  fill  up  the 
joyfulnefs  thereof  into  a  redundancy. 

Frft,  It  ntuft  be  good-,  none  rejoyce  to  hear  evil  news-:  Joy  is 
the  dilatation  of  the  hearc,whereby  it  goes  forth  to  meet  and  wel- 
come m  what  it  defires^and  this  rauft  needs  be  fome  good .  Ill  news 
is  fure  to  find  the  heart  fhut  againft  it ,  and  to  come  before  it  is 
welcome. 

Secondly,  It  muft  be  ^ome  great  good,  or  elfe  it  affe&s  little; 
affections  are  itir'd  according  to  the  degrees  of  good  or  evil  in 
che  objeft  prefented :  A  thing  we  hear  may  befo  inconfiderably, 
that  it  is  no  great  oddes  how  it  goes ;  butifitbegood,  and  that 
greatalfo*  of  weighty  importance,  ihis  caufeth  proportionable. 
The  greater  the  bell,  the  more  ltrength  is  required  to  raife  it.  It 
mull  t<e  a  great  good  that  raifeth  great  joy. 

Thirdly,  This  great  good  muft  inrimat/y  concern  them  that  he «r 
i^  my  meaning  is,  .they  muft  have  propriety  in  ic  -  for  though  we 
can  rejoyce  to  hear  of  fome  great  good  befallen  another ;  yet  it 
affects  moft,  when  it  is  emptied  into  our  own  bofome.  k  fick 
man  doth  not  feel  the  joy  of  anothers  recovery  with  the  fame  ad- 
vantage as  he  would  do  his  own. 

Fouit'lly,  It  v?ould much  adiU  to  tbejoyfulnejfe  of  thr  news, if  this 
were  inauditum  or  infyeratum  ,  unheard  of,  and  utility  for  ;  when 
the  tydings  fteals  upon  us  by  way  of  furprize.  The  further  our 
own  ignorance  or  defpaire  have  fet  us  off  all  thoughts  of  fo  great 
enjoyment,  the  more  joy  it  brings  with  it,when  we  hear  the  news 
of  .t.  The  joy  of  a  poor  fwine-hcrds  fonne,  who  never  dreamt 
of  a  C  rown,  would  be  greater  at  the  news  of  fuch  a  thing  con- 
ferred on  him,  then  he  whofe  birth  invited  him  to  look  for  it,yea 
promifed  it  him  as  his  inheritance  •,  fuch  a  one  his  heart  would 
ftand  but  level  to  the  place ,  and  therefore  could  not  be  (o  ravift.t 
with  it  as  another  who  lay  fo  farre  below  fuch  a  prefer- 
ment. 

Laftly,  to  fill  up  the  joy  of  all  thefe  ,  it  is  moft  nectffarj  that 
the  news  be  true  and ctrtaine  }  or  dfeall  the  joy  foon  leaks  our. 

What 


The  Gofpel  of  peace  2 1 9 


What  great  joy  would  ic  afford  to  hear  of  aKingdora  befallen  to  a 
rnan,and  the  next  day  or  montb,to  hear  all  croit  again  and  prove 
falfc .?  Now, in  the  glad  tydings  of  the  Gofpel,  ailthefedomoft 
happily  meet  together  ,to  wind  up  the  joy  of  the  believing  fou'e 
to  the  higheft  pin  that  the  firings  of  his  affe&ions  canpoiiibiy 
bear. 

Firft,  the  news  which  the  Gofpel  hath  in  its  mouth  to  re  I  us 
poor  finners ,  U good.  It  fpeaks  promifes,  and  they  are  figniHca- 
tions  of  fome  good  intended  by  <7od  for  poor  finners.  The  La  w, 
that  b.  ings  ill  news  to  town,  threatnings  are  the  lingua  vtrnautU 
legu,  it  can  fpeak  no  other  language  to  finners,  but  dcnunciaiions 
of  evil  to  come  upon  them  ;  But  the  Gofpei  fmiles  on  poorc 
finners,  and  plains  the  wrinkles  that  fit  on  thelawes  brow,  by  pro- 
claiming promifes. 

Secondly  the  news  the  Gofpel  brings  is  as  great  as  good. 
It  was  that  the  Angelli\&,Luke  z.  1  o.  1  bring  yon  tj  dings  of  great 
joj ;  great  joy  it  muft  needs  be  becaufe  it  is  ail  joy.     The  Lord 
chrift  brings  fuch  news  in  his  Gofpel,as  that  he  hath  left  nothing 
for  any  after  him  to  addc  to  it  j  if  there  be  any  good  wanting  in 
the  tydings  of  the  Gofpel,  we  finde  it  elfewhere  than  in  God^for 
in  the  Covenant  of  the  Gofpe!,he  gives  himfelf  through  Chrift  to 
the  believing  foul ;  furely  the  Apoftles  argument  will  hold,  aU 
things  are  yours,  ye  are  Chrift  s,  and  thrift  is  Gods  ,   I  Cor.  3 .  22. 
The  Gofpel  layes  our  pipes  clofe  to  the  fountam  of  goodnefie  it 
felf,  and  he  fure  muft  have  all  that  is  united  to  him    that  hath  • 
that  is  all.     Can  any  good  news  come  to  the    glorified  Saints 
which  heaven  doth  not  afford  them.?  In  the  Gofpel  we  have  news 
of  that  glory,     fefus  Chrift  bath  brought  life  and  immortality  to 
light  by  the  Gofpel,  2Tim.i.io.  TheMin  in  the  firmament  dis- 
covers only  the  lower  world  •,  obfignat  coelitm,  dum  revelat  ter- 
ram;  O  it  hides  heaven  from  us,  while  it  fhews  the  earth  to  us  -y 
but  the  Gospel  enlightens  both  at  once.     Cjodlineffe  hath  the  pro- 
mife  of  the  hfe»that  now  is  y  and  of  that  which  is  to  come  ,   1  Tim. 
4.8. 

Thi  dly,  the  Gofpel  doth  not  tell  us  news  we  are  little  con- 
cerned m ;  Not  what  God  has  done  for  Angels,  but  for  us ;  unto 
joh  (  faith  the  \  ngel )  ii  borna  Saviour,  Ch  ift  the  Lord ;  Jf  cha- 
rity made  Angeisrejoy^e  for  our  happinefs,  furely  then  the 
benefit  which  i$  paid  in  to  our  nature  by  it,gives  a  further  pleafurc 

CO 


1. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


to  our  joy  at  the  hearing  of  it.lt  were  ftrange  that  the  mefTenger 
who  only  brings  the  news  of  fome  great  Empire  to  be  devolved 
onaperfonfhouldfing,  and  the  Prince  to  whom  it  falls,  ftiould 
not  be  glad.  And,  as  the  Gofpels  glad-tidings  belong  to  mans 
nature,  not  to  Angels  •  fo  in  particular,  to  thee  poor  foul,  who- 
ever thou  art,  that  embraced  Chriftinthe  armes  of  thy  Faith. 
A  Prince  is  a  common  good  to  all  his  Kingdome^  every  fubje& 
though  never  fo  mean,  hath  a  part  in  him,  and  fo  is  Chrift  to  all 
belisvers.  The  promifes  are  fo  laid,  that  like  a  well-drawn  pi- 
cture, they  look  on  all,  that  look  on  them  by  an  eye  of  faith. 
The  Gofpds  joy  is  thy  joy ,  that  haft  but  faith    to  receive 

it. 

Fourthly,  the  glad-tidings  of  the  Gofpel  were  unheard  of ,  un- 
lookt  for  by  the  Sonnesofmen.,  fuch  news  it  brings,  as  never 
could  have  entred  into  the  heart  of  man  t<  conceive,  till  God  un- 
lockt  the  cabinet  of  his  own  good   pleafure,  and   revealed  the 
counfel  of  his  will,  wherein  this  myfterious  price  o!  love  to  fallen 
man,  lay  hid  far  enough  from  the  pr\  ing  eye  of  the  moft  quick- 
fighted  Angel  inheaven,much  more  from  man  himfel,  who  could 
read  in  his  own  guilty  confeience  within,  and  fpdl  from  the  Co- 
venant without  (now  broken  by  him  )  nothing  but  his  cenain 
docme and  damnation.  Sothattheftrft  Gofpel-Sermon  preacht 
by  God  himfelf  to  Ad.:m,  anticipated  all  thoughts  of  fuch  a  thing 
intended  to  hirn.    O  who  can  conceive  (  but  one  that  hath  really 
felt  the  terfoursc  fan  approaching  hell  in  hisdefpairingfoul)how 
joyous  the  tydings  of  Gofpel  mercy  is  to  a  poor  foul  ,  dwelling 
amidft  the  black  thoughts  of  defpair ,    and  bordering  on   the 
very  marches  of  the  region  ofutterdarknefs?  Story  tells  us  of  a 
Noble  man  of  our  Nation  in  K.  Hen.  8.  reign,  to  whom  a   par- 
don was  fent  a  few  houres  before  he  fbould  have  been  beheaded , 
which(being  not  at  all  expected  by  him)did  fo  tranfport  him  that 
he  died  for  ;oy.     And  if  the  veffel   of  our  nature  be  fo  weakly 
hoopt,that  the  wine  of  fuch  an  inferior  joy  breaks  it  j  how  then 
could  it  poffibly  be  able  to  bear  the  full  joy  of  the  Gofpel  tydings 
which  doth  as  far  exceed  this,as  the  mercy  of  God  doth  the  mccy 
of  a  mortal  man  ,  and  as  the  deliverance  from  an  eternal  death  in 
hell,doth  a  deliverance  from  a  temporary  death,which  is  gone  be- 
fore the  pain  can  well  be  felt  ? 
Fifthlj,  and  laftly,  the  glad  tydings  of  the  Gofpel  are  certainly 

true; 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  321 

crue.  Ic  is  no  flying  report,  cryedup  to  day,  and  like  to  be 
croft  to  morrow  ;  not  news  that  is  in  every  ones  mouth,but  none 
can  tell  whence  it  came,  and  who  the  anthour  of  it,  we  have  it 
from  a  good  hand,  God  himfelf,  to  whom  it  is  impoffblc  to  lyey  he 
from  heaven  voucheth  \ifthu  is  my  beloved  Son^hear  him^Luk. 
p.  VVh.it  were  all  thofe  miracles  which  Chrift  wrought,but  rati- 
fications of  the  truth  of  the  Gofpel  ?  thofe  wretches  that  denied 
the  truth  of  Chrifts  doctrine, were  forced  many  times  to  acknow- 
ledge the  Divinity  of  hi?  Miracles;  which  is  a  pretty  piece  of  non- 
fenfe,an \  declares  the  abfurdiry  of  rheir  unbelief  to  all  the  world. 
Themir.icJes  were  to  theGotpel  as  fealstoa  writing.  They 
could  not  deny  God  to  be  in  the  miracles,  and  yet  they  could  not 
fee  him  in  the  Doitrine ;  as  if  God  would  fet  his  leal  to  an  un- 
truth. Here  (XhriftiarfsJ  is  that  which  fills  up  the  joy  of  this 
good  news  the  Gofpel  brings  •  that  we  may  lay  our  lives  upon 
the  truth  of  it,  it  will  never  deceive  any  the  lay  the  weight 
of  their  confidence  on  it.  7 I  is  is  af.i  thf.4  fiylng,and  worthy  of 
all  acceptation^ hat  Jefm  Chr'fi  came  into  the  vro  'Id  to  fa  ve  firmer  sy 
I  Tim.  i  .1  c.  This  bridge  which  the  Gofpel  lays  over  the  gulf  of 
Gods  wrath  for  poor  finners  to  paffe  fro m  their  fins  into  the 
favour  of  God  here,and  Kingdome  of  Go  J  hereaftcr,is  fupporr- 
ed  with  no  other  arches,  than  the  wifdome,  power,  mercy  and 
faithfulnefle  of  God  ;  loth  it  the  believing  foul  needs  not  fear, 
till  it  fees  thefe  bowe  or  break.lt  is  called  the  ever  I  a  sling  GTfel, 
Rev.  14.  i(5.  When  heaven  and  earth  go  to  wrack,not  the 
leaft  lota  or  tide  of  any  promife  of  the  Gofpel  fhall  be  buried 
in  their  mines.  The  U'o  d  of  the  Led  en  in  eth  fjr  eve*, and  this 
is  the  Wori,  which  by  the  (j off  el  is  pre.'.chei  to  you  ,  I  Pet. 
I.2C. 

Vf?  1.  Pity  thofe  thar  never  heard  word  of  this  good  news;  %jfe  1 
fuch  there  are  in  the  world,  whole  Nations,  with  whom  the  day 
is  notyetbroke,buta  difmal  night  of  ignorance  and  barbarifme 
continues  to  be  liretched  over  them  ;  vvhofe  forlorne  fouls  are 
under  a  continual  maflacrc  from  the  bloody  butcher  of  hell?  an 
eaiie  conrjueft  (God  knows)  that  foul  fiend  makes  of  them; who 
lays  his  cruel  knife  to  thfcir  throats,  and  meets  with  no  refift- 
anre;  b ;caufe he findes them fa(t  afleep  in  ignorance,  utterly 
deftituteof  that  light  which  can  alone  difcover  a  way  to  efcape 
the  hands  of  thisdeftroyer.     What  heart  (that  ever  tailed  the 

T  t  fweet- 


2  2a  ?  he  Oofpel  of  peace . 

fweetneiTe  of  Gofpel-grace  )  trembles  not  at  their  dex  lored 
ftate  ?  yen,  doth  not  ftand  altonifhcd  at  the  difference  or'  Gods 
difpenlations  to  them  and  us  ?  herd,  why  iv'tlt  t! ou  man'ifeft  thy 
felf  touted  not  to  the  world  ?  God  pardon  the  unmerciful  nets 
of  our  hearts,  that  we  can  weep  no  more  over  them.     Truly  we 
do  not  live  fo  farre  from  the  CAtoires  and  Ipdiavs^but  we  may 
(by  not  pitying  of  them,  praying  for  them.andearneftdefiring 
their  converfion  )  befmear  our  felves  with  the  guilt  of  their  fouls 
blood,which  is  lied  continually  by  the  deftroyer  of  man-kinde. 
O  how  feldome  is  their  miferable  condition  the  companion  of 
our  forrowful  thoughts  ?  and  their  converfion  the  fubje£t.  of  our 
prayers  and  defires  ?  There  have  be~n,  alas,  in  the  world,more 
counfels  how  to  eafe  them  of  their  gold,  than  enrich  them  with 
the  treafure  of  the  Gofrel  i  How  to  get  their  land,  than  how  to 
fave  their  fouls.     But  the  time  is  coming,when  winning  fouls 
will  be  found  more  honourable  than  conquering  Nations.  Well 
Chrirtian,  though  thou  can 'ft  not  impart  to  them  what  God  hath 
laid  on  thy  trencher ;  yetasthou  fit'ftatthefeaftoftheGofpel, 
think  of  thofe  poo:  fouls  and  that  compaAlonately, who  ftarve 
to  death  for  want  of  that  bread,  with  which  thou  art  fed  unto, 
eiernal  life.There  is  an  opinion  which  fome  have  lately  taken  up, 
that  the  Heathens  may  fpell  Chriii  out  of  the  Sun,  Moon  &  Stars; 
thefe  may  feem  kinder  than  others  have  been  to  themubutlwifh  it 
dothnot  make  them  more  cruel  to  themin  the  end. I  mean  by  not 
praying  fo  heartily  forGofpel-hght  to  arife  among  them;as  thofe 
mult  needs  do,who  believe  them  under  a  fid  necclTity  of  perifh- 
ing  without  it  •  when  a  Garrifon  is  judged  pretty  well  ftored  with 
p:  ovihon  for  its  defence,  it  is  an  occahon,that  relief  and  fuccour 
«o:r  es  the  flower  to  ir.     And  I  wifh  Satan  had  not  fuch  a  defign 
againfl  thofe  forlorn  fouls  in  this  principle  ;  if  fuch  a  leffon  were 
to  be  got  by  the  Stars,we  fhould  ere  this  have  heard  of  fome  that 
had  learn't  it.  Indeed  I  finde  a  Star  led  the  wife  men  to  Chritt  ; 
but  they  hid  a  heavenly  Preacher  to  open  the  text  to  them,  or 
elfe  they  would  never  have  underftood  it. 


CHAP. 


The  Gofpel  o^  peace.  333 


CHAP.    II. 

A  fomentation  for  the  unhptde  welcome  that  GofpeL 
newsfindes  in  the  world  ■>  with  two  or  three  fad 
grounds  of  fear  as  tout  in  this  Nation J, aken  from 
the  prefent  entertainment  the  Gofpel  hath  among 
us^with  a  double  Exhortation  to  the  Satnts  to  re- 
Joyce  in  this  joyous  meffage  ,  and  chiefly 
in  this. 


SECT.     I. 

A  Sad  lamentation  may  be  here  taken  up,  that  fo  good  Vfe  z. 
news  fhould  have  fuch  ill  welcome,  as  the  Gofpel  com- 
monly rinds  in  the  wo  rid.  When  the  tydings  was  firft  told  at  fern- 
faicm^oi  a  Saviour  being  born., one  would  have  thought(efpecial~ 
ly  if  we  contider  that  the  Scripture  reckoning  was  now  out,  for 
the  birth  of  the  Mellias,and  they  big  with  expectation  of  his  com- 
ing )  rhat  all  hearts  fhould  have  Jeap'c  within  them  for  joy  at 
the  news  to  fee  their  hopes  lb  happily  delivered  and  accom- 
plifh't;  but  behold  the  clcai  contrary.  Chrilts  coming  proves 
matter  of  trouble  and  difhfte  to  them  •,  they  take  the  alarum  at 
his  birth,  as'if  an  enemy,  adeltroyer,  ,'  not  a  Saviour)  were 
landed  in  their  Coaft,and  as  [ac\\J  I  erod  ^ozs  out  again!!  him,and 
makes  hi  n  flee  the  Countrey.  But  polTibly,  though  at  prefent 
they  (tumble  at  the  meannefleof  his  birth  and  parentage;  yet 
when  the  rays  of  his  Divinity  fhall  ihine  through  his  miracles, 
than  they  will  feligiouTty  worjnip  him,whom  now  they  contemn; 

Tt  2  when 


^  2  -  The  Gtfjpe/  ef peace , 


when  he  comes  forth  into  his  publick  Miniftry,  opens  his  cpm- 
miifion,  and  lliews  his  authority  ;  yea,  with  his  own  blefled  lips 
tells  the  joyful  melfage  he  brings  from  his  Fat  her  unto  the  ions 
of  men  ;  then  iurely  they  will  dearly  love  his  perfon,and  thank- 
fully embrace,yea,greedily  drink  in  the  glad-tydings  of  lalvation 
which  he  preacheth  to  them  :  No,they  gerhh*  in  their  curled  un- 
belief, and  obliinate  rejecting  of  him;    though    the  Scripture 
(  which  they  feem'd  to  adore  )  bear  lo  full  a  teitimony  for  Chrift, 
that  it  accufeth  them  to  their  own  conferences,  yet  they  will 
have  none  of  him.    ChriU  tells  them  lb  much,  Job.  ^.  ;.p,  40. 
Scrcb tic  -  cr'.ftHres  for  in  them  )<■  thinly  je  have  eternal  lifted 
ti. ey  ,i? e  tl.ey  » h  ch  tejtjfie  of  me  j   ^Andje  will  not  come  unxo  zwc, 
that  )§  migit  have  life;  lite  they  deiired,  yet  willlofe  it  rather 
than  come  to  him  for  it.   And  is  the  world  now  amended  ?.  doth 
Chriit  in  his  Gospel  meet  with  any  kinder  ufage  at  the  hands 
of  moit  >  the  note  that  Chrift  fings  is  Hill  the  lame,  £  erne  urjo 
me  thiit  y ot*  may  have  ,'ifc.  The  wortt  hurt  Chrui  does  poor  foils 
that  come  unto  him, is  to  put  them  into  a  fhte  of  life  and  falva  - 
tion  ;  and  yet  where  is  the perfon  that  likes  the  offer?  O  'tis 
other  news  that  men  generally  Hften  after.-  this  makes   the. 
Exchange,  the  Market-place  lo  full,  and  the  Church  fa  thin  and 
empty/  Moll  expect  to  hear  their  belt  news  from  the  world  ; 
they  look  upon  the  news  of  the  Gofpel  as  forreign,    and  that 
which  doth  not  fo  much  concern  them  (  at  leaft  at  prefent )  'tis 
time  enough  to  minde  this,  when  they  are  going  into  another 
world.    Alas,  the  Gofpel  is  not  accommodated  to  their  carnal 
defires,  it  tells  them  of  no  fields  and  vine-yards  it  hath  to  give, 
it  invites  them  not  with  the  gayeties  of  worldly  honours  and 
pleafures;  had  ChritUn  his  Gofpel  but  gratified  the  cravings  of 
mens  lulls  «\  ith  a  few  promifes  for  thefe  things  (  though  he  had 
promiled  lefs  for  another  world)the  news  would  have  gone  down 
better  with  thefe  fots,who  had  rather  hear  one  prophecy  of  wine 
and  Mrong drink,  than  preach  of  heaven    it  felt.     Truly,  they 
are  but  a  very  few  (  and  thofe  fufliciently  jeer'd  for  their  pains  ) 
that  like  the  meilage  of  theGofpel  fo  well  as  to  receive  it  cordial- 
ly into  their  hearts ;  if  any  one  does  but  give  entertainment  to 
Chrift,  and  it  be  known,  what  an  alarum  does  it  give  to  all  his 
carnal  neighbours  ?   who   if  they  do   not    prefently   befet 
his  houfe,  (  as  the  Sodmites  did  Lots  )  yet  fet  fome  brand  of 

fcorn 


the  Gofpel  of  peace.  325 

fcorn  u}:on  him;yea,make  account  they  have  now  reafon  enough 
to  defpife  and  hate  him,how  well  foever  they  Joved  him  before. 
O  what  will  God  co  with  this  degenerate  age  we  live  in?  O 
£ ftoUn&^Englwd ?l  fear  lb'.ne  fad  judgment  or  other  bodes  thee! 
If  luch  glad-tydings  as  the  Gofpel  brings  be  rejected,  fad  news 
cannot  be  far  off,  I  cannot  think  of  leife  than  of  a  departing 
Gofpel.  God  never  made  fuc ha  fettle  rient  of  his  Gofpel  a- 
mong  any  people,  but  he  could  remove  it  from  them.  He 
co. lies  but  upon  likin^and  will  he  (tay, "where  he  is  not  welcome?  - 
who  will,  that  h.uh  elie-where  to  go?  It  is  high  time  for  the 
Merchant  to  pack  up  and  be  gone,  when  few  or  none  will  buy  j 
iuy,when  inftead  ot'  buyin^,they  will  not  fuffer  him  to  be  quiet 
in  hfs  ("hop,  but  th  ow  Hones  at  him,and  dirt  on  his  richer  com- 
modities. Do  we  not  fee  the  names  cf  Chriits  faithful  meffen- 
gers  bleeding  at  this  day  under  the  reproaches  that  fliefo  thick 
about  their  ears?  Are  not  the  precioufelt  truths  of  the  Go- 
fpel a lmolt  covered  with  the  mire  and  dirt  of  erroursand  blafr 
phemies,  which  men  of  corrupt  mindes  (fet  on  work  by  the  Di~ 
vel  himfdl)have  rake  J  out  of  every  filthy  puddle  and  link  of  old 
hereticks,  and  thrown  on  the  face  of  Chrift  and  his  Gofpel! 
An  i  where  is  the  hand  fo  kinde,  as  to  wipe  off  that  which  they 
throw  on?  the  heart  fo  valiant  for  the  truth,  that  will  flop 
thefe  foule  mouths  from  fpitting  their  venome  againltChrirt  and 
his  Gofpel  ?  if  any  thing  be  done  of  this  kind,  alas.'tis  fo  faint- 
ly ,  that  they  gather  heart  by  it  ;  judice  is  fo  favourably 
fprinkled,  like  a  few  drops  upon  fire^Jiat  it  rather  encreafeth  the 
flame  of  their  rage  againft  the  truth,  than  quencheth  it.  A 
Prince  calls  not  home  his  Ambaflador  for  every  afront  that  is 
offered  him  in  the  ftreets ;  but  when  he  is  afronted  and  can  have 
no  redrefllfor  the  wrong. 


SECT.    II, 

Ohjeft.  But  fome  may  fayyhough  it  cannot  be  denied  that  the     n, . 
Gofpel  hath  found  very  unkinde  entertainment  by  many  among      Ui;Jf^'  ■ 
us,and  efpecially  of  late  years,fince  a  fpirit  of  errour  hath  fo  fadly 
prevailed  in  the  Land ;  yet  make  us  not  worfe  than  we  are.There 

is 


526  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


1. 


is,bleffed  be  God,a  remnant  of  gracious  fouls  are  yet  to  be  found, 
to  whom  ChrifHs  precious ;  who  gladly  embrace  the  mefTage  of 
die  Gofpel,and  weep  in  fecret  for  the  contempt  that  is  caft  upon 
it  by  menof  corrupt  minds  and  profane  hearts ;  and  therefore  we 
hope  we  are  nor  in  fuch  imminent  danger  of  lofing  the  Gofpel 
as  your  fears  fuggeft. 
Anfrv.  v4n[v?\i  there  ware  not  fuch  a  fprinkling  of  Saints  among  us, 

our  cafe  were  indeed  defperate,  conclnfum  effit  de  nobis.  The 
fhades  of  that  difmal  night  would  quickly  be  upon  us :  Thefe  are 
they  that  have  held  the  Gofpel  thus  long  among  us.  Chrift  had, 
as  to  his  Gofpel-prefence  been  gone  ere  this,  had  not  thefe  hung 
about  his  legs,  and  with  their  llrong  cries  and  prayers  entreated 
his  ftay.  But  there  are  a  few  considerations  as  to  thefe,  which 
ferioufly  weighed,  will  not  leave  us  without  fome  tremblings  of 
-heart. 

Firft,  confider  what  little  proportion  ( as  to  the  number 
I  mean  )  do  thefe  that  embrace  the  Gofpel,  bear  with  thofe  that 
continue  to  reject  it;  thofe  that  defire  to  keep  Chrilt  among  us, 
and  thofe  that  wifh  him  gone,  and  would  gladly  be  rid  of  him. 
Were  it  put'to  the  vote,  would  not  they  carry  it  by  thcufands 
of  thoufands,  that  care  not  whether  we  have  a  Gofpel  or  not  ? 
Anddothit  notproihecy  fadly,  when  the  oddes  is  fo  great  ?  In 
all  the  departures  of  God  from  a  people,  there  were  ever  fome 
holy  ones  mingled  amongft  the  rout  of  finners.     S.irdis  had  her 
few  n,imes  wmch  had  not  defiled  their  garments ;    but  yet  the 
candleftick^  was  removed.  All  that  they  could  ret  was  a  promife 
for  themfelves  in  particular,  'Aju.;.^.  I  hey  frail  ifnlk^with  me 
in  white  ;  but  no  prote&ion-for  the  Church.  God  can  pu'l  down 
the  houfe,  and  provide  well  for  his  Saints  alio,  that  he  fifl&s 
there.     A  few  voicesare  ealily  drown 'd  in  the  out-cry  of  a  mul- 
titude; a'few  pints  of  wine  are  hardly  tailed  in  a  Tun  of  water  : 
And  a  little  number  of  Saints  can  do  fomeames  b.;t  little  to  the 
faying  of  a  wretched  people  ajftoijg  whom  they  live  ;  poifibly  as 
in  a  weak  body,  w  here  the  difeale  hath  g6t  the  ma  icry,  nature 
putting  forth  us  fummam  coqatMm*  its  utmoft  Hreni>th,may  keep 
life  awhile  in  the  body  fome  days  or  weeks ,  but  caivot  long 
without  fome  help  to  evacuate  the  diflemper  ;   fo  a  few  Saints, 
fluit  up  in  a  degenerate  age  amongft  an  ungodly  Chrift-defpifing 
people,  may  awhile  prorogue  the  judgment,    and  reprieve  a 

while 


The  Gojpel  of  peace.  337 


while  the  lite  of  fuch  a. people;  bur  if  there  be  no  change 
made  upon  them  for  the  better,  ruine  mutt  needs  break  in  upon 
them. 

Secondly,  confider  of  thefe  few  gracious  ones  found  amongft  2. 

us,  that  embrace  the-GoDcl ;  how  many  are  new  converts, fuch 
1  mean  asthe  Gofpel  hath  of  Jatedayes  won  roChrift?  Iama- 
fraid  you  will  flnde  this  little  number  of  Saints  chiefly  to  confift 
of  old  1  ifciJles,  fuch  as  were  wrought  upon  many  years  frnce. 
Alas,  the  womb  of  the  Gofpel  hath  been  in  a  great  meafure  fhut 
up  of  l.ue,  as  to  the  bringing  forth  of  fouls  by  a  thorow  folid 
work  of  conveifion.  Indeed,if  they  may  paffe  for  converts,rhat- 
baptize  themfelves  into  a  new  way  and  form  of  worfhip  ;  or  that 
begin  their  Religion  with  a  tenet  and  an  opinion;  we  have  more 
than  a  good  many  to  fhew  of  thefe  ;  but  in  this  old  age  of  En- 
o lands  withered  profeAion,how  great  a  rarity  is  afincere  con- 
vert? we  cannot  deny,  but  God  is  gracioufly  pleafed  to  bring 
the  pangs  of  the  new  birth  now  and  then  upon  fome  poor  fouls 
in  our  AtVemblies  ( thas-&sdefpifed  fervantsmay  have  his  feal 
to  confirme  their  Miniftery,  and  flop  thofe  mouths  which  are  fo 
fcornfully  open'd  againft  it;)yet  aias,it  h  but  here  and  there  one; 
and  doth  not  this  prophefie  fadly  to  this  Nation?  I  am  fure,when 
vye  fee  a  Tree  that  ufed  to  ftand  thick\yith  fruit,  now  bring  forth 
but  little,  may  be  an  apple  on  this  bough,  and  another  on  that, 
we  look  upon  it  as  a  dying  tree.  Leah  comforted  her  felf  from 
her  f ruitfulnefle,t/j<7f  therefore  her  I.  usband  would  love  her^and 
cleave  to  /ur,Gen.  29.  24.  may  we  not  on  the  contrary  fear, 
that  God  will  not  love,  but  leave  a  people  when  they  grow  bar- 
ren under  the  means  of  grace  ? God  threatens  as  much,fer.  6.  8- 
he  inflmtted  O  fertifalemyleft  my  foul  depart  from  tkeeymd  if 
Gods  foul  departs,  then  he  is  upon  his  remove,  as  to  his  vinble 
prefence  alfo  ;  fo  indeed  it  follows,  left  I  make  thee  de folate y  a 
land  not  inhabited.  O  my  brethren,  thofe  golden  dayes  of  the 
Gofpel  are  over  when  converts  came  flying  as  a  cloud,  as  the 
Doves  to  their  windows  in  flocks.  Now  Gofpel-news  grows 
ftale,fevv  are  taken  with  it.  Though  a  Kingdome  hath  much  ttea- 
fure  and  riches  in  it ;  yet  if  trade  ceafe,no  new  bullion  comes  in, 
nor  Merchandife  be  imported ;  it  fpends  upon  its  old  flock,  and 
muft  needs  in  time  decay  ;  our  old  ftore  of  Saints  (the  treafure  of 
their  times)  wears  away  apace \  what  will  become  of  us,if  no  new 

ones 


3  2  8  The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


ones  come  in  their  room  ?  Alas,  when  our  burials  are  more 
than  our  births,  we  mult  needs  be  ontheloiinghand.There 
is  a  fad  lilt  of  holy  names  taken  away  from  us.-  but  where  are 
they  which  are  borne  to  God  ?  If  the  good  go/  and  thofc  which 
are  left  continue  bad ;  yea,  become  worfe  and  worfe,  we  have 
reafon  to  fear  thac  God  is  clearing  the  ground,  and  making  vvay 
for  a  judgment. 

Thirdly,  confider  the  unhappy  contentions  and  divisions  that 
are  found  among  the  people  of  God,  yet  left  upon  the  place; 
thefe  prophecy  fadly  the  Lord  knows.  Contentions  ever  por- 
tended ill.  The  remarkable  departures  of  God  ('recorded  in  Scri- 
pture )from  the  Church  of  the  fexsjouni  them  wofully  divided 
and  crumbled  into  parties.  And  the  tsffia*  Churches  no  lefs. 
Chrift  lets  up  the  light  of  his  Gofpel  to  walk  and  work  by,  not 
to  fight  and  wrangle :  and  therefore  it  were  no  wonder  at  all,  if 
he  ftould  put  it  out,  and  lo  end  the  difpute :  If  thefe  ftormes 
which  have  been  of  late  years  upon  us  (and  are  not  yet  off) 
had  but  made  Ch  iftians,  as  that  did  the  Difciples^^r^^.^s.ply 
their  oare,  and  lovingly  row  all  one  way,  it  had  been  happy; 
we  might  then  have  expected  Chritt  to  co  ne  w  alking  towards  us 
in  mercy ,and  help  us  fafe  to  Land  ;  but  when  we  throw  away  the 
oar,and  fall  a  fcuffiin;in  the  fhip,  while  the  wind  continues  loud 
about  us;truly  we  are  more  like  to  drive  Chri.t  from  us,  than  in- 
vite him  to  us ;  we  are  in  a  more  probable  way  of  finkinj,  than 
faving  the  ihip  and  our  ielves  in  it. 


SECT.    III. 

*y  r  ,  Vfe  3 .  A  word  of  Exhortation,and  firft  to  you  who  yet  have 
not  clofed  with  the  terms  of  the  GofpeI;He  pemvaded  to  receive 
the  meflage  of  the  Gofpel  kindly,  believintly  into  your  hearts; 
'Tis  the  belt  news  you  can  fend  b:ck  to  heaven,  as  a  g-atulatory 
return  for  the  glad-tydings  that  the  Gofpel  b:in;s  from  thence. 
Thy  embracing  Chi  iltpreach't  to  thee  in  the  Gofpel,  will  b_  as 
welcome  news  to  heaven(I  can  tell  theeyas  the  tydings  of  Chriit 
and  falvation  through  hi  n  can  be  to  chec,  /  ere  is  joy  in  heaven 
at  the  convcrfton  o>  a  finmr.Ht3i\'tr\  foon  rings  of  f  his. The  An- 
gels that  fang  Chriit  into  the  world,  will  not  want  a  fong  when 

he 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  22  a 


he  is  received  into  thy  heart ,  for  he  came  into  the  world  for  this 
end.    Chrift  defcended  when  he  came  into  the  wcrld,  but  now 
heafcends:  That  was  an  aft  of  his  humiliation,  this  of  his  exal- 
tation.    The  higheft  created  Throne  that  God  can  fit  in ,  is  the 
foul  of  a  beleever  j  no  wonder  then ,  that  Chrift  calls  all  his 
friends  to  joy  with  him  at  a  fouls  return  to  him  and  reception  of 
him,  Lukj  15.9.  What  joy  is  now  in  heaven  upon  thisoccafi  n, 
we  may  colled  from  the  joy  it  drew  from  Chrift  when  on  earth. 
It  was  fome  great  good  news  that  could  wring  a  fmile  then  from 
Chrift ,  or  tune  his  Spirit  into  a  jov  ful  note  ,  who  was  a  man  of 
forrows,  and  indeed  came  into  the  world  to  be  fo ;  yet  when  his 
difciples  (whom  he  had  fenc  forth  to  preach  the  Gofpel) returned 
with  news  of  fome  victorious  fuccefle  of  their  labours,     in 
that  hour  Jefus  rejoycedin  Sprit,  And  [aid,  1  thanfythee  O  Father* 
Luke  i o.  2i-  of  all  the  houresof  his  life,  thatis  the  houre, where- 
in Chrift  would  expreiTe  his  joy-,  which  (with  the  care  of  the 
Spirit  to  record  this  paflfagein  the  Hiftory  of  Chrifts  life  )  (hews, 
that  Chrift  had  an  efpecial  defigne  in  that  expreftion  of  his  joy  at 
that  cimcjand  what  could  it  be,  but  to  let  us  know,  how  much  his 
heart  was  fet  upon  this  work  of  faving  fouls  ?  and  that  when  he 
{hould  be  gone  to  heaven ,  if  we  meant  to  fend  any  joyful  news 
to  him  thither ,  it  (hould  be  of  the  profperous  and  .victorious 
fuccefTe  the  Gofpel  hath  over  our  hearts.  This,  this  which  could 
make  him  re  Joyce  in  the  midft  of  all  his  forrows  here  on  earth, 
muft  needs  be  more  joyous  to  him  in  heaven,  now  where  he  hath 
no  bicternefTe  from  his  own  fufferings  (which  are  all  healed,  paft 
and  gone)  to  mingle  with  the  joy  of  this  news;  And,  if  the 
kinde  reception  of  the  Cofpel,  be  fuch  joyful  hews  to  him  ^  you 
may  eafily  conceive  ,  how  diftaft  ful  the  rejecting  of  it  is  to  him. 
As  he  rejoyced  in  Spirit  to  hear  the  Gofpel  prevail'd-,fo  he  cannot 
but  be  angry,  when  it  meets  with  a  repulfe  from  the  unbelieving 
world ,  Luke  M-  21,  we  finde  the  Alafier  ef  the  hon[e  (that  is 
Chrift)  angry,  when  his  fervants  fent  to  invite  his  guefts  (that  is, 
preach  the  Gofpel  J  return  with  a  denial  from  thofe  that  were 
bidden/or.fo  their  mannerly  excufes  were  interpreted  by  Chrift, 
yea  fo  angry  that  he  claps  a  fearful  doome  upon  them;  not  one  of  , 

thofe  invited  /hall  tafie  of  my  fopper.     God  can  leaft  bear  any  '.. 

contempt  caft  upon  his  grace.    The  Jem  though  they  had  many 

U-U  grie- 


3  j  o  TbeGoJpel  ofpejce. 

grievous  calamities  befei  them  for  their  idolatries  and  other  fins; 
yet  never  any  like  that ,  which  the  rejecting  (  hrift  brought 
uponthemi  under  thofe  they  relented,  but  under  this  they  har- 
deii'4  They  would  not  come  when  the  flipper  was  on  the  tab^ 
and  therefore  the  cloath  is  drawn,and  they  g0  fupperleffe  to  bed, 
and  die  in  their  fanes-  ^  while  they  (hut  the  door  cf  their  hearts 
againft  Chrift,  this  padlock  (as  I  may  lo  call  it )  of  judiciary  im- 
penitence is  fattened  to  it.  C  hrift  needs  take  no  other  revenge 
on  a  foul  for  its  refufin  g  him,  to  make  ic  miferable  to  the  height, 
than  to  condemn  fuch  a  one  to  have  its  own  defire  •  Chrift-thou 
wilt  not,  Chrift  therefore  thou  (halt  not  have.  O unhappy  foul 
thou  .'  that  haft  offers  of  Chrift,  but  dieft  without  Chrift  ?  Thou 
goeft  with  thy  full  lading  to  damnation;  none  fink  fo  deep  in  hell, 
as  thofe  that  fall  into  it,  with  a  ftumble  at  Chrift.  7  hat  Gofpel 
which  brings  now  good  news,  will ,  when  thou  (halt  have  a  re- 
petition Sermon  of  it  at  the  great  day,  bring  the  heavieft  tydings 
with  it  that  ever  thy  ears  heard. 


SEcr.  iv. 

2.  Secondly,  to  you  who  have  entertainM  the  meflagc  of  the 

Gofpel. 

i .  Firft,  re  Joyce  at  the  news^  glad  tydings,  and  fid  hearts,  do  not 

well  together  .■  when  we  fee  one  heavie  and  forrowful ;  we  ask 
him,  what  ill  news  he  hath  heard.  Chriftian,what  ill  news  hath 
Chrift  brought  from  heaven  with  him,  that  makes  thee  walk  with 
Pfil.ijt.i6.  thy  folded  armes,  and  penfive  countenance  ?  'pfaU  132. 16.  To 
fee  a  wicked  man  merry  and  Jocund,  or  a  Chriftian  fad  and  dum- 
pifh,  is  alike  uncomely.  A  feaft  is  made  for  laughter ,  faith  Solo- 
men^  Ecclef.  1  o.  1 9. 1  am  fure  God  intended  his  peoples  joy  in  the 
feaft  of  the  Gofpel  j  Mourners  were  not  to  fit  at  Gods  table, 
Deut  76.  Truly  the  Saints  heavineflc  reflects  unkindly  upon  God 
himfelf •  we  do  not  commend  hischeere,  if  it  doth  not  chearus. 
What  faith  the  world?  The  Ch;iftianslifeisbuta  melancholy 
walk ,  fure  thinks  the  carnal  wretch,  it  is  a  dry  feaft  they  fit  at, 
where  fo  little  wine  of  joy  is  drunk.  And  wilt  thou  confirm  them 


in 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  g  3  I 


in  this  their  opinion,  C'briftian?  fhall  they  have  thy  example  to 
produce  againft  Chrift  and  his  Word  ,  which  promife  peace  and 
joy  to  all  that  will  come  to  this  fcaft  t  O  God  forbid ,  that  thy 
converfation,  wherein  thou  art  to  hold  forth  the  Word  of  life, 
to  live  in  the  eyes  of  the  world, and  which  ought  to  he  as  a  Com- 
ment or  gloiTe  upon  the  Word,  to  clear  up  the  truth  and  reality 
of  it  to  others  j  that  this  fhould  fo  difagree  from  the  Text,  as 
to  make  the  gl  jdfome  tydings  fpoken  of  in  it,  more  difputed  and 
queftion'd  in  the  thoughts  of  the  unbelieving  world  than  before. 
It  is  an  errour  I  confeffc  ,  and  that  a  grofTe  one  wh;ch  the  Pa- 
pifls  teach  •,  that  we  cannot  know  the  Scriprures  to  be  the 
WTord  of  God,  but  by  the  teftimony  of  the  Church,  yet  it  is  none 
to  fay  ,  that  a  practical  teftimony  from  the  Saints  lives,  hath 
great  authority  over  the  confeiences  of  men  ,  to  convince  them 
of  the  truth  of  the  Gofpel.  Now  they'l  believe  *cis  good  news 
indeed  the  Gofpel  brings,  when  they  can  read  it  in  your  chearful 
lives  i  But  when  they  obferve  C  hriftians  fad  wi:h  this  cup  of  fal- 
vation  in  their  hands,  truly  they  fufped  the  wine  in  it  is  not  fo 
good  as  the  preachers  commend  it  to  them  for  •  (hould  men  fee 
all  that  trade  to  the  Indies ,  come  home  poorer  than  they  wenr  ■ 
it  would  be  hard  to  perfwade  others  to  venture  thither,  for  all 
the  golden  mountains  faidcobe  there.  OChriftians,  let  the 
world  fee  you  are  not  lofersin  your  joy,fince  you  have  been  ac- 
quainted with  the  Gofpel  ;  give  not  them  caufe  to  think  by  your 
uncomfortable  walking  ,  chat  when  they  turn  C  hriftians ,  they 
muftbidall  joy  farewel ,  and  refolve  tofpend  their  dayes  in  a 
houfe  of  mourning. 

Secondly,is  the  Gofpel  a  mefTage  of  glad  tydings?  do  not  t'en 
for  fhame,Chriftian,  runneonthe  worlds  fcore  by  taking  up  any 
of  its  carnal  joy  -9  Thou  necd'ft  not  go  out  of  Gods  houfe  to  be 
merry,  Here's  joy  enough  in  the  glad  tydings  of  the  Gofpel, more 
than  thou  canft  fpend ,  though  thou  fhouldll  live  at  an  higher 
rate  than  thoudoeft  or  can'ft  here  on  earth.  Abraham  would 
not  take  fo  much  as  a  thread,  or  flioe-latchet  from  the  King  of 
Sodom,  C/cn  14.  left  be  Jhonld  fay  ,  that  he  made  Abraham  rich  ; 
A  Chriftian  ftiould  deny  himfelf  of  the  worlds  joy  and  delights  •, 
left  they  fay ,  thefeChriftians  draw  their  joy  out  of  our  cifterne. 
The  channel  is  cut  out  of  the  Spirit  of  God,  in  which  he  would 
have  his  Saints  joy  runne .     Jfanj  be  merry ,  let  himftng  Pfiilmes . 

Uu  2  Let 


2  q  a  The  Gofpel  of  peace . 


r.n.cs  j.  1 3  ■ 


Let  the  l'ubjed  of  his  mirth  be  fpiritual,  as  on  the  other  hand, 
Jf  he  be  fie k^  let  him  pray  ;  a  fpiritual  vent  is  given  to  both  affe- 
ctions of  forrow  and  joy.      /Jitter  Indir  ganeo^  alitir  Princepi.  A 
frinces  recreation  muft  not  be  like  Ruffians^  Nor  a  Chriftians  joy 
like  the  carnal  mans-,  if  ever  there  was  need  to  call  upon  Chri- 
ftians to  feed  the  lamp  of  their  joy  with  fpiritual  fewel,  holy  oyl, 
that  drops  from  a  Gofpel-  pi pe,now  the  time  is,wherin  profeflbrs 
do  fymbolize  with  the  world  in  their  outward  bravery,  junket- 
tings,  fafluons,    paftimes ,   and   are    fo  kinde  to  the  flefh 
in  allowing   of,  yea,    pleading   fo   much   for  a  carnal   li- 
be  ty  in  thefe  things ,  that  (hews  too  plainly  the  fpiritual  joy  to 
be  drawn  out  of  thefe  wells  of  falvation,  does  not  fatisfie  thcm;or 
elfe  they  would  not  make  up  their  draught  from  this  puddle  wa- 
ter ,  which  was  wont  to  be  thirfted  after,  enly  by  thofe,  that  had 
never  drunk  of  Chrifts  cup.  O  what  is  the  reafon,that  thofe,who 
would  pafle  for  Chriftians ,  forfake  this  pure  wine  of  Gofpel 
joy,  for  the  fophifticated  fluffe,  which  this  whore,  the  world  pre- 
fents  in  her  golden  cup  to  them  ?    Is  it  becaufe  the  glad- 
fome  mefTage  of  the  Gofpel  is  grown  ftale,and  fo  its  joy  (which 
once  fparklcd  in  the  preaching  of  it  ,as  generous  wine  doth  in  the 
cup  and  cheer'd  the  hearts  of  beleevers  with  ftrong  confolationsj 
hath  now  loft  itsfpirits  ?  or  can  that  pure  ftreame  of  fpiritual  joy, 
which  hath  run  fo  long  through  the  hearts  and  lives  of  the  Saints 
in  fo  many  generations,without  mingling  with  the  brackifh  water 
of  the  worlds  fenfual  pleafurcs,at  laft  fall  in  with  ihem,&  be  con- 
tent to  lofe  its  own  divine  nature  and  fweetnefle  in  fuch  a  fink  ? 
O  no  /  The  Gofpel  is  the  fame  it  was ;   the  joy  it  brings  as  fweet, 
and  brisk;as  fpiritual  and  pure  as  ever  it  was,and  will  be  as  long,as 
God&Chrift  continue  to  be  the  fame,out  of  whofc  bofom  of  love 
it  firft  flowed  ,  and  is  ftill  kd :  But  the  profellburs  of  this  Gofpel 
now  are  not  the  fame  with  thofe  holy  men  and  women  of  primi- 
tive times.  The  world  grows  old,  and  mens  affections  with  it  chill 
and  cold:,  we  have  not  our  tafte  fo  lively,  nor  our  fpirits  fo  chafte 
and  pure,  to  relifh  the  heavenly  viands  difht  forth  in  the  Gofpel. 
The  chearis  as  good  as  ever,but  the  guefts  are  worfe,we  are  grown 
debauched  in  our  judgements-,  and  corrupt  in  our  principles^  no 
wonder  then  if  carnal  in  our  joyes.  Errour  is  a  whore,  it  takes  a- 
way  the  heart  fromChrift  &  his  fpiritual  joys.  The  head  once  di- 
ftempcred,  foon  affects  the  hcart,and  by  dropping  the  malignity 

of 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  2  ^ 


of  its  principles  upon  it,poifons  it  with  carnal  afftdiors.  and  car- 
nal affections  cannot  fare  with  anv  other,  than  proiTe  and  carnal 
joyes.     Here,  here  is  the  rcot  of  the  raifery  of  our  times.  Hath 
not  ( think  you)  the  Devi  plaid  his  game  cunningly  among  us> 
who  by  his  inftruments  (transforming  themfelves  into  the  like- 
nelTe  of  Angels  oHlghc ;  Firft,  could  raife  fo  many  credulous 
fouls  intaa  fond  expectation  of  higher  at:amments  in  grace  and 
comfort  from  their  new  pretended  light,  than  ever  yet  the  bairns 
were  acquainted  with,  and  at  laft  to  make  them  fall  fblow,  be 
foreafonable,  (or  rather  unieafonab'e)  as  to  accept  inch  lenfual 
pleafures  and  joys  as  this  world  can  aford,  in  full  payment  for  all 
the  glorious  things  he  promifed  them  ?  Well  Sirs,  this  I  hope 
will  make  fomc  love  the  Gofpel  the  more,  and  (tick  clofer  to  it 
as  long  as  they  live.  O  Chriftians  blefle  God  for  the  glad  ty dings 
of  the  Gofpel  ,  and  never  lend  an  ea*  to  him,  that  would  be  tel- 
ling you  other  news,  except  you  mean  to  part  with  truth  to 
purchafe  a  lie-,  yea,let  it  make  you  careful  to  draw  all  your  com  - 
fort  and  Joy  from  the  G  of  pels  breaftj  when  a  carnal  heart  would 
be  merry,  he  doth  not  take  the  Bible  down  to  readein  thatj  he 
doth  not  go  into  the  company  of  the  promifes ,  and  walk  in  the 
meditation  of  them  ;  it  brings  no  joy  to  him  ,  to  think  of  Chrift 
or  heaven;  no,  he  takes  down  a  play-book  may  be,  feeks  fome 
jovial  company,  goes  to  the  Exchange  or  Market,  to  hear  what 
news  he  can  meet  with.  Every  one,  as  his  haunt  lies :  butftill  'tis 
from  the  world  he  expects  his  joy.     And  now  where  lies  thy 
road  Chriftian  ?  whether  doth  thy  foul  lead  thee  for  thy  joy  ? 
doeft  not  thou  go  to  the  Word,  and  read  there,  what  Chrift  has 
done  for  thee  on  earth ,  and  is  doing  for  thee  in  heaven  f  is  not 
the  throne  of  grace  the  Exchange^  to  which  thou  reforteft 
for  good  news  from  that  far  country ,heaven,where  all  thy  eftate 
lies,and  thy  beft  friends  live?  art  not  thou  liitening,what  pr  -mife 
hee'l  fpeak  peace  from  to  thy  foul  ?  if  fo,thou  haft  not  thy  name 
for  naught:  thou  art  a  Chriftian  indeed.     £>ni  litteris  additti 
fnmns ,  (faith  Erafmus)  ammi  Ujptudinem  a  fludiis  gravionltis 
contraElant)  abiifdem  Fludiii^fed  am&nhribiis  recreamus.  True  flu- 
dents,  that  love  their  book  indeed,  when  they  have,wearyM  their 
fpirits  with  ftudy,  can  recreate  them  again  with  ftudy ,  by  making 
a  diverfion  from  that  which  i9  fevere  and  knotty ,  to  fome  more 
facile  and  pleafant fujed*     Thus  the  true  Chriftian,  when  hts 

(pints 


2^4  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


fpirtts  are  worn  and  wafted  in  the  fevererexenifes/if  Chriftiani- 
ty,  fuch  as  are  falling  and  prayer,  wherein  he  affli&s  both  body 
and  foul  for  hisfinnes,  then  can  he  recover  them  atthefeaft  of 
Gods  love  in  Chrift,where  he  lees  his  water  turn'd  into  wine,  and 
the  tears  that  even  now  his  finnes  covered  his  face  withal,  wafhc 
oft  with  the  blood  of  Chrift  \  when  his  foul  is  ftruckinto  a  fearc 
and  trembling  with  the  confederation  of  the  juftice  of  God,  and 
the  tetrour  of  his  threatnings  and  judgements  forfinne,  then  the 
meditation  of  thefweet  promifes  of  the  Gofpel  recreate  and  re- 
vive him  ^  fo  that  in  the  fame  word ,  where  he  meets  with  his 
wound,  he  findes  his  healing  j  where  he  hath  his  forrow ,  there 
alfo  he  receives  his  joy. 

&&&&&&&  fib  *l  ^  ft  &± 
*sf  *x  G&i  *j?  Q&J  JSP-Ha  Hr 


CHAP.  Ill, 

A  fourfold  peace  attributed  to  theGefyel^andin  par- 
ticular Jpeace  ofreconciliation^whereit  is  proved 
there  is  a  quarrel  betwixt  God  and  man>  as  alfo, 
that  the  Gofpel  can  onely  take  it  up,  and  why 
God  thus  laid  the  method  of  wans  recovery  fo. 

THe  fecond  enquiry  follows-,  What  peace  is  here  meant  ,that 
is  attributed  to  the  Gofpel  ?  Peace  is  a  comprehenfive  word. 
We  looked  for  pace  (faith  the  Prophet)  but  no  good  cameJcr.H.  15. 
Peace  brings,  and  carries  away  again  with  it  all  good,  as  the  Sun 
doth  light  to  and  from  the  world;  when  Chrift  would  to  the 
utmoft  exprefle  ,  how  well  he  wiflit  hisdifciples;  he  wraps  up  all 
the  happinefle,  which  his  large  heart  could  beterme  them  in  this 
bleiling  of  peace.  Peace  1  leave  with  jou  y  rnj  peace  1  give  unto 
you,  John  14.27.  Now  take  peace  in  its  greateft  latitude  (if  not 
Ipurious  jand  it  will  be  found  to  grow  upon  this  Gofpel-root,  So 

that 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  325 


Dott. 


that  we  fhall  lay  the  conclufion  in  general  termes, 

<DeEl.  True  peace  is  the  blelTing  of  the  Gofpe),and  only  of  the 
Gofpel.  This  win  appear  in  the  feveral  kinds  of  peace.  Which 
may  be  forted  into  thefe  four. 

Firft ,  peace  with  God ,  which  we  may  call  peace  of  recon- 
ciliation. 

Secondly,  peace  with  our  felves,  or  peace  of  coni'ci- 
ence. 

Thirdly ,  peace  with  one  another ,  or  peace  of  love  and 
unity. 

Fourthly,  peace  with  the  other  creatures ,  even  the  moft 
hurtful ,  which  may  be  cail'd  a  peace  of  indemnity , 
and  fervice. 

To  begin  where  all  other  begin  with  peace  of  reconciliation 
with  God.  For  when  man  fell  out  with  God,he  fell  out  with  him- 
felf,  and  all  the  world  befides  -y  and  he  can  never  come  to  be  at 
peace  with  thefe,till  his  peace  be  made  withGod, Tr<?#f  #*'///«  Zfc- 
us,  tranquilUt  omnia,  The  point  then  is, 

Dott.  1 .  That  peace  of  reconciliation  with  God  is  the  blefiing  cDocl.  1 .. 
of  the  Gofpel.  Three  things  are  here  to  be  done  in  profecution  o£ 
the  point.  Firft,  I  (hall  fhew  you  that  there  is  a  quarrel  between 
God  and  man.  Secondly,  that  the  Gofpel,  and  only  the  Gofpel 
takes  this  up,  and  makes  peace  betwixt  God  and  man.  Thirdly, 
why  God  conveighs  this  peace  of  reconciliation  into  the  world  in 
this  way,  and  by  this  method. 

Firft,  there  is  a  quarrel  depending  betwixt  God  and  the  fons 
of  men;  open  ads  of  hoftility  done  by  one  Nation  againft  ano- 
ther, proclaime  there  is  a  war  commenced.  Now,  fuch  ads  of 
hoftility  pafTe  betwixt  God  and  man :  Bullets  flie  thick  to  and 
fro  on  either  hand.  Man  he  lets  flie  againft  God  (though  a- 
gainft  his  will  he  (hoots  fhortj  whole  vollies  of  finnes  and  impie- 
ties. The  beft  of  Saints  acknowledge  thus  much  of  themfelves, 
before  converting  grace  took  them  off,  Titus  3 .  3 .  We  our  felves 
alfovoerefometimesfoolijb,  di [obedient,  deceived ,  ferving  divers 
Ittfts  And  pleafuret.  Mark  the  laft  words,  ferving  tuft  s  and  plea- 
fttrej.    They  were  in  pay  to  fin,  willing  to  fight  againft  God,and 

fide 


1, 


o  2  5  TbeGoJpel  ofpejce. 


fide  with  this  his  only  enemy.  Not  a  faculty  of  his  foul  or  member 
of  his  body  ,  which  is  not  in  armes  againft  him.  The  carnal 
»«W (faith  the  Apoftle)  U  enmity  againft  God,  Rom  8.7.  And 
if  there  be  war  in  the  mind ,  to  be  fure  there  can  be  no  peace  in 
-  the  members  (inferiour  faculties  I  mean  of  the  foulj  which  are 

commanded  all  by  it.    Indeed  we  are  by  nature  worft  in  our  beft 
part,  the  enmity  againft  God  is  chiefly  feated  in  the  fuperipur 
faculties  of  the  foul.    As  in  Armies ,  the  common  fouldery  is 
wholly  taken  up  with  the  booty  and  fpoile  they  get  by  the  war, 
without  much  minding  one  fide  or  other  ;  but  the  more  prin- 
cipal officers,  efpecially  the  Prince  or  General,  thefe  go  into  the 
field  full  of  enmity  againft  them  that  oppofe  them .-  fo  the  infe- 
riour faculties,  feek  only  fatisfaaion to  their  fenfual appetite 
in   the   booty   that   finne  affords ,  but  the  fuperiour  facul- 
ties of  the  minde,  this   comes  forth  more  dircfty  againft 
God ,  and  oppoieth  his  Sovereignty •  yea ,  if  it  could  lay  a  5 
plot  effectual  to  take  away  the  life  of  God  himfelf,  there  is 
enmity  enough  in  the  carnal  minde  to  put  it  in  execution.    And 
as  man  is  in  arms  againft  God,  fo  is  He  againft  man.   He  is.  angry 
reitb  the  wicked  every  day  y  he  hatkhwt  his  bowe,  and  made  it  ready , 
he  hath  alfo  prepared  for  him  the  inftruments  of  deathy  Pfal.  7.  II. 
God  hath  fet  up  his  royal  ftandard  in  defiance  of  all  the  fonnes 
and  daughters  of  apoftate  *s4dam,  who  from  his  own  mouth 
are  proclaimed  rebels  and  traitours  to  his  Crown  and  dignity  ^ 
and  as  againft  fuch,  he  hath  taken  the  field ,  as  with  fire  and 
fwordto  be  avenged  on  them.  Yea,  he  gives  the  world  fufficient 
teftimony  of  his  incenfed  wrath  ,  by  that  of  it  which  is  revealed 
from  heaven  daily  in  the  judgements  executed  upon  finners,and 
thofe  many  but  of  a  fpan  long,before  they  can  (hew  what  nature 
they  have  by  actual  finne,  yet  audit  to  death  by  Gods  righteous 
foot,  only  for  the  viperous  kind  of  which  they  come.  At  every 
door  where  finne  fets  its  foot,  there  the  wrath  of  God  meets  us. 
Evcrv  facdry  of  foul,  and  member  of  body,  are  ufed  as  a  weapon 
ofunrighteoufnefTe  againft  God;  fo  every  one  hath  its  portion 
of  wath,  even  to  the  tip  of  the  tongue.     A<  man  is  finful  all  o- 
ver,  fo  is  he  cuffed  all  over.^  Infide  and  outfide,  foul  and 
body  ,  write  all  with  wo.s  and  curfes  fo  clofe  and  full,  that 
there  is  not  room  for  another  to  interline,  or  adds  to  what 
God  ha;h  written. 

In 


7  be  Gofpel  of  peace.  3 ■ y 


In  a  word,  fo  iiery  is  the  Lor^s  wath  againft  finml  man  t  that 
all  the  creatures  {hare  with  him  in  it  ThoughGod  takes  h\$  aim  at 
man,and  levels  his  arrows  primarily  at  his  very  hearty  )  et  as  they 
go,  they  flent  upon  thi  creature^  Gods  curie  b!afts  the  whole 
creation  for  mans  fake  ^  and  fo  he  paves  him  fome  of  his  mifery 
from  the  hand  of  thofe  creatures  which  were  primitively  o-riain'd 
to  mimfter  to  him  in  his  happy  ftate,yea,contnbute  fume  drop?  co 
the  filling  of  his  cup.  As  an  enraged  army  makes  fpoile  and  hav  k 
of  all  in  their  enemies  land,  deliroys  their  provifion,  flops  or 
poyfons  cheir  waters,  burns  up  their  houfes,  and  lets  out  his  fury 
on  all  his  hand  comes  at :  Truly  thus,  God  plagues  man  in  every 
creature,  not  one  efcapes  his  hand.  The  very  b  ead  we  eat,  wa- 
ter we  drink,  and  aire  were  breath  in,are  poifoned  with  the  curfe 
of  God  ;  of  which  they  who  live  longeft,dic  atlaft:  And  all  thefe 
are  no  more  to  hell,  than  the  kw  files  of  men  in  a  forlorn  to  the 
whole  body  of  an  army  •  God  doth  but  skirmifh  with  finners  here 
byfomefmall  parties  of  his  judgements  fent  out,  to  let  them 
know  they  have  an  enemy  alive,  thatobferves  their  motions, 
takes  the  alarum  their  finnesgive^  him,  and  can  be  too  hard  for 
them  when  he  pleafe  j  But 'tis  in  hell  where  he  falls  on  with  his 
whole  power.  There  finners^//  be  fttnijht  rritb  everhfiing  de- 
flrttttion  from  the  prefenceef  the  Ldrdyand from  the  giorj  efhu  pow- 
er. 2Thef.i.o.  And  fo  much  for  the  firft,  that  there  is  a  quarrel 
between  God  and  man.  Thefecond  follows, 

Secondly,  the  Cofpel  takes  this  quarrel  up  ,  and  only  the  2. 
Gofpel;  therefore  called  :heGcjj?el  of  peace.  This  will  appear  in 
two  particulars  Firft. the  Gofpel  prcfentsus  with  the  articles  of 
peace,which  God  offers  gracioufly  to  treat  upon  with  the  chil- 
dren of  men,  and  this  none  but  theGofpel  doth.  Secondly  ,the 
Gofpel  preacht  and  publiflit  is  the  great  inftrument  of  God  to 
effcA  this  peace  thus  offered.  Firft  of  the  firft. 

1.  The  Gofpel  prefents  us  with  the  articles  of  peace,  which 
God  graciouflly  offers  to  treat  &  conclude  an  in  inviolable  peace 
upon  with  rebellious  man.In  it  we  have  the  whole  method, which 
God  laid  in  his  own  thoughts  from  eternity  of  reconciling  poor 
finners  to  himfelf.  The  Gofpel,  what  is  it,  but  Gods  heart  in 
Piint?  The  precious  prornifes  of  the  Gofpel,  what  are  they,  but 
heavens  Court-rolls,  tranflated  into  the  creatures  language?  in 
which  are  cxpofed  to  the  view  of  our  faith,  all  the  countels  and 

X  x  pur- 


1. 


2^8  TheGoJfrel  of peace. 


puipofes  of  love  and  mercy,  which  were  concluded  on  by  Father, 
Gal  $•  ij       sonne  and  holy  Spirit  for  the  recovery  of  loft  man  by  Jefus  Chrift, 
who  was  fent  as  heavens  Plenipotentiary  to  earth,  fully  empow- 
ered and  enabled,  not  only  by  preaching  to  treat  of  a  peace  as 
delired  on  Gods  part,  to  be  concluded  between  God  and  man, 
but,  by  the  purchafeofhis  death  to  procure  a  peace,  and  by  hi9 
Spirit  to  feal  and  ratifie  the  fame  to  all  thofe ,    who  (believing 
the   credential  letters  which  God  fent  with  him  in  the  miracles 
wrought  by  him,  and  efpecially  the  teftimony  which   the  Scri- 
pture gives  of  him  J  do  by  a  faith  unfained  receive  him  into  their 
fouls,  as  their  only  Lord  and  Saviour.    This  is  fuch  a  notion  as 
is  not  to  be  learnt  elfewhere.    A  deep  filence  we  finde  concerning 
this  in  Arifiotle  and  TuUy.    They  cannot  tell  us  how  a  poor  Tin- 
ner may  be  at  peace  with  God ;  nothing  of  this  to  be  fpell'd  from 
the  Covenant  cjcd  made  with  Adam.    That  (huts  the  finner  up 
in  a  dark   dungeon  of  defpairej  bids  him  look  for  nothing    but 
what  the  wrath  of  a  juft  God  can  meafure  out  to  him.  Thus  the 
guilty   creature    is  furrounded  on  every  fide  as  with  a  deluge  of 
wrath;  no  hope  nor  help  to  be  heard  of,  till  the  Gofpel  like  the 
Dove,  brings  the  Olive-  branch  of  peace,  and  tells  him  the  tyde  is 
turned,  and  that  flood  of  wrath  which  was  poured  on  man  for  his 
finne,  is  now  fallen  into  another  channel,  even  upon  Chrift,who 
was  made  a  curfe  for  us,  and  hath  not  only  drunk  of  the  brook 
that  lay  in  the  way  andhindred  our  paflage  to  God  ,  but  hath 
drunk  it  off-,  fo  that  where  a  fea  was,  now  appears  dry  land  , 
a  fafe  and  faire  caufie,  called  Heb.  1 0.20.  a  living  wajy  by  which 
every  truly  repenting  and  believing  finner  may  pafTe  without  a- 
ny  danger,from  thejufticeofGod  now  appeafed,  imo  thelove 
and  favour  of  God.     Beingjuftified by  faith,  we  have  peace  with 
GoJi  through  ottr  Lord  Jefpts  Chrift    Rom.  5.  t.      We  are  entirely 
beholden  to  the  Gofpel  for  the  difcovery  of  this  fecrer,  which  the 
Apoftle  folemnly  acknowledgeth,  zTim.i.  10.  where  Chrift  is 
faid  to  bring  life  and  immortality  to  light  by  the  '■  cfpel.     It  lay   hid 
in  the  womb  of  God*  purpofe,  till  the  Gofoclarofe,  and  let  us 
into  the  knowledge  of  ir,  as  the  light  of  the  Sun  reveals  to  the  eye 
what  was  before,    but  what  could    not   be   feen   without  its 
light  i  and  therefore,  "cis  not  only  called  a  living  way,  but  a  new 
and  living  way  »  hich  he  hath  confecrated  fo>  us  ,  in  the  place  fore- 
jeentioned  3  lb  new,  that   the  heart  of  man  never  was   ac- 

fjuamted 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  q*a 

quaintcd  with  one  thought  of  it,  till  the  Gofpel  opens  it,accord- 
ing  to  that  of  /p.42.,16.  I  wi.,  bring  the  blinde  by  a.  way  he 
knew  not  •,  1  will  lead  them  in  paths  that  they  have  not  known. 

Secondly ,The  Gofpel  publtflit  and  preacht,  is  the  great  inftru- 
ment  of  God  to  effeft  this  peace.  Before  peace  be  concluded  be- 
twixt God  and  the  creature,both  muft  be  agreed  j  as  God  to  par- 
don, fo  the  (inner  to  accept  and  embrace  peace  upon  Gods  own 
termes  ^  But  how  (hall  this  be  done?The  heart  of  man  is  fo  deeply 
rooted  in  its  enmity  againft  God,  that  it  requires  a  ftrength  to 
pluck  up  this,  equal  with  that  which  tears  up  mountains,  and  car- 
ries rocks  from  one  place  to  another.The  Gofpel  preach t  is  thein- 
ftrument  which  God  ufeth  for  the  effecting  of  it.  Rom.  116.  / 
amnotafhamed  (faith  the  A  poftfe  there)  of  the  Gofpel  ofChrift, 
for  it  is  the  fewer  of  God  unto  falvation.  It  is  the  chariot  wherein 
the  Spirit  rides  vi&orioufly  when  he  makes  his  entrance  into  the 
heart  of  man ;  called  therefore  the  Miniftration  of  the  Spirit^ 
2  Cor.  3.8.  He  fafhions  anew  the  heart,  as  he  framed  the  world 
at  firft  with  a  word  fpeaking.  This  is  the  day  of  Gods  power,  where* 
in  he  makes  his  people  willing.  Power  indeed  to  make  thofe  that 
had  the  feeds  of  warre  fowne  in  their  very  natures  againft 
God,  willing  to  be  friends  with  him.  Unheard  of  power,  as  if 
the  beating  of  a  drum  fhould  carry  fuch  a  charme  along  with  its 
found,  to  make  thofe  on  rhe  enemies  fide  upon  the  hearing  of 
it  to  throw  down  their  arms,  and  feck  peace  at  his  hand,  againft 
whom  they  even  now  took  the  field  with  great  rage  and  fury  \ 
fuchafecret  power  accompanies  the  Gofpel.  It  ftrikes  many 
times  not  only  the  finners  fword  out  of  his  hand,  while  it  is 
ftretched  out  againft  God;  but  the  enmity  out  of  his  heart,  and 
brings  the  ftouteft  rebel  upon  his  knee  humbly  to  crave  the  bene* 
fit  or  the  articles  of  peace  publifht  in  the  Gofpel;  It  makes  finners 
fo  pliant  and  tradable  to  the  call  of  God  in  the  Gofpel,  that  they 
on  a  fudden  (upon  the  hearing  of  a  Gofpel-SermonJ  forget  their 
old  natural  affections,  which  they  have  had  to  their  beloved 
lufts ,  and  leap  out  of  their  embraces,  with  indignation,  left 
they  (hould  keep  God  and  them  at  oddes  one  moment  longer. 
Now  follows  the  third. 

jQHeft.  3.  Why  doth  God  conveigh  his  peace  of  reconciliati-      Qjiefa 
on  by  this  channel  unto  the  fonnes  of  men?  or  in  plainer  termed, 
why  doth  God  choofe  to  reconcile  poor  finners  to  himfelfe  by 

Xxz  Chrift? 


3  $  o  TheGojpel  of  peace. 


Chrut.  tor  this  is  the  peace  which  the  Gofpel  proclaimes- 
Qd  f  1 .20.  Anl  having  mad*.  peace  through  the  blood  oj  hx  crrflc ,' 
ty  him  tn  reconcile  *H  tkmgs  'o  bimjclf^  and  v,  2 T,  2  2.  A*-dli* 
that  were fontetimr  alienated  arid  energies  in  )  our  mind  by  wcked 
works  •,  jet  now  barb  he  rcccr.cthd  in  ih(bedjojhisfleJljthrH'h 
d-carh,  tc  prefe/itjoH  boh  and  tmblamea^lt^anA  nnrtprovable  in  hid 
fight  ? 
Anfw.  A, if*.  They  are  too  bold  with  God,  who  %  that  he    could 

not  tinde  out  another  way5  whocantell  that,   except  God  him- 
felf had  told  h  mfo?   Ms,  howunmeetis  the  fl.ort  line o;  our 
crt "ted  ur,d:rftarding  for  fuch  a  c  aring  attempt  ,as  to  fathom  the 
unfcarchablenefs  of  Gods  omnipotent  Wifdomc  ?  to  determine 
what  God  can,  and  what  he  cannot  do  ?  But  we  may  fay,  (  and 
not  forget  to  revere  the  Majefty  of  heaven)  That  the  wi'fdome 
of  God  could  not  have  laid  the  method  of  falvation    more  ad- 
vantageous to  the  exalting  of  his  own  glorious  Name    and   his 
poor  creatures  happinefs,  then  in  this  expedient  of  reconciling 
them  to  himfelf  by  Chrift  our  great  Peace-maker.    This  tranS 
action  hath  in  it  a  happy  temperament,  to  faUt  all  the  difficulties 
on  either  hand  ;  and  for  its  myfterious  contrivance,  exceeds  the 
workmanfhip  which  God  put  forth  in  making  this  exteriour 
world(though,that  in  its  kind  perfect,and  fo  glorious ,  that  the 
kaft  creature  tells  its  Maker  to  be  a  Deity,  and  puts  the  Atheift 
to  fharoe   in  his  own  confeience  that  will  not  believe  fo)  yet  I 
fay  it  exceeds  this  goodly  frame  of  heaven  and  earth,  as  far  as  the 
watch  it  felf ,  doth  the  cafe  which  covers  it.    Indeed,God  intend- 
ed by  this  way  of  reconciling  poor  Tinners  to  himfelf  to   make 
work  for  A  ngels  and  Saints  to  admire  the  myftery  of  his  wifdom 
power  and  love  therein  to  everlafitng.     O  when  they  (hall   all 
meet  together  in  heaven,and  there  have  the  whole  counfel  of 
God  unfolded  to  them  j  when  they  diall  behold  what  feas  were 
dryedup,  and  what  rocks  of  creature  impoffibilities   digged 
through  by  the  omnipotent  wifdome  and  love  of  God    before  a 
Tinners  peace  could  be  obtained,  and  then  behold  the  work  fnot- 
withfhnding  all  this)  to  be  effected  and  brought  to  a  happy  per- 
fection:    O  how  will  they  be  fwallowed  up  in  adoring  the  abyflc 
of  his  wifdome,  who  laid  the  plat- form  of  all  this  according   to 
the  eternal  counfel  of  his  own  will  ?  Surely,  the  Sunne  doth  not 
fornuch  exceed  theftrength  of  our  moitaleyes,  as  the  glory  of 

this, 


The  Go/pel  of  peace.  %  a  t 


this,  will  their  underftandings  from  ever  fully  comprehending  it. 
This,  this  is  the  piece  which  God  drew  on  purpofe  (  for  its 
rare  workmanfhip  )  to  beauifie  heaven  it  ielfe  withal-,  when 
Chrift  returned  to  heaven,  he  carried  none  of  this  worlds  rarities 
with  him  ^  notits  filver  and  gold  ^  not  Crowns  and  D  adems  , 
Which  here  men  venturetheir  lives,  yea,  part  with  their  fouls  fo 
prodigally  for.    Alas,  what  are  thefe,  and  the  whole  pride  and 
galantryofthis  world  to  heaven?  That  which  it  glories  moil  of, 
fuits  heaven  no  better  ,  than  the  beggars  difh  and  fcraps  do  a 
princes    table:    or  the  patch't  catter'd  coat  of  the  one, 
the  Wardrobe  of  the  other.    No,  the  Lord  Chrift  came  on 
a  higher  defign  than  this  to  earth  :     The  enterprize  he  under- 
took to  atchieve,  was  to  negotiate,  yea.effecl  a  peace  betwixt 
Godandhisrebel'Creatureraan,  that  had  by  his  revolt  incurr'd 
his  juft  wrath  and  vengeaoce  ^  This  was  a  work  that  became  God 
himfclf  fo  well  to  engage  in,  that  he  thought  none  high  and  wor- 
thy enough  to  be  truitcd  with  the  tranfadingof  it  beneath  his  on- 
ly Sonne,who  ftaid  here  but  while  he  had  brought  his  negociation 
to  a  happy  period ;  and  then  carried  the  joyful  tydings  of  its  be- 
ing finifhed  back  with  him  to  heaven,    which  made  his  re- 
turn infinitely  welcome  to  his  £ ather,and  ail  the  glorious  inhabi- 
tants of  heaven  his  attendants* 


CHAP.  IV. 

A  more  particular  account  why  God  reconciled fm- 
ners  to  himfelfby  Chrifl. 


B 


Ut  I  (hall  proceed  to  give  fome  more  particular  anfwer  to  the 
queftion  propounded . 


XX3  SECT. 


~>*2  IbeGofpel  of  peace, 


SECT.   I. 

i.  Firft,   God  lays  this  method  of  reconciling  finners  to  himfelfe 

byChrift,  that  he  might  give  the  deepeft  teftimony  of  his  per- 
fect hatred  to  finne  in  that  very  ad,  wherein  he  exprefTeth  the 
higbeft  love  and  mercy  to  finners.  No  ad  of  mercy  and  love ,  like 
that  of  pardoning  finne.  To  receive  a  reconciled  (inner  into  hea- 
ven, is  not  fo  great  an  advance,  as  to  take  a  rebel  into  a  ftate  of 
favour  and  reconciliation.    Thetermes  here  arc  infinitely  wider-, 
there  is  reafon  to  exped  the  one,  none  to  look  for  the  other.  It 
is  pure  mercy  to  pardon,  but  truth  being  pardoned  to  fave. Well, 
Mfc  7.i9)io,  when  God  puts  forth  this  very  ad,  he  will  have  the  creature  fee 
his  hatred  to   fin  writ  upon  the  face  of  that  love  he  (hews  to 
thefinner.     And  truly  this  was  but  needful ,  if  weconfider,  how 
hard  it  is  for  our  corrupt  hearts  to  conceive  of  Gods  mercy  with- 
out fome  dilbonourable  refledion  upon  his  holinefs.     i  kept  Ji- 
lettce  (faith  God  J  Pfalme  5oand  what  inference  doth  the  wick- 
ed draw  from  thence  >     Thou  thought  ft  I  was  altogether  fuch  a 
one  as  thjfeif,  that  is,  thou  thoughi'il  I  lik't  finne  as  well  as  thy 
fclf.    Now,if  fo  plaine  and  eafie  a  text  as  Gods  forbearing  mercy 
be  wreftedj  and  a  falfe  gloflefo  repugnant,  not  only  to  the  end 
of  God  therein,  but  to  the  holy  nature  of  God ;  how  much  more 
fubjed  is  forgiving  mercy(that  is  fo  far  fuperlative  to  that  ,and  in- 
finitely more  lufliious  to  the  finners  palatej  tobeabufed?  Some 
men  gaze  fo  long  on  this  pleafing  objed ,  that  they  are  not  wil- 
ling to  look  off,  and  fee  any  other  attribute  in  God.    Now,  in 
this  way  of  reconci^ng  himfelf  to  finners  by  Chrift,  he  hath  given 
fuch  an  Argument  to  convince  finners,  that  he  is  an  implacable 
hater  ofiinne,  as  hath  not  its  fellow.    *Tis  true,  every  threat  in 
the  Bible  tells  us,  that  finne  findes  no  favour  in  Gods  heart  j  the 
guilty  conferences  of  men,  that  hunt  them  home,and  follow  them 
into  their  own  bofomcs,continually  yelling  and  crying  damnati- 
on in  tbeir  ears-,  the  remarkable  judgements,  which  now  and  then 
take  hold  of  finners  in  this  world,  and  much  moretly  furnace 
which  is  heating  for  them  in  another  world  \  (hew  abundantly , 
how  hot  and  burning  Gods  heart  within  him  is  in  wrath    againit 
finne.    But  when  wc  fee  him  lunne  upon  his  Sonne,  and  lay  the 

en- 


The  Gojpel  of  peace.  2  ±2 


envenomed  knife  of  his  wrath  to  his  throat,  yca,thruftitinto 
his  very  heart,  and  there  let  it  flick  for  all  the  (applications  and 
prayers,  which  in  his  bitter  agonies  he  offered  up  to  his  Father 
with  ftrong  crying  and  tears ,   without  the  leaft  fparing  of  him, 
till  he  had  forced  his  life  (in  a  throng  o:  fad  groans  and(ighs)out 
of  hisbody,&  therewith  payed  juftice  the  full  debt,  which  he  had 
as  mans  furety  undertook  to  discharge:    This,  this  ( I  fay)  doth 
give  us  a  greater  advantage  to  conceive  of  Gods  hatred  tofinne, 
than  if  we  could  ftand  in  a  place,  to  fee  what  entertainment  the 
damned  find  in  hell,  and  at  once  behold  all  the  torments  they  en- 
dure.   Alas,  their  backs  are  not  broad  enough  to  beare   the 
whole  weight  of  Gods  wrath  at  once,,  it  being  infinite,  and  they 
finite  •,  which  if  they  could, we  fhoujd  not  find  them  lying  in  that 
prifon  for  non-payment.     But  behold  one  here,  who  had   the 
whole  curfeoffinne  at  once  upon  his  back.     Indeed,  their  fuf- 
ferings  are  infinite,  extenfive,  becaufc  everlafting-,  but  his  were 
infinite, intenfive ;  hepay'dinone  fumme,  what  they  (hall  be 
ever  paying,  and  yet  never  come  to  the  laft  farthing.    The  cha- 
ftifement  ef  cur  peace  was  upon  him y  Eiay  53-5-    He  hath  laid  oh 
him  the  iniquity  of  mall,  ver.6    Or,  he  hath  made  the  iniquity  of 
us  all  to  meet  in  him  ^  the  whole  curfe  met  in  him,   asalliireams 
do  in  the  fea.A  vertual  collection  of  all  the  threatnings  denounced 
againftfinne,  and  all  laid  on  him.    And  now,   take  but  one  ftep 
more,  and  confider  in  how  near  relation  Chrift  ftoodin  to  God,as 
alfo  the  infinite  and  unfpeakable  love  with  which  it  was  filled, 
and  mutually  endeared  on  each  hand,  and  this  at  the  very  fame 
time,  when  he  afcended  the  ftage  for  this  bloody  tragedy  to  be 
acted  on  him  in  :    and  I  think  that  you  are  at  the  higheft  ftair 
the  Word  of  God  can  lead  you,  to  afcend  by  into  the  meditation 
of  thisfubject.    Should  you  fee  a  father  that  has  but?  one  only 
Sonne,  and  can  have  no  more,  make  him  his  Mittimus  to  prifon, 
come  into  Court  himfelf  and  fit  Judge  upon  his  life,  with  his  own 
lips  pafle  fentence  of  death  upon  htm,  and  order  that  it  be  exe- 
cuted with  the  moft  exquifite  torments  that  may  be,  yea,  go  to 
the  place  himfelf,  and  with  his  own  eyes,  and  thofe  not  full  of 
water,  as  mourning  for  his  death,  but  full  of  fire  and  fury  •  yea,  a 
countenance  every  way  fo  fet,  as  mighc  tell  all  that  fee  it,  the  man 
took  pleafure  in  his  childs  death  ;     You  would  fay  purely  he  bit- 
terly bates   his  fonne,  or  the  fmne  his  fonne  hath   committed. 

This 


3  4f  4  ^  ^e  Gofpel  of  peace. 


!■ 


This  you  fee  in  God  the  Father  towards  his  Sonne i  It  was  he 
more  then  men  or  devils,  that  procured  his  death,  chrift  took 
notice  of  this,  that  the  warrant  for  his  death,  had  his  Fathers 
hand  and  feal  to  it;  Shall  I  not  drinkjfthe  cup  my  Father  gives  mc? 
yea,  he  ftands  by  and  rejoyceth  in  it^  his  blood  was  the  ve'uie  that 
made  glad  the  heart  ofGed  -,  it  plcafed  the  Lord  to  brnife  him  ,  Jfa. 
53.  JO. 

When  God  corrects  a  Saint,  he  doth  it  in  a  manner  unwil- 
lingly -y  but  when  Chrift  fuffers,  it  pleafeth  him^and  not  this  from 
want  of  love  in  his  heart  to  Chrift,  nor  that  any  difobedience  in 
Chrift  had  hardened  his  Fathers  heart  againft  him  ,  for  he  never 
oil  pleafed  him-,  but  from  the  hatred  he  had  to  finnc,  and  zeal  to 
exalt  his  mercy  towards  tinners,  by  fatisfying  his  jufticcon  his 
*on. 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly,  he  effected  our  peace  by  Chrift,  that  he  might  for 
ever  hide  pride  from  his  Saints  eyes.    Pride  was  the  ftone   on 
which  both  Angels  and  Man  (tumbled  and  fell.  In  mans  recovery, 
therfore  hee'l  rol  that  ftone  as  far  as  may  be  out  of  the  way^  heeT 
lay  that  knife  afidc  with  which  man  did  himfelf  the  mifchief.  And 
that  he  may  do  this,  he  tranfads  the  whole  bufinefsby  Chrift 
for  them.     Mans  pro  je&  was  to  cut  off  the  entaile  of  his  obe- 
dience to  God,    andfetup  for  himfelf,  as  a  free  and  abfolute 
Prince  without  holding  upon  his  Maker;  aftrangcplot!  for  to 
effect  this,  he  muft  firft  have  thrown  away  that  being  which 
God  gave  him,  and  by  a  felf-crcation  (  if  iuch  a  thing   had 
beenpoflrMe)  have  beftowed  a  new  one  upon  himfelf  -,  then  in- 
deed and  not  till  then,  he  might  have  had  his  will.     Buralas  his 
pride  to   be  what  h?.  could  not ,  loft  him  what  he  had,  and  ftill 
might  have  enjoyed;yet  how  foolifh  foever  it  now  appears   and 
infeafable,  that  was  the  plot  pride  had  fprung  in  mans  heart.Now 
God  to  piefervehis  children  from  all  future  aflaults  and  batteries 
of  hell  at  this  door,  chofefucha  way  of  reconciling  and  faving 
them ;  that  when  the  Prince  of  the  world  comes  to  tempt  them 
to   pride,  he  (hould   find    nothing  in  thep  togivethcleaft 

coun- 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  545 


countenance  or  colour  to  fuch  a  motion  ;  fo  that  of  all  fins, 
pride  is  fuch  a  one,  as  we  may  wonder  how  it  fhould  grow ;  for 
it  hath  no  other  root  to  bear  it  up,  but  what  is  found  in  mans 
dreaming  fancy  and  imagination.  It  grows,  asfometimes  we 
fhall  fee  a  mufhroome,  or  moflfe  among  ftones,  where  litde  or 
no  foyle  is  forks  root  to  take  hold  oft.  God  in  this  Gofpel 
way  of  reconciling  Iinners  by  Chrift,  makes  him  fetch  all  from 
without  doors.  Wilt  thou  poor  foul  have  peace  with  God  ? 
thou  mu(l  not  have  it  from  thine  own  penance  for  thy  fins.  The 
thxftifement  of  o;tr  peace  veas  upon  him>Yfa.%  <,.%.0  know  thou 
art  not  thy  own  peace-maker.  That's  Chriifs  name,  who  did 
that  \york>Eph.2.iq.forhe  is  our  peace  who  hath  made  both  one, 
Jew  and  Gentile  one  with  God,  and  one  with  one  another. 
Wou'd'ft  thou  be  righteous?  then  thou  muft  not  appear  before 
God  in  thy  own  cloaths;  'tis  anothers  righreoufnefle ,  not 
thy  own  that  is  provided  for  thee  ;  Sur  Ijjhall  on  -  f*%In  the  Lord 
hav  I  rivhtimfnif£e\  Ifa.47.24.  In  a  word,  would 'll  thou  ever 
have  a  right  in  heavens  glory  ?  thy  penny  is  not  good  filver  to 
purchafe  it  with;  the  price  muft  not  come  out  of  thy  purfe,  but 
Chri^ls  heart ;  and  therefore  as  it  is  called  the  purchafe  d  pojfffi- 
on,  in  regard  of  Chr  ft  •  becaufe  he  obtained  it  for  us  with  % 
great  fum,  not  filver  and  gold, but  his  precious  blood;fo  an  inhe- 
rit.-.t.cejxi  regard  of  us,becaufe  it  defcends  upon  us  as  freely  as  thQ 
fathers  efbte  on  his  childe,  Eph.  1.  14.  And  why  all  this?  but 
that  the  lofty  looks  of  x.an  maybe  humbled,and  the  haughtinefs 
of  man  fhould  be  bowed  down,  and  the  Lord  alone  exalted  in 
the  day  of  our  falvation.  The  Mawa  is  expounded  by  Chrift 
himfelf  to  be  a  type  of  him,  John  6.32.1  ht  bread  of  God  is  hi 
w hi.  hi  ometh  down  from  heaven,  andgiveth  Ufe  to  h  rvor/d.Now 
obferve,  wherefore  God  chofe  that  way  of  feeding  them  in  the 
wildernefle.  T)  'fit.  8.16.  Who  fed  thee  in  the  wilderneffewuh 
A4a>;naywkich  thy  fathers  knew  notythat  h:  might  humble  thee. 
But  wherein  lay  this  great  humbling  cfthem?  were  they  not 
ilirewdly  humbled  think  you,  to  be  fed  with  fuch  a  dainty  difh, 
which  had  (jod  for  its  Coo^  and  is  called  ^Angels  food  for  its 
delicacy?Pp/.78.2s-Such,thatif  they  needed  any  repaft,  might 
well  fiat  their  table  ?  I  anfwer,.  it  was  not  the  meannefle  of 
the  fare,  but  the  manner  of  having  it,  which  God  intended 

T  y  ftiould 


3"46  rhe  Oofpel  tfpcaa^ 

"Ihould  humble  them.  Man  is  proud,and  loves  robe  his  own 
provider,  and  nor  tiand  to  anothets  allowance  ;  the  fame  feaft 
fent  in  by  the  charity  and  bounty  of  another,willnot  go  down 
fo  well  with  his  high  ftomack,  as  when  'tis  provided  at  his  own 
coft  and  charges  :he  hid  rather  have  the  honour  of  keeping  his 
own  houfe,  though  mean, than  to  live  higher  upon  the  almes  and 
allowance  of  anoihers  charity  :  this  made  them  with  thcmfelves 
at  their  onions  in  their  own  gardens  in.  EgJfh  and  flefh-pots 
there  ;  which  (though  they  were  grofTer  diet)  liked  them  better, 
beca.uie  bought  with  their  own  penny. 


a 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  that  it  might  be  a  peace  with  the  greareft  ad  vantage  - 
poffible  ;  th.it  God  and  man  might  meet  again  on  better  terms 
by  this  pacification,  thin  when  Adam  flood  in  all  his  primitive 
glory.     God  no  doubt,  would  not  have  fet  ihe  beauty  of  his 
firft  workmanlhip  to  be  fo  defaced  by  fin,  had  he  not  meant 
to  have  rear'da  more  magnificent  ftru&ure  out  of  its  mines. 
Now  God  inter. ding  to  print  mans  happinefle  in  the  fecond  e- 
dition  with  a  fairer  character  than  at  the  firft,  he  employs  Chrift 
in  the  work,  as  the  only  fit  inftrument  to  accomplish  fo  great  a 
defigne-,  Chrift  himfelt  tells  us  as  much,  John  io.io./  am  come 
that  they  might  have  life, and  that  they  might  have  it  more  abun- 
dantly :  His  coming  was  not  to  give  thole  who  were  dead  and 
damned,bare  peace,naked  life,  but  more  abundantly,  than  ever 
man  had  them  before  the  breach.     It  was  Chrift  in  the  fecond 
Temple,  who  fill'd  it  with  a  glory  fuperlative  to  the  firft :  Chrift 
in  the  fecond  creation  of  man,  that  lifts  his  head  above  his  firft 
ftate  in  happinelTe.  As  aAdam  was  a  pattern  to  all  his  ked,  what 
he  was  in  his  innocent  ftate,  that  fhould  they  all  have  been(if 
fin  had  not  altered  the  fcene,and  turned  the  Tables;)  fo  Chrift 
is  a  pattern  to  all  his  feed  of  that  glory  which  they  fhali  be  cloath- 
edwith  ;  i  John  3.  2.  We  are  now    the  fons  of  God,  but  it  doth 
not  yet  appear  what  we  (ball  be  ;  but  we  know, when  he  appears, 
w.e  jhall  be  like  him>  that  is3ow  vile  bodies  like  his  glorious  body, 

AS 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  347 


as  the  Apoftle  hath  #>,Phil.  3-  and  our  fouls  alio  like  his  glori- 
ous foul.  Now  by  how  much  our  nature  in  Chrift  is  more  glo- 
rious than  it  was  in  sAdam ,  by  fo  much  the  ftate  of  a 
reconciled  hnner  furpaffeth  Adams  hrft  condition. Some  little 
difcovery  whereof,  take  in  two  particulars.  First,  the  recon- 
ciled (inner  hath  the  advantage  of  Adam  in  his  union  to  God., 
Seconal],  in  his  communion  with  God.  1. 

Firft,  in  his  union  to  God.  And  that,  i# 

Firji^s  it  is  nearer. Secondly, as  it  is  ftronger.  Firfi,k  is  nearer; 
becaule  God  and  man  rnakg  one  perfon  in  thrift  ;  this  is  fuch  a 
myllery  as  was  not  heard  of  by  Adam  in  all  his  glory  ,he  indeed 
was  in  league  of  love  and  friendlhip  with  God,  and  than  was 
the  bed  flower  in  his  crown  ;  but  he  could  lay  no  ciaime  to  fuch 
kindred  and  confanguiniry,as  now(with  reverence  be  it  fpoken) 
the  reconciled  foul  can  with  God  ;  this  comes  in  by  the  marriage 
of  the  divine  nature  with  the  humane,in  the  perfon  of  Chrift, 
which  peribnal  union  is  the  foundation  of  another,  a  my  (Ileal 
Ki.im  betwixt  Chrift  and  the  perfon  of  every  believer ;  and  this 
is  10  near  an  union,  that  as  by  the  union  of  the  divine  nature  and 
humane,  there  is  one  perfon  ;  fo  alfo  by  this  myflical  union,the 
Saints  and  their  head  make  one  Chrift  far  as  th  e  body  is  one,and 
hath  many  members,  and  all  the  members  of  that  one  body  being 
members  are  one  body  ;foalfois  Chrift,!  Cor.  12. 1  2.  Fjcclefiaeft 
Chrifttu  explicate.  The  Church  is  nothing  but  Chrift  difplayed- 
who  can  fpeak  what  an  advance  this  is  to  the  humane  nature  in 
general,  and  to  the  perfons  of  believers  in  efpecial  ?  fuch  a 
one  as  it  leaves  not  only  <z/fdam,  but  Angels  beneath  a  re- 
conciled (inner  in  this  refpect  Adam  at  firft  was  made  but  little 
lower  than  the  Angels,but  by  this  paire  of  unions,God  hath  fee 
the  reconciled  foul  more  than  a  little  above  them  both  ;  for 
Chrift  by  taking  on  him  not  the  nature  of  Angels,  (  though  the 
more  ancient  and  noble  houfe)  but  the  feed  of  Abraham,  made 
the  elder  ferve  the  younger,  even  Angels  themfelves  mi- 
nuter to  the  meaneft  Saint,  as  unto  their  Mifters  heire,  Heb. 

Secondly,  as  the  union  is  nearer,  fo  is  it  ftronger  ;  therefore         2. 
ftronger,  becaufe nearer;  the  clofer ftones ftand  together,  the 
ftronger  the  buil  ing.  The  union  betwixt  God  and  Adam  in  the 
firft  Covenant  was  not  fo  near,  but  Adam  might  fall,  and  yec 

Y  y   2  Gods 


2  a  8  Tke  Gtfpel  °f  Pea€e 


Gods  "lory  ftands  entire  and  unfhaken ;  but  the  union  now  is  lb 
clofe  and  ttron'j;  betwixt  Chrift  and  hisSa'nts,  that  Chrilt  can- 
not be  Chnft  without  his  members ;  Becaufe  I  live  (fairh  Chriit) 
je  jhall  live  alfo,  Joh.i4.i9.implying  that  their  life  was  bound 
up  in  his,and  it  was  as  eafie  for  him  to  be  turned  out  of  heaven, 
as  for  them  to  be  kept  out, Ep/>.  1.2  3. The  Church  is  called  there 
Chrifts  bodjjhe  fulneffe  of  him  that  fillerh  all  in  all.h  body  is 
not  full, if  it  hath  not  every  member  and  joynr,  though  never  fo 
little,  and  them  in  their  fulnefle  too.  The  Saints  grace  is  Ch rifts 
°lory,  2  Cor.  8.  2 3.  and  though  his  eflenrial  dory  as  God,  re- 
ceives no  filling  from  his  Saints  or  their  graces;  yet  conhder 
him  in  his  Mediatorfhip,  as  head  of  his  Church ;   fo  Chrifts 
°lory  is  daily  filling,  as  the  EIe6l  are  called  in  daily,and  as  thofe 
that  are  called  in,  grow  up  to  their  appointed  ftature.Chrift  hath 
not  his  fulnefle,  till  the  Saints  have  their  perfection  and  com- 
plement of  grace  in  heavens  glory. 

Secondly,  in  his  communion  with  God  ;  the  nearer  (  we  \\{t 
to  fay)  the  de  rer ;  Communion  refults  from  union  ;  if  the  union 
be  nearer  and  ftronger  between  a  reconciled  foul  and  God,  than 
Adams  was,  his  communion  muft  needs  be  fweeterand  fuller. 
Why  elfe  is  the  communion  of  husband  and  wife  fuller,  than  of 
friend  and  friend  .?  but  becaufe  the  union  is  clofer.  God  con- 
verfeth  with  Adam  as  a  friend  with  his  frierd,and  ally  ;  but  with 
the  reconciled  foul,  as  a  husband  with  his  wife.  Thy  {Maker 
is  thi i  hwbatidylh^.  5. 

There  is  a  double  fweetnefs  peculiar  to  the  reconciled  finners 
communion  with  God. 
F/V/?,there  is  in  Chrift  a  foundation  laid  for  greater  familiarity 
*'  with  God,than  Adam  was  at  firft  capable  of.     He  indeed  was 

rhe  Sonne  of  God,  yet  he  was^  kept  at  a  further  diftance,and 
treated  with  more  ftate  and  Ma jefty  from  God,than  now  the  re- 
conciled foul  is ;  for  though  he  was  the  Sonne  of  God  by 
Creation,  yet  the  Son  of  God  was  not  then  the  for,  of  man  by 
incarnation  ;  and  at  this  door  comes  in  the  believers  fweetcft 
familiarity  with  God  :  the  Chriftian  cannot  lift  up  now  an  eye 
of  faith  to  God,  but  he  fees  his  own  nature  ftanding  upon  the 
Throne  by  him  in  the  perfon  of  Chrift.  And  if  the  fit-he  of  Jo- 
feph  at  'Tharaohs  right  hand,  in  Court  favour  and  honour,ient 
the  patriarchs  home  with  fuch  joyful  news  to  their  aged  father; 

what 


The  Gejpel  of  peace.  ^aq 


what:  aravifhhg  meiTage  of  joy  muft  faith  carry  then  to  the 
foul  of  a  reconciled  finner,  when  it  comes  in(after  fome  vifion 
of  love  in  an  Ordinance  J  and  faith,Chear  up  (O  my  foul)  I  fee 
Jefus  Chrift  thy  near  kinfman  at  Gods  right  hand  in  glory,  to 
whom  all  power  is  given  in  heaven  and  earth  ;  fear  not,  he  is  fo 
nigh  in  blood  to  thee,  that  he  cannot  be  unmindful  of  thee, 
except  he  iliould  do  what  were  unnatural  in  it  felf,    that  is, 
hide  hln.feif  from  his  omi  flejh  ?  The  lower  a  Prince  (loops  to 
the  meaner!  oi  his  U;b;e£ts,the  more  familiar  he  makes  himfelf 
to  his  fub,ects.  It  was  a  wonderful  condefcent  in  the  great  Gf  d, 
(  who  c.i  n  have  no  compeere  j  firft,  to  make  man,  and  then 
itrike  fo  friendly  a  League  and  Covenant  with  him.     This  God 
doth  now  with  every  reconciled  foul,  and  that  enrich't  with  fo 
many  ailonifhing  circumftances  of  condescending  grace,as  muft 
need's  fpeak  the  way  of  the  believers  accefle  to  God  more  fami- 
liar.    Col  doth  in  this fecond and  new  alliance  with  his  poor 
creature,  defcend  his  Throne,  exchange  his  Majeflick  robes 
of  glory,  for  the  rags  of  mans  fraile  flefh ;  he  leaves  his  Pa- 
lace to  live  for  a  time  in  his  creatures  humble  Cottage,and 
there  not  only  familiarly  converfes  with  him,but  (  which  is 
Granger  )  Miniiters  to  him,  yea,  which  is  more  than  all  thefe,he 
furrenders  himfelf  up  to  en  °ure  all  manner  of  indignities  from 
his  forry  creatures  hand.  And  when  this  his  courfe  entertainment 
is  done,  back  he  polts  to  heaven,not  to  complain  to  his  Father, 
how  he  hath  been  abufed  here  below,  and  raife  heavens  power 
a°ainLl  thofe  that  had  fo  ill-entreated  him;  but  to  make  ready 
heavens  Palace  for  the  reception  of  thofe  who  had  thus  abufed 
him,  and  now  will  but  accept  of  his  grace :  And  le(t  thefe, 
yet  left  on  earth,  fhould  fear  his  re-afTumed  Royalty  and  Ma- 
jeity  in  heavens  glory,  would  make  fome  alteration  with  their 
affairs  in  his  heart ;  to  give  them  therefore  a  confhnt  demon- 
ftration,that  he  would  be  the  fame  in  the  heighth.of  his  honour, 
that  he  was  in  rhe  depth  of  his  abafement,     He  goes  back  in  the 
fame  cloathshe  ha>  borrowed  of  their  nature,to  wear  them  on 
the  Th:  one  in  ail  his. dory  (  only  fome  Princely  coftbeftowed, 
to  put  'he  m  inro  the  fafhion  of  that  heavenly  Kingdome,  and 
make  them  fuit  wuh  hi<  glorified  (late)  giving  them  a  pattern  bv 
thiswh  it  ch-ir  own  vile  bo  Jies(which  are  now  lb  difhonourable) 
{hall  be  made  another  day.  Now  none  of  all  thofe  circumftan- 

Y  y  3  ces 


3 1-  0  The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


ces  were  found  in  Gods  firft  administration  to  Adam^nd  there- 
fore this  the  more  familiar. 

Secondly ,  there  is  the  fweetneffe  of  pardoning  mercy,and  the 
bleeding  love  of  Chrift  (who  by  his  death  purchafed  it  for  him) 
to  be  tafted  in  the  reconciled  fouls  communion  with  God.  This 
lump  of  fugar  zAdam  had  not  in  his  cup.    He  knew  what  the 
love  of  a  giving  God  meant,but  was  ftranger  to  the  mercy  of  a 
forgiving  God.  The  reconciled  foul  experiments  both.The  love 
of  a  father  fmore  than  ordinary  kinde)  is  a  great  comfort  to  a 
dutiful  childe,  one  that  never  difpleafed  his  father.-  But  it  car- 
ries no  fuch  wonder  in  it  to  our  thoughts,  as  the  companion  and 
melting  bowels  of  a  father  towards  a  rebellious  childe  dorhjand 
certainly  the  prodigal  childe  that  is  received  again  into  his  fa- 
thers embraces,  hath  the  advantage  for  loving  his  father,  more 
than  his  brother  that  never  came  under  his  fathers  difpleafure. 
O  this  pardoning  mercy,  and  the  love  of  Chrift  that  procured 
it ;  they  are  the  moft  fpacious  and  fruitful  heads  for  a  gracious 
foul  to  enlarge  his  fweeteft  meditations  upon  here  on  earth  : 
but  vvho  can  conceive  what  ravifhing  mufick  glorified  Saints  will 
make  in  running  divifion  on  thisfvveet  noat?  I  am  fure  the  fong, 
their  harps  are  tuned  unto,is  the  fong  of  the  L^/»^,Rev.i  5.2,3 . 
The  Saints  finil"hed  happinefle  in  heavens  glory,  is  a  competiti- 
on of  all  the  rare  ingredients  polTible,  fo  tempered  by  the  wife 
hand  of  God,  that  as  none  could  well  be  fpared,fo  not  the  tafte 
of  any  one  fhall  be  loft  in  another ;  but  this  of  pardoning  mer- 
cy,and  the  ftupendious  love  and  wifdom  of  God  through  Chrift 
therein,fhali,as  I  may  fo  fay,give  a  fweet  reli{h  to  all,  and  be  Ba- 
ited above  all  the  reft. 


CM  A  p. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  3  5  1 


CHAP.    V. 

An  Exhortation  to  embrace  this  peace  of  reconcili- 
ation^ offer' d  in  the  Gofpel. 


LEt  ic  provoke  every  one  to  labour  to  gee  an  intereft  in  this        Vfe  i< 
peace  of  Reconciliation  with  God,which  the  Gofpel  brings. 
peace  with  ood  ?  lure  'tu  worth  the  Tinners  having  ?  Or  elfe  the 
Angels  were  ill  employed,  when  they  welcom'd  the  tydings 
thereof  into  the  world  atour  Saviours  birth  with  fuch  acclama- 
tions of  joy. Glory  to  Godson  earth  Teacc^Liik.  2.I4.  yea,Chrift 
himfelf  was  deceived  in  his  purchafe;who  if  a  finners  peace  with 
God  be  not  of  high  price  and  value,hath  little  to  (hew  for  the 
erfrfion  of  his  heart- blood,  which  he  thought  well  fpent  to  gain 
this.But  this  we  cannot  believe :  And  yet  to  fee  how  freely  God 
offers  peace  and  pardon  to  the  fons  of  men  through  Chrift,  and 
how  coy,yea,fullen  and  crofle  they  are  to  the  motion ;  one  that 
does  not  well  know  them  both,  (  Gods  infinite  goodnefle,  and 
wretched  mans  horrible  baienelYe  )  might  be  ready  to  think  it 
fome  low  prized  ware  which  lay  upon  Gods  hands ;  and  this  to 
be  the  caufe  why  God  is  fo  earneft  to  put  it  oflf,and  man  fo  loth 
to  take  it  off  his  hands.     Ah  poor  deluded  wretches!  who  is 
the  wicked  Ccunfellor  that  hardens  your  hearts  from  embracing 
your  own  mercies  ?  None  fure  but  a  Divel  can  hate  God  and  you 
fo  much.    And  he  hath  fped  fo  well  in  his  own  quarrel  againft 
God,that  he  fhould  be  hearken'd  to  by  thee  poor  finner?  Can  he 
give  thee  armour,  that  will  quench  Gods  bullets  ?  how  then  is  ic 
that  he  is  fo  unkinde  to  himfelf,as  to  let  them  lye  burning  in  his 
own  bofome  to  his  unfpeakable  torment ?or  will  he  lend  thee  any 
pity,  when  thou  haft  by  his  advice  undone  thy  felf?  alas !  no 
v  more 


2C  2  The  Go/pel  of  peace. 


more  than  the  cruel  wolf  doth  the  filly  flieep,when  he  hath  fuckt 
her  blood,and  torne  her  in  pieces.  Think  and  think  again  poor 
finner,  what  anfwer  thou  meaneft  to  fend  to  heaven,befo:e  God 
calls  his  Embafladors  home,  and  the  treaty  break  up  never  to 
be  renewed  again.  And  that  thou  mayeft  not  want  fome  feafon- 
able  matter  for  thy  mufing  thoughts  to  enlarge  upon  on  this  lub- 
je& ,  let  me  defire  thee  to  treat  with  thy  own  heart  upon  thefe 
four  heads. 

Firft,  Confider  what  it  is  that   ftands   before  thee  in 
offer. 

Secondly,  Who  it  is  that  offers  it. 

Thirdly,  How  he  offers  ic. 
m  Fourthly,  What  thou  doft  when  thou  refufeft  it. 


2. 


SECT.     I. 

Firft,Confider  what  it  is  that  is  offered  thee,/*vzr?  with  God. 
A  thing  fo  indifpenfable,  thou  canfl:  not  have  leffe  ^  and  fo 
comprehensive  thou  need'ft  have  no  more  than  this,  and  what 
cometh  with  it  to  make  thee  truly,  fully  happy ;  of  all  the  varie- 
ty of  enjoyments  with  which  'tis  poifible  thy  table  can  be  fpread, 
this  isaoifhcanleartbefpared-,  takeaway  peace,  and  that  but 
of  an  inferiour  nature  (outward  peace)  and  the  feaft  is  fpoiled, 
though  it  be  on  a  Princes  table.  Davids  children  had  little  {\o- 
mack  to  their  royal  dinner,  when  one  of  them  was  (lain  that  fate 
at  the  board  with  them.    And  whit  taite  can  you  have  in  all 
your  junkets,  while  God  is  in  aray  againftyou,  many  finners 
(lain  before  your  eye  by  Gods  judgments,  and  the  fame  Sword 
that  hath  let  out  their  blood,  at  thy  throat  while  the  meat  is  in 
thy  mouth  ?  Methinks  your  fweet  morlels  lliould  Dick  in  your 
throat,  and  hardly  get  down,  while  you  mufe  on  thefe  things.  O 
(inner !  is  not  this  as  a  toadfwellingatthebottomeof  thy  moft 
fweetly  fugar'd  cup,  that  the  controverfie  yet  depends  betwixt 
Grxl  and  thee ;  thy  fins  are  unpardoned ,    and  thou  a   dead 
damned  creature,   however  thou  froliqueft  it  for  the  prefent  in 
thy  prifon  ?  would  you  not  wonder  to  fee  a  man  at  his  fport, 
hunting  or  hauking;  anyone  fhould  tell  you  this  man  is  to 

b* 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  3^3 


be  hanged  to  morrow  ?  Truly  God  is  more  merciful  to  thee 
than  thou  canft  prom ife  thy  i'elf,  if  he  ftay  the  execution  till 
another  day.I  confeile  when  I  meet  a  man,whofe  life  proclaims 
him  an  unreconaied  (inner,  and  fee  bin  fpruce  up  himfelf 
in  his  fine  c\r:  entertain  himfelf  with  rhe  joy  of  his  children, 
eftate,honour,<.  he  like,  in  this  fife ;  it  adminifters  matter  of 
admiration  to  Tie,  what Tuclia one  thinks  of  God  or  himfelf. 
Canftthou  thir.ki  Lo  g  thou  ih&lt  lit  at  this  fire  of  thornes 
thou  haft  kin dted,  and  not  God  for  thee  ?  mule  it  needs  provoke 
a  creditour  to  Lee  his  lebtou  live  high,  and  go  brave,  all  at  his 
cort,andallthcM  Fiil  eve.  chink  of  getting  out  of  his  debr,  or 
make  his  peace  w.-  ?  much  more  ooth  it  God,  to  fee  Tin- 

ners fpend  upon  hi  nty,  lead  joyful  -ovial  lives  in  rhe  abun- 
dance of  oatwa  d  en  oyments  he  lends  them  ;  but  take  no 
thought  of  making  peace  with  him, in  v.hofe  debt-book  they  are 
fo  deep  in  arrears  What  folly  had  it  been  for  the  f*ws,  when 
Ahafoaerw  had  ieaied  the  warrant  for  their  deftruetion,to  have 
r,one  an;l  painted  their  houfes,planred  th-ir  fields,&let  out  their 
hearts  in  the  enjoyment  of  their  eftates,  without  taking  care  in 
the  firft  place  of  getting  that  bloody  decree  reverted .?  a  worfe 
for  art  thou,  that  doll  all  thefe,while  thou  carried  the  fentence 
of  death  from  Gods  mouth  about  thee  in  thy  own  confeience. 
Sir  Thomas  Move,  when  in  the  lower,  would  not  fo  much  as 
trim  himfelf,  faying,  There  was  a  controverfe  betwixt  the  King 
and  him  for  his  headend  till  that  was  at  a  h,zppy  endjhe  would  be  at 
r.o  coft  about  it:  Scumb.it  off  the  froth  of  his  wit,and  you  may 
make  a  folemn  ufe  of  it.  Certainly,  all  the  colt  you  bellow  on 
your  felve?-, to  make  you:  lives  pleaiurable  and  joyous  to  you, 
is  meere  folly ,  till  it  be  decided  what  will  become  of 
the  fuit  betwixt  God  and  you,  not  for  your  heads,  but  fouls, 
yea,  foul  and  body,  whethet  for  heaven  or  hell.  O  were  it  not 
th;  witeit  courfe  to  begin  with  making  thy  peace,  and  then  thou 
majltfoo'i  lead  a  happy  lite.  We  fay,  be  that  gets  out  of  debt 
g<o.v$  rich.  I  am  fure,  the  reconciled  foul  cannot  ta  poor.As 
foon  as  the  peace  is  concluded,  a  free  trade  is  open'd  betwixt 
God  and  the  foul.  If  once  pardoned,  thou  mayftthen  fail  to 
any  port  rhit  lies  in  Gods  Dominions,  and  be  welcome;  all  the 
promifes  Pand  open  with  their  rich  treafure  ;  take  poor  foul  full 
lading  in  of  all  the  precious  things  they  aford,  even  as  much  as 

Z  z  thy 


2  c  a  The  Cofpel  of  peace, 


ihy  f.u^h  can  bear,and  none  fhall  hinder  thee.  As  a  man  may 
draw  the  wine  of  a  whole  veflel  through  one  tap ;  fo  faith  may 
.draw  the  comfort  of  all  the  Covenant  out  of  this  one  promife  of 
reconciliation.If  reconciled,then  the  door  is  open  to  let  thee  in- 
to communion  with  God  in  all  his  Ordinances.God  and  thou  be- 
ing agreed,may  now  walk  together;  whereas  before  thou  couldft 
not  look  into  Gods  prefence,  but  his  heart  rofe  againft  thee,  as 
one  at  the  fight  of  his  enemy,  ready  to  draw  upon  thee  with  his 
judgments.  The  Smith  (we  fay)  am  his  penny  tboth  are  blacky',  fo. 
were  thou  with  all  thy  duties  and  performances,while  unreconci- 
led in  his  eye  ;  but  now  thy  voice  is  fw:et,and  countenance  comely. 
All  the  attributes  of  God  (thy  ally)  are  thine ;  his  horfes  and  cha- 
riots thine^s  fehojhaphat  told  Ahab\  when  ever  any  enemy  purs 
thee  in  fear,  you  know  where  to  have  a-friend  that  will  take 
part  with  thee;all  his  providences,though  likeBees,they  flie  fome 
this  way,  and  fome  that,  yea,  one  contrary  to  another,  as  thou 
thinkeliimpolTible  to  trace  them  j  yet  they  are  all.  at  work  for 
thee,  and  thy  foul  is  the  .hive  wherein  they  will  unlade  the  fweet 
fruit  of  all  their  labour ,though  poflibly  it  may  be  night,  the  eve- 
ning of  thy  days  before  thou  findeft  it.  \x\  a  word,if  reconciled, 
thou  ftand'lt  next  to  heaven  ;  whom  he  jtuftifes,  them  he g/orifiesy 
Rom.  8.  30.  thou  art  fure  to  be  there,  as  foon  as  death  rends  the 
veile  of  thy  nefli,which  is  all  chat  enterpofeth  between  thee  &  it. 
. ___________________ / 

SECT.    II. 

Secondly,  confider  who  it  is  that  offers  peace  to  thee,  the 
great  God  ;  and  'tis  hard  to  .fay  which  fpeaks  the  greateft  won- 
der ;  for  God  to  offer,  or  thee  to  deny  what  he  offes.  We  mar- 
vel not  to  fee  the  undutiful  child  on  his  knee,  labouring  to  foften 
his  fathers  heart  with  his  tears,  which  he  hath  hardened  againft 
him  with  his  rebellions ;  nor  a  condemned  traytor  proitrare  at 
his  Princes  foot,  begging  for  his  life,  now  forfeited  to  the  jufrice 
of  the  Law  :  bnt  'tisfomething  ftrange,to  fee  the  Father  become 
fuppliant  ro  his  childe  ;  more  for  the  tray  tour  to  open  his  dun- 
geon door,  and  flnde  his  Prince  landing  there,ani  that  upon  no 
other  errand,  than  to  defire  him  to  accept  of  a  pardon  And 
yet  felt-love  may  be  the  _,reat  mot.ve-.for  this  feeming  felf-deni- 
aJ.The  parent  doth  but  love  himfelf,  when  he  fteps  below  his 

place 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  355 

place  to  gain  his  childe  that  carries  fo  much  of  its  parents  life  a- 
bout  him.  And  fuch  neceffity  of  State  there  is  fometimes,  thac 
greatPrinces  are  forced  to  (bop  to  the  meaneft,yea,worft  of  their  , 
Subjects.  A  Princes  fafety  may  be  fo  intimately  concern 'd  in  a 
traitours  life,  that  he  cannot  cut  oflfhis  head,  without  eminent 
danger  to  the  Crown  that  ftands  upon  his  own.But  none  of  thefe 
freights  forced  God  to  take  up  thoughts  of  peace  to  his  poor 
<reature ;  no,they  are  the  birth  of  free  condefcending  love;ancf 
now  think  again  finner,before  the  great  God  hath  a  denial  from 
thee^if  a  neighbour,the  pooreft  in  th_Town,anclhe  one  that  hath 
done  thee  wrong,  and  not  received  it  from  thee,  comes  to  thee 
and  defires  peace,lhould'(t  thou  re  je&  the  motionrwould  not  thy 
confcience  reproach  thee  to  thy  dying  day  ?  how  then  wilt  thou 
endure  to  look  God  or  confcience  in  the  face,  if  thou  refufeft 
peace  at  a  Gods  handspthat  doth  not  treat  like  men,  when  their 
Sword  isbroke,and  they  cannot  fight ;  but  when  he  hath  abfolute 
power  over  thy  life,  (which  i?  ever  in  his  hands)  yea,  a  God  thac 
hath  received  the  vvrong,and  never  did  thee  any;yea,fhould  have 
done  thee  none,  if  he  had  long  before  this  hang'd  thee  up  in 
chains  of  darknefle  among  the  damned. 

SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  confider  how  God  offers  thee  peace  ?  , ; 

-F/V/?,  he  doth  it  fincerely,.  he  covers  not  fraud  under  a  treaty  j " 

of  peace.  Among  men  there  hath  been  horrible  jugling  in  this 
cafe.  The  flag  of  peace  is  oft  hung  out  at  lip,  only  to  draw 
them  within  the  reach  of  their  dagger,  which  is  ready  to  fmite 
them,  as  foab  did  cyibner  under  the  fifth  rib.  In  all  the  Civil 
wars  of  France ,the  poor  Proteftants  found  peace  more  coftly  to 
them  than  war ;  they  beat  the  Papifts  in  the  field,  when  open  e- 
nemi^s,  but  were  betrayed  by  them  in  the  chamber,  when  falfe 
friends.But  for  thy  comfort  know,'tis  a  God  of  truth  thou  trea- 
ted withjnever  did  he  fhed  the  blood  of  war  in  peace  ;  or  give  a 
foul  to  the  fword  of  his  wrath,  after  quarter  taken,  and  peace  gi- 
ven ;  If  we  confeffejie  is  jttft  and  faithful  to  forgive ;  his  proffiifes 
are  not  yea  and  nay  ;  like  the  Divels,  who  lays  them  fo,  that  he 
may  have  the  credit  both  ways.No,the  very  heart  of  God  may  be 
feen  as  thorow  a  chryftal  window  in  the  promifejfA*/  are  all  Tea 
and  Amen  in  Chriftj.  Cor.  1 ,2o.  Z 1  2  Se- 


3^6  The  Gcfpel  of'  peace. 


2. 


Secondly  >he  offers  peace  affectionately ; his  heart  deeply  engi- 
<?ed  in  the  tenders  of  mercy  to  poor  iinners;v\hkh  will  appear, 
v  Firit?in  his  contriving  a  way  for  reconciling  iinners  to  himfelf. 
What  menftrongly  defire,  theyltretih  their  wits  to  the  utmo.t 
how  to  accomplil~h.77)£  i.beral  man  lieu  fah  Lbtral  things  ^h. 
;2.  8.  It  ihews  the  heart  exceeding  large  in  charity  ,when  a  man 
fhall  fit  down*  and  ftudy  how  he  may  finde  out  wayes  for  the 
exercife  of  his  charity  :  wheteas  ir.oll  men,alas,beat  their  brainy 
how  they  may  fave  their  purfes,  and  fcape  with  giving  as  little; 
as  may  be  to  the  poor.O  whin  a  rare  invention  hath  Go  \  found 
out  for  fhewing  mercy  f 'which  hath  o  many  mylterious  parages 
init,that  An.els  themfelvesare  put  hither  to  School, that  by  Ik- 
dying  this  myitery  of  Gods  reconciling  Tinners  to  himfelf  by 
Chrittjthey  might  kn<m  the  manifold  rv.fJcme  of  £/^,Eph.}.ic. 
S-condh  Joy  the  early  difcovery  he  made  of  this  to  the  fons  o.; 
men.That  Prince  might  well  be  admired  for  his  merciful  heart ; 
(if  any  Hiliory  could  fhew  fuch  a  one  ever  to  have  fwayeci  Sce- 
pter in  the  world, which  1  think  it  cannot)  who,upon  lb  me  hor- 
rid treafnn  plotted  againft  his  Crown  and  Royal  perfon,and  that 
by  one  obliged  to  him  with  the  higheftfavours  rouble, could  yet 
not  only  hnde  in  his  heart  to  paroon  the  Rebel,but  alio  Hoop  (c 
far  as  to  be  himfelf  rhe  meflenger  thar  ihould  carry  the  news  of 
this  his  gracious  purpofe  to  the  traitour  in  prilbn,  before  ever  he 
relented,or  had  it  in  his  thought  to  fue  for  his  mercy,and  this  the 
fame  day  in  which  the  vilbnous  attempt  was  made,that  the  poor 
wretch  miDht  not#languiih  fo  much  as  one  night  under  the  hor- 
rour of  his defpairing thoughts;   certainly  fuch  a  Prince  woulu 
palfe  tor  a  none-fuch  in  mercy  among  the  ions  of  men.How  then 
mutt  our  thoughts  be  quite  fwal lowed  up  into  an  admiration  of 
thisftupendiousactof  mercy,  which  the  great  Godexpreffed  to 
fall'n  man,wherdn  he  di  J  all  this  for  his  Rebel  creature  ?  for  no 
fooner  had  man  broke  the  peace,and  taken  up  rebellious  arms  a- 
gainlt  his  Maker,but  the  Lords  heart  relented  rovvards  him,  and 
could  not  let  the  Sun  go  down  in  his  w  ath  againlt  him,  bit  muft 
in  the  very  fame  day  that  he  finned,let  him  hear  of  a  Saviour,  by 
preaching  peace  to  hiaiyinthefsedof  the  woman fjzx\.2.\  ^.little 
did  AdamtVmV  God  had  fuch  a  meflage  in  his  mouth  for  him, 
when  he  firft  heard  him  coming  towards  him,and  for  fear  ran  his 
head  into  a  bufh,  meditating  a  flight  from  him,  if  he  had  known 

whether 


The  Gofpel  of  peart .  357 


whether  ro  have  gone.O  th.it  Adam  -where  art  thou  ?  founded  no 
doubt  in  his  guilty  ears,  like  the  voice  of  an  avenging  God,  cal- 
ling him  a  malefa£tour  to  executionjbut  it  provedthe  voice  of  a 
gracious  God  coming,nor  to  meet  man  in  his  way  returning  to  ' 
him;birt  to  feck  him  out,who  had  loft  all  thoughts  ofhimjtbat  he 
mi  ;ht  give  fo.me  eafe  ro  his  own  gracious  heart,novv  fifll  of  mer- 
cy to  his  poor  crcati:re,by  difcloting  to  hfm  the  purpofes  of  grace 
which  he  had  there  conceived  towards  him.  Surely  his  heart  was 
very  ful[,orelfe  this  would  nor  have  burft  outfofoon. 

Thirdly,  the  greit  Ordinance  of  the  Gofpel-miniftry,  which  3. 

God  hath  let  up  in  the  Church,  on  purpofe  totreat  with  finners 
upon  a  peace,  freaks  his  deep  affection  to  the  work.  One  would  1  Cor.  f, 
have  thought  it  hid  been  enough  to  print  his  thoughts  and  pur- 
pofes of  mercy  in  the  Scripture,  though  he  had  done  no  more. 
Princes,  when  they  put  out  a  Statute  or  a  Law,  expect  all  their 
Subjects  iliould  enquire  after  it ;  and  do  not  fend  one  to  every 
Town,whofe  office  fhall  be  to  give  notice  thereof,  and  perfwade 
people  to  fubmit  to  it;yet  this  the  great  God  doth ;  the  Minitlers 
work  from  one  end  of  the  year  to  the  other,what  is  it  but  to  be- 
feech  finners  to  be  reconciled  to. God  ?  And  in  this  obferve, 

F/rtf  ,the  perfons  he  fends  to  preach.  Not  Angels.>forreign- 
ers  to  our  nature;who  though  they  wilh  us  well,yet  are  not  fo  in- 
timately concern'd  in  mans  fall,as  to  give  them  the  advantage  of 
preaching  with  thofe  melting  bowels,that  God  would  hive  them 
filled  with,who goon chis errand.  No,he  fends  men  with  whom 
he  may  converfefamiliarly,creatures  of  like  paflions ;  whofe  na- 
ture pits  them  under  the  fame  depravation,temptation,condem- 
nation,  with  our  felves ;  who  can  from  the  acquaintance  they 
have  with  their  own  hearts,t^ll  us  the  bafenefle  of  ours;from  the 
fire  of  Gods  wrarh  which  hath  fcorch't  them  for  their  fins,  rell  ! 
us  the  defert  of  ours,and  danger  we  are  in  by  reafon  of  them ;  as 
alfo  from  the  fweet  fenfe  that  the  talk  of  Gods  love  inChrift 
hath  left  on  their  fouls,can  commend  the  chear  and  feaft  they 
invite  us  to  upon  their  own  knowledge.  Did  not  God  think  you, 
dehre  good  fpeed  to  hisEmbaflage,wnen  he  chofe  fuch  to  carry  it? 

Secondly,  obferve  the  qualifications  required  in  thofe  he  em- 
ploys as  Embaffadors  to  offer  peace  to  finners,  2  T/w.2.24.  The 
fervant  of  th;  Lordmuft  not  ftrivej?ut  be  gentlest  to  teachypati- 
cntjn  meekyefi  inftr  fitting  thofe  that  oppofe  themf elves. Q  how  care- 

Z  z  3  ful 


a  *  8  The  Goftel  of  peace. 


tal  is  God  that  nothing  fhould  be  in  thePreacher  to  prejudice  the  , 
Tinners  judgment,  or  harden  his  heart  againft  the  offer  of  his 
grace?if  the  fervant  be  proud  and  hafty,  how  (nail  they  know  the 
.  Mafter  is  meek  and  patient?God  would  have  them  do  nothing  to 
make  the  breach  wider,or  hinder  a  happy  clofe  betwixt  him  and 
them.Indeed  he  that  will  take  the  bird,muft  not  fcare  it.  A  fro- 
ward  peevifh  meffenger  is  no  friend  to  him  that  fends  him.  Sin- 
ners are  not  pelted  into  Ch rift  with  (tones  of  hard  provoking 
language;but  wooed  into  Chrift  by  heart-melting  exhortations. 

Thirdly  ^look  into  thecommiffion  God  gives  his  Embaffadors, 
and  ftill  his  heart  appears  in  the  bufincfs.  Whether  you  confider 
the  largenefle  of  it  on  the  one  hand,  or  ftri&neffe  of  it  on  the 
Other.  Firft, the  largeneffe  of  it,  (jo  and  preach  (faith  Chrift) 
the  Gofpel  to  every  creature.  Make  no  difference,  rich  or  poor ; 
^reat  tinners  or  little,  old  finners  or  young;  offer  peace  to  all 
that  will  but  repent  and  believe,bid  as  many  come  as  will,here's 
room  for  all  that  come.  aSlgainjbs.  ftri£tneife  of  it  on  the  o- 
ther  hand.  O  what  a  folemne  charge  have  they  of  delivering 
their  meflage  faithfully  }Paul  trembles  at  the  thoughts  of  loy- 
tering.  \Vo  unto  me  if  1  preach  not.  What  an  argument  doth 
Chrift  ufe  (fetch t  from  his  very  heart)  to  perfwada  Teter  to  be 
careful.  If  thou  lovefi  mey  feed  my  Jheep.  As  if  he  had  laid, 
Teter,  thou  now  art  in  tears  for  thy  cowardife  in  denying  me, 
thou  haft  yet  one  way  left,  for  all  that  unkindnefle  to  demon- 
ftrate  thy  love  to  me,  and  that  is  by  feeding  my  fheep  :  do  this, 
and  trouble  not  thy  felf  for  that.  Chrift  fliews  more  care  of  his 
fheep,thanof  himfei'f. 

F,  urthlyy  the  joy  God  expreffeth  when  poor  finners  come  in 
to  tr  e  offer  of  peace.Joy  is  the  higheft  teftimony  can  be  given  to 
our  :omplacency  in  any  thing  or  perfon ;  love  to  joy,  is  as  fuel 
to  tl  e  fire ;  if  love  lay  little  fuel  of  defires  on  the  heart,then  the 
flame  of  joy  that  comes  thence,will  not  be  great.  Now  Gods 
joy  i^reat  in  pardoning  poor  finners  that  come  in;  therefore 
hi*  affecUon  great  in  the  offer  thereof.  It  is  made  the  very  mo- 
tive that  prevails  with  God  to  pardon  finners,  Becaufe  h:  de- 
I'ghteth  in  mercy  y  Mlcah  7.  1 8.  Who  is  a  God  like  unto  thee, 
that  pardoneth  iniquity  ^and  pa  feth  by  the  tranfgrejfion  of  the  rem~ 
nantof  hit  heritage  ?  he  retaineth  not  his  anger  for  ever yf or  he  dc- 
Ughtah  in  mercy. God  doth  all  thisfecavfehe  dclighteth  in  mercy. 

Ask, 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  ^  9 


Ask,why  the  Fiflier  ftands  all  night  with  his  Angle  in  the  River; 
hee'l  tell  you,  becaufe  he  delights  in  the  fport.  Well,  you  now 
know  the  reafcn  why  God  ftands  fo  long  vvaiting  on  Tinners, 
months,  years,  preaching  to  them;  'tis  that  he  may  be  gracious 
in  pardoning  them,  and  in  that  aft  delight  himfelf.  Princes  ve- 
ry oft  pardon  traytours,  topleafe  others  more  than  themfelves, 
or  elfe  it  would  neve l be  done  ;  but  God  doth  it  chiefly  to  de- 
light and  dad  his  own  merciful  heart.  Hence,  the  bufinefle. 
Chrift  came  about  (  which  was  no  other  but  to  reconcile  finners 
to  God)  'tis  called  the  fleafwc  of  the  Lord,  Ila.s3.i0. The  Lord 
rakes  luchjoy  and  pleafure  in  this,  that  whereas  other  fathers 
(whole  love  to  their  children  finks  infinitely  beneath  any  corrn 
parifon  with  the  love  of  GodtoChriit)  mourn  at  the  death  of 
their  children,(and  moll  of  all  when  violent  and  bloody)God  he 
takes  content  in  his  Sons  death ;  yea,had  the  chief  hand  in 
procuring  of  it ;  and  that  with  iniinite  complacency; />  pleafed 
the  Lord  to  hrmfe  kim.\  and  what  joy  could  God  take 
in  his  Sons  death,  but.  as  it  made  way  for  him  and  his  poor 
creature  that  were  fallen  our,  and  at  oven  war  one  againft  ano- 
ther , to  fall  in  igain  by  a  happy  accord  ?  And  now  fpeak  O  firmer, 
if  God  doch  not  fo  affectionately  deiire  to  be  reconciled  with 
thee,doth  it  not  much  more  behove  thee  to  embrace  the  peace, 
than  it  doth  him  to  offer  it  ? 


SECT.  IV. 

There  is  but  one  thing  more  I  would  defire  thee  finner  to  con-  ;jj 
fider,  and  then  I  leave  thee  to  thy  own  choice.  Confider  what 
thou  doll,  when  thou  refufeft  peace  with  God.  Determinati- 
ons of  war  or  peace,ufe  to  be  the  refult  of  the  moft  grave  coun- 
fels  and  mature  deliberation  poflible.  Think  and  think  again* 
what  thou  doft  before  thou  breakeft  off  the  treaty  of  peace  , 
left  thou  make  ft  work  for  repentance,  when  it  will  be  bootleflTe, 
But  left  thoufhouldft  not  be  fo  faithful  to  God  and  thy  own 
foul,as  to  give  thy  confcience  liberty  to  fpeak  freely  in  this  mat- 
ter, Ifhalldoit  for  thee,  and  tell  thee  what  thou  doft  when 
thou  reje&eft  peace.  Thoiy  uftifieft  thy  former  hoftilities  agiinft 

God,, 


o6o  Tfcc  Gofpel  of  peace. 


God,  and  declareft  that  thou  wilt  vouch  what  thou  hart  done,let 
God  right  himfclf  as  well  as  he  can.He  that  refufcth  a  pardon,  ei- 
ther deneith  he  hath  done  wrong,or  which  is  worfejlinds  to  de- 
fend it;thou  had'ft  as  good  fay,thou  defirert  not  to  be  friends  with 
Gcd,  but  halt  a  minde  to  perpetuate  the  feud  betwixt  God  and 
thee;like  Ami/car yvho  was  fuch  an  enemy  to  Rome ,   that  when 
he  died,he  made  his  (onHannibal  heir  to  his  hatred  againft  them. 
Is  it  not  enough  thou  haft  fought  fo  many  battels  on  earth  againft 
thy  Maker,  but  wilt  thou  keep  the  quarrel  up  in    another  world 
alfo,  where  there  is  no  more  portability  to  put  an  end  to  it,  than 
to  eternity  it  felf?  thou  throweftthe  greatert  fcorn  upon  God, 
that  'tis  poflible  for  a  creature  to  do  5  as  if  Gods  love  and  hatred 
were  fuch  inconfiderable  things,  that  they  need  not,  when  cart 
into  thefcaleof  thy  thoughts,  preponderate  thee  either  way, 
the  one  to  move  thy  defire  >  or  the  other  thy  fear.    In  a  word, 
thou  confenteft  to  thy  own  damnation,  and  defperately  flingeft 
thy  felf  into  the  mouth  of  Gods  flaming  wrath,which  gapes  in 
the  threatning upon  thee.    God  is  under  an  oath  to  procure  thy 
deltruftion,  if  thou  dyeft  in  this  minde,which  God  fo:  bid  Death 
is  the  trap-door  which  will  let  thee  down  to  hells  Dungeon.and 
when  once  thou  art  there,  thou  art  where  thou  wilt  have  fpace 
enough  to  weep  over  thy  part  folly  ;  thoighhcre  thou  haft  nei- 
ther minde  nor  leifure  to  make  God  ihy  friend.  The  very 
thoughts  of  thofe  offers  of  peace  which  once  thou  had'rt,  f  but 
no  heart  to  embrace  them)will  be  like  fo  much  fair  and  vinegar, 
\a  ith  which  thy  accufing  confeience  will  be  continually  balling 
thee,    as  thou  Heft  roaring  in  hell-fire,  to  make  thy  rorment  the 
more  intolerable.    I  know  this  language  urates  in  the  tinners 
ears,  but  not  fo  ill  as  the  gnafhi; -g  oV  the  finners  own  reeth  will 
in  hell.    I  have  read  of  a  foolifh  (I  may  lay  cnu  I    lUyv  among 
the  Lacedemonians,  that  none  Hi  on  Id  tell  his  neighbour  any  ill 
news  befallen  him  ;  but  every  one  fliould  be  left  in  po:efie  of 
rimctofmde  it  out  themfelves.  Many  among  us  I  think  would 
be'content,if  there  were  fuch  a  Law,rhar  migu  t  rye  rtp  Minirters 
mouths  from  fearing  them  with  their  fins,jnd  the  miferiesthat 
attend  their  unreconciled  ftate:  the  moll -arc  more  careful  to 
runfromthe-difcourfeof  their  mifery,  than  ro  get  out  of  the 
danger  of  it ;  are  more  offended  wun  the  talk  of  hell,than  trou- 
bled for  that  finful  rtate,  that  iTiall  bring  them  thither.    But 

alas  r 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  %6s 


alas !  when  then  (hail  we  (hew  our  love  to  the  fouls  of  finners . 
if  not  now  ?  feeing  that  in  hell  there  rernaines  no  more  office?  of 
love  to  be  done  for  them.  Hell  is  a  peft-houfe,  that  we  may 
not  write  fo  much  on  the  door  of  it,  as,  -Lord  have  mercy  on  them 
that  are  in  it  •  nay,  they  who  now  pray  for  their  falvation,  and 
weep  over  their  condition ,  muft  then  with  Chrift  vote  for  their 
damnation,  and  rejoyceinit;  though  they  be  their  own  fathers, 
husbands  and  wives  they  fee  there.  O  now  bethink  your 
felves,  before  the  heart  of  God  and  man  be  hardened  againft 
you. 


mmmmmmmmmu 

CHAP.  VI. 


Foure  Directions  by  way  of  Counsel  to  finners^ 
yet  in  an  unreconciled  Jlate  how  they  way  be  at 
peace  with  God. 


Q 


Veft.  But  how  may  a  poore  (inner   be  at  peace  with     £l*eft. 
God? 


SECT.     I. 


Firft,  fee  and  be  fenfible  of  the  feud  and  enmity  that  at  prefent 
(lands  betwixt  God  and  thee.  Anf»> 

Firft,  as  to  the  reality  of  the  thing,  that  there  is  indeed  a 
quarrel  which  God  hath  againft  thee,  where  ever  thou  goeft,an 
angry  God  is  at  thy  back,  and  his  wrath  like  a  big  bellied  cloud, 
hangs  full  of  curfes  over  thy  head  ready  every  moment  to 
empty  them  upon  thy  head.  There  is  need  of  prefiing  this; 
for  though  'tis  ordinary  for  men  to  confefle  themfelves  finners ; 

A  a  a  yet 


a  5  3  T/jff  C  ^e/  0/  /Jew* 


yet  moll  arc  loath  to  def parage  their  ftate  fo  faire,  as  to  rank, 
ttiemtelves  among  the  enemies  of  God  ^  no,  they  hope  God  and 
they  are  good  friends  for  all  this.    Like  thieves,  they  will  confefs 
tome  little  matter,  bv/.  they  will  have  a  care  of  letting  fall  any 
thing  that  may  h.ua<d  their  necks  -y  j.'nwr  is  a  favourable  word  j 
wliolivesandlinnesnot?  that  they  will  grant  •   but  to  be  in  a 
ft  ate  of  enmity,  and  nnder  the  wrath  of  God;  this  f cares  them 
too  much  ,  and  brings  them  too  near  the  light  of  the  gallows,the 
feat  of  hell,  which  a*c  due  to  that  ftate-   and  therefore  when 
preft  thus  fane,  at  the  feres  defired  Rabfiefyh  (when  he  fcar'd 
them  with  the  dreadful  things  that  would  befal  them  jf  they  ftood 
out  againft  the  King  his  Matter  )  that  he  vcould  not  Jpeal^  in  the 
fews  Unguagein  the  hearing  of  the  pecfle,  (for  fear  of  afrighting 
lb. l6  11.       them)  butinaforreign  tongue  ^     So  finners  defire  thofe  that 
deal  plainly  with  them,  they    would  not  (peak  fo  broad  in  the 
hearing  of  their  conference  ,which  they -are  afraid  fhould  know  the 
worft.    But  if  thou  loveft  ihy  own  foul,  make  a  true  reprefenta- 
tion  of  thy  ftate  to  thy  (elf.    O  what  folly  is  it,for  a  man  to  lofe 
his  caufe  by  concealing  the  badnefs  of  it  > 

Secondly ,  labour  to  bring  thy  feLf  under  the  fenfe  of  thy  mifer- 
able'condition as  thou  art:  Had'ft  thou  the  Empire  of  rhe  world, 
&all  Nations  creeping  to  thy  foot,as  once  the  beafts  did  toAdam, 
and  a  leafe  as  long  as  MethnfeU's  lite  twice  told,  to  enjoy  it  in, 
without  the  interpofition  of  one  cloud  all  the  while,to  darken  the 
glory  jf  this  thy  royalty  •  yet  fuppofwgthee  to  be  one. to  whom 
God  is  an  enemy-  I  would  choofe  to  be  the  worm  under  thy  foot, 
the  toad  in  the  ditch,  fooner  than  thy  miferable  felf  in  thy  pa  lace. 
One  thought  of  thy  approaching  death  &  eternal  miferv  in  ftore 
for  thee, will  let  out  all  the  joy  or  thy  prefent  happinefTe.Thjs,this 
makes  the  g;  eat  ones  of  the  world,  indeed  all  unreconciled  finners 
high  and  low,  to  go  to  their  giaves,  as  Heart  down  a  hill    back- 
wards •■  alas  if  they  (hould  buc  fc ok  forward  whether  they  are 
going,  their  hearts  would  foon  he  at  their  mouths  for  want  of  this 
breaft-plate,  a  comfortable  perfwafion  of  their  peace  made  with 
God.    (  jo  therefore  (  as  a  pour   malcfa&our  condemned  to  die 
would  do)  (hutthv  fcifupfnm  allthv  old  flattering  compani- 
ons, that  would  ftill  lullaby  thy  m;je  r.ab'e  fou!  in  a  fenfelefle  fecu- 
rity/the  cradle  which  the  devil  *  ock*  foul?  in  to  their  utter  deftru- 
ftton)  noneofihemcometo  thee  ;  but  fend  for  thofe  that  dare 

be 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  2  5  -» 


be  faithful  to  theejand  like  Samuel  j<z\\  thee  every  word  that  God 
faith  againft  thee,  and  conceal  nothing-,  3  ea,  read  thy  doom  with 
thy  own  eyes  in  the\Vord,and  take  thy  condemnation  from  Gou> 
own  mouth,  and  not  mans  ;  J  here  a  no  pence  to  the  wicked,  faith 
raj  God;  mufeonit,  till  it  cleaves  to  thy  foul,  like  a  drawing 
plaifter  to  a  fore,  and  brings  out  ihe  very  core  of  thy  pride  and 
carnal  confidence,  which  hardened  thy  heart  from  all  fenfe  of  thy 
condition,  by  which  time  the  angnifh  of  thy  own  fpirit  (  feeing 
the  ftreights thou  art  brought  into  )  will  prompt  thee  to  defire 
peace  with  God,  and  this  is  that  which  God  waits  for  to  heare 
drop  from  thee,  as  much  as  Benhadad's  fervants  did  for  a  word 
from  Ababs  mouth. 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly,  look  thou  propounded  right  ends  in  thy  defire  of 
reconciliation  with  God.    Nothing  more  hateful  toGod  or  man 
than  falfhod  and  treachery  in  treaties  of  peace ;   and  yetforae 
men  can  have  words  as  fmooth  as  butter  in  their  mouths,  and 
war  is  in  their  hearts  at  the  fame  time,  Pfalme$$.  21.  O  take 
heed  of  any  hollownefle  of  heart  in  thy  enquiry  for  peace  ^  .when 
found  out  fas  it  muft  needs  be,except  Gods  eye  failes  him,  which 
is  impoffible  )  it  will  exceedingly  harden  the  heart  ofGod  againft 
thee.  God  never  repented  of  any  he  pardoned  or  took  up  info  the 
chariot  of  peace  with  him^  becaufe  he  was  never  deceived  by  any^ 
as  men  are,  who  make  often  peace  with  thofc  that  prove  at  iaft 
falfc  brethren,  and  give  them  caufe  to  wifh  they    had   never 
known  them,    foal?  kift  Jmaft, but  he  took  no  heed  to  the  fword 
infoafohmd.    God  looks  to  the  heart,   and  fees  what  is  in  its 
hand;  be  fure  thou  therefore  ft  and  clear  in  thy  own  thoughts, 
as  to  the  ends  thou  aimeft  at.     It  is  lawful  for  thee  to  look  to  thy 
own  fafety  ^  God   will  give  thee  leave  to  look  to  thy  felf ;  this 
thoumayeft,  andyetnotnsgleft  hira  :  Cut  never  was  any  peace 
true  or  fure,  where  only  feiMove  made  it ;  whether  it  be  with 
God,ot  between  man  and  man. Thou  feeft  thon  art  undon,if  thou 
keepeft  thy  old  fide,  and  therefore  thou  feekeft  peace  with  God, 
as  the  Kings  that  ferved  Hadarezer  (  when  theyfaw  he  w.nfmit- 
ten  before  Jfrael ,    they  made  pence  mih  lfrael  themfelves,  2  Sam. 

A  a  a  2  1  o  1 9. 


I, 


^£a  The  Gcfpel  of  peace. 

10.19.  well,  this  may  be  allowed  thee  to  come  over  to  God,be- 

caufehisisthe  furer  (ide.  Never  any  made  p-ace  with  God,  but 

this  argument  weighed  much   with  them,     if  Jacob  could  have 

been  safe  at  home,  he  had  never  fled  to  Lahan  ^  all  are  fired  out 

oftheirholds,  before  rhey  yield  to  God.    But  take  heed  this  be 

not  all  thou  aimeft  at,  or  the  chief  thon    aimeft  at-,  this  thou 

mayeft  do   and  hate  God  as  much  as  ever,  like  tbofe  who  are  laid 

to  fie M  feignedly  to  Davids  victorious  armes,  becaufeno  help  for 

it.    A  man  taken  in  a  ftorme,  may  bs  forced  under  the  p?mhoufe 

of  his  greateft  enemy  for  (belter,  without  any  change  of  his  heart, 

or  better  thoughtsofhim,than  before  he  was  wont.    Two  things 

therefore  thou  muft  look  to  have  tn  thy  eye,  above  thy  own  felf- 

prefervation. 

Firfi,  the  honour  of  God.    Hence  oft  the  Saints  prayers  are 
preft  with  an  argument  from  God,  as  well  as  thcmlelves.and  their 
own  m\(ctyyPfalme  79.  9.      Help  tu  0  god  of  our  falvation^  fir 
the  glory  of thy  Name  ,  and  deliver  w,  and  purge  arc  fly  our  Jinxes 
for  thy  Names  faks-     Certainly,  if  Cod  could  not  be  more  glo- 
rified in  our  peace  and  reconciliation,then  in  our  death  and  dam- 
nation, it  were  a  wicked  thing  to  defire  it.  Bur  God  hath  cleared 
thisuptous,  thatheisnolofer   by  ads  of  mercy.     Jn  this  lies 
thegreatelt  revenew  of  his  Crown  ,  orclfe  he  would  not  love 
mercy,  rat  her  than  [acrifice;  God  is  free  to  choofe  what  fuits his 
own  heart  beft,  and  moft  conduceth  to  the  exalting  of  his  great 
Name  ^  and  he  delights  more  in  the  mercy  (hewn  to  one,  than 
in  the  blood  of  all  the  damned  that  are  made  a  faedfice  to  his  ju- 
ftice.    And  indeed  he  had  a  higher  end  in  their  damnation,  than 
their  fuffering-,  and  that  was  the   enhancing  of  the  glory  of  his 
mercy  in  his  fa  ved  ones.    Thisis  the  beautiful  piece  God  takes 
delight  in,  and   the  other  but  the  fhadow  to  it.     Then   thou 
artinafitdifpofition  to  pray  for  peace,  ani    mayeft  go   with 
er.couragement,when  thy  heart  is  deeplyaffe&ed  with  the  honour 
that  wilt  accrew  coGod  by  it  It  is  an  argumentGod  will  not  deny. 
This  (laid  Arigal  to  T>,.vid)  /ball  be  no  grief 'to  thee •,  nor  offence  of 
heart  unto  my  Lord^  1  Sam.  25.  flie  meant,  he  fhould  never  have 
caufe  to  repent  that  he   was   kept  from  (Tied ding  blood.    Thus 
mayeft  thou  plead  with  God  and  fay,  O  Lord,  when  I  ihall  with 
Saints  and  Angels  ,  be  praifing  thy  pardoning  grace  in  heaven,  it 
will  not  grieve  thee,that  thy  mercy  kept  thee  fiom  (hedding  my 

blood. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace .  2  £& 


blood,  damning  my  £>ul  in  hell.  But  now  *cis  evident,  that 
many  who  feem  to  leek  peace,  and  perfufe  it  too  very  ftrongly  , 
yet  do  not  take  overmuch  care  for  Gods  honour  in  the  thing. 
Becaufe  they  are  earneft  with  God  to  pardon  them  in  a  way 
that  were  to  him  difhonourable.  Pardoned  they  would  be,though 
wholly  ignorant  of  God  and  Chrift:  they  would  have  God  to  be 
at  peace  with  them,  while  they  are  enemies  to  him.  Like  a  thief  at 
the  bar,  he  would  have  the  Judge  fpare  his  life  right  or  wrong, 
legally  or  illegally,  what  cares  he .?  doth  this  wretch  cctnfider  the 
honour  of  the  Judge ?  or  that  (inner,  who  fo  he  be  slaved,  cares 
not  how  unrighteous  God  is  in  the  ad  of  mercy  ?  O  deceive 
not  your  (elves  poor  foulsj  God  will  not  make  war  between  his 
own  attributes,  to  make  peace  with  you. 

Secondly,  you  muft  delire  to  be  reconciled  to  God,  that  you 
may  have  fellowfhip  with  God.  Certainly  a  foul  fenfible  what 
the  loiTe  of  communion  with  God  isocounts  it  hath  not  all  her  er- 
rand done,  when  it  hath  naked  peace  given  it ;  fhould  God  fay, 
Soul  I  am  friends  with  thee-  I  have  ordered  thou  (halt  never 
go  to  hell,  here  is  a  difcharge  under  my  hand,  that  thou  (halt  re- 
verbearrefted  for  my  debt  more  ^  but  as  for  any  fellowfhip  With 
me,  or  fruition  of  me,  thou  canft  exped  none :  I  have  done  with 
thee ,  forever  being  acquainted  more  with  thee,  certainly 
the  foul  would  take  little  joy  in  her  peace^  were  the  fire  out  as 
topofitive  torments,  yet  a  hell  would  be  left  in  the  difmal 
darknefs,  which  the  foul  would  fet  under  for  want  of  Gods  pre- 
fence.  Abfolom  knew  no  middle  condition  that  could  pleafe 
him,  betwixt  feeing  the  King  his  Fathers  face,  and  being  killed, 
2  Sam.  1432  Let  me  fee  the  Kings  face,  and  if  there  be  any  ini- 
quity in  me,  let  him  fyll  me,\i I  be  not  worthy  to  enjoy  my  fathers 
love  and  prsfence,  neither  do  I  defire  to  live  ^  whereas  a  naughty 
heart  feeks  reconciliation  without  any  longing  after  fellowfhip 
with  Cod ;  like  the  traitour,  if  ihe  King  will  but  pardon  and  fave 
him  from  the  gallows,  he  is  ready  to  promife  him,  never  to  trou- 
ble him  at  Court ;  'tis  his  own  life,  not  the  Kings  favour  he  de- 
fires, 


A- a  a- 3  SECT' 


2, 


^65  TbeGojpel  of  peace. 


SLCT.  HI. 

Thirdly,  throw  down  thy  rebellious  armes,  and  humbly  fub- 
mic  to  his  mercy.  God  will  not  fo  much  as  treat  with  thee  Co 
long  as  thy  fword  is  in  thy  hand  •  C<>mt  novo,  let  us  reafon  together 
faith  the  Lord,  Ifa.  i .  1 8.  Mark  when  the  parly  begins  ^  put  away 
the  evil  of  your  doings  t  ver.  1 6.  Now  come  and  treat  with  God 
about  a  peace. 

Firft,  God  is  a  great  God,  and  it  doth  not  become  his  Sove- 
reignty to  treat  with  his  forry  creature  on  equal  terms,  as  a  King 
doth  with  his  fellow  Prince,  who  if  he  cannot  have  peace  on  his 
own  termes,  is  able  probably  to  revenge  bimfelf  by  force  of  arms: 
But  as  a  mighty  King  with  his  rebel-fubjed,  whom  he  hathfaft 
bound  with  chains  in  prifon,  and  can  at  pleafure  hang  up  for  his 
treafon.    The  great  God  will  have  thee  know  that.    Let  thofe 
capitulate,  who  can  retire  to  their  ftrength,  and   live   without 
peace.-  But  as  for  thee  poor  (inner,  thou  doeft  not,  Ihope,think 
thou  art  in  a  capacity  to  meet  God  in  the  field,or  to  thrive  by  this 
trade  of  war  againft  God.No.thy  only  way  is  to  conquer  him  up- 
on  thy  knee,  to  lay  thy  neck  at  his  foot,  and  fay,  Lord  I  put  my 
life  in  thy  hands,  thy  true  prifoner  I  will  be,  choofing  rather  to 
die  by  the  hand  of  thy  jultice,than  to  continue  fighting  againft  thy 
mercy.    Now,  poor  foul,  thou  art  got  into   the  right  path  that 
leads  to  peace.     Humble  your  [elves  in  the  fight  of  the  Lord ,  and 
he /hall  lift  you  up  ,  James  4.10.  that  foul  {hall  not  long  be  out 
ofhisarmes,  that  is  proftrate  at  his  foot ;    But  though  the  high 
and  lofty  onecanftoop  to  take  up   a   penitent  finner    into  the 
armes  of  his  pardoning  mercy ;  yet  he  will  not  debafe  his  Sove- 
reignty to  treat  with  a  wretch  that  ftands  to  his  armes ,  and  (touts 
it  out  with  him.    There  is  one  red  letter  in  Gods  Name.,/;?  pill  h) 
no  means  clear  the  guilty ,  Exod.  34. 

Secondly ,  the  holy  nature  of  God  requires  this  •,  llrnie  is  that 
which  made  the  breach,  and  caufed  God  to  take  armes  againit  his 
creature-,  how  canft  thou  rationally  think  to  make  thy  peace  with 
him,  and  keep  this  make-bate  in  thy  bofome?  God  is  willing 
to  be  reconciled  with  thee,  but  wilt  thou  have  him  be  at  peace 
with  thy  finne  alfo  ?     Is  it   not  enough  to  be  juftified  from  thy 

(inne. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  26  7 


finne,  but  would'ft  thou  have  God  betray  his  own  honour,  by  ;u- 
ftifying  thee  in  thy  finne  ?  Did  you  ever  hear  a  Prince  give  a  pa- 
tent to  another  to  cut  his  own  throat  ?  What  fecurity  eanft  thou 
give  to  God  of  thy  love  to  him,  if  thou  wilt  not  renounce  that, 
which  is  the  only  thing  that  fceks  his  life  ?  "Teccatum  eft-  deici- 
dittm.  As  long  as  the  traytour  is  in  favour  within,  God  will  not 
raife  his  ficge,  or  hear  of  peace  without.  They  cannot  reign  to- 
gether; choofe  which  you  will  have  of  them;  And  be  not  fo 
far  deluded  as  to  think,  'tis  enough  to  fend  thy  luft  out  of  the 
way  for  a  while,  as  P.  inces  ufe  to  do  their  favourites  in  a  popular 
commotion  to  pleafe  the  people,  and  then  call  for  them  home, 
when  the  hubub  is  over.  No,  God  will  not  be  thus  dodg'd  and 
mockt.  See  how  the  promife  runnes,  and  this  he  will  ftand  too. 
If*.  55.7.  Let  the  wicked  for  Jake  his  way,  and  the  unrighteous  his 
thoughts,  and  let  him  return  unto  the  Lord,  and  he  wiH  abundant  ly 
pardon.  See  how  cautious  God  is  in  the  termes .-  no  corner  lerc 
for  the  leaft  (inne  to  skulk,  and  fave  its  life  in  ±  He  mufi  forfake, 
that  implies, 

Firft,  a  deliberate  choice  in  the  foul,  he  does  it  freely  •,  fome 
mens  finnes  forfake  them-,  the  unclean  fpirit  goes  out,  and  is  not 
driven  out  ^  occafions  to  finne  ceafe,  or  bjdily  ability  to  execute 
the  commands  offinne  is  wanting-,  here  is  no  forfaking  finne  in 
all  this  •,  but  to  break  from  it  with  a  holy  indignation  and  refolu- 
tion  when  temptation  is  moft  bufie,and  ftrength  moft  a&ive^now 
(as  D<*W  faid,  when  his  enemy  compared  him  as  Bees  )  in  the 
Name  of  the  Lord  to  repel  and  refift  them,  this  is  to  forfake.  This 
is  the  Encomium  oi  Mofes,  he  foriook  the  Court  when  he  was 
grown  up^  not  for  age  as  Barzi/tai, but  when  his  blood  was  warm 
in  his  veines.  A  man  doth  not  forfake  his  wife,when  he  is  detained; 
from  her  in  prifon,  but  when  he  puts  her  away , and  gives  her  a  bill- 
of  divorce. 

Secondly,  to  forfake  finne,  is  to  leave  it  without  any  thought 
referved  of  returning  to  it  again.  Every  time  a  man  takes  a  jour- 
ny  from  home  about  bufinefs,  we  do  not  fay  he  haih  forfaken^ 
his  houfe,  becaufehe  meant  when  he  went  out  to  come  to  it  a- 
gain.  No,  but  when  we  fee  a  man  leave  his  houfe,  carry  all  his 
ftuffe  away  with  him,  lock  up  hisdoores,  and  take  up  his  a- 
bode  in  another,  never  to  dwell  there  more-,  here's  a  man  hath 
indeed  forfaken  his  houfe.     It  were  ftrange  to  find  a  drunkard  fo 

conftant 


'^58  Tfcg  Gofpel  of  peace. 

conftant  in  the  exercife  of  that  finne,but  fometime  you  may  find 
himfober;  and  yet  a  drunkard  he  is,  as  well  as  if  he  was  then 
drur.k.  Every  one  hath  not  forfaken  his  trade,  that  we  fee  now 
and  then  in  their  holy- day  fuit;  then  the  manforfakeshis  finne, 
when  he  throws  it  from  him,  and  bolts  the  door  upon  it  with  a 
nurpofe  never  to  open  more  to  ic.  Hofea  14.8.  Ephraim  (hallfaj, 
what  have  J  to  do  anj  more  with  Idvls  ? 

A? ciin,  ©bferve,  before  pardon  can  be  fealed,  he  muft  forfake 
not  this  lin,or  that'but  the  whole  way  of  C\n.Let  the  wicked  forfake 
bis  way.  A  traveiour  may  ftcp  from  one  path  to  another,  and  ftill 
go  on  the  fame  way-,  leave  a  dirty,  deep,  rugged  path,  for  one 
more  fmoo:h  and  even-,  fo  many  finding  fome  grofle  fins  uneafie, 
and  too  toilefome  to  their  awakened  confcicnces,ftep  into  a  more 
Cleanly  path  of  civility  ^  but  alas  poor  creatures,  all  they  get  isto 
go  a  little  more  eafily  and  cleanly  to  hell?than  their  beaftly  neigh- 
bours- butheforfakesthewayoffwne,  that  turnes  out  of  the 
whole'road  -,  in  a  word,  thou  muft  forfake  the  blindeft  path  of  all 
infinncsway,  that  which  lies  behind  the  hedge,  as  I  may  fo 
fay    in  the  thoughtsof  the  heart,  and  the  unri&htecut  his  thoughts-, 
or  elfc  thou  knock'ft  in  vain  at  Gods  door  for  pardoning  mer- 
'  cy     and  therefore  poor  foul ,  forfake  all  or  none.-     Save  one 
luft    and  you  lofe  one  foul  •  if  men  mean  to  go  to  hell,  why  are 
they  fo  mannerly  ?  this  halving  with  finne  is  ridiculous :     Art 
thou  afraid  of  this  finne,  and  not  of  a  leffe,  which  hinders   thy 
peace    and  procures  thy  damnation  as  fure,  only  not  with  fo 
much  diftracYion  to  thy  drowfie  confeience  at  prefent  ?  This  is 
as  ridiculous,  as  it  was  with  him ,  who  being  to  be  hanged,  defi- 
red  that  he  might  by  no  means  go  through  fuch  a  ftreet  to  the 
gallows,  for  fear  of  the  plague  that  was  there.    What  wilt  thou 
let  poor  finner,  ifthougocft  to  hell,  though  thou  goeft  thither 
2*  by  thy  ignorance,  unbelief,  fpiricual  pride,  &c.     yet  led  about 

fo  as  to  efcape  the  plague  of  open  profanenefle  ?  O  firs,confider 
but  the  equity ,  the  honourablenefs  of  the  termes  that  God 
offers  peace  upon  j  whac  luft  is  fo  fweet  or  profitable,  that  is 
worth  burning  in  hell  for  ?  Darius,  when  he  fled  before  Alexan- 
der, that  he  might  runne  the  fafter  out  of  danger  ,  threw  arvay 
his  M.ijpc  crown  from  his  head  which  hindred  hint ,  and  is  <any  luft 
fo  precious  in  thy  eye,  that  thou  canft  not  leave  it  behind  thee, 
rather  than  fall  into  the  hands  of  Gods  juftice  ?  But  fo  fottifli  is 

foolifh 


The   Gofpel  of  peace.  260 


foolifh  man,  that  a  wife  Heathen  could  take  notice  of  it ;  Eafola 
emi  put. twits,  pro  qtiibus  pccHniam  folvimus j  ea  gratu.it  a  vocamw, 
pro  quibns  *os-ipfos  imp{ndimHs,&c.Seri.EpiJl.4Z.  We  think  we 
only  buy,what  we  part  with  money  for  •  and  as  for  thofe  things 
we  pay  our  felves,  our  fouls  for,  the.'e  wc  think  we  have  for  no- 
thing j  as  if  the  man  were  not  more  worth  than  his  mo- 
ney. 


SECT.  IV. 


Fourthly,  having  been  faithful  to  follow  the  preceding  di- 
rections ,  thou  now  art  in  a  fair  way  to  effed  thy  much  defired  4- 
enterprize ;  hie  thee  therefore  as  £  on  as  may  be  to  the  throne  of 
grace,  and  humbly  prefer*  thy  requeft  to  God,  that  he  would 
be  at  peace  with  thee-,  yea,  carry  with  thee  a  faith  that  thou 
{halt  find  him  more  ready  to  embrace  the  motion,  than  thou  to 
make  it;  only  take  heed,  what  thou  makeft  thy  plea  to  move 
God,  and  where  thou  placeft  thy  confidence ;  not  in  thy  repen- 
tance or  reformatio^  this  were  to  play  the  Merchant  with  God-, 
know  he  expects  not  a  chapman  to  truck  with  him,  but  an  hum- 
ble funplicant  to  be  fuitor  to  him  ;  Nor  his  abfolute  mercy  (  as 
ignorant  fouls  doj  this  is  to  take  hold  of  the  fword  by  the  blade 
and  not  by  the  hilt ;  fuch  will  find  their  death  and  damnation 
from  that  mercy,  which  they  might  be  faved  by ,  if  they  did  take 
hold  of  it  as  God  offers  it  them,  and  that  is,  thrcugh  Chrift ,  Ifa. 
37.5.  Let  him  take  held  of  my  flrength^  that  he  may  make  peace  with 
me,  andhejhall  make  peace  with  me.  And  where  lies  Gods  laving 
ftrength,butinChiift?hehath  laidftrength  upon  this  mighty  one \able 
tofave  to  the  uttermeft  all  that  come  to  God.  It  is  not  Gods  abfolute 
power  or  mercy  will  help  the,buthis  Covenant,ftrength&mercy, 
and  this  is  in  Chrift.  Take  hold  of  Chrift,  and  thou  haft  hold  of 
Gods  arme,he  cannot  ftrike  the  foul  that  holds  thereby.  Indeed, 
Gods  eflential  goodnefs  is  a  powerful  argument  to  perfwade  the 
poor  foul  to  relie  upon  the  promife  in  Chrift  for  pardon  ,  when 
he  confidcrs  that  God  who  promifeth  peace  to  the  believer,  is 
a  God  whofe  very  nature  is  forgiving,  and  mercy  it  felfj  but 
had  there  been  no  promife  to  engage  this  mercy  to  poore  finners 

B  b  b  through 


^-0  The  Go/pel  of  peace. 


through- chrift,  this   would  have  been  but  cold  comfort,  to 
have  believed  Gcd  was  good.    He  could  have  damned  che  whole 
ftockofe^*w5anJ  not  call'd  his  eflential  goodnefs  the  leaft  in 
qutftion.     Ic  is  no  blot  to  the  almightinefs  of  his  power,  that 
he  doth  not  all  he  can-     He  could  make  more  worlds,  (if  he  was 
fo  p!eas,d)chan  he  hath  done  ;  buc  we  have  no  ground  to  believe 
he  will,  neither  is  he  the  lelle  Almighty,  becaufe  he  does  not-, 
fo  he  could   have   faved    the  fallen  Angels  with  the  fonncs  of 
loft  man  ;  He  is  not  fcanted  in  mercy  for  luch  a  defign,  if  he  had 
thought  it  fit  •  but  having paft  no promife for fuch a  thing,  the 
efiential  goodnefs  of  God  affords  the  devils  but  little  relief ,  or 
hope  that  he  will  doit>,    And  yet  God  continues  good.  And  for 
ought  I  can  find  out  of  the  Word,  they  among  the  fonnes  of  men, 
who  (either  through  fimple  ignorance  of  theGofpel,  or  preju- 
dce,  which  their  proud  reafon  hath   taken  up  againft  the  way 
it  chalks  out  for  making  our  peace  with  God,  through  Chrifts 
fatisfadion  for  us  )  do  negled  Chrift,  or  fcomfully  rejed  this 
his  fatisfadion,  and  betakethcmfelvcs  to  the  abfolute  goodnefs 
and  mercy  of  God,  as  the  plea  which  they  will  make  at  Chrifts 
b3r  for  their  pardon  and  falvation,  (hall  find  as  little  benefit  from 
it,  as  the  devils  themfelves  •  fuppofe  (  friends)  a  Prince  fliould 
freely  make  a  law,  by  which  he  will  govern  his  people,  and  takes 
a  fokmneoathtokeepclofeto  it-,  could  a  malefadour  that  is 
condemned  by  this  Law  to  die,  expect,  any  relief  by  appealing 
from  the  Law  to  the  mercy  and  goodnefs  of  the  Princes  nature? 
I  confeiTe  fome  have  fped  and  faved  their  lives  by  taking  this 
courfe :    But  it  hath  been  becaufe  either  the  Prince  was  impru- 
dent in  making  the  Law,  or  unfaithful  in  keeping  his  oath.-  Nei- 
ther of  which  can  without  blafphemy  be  imputed  to  God  infinite- 
ly wife  and  holy.    He  hath  enaded  aLaw,called  the  Law  of  faith 
for  the  faving  poor  finners  through  Chrift,  and  is  under  an  oath 
to  make  it  good  both  in  the  falvation  of  every  one  that  believe 
on  C  hrift&damnation  on  every  one  that  doth  not  believe:and  to 
make  all  fure  hath  given  C  hrift  an  oath  to  be  faithful  in  his  office, 
who  was  trufted  as  Prieft  to  procure  redemption ,    and  fhall  lie 
Judge  to  pronounce  the  fentence  (at  the  great  day  )  of  abfolu- 
tion  or  condemnation.     Take  heed  therefore  poor  (inner,  that 
thou  bet  ft  not  drawn  from  placing  thy  entire  confidence  on 
Chrift  the  Sonne  of  God ;  both  God  and  man  in  one  perfon ,  who 

laid 


The  Go/pet  ofpejce.  %j\ 


laid  down  his  life  upon  agreement  with  his  Father,  to  make  an 
atonement  for  the  (inne  of  the  world  j  and  now  offers  thee  that 
blood  (  which  then  he  fhed)   as  a  price  to  carry  in  the  hand 
of  thy  faith  to  the  Father  for  pardon  and  peace.    No,  though 
they  fhould  come  and  call  thee  frorrk-hrift  to  Chriftjxom  aCh;  lit 
without  thee,  to  a  Chrift  within  thee  ^     As   the  Jcjuite  doth  in 
the  Quaker,  into  whom  he  is  now  got  v  As  the  Friars  of    old 
were  wont  into  their  hollow  images.-  that  they  might  deliver 
their  lying  do&rins  out  of  the  mouths  of  their  reputedSaints,and 
thereby  cozen  the  multitude  without  any  fufpition  of  their  kna- 
very.    Juftfo  do  the  Jefmtes  now  adayes  deliver  their  Popifh 
ftuffe,  out  of  the  mouths  of  the  Quakers.    A  defign  fo    much 
more   dangerous    as    'tis  more    cunning    than  the  other i 
There  is  too  much  light  fhed  abroad,  for  that  old  puppet-play  to 
take  :  but  though  men  are  too  wife   to  lend  an  eare  to  a  block 
oraftonej  yetholinefsina  living  Saint  commands  fuch  reve- 
rence, that  the  devil  hath  ever  found ,  and  will  to  the  end  of  the 
world,  that  he  may  pafs  lcaft  fufpe&ed  under  this  cloak.    Well, 
when  he  comes  ro  call  thee  from  a  Chrift  without  thee ,  to  a 
Chrift  within  thee  -^  ftrip  the  doctrine  out  of  its  pleafing  phrafe  j 
and  in  plain  Englifb,  he  calls  theefromtruftinginthe  righteouf- 
nefs  of  Chrift  wrought   by   him  for  thee ,  and  by  faith  to  be 
made  thine  for  thy  justification  before  God,  to  an  inherent  work 
of  grace  or  righteoufnefs  wrought  by  the  Spirit  of  God  in   thee 
for  thy  fan&ification  and  renovation ,  called  fometimes   the 
new  creature,  and  Chrift  within  m.    Now,  hadft  thou  not  made 
a  goodly  change,  ifthou  hadft  let  go  thy  hold  on  Chrift,  who  is 
thy  righteoufnefs,  to  relie  on  a  creature,  and  that   a  weak  one 
too,  God  knows,  full  of  fo  many  imperfections ,  that  thy  con- 
fcience  (  except  injudicious  and  given  over  to  believe  a  lie  )  can 
tell,  th?t  'tis  but  as  veine  of  gold  irnbafed  with  much  more  earth 
anddroffe,  which  (hall  never  be  quite  purged  till  thou  beeft  put 
into  the  refining  pot  of  the  grave:    look  to  thy  felf  Chriftlan  , 
here 'tis  matter  of  life  and  death  ^  prize  Chrifts   grace  within 
thee  thou  muft  ;  yea,  thou  haft  none  in  thee,if  thou  doeft  not  va  • 
lue  it  above  all  the  mountaines  of  gold  the  world  hath ;  Bur  truft 
not  to  this  Chrift, or  grace  of  Chrift  within  thee  for  life  and  aU 
vation  j  for  now  thou  prizeft  the  creature  above  God,  and  fetteft 
Chrift  within  thee  to  fight  with  Chrift  without  thee.     The    Bride 

B  b  b  2  doth 


^-2  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


doth  well  highly  to  efteem  her  husbands  picture,  which  he  hath 
given  her,  especially  if  very  like  him,  and  moft  ofall,  if  drawn 
by  his  own  hand  :    But  it  were  very  ridiculous  i  f  (he  (hould  dote 
on  that  fo  far  as  to  flight  her  husband,  and  when  (he  wants  mo- 
ney, cloathsorthclike,  to  go  not  to  her  husband,  but  to  the 
picture  he  gave  her  for  all.    The  Saints  grace  is  called,  Chrift 
within  him,  becaufeit  is  his  picture,  and  makes  the  Saint  fo  like 
Chrift  :  This  for  the  refemblance  it  bears  to  theholinefs  of  Chrift 
himfelf  thy  husband,  who  with  the  finger  of  his  own  Spirit,  drew 
it  on  thy  foul,  deferves  highly  to  be  valued  :   But  what  a  dotage 
were  it   for    thee  to  turn  thy  back  on  the  Lord  Jefus  Chrift 
himfelf  to  whom   by  faith  thou  art  married  j  and  when  thou 
wanted  pardon  and  comfort,  wouldft  have  heaven  and   happi- 
nefs,  to  exped  thefe,  not  from  Chrift,  but  thy  grace  ?  O  will 
Chrift  thank  thee  for  honouring  his  creature  to  the  difhonour  of 
his  perfon  ? 


CHAP.  VH. 


An  Exhortation  tofu  ch  as  are  at  peace  with  Godwin 
fix  particulars. 

Vfc  z.     CEcondly,  a  few  words  by  way  of  improvement  to  you  whofc 
peace  is  concluded  with  Chrift. 
i  •  FirfVhaft  thou  peace  with  ■  ,od?  Look  •hen  maksft  nc  peace  with 

^»,This  broke  thy  peace  withGod^nowIet  thy  peace  withGod,be- 
gin  a  war  with  that. never  to  have  end.  Thou  canft  not  fure  forget 
the  ineftimabte  wrong  and  damage  thou  haft  furTered  by  it^  every 
moments  fweet  en  j.  yment  of  God  ( whefe  bofome-Iove  thou  haft 
now  hrppil  recovered )  will  help  ro  keep  the  fire  of1  wrath  and  re- 
venge burning  in  thy  heart  againft  that  curfed  enemy ,  that  both 

threw 


The  Gofpel  of  peace .  373 

threw  and  kept  thee  fo  long  thence.  God  hath  now  won  thy 
heart  (I  hope,)  by  his  pardoning  mercy,  dearly  to  love  him 
for  his  love  to  thee.  How  then  canft  thou  with  patience  fee 
any  luft  come  braving  forth  from  its  trench  fthy  heart  I  mean  ) 
defying  thy  God  and  his  grace  in  thee  ?  Pauls  fpirit  was  ftirred 
inhimat  Athens,  to  fee  God  difhonoured  by  the  fuperftition 
of  others  j  and  is  not  thine,  to  fee  him  reproacht  by  the  pride, 
unbelief,  and  other  linnes  that  do  it  from  under  thy  own  fouls 
roof?  Oh  Chriftian,meditatefome  noble  exploit  againft  it;  now 
the  more  to  ftcel  thy  heart,  and  harden  it  againft  all  relenting  to- 
wards it  •,  carry  the  blood  and  wounds  of  thy  Saviour  into  the 
field  with  thee,  in  the  hand  of  thy  faith  •,  The  fight  of  thefe  will 
certainly  enrage  thy  heart  againft  thylufts,  that  ftab'd  and  kil- 
led him ;  more  than  the  bloody  garments  of  Ctfar  (  held  up  by 
Anthony  )  did  the  Roman  Citizens  againft  his  murderers.  Oh 
fee  how  cruelly  they  ufed  the  Lord  of  glory,  and  where  they  laid 
him  in  an  ignominious  grave,  and  that  faftened  with  a  feal , 
ftronger  than  that  which  man  fet  to  it  (thecurfe  due  to  us 
finners)  never  poffible  to  have  been  broke  up  by  any  lefle  than 
his  own  Almighty  arme.  And  now  Chnftian,  (hall  thefe 
murderers,  not  of  man,  but  of  God  (  for  it  was  the 
blood  of  God  that  was  died  )  efcape  that  vengeance, 
which  God  would  have  done  with  thy  hand  upon  them  ?  where- 
fore elfe  doth  he  leave  thee  any  life  in  thy  foul,  but  that  thou 
fhouldft  have  the  opportunity  of  (hewing  thy  love  to  Chrift,  by 
running  thy  dagger  of  mortification  into  their  heart  ?  Alexander 
got  not  more  honour  by  his  great  victories  in  the  field,  than  by 
his  piety  to  his  dead  father  Thilif.  whofe  bloody  death  he  a- 
venged,  as  foon  as  he  came  into  the  Throne,  flaying  the  mur- 
therersupon  his  fathers  Tomb.  Ofhewthou  (  Chnftian)  thy 
piety  to  thy  dear  Saviour,  bv  falling  upon  thy  curfed  Iufts,  and 
that  fpeedily ;  never  reft  till  thou  haft  had  their  blood,  that  fhed 
his ;  till  thou  doeft  this,thou  art  confenting  to  all  the  cruelty  that 
was  executed  on  him  ;  This  this  is  the  honour  which  all  the  Saints 
/haHhave,2ind  therefore  the  two-edged  fwordoi  the  Spirit  is  put  in- 
to their  hands ,  that  they  may  execute  the  vengeance  writ- 
ten. 

Sccbndly^  Is  God  reconciled  to  thee  ?  Be  thou  willing  to  be  2* 

reconciled  to  any  that  have  wronged  thee.    Thy  God  expefts  it 

Bbb}  at. 


o^a  TheGoJj>eloj  pejce* 


at  thy  hands.    Thou  haft  reafon  to  pardon  thy  brother  f.r  Gods 
lake,  who  pardoned    thee  for  his  pure  mercies  fake.     Thou  in 
pardoning  doeft  no  more  than  thou  owelt  thy  brother '  but  God 
pardoned  thee  when  he  did  owe  thee  nothing  but  wrath.     Thou 
needft  not  (  1  hope  J  think  that  thou  difhonoureft  thy  felf in  the 
ad,  though  it  be  totheveryeft  bggar  in  the  town,  know  thou 
docft  it  after  thy  betters.Thy  God  itoopt  lower  when  he  reconci- 
led himfelf  to  thee,  yea,fought  ic  at  thy  hands,  and  no  dishonour 
neither  to  the  high  and  lofty  One. Nay,  by  implacablends  and  re- 
venge thou  debafeft  thy  felf  the  moft  thou  canft  likely  do  •,  for 
by  thefe  thou  ftoopeft  not  only  beneath  thy  heaven-  born  nature, 
but  humane  ^  'tis  the  Devil,  and  none  but  fuch  arbear  his  image 
that  are  implacable  enemies  •   Hell  fire  it  is  that  is  unquenchable. 
The  vrifdome  from  above  is  eafilj  to  be  intr  cared.  Thou  a  Chriftian, 
and  carry  heli  fire  about  thee?  howcanit  be?  when  we  fee  a 
child  furious  and  revengeful ,  that  comes  of  merciful    parent*^ 
we  ufe  to  fay,  we  wonder  of  whom  he  got  his  currifli,churlifh  di- 
fpofition,  hu  father  and mother  was  not  fo  ?  who  learns  thee  ,  O 
Chriftian,  to  be  fo  revengeful  and  unmerciful  ?  thou  haft  it  not  of 
thy  heavenly  Father  I  am  fure. 
3  •  Thirdly,  Is  God  at  peace  with  thee  ?  hath  he  pardoned  thy  fin?? 

never  then  diftruft  his  providence  for  any  thing  thou  wanted  as 
to  this  life;  two  things  well  weighed,  would  help  thy  faith  in 
this  particular.  Firfiy  when  he  pardoned  thy  finnes,hc  did  more 
for  thee  than  this  comes  to,  and  did  he  give  the  g  eater,  and  will 
he  gi  utch  thee  the  leiTcfThou  haft  Chrift  in  thy  pardon  beftowed 
on  thee  •  Horvfi/aM  he  not  -with  him  tlfo  freely  oivc  thee  all  things  I 
Rom  8  32.  When  the  father  gives  his  childe  the  whole  orchard, 
it  were  folly  to  queftion,  whether  he  gives  him  this  apple  or  that 
init.  All things  are  jcurs,  anijott  are  Cfaifls^  1  Cor. 3  22.  The 
reconciled  foul  hath  a  right  to  ail.  The  whole  world  is  his  •  bnt 
as  a  father  ,though  he  fettles  a  faire  eftate  on  his  child,  yet  lets  him 
hold  no  more  in  his  own  hand,  than  he  can  well  manage  ■  fo  God 
gives  believers  a  right  to  all  the  comforts  of  this  life,  but  propor- 
tions fo  much  out  to  them  for  their  aftual  ufe,  as  his  infinite 
wifdome  fees  meet ;  fo  that,  he  that  hath  lefle  than  another  in 
his  prefent  poflefiion,  ought  to  impute  it  not  to  any  want  of  love 
or  care  in  Cod,  but  to  the  wifdome  both  of  his  love  and  care, 
that  gives  ftcck  as  we  have  grace  to  work  it  out  j  we  poure  the 

wine 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  375 


wine  according  as  the  cup  is;  that  which  but  fills  one  would 
half  be  loft,  if  poured  into  a  leffe.  Secondly,  conCidet  how  God 
gives  thefe  temporals  to  rhofe  he  denies  peace  and  pardon  to. 
Though  within  a  while  they  are  to  be  tumbled  into  hell, yet  while 
on  earth  his  providence  reacheth  unto  them,  and  doth  God  feed 
thefe  Ravens,  uncleane  birds  ?  doth  he  caufe  his  rain  to  drop 
fatnefTe  on  their  fields,  and  will  he  neglect  thee  thinkeft  thou,that 
art  a  believer  >  If  the  Prince  feeds  the  traytourin  prifon,  furely 
thechilde  inhishoufeftiallnotftarve.  In  a  word  (to  allude  to 
that,  Luke  12.28.)  if  God  in  his  providence  fo  abounds  to  the 
ungodly  (as  we  fee  he  dothj  if  he  cloaths  this  grafTe  (  for  to  this 
the  wicked  may  well  be  compared )  which  is  today  in  the  field, 
and  to  morrow  is  caft  into  hells  burning  oven,W  much  more  -will 
hecloaihyou,  0  ye  of  little  faith  ? 

4.  Art  thou  at  peace  with  God?  O  then  fliew  no  difcontent  at         4. 
anycrofle  or  affliction   that  God  vifiteth  thee  withal.    If  he 
hath  vifited  thee  firft  with  his  mercy,  thou  haft  reafon  to  bid  him 
kindly  welcome,  when  he  comes  to  vifit  thee  with  his  rod.  Thou 
haft  fugar  by  thee  now  to  fweeten  fchy  bitter  cup  -t  when  the  Pro- 
phet Samuel  came  to  Bethlehem,  it  is  faid  ,     The   Elders    of 
the    Town  trembled  at    hU  comings      and  [aid,      comtfl    thou 
peaceably ,  and  he faid  peaceably  ^  I  Sam.  16.    4.    Thus  when 
Cod    comes    with   fome   heavy  affliction    to  us ,    it    may 
make  us  tremble  till  we  know   what  i:  comes  for ,  whether 
peaceably  or  no.    Now,  if  thou  beeft  at  peace  with  God,the  fear 
is  over ;  it  cannot  but  come  peaceably  .-     Thou  mayeft  conclude 
it  comes  on  mercies  errand  -,  what  condition  canft  thou  (O  par- 
doned foul)  be  in,  that  (hould  part  thee  and  the  joy  of  thy  peace 
with  God?  Is  it  the  wrath  of  man  *thou  feareft  ?  poffibly  thou 
haft  many  enemies,  and  thofe  great  ones.and  their  wrath  as  greac 
as  fuchc:an  expreffe.     Let  it  be  fo  •,  is  God  among  them  or  no? 
Doth  God  let  out  their  wrath  in  his  wrath  againftthee?  if  not , 
thou  exceedingly  wrongeft  God  ,  if  overmuch  troubled ,  and 
thy  felf  alfo.     Thou  wronged  God  by  not  fan&ifying  his  name 
in  thy  heart,  whofe  mercy  (I  hope)  is  able  to  fecure  thee  from 
their  wrath.     IfGodbefr  us,  who  can  be  againji  tu>  Rom. 8. 3  1  . 
Thou  needft  not  fear  them,  though  an  army  of  them  about  thee, 
no  more  than  if  they  were  fo  many  wifps  of  ftraw.    And  thou 
wrongeft  thy  felf  alfo  j  how  indeed  can  we  wrong  God  and  net 

our 


2  7  6  Ike  Gofpel  of  peace. 


ourfelves?  fo  long  as  thou  art  under  the  power  of  fuch  a  fear 
from  mans  wrath,  thoucanft  never  have  the  taite  of  Gods  love 
in  its  true  fwcetnefs. 

A  (rain,  art  thou  fickj  poor.and  what  not  befide?  may  not  God 
reafonably  expect,  that  reconciling  mercy  (hould  ftop  thy  mouth 
from  whifpering  any  word  of  difcontent  againft  him,  and  prevent 
all  envious  glances  of  thy  eye   at  the  profperity  of  the  wicked  ? 
Remember  man,  that  thou  canft  fay  one  great  word,  which  they 
cannot  in  the  midft  of  all  their  pomp  and  worldly  glory,  Though 
I  lie  here  poor  andfick^  jet  1  am  through  mercy ,  at  peace  with 
God.    This  well  thought  on,would  foon  change  both  your  notes. 
The  joy  oftheprofperous  (inner  into  bitter  mourning,  and  thy 
forrow  (Chriftian)  into  joy.    The  Lady  Elizabeth  (afterwards 
England:  gracious  <*W»)hearing  a  fimple  milk  maid  (ing  mer- 
rily in  the  field,  when  (be  poor  Princefle  (being  then  a  forrow- 
fulprifonerj  had  more  minde  to  figh  than  (ing  (  though  ferved 
at  the  fame  time  in  ftate  as  a  Princefle  )  faid,  that  poor  maid  was 
happier  than  her  fe If.     And  fo  would  the  (inner    (how  great  and 
high  foever  in  the  world  )  think  the  pooreft  Chriftian  with  his 
rags  and  penury,  a    better  man  and  happier  in  his  liberty ,  and 
peace  with  God,  than  himfelf  in  all  his  g  andure  and  worldly 
gayeties,  did  hebutconfider  that  in  the  midft  ofallthefeheisa 
prifoner,  not  to  man,  but  God,out  of  whole  hands  there  is  no 
efcaping. 
5,  Fifthly,  comfort   thy   felf  with   this;  that   thou  who  a;t 

at  peace  with  God  now  on  earth,  (halt  feaft  with  God  ere  long 
in  heaven.      Ecm.'S.^O.  Andvohom  he  juftified  ^them he  alfo glori- 
fied. And  do  not  think  this  news  too  good  or  great  to  be  true. 
Here  is  a  word  for  it  you  fee-Heavens  number  of  glorified  Saints, 
is  made  up  of  juftified  finners. Neither  more  nor  lefs  of  the  one,than 
of  the  other.  Art  thou  juftified  by  faith,by  which  thou  haft  peace 
with  God?  then  lofe  not  thy  priviledge,  but   rejoyce  with  thy 
fellbw-Saints,  in  the  hope  of  the  glory  of  God.     It  is  before  thee  ^ 
evtry  day  brings  thee  nearer  to  ic,  and  nothing  can  hinder  thee 
ofitatlaft  -9  not  thy  fnnes  themfches,  and  I  know  thou  feareft 
them  moft.    He  that  paid  thy  great  fcore  at  thy  converfion,  will 
find  mercy  enough  in  his  heart  furely,  to  pafle  by  thy  dribbling 
debts,  which  thy  own  infirmity  and  Satans  fubtilty  have  run  thee 
into.  Thou  wcrt  an  enemy  ,whcn  God  thought  of  doing  the  firft . 

but 


The  Go f pel  of  peace.  ^jy 


but  now[houartahriend5&diis  will  oblige  him  todothefecond, 

that  he  may  not  Iofe  his  di*buritment  in  the  firft  •  ye* ,  provision 

is  made  by  God  in  his  method  of  our  falvation  ;or  the  one,  as 

flrongly  as  for  the  other.   Gbrifl  died  to  make  us  of  enemies  to 

God, friends  with  him;    and  he  lives  now  to  bring  God  and  us 

(being  thus  made  friends)  to  meet  in  one  heaven  together.  Yea, 

the  Apoftle  gives  the  advantage  to  this  of  the  two  for  our  faith 

to  triumph  in.     For  if  when  we  were  enemies^  we  were  reconciled  to 

Gedbj  the  death  of  his  Sonne  •  much  more  being  reconciled,  we  jh all 

be  ftved  by  his  life ,  Rom.  s«  10.  As  if  the  Apoftle  had  (aid,  Can 

you  believe,  that  God  hath  taken  \  ou  that  were  bloody  enemies 

into  a  ft  ate  of  peace  and  favour  with  himfelf?  i'urely^  then  you 

muft  needs  find  it  eafier  for  your  faith  to  argue  from  reconciiatton 

to  falvation,then  from  hoftility  and  enmity , to  pardon  and  peaee; 

could  Chrift  procure  the  one  by  his  death ,  when  he  was  wcakeft 

(asl  may  fo  fay)and  at  the  loweft  defcent  of  his  bumiliation?How 

much  more  (hall  he  in  the  height  of  his  '_  ourt  favour  in  heaven 

(where  he  hath  all  power  given  him,  and  in  particular  the  keyes 

of  hell  and  death  to  open  and  (hut  as  he  pleafethj  be  able  to  favc  Rev'#  x*  '  *' 

thofe  whom  he  hath  reconciled? 

Sixthly,  art  thou  at  peace  with  God  ?  knowing  the  goodnefle  6 • 
of  God  to  thy  ftlf,  do  thou  wooe  in  fome  others  to  embrace  the 
lame  mercy.  The  houfeis  not  fo  full,  but  jet  there  is  reomet 
Luke  14.  ?2.  Haft  thou  none  thou  loveft  fo  well,  as  to  wiOi  them 
thy  happineflc  ?  haply  thou  haft  a  carnal  husband  lying  bv  thy 
fide ,  children  of  thy  womb  or  loyns,  at  ighbours  in  whofe  com- 
pany thou  art  every  day  a  lmoft,  and  allthefe  in  an  unreconciled 
ftate  i  who,  fhould  they  die  as  now  they  live,  their  precious  fouls 
arc  loft  for  ever,  and  yet  themfelves  think  no  more  of  this  mifery 
coming  on  them,than  the  filly  (hecp  doth  what  the  Butcher  is  do- 
ing ,  when  he  is  whetting  his  knife  to  cut  her  throat.  Well,the 
lefle  merciful  they  are  to  their  own  fouls,  the  more  need  there  is 
thou  (hould'ft  (hew  thy  compaflion  towards  them.  We  take  moil 
care  of  thofe  that  are  leaft  capable  of  taking  care  for  themfelves. 
If  thou  hadft  a  friend  fick  in  thy  houfe,  and  of  fuch  a  difeafe  that 
he  could  not  help  himfelf,(hould  he  die  rathar  than  thou  would'ft 
look  after  him  ?  if  a  childe  condemned  to  die,  though  he  did  him- 
felf  not  mind  the  getting  of  a  pardon,yet  furely  thou  would'ft  run 
and  tide  to  obtaine  it,  rather  than  fee  him  end  his  dayes  fo  (hame- 

Ccc  fully. 


"\ 


-8  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 

tully.     In  a  word,did'ft  thou  but  know  that  thy  next  neighbour 
had  an  intention  to  foredo  himfelf ,  and  for  that  end  had  lockt 
himfelf  up  in  a  room  •,  would'ft  thou  not  bcftir  thee  to  break  up 
the  door,  rather  than  the  man  (hould  thus  mifcarry  ?   But  alas, 
where  is  the  holy  violence  that  is  ufed  to  fave  poor  fouls  ?  Pa- 
rents >  husbands,  neighbours ,  they  can  fee  their  relations  going  to 
hell  before  their  eyes  ■,  and  who  faith  to  them,  why  do  you  fo  ? 
Ofor  the  Lords  fake,  be  more  merciful  to  the  fouls  of  others. 
Thou  haft  found  a  feaft,  let  not  any  that  are  neer  thee  ftarve  for 
want  of  knowledge,  where  it  is  to  be  bad  -,  go  and  invite  all  thou 
canft  fee,  to  Gods  houfc :  fo  did  David,  Pfal.  j  4.  8.   0  tape  and 
fee  that  t  he  Lord  is  good.  Thou  need'ft  not  fear  a  chiding  from 
Cod,  for  fending  him  more  guefts.    He  complains  he  hath  no 
mor^ .  Te  will  not  come  unto  me  that  ye  may  have  life,  John  5 .  40. 
He  thrtatnes  thofe  that  keep  finners  off  from  making  their  peace 
with  him,by  flattering  them  with  a  falfe  one  -,  called  iftrengthen- 
ing  the  hands  vfthe  wkked,that  he/heuldnot  return  from  his  wicked 
way,  by  p  *-mifug  him  lifey  Ezek.  1 3.  22. 0  how  acceptable  a  work 
then  muft  it  needs  b?  to  wooe  fouls  in  to  Chrift  ?  The  Merchant 
is  not  angry  for  fending  a  cuftomer  into  his  Ware-hou/e,that  will 
buy  what  he  hath  taken  fo  much  colt  and  travail  to  get  that  he 
may  fcll^  Not  will  the  Phyfician  blame  any  for  bringing  a  Patient 
to  nim,by  whofe  cure  he  may  let  the  world  know  his  skill  and  art. 
And  this  is  the  great  deligne  thrift  hath  long  had,  and  in  parti- 
cular praid  for,  John  17.21.  Thst  the  world  might  believe  that  he 
was  fent  vfGod  -,  what  aimes  he  at  in  the  gathering  in  of  fouls  by 
the  graceof  the  Gofpel,  but  to  take  out  a  people  (from  the  heap  of 
finners)  for  his  name  ?  Ads  1 5 . 1 4.  that  is,  cull  out  a  number,  in 
ihewing  mercy  to  whom  he  might  exalt  his  own  name  glorioufly . 


CHAP. 


The  Go/pel  of  peace.  g  7  p 


<&*  tig  fi| 

«V*  ***  *** 

■MO*?,  -rv.wo  KW+* 

«ev  «y>  *i< 


CHAP.  VIII. 

That  peace  of  conference  is  a  bleffmg  to  be  obtained 
from  the  Goft>tl>andonly  the  Gofpd^  with  a  dou- 
ble demonftration  thereof 

WE  come  now  to  the  fecond  kindjof  peace,and  that  is  peace 
of  conflation ,  er  peace  ^  confeience -^  by  the  former  the 
poor  (inner  is  reconciled  to  God^  by  this,  he  becomes,atiwa  pa- 
cattfibi,  A  foul  reconciled  to  it  felfj  fince  man  fell  out  with 
God,  he  could  never  be  truly  friends  with  his  own  confeience. 
This  fecond  peace  is  fo  neceflary ,  that  he  cannot  tafte  the  fweet- 
nefle  of  the  firft  ,  nor  indeed  of  any  other  mercy  without  it.  This 
is  to  the  foul  what  health  is  to  the  body  ;  it  fugars  and  fweetens 
all  enjoyments.  A  fuit  ( though  of  cloth  of  gold,)  fits  not  cafie 
on  a  lick  mans  back :  Nothing  joyous  to  a  diftrefled  confeience. 
Mofes  brought  good  news  to  the  aiftrefTed  lfraelites  mEgypt,h\i,t 
it  is  faid,  they  hearkened  not  to  him  for  angnijb  ofjfririt,  Exod.  6.  9. 
Hannx ,  (he  went  up  to  the  feaftival  at  ferufalem  with  her  huf- 
band,but  'tis  faid,  {be  wept  and  did  not  eat,  1  Sam. 1.7.  Truly  thus, 
the  wounded  foul  goes  to  the  Sermon,  but  doth  not  eat  of  the 
feaft  before  it ,  hears  many  precious  promifes,  but  her  ear  is  (hut 
up  from  receiving  the  good  news  they  bring.  Tell  one  in  trouble 
of  confeience ,  Here's  your  dear  husband,  fweet  children ,  will 
you  not  re  Joyce  with  them  ?  alas,  the  throes  fuch  a  one  feels,  are 
jo  amazing,  that  he  regards  thefc  things  no  more  than  Phineai's 
wife  in  her  fere  traveled  the  women  that  joy'd  her  with  the  birth 
of  a  fonne.  Set  the  Royaleft  feaft  before  fuch  a  foul,  that  ever 
Mas  on  Princes  table  ,  ana  (poor  heart )  it  had  rather  go  into  a 
corner  and  weep,  than  lit  and  eat  of  thofe  delicacies.  A  wounded 

Ccc  2  fpirif 


the  Gofpel  of  peace. 


fpirit  who  can  btar}  yea,  who  can  cure?  feme  difeafesare  for 
their  incurablencfle  ,  called  fadibrium  meaiacrpim.  The  Phjjicians 
j7jame  and  reproach.  To  be  fure  this  fpiritual  trouble  of  an  ac 
cufing  confcience  puts  all  the  world  rofhame  for  their  vaine  at- 
tempts. Many  have  attemptedto  tonjere  this  evil  fpirit  out  of 
their  own  bofomes  and  others ;  but  have  found  it  at  lafttoleap 
upon  them,  and  prevail  againft  them,as  the  evil  fpirit,  Ads  19.14. 
did  bj  the  fins  ofSccva. 

Now,peace  of  confcience(I  am  now  to  (hew)  is  the  blefiing  of 
the  Gofpel,  and  only  of  the  Gofpel :  Confcience  knows  Jefus, 
and  the  Gofpel  of  Jefus ;  ihefe,  and  none  elfe  it  will  obey.  Two 
particulars  confider'd  will  demonftrate  the  truth  of  the  point. 
Firfi,  if  we  confider  what  is  the  argument  that  pacifies  and  fatif- 
hes  confcience.  Secondly,  what  the  power  and  ftrength  that  is  re- 
quired to  apply  this  argument  foclofeand  home  to  the  con fci. 
ence  as  to  quiet  and  fully  fatisfie  it ,  both  thefe  will  be  found  in 
the  Gofpel,  and  only  in  the  Gofpel. 


SECT.     I. 

Firft,  let  us  enquire  what  is  the  argument  that  is  able  to  pa- 
cific confcience,  when  throughly  awakened.  Now  to  know  this, 
we  muft  enquire ,  what  is  the  caufeof  all  thofe  convulfions  of 
borrour  and  terrour  with  which  the  confeiences  of  men  are  ac 
any  time  fo  fadly  rent  and  diftorted.  Now  this  is  finne;could  this 
little  word  (but  great  plague)  be  quite  blotted  out  of  mens  minds 
and  hearts,  the  ftorrae  would  be  foone  hiifht,  and  the  foul  be- 
come a  pacifique  fea ,  quiet  and  fmooth,  without  the  leaft  wave 
of  fear  to  wrinkle  the  tace  tbereof.Thisis  the  Jonas ,  which  raifeth 
theftorme^  The   1chaH  thac  troubles  the  foul.    Where-ever 
thiscomts  (as  was  obfetved  of  a  great  Queen  in  Frnrce)  a  war 
is  fure  tofolk.w^  when  ./4^?r/r  finned,  he  difTolv'd  another  man- 
ner; of  jewel   than  Cleopatra  did  •  he  drunk  away  this  fwect 
peace  of  conforms  in  one  unhappy  draught,  which  was  worth 
more  ro  him  tran  the  world  he  lived  in     No  wonder  that  it 
Keb.  io. :..     rofe  inhisconfcierce  as  fcon  as  it  was  down  his  throat.  Thy  fare 
that  they  were  na\(d,    Their  confeiences  reproacbt  them  for 

curfed 


The  Gofpelofpeacs.  38 


curfed  Apoftates.    That  therefore  which  brings  peace  to  confci- 
cnce,  muft  proitrate  rliis  CjeliAh  ,  throw  this  troubler  over  board, 
pluck  this  arrow  out  of  the  foul^  orelfe  the  war  will  not  end, 
the  ftorm  will  not  down,  the  wound  will  not  dole  and  heal  which 
confeience labours  under.    Now  the  invenomed  head  of  finnes  ar- 
row, that  lies  burning  in  confeience ,  and  by  its  continu  al  boking 
and  throbbing  there ,  keeps  the  poor  linner  out  of  quiet ,  yea, 
fometime  in  unfupportable  torment  and  horrour,  is  guilt;  where- 
by the  creature  is  alarm'd  up  to  judgement ,  and  bound  over 
to  the  punifhment  due  to  his  finne  ^  which  being  no  leffa  than 
the  infinite  wrath  of  the  eternal  living  God,  mult  needs  lay  the 
poor  creature  into  a  difmal  agony ,  from  the  fearful  expectation 
thereof  in  his  accufing  confeience :  He  therefore  that  would  ufe 
an  argument  to  pacihe  and  comfort  a  diftrefled  confeience  that 
lies  roafting  upon  thefe  burning  coals  of  Gods  wrath ,  kindled 
by  his  guilt ,  muft  quench  thefe  coals ,  and  bring  him  the  certain 
news  of  this  joyful  meflage,that  his  finnes  are  all  pardoned  ,  and 
God  fwhofe  wrath  doth  fo  afright  hiro)  is  undoubtedly ,  yea, 
everlaftinglyreconciledtohim.     This,  and  no  other  argument 
will  flop  the  mouth  of  confeience,  and  bring  the  creature  to  true 
peace  with  his  own  thoughts-  jonne  bs  ofgeodchear  (kid  Chrirt 
tothcPalfic-man)  thy  [innes  be  forgiven  thee,  Match,  9.  2.  Not 
be  of  good  chear ,  thy  health  is  "given  thee,( though  that  he  had 
alfo)  but  thy  finnes  are  forgiven  thee.    If  a  friend  fhould  come 
to  a  malefa&our  on  his  way  to  the  gallows ,  put  a  fweec  pofie 
into  his  hands ,  and  bid  him  be  of  good  chear,fmell  on  thatjalas 
this  would  bring  little  joy  with  it  to  the  poor  mans  heart ,  who 
fees  the  place  of  execution  before  him.    But  if  one  corre* 
from  the  Prince  with  a  pardon ,  which  he  puts  into  his  hand,  and 
bids  him  be  of  good  chear  .•  This,  and  this  only  will  reach  the 
poor  mans  heart ,  and  over-run  it  with  a  fudden  raviihment  of 
joy.    Truly  any  thing  fhort  of  pardoning  mercy, is  as  inconfider- 
able  to  a' troubled  confeience  (towardaany  relieving  or  pacifying 
k)  as  that  pofie  in  a  dying  prisoners  hand  would  be.    Confidence^ 
demands  as  much  to  fatisiie  it ,  as  God  himfelf  doth  to  fatisfie 
him  for  the  wrong  the  creature  hath  done  him.    Nothing  can 
take  off  confeience  from  accufing ,  but  that  which  takes  cfrGod 
from  threading.    Confeience  is  Gods  Serjeant  he  employs  to 
meft  the  finner.    Now  the  Serjeant  hath  no  power  to  releafe 

his 


-  •    .     .  ■      I  *  •  ---■*-  i         I    III       ■!       I    ■    •  ■- 

og2  TheGojpel  of  pejce. 


his  priiorrer  upon  any  private  corapofition  between  him  and  the 
prifoner ;  but  liftens ,  whether  the  debt  be  fully  p:id,  or  the 
crcditour  fully  fatisfied  j  Then,  and  not  till  then,  he  is  difcharg'd 
of  his  prifoner.  Well,we  have  now  only  one  ftep  to  go  further ,& 
we  (hall  bring  this  demonstration  to  a  head  j  from  what  quarter 
comes  this  good  newes,  that  God  is  reconciled  to  a  poor  foul, 
and  that  his  finnes  are  pardoned  ?  furely  from  the  Gofpel  of 
Chrift  ,  and  no  other  way  befides.    Here  alone  is  the  Covenant 
of  peace  to  be  read  betwixt  God  and  finners  ■,  here  the  facrifice 
by  which  this  pardon  is  purchaied^  here  the  means  difcovered  by 
which  poor  finners  may  have  benefit  of  this  purchafe^  and  there-  ' 
fore  here  alone  can  the  accufing  confeience  finde  peace.   Had  the 
ftung  ffraelites  lookt  on  any  other  obje&befides  the  brazen  Ser- 
peril,  they  had  never  been  healed.  Neither  will  the  ftung  confer- 
ence finde  eafe  with  looking  upon  any,  befides  Chrift  in  the  Gof- 
pel-promife.    The  Leviteznd  the  Priefl,  lookt  on  the  wounded 
man,  but  would  not  come  near  him  •  there  he  might  have  laine 
and  perifhed  in  his  blood  for  all  them.    It  was  the  good  Samari- 
tan that  poured  oyle  into  his  wounds,     Not  the  Law,  but  Chrift 
by  his  blood,  baths  and  fupples,  clofeth  and  cureth  the  wounded 
confeience.  Not  a  drop  of  oyle  in  all  the  world  to  be  got,  that  is 
worth  any  thing  for  this  purpofe,  befides  what  is  provided  and 
laid  up  in  this  Gofpel- vial.  1  here  was  abundance  of  facrifices  of- 
fered up  in  the  fem/b  Church  ;  yet  put  all  the  blood  of  thofe 
beafts  together ,  which  was  poured  out  from  firft  to  laft  in  that 
difpenfation,  and  they  were  not  able  to  quiet  one  confeience,  or 
purge  away  one  finne.    7  he  confeience  of finne ,  as  the  Affile 
phrafeth  it ,  Heb.  i  o.  2.  that  is,  guilt  in  their  confeience  would 
drill  have  remained  unblotted  ,  notwithftanding all  thefc  (if  fe- 
vcr'd  from  what  was  fpiritually  fignified  by  them.)  And  the 
realon  is  given,  ver.^.for  it  is  not  foffrble  that  the  bleed  of  bulls  find 
goats  fhoutt  take  away  finnes.     There  is  no  proportion  betwixt 
the  blood  of  beafts  though  it  could  fwell  into  a  river,  a  fea ,   and 
the  demerit  of  the  lcaft  iinne.    Mans  finne  defer  ves  mans  death, 
and  that  eternal  both  of  body  and  foul  in  hell.    This  is  the  price 
God  hath  fet  upon  the  head  of  every  finne.    Now  the  death  of 
beafts  being  fo  far  beneath  this  price, which  divine  juftice  demands 
as  fatisfa&ion  for  the  wrong  finne  doth  him ;  it  muft  needs  be  as 
far  beneath  pacifying  the  finners  confeience-,  which  requires  as 

much 


The  Gofpel  cf  peace.  3  &  ^ 


much  to  facisfie  it ,  yea  the  very  fame ,  as  it  doth  to  fatisfie  the 
juftice  of  God  himfelf.  But  in  the  Gofpel,  behoJd  joyful  news  is 
brought  to  thefinners  ears  of  a  fountain  of  blood  there  opened, 
which  for  its  precioufnefle  is  as  far  above  the  price  that  divine 
juftice  demands  for  mans  fin,as  the  blood  of  bulls  and  beaftsjw  as 
beneath  it^and  that  i<=,  the  blood  offefaChriJlywho  freely  poured 
it  out  upon  the  Crofle,and  by  it  obtain  d  eternal redemption  for  us^ 
Heb.  9.  This  is  the  door  all  true  peace  and  joy  comes  in  to  the 
confetence  by^  Hence  we  are  dire&ed  to  bottom  our  confidence, 
and  draw.out comfort  here,andno  where  eife,  Heb.io.zi. Let  its 
draw  near  with  a  true  hearty  in  full  affurance  of faith  ,  kavixg  cur 
hearts  fprinkjed from  an  evil  confcience-,  Mark  that,  fprinkled  frsm 
an  evil  conference :  Confcience  by  office  is  appointed,  to  judge  of  a 
mans  actions  andftate-,  whether  good  or  bad,  pardoned  or  un_ 
pardoned  •,  if  the  ftate  be  good,  then  it  is  to  acquit  and  comfort_ 
if  evil,  then  to  accufe  and  condeme  him ;  therefore  the  evil  con 
fcience  here,  is  the  accufmg  confcience ;  from  this  evil  confcience' 
we  are  faid  to  be  fprinkled  ,  that  is,  freed  by  the  blood  of  Chrift 
fprinkled  on  us^  'tis  finne  the  evil  confcience  accufeth  of,  and 
wrath  (the  due  punifhment  for  that)it  condemnes  the  poor  crea- 
ture unto;  and  to  be  fprinkled  with  the  blood  of  Chrift  is  to  have 
the  blood  of  Chrift  applyed  to  the  heart  by  the  fpirit  for  pardon 
and  reconciliation  with  God.    Sfrinkjing  in  the  Law  did  denote 
the  deanfing  of  the  perfon  fo  fprinkled,  from  all  legal  impurities; 
yea,  the  believing  ioul  from  all  finful  uncleanneffe  bythe  blood 
of  Chrift,  which  was  fignified  by  the  blood  of  thofefacritices. 
Therefore  David  prays,  Pfalme  517.  Purge  me  with  hyfep,  ifc»Xevit.  146 
/ball  J  be  clean,  that  is,  apply  the  blood  of  Chcift  to  my  troubled  * 

confcience  (as  they  with  a  bunch  of  hyfop  did  the  blood  of  the 
beaft  into  which  it  was  dipt  upon  the  Leper  to  cleanfe  him.)  Then 
(faith  he)  I  fball  be  clean ;  this  finne,  which  now  doth  affright 
my  confcience ,  fliall  be  wafht  off  ,  and  I  at  peace  ,  as  if  I  had 
never  (in'd.  To  this  fprinkling  of  blood  the  holy  Ghoft  alludes, 
Heb.  1 2, 24.  where  we  are  faid  in  the  Gofpel  adminift'  ation,  To 
become  to  fefus  the  Adediatourof  a  better  Covenant ,  an&  ts  the 
blood  of  (printing  ,  that  (peakj  better  things  than  tht  ileodef  A- 
bel  j  that  is,  better  things  in  the  confcience.  Abels  blood  fprr  k-r 
led  in  the  guilt  of  it  upon  Cains  confcience ,  fpake  fwo  ds  ?nd 
daggers,  hell  and  damnation  •  but  the  blood  of  Chrift  fprinkled 

io 


-  g  4  The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


inthecon'cienceofa poor  trembling  firmer,  fpe?ks pardon  and 
peace.  Hence  it  is  called  the  anfrvcr  cf  a  good  confcnrxe  toward 
God,  by  the  refurrcttion  of  'jefus  Chrift,  i  Pet.  3.21.  An  anfwer 
fuppofeth  a  queftion  •,  an anfwer  toward  God,  fuppofeth  a  quefti- 
on  from  God  to  the  creature,  Now  the  Queftion  God  here  is 
fuppofed  to  propound  to  the  poor  creatuie,  may  be  conceived  to 
bethiSiWhatcan'ft  thou  fay  (who  art  a  finncr,  and  ftand'it  by 
the  curfe  of  my  righteous  Law  doom'd  to  death  and  damnation  J 
why  thou  fliouldfl:  not  die  the  death  pronounced  againft  every 
(inner  ? 

Now  the  foul  that  hath  heard  of  Chrift,  and  hearing  of  him 
bath  received  him  by  faith  into  his  hcart,is  the  pcrfon,and  the  on- 
ly perfon  ,  that  can  anfwer  this  queftion  fo  astofatisfieGod  or 
himfelf.  Take  the  anfwer,  as  it  is  formed  and  fitted  for,  yea,  put 
into  the  mouth  of  every  believer  ,by  the  Afoftle  Taul,  Rora.8.34. 
Who  is  he  that  condemneth  >  It  is  Chrift  that  died,  jea  rather  that 
is  rifen  again,  who  is  even  at  the  right  hand  of  God,  who  alfo  ntaketb 
intercejjionfor  us-,  fuch  an  anfwer  this  is,  that  God  himfelf  can- 
not object  againft  it;  and  therefore  Saint  ^Panl  freprefenting  all 
believers)  triumphs  in  the  invincible  ftrengch  thereof  againft  all 
the  enemies  of  our  falvation ;  who  fhall  ftparate  hs  from  the  love 
of  Christ  ?  ver  35.  and  proceeds  to  challenge  in  death  and  devils 
with  all  their  attendants,  to  come  and  do  their  worft  againft  be- 
lievers, who  have  got  this  breaft  work  about  them,  and  at  laft  he 
difplays  his  victorious  colours,  and  goes  out  of  the  field  with  this 
holy  confidence,  that  none  (be  they  what  they  willj  (hall  ever  be 
able  to  hurt  them,  ver/e  38,3  g.  lam  per  [waded  ,t  hat  neither  death 
nor  life,  nor  Angels,  nor  Principalities,  fljallbe  able  to  feparate  us 
from  the  love  of  God  which  is  in  Chrift  fefus  our  Lord;  in  him  he 
lodgeth  his  colours,  and  layes  up  all  his  confidence.  But  I  am 
afraid  I  have  been  too  long  •,  If  I  can  be  faid  to  be  too  long  on 
this  lubjed ,  the  richeft  veine  in  the  whole  mine  of  Gofpel-trea- 
fure. 


SECf. 


The  Qofpel  of  peace.  38$ 


SECT.  II. 

The  fecond  demonft ration  is  taken  from  the  ftrength  and  po vv-  2 1 
er  required  to  preiTe  this  argument  home  to  the  confcience,fo  as 
to  fatisfie  it,and  make  it  acquiefce  therein ;  Confeience  is  a  lack 
that  goes  hard  ;  though  the  key  fit  it  (I  mean  the  argument  ufed 
to  comfort  it  be  futable  and  ftrong  )  yet  if  this  key  be  in  a  weak 
hand,  that  cannot  turn  it  in  this  lock  (  as  it  is  when  ever  a  mee: 
creature  holds  it )  conference  will  not  open;  its  doubts  and 
fears  will  not  be  refolv'd.  No,  this  muft  be  the  work  of  the 
Spirit,  or  elfe  it  will  never  be  done.Confcience  is  Gods  officer; 
and  though  the  debt  be  paid  in  heaven,  yet  it  will  not  let  the 
foul  go  free,  till  a  warrant  comes  from,  thence  to  authorize  it. 
And  who  can  bring  this  but  the  Spirit  of  God  ?  fo  that,as  'tis  not 
in  all  their  power  that  are  about  the  poor  prifoner  to  comfort 
him,till  news  come  from  Court,  what  the  Prince  means  to  do 
with  him^fo  here  in  this  cdL&.when  he  giveth  ^Hietnejfe^  who  then 
can  make  trouble  ?  and  when  he  hideth  his  face^who  can  behold 
him  ?  Job  34. 29.  Now  two  things  I  fhall  do  for  the  bringing 
this  demonrtration  to  a  head.  F/V/,  (hew  that  the  Gcfpel  only 
prefents  the  Spirit  of  God  to  us  under  the  notion  of  a  Comfor- 
ter.  Secondly ,the  admirable  fitnefle  and  fufficiency  of  the  holy  Spi- 
rit to  pacihe  and  comfort  a  guilty  troubled  confeience :  the  firft 
will  evince  that  peace  of  confeience  is  no  where  elfe  to  be  found 
but  from  the  Gofpel ;  the  fecond  will  (hew  that  it  is  there  abun- 
dantly to  be  found. 

Firft, 'tis  the  Gofpel  alone  that  prefents  the  Spirit  of  God  as  J* 
a  Comforter  to  poor  finners.  Indeed  the  comforting  office  of 
the  Spirit  is  founded  on  the  fatisfaclion  of  Jefus  Chritt.  When 
Chrift  had  flied  his  blood,  and  in  it  laid  down  upon  the  naile,the 
full  price  of  a  finners  peace  with  God ;  then  at  his  return  to  hea- 
ven he  prayes  his  Father  to  fend  the  Comforter  i  Neither  could 
Chrift  defire  this  requeft  of  his  Father,  nor  his  Father  grant  in 
to  him,  but  upon  the  account  of  this  his  death,which  fecures  the 
Jufiice  of  God  from  receiving  any  damage  by  the  comfort  which 
the  Spirit  carries  into  the  believing  finners  bofom.Chrift  tells  his 
difcipies  thus  much, John  15.7.  //  /  ^0  notawar}  the  Comforter 

"D  d  d  will 


~8  6  the  Cofpel  ef peace , 


will  not  come  unto  yon  \  but  if  I  depart ,Z  will  fend  him  unto  yon\ 
p  ray  mark,the  Spirit  as  a  Comforter, flays  till  Chrift  goes  to  flea- 
s' en  to  fend  him  dowhjand  no  room  for  Ch rift  rhere,till  the  work. 
\v  as  done  he  came  about ;  and  what  was  that,  but  by  his  bloody- 
death  to  purchafe  peace  with  God  forpoor  believing  finners?and 
now  let  him  come  when  he  will,the  Spirit  is  ready  to  be  fent  as  a 
Comforter,as  foon  as  he  appears  in  the  heavens  with  his  blood 
as  an  Interceffor.But  whence  then  had  the  OldTeftament-Saints 
all  their  peace  and  comfort,who  liv'd  before  Chrift  return'd  to 
heaven;yea,beforehe  took  his  firft  journey, from  heaven  I  mean 
to  earth?I  anfwer,upon  the  fame  account  they  had  their  comfort, 
that  they  had  their  pardon.    They  were  pardoned  through  the 
blood  of  Chrift,who  was  vertually  a  Lamb  (lain  from  the  begin- 
ning of  the  world,   and  they  were  comforted  by  the  Spirit  of 
Chrift,whofe  comforting  office  bears  the  fame  date  with  Chrifts 
Mediators  office.  As  all  their  pardons  were  ifTued  out  upon  the 
credit  of  Chrift,whoftood  engaged  in  the  fulnefs  of  time  to  lay 
down  hislifejfo  all  the  comforts  which  the  Spirit  of  Chrift  ifTued 
out  into  their  consciences,  wa$  upon  the  fame  credit  of  Chrift, 
who  fhould,as  in  the  fulnefle  of  time  die  on  earth  for  finners,fo 
appear  alfo  in  the  heavens  (by  vertue  of  the  fatisfaftion  that  his 
death  fhould  make  )  there  to  intercede  with  the  Father  for  a 
Comforter.     Thus  you   fee    the   firft  thing.     The  Spirit  as 
a  Comforter  hath  his  office  from  the  Sofpel-Covenant,  and 
could  never  have  fpoke  word  of  comfort,  but  upon  this  Go- 
fpel  account.     Hence  it  is,when  the  Father  fends  him  as  a  Com- 
forter, he  fends  him  in  Chrifts  Name,  who  hath  made  up  the 
b/each  betwixt  him  and  Tinners,  fohniq.  26.  that  is,  for  his  fake, 
and  at  his  entreaty  :  yea,  when  the  Spirit  doth  comfort ,  what 
kit  he  faith?  the  joyful  news  he  brings  is  Gofpel-intelligence, 
Join  1(5,13,14.  He  jk all not  jpral^  of  himfelfyt>nt  whatfoever  he 
(b.i  llhetrjjefkallfpc.ik^',  the  meaning  is,when  he  comes  to  teach, 
he  ftiall  not  bring  new  light  different  from  what  fhines  in  the 
Gofpel,but  what  truth  Chrift  preacht  in  the  Gofpel,  that  he  fhall 
teach  when  he  comforts;the  ingredients  which  his  foul-reviving 
cordials  fhall  be  made  of,are,what  grow  in  theGofpel-garden,as 
v.l^.lle  ftatlglorijie  meyfor  he  fhall  receive  of '  mine^and  fkeiv  it  to 
7^,that  K,my  death, my  merit,my  refurreitioivny  afcention  and 
^terceffion,my.promifes  purchafed  and  fealed  with  my  blood  . 

the/e 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  387 


thefe  he  fhall  take  and  make  report  of  them  to  you,for  your  eter- 
nal joy  and  comfortjfo  that,if  it  had  not  been  for  thefe,  the  Spi- 
rit who  is  Chrifts  mellenger,  would  have  wanted  an  errand  of  this 
comfortable  nature  to  have  brought  unto  poor  iinners :  yea,  in- 
ftead  of  a  Comforter,  he  would  have  been  an  accufer  and  a  tor- 
mentor;he  that  now  bears  witneffe  with  our  fpiritsfor  our  recon- 
ciliation,adoption  and  falvation,would  hive  joyn'd  in  a  fad  tetfi- 
mony  with  our  guilty  confidences  againit  us,  for  our  damnation 
and  deftru&ion. 

Secondly, I  am  to  fliew  the  admirable  fitneffe  of  the  Spirit  for 
this  comforting  office  which  theGofpel  reveals  him  to  have, 
for  the  pacifying  and  fatisfytng  the  consciences  of  poor  difconfo- 
late  dinners;  You  have  heard  the  Gofpel  affords  an  argument 
fufficient  to  fatisfie  the  molt  troubled  confcience  in  the  world,to 
vvit,the  full  fatisfaclion  which  Chrilt  by  his  precious  bloodbath 
made  to  God  for  finners.  But  if  poor  man  had  been  lefc  to  im- 
prove this  as  well  as  he  could  for  his  comfort,  he  might  have 
lain  long  enough  roaring  in  the  horrour  of  his  fcorched  confci- 
ence without  eafe,  for  want  of  one  to  drop  this  cooling  healing 
balm  into  it.But  as  both  the  wifdome  and  love  of  God  appear 'd 
in  providing  an  able  Saviour  to  purchafe  eternal  redemption  for 
us ;  fo  alfo  a  meet  Comfqrter,as  able  to  apply  this  purchafed  re- 
demption to  us ;  his  Confolations  are  called  ftrong  C'wfilati-ons. 
Chriftfhew'dhisftrength,  when  he  unhing'd  the  gates  of  the 
grave,and  made  his  way  out  oi  that  dark  prifon  by  his  glorious  re- 
furre&ion  :  by  this,  he  was  declared  to  he  the  Son  of  God  with 
pjiver,  as  the  Apoftle  hath  ic,  %om.  1.4.  And  truly  it  requires 
no  lefle  power  to  break  open  the  dungeon,  wherein  the  guilty 
confcience  lies  fhut  up,  as  one  free  among' the  dead  in  his  own 
defpairing  thoughts;  for  if  youobferve  it  well,  the  fame  Hone 
and  feal  are  upon  the  finners  confcience  to  keep  him  down  from 
a  refurreclion  tocomfort,as  was  on  Chrifts  grave,  to  keep  him 
down  from  a  refurreclion  to  life.  What  was  the  heavielt  ftone, 
the  itrongeft  feal  upon  dead  Jefus  to  keep  him  from  riling  ?  not 
the  ftone  man  rolled  upon  him  ;  not  the  feal,  the  Jews  thought 
to  fatten  the  grave  with  ;  but  the  curfe  of  the  Law  for  fin,which 
Divine  juftice  rolled  upon  him;this  preit  the  heavyeduponChrilt 
without  all  compare;the Angel  himfelf  that  roll'd  away  theftone, 
coi'ld  not  have  removed  the  curfe  ;now  look  upon  the  diftref- 

Dddi  feJ 


a88  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


fed  confciences  grave,  where  its  own  guile  hath  hid  it,*  what 
is  true  ?  no  other,than  the  loweft  hell  in  its  fears  and  prefent  dif- 
mal  apprehenfions.  I  am  damned,I  am  for  ever  an  undone  crea- 
ture,^ the  language  fuch  a  one  rings  continually  in  his  own  ears , 
but  enquire  what  is  it  that  Keeps  him  down  in  this  grave ;  what 
hinders,but  the  poor  wretch  may  be  help't  out  of  this  pit  of  ho:- 
vour,  and  receive  fome  comfort  ?  alas,  he  will  tell  you  that  it 
is  but  in  vain  to  comfort  him,  this  oyntment  is  all  wafted  to  no 
purpofe,  which  you  poure  upon  his  head.    No,he  is  an  undone 
{inner ;   the  curfe  of  God  flicks  like  a  dagger  in  his  heart,  the 
wrath  of  God  lies  like  a  Mountain  of  lead  on  his  confeience; 
except  you  can  put  your  hand  into  his  bofome,  and  pluck  out 
the  one,  or  by  main  force  roll  off  the  other,  'tis  impofllble, 
that  he  fhould  be  raifed  to  any  peace  or  comfort  in  his  mifera- 
ble  confeience ;   you  fee  it  is  the  fame  grave-ftone  on  both.  But 
for  thy  eternal  comfort  know  (poor  heart)  that  art  thus  faft 
hid  under  the  fenfe  of  the  curfe  due  to  thy  fins  ?  as  the  .weight 
is  the  fame,  that  keeps  thee  from  comfort,  which  lay  on  Chrirt 
to  keep  him  from  life ;  fo  the  fame  power  and  ftrength  is  fenc 
to  raife  thee  to  comfort:  that  enabled  Chrift  to  rife  to  life.  That 
Spirit,  who  kept  the  Lord  J efus  from  feeing  corruption  in  the 
prave,tbat    retrained  death,  when.it  hadChrili  in  its  very 
mouth,  fo  as  it  could  no  more  feed  on  him,   than  the  Whale 
could  dig:/*  Jonas  in  her  belly ;  yea  ,tha<  quickned  his  dead  bo- 
dy, and  raifed  him  with  honour,  not  only  to  life,  but  immorta- 
lity alfo,ishe  that  Chrift  fends  for  his  meflenger?  to  come  and  fa- 
tisfie  the  trembling  confciences  of  his  poor  children  on  earth, 
concerning  his  love,  yea,  his  fathers  love  to  them  for  his  fake. 
This  blefled  Spirit  hath  all  the  properties  of  a  Comforter ;  He 
a  fo  pure  and  holy  ^  he  cannot  deceive ;  called  therefore  the  Spirit 
of  truth,  John  1 4.     If  he  tell  thee  thy  fins  are  pardoned,  thou 
mayft  believe  him,  he  will  not  flatter;  if  it  were  not  fo,  he 
would  have  brought  another  meflage  to  thee  :    for  he  can 
chide  and  reprove  as  well  as  comfort,   convince   of  finne 
as  well  as  of  righteoufnefle.    He  is  fo  wife  and  omnifcient, 
that  he  cannot  be  deceived.  Never  did  the  Spirit  of  God  knock 
at  the  wrongdoers,  and  deliver  his  letters  into  a  wron^  hand 
(  as  a  man  may  do,efpecially  where  oerfons  are  very  like.  )  The 
Spirit  exactly  knows  the  heart  of  God  to  the  creature,  wiih  all 

his 


The  Gofpel  of  peace .  389 

his  counfelsand  purpofes  concerning  him,  1  CV.2.11.  The  Spi- 
rit (eafrcheth  all  things,  the  deep  things  of  God.  And  what  are 
thofe  deep  things  of  God  the  idpoftlc  means  ?  but  the  counfels 
of  ldve  which  lie  deep  in  his  heart,  till  the  Spirit  draws  them 
forth,  and  acquaints  the  creature  with  them ;  as  appears  by 
vtrfe  9.  And  alfo  he  knows  the  whole  frame  of  mans  heart ; 
it  were  ftrange,  if  he  that  made  the  cabinet  (hould  not  knowe- 
very  fecret  box  in  it.  Some  few  men  have  compafled  rhat  we 
call  the  oreater  world ;  but  the  little  world  of  man  fas  we 
call  hun  )  never  did  any  creature  encircle  with  his  know- 
ledge, no  not  the  Divel  himfelf,  who  hath  made  it  his  work 
fo  many  thoufands  of  years  to  maVe  a  full  difcovery  of  it  .- 
But  the  Spirit  of  God  doth  know  him,  mas  eft  in  cute,  f  as  we 
fay)  thorough^)',  and  knowing  both  thefe,  he  cannot  be  de- 
ceived. 

In  a  word,  he  is  fa  unref  Bible,  that  none  can  hinder  the 
efficacy  of  his  comforts ;  The  pardon  brought  by  Nathan 
to  David,  did  not  lie  fo  xlofe,  as  the  holy  man  defired  ; 
and  therefore  away  goes  he  to  beg  comfort  of  the  Com- 
forter, Tfal.  51.  where  you  finde  him  on  his.  knees  pray- 
in0  hard  to  have  his  loii  joy  reftored,  and  his  trembling 
heart  eftablifli't  by  the  free  Spirit  of  God.  Though  thou 
can'rt  baffle  man ,  and  through  thy  own  melancholy  fan- 
cy ,  and  the  fophoftry  of  Satan,  ( who  coins  distinctions 
for  thee , )  evade  the  arguments  that  Chriftians  and  Mini- 
fters  bring  for  thy  comfort ;  yet  when  the  Spirit  comes  him- 
felf, all  difputes  end.-  The  Divel  cannot  chop  logick  with 
him;  no,  then  the  lying  fpirit  vanUheth,  and  our  own  fears 
too,  as  the  darkneffe  flees  before  the  Sun;  fo  fweetly  and 
powerfully  doth  the  comforting  Spirit  over-run  the  heart 
with  a  flood  of  joy  that  the  foul  can  no  more  fee  her  i!ns 
in  the  guilt  of  them,than  Noah  could  the  mol-hills,  when  the 
whole  earth  was  under  water. 


Ddd^  CHAP. 


39° 


The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


CHAP.    IX. 

A  reproof  to  three  forts   of  perfons    that  ef. 
fend  againfl  this  peace  which  the 
Gofpel  brings. 

r         T?Irft,is  peace  of  conference  the  blefling  of  the  Gofpel?  this 
Vje  I.     J^>    repr0Yes  three  forts  of  perfons. 


SECT.  I. 

I.  Firft,  the  *P apists ,who  interpretatively  deny  this,in  denying 

that  any  perfon  can  know  in  this  life  (  unlefle  by  an  extraordina- 
ry revelation  )  that  he  is  a  childe  of  God,  and  one  that  final!  be 
faved;  which  if  true,would  Have  all  to  pieces  the  veflel  in  which 
the  Chriitfans  joy  and  inward  peace  is  kept ;  whence  comes  the 
peace  we  have  with  our  own  conferences,  but  from  the  know- 
ledge we  have  of  our  peace  with  G od  ?  Rom.  ^ .  i . Being  jn '(lifted 
by  faithywe  have  peace  with  Godjby  whom  we  have  acce[?  by 
faith  into  this  grace  ^wherein  me  ft  and  and  rejoYcein  hope  of  tie 
glory  of  God.I£  the  poor  foul'be  left  at  uncertainties  here,  and 
the  Gofpel  cannot  refolve  it,what  its  ftate  is,  for  hell  or  heaven , 
farewel  to  all  inward  peace  ;  the  poor  Chrifhan  then  may  fay 
of  himfelf,  with  a  trembling  heart,  what  Saint  John  faith  in  ano- 
ther cafe  of  him  that  hateth  his  brother,  I  John  2.1 1.  He  walks 
in  darknejfe^and  k/rows  not  whether  he  qoes  :  truly  then  ic  mi^ht 
rather  be  called  the  Gofpel  of  fears  and  doubts,  than  the  Go- 
fpel of -peace.    But  is  that  the  top  of  the  bletfing  the  Gofpel 

brings 


The  Gofpel  of  peace  i  g  9 1 


brings  to  Saints,  which  was  almoft  the  bottome  of  the  curfe 
that  the  Law  denounced  againrt  finners?  Dent.  28. 66.  That 
their  llfefhonld  hang  'in  doubt  before  them^And  they  fkmld  fear  day 
and  night,  and  frontd  have  no  ajfurance  of  life.  Bold  men,  that 
dare  fo  wretchedly  disfigure  the  fweet face  .of  the  Gofpel;  ma- 
kirg  Chriftinhis  precious  promifes, . fpeak  as  doubtfully  to  his 
Saints,  as  the  Divel  did  in  his  Oracles  to  his  Devotoe's.  Becaufe. 
their  hypocrihe  makesthem  juftly  quetfion  their  own  falvation, 
and  will  not  fuffer  them  to  apply  the  comfort  of  the  pro- 
mifes to  the  mfe  Ives  :  muft>they  therefore  feal  up  thefe  wells  of 
falvation  from  rhofe  that  are  fincere,  and  then  lay  the  blame  on 
theGofpel,  which  is  due  only  to  their  own  wickedneflfe?  But 
there  is  a  myftery  of  iniquity  which  hath. at  laft  been  found 
to  be  at  the  root  of  this  uncomfortable  doilrine  of.  theirs.  They 
are  a  little  kin  to  JW^,  who  was  a  thief,  and  carried  the  bag. 
Thefe  have  a  bag  too,into  which  they  put  more  gold  and  filver,. 
that  this  do&rine  brings  them  in,  than  ever  fudas  had  in  his, 
though  the  doitrine  of  Gofpel-grace  to  poor  finners  would  bring 
more  peace  to  others  conferences,  might  ir  be  feen  inks  naked 
glory  among  them;  yet  thefupertUtious  fear  which  they  keep 
ignorant  fouls  in,  brings  more  money  to  their  purfes ;  and  this 
lies  fo  near  the  heart  of  their  Religion,that  Gofpel,.  Chaff,  hea- 
ven, and  all  muft  bo  we  unto  it. 


SECT.    I.L 

Secondly,  thofe  are  to  be  reproved  who  frame  very,  unlovely  % 
images  in  their  ownfoolifh  imaginations  of  theGofpel, as  if  there 
was  nothing  lefle  than  peace  of  confcience  and  inward  comfort 
to  be  found  in  it ;  and  all,  becaufe  they  fee  fome  thatprofefle  ic 
who  cannot  fhew  that  they  have  got  any  more  peace  and  com- 
fort fince  their  acquaintance  with  the  Gofpel,  than  they  had  be- 
fore, or  than  themfelves  have,  who  are  yet  Grangers  to  it; 
yea,maybe,difcover  more  trouble  of  fpirit.  Such  I  would  defire 
to  take  thefe  following  particulars  (by  way  of  anfwer)  into  their 
ferious  confideration. 

Firftjconfider  all  are  not  true  .Chriftianj  that  hang  upon  the         1. 

Gofpel . 


qq2  The  Gofpel  o^  peace. 


2, 


Gofpel  by  profeflion ;  and  no  blame  can  be  laid  on  the  Go- 
fpel,chough  it  doth  not  lavifti  out  this  treafure  to  every  ,one  that 
fcrapes  acquaintance  with  it.    The  Spirit  of  God  is  too  wife 
and  faithful  to  fet  his  feal  to  a  blank.    The  Minifter  indeed  of- 
fers peace  to  all  that  will  accept  it ;  but  where  the  peace  of  the 
Gofpel  meets  with  a  falfe  heart,  it  will  not  ftay  there,  CM  at. 
10.13.//  th.  honfe  be  not  worthy  Jet  your  peace  return  unto  yon. 
As  the  Dove  returned  to  the  Ark  again,  whe^it  found  the  earth 
under  water ;  fo  doth  the  Spirit  of  God  carry  his  comfort  back 
with  him  to  heaven  from  a  foul  that  is  yet  in  the  fuds  of  unmak- 
ing in  his  abominations;  where  can  this  heavenly  Dove  finde 
reft  for  the  fole  of  her    foot  in  fuch   a  foul  ?     And   will 
he  fpeak  peace  to  that  foul,  in  which  himfelf  can  finde  no 
reft1. 
2.  Secondly,  asforthofe  that  are  fincere,  true  hearted  Chrifti- 

ans,  there  are  feveral  confederations  which  will  vindicate  the 
Gofpel  to  anfwer  its  name,and  to  be  a  Gofpel  of  peace  and  con- 
folation. 
1.  Fi;ft,  fome  that  are  fincere  Chriftians,  do  not  fo  clearly  un- 

derftand  the  doctrine  of  the  Gofpel  as  others,  and  the  want  of 
lLht  of  joy  and  comfort  in  their  confciences  comes  from  that 
want  of  light  in  their  underftandings.  The  ignorance  of  the 
workman  doth  not  difparage  the  art.  Vim  eft  in  arte,  quam  in 
amfi'  .There  is  fulnelte  of  comfort  in  the  principles  of  th^  Go- 
fpel,but  every  Chriftian  hath  not  attain'd  to  the  riches  of  the  full 
ajfurance  of  under flanding  to  the  acknowledgment  of  the  my  fiery  of 
God>and  of  the  Father yind  of  Chri si;  which  the  Apoftle  directs 
the  Colcfl'ians  to,  as  a  Soveraign  means  whereby  their  hearts 
Plight  be  comforted^  Co\. 2.2. 

Secondly,  fome  that  do  underftand  the  docVine  of  falvation 
by  faith  in  Chrii^  fthe  only  foundation  to  build  and  rear  up 
true  comfort  and  peace  of  confeience  on^)  yet  may  by  their  neg- 
ligence in  their  ChrifUan  courfe  (  not  walking  carefully  by  the 
rule  of  the  Gofpel)  deprive  themfelves  at  prefent  of  this  fweec 
peace,  which  otherwife  might  flow  into  their  bofomesfrom  the 
promifesof  the  Gofpel.  As  many  as  walk  hy  thisru'e,  peace  be 
on  r/?fw,Gal.6.i<5.Andif  fo,wh:>t  bhme  can  be  laid  on  the  Go- 
fpel ?  Be  the  pen  never  fo  goo  J,  and  the  hand  never  fo  skilful,  it 
will  net  write  on  wet  paper;  yet  ve  do  not  fault  the  hand  or 

pen, 


The  Go/pel  of  pejcc.  2  9 


pen,  but  paper ;  if  the  heart(though  cf  a  Sain:  never  fo  eminent  1 
blunder   the  defilement  of  a  prefenc  lull  not  repented  of,  no 
promifc  will  fpeak peace  to  him;  he  is  a d'i  orderly  walker,  and 
the  Spirit  hath  his  rod  to  whip  fuch  ,  ro  f.veet-meat5  of  joy  and 
peace  to  entertain  them  withal  in  that  plight. 

Thirdly,  As  for  thole  which  do  walk  clofe  to  the  rule  of 
the  Gofpcl  (  I  mean  by  a  lincere  endeavour  )  and  thou  feed 
no  fuch  peace  and  comfort  (as  we  fpeak  ofj  that  they  have:  I  an- 
fwer. 

Firfiy  they  may  have  it,  and  thou  not  know  it.  The  faints  y  y 
and  peace,  is  not  iuch  a  light  gigling  joy  as  the  worlds;  res  feve- 
ravernm gaud'mm.     The  parlour  wherein  the  Spirit  of   (  hnft 
entertains  the  Chriftian,  is  an  inner  room  ,  not  next  thefttcet, 
for  every  one  that  goes  by  to  fmell  the  feaft.    7  he  fl  anger 
intermeddles  rut  with  his  jc y  ,  Prov.  1 4.  i  o.     Chrift  and  the    foul 
may  beat  fupper  within,  and  thou  not  fo  much  as  fee  one  di(h 
go  in,  or  hear  the  mufick  that  founds  fo  fweetly  in  the  Chriftians 
eares^  perhaps  thou  thinkeft  he  wants  peace,  becaufe  he   doth 
not  hang  out  a  fign  in  his  countenance  of  the  joy  and  peace  he 
hath  within.    Alas  poor  wretch  /  may  not  the   Saint  have   a 
peaceful  confciencc  with  a  folemne,  yea,fad  countenance ,  as  well 
as  thou  and  thy  companions  have  a  lbrrowful  hearty  when  there 
is  nothing  but  fair  weather  in  your  faces  ?  in  laughter  the  heart  is 
fo> rowful, Prov.  1 4. 1 3. Sure  he  means  the  wicked  manslaughter.  It 
never  looks  more  like  rain  with  them,  than  when  it  (hines  ^  their 
confeience  lowrs  when  their  face  laughs  ^  To  on  the  contrary,never 
more  inward  peace  &  comfort  to  be  found  in  a  Saints bofom, than 
fomerimes  when  his  face  is  blubberd  with  tears-,(houldft  thou  com 
in  and  hear  theChriftian  bemoaning  himfelf,and  complaining  with 
fighs  and  fobs  of  his  fins  againft  God,  thou  would' ft  go  home,and 
cry  out  of  this  melancholy  Religion,  and  the  fad  condition  this 
man  was  in:    And  yet  he  whom  thou  fo  pitied  can  defire  thee 
tofaveit   for  thyfclf,  and  not  fpend  it  in  vain  for  him  ^  who 
would  not  part  with  that  very  forrow  ('that  fcares  thee  fo  much  ) 
for  all  the  joy   which  the  world  with  all  its  galantry  (  when 
beft  fet  forth  )  could  afford.     There  is  a  myftery  in  this  forrow 
thou  canft  not  unriddle  •  know  therefore  there  is  a  forrow  and 
anguilh  of  heart  which  arifeth  from  the  guilt  of  finne,  and  the 
fearful  apprehenfions  of  Gods  wrath  due  to  finne  ^  and   another 

E  e  e  that 


354 


The  Gofpel  of  peace, 


that  flews  rot  firm  fear  of  wrath  anili  gfrom  £  tilt,  bi  tfrom  the 
fenie  of  fins  inbcir.gin  the  foul,  that  provokes  rbeChr:irian  to  do 
that  which  is  difhonourable  to  that  God  whohath  pardoned  his 
finnzs  tohinii  and  this  is  the  forr<>w  which  fometmes  makes  the 
Saints  go  for  fad  uncomfortable  creatures;  when  a:  the  fame  time 
their  hearts  are  as  full  of  comfort  from  the  fenfeof  Gods  pardon- 
ing mercy  as  they  can  hold.  Thisforrow,  is  but  like  a  hummer 
{howre,  melted  by  the  fenfe  of  Gods  love,  astha.by  the  warms 
Sunne,  aud  leaves  the  foul  (as  that  doth  a  garden  of  fweet  flow- 
ers) on  which  it  falls  more  frefh  and  odoriferous. 

Secondly,  though  fome  precious  fouls  that  have  clofed  with 
Chrift,  and  embraced  the  Gofpel,  ben  tat  prefent  brought  to 
reft  in  their  own  confidences,  but  continue  for  a  while  under  fome 
diflfatisfadions  and  troubles  in  their  own  fpirits^  et  even  then  they 
have  peace  of  confeience  in  a  threefold  relpeft./»  precioju  pnwijj'ei 
in  [emine. 

Firftjevety  true  believer  hath  peace  of  confeience  inpreeio-,  the 
Gofpel  puts  that  price  into  hi*  hand,  which  will  afluredly  pur- 
chafe  it,  and  that  is  rhe  blood  of  Chrift-  we  fay,  that  is  gold  which 
is  worth  gold,  which  we  may  any  where  exchange  for  gold  -,  fuch 
is  the  blood  of  Chrift;  'cis  peace  of  confeience,  becaufe  the  foul 
that  hath  this  may  exchange  it  for  this.  God  himfelf  cannot  deny 
the  poor  creature  that  prays  on  thefe  terms,  Lord  give  me  peace 
of  confeience,  here's  Chrifts  blood  the  price  of  it.  That  which 
could  pay  the  debt,  furcly  can  procure  thereceipt.  Peace  of  con- 
feience is  but  a  difcharge  under  God  his  hand,  that  the  debt  due 
to  Divine  juftice  is  fully  paid  ^  the  blood  of  Chrift  harh  done  that 
the  greater  for  the  believer,  it  (hall  therefore  do  this  the  lefle,  If 
there  were  fuch  a  rare  potion,  that  did  infallibly  procure  health 
to  every  one  that  takes  it,  we  might  fafely  fay,  as  foonasthe 
(kk  man  hath  drunk  it  down,  that  he  hath  drunk  his  health  •,  it  is 
in  him,  though  at  ptefent  he  doth  notfeel  himfelf  to  have  it  j  in. 
time  it  will  appear. 

Secondly,  in  promifjo.  Every  true  believer  hath  peace  of  confei- 
ence n  the  promife;  and  that  we  count  as  good  as  ready  money 
in  the  pur  e,  which  we  have  lure  bond  for,  Pfal.  29.1 1.  The  Lord 
■wilt  i>lej[e  hi*  people  with  pence.  He  is  refolv'd  on  it,  and  then  who 
(hall  hinder  it  >  'tis  worth  your  reading  the  whole  Pfalme,  to  fee 
what  weight  the  Lord  gives  to  this  fweet  promife,  for  the  encou- 
ragement 


The  G  offtei  of  peace.  2  c  ez 


ragemcnt  of  our  faith  in  expc&ing  the  performance  thereof  no*  " 
thing  more  hard  to  enter  into  the  heart  of  a  poor  creature  (  when 
all  is  in  an  uproare  in  his  bofome,  and  his  confeience  threatning 
nothing  but  fire  and  fword,  wrath  and  vengeance  from  God  for 
hisfinnesj  than  thoughts  or  hopes  of  peace  and  comfort.     Now 
the  Pfalme  is  fpent  in  {hewing  what  great  things  God  can  do,and 
that  with  no  more  trouble  to  himfelf  than  a  word  fpeaking.  The 
voice  of  the  Lgrd  is  powerful  j  the  voice  tf  the  Lord  is  full  of  Afa—. 
3eftj->  ver-  4«  h  breaks  the  Cedars,  it  divides  the  flames ,  it  jhakes  the 
■wilderneffe,  it  maizes  the  hindes  to  Calve.     This  God  that  doth  ail 
this,promifeth  to  blefle  his  people  with  peace,  outward   and  in- 
ward h  for  without  this  inward  peace,  though  he  might   give 
them  peace,  yet  could  he  never  blefle  them  with  peace  as  he  there 
undertakes.  A  fad  peace(were  it  not)to  have  quiet  fheet«,  but  cut- 
ting of  throats  in  our  houfesfyet  infinitely  more  fad  to  have  peace 
both  in  our  ftreets  and  houfes,  but  war  and  blood  in  our  guilty 
confeiences ;  what  peace  can  a  poor  creature  tafte  or  relinYwhile 
the  fword  ofGods  wrath  lies  at  the  throat  of  confcience,not  peace 
with  God  himfelf?  Therefore  Chrift  purchafed  peace  of  pardon, 
to  obtain  peace  of  confeience  for  his  pardoned  ones  j  And  accord- 
ingly hath  bequeathed  it  in  the  promife  to  them.    'Peace  J  leave 
with  jott}mj  peace  I  give  unto  jou  John  14.  ?7.  where  you  fee  he  is 
both  the  Teftatour  to  leave^nd  the  Executor  of  his  own  Will,  to 
give  out  with  his  own  hands,  what  his  love  hath  left  believers^  fo 
that  there  is  no  fear,but  hisWiil  (hall  beperform'd  to  the  fulJ,fec- 
ing  himfelf  lives  to  fee  it  done. 

Thirdlyjnfemine.  Every  believer  hath  this  inward  peace  in 
the  feed.  Light  is  /own  for  the  righteous,  andgladnefs  for  the  tf~ 
right  in  heart,  Pfalme  97.1 1.  where  fown,  but  in  the  furrows  of 
the  believers  own  bofome,  when  principles  of  grace  and  holinefs 
were  caft  into  it  by  the  Spirit  of  God  ?  hence  it  is  called  the  peace- 
able fruit  of  right  eoufnefsy  Heb.  12.11.it  (hoots  as  naturally  from 
holinefs,as  any  fruit  in  its  kind  doth  from  the  feed  proper  to  it. 
It  is  indeed  moft  true,  that  this  feed  runnes  and  ripens  into  this 
fruit  foon^r  in  fome,  than  it  doth  in  others.  Thisfpiritual  harvelt 
comes  not  alike  foon  to  all,  no  more  than  the  other  that  is  out- 
ward doth  •  but  here's  the  comfort,  who  ever  hath  a  feed-time 
of  gnce  pafle  over  his  foul,(hall  have  his  harveft  time  alfo  of  joy^ 
this  Law  Cod  hath  bound  himfelf  to5  as  ftrongly  as  for  the  other^ 

Eer:  which 


The  Go/pel  of  peace. 


wlv  chare  not  to  ceafe  white  the  earth  remaineth  ,  Gen.  822.  yea, 
moreftrongiy,  for  that  was  to  the  world  in  general,  noc  to  eve- 
ry particular  counrrey,  town  or  field  in  thefe,  which  miy  want 
a  harveft,  and  yet  God  keep  his  Word ;  but  God  cannot  perform 
his  promife,  if  any  one  particular  Saint  fhould  everlaftingly  go 
without  his  reaping  time.   He  that  got  th  forth  bearing  precious  feed, 
flail  d-ttbtleffe  come  again  with  rejrjcing,  bringing  his  /heaves  with 
him,  Pfal.126.6.    And  therefore,  you  who  think  fo  bafely  of  the 
Gofpel  and  the  profeffours  of  it,becaufe  at  prefent  their  peace  and 
comfort  is  not  come  \  know  it  is  on  the  way  to  them,  and  comes 
to  fhy  everlaftingly  with  themjwhei  eas  your  peace  is  going  from 
}  011  every  moment,  andis  fure  to  leave  you  without  any  hope  of 
returning  to  you  again.    Look  not  how  the  Chriftian  begins,  but 
erfds  •,.  1  he  Spirit  of  God  by  his  convictions  comes  into  the  foul 
with  fome  terrours,but  it  clofeth  with  peace  and  joy.    As  we  fay 
of  the  month  of  March,  it  enters  like  a  LLn,  but  goes  out  like  a 
Lamb.     Marhjhc  perfect  mart,  and  behold  the  upright,  for  the  end 
of  that  man  u  peace ,  Pfal.  3  7. 3  6. 


SECT.  III. 

This  reproves  thofe  that  think  to  heal  their  confeiences  with 
other  than  Gofpel- balme  ^  who  leave  the  waters  of  living  com- 
fort that  flow  from  this  fountain  open'd  in  the  Gofpel  by  Chrift  , 
to  draw  their  peace  and  comfort  out  of  cifternes  of  their  own 
hewing^  and  they  are  two  j  A  carnal  ciftern  ,  and  a  legal 
ciftern. 

Firft,  fome  think  to  draw  their  peace  out  of  a  carnal  cifterne. 
There  is  not  more  variety  of  plaifters  and  foolifh  medicines  ufed 
for  the  cure  of  the  ague  of  the  body,  than  there  is  of  carnal  re- 
ceipts ufed  by  felf deceiving  finners  to  rid  themfelvcs  of  the  fha- 
king  ague,  which  the  fear  of  Gods  wrath  brings  upon  their  guil- 
ty confeiences  j  fome,  ifthcybebuta  little  awakened  by  the 
Word,  and  they  feel  their  hearts  chill  within  them,  from  a  few  fc- 
rious  thoughts  of  their  wretched  undone  condition,  fall  to  Fcelix 
his  phyfick  ^  who,  asfoonas  his  confeience  began  to  be  fickat 
P,inls  Sermon,  had  enough  of  the  Pi  cacher,and  made  all  the  hafte 

he 


lbs  Gofpel  of  peace.  207 


he  could  to  gee  that  unpleafing  noiie  out  of  his  head  ,     ssiBs  24. 
Foelix  trembled,  and  anfweredfjo  thy  way.    Thus  many  turn  their 
back  off  God,  runne  as  far  as  they  can,  from  thofe  Ordinances 
that  company,or  any  thing  elfe  that  is  likely  to  grate  upon  their 
confeiences,  and  revive  the  thoughts  of  their  deplored  ftate,which 
all  their  care  is  to  fbrget^fuch  a  onelhave  heard  of,that  would  not 
be  prefent  at  any  Funeral;  could   not  bear  che  fight   of  his  own 
greyhaires,  and  therefore  u fed  a  black-lead-comb  ro  dlfo'lour 
them,  leaft  by  thefe,the  thoughts  of  death(which  he  fo  abhorr'd) 
fhould  crowd  in  upon  him.  A  poor  cowardly  fhift(God  knows;,? 
yet  all  that  this  wretch  had,  and  many  more  have  betwixt  them 
and  a  hell  above  ground  in  their  confeiences.    Others  their  light 
is  fo  ftrong,  and  glares  on  them  fo  conftantly,  that  this  will  not 
do,  but  where  ever  they  go,though  they  hear  not  a  Sermon  in  a 
moneth,  look  not  on  a  Bible  in  a  year,  and  keep  far  enough  from 
fuch  company  as  would  awake  their  confeiences ,  yet  they  are 
haunted  with  their  own  guilt ;  and  therefore,  they  do  not  only  £3 
from  the  pre  fence  of  the  Lord,  as  Cain  did, Gen. q..i  6.  but  as  he  aifo 
made  diversion  of  thofe  mufing  thoughts  which   gathered   to 
his  guilty  confeience,  by  employing  them  another  way  in  building 
n  City,  ver.  1 7.  fo  do  they  labour  to  give  their  confeiences  the  flip 
in  a  crowd  of  worldly  bufincfles.  This  is  the  great  Leviathan  that 
fwallows  up  all  the  thoughts  of  heaven  and  hell  in  many  mens 
hearts.    They  are  fo  taken  up  with  that  projed  and  this ,  that 
confeience  finds  them  not  at  lcifure  to  exchange  a  few  words  with 
them  of  a  long  time  together.    Confeience  is  as  much  huncht  at, 
and  fpighted  among  (inners,  as  Jofeph  was  ameng  the  patriarchs. 
That  which  confeience  tells  them,  likes  them  no  better  than    Jo- 
fephs  dream  did  his  brethren  j.  and    this  makes   many  play  the 
Merchants  with  their  confeiences,  as  they  did  with  him  ^  which 
they  do  by  bribing  it  with  the  profits  of  the  world.  But  thisphy- 
fick  is  found  too  weak  alfoj  and  therefore  Sauls  harp,and  Nabals 
feaft  is  thought  on  by  others  •,  with  thefc  they   hope  to  drown 
their  cares,  and  lay  their  raving  confeiences  afleep,  like  fome  ruf- 
fian that  is  under  an  arreft  for  debt,  and  hath  no  way,  but  now 
to  prifon  he  muft  go,  except   he  can  make  the  Serjant  drunk  in 
whofc  hand  he  i<?,  which  he  doth,  and  fo  makes  anefcape.  Thus 
many  befot  their  confeience  with  the  brutifh  pleafures  of  finne  j 
and  when  they  have  laid  it  as  faft  afleep  in  fenfelefle  ftupidity,  as 

one 


2  q3  The  Gojpel  of  peace  t 


one  that  is  dead  drunk,  then  they  may  Anne  without  control  till 
it  wakesagain.     This   is  the  heighth  of  that  peace,  which  any 
carnal  receit  can  help  the  (inner  unto  •,  to  give  a  fleeping  potion, 
that  (hall  bind  up  ihefenfes  of  confeience  for  a  while,  in  wh  ch 
time  the  wretch  may  forget  his  mifery  ,  as  the  condemned  man 
doth  when  he  is  afleep,  but    as  foon  as  it  awakes,  the  horrour 
of  his  condition  is  fure  again  to  affright  him    worfe  than  before. 
God  keep  you  all  from  fuch  a  cure  for  your  troubles  of  confeience, 
which  is  a  thoufandtimes  worfe  than  the  difeafe  itfelf.  Betterto 
have  a  dog  that  will  by  his  barking  tell  us  athief  is  in  our  yard  ,than 
one  that  will  fit  ftill,and  let  us  be  rob'd  before  we  have  any  notice 
or  our  danger. 

Secondly,  fomc  diaw  their  peace  of  confeience  from  a  legal  ci- 
ftern^  all  ihe  comfort  they  have,is  from  their  own  righteoufnefs  j 
this  good  work,  and  that  good   duty  they  blefs  them felve9  in, 
when  any  qualme  comes  over  their  hearts  i  the  cordial  drink, 
which  they  ufe  to  revive  and  comfort  themfelves  with  ,  is  drawn 
not  from  the  iatisfa&ion  which  Chrift  by   his  death  hath  given 
to  God  for  them  poor  finners  •,  but   from  the  righteoufnefs  of 
their  own  lives  ^  not   from  Chrifts   interceffion  in  heaven  for 
tbem,  but  their  own  good  prayers  on  earth  for  themfelves-,  in  a 
word,  when  any  fpark  of  difquiet  kindles  in  their  confeiences  (as 
it  were  ftrange,  if  where  fo  much  combuflible  matcer  is,    there 
ihould  not  at  one  time  or  other  fosne   fmothering  fire  begin  in 
fuch  a  ones  bofomc)then,not  Chrifts  blood,  but  their  own  tears 
arecaftonto  quench  it.    Well,  whoever  thou  art  that  goeft 
this  way  to  work  to  obtain  peace  of  confeience,  I   accufe  thee 
as  an  enemy  to  Jefus  Chrift   andhisGofpel.    If  any  herb  could 
be  found  growing  in  thy  garden  to  heal  the  wounds  of  thy  confei  • 
,.  ence  j  why  did  the  Lord  C  hrift  commend  for  fuch  a  rarity  ,  the 
balme  which  he  came  from  heaven  on  purpofe  to  compound  with 
his  own  blood  ?  why  doth  he  call  finners  from  all  betides  himfelf 
as  comforters  of  no  value,  and  bid  us  come  to  him,  as  ever   we 
would  find  reft  for  our  fouls  ?  Mattb.  11.28.    No,  know  poor 
creature,and  believe  it(while  the  knowing  of  it  may  do  thee  good) 
Either  Chrift  was  an  impoftor    and  the  Gofpel  a  fable,  which 
Ihope  thou  art  not  fuch  an  InfideKworfe  than  the  Devil  himfelf) 
to  b<  lieve^reiie  thoutakeft  not  the  right  method  of  healing  thy 
confeience  wounded  for  finne,  and  laying  a  fure  bottome  for  fo- 

lid 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  399 


lid  peace  in  thy  bofome^  prayers  and  cears  (repentance  I  mean  ) 
good  works  &  duties,thefe  are  not  to  be  ncgletfed,nay,thou  canft 
never  have  peace  without  them  in  thy  confeience,  yet  thefe  do 
not,  cannot  procure  this  peace  for  thee,  becaufe  they  cannot  thy 
peace  with  God  j  And  peace  of  confeience  is  nothing  but  the 
cccho  of  pardoning  mercy ,  which  founding  in  the  confeience , 
brings  the  foul  into  a  fweet  reft  with  the  pleafant  mulick  it  makes. 
And  the  eccho  is  but  the  fame  voice  repeated  ^  fothat  if  prayers 
and  tears,  good  duties  and  good  works,cannot  procure  our  peace 
of  pardon,  then  not  our  peace  of  comfort.  I  pray  remember  I 
faid,you  can  never  have  inward  peace  without  thefe  •  and  yet  not 
have  it  by  thefe.  A  wound  would  hardly  ever  cure ,  if  not  wrapt 
up  from  the  open  aire,  and  alfo  kept  clean  -y  yet  not  thefe,  but 
the  balfne  cures  it.  Ceafe  therefore  not  from  praying  and  the 
exercife  of  any  other  holy  exercifc  of  grace  or  duty ;  but  from 
expecting  thy  pe,ice  and  comfort  to  grow  from  their  root,  or  elfe 
thou  (hut'ft  thy  fclf  out  from  having  any  benefit  of  that  true 
peace  which  the  Gofpel  offers.  The  one-*difts  the  other ,  like 
thofetw-o  famous  rivers  in  Germany  ^  whofe  dreams  when  they 
meet,  will  not  mingle  together.  Gofpel  peace  will  not  mingle  and 
incorporate'aslmay  fo  fay)with  any  ctherjthou  muft  drink  it  pure 
and  unmixt,or  have  none  at  a\\.We  (faith  holy  Paul  for  himfelf,and 
all  other  fincere  believers)  are  the  circumcifion,  which  morjbip  God 
in  the  spirit ,  and  rejoyc&in  Chrift  fefus,  and  have  no  confidence  in 
thefle/byVh\L$.i.  As  if  he  hadfaid,  we  are  not  fhort  of  any  in 
holy  duties  and  fervices,nay,we  exceed  them,  forw  worjhip  God 
in  the  Sprit ;  but  this  is  not  the  tap  from  whence  we  draw  our 
joy  and  comfort  ^  we  re  Joyce  (fiduciarily)  in  Qhrift  Jefw^  not  in 
thefiejh,  where  that  which  he  called  worshipping  God  in  the 
Spirit,  now  in  opposition  to  Chrift  and  rejoyemg  in  him,he  calls 
flefh. 


"SECT.  IV. 

They  are  to  be  reproved  from  hencc,who  do  indeed  ufe  the  balm 
of  the  Gofpel  for  the  healing  confeience-wounds  •,  butchey  ufe 
it  very  unevangelically.  The  matter  they  bottom  their  peace  and 

com  fore 


4  oo  TbeGojpel  of peace. 


comfort  on,  is  right  and  good,  C  hnft  and  the  mercy  of  God  tho- 
rough him  in  the  promife  to  poor  (inners :  what  can  be  faid  bet- 
ter ?  But  they  do  notobferve(7ofpel- rule  and  order  in  the  apply- 
ing it.  They  ihatch  the  promife  prelum ptuoufly, force  and  raviih 
ir,  rather  than  feek  to  have  Chrilts  conlent  j  Like  Saul,,  who  was 
in  fuch  haftc,  that  he  could  not  flay  till  Samuel  came  to  facntice 
for  him,  but  boldly  falls  to  work  before  he  comes-,  flat  againft 
order  given  him.  Thus  many  are  lo  hot  upon  having  comfort, 
that  they  will  not  ftay  for  the  Spirit  of  God  to  come  and  fprinkle 
their  confeiences  with  the  blood  of  C  hrift  in  uofpel  order  ;  but 
profanely  do  it  themfelvei,  by  applying  the  comfort  of  thofe  pro- 
mifes  which  indeed  at  preient  does  not  belong  to  them.  O  Mrs, 
can  this  do  well  in  the  end  ?  (hould  he  confult  well  for  his  health, 
that  will  not  ftay  for  the  Doclors  diredtion,but  runs  into  the  Apo- 
thecaries (hop,  and  on  his  own  head  takes  his  Phytick  without  the 
counfel  of  thePhyfician,how  to  prepare  it  or  himielffor  the  taking 
of  it  ?  This  every  profane  wretch  doth  that  lives  in  finne,  and  yet 
fprinkles  himfelf  with  the  blood  ofChriit,  and  blefleth  himfelf 
in  the  pardoning  mercy  of  God  j  but  let  fuch  know,  that  as  the 
blood  ofthePafchal  Lamb, was  not  ftruck  on  the  Egyptians  doors, 
but  the  Ifraelires,  fo  neither  is  the  blood  of  Ghrift  to  be  fprinkled 
ontheobftinatefinner,  but  fincere>Denitent.  Nay  further,  as  that 
blood  was  not  to  be  fpilt  on  the  threfhold  of  an  Jfraclites  door 
("where  it  might  be  trampled  on)but  on  the  fide-poft s  j  fo  neither 
is  the  blood  Of  Chrift  to  be  applyed  to  the  believer  himfelf,  while 
he  lies  in  any  finne  unrepented  of,  for  his  prefent  comfort.  This 
were  indeed  to  throw  it  under  his  foot  to  be  trod  upon.  David 
confelTeth  his  finne  with  (hame, before  Nathan  comforts  him  with 
the  news  of  a  pardon. 


CHAP. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  4  o  1 


CHAP.  X. 

Where   we   have  a  trial  of  our  peace    from 
fonre    Characters  of  Gofpel  peace    or 
Comfort.    . 


LEt  this  Do&rine  be  as  a  touch-flone  to  try  the  truth  of  your  vfi  2. 
peace  and  comfort ;  hath  it  a  Gofpel-  ftamp  upon  it?  the 
Divel  hath  his  falle  mint  of  comfort  as  well  as  of  grace ;  put  thy 
felf  therefore  to  the  tryal,  while  I  fhall  lay  before  you  feme 
characters  of  the  peace  thatChrift  in  his  Gofpel  fpeaks  to  his 
people. 

Firft,Gofpel-comfort  may  be  known  by  the  veffel  it  is  poured  !• 

into,  which  is  a  broken  heart.  Thepromife  is  fuperfcribed  by 
name  to  fuch,  and  fuch  only;  Efay  57.1 5./ 'dwell  in  the  high  and 
iolyphct'j  with  him  alfo  that  is  of  a  contrite  and  humble  (firity 
to  revive  the  jpirit  of  the  humble, and  to  revive  the  heart  of  the  con- 
trite ones.  Cnrills  commilTion  from  his  Father  binds  him  up ;  he 
can  comfort  none  befides,£pjr  61.1. The  Spirit  of  the  Lord  is 
nf  on  me, becanfe  the  Lord  hath  anointed  me  to  preach  good  ty  dings 
to  the  m:ekji  he  hath  feat  me  to  bindc  up  the  broken-hearted  ;  and 
what  he  receives  himfelf  from  the  Father ;  the  fame  he  gives  to 
thofe  he  fends  upon  the  fame  errand ;  Firft,his  Spirir,concerning 
whom  he  teils  his  Difciple?,that  the  Comforter  when  he  is  comet 
frail  convince  of  fin,  of  rightconfneffe,and  of  judgment,]6h.l6.j. 
Mark,  Firfi,  of  fin;  and  as  for  his  inferiour  meflfengers,  they 
have  direction,  to  whom  they  are  to  apply  the  comforts  of  the 
GofpeJ.  Efay  5^  i.firengthen  ye  the  weak^hands, and  confirm: 
the  fe.ble  knees  ;  fay  to  1 7  em  that  are  of  a- fearful  heart,  be  firongy 
fear  t.or.And  cf on  their  peril  be  it,if  they  poure  this  ointment 

F  f  f  upon 


^02  The  Gofpel  of  feace. 


upon  the  head  of  an  unhnmbled  (inner ;  to  give  fuch  any  coni- 
ioit^y  promifi»g  life  to  him  as  he  is,God  protefts  againft  it ;  he 
calls  it  a  lye;a  jtn'ngthimxg  the  hnnds  of  the  r»iekcd\2i\\A  as  much 
as  in  them  lies,by  blowing  him  up  with  a  falfe  comfort,ro  make 
fure  that  he  ihall  never  have  the  true  peace.  Thus  you  fee  the  or- 
der of  the  Gofpel  in  comforting  fouls.  As  in  needle-work,che 
fad  ground-work  is  laid  before  the  beautiful  colours ;  as  the  fta- 
tuary  cuts  and  carves  his  ftatue  before  he  guilds  it ;  fo  doth  the 
Spirit  of  Chrift  begin  with  fadnefle,ends  in  joy ;  firft  cuts  and 
wounds,  then  heals  and  over-lays  the  foul  with  comfort.and 
peace.I  hope  you  do  not  think  I  limit  the  holy  one  in  his  work- 
ings to  the  fame  degree  and  meafure  in  all .    1  have  open'd  my 
thoughts  in  another  place  concerning  this :  but  fo  far  the  con- 
\  incing,humbling  work  of  the  Spirit  goes  in  every  foul  before 
peace  and  comfort  comes,  as  to  empty  the  foul  of  all  her  falfe 
comforts  and  confidences  which  fhe  had  laid  up ;  that  the  heart 
becomes  like  a  veflel  vvhofe  bottome  is  beat  out,and  all  the  wa- 
ter it  held,thsreby  fpilt  and  let  out;the  fins  it  lovedmow  ir  hates; 
the  hopes  and  comforts  it  pleafed  it  felf  with, they  are  gone,  and 
the  creature  left  in  a  defolate,folitary  condition;  no  way  now  ic 
fees,but  perifh  it  muft,except  Chrift  be  her  friend,and  interpofe 
betwixt  hell  and  it;to  him  fhe  therefore  makes  her  moan,as  wil- 
ling to  follow  his  counfel,and  to  be  ordered  by  his  direction,  as 
ever  Patient  was  by  his Phyfician,  of  vvhofe  skill  and  care  he  i> 
throughly  fatisfied;This  I  call  the  broken  heart,  which  if  you  be 
wholly  Grangers  to,your  acquaintance  is  to  begin  with  Gofpel- 
peace.l  befeech  you  reft  not  till  you  have  an  anfwer  from  your 
confciences;what  is  it  they  fay?  was  your  wine  once  water  ?  doth 
your  light  arife  out  of  darknefle?is  your  peace  the  iflue  of  a  foul- 
conflit1:&troub!e?did  you  bleed  before  you  were  healed?you  may 
hope  'tis  a  kindly  work  of  Gods  gracious  Spirit;make  much  of  ir, 
and  bleflfe  thy  God  that  hath  given  this  wine  to  chear  thy  fad 
hearr.But  ifthoucommenceftprr/^#7w,haft  thy  wine,  before 
thy  pots  were  filled  with  water ;  thy  morning  be  come,  before 
thou  haft  had  thy  evening  ;  thy  peace  be  fetled,  before  thy  falfe 
peace  is  broken  ;  thy  confeience  found  and  whole,  before  it  is 
lanced,  and  the  putrid  fluff  of  thy  pride, carnil  confidence,  and 
other  fins  thou  h.tft  lived  in,be  let  out,thou  rmyft  have  fome  e\[Q 
for  a  vuhile;  but  know  it,the  Lord  Jeius  denies  it  to  be  his  cure 

The 


The  Go/pel  of  peace.  ^03 


The  flrong  mans  houfe  is  kept  in  ^w,Luk.H.2l.as  well  as  the 
good-mans.  It  requires  more  power  to  work  true  forrow>  than 
falfe  joy  and  peace;a  happier  man  thou  wouldft  be.if  mourning 
in  the  diftrefie  of  a  troubled  confidence,  than  dance  about  this 
Idol,  peace,  which  the  Divel  thy  fworn  enemy  mocks  thee 
withall. 

2.  Gofpel-peace  is  obtain'd  in  a  Gofpel-way,and  that  is  two-  2. 

fold. 

F irft,  in  a  way  of  obedience  and  holy  walking,*^/.  6.16.  As 
many  as  malk^by  this  rule^peace  be  on  them.  Now  this  rule  you 
may  fee, -p.  if.tobethe  rule  of  the  new  creature.  And  what 
is  chat, but  the  holy  rule  cf  the  WordPro  which  the  principles  of 
grace  planted  in  the  foul  of  a  believer  are  fo  fitted,  that  there  is 
not  a  more  con-natural  agreement  betwixt  the  eye  and  light  , 
than  betwixt  the  difpofition  of  this  new  nature  in  a  Saint,and  the 
rule  of  holinelfe  in  the  Word.  Now,it  is  not  enough  for  one  to 
be  a  new  creature,and  to  have  a  principle  of  grace  in  his  bofom, 
but  he  mult  actually  walk  by  this  rule,  or  elfe  heel  be  to  feek 
for  true  peace  in  his  confcience.  No  comfort  in  the  Saints  is  to 
be  found,  but  what  the  Comforter  brings.  And  he  who  com- 
mands us  to  withdraw  from  them  ( though  our  brethren  )  that 
waik,  dif orderly, 2  Thtf.  1.9.  will  himfelf  furely  withdraw  from 
fuch,  and  with-hold  his  comforts,  fo  long  as  they  are  diforderly 
walkers;  which  they  are  as  long  as  they  walk  beiides  this  rule. 
And  therefore  if  thou  be  fuch  a  one,  fay  nor  the  Spirit  brought 
thy  comfort  to  thy  hand,for  he  would  not  bid  thee  good-fpeed  in 
an  evil  way  ;  No,he  hath  been  with-drawn  as  a  Comforter  ever 
fince  thou  haft  with-drawn  thy  foot  from  walking  by  the  holy 
rule. All  thy  peace  which  thou  pretendeft  to  have  in  this  time,  is 
bafe-born  .•  and  thou  haft  more  caufe  to  be  afhamed  of  it,  than 
glory  in  it.lt  is  little  credit  to  the  wife,that  fhe  hath  a  child  when 
her  husband  is  abroad,  and  cannot  father  it;  and  as  little  to 
pretend  to  comfort,  when  the  Spirit  of  Chriil  will  not  own 
it. 

Second  ly,Go(peiipzace  is  given  in  to  the  foul  in  a  way  of  duty, 
and  clofe  attendance  on  God  in  his  Ordinances.N^jy  the  Lord  of 
psacegive  you  -peace  always, by  all  means,  2  Th:f.  3.I  <5.That  is,blef$ 
all  means  for  comforting  and  filling  your  fouls  with  inyvard 
peace,fo  that  fit  that  drives  no  trade  in  6rdinances,and  brags  of 

Fff2  *hi> 


4°4    »••• 


The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


rVis  peace  8c  comfo:t,fpeaks  enough  to  b  ing  die  crwh  of  it  into 
{uiy'uion,  i»"»  the  thoughts  of  fober  Chriitiam.  I  know  Cod  can- 
by  immediate  illapfes  of  his  fpirit  comfort  theCh  iftian,an.i  lave 
hi:n  the  labour  of  hearing,praying,meditating;but  where  did  htj 
fay  he  would?  why  may  we  not  expect  a  harvetf,  as  well  with- 
out lowing  and  plowing,  as  peace  without  ufing  the  means  ? 
If  we  were  like  Ifra.  I  in  the  wildernefle  ;  in  fuch  a  ftatc  and  po- 
fture,  wherein  the  means  is  cut  from  us,  and  not  by  pride  or 
doth  put  from  us ;  as  fometimes  it  is  the  Chriftians  condicion;he 
is  fick,and  knock't  off  from  Ordinances ;  or  by  fome  other  pro- 
vidence as  prefling  he  is  fhut  out  from  the  help  of  this  means  or 
that;  now  I  fhould  not  wonder  to  fee  comfort  lie  as  thick  in 
his  foul,as  CM.  anna,  about  the  Jfraelltes  tents ;but  as  God  would 
not  raine  bread  any  longer,when  once  they  had  corne,bf  whicb 
with  their  labour  they  might  make  bread,  fop?.  y#  1 1,  i :.    fo 
neithet  will  the  Lord  comfort  by  a  miracle,  when  the  foul  may 
have  it  in  an  Ordinance.    God  could  have  taught  the  Emuch, 
aud  fatisfied  him  with  light  from  beaven,and  never  have  fent  for 
Philip  to  preach  to  him.  But  he  choofethto  do  k  out  of  Phi- 
lips mouth,ratber  than  immediately  out  of  his  own, no  doubt  to 
put  honour  on  his  Ordinance. 

Thirdly, Gofpel-  peace  in  the  confcience,it  is  ftrengthning  and 

reftorative  ;  it  mates  the  Chriftian  ftrong  to  fight  againft  linne 

andSatan;the  Chriftian  is  revived,and  findes  hisftrength  come, 

upon  a  little  tafting  of  this  honeys  butOwhataflaughter  doth 

he  make  of  hisfpiritual  enemies,  when  he  hath  a  full  meale 

of  this  honey,  a  deep  draught  of  this  wine  ?  now  he  goes  like  a 

Gyant  refrefhed  with  wine  into  the  field  againft  them.    No  luft 

can  fland  before,  him  ;  it  makes  him  ftrong  to  work.    O  how 

Paul  laid  about  him  for  Chrift?^  laboured  more  abundantly  than 

them  *//.The  good  man  remembred  vvhat  a  wretch  he  once  was, 

and  what  mercy  he  had  obtained ;  the  fenfe  of  this  love  of  God 

lay  fo  glowing  at  his  heart,  that  it  infired  him  with  a  zeal  for 

God  above  his  fellow-Apoftles.  This  made  holy  David  prayfo 

hard  to  drink  again  of  this  wine,  which  fo  long  had  been  lock't 

up  from  him.  Restore  Hnto  me.  the  joy  of  thy  fa/vat  'onyand  uphold 

me  with  ihy  free  Spirit :  Then  will  J  teach  trar.fgrefors  thy  ways, 

and  finners  JhaH  be  converted  unto  f/;«",  Pfal.    $1.  *&,IJ.  Pray 

mark,  it  was  not  his  lkjuoriih  palate  after  the  fweet  tafte  of  this 

wine 


The  Gofpel  of  peace,  405 


wine  of  comfort,  that  was  the  only  or  chief  reafon  why  he  (o 
long'd  for  it ;  buc  the  admirable  vercue  he  knew  in  it,  to  infpirit 
and  impower  him  wich  zeal  for  God ;  whereas  the  falfe   peace 
and  comfort  of  hypocrites  is  more  heady  than  hearty  j  it  leaves 
them  as  weak  as  they  were  before ;  yea,  it  lies  rotting,  like  un- 
wholefom  food  in  (he  flomack,and  leaves  a  forfeit  in  their  fouls, 
(  as  lufcicus  funmer-fruicsdo  in  the  bodies  of  men)  which  foon 
breaks  out  in  loofe  practices.     Thieves  commonly  fpend  their 
money  as  ill  as  they  get  it-,  and  fo do  hypocrites  and  formalins 
their  ftollen  comforts  j  fiay  but  a  little,and  you  lliall  fuide  them 
feaftingfome  luft  or  other  with  them.     /  have  peace-offerings 
with  nje,(  faich  the  religious  whore, the  hypocritical  harlot  )this 
day  I  have -paid  my  vows  ^therefore  cams  I  forth  to  meet  /7W,Pr0vo 
7. 14,  j  ^.fhe  pacifies  her  conference,  and  comforts  her  felf  with 
this  religious  fervice  foe  performs;  and  now  having  (as  fhe 
thought )  quit  fcores  with  God,   Hie  returns  to  her  own  lustful 
trade;  yea,  emboldens  her  felf  from  this  in  her  wickedneffe  ; 
Therefore  came  1  forth  to  m  et  thee ;  as  if  fhedurft  not  have  plaid 
the  whore  with  man,  till  ("he  had  plaid  the  hypocrite  with  Godr 
and  ftopt  the  mouth  of  her  confidence  w;th  her  peace-offering. 
Look  therefore  I  befeech  you  very  carefully  what  erfecl:  your 
peace  and  comfort  have  in  your  hearts  and  lives.    Are  you  the 
more  humble  or  proud  for  your  comfort )  do  you  walk  more 
clofely  or  loofely  after  your  peace  ?  how  ftand  you  to  duties  of 
worihip.?are  you  made  more  ready  for  communion  with  God  in 
them,or  do  yoa  grow  ftrange  to  and  infrequent  in  them  ?  have 
you  more  quickningin  them,  or  lie  more  formal  and  lifeleffe 
under  them?In  a  word,can  you  (hew  that  grace  and  peace  grow 
in  thee  alike  ?  or  doth  the  one  Iefle  appearance  thou  doit  more 
pretend  to  the  otherpby  this  thou  mayft  know  whether  thy  peace 
comes  from  the  Peace-maker,or  peace-marrer,from  the  God  of 
truth,or  father  of  lies. 

Fourthly,  Gofpel-peace  comforts  the  foul,  and  that  ftrongly, 
when  it  hath  no  other  comfort  to  mingle  with  it.  It  is  a  cordial 
rich  enough  it  felf,  and  needs  not  any  other  ingredient  to  bz 
compounded  with  it.  David  (ingles  God  out  by  himfelf ;  whim 
have  I  in  h  oven  but  thee  ?  and  there  k  none  on  earth  that  I  defire 
befdes  theeyVh\.j?.V<;.GivQ  David  but  his  God,and  let  who  will 
like  all  beiides ;  let  him  alone  to  live  comfortably,  may  he  bat 

Eff  3  have 


aq6  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


have  his  love  and  favour.  Hence  it  is  that  the  Chriftians  peace 
pays  him  in  the  greateft  revenues  of  joy  and  comfort,when  out- 
ward enjoyments  contribute  leaft,  yea,  nothing  at  all,  but  bring 
in  matter  of  trouble.  But  David  encouraged  himfelfin  his  Gody 
t  Sam. 30.6.  you  know  when  that  was;  if  Davids  peacehadnot 
been  right  and  found,  he  would  have  been  more  troubled  to 
think  of  God  at  fuch  a  time,  than  of  all  his  other  difalter*. 
Qr-eat  peace  have  they  whic  h  love  thy  Law>ar?d  not hing  fhall  offend 
them,  Pfal.119. 16%.  This  diftinguifheth  the  Saints  peace  both 
from  the  worldlings  and  the  hypocrites. 

Firfiy  from  the  worldlings,  his  peace  and  comfort  (poor 
wretch)  runs  dregs  as  foon  as  creature-enjoyments  run  a  tilt : 
v\  h  :n  poverty ,difgrace  ,ficknefs,or  any  thing  elfe  crofleth  him , 
in  that  which  he  fond  7y  doted  on,  then  his  night  iscome,and 
day  lluit  up  in  difmal  darkneffe.     In  which  refpeft  it  is ,    that 
Chrifl  ( as  I  conceive )  oppofeth  his  peace  to  the  worlds,  fofa 
1 4.  27.  My  pace  I  give  unto  yon  y  not  as  the  world  givtthygive 
Jttntoyoft;  let  nor  jot*r  heart  be  troubled,  ne'th  r  let  it  heap- ad. 
Pray  mark,Chrift  is  laying  in  Arguments  of  comfort  for  his  Di- 
fciples  againrt  his  departure,  which  he  knew  would  go  fo  near 
their  hearts.One  amongft  the  reft,is  taken  from  the  difference  of 
that  peace  and  comfort  which  he  leaves  .them,   from  what 
the  world  gives -as  if  he  had  faid,If  the  peace  and  comfort  you 
have  from  me,  lay  in  fuch  things  as  the  worlds  peace  is  made 
up  of,  plenty,  eafe,  outward  profpericy,  and  carnal  joy,  truly 
then  you  had  reafon  to  be  the  greateft  mourners  at  my  funeral , 
that  ever  followed  friend  to  the  ^rave  ;  for  after  my  departure, 
you  are  like  to  have  none  of  iheie;nay,rather  expect  trouble  aid 
perfecution.     Bur  know,  the  peace  I  left  with  you,   is  not  in 
your  houfes,but  hearts;the  comfort  I  give  you  lies  not  in  hlver 
and  gold,  but  in  pardon  of  !in,  hopes  of  glory  and  inward  con- 
iblations  which  the  Comforter  that  is  to  come  from  me  to 
dwell  with  you,  fhall,  upon  my  appointment,pay  into  your  bo- 
fo:ns;and  this  fhall  out-live  all  the  worlds  joy.This  is  fuch  a  le- 
gacy as  never  any  left  their  children.  Many  a  father  dying,hath 
ina  farewel  fpeech  to  his  children,  wiih't  them  all  peace  and 
comfort  when  he  fhould  be  dead  and  gone;but  who  befidesjefus 
Chritf  could  fend  a  Comforter  into  their  hearts,and  thrufl  peace 
and  comfort  into  their  bofom.es  ? 

lAgam, 


The  Gofpel  of  peace .  4  07 


y^W»,itdiftinguiiheth  the  true  Chriilians  peace  from  thz  hy- 
pocrites, who,  though  he  pretends  to  place  his  comfort  not  in 
the  creatures,but  in  Cod  5  and  feems  to  take  joy  in  the  intereft, 
which  he  laves  claim  to  hive  in  Chriit  and  the  precious  proini- 
fes  of  the  Gofpel ;  yet  when  k  conies  indeed  to  the  trial,thac  h  z 
fees  all  his  creature-comforts  gone,  and  not  like  to  return  any 
more,  (  which  at  this  time  had  his  heart,though  he  would  not  ic 
fhould  be  thought  fo)and  now  he  fees  he  muft  in  earneft  ihto  a- 
noiher  world,tortand  or  fall  eternally,  as  he  lhall  then  be  found 
in  Gods  own  fcrutiny  to  have  been  fincere  or  falfe-hearted  in  his 
pretenfions  to  Chriti  and  his  grace;  Truly  then  his  thoughts  re- 
coile,  his  confcience  flies  in  his  face,  and  reproacheth  him  for 
fpiritual  couzenage  and  forgery.  Now  foul  fpeak,  is  it  thus  with 
thee?  does  thy  peace  go  with  thee  jutt  totheprifondoor,  and 
there  leave  thee-'art  thou  confident  thy  fins  are  pardoned  all  the 
while  thou  art  in  health  and  ftrength,  but  as  foon  as  ever  the  Ser- 
jeant knocks  at  the  door  to  fpeak  with  thee,  fdeath  I  mean 
comes  in  thy  fight )  then  thy  thoughts  alter,  and  thy  confcience 
tells  thee,  he  comes  to  prove  thee  a  liar  in  thy  pretended  peace 
and  ;oy?this  is  a  fad  fymptom.I  know  indeed  that  the  time  of  af- 
fliction is  a  trying  time  to  grace  that  is  truejThe  fincere  Chrifti- 
an  for  a  while  mayflike  a  valiant  fou!dier)be  beat  from  his  artil- 
lery, and  the  enemy  Satan  may  feem  to  pofTefle  his  peace  and 
confidence  ;  yea,  fo  far  have  fome  precious  Saints  been  carried 
down  the  flreame  of  violent  temptations,as  to  queflion  whether 
their  former  comforts  were  from  the  holy  Spirit  the  Comforter, 
or  the  evil  fpirit  the  deceiver;  yet  there  is  great  difference  be- 
rween  the  one  and  the  other. 

Firft,they  differ  in  their  caufes ;  this  darkneiTe  which  fome- 
times  is  upon  the  fincere  Chrifiiansfpirit  indeep  diftrefs,comes 
from  the  withdrawing  of  God  his  lightfom  countenance;but  the 
horrour  of  the  other  from  his  own  guilty  confcience,that  before, 
was  lullabyd  afleep  with  profpericy,  but  now  being  awakened  by 
the  hand  of  God  on  him,doth  accufe  him  to  have  been  falle  with 
God  in  the  whole  courfe  of  hisprofeflion.  Itis  true,fome  par- 
ticular guilt  may  be  contracted  by  the  ChriiHan  through  ne?li- 
gence,or  ftrong  temptation  in  his  Chriftian  courfe^for  which  This 
confcience  may  accufe  him,  and  may  futther  imbitter  the  pre- 
fent  defertion  he  is  in  fo  farre,  as  from  thofe  particular  mifcar- 

ri.i^es 


4.o8  the  Gofpel  o^feace. 


riages  to  fear  his  hncerity  in  the  reft,  though  he  hath  no  reafon 
to  do  it;but  his  confcience  cannot  charge  him  of  an  hypocritical 
de(ign,to  have  been  the  fpring  that  hath  let  him  on  work  through 
the  whole  courfe  of  his  profellion. 

Secondly  ,there  is  fomething  concomitant  with  the  ChriilianJ 
prefent  darknefie  of  f^irir,  that  diitinguifheth  it  from  the  hypo- 
crites horrour ;  and  that  is  the  lively  working  of  grace,  which 
then  commonly  is  very  vi(ible,when  his  peace  and  former  com- 
fort are  molt  queftioned  by  him  ;  the  Idle  Joy  he  hath  from  any 
prefent  fenfe  of  the  love  of  God,the  more  abounding  you  l*hall 
rinde  him  in  for  row  for  his  fin,  that  clouded   his  joy ;   The 
further  Chrift  is  gone  out  of  his  (ight,the  more  he  clings  in  his 
love  toChrift,and  vehemently  cries  after  him  in  prayer,as  we  fee 
in  Hemav,  Pfal.88.1 3  •  Vxto  tf.es  have  I  cried  0  Lordyand  in  the 
morrrngfoallmy  prayers  prevent  thee.Q  the  fervent  prayers  that 
then  are  (hot  from  his  troubled  fpirit  to  heaven,the  pangs  of  af- 
fecticn,which  are  fpringing  after  God  :  and   is  face  and  favour ! 
Never  did  banifht  child  more  delire  admittance  into  his  angry 
fathers  prefence,than  he  to  have  the  light  of  Gods  countenance 
{hine  on  him,  which  is  now  vailed  from  him.  O  how  he  fearch- 
eth  his  heart,  ftudies  the  Scriptare,w  rallies  with  God  for  to  give 
him  that  grace,   the  non-evidence  of  which  at  prefent,  makes 
him  fo  queltion  the  comforts  he  hath  formerly  had  ;  might  he 
but  have  true  grace,  he  will  not  fall  out  with  God  for  want  of 
comfort,  though  he  Hays  for  it  till  the  other  world.  Never  did 
any  woman  big  with  chikle  long  more  to  have  the  childe  in  her 
arms  that  is  at  prefent  in  her  womb;than  fuch  a  foul  doth  to  have 
that  grace  which  is  in  his  heart  (  but  through  temptation  quefU- 
on'd  by  him  at  prefent)  evidenced  to  him  in  the  truth  of  it. 
Whereas  the  hypocrite  in  the  midlt  of  all  his  horrour  doth  nor, 
cannot  ( till  he  hath  a  better  heart  put  imo  his  bofome^corc  i.illy 
love  or  deiire  grace  and  holinefs,  for  any  in:rinfecal  excellency 
in  it  felf;only  us  an  expedient  for  cfcaping  the  tormentors  hand, 
which  he  fees  he  is  now  falling  inpD. 

They  differ  in  the  iflTue.  TheChriflian,  he  [\kz  a  ftarin  rhe 
heavens,  wades  through  the  cloud,  that  for  a  time  hides  hij 
comfort;  but  the  other,  lik*  a  Meteor  in  the  aire,  bla2eth  a 
lit'le:  and  than  drops  into  fome  ditch  or  other,  where  it  is 
quenched ;    o:   as   the  Spirit  of  God   diflinguilLeih   them  , 

Prov. 


The   Gvfpei  of  peace.  4  09 


'Troy.  13.9.  The  light  of  the  rittteom  rejtyceth,  but  the  lamp  (or 
candle,  as  in  trie  Hebr.)  ojrhe  rrickfd is  put  oat ;  the  fir-cere  Chri- 
ftians  joy  and  comfort  is  compared  ihere  to  the  light  of  the  Sun, 
that  is  climbing  higher ,while  it  is  mufled  up  with  clouds  from  ouc 
eye  j  and  by  and  by,  when  it  breaks  out  more  glorioufly,  doth 
rejoyceover  thofe m  fts  and  cloud?,  that  feem'd  to obfeure  itj  but 
the  joy  of  the  wicked,  like  a  candle,  waftes  andfpends  ( being  fed 
with  grofiefewcll  of  out  ward  profperity,  which  in  afhorttime 
fails  j  and  the  wretch  his  comfort  goes  out  in  a  fnuffc  at  Iaft,  paft 
all  hope  of  being  lighted  again.  The  Chriftians  trouble  of  fpirit 
again  is  compared  to  a  fwooning  fainting  fit,  which  he  within  a- 
while  recovers,  Pfal.  40.  A  qualm  comes  over  the  holy  mans 
heart  from  the  thought  of  his  fins  in  the  day  of  his  great  diftreife , 
verfe  12.  Innumerable  evils  have  comfajfedme  about  ^  mine  iniqui- 
ties have  tak^n  hold  upon  me,fo  that  I  am  not  able  to  look,  up  ^  they 
are  more  than  the  hairs  of  my  head,  the  e fore  my  heart  faileth  me. 
But  before  the  Tfalme  is  at  an  end  ,  after  a  few  deep  groans  in 
prayer,  (verfe  1 3 ,  i4.)he  comes  again  to  himfelf,  and  acts  his 
faith  ftrongly  on  God,  verfe  ij.jet  the  Lord thinke* h  on  met  then 
art  mj  help  and  my  deliverer.  But,  the  hypocrites  confidence  and 
hope,  when  once  it  begins  to  fink  and  falter,  it  dies  and  periftieth, 
Job  II.  20.  The  eyes  of  the  wicked  Jhall  failet  and  they  /hall  not 
tfcapey  their  hopeJhaU  be  as  the  giving  up  oftheghoil. 


CHAP.  XL 

That  the  Gojpel  alone  can  unite  the  hearts  of  men 
together  in  true  peace  ^and  how  the  Go/pel  doth  it, 


Vv 


7  E  come  now  to  the  third  kinde  of  peace,  which  I  called  a  3 

peace  of  love  and  unity.     A  heavenly  grace  this  is,  wherc- 

Ggg  *>y 


4,o  Tl*  Gvfpel  of  peace. 

by  the  mindes  and  hearts  of  men,  that  even  now  jarred,  andxang 
backwards,  are  madetunable  each  to  other ,  fo  as  to  chime  all  in, 
to  an  harmonious  confent  and  concord  among  themfelves.  Thus 
peace  in  Scripture  is  frequently  taken,  as  you  may  fee, Mar. 9. 50. 
Heb.  13.  14  1  Thef.  5.13.  Now  ,  the  Gofpel  is  a  Gofpel  of 
peace,  if  taken  in  this  notion  alfo,  which  we  (hall  briefly  fpeak  to 
from  this  Note, 
^nte  That  the  Gofpel,  a°d  °nly  the  Gofpel,  can  knit  the  hearts  and 

"^-  "  mindes  of  men  together  i^  a  fblid  peace  and  love.  This  (  next 
the  reconciling  us  to  G°d  and  our  felves  )  is  cfpecially.  defigned 
by  Chrift  iaphe  Gofpel  -y  and  truly  thofe without  this,  would  not 
fill  up  the  Saints  happineiTe ,  except  God  fliould  make  a  heaven 
for  every  Chriftian  by  himfelf  to  live  in.  fob*  'Baptifts  Mi- 
♦  niftery  ( which  was  as  it  were  the  preface  to ,  and  brief  contents 

of  the  Gofpel)  was  divided  into  thefe  two  heads^    To  turne 
many  of  the  children  of  Jfrael  to  the  Lord  their  God,  Luke  1 . 1 6.  and 
to  turn  the  hearts  of  the  fathers  to  the  children,  v.  17.  That  is,  to 
make  them  friends  with  God ,  and  one  another.    This  is  the  na- 
1.         tural  effed  of  the  Gofpel,  where  it  is  powerfully  and  fincere- 
ly  embraced ,  to  unite  and  endeare  the  hearts  of  men  and  wo- 
men in  love  and  peace  together  ,  how  contrary  foever  they  were 
before.    This  is  the  ftrange  Met  amorphous ,  which  the  Prophet 
fpeaks  fhall  be  under  the  Gofpel,  Jfa.u.S*  The  Wolfe  Jhall 
dwell  with  the  Lamb^nd  the  Leopard  lie  down  with  the  Kid.     That 
is,  men  and  women,  between  whom  there  was  as  great  feud  and 
enmity,  as  is  betwixt  thofecreatures^  thev  {hall<etfweetlya- 
gree,  andlieinoneanothers  b  fomes  peaceably  ;  and  how  all 
this,  but  b)  the  erflcacie  of  the  Lofpelon  their  hearts?  fo  ver. 
0.  for  the  earth  Jha/l  be  full  of  the  knowledge  of  the  Lord,     indeed 
it  is  in  the  dark  when  men  fight,  and  draw  upon  one  another 
in  wrath  and  ft  ry  •,  if  GofpeMight  comes  once  avingly  in,  the 
fw.  rd  will  foone  be  put  up  •   the  fweet  *  pint  of  love  will  not  fuf- 
fer  thefe  doings  where  he  dwells,  and  fo  peculiar  is  thisblelfing 
to  the  Gofpel,  that  Chrft  appoints  tt  for  the  badge  and  cogni- 
zance by  which  they  flvul.l  not    <>nly  know  one   another, 
bat  even   ftrangers  fhould  b?  able  to  know  them  from  any 
other  fcA  and  fort  or  men  in  the  world,  JohniT,,  35.     Bjthii 
jhall  all  men  knw  th.it  je  are  my  dtfciples^  that  ye  love  one  another  ^ 
aNoblemansfrrvantisknowna.faa'c  as  hecanwelLbe  feen,by 

the 


The  Gofyel  of  peace,  q  n 


the  coat  on  his  ba  k,  whofe  man  he  is  ^  fo  faith  Chrift,  (hall  all 
men  know  you  ,  b\  y«  >u  mutual  love,  that  you  recaine  to  me  and 
my »  ofpel  Jf  we  would  judge  tunouflyof  wine,  what  is  its 
natutal  relifh  ,  we  muft  cafte  of  it,  before  it  comes  into  thehuck- 
fters  hands,  or  alter  it  is  refined  from  its  lees;  fo  the  ^eftway 
to  judge  of  the  .jolpel ,  and  the  truit  it  bears  is  to  cafte  of  it  ei- 
ther when  it  was  profeft  and  embraced  with  moft  fimplicity^  and 
that  was  without  doubt  in  the  firft  {.iromulgation,  or,  fecondly, 
when  it  (ball  have  its  full  eh\  don  the  he<  rts  •  f  men,  and  that  is 
in  heaven-  in  both  thefe  though  chiefly  the  laft,  this  ^eace  will 
appear  to  be  the  natural  fruit  of  the  Gofpel. 

Firft ,  when  the  Gofpel  was  firft  preached  and  embraced,  x* 
what  a  fweet  harmony  of  peace  and  admirable  onenei'c  of  heart 
was  thenamongft  the  holy  profefTours  of  it, who  but  a  while  be- 
fore were  either  meer  ftrangers  to  .or  bitter  enemies  one  againft  a- 
nother?  they  lived  and  loved,  as  if  each  Chrifti?ns  heart 
had  forfaken  his  own,  to  creep  into  his  brothers  bofome.  They 
alienated  their  eftates ,  to  keep  their  love  entire  -t  they  could 
give  their  bread  out  of  their  own  mouths  to  put  it  int* 
their  brcth^ens  that  were  hungry-,  yea  when  their  love  to  their 
fellow  Chriftians  was  moft  coftly  and  heavie,  it  was  leaft  grutcht 
and  felt  by  them;  fee  thofe  blelTed  fouls,  Atlsz.^6.  the)  fold 
their  pejfeftiens  and  goods ,  and  parted  tt  all  men ,  as  every  one 
had  need-,  and  they  continuing  daily  rpith  one  accord  in  the  Tem- 
ple ,  and  breaking  of  bread  from  houfe  to  houfe ,  did  eate  their 
bread  mtb  gladnejfe  and  fingleneffe  of  heart.  More  ,  they 
are  more  merry  now  they  nave  been  emptying  of  their  baj,s 
by  charity,  than  if  they  had  come  from  filling  them  by 
worldly  traffique*.  So  notorious  was  the  love  of  (  hriftians  in 
the  Primitive  times,  that  jhc  very  Heathens  would  point  at  them, 
as Tertullian faith, and  fay,  See  horvthey  love  one  another-,  And 
therefore,  if  lefle  love  and  peace  be  found  now  amongft  C  hrifti- 
ans, the  blame  lies  not  on  the  Gofpel  but  them  ^  the  Gofpel  is 
as  peaceful,  but  they  are  minus  Evangelic*,  lefle  evangelical ,  as 
we  (hall  further  (hew. 

Secondly,  look  on  the  Gofpel  as  at  laft  in  the  complement  of  2. 

all  in  heaven  ;  when  the  hears  of  Saints  (ball  be  throughly  Gof- 
pelized,  and  the  promifes  concerning  the  peaceable  ftate  of  Saints 
have  their  full  accomplilhmenr :  then  above  all ,  this  peace  of 

Gggz  *e 


,  2  The  Gofiel  of  peace. 


i. 


the  Gofpcl  will  appear.     Here  it  put  out  and  in  ,  like  a  budding 
flower  in  the  Spring  ,  which  one  warm  day  opens  a  little,and  an- 
other that  is  cold  and  fhai  p  (huts  againe.   Thejtkr.cc  inthu  lw- 
er  heaven  (the  Church  on  earth)  is  but  for  the  lpace  of  halfe  an 
hovr^Rtv.  8.  i.  Now  there  is  love  and  peace  among  Chriltiar.s^ 
anon  fcandals  are  given  ,  and  differences  arife,  which  drive  this 
fweet  lpring  back;,  hut  in  heavea  it  is  full  blown,  and  fo  continues 
to  eternity.  There  duCenting  brethren  are  made  through  friends, 
never  to  fall  out^  there,  not  only  the  wound  of  contention  is  cu- 
red, bnt  the  fear  w"  ich  is  here  oft  left  upon  the  place,  is  not  to  be 
feen  on  the  face  of  heavens  p;ace,  to  disfigure  the  beauty  of  it, 
which  made  that  Cjerman  Divine  fo  long  to  be  in  heaven,  where, 
faid  he,  Luther  a-  d  Zuingliw  are  periedly  agreed ,  though  they 
could  not  on  earth. 

But  I  come  to  give  fome  particular  accout  how  theGofpel 
knits  the  hearts  and  m  nds  of  men  in  peace  together,  and  why  the 
Cofpel  alone  can  do  this  j  whiie  1  cleare  one ,  I  (hall  the  other 
alfo. 

Firft,  theGofpel  knits  the  hearts  of  men  together,  as  it  pro- 
pounds powerful  arguments  for  peace  and  unity;  and  indeed  fuch 
as  are  found  no  where  elfe.lt  hath  cords  of  love  to  draw  and  bind 
fouls  together ,  that  were  never  weav'd  in  natures  loomc  :  fuch 
as  wc  may  runne  through  all  theTopick*  of  Morality,  and  meet 
with  none  of  them,  being  all  Supernatural  and  of  divine  revelati- 
on Epbcf.  4  3.  The  Apoftle  exhorts  them  to  keep  the  unity  of  the 
Spirit  in  the  bonh  of  pence.     And  how  doth  he  perfwade  them,  v. 
4,5,6,7.  Tir ft,  there  ucnebodj  ,  but  fuch  a  one  as  natural  Phi- 
lofphj  treats  not  of  ^  I  ut  a  myftical  one,  the  Churchy  which  con- 
iifts  of  feveral  Saints ,  as  the  natural  body  of  feveral  members  •, 
and  as  it  were  flange  to  fee  one  member  to  faU  out  with  another, 
which  all  are  preferved  in  life  by  their  union  together  ^  fo  much 
more  in  the  myftical  body,     isfgrn »,  one  (fir  it,  that  isthefanic 
holy  Spirit,  which  quickens  them  all  that  are  true  Saints,  and 
is  to  the  whole  number  of  Saints,  as  the  foul  is  to  the  whole 
man,  informing  every  part      Now  as  it  were  a  prodigious  vio- 
lence to  th   law  of  natu  e  ,  i1  the  members  by  an  inteftine  wane 
among  thcrnfelvcs ,  fhould  drive  the  foul  out  of  the  body,  which 
gives  life  to  them  in  union  together  ^  fo  much  more  would  it  be 
for  Chriftiaus  to  force  the  holy  '  pirit  from  them  ,  by  their  con- 
tentions 


The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


<  1 3 


tendons  and  ftrifes^as  indeed  a  wider  d.  »or  cannot  e  ifily  be  opened 
for  him  to  go  out  at.  Again,  it  preiTeth  unity,  from  the  one  hope 
rf  o«r^//i»^,where  hope  is  put  pro  re  fperata ;  the  blifle  we  a!l 
hope  for  in  heaven  ;  there  is  a  day  coming,  and  it  cannot  b?  far 
from  us,  in  which  we  fhall  meet  lovingly  in  heaven,  and  fit  at 
one  feaft,  without  grutching  one  to  fee  what  lies  on  anothers 
trencher ;  full  fruition  of  God  fhall  be  the  feaft  ,  and  peace  and 
love  the  fweet  mufick  that  fhall  found  to  it ;  and  what  foliy  is  it 
for  Us  to  fight  here,  who  (hall  feaft  there?  draw  blood  of  one 
another  here,  that  fhall  fo  qu  ckly  lie  in  each  others  boiomes? 
Now  the  Gofpel  invites  to  this  feaft,  and  calls  us  to  this  hope.  I 
might  run  thorugh  the  other  particulars,  which  a;  e  all  as  purely 
Evangelical,  as  thefe  one  Lordt  we  Faith,  one  Baptifm,  but  enough 
to  have  given  you  a  tafte. 

Secondly,  the  Gofpel  doth  this,  as  it  takes  away  the  caufe  of 
that  feud  and  enmity,  which  is  among  the  fonnes  and  daughters 
of  men,  and  they  chiefly  two.The  curie  of  Gcd  on  them,and  their 
ownluftsinthem. 

Firft ,  [he  feud  and  hoftility  that  is  among  men  and  women  is 
part  of  that  curfe,  which  lies  upon  mankinde  for  his  Apoftacic 
from  God.  We  read,  Gen.  3.  17.  how  the  ground  was  curfed 
for  mans  fakei  Th&rnes  and  thifiles  fhall  it  bring  forth  to  thee  (faith 
God,).  Bur,  a  far  greater  curfe  it  was,  that  one  man  ihould  be- 
come as  a  thorne  and  briar  to  fetch  blood  one  of  another.  Some 
have  a  fancy,  that  the  Rofe  grew  in  Paradife  without  prickles.  To 
be  fure,man,  had  he  not  finned.fh'  uld  never  have  bin  fuch  a  prick- 
ing briar ,  as  now  the  beft  of  them  is.  Thefe  thornes  that  come 
up  fo  thick  in  mans  dogged,  quarrelfome  nature,  what  do  they 
fpeak ,  but  the  efficacy  of  Gods  curfe  ?  The  firft  man  that 
was  borne  in  the  world,  prov'd  a  murtherer-  and  the  firft  that 
died,  went  to  his  grave  by  that  bloody  murtherers  hand  j  may  we 
not  wonder  as  much  at  the  power  of  Gods  curfe  on  mans  nature, 
that  appeared  fo  foon  in  Cains  malicious  heart,  as  they  did  at  the 
fudden  withering  of  the  fig-tree  blafted  by  Chrifts curfe  ?  And 
truly,  it  was  but  fuft  with  God,  to  mingle  a  perverfc  fpirit  among 
them  who  had  exprefTed  fo  falfe  a  one  to  him.Thcy  deferved  to  be 
confounded  in  their  language,  and  firffer'dtobitcanddcvoure 
one  another,  who  durft  make  an  attempt  upon  God  himfdf 
by  their  difebedience  j  very  obfervable  is  that  in  Zccbu.  10. 

Ggg  3  c°m» 


1. 


<j.<4.  1\k  Gofpel  of  peace. 


* 


compared  with  the  fourteenth.     When  once  the  ft  ffe  tf  beaut y, 
vcrfc  i  o.  (which  reprefented  Gods  Covenant  with  the  fewes) 
wa^alunder,  then  prefently  the  ftaffe  of  bands  (which  Signified 
the  brotherhood  between  'fuJiah  and  ftrufttem)  was  cut  alunder  al- 
fo.    VV  hen  a  people  break  Covenant  with  Cod  ,  they  muft  not 
expeft  peace  among  thcmfelves ;'  1 1  is  the  wifdome  of  a  Prince,  if 
he  can,  to  finde  his  enemy  work  at  hon-e.     As  i'oone  as  man  fell 
out  with  Cod f  behold  there  is  a  fire  of  warre  kindled  at  his  own 
door ,  in  his  own  nature.    No  more  bitter  enemy  now  to  man- 
kinde,  than  it  (elf.     One  man  is  a  Wolf,  yea  a  Devil  to  another. 
Now ,  before  there  can  be  any  hope  of  true  folid  peace  among 
men ,  this  curfe  muft  be  reverted  •  and  the  Gofpel,  and  only  the 
Gofpel  can  do  that ,  where  an  expedient  is  found  how  the  quar- 
rel betwixt  God  and  the  finner  may  be  reconciled  j  which  done, 
the  curfe  ceafeth.     A  curfe  is  a  judiciary  doome ,  whereby  God 
in  wrath  condemns  his  rebel  creature  to  fomething  that  is  evil. 
But  there  is  no  condemnation  to  him  that  u  in  Chrift.     The  curfe  is 
gone,  no  arrow  now  in  the  bow  of  threatning  ^  that  was  (hot  in- 
to C  hnfts  heart ,  and  can  never  enter  into  the  beleevers-  God 
may  whip  his  people  by  fome  unbrothcrly  unkindnefle  they  re- 
ceive one  from  anothers  hands,  by  way  of  fatherly  chaftilement, 
(and  indeed  it  is  as  (harp  a  rod  as  he  can  ufein  his  difciplinej  the 
more  to  make  them  fenfibleof  thdr  falling  out  with  him.    But 
the  curfe  is  gone,  and  they  under  a  promife  of  enjoying  peace  and 
unity,  which  they  (hall  (when  belt  for  them )  have  per;ormed  to 
them. 

Secondly,  the  internal  caufe  of  all  the  hoftility  and  feud  that  is 
to  be  found  amongft  raen,is  luft  that  dwells  in  their  own  bofoms; 
this  is  the  principle  and  root  that  bears  all  the  bitter  fruit  of  ftrifc 
and  contention  in  the  world,  J <*mes  4  1.  From  whence  come  wars 
and  fightings  among  you  ?  come  they  not  hence  ,  even  of  jour  lufts 
that  war  in  jour  members  ?  this  breaks  the  peace  with  God, 
our  felves,   and  others.    If  there  be  a  fiery  exhalation  wrapt 
up  in  the  cloud,  we  muft  look  for  thunder  and  lightning  to  fol- 
low -y  if  luft  in  the  heart,  it  will  vent  it  felf,  though  it  rends  peace 
of  family,  Church,  and  Kingdome.    Now.  before  there  can  be  a 
foundation  lor  a  firme  folid  peace ,  thefe  unruly  lufts  of  men 
muft  be  taken  down.    What  peace  and  quiet  can  there  be  while 
pride,  envic,  ambition,  malice,  and  luch  like  lufts ,  continue  to 
■  fit 


The  Gofpel  of  peace .  4 1 A 

fit  in  throne,  and  hurry  men  at  their  pleafure  ?  Neither  will  it  be 
enough  for  the  procuring  peace ,  to  reftraine  thefe  unruly  pac- 
tions, and  binde  them  up  forcibly  j  if  peace  be  not  made  between 
the  hearts  of  men,  it  is  worth  nothing.  The  chaine  that  ties  up 
the  mad  dog,  will  in  time  wear;  and  fowill  all  cords  break, 
by  which  men  feeme  at  prefent  fo  ftrongly  bound  together,  if 
they  be  not  tied  by  the  heart-ftrings,and  the  grounds  ol  the  quar- 
rel be  there  taken  away.  Now  the  Gofpel ,  and  only  the  Gofpel, 
can  help  us  to  a  plaifter ,  that  can  draw  out  of  the  heart  the 
very  core  of  contention  and  ftnfe.  Here  the  Apoftle  telling 
us  how  himfelf,  and  others  his  fellow  Saints  got  cure  of  that  ma- 
licious heart,  which  once  they  were  in  bondage  to,  Titus  3.3.  We 
6Hr  [elves  were  fometimet  foolijh  and difobedient ,  ferving  divers 
lufts  and  pleafures ;  living  tn  malice  and  envie,  hateful,  and  hating 
ene  another.  Well,  what  was  the  phyfiek  that  recove;ed  them  ? 
Seer.  4.  'But  after  the kindnejfe  and  love  of  Ood  ottr  Saviour  to- 
wards man,  appeared,  not  by  works  of  right  eeufneffe  which  we  have 
done ,  but  according  to  bis  mi  rcy  he  [avid  us  bj  the  wafting  of  re- 
generation and  renewing  of  the  holy  Che  ft.  As  if  he  had  faid,  had 
not  this  love  of  God  to  us  in  Chrift  appeared,  and  we  been  thus 
wafhed  by  bis  regenerating  Spirit,  we  might  have  lien  to  this  day 
under  the  power  of  thofe  lufts,  for  all  the  help  that  any  other 
could  afford  us  Mortification  isa  workof  the  Spirit,  Rom. 8.13. 
If  through  the  Spirit  ye  mertife  the  deedt  of  the  flejh  ,  je  JhaU 
live.  And  the  Gofpel  is  the  facrificing  knife  in  the  hand  of  the 
Spirit;  the  Word  it  is  called  the  fword  of  the  Sp iritis  that  which 
he  ufeth  to  kill  and  (lay  finne  with  in  the  hearts  of  his  peo- 
ple. 

Thirdly,  as  the  Gofpel  layes  the  axe  to  the  root  of  bittemefTe  3 , 

andftrife,  to  ftub  that  up  •,  fo  it  fills  the  hearts  of  thofe  that  em- 
brace, it ,  with  fuch  gracious  principles  as  encline  ro  peace  and  u- 
nity  i  fuch  are  fe/f- denial,  that  prefers  another  in  honour  before 
himfelf,  and  will  not  juftJe  for  the  wall.  Lcng-fufferixg,  a  grace 
which  is  not  eafily  moved  and  provoked-,  Gentleneffe,  which  if 
moved  by  any  wrong,  keeps  the  doors  open  for  peace  to  come  in 
at  again,  and  makes  him  eafie  to  be  entreated.  See  a  whole  bun- 
die  of  thefe  fweec  herbs  growing  in  one  bed/^/.  5. zz.The  fruit 
of  the  Spit  it  is  love,  joy,  peace, long- faff  eringy^cdn(ffe,  aith  mc  4r 
neffe.    Mark  I  pray,  this  is  not  fruit  that  grows  in  every  hedge ^ 

but 


4i6  The  Gofpel  of  peace. 


Vft  I. 


but/r^Vofr^f^WV.FruitthacfpringsfromGofpel-fecd.  As  the 
ftones  in  the  quarry , and  Cedars  as  they  grow  in  the  wood, would 
never  hive  l;enclofe  and  comely  together  in  the  Temple  j  fo  nei- 
ther coul  J  the  one  cut  and  polilh  ,  nor  the  other  hew  and  carve 
themfelves  into  that  fitnefle  and  beauty,  which  they  all  had  in 
thatftately  fabrick  j  No,  that  was  the  work  of  men  gifted  of  God 
for  that  purpofe  ^  neither  can  men  and  women  with  all  their 
skill  and  tools  of  morality,  fquare  and  frame  their  hearts,  fo  as 
to  fall  in  lovingly  together  into  one  holy  Temple  •  This  is  the 
work  of  the  Spirit,  and  that  alio  with  this  inftrument,  and  chizel 
of  the  Gofpel,  to  do,  partly  by  cutting  orTthe  knottinefie  of  our 
churlifti  natures,  by  his  mortifying  grace-  as  aLfo  carving,  polifh- 
ing,  and  fmoothing  them,  with  thofe  graces  which  are  the  ema- 
nations of  bis  own  fwett,meek  and  holy  Spirit, 


mini  *•»*«»  *f» 


B 

•-&«*■_  „ 

***  *■£'  <fg* 

CHAP.  XIL 

Wherein  isJJjewn  the  difference  between  the  peace 
that  is  among  Saints ,  and  which  is  among  the 
wicked.  The  greatnejje  of  their  fin,  who  are  Mi- 
mflers  of  peace  ^  andyetflir  up  flrife^  and  the 
reafon  why  there  is  no  more  peace  and  unity  a- 
mong  Saints  in  this  life. 

FIrft,  this  helps  us  what  to  think  of  that  peace ,and  love,  which 
fometimes  is  to  be  found  among  the  wicked  of  the  world.  It 
is  nor  true  peace,  and  fc  lid  love,  becaufe  they  are  ftrangers  to  the 
Gofpel  that  alone  can  unite  hearts  together.  What  then  (hall  we 

call 


The  Go/pel  of  peace.  a  \  y 


call  this  their  peace  ?  In  fome  it  is  a  meer  confpiracy,  fay  ye 
not  a  confederacy  to  all  them,  to  whom  this  people  JhaH  fay  a  con- 
federacy,  Efay  8. 12.     The  peace  of  fome  is  rather  founded  in 
wrath  to  the  Saints,  than  love  among  themfelves.  They  areu-  - 
nited,  but  how  ?  no  other  way  than  Sampfons  foxes,  to  do  mif- 
chief  to  others,  rather  than  good  to  themfelves.     Two  dogs 
that  are  worrying  one  another,  can  leave  off  to  run  both  after 
a  hare  that  comes  by  them;  who  when  the  chafe  is  over,  can 
to  it  as  fiercely  as  before.     In  the  fame  day  dilate  and  Herod 
vetre  made  friends  together,  for  before  they  were  at  enmity  between 
themfelves,  Luke  23.12.  i/fg*w,  the  peace  and  unity  of  others , 
is  founded  upon  fome  bafe  lult,  that  ties  them  together ;  thus 
fhall  you  fee  a  knot  of  good-fellows  (  as  they  mifcall  them- 
felves )  (it  over  the  pot  with  abundance  of  teeming  content  in 
one  anotherjand  a  pack  of  thieves,when  upon  a  wicked  deiign, 
jug  and  call  one  another  together,(as  Partridges  their  fellows,) 
faying,  come  with  tts,caft  in  thy  lot  among  us, let  its  all 'have  one 
purfe^Vrov*  1 . 1 4.  Here  now  is  peace  and  unity;  but  alas .'  they 
are  only  brethren  in  iniquity. Thirdly  ^ wbere  it  is  not  thusgrofs, 
as  k  cannot  indeed  be  denied  but  there  are  fome  that  never  fek 
the'power  of  the  Gofpel,  fo  as  to  be  made  new  creatures  by  it, 
who  yet  hold  very  faire  quarter  one  with  another,  and  corre- 
fpond  together  ;  and  that  not  on  fobafe,and  fordid  an  account, 
among  whom  fuch  offices  of  love  are  reciprocated,  as  do  much 
fvveeten  their  lives,  and  endear  them  one  to  another ;  and  for 
this  they  are  much  beholden  to,the  Gofpel,  which  doth  civilize 
oft,where  it  doth  not  fan£tihe.  But  this  is  a  peace  fo  fundamen- 
tally defective  ,  that  it  doth  not  deferve  the  name  of  true 
peace. 

Fir  ft,  it  is  in  cortice,mn  tn  corde;fapzvdcia.[  and  external,nor. 
invard  and  cordial ;  we  may  fay,  rather  their  lufts  are  chained 
from  open  warre,  than  their  hearts  changed  into  inward  love- 
As  the  bea(ts  agreed  in  the  Ark  pretty  well,yet  kept  their  hoftile 
nature,  fo  do  unregenerate  men. 

Sesondh,  '  Tit  unfanBifed  peace.  Fir  ft ,  becaufe  while 
they  feem  to  have  peace  with  one  another,  they  have 
not  peace  with  God ;  and  it  is  peace  with  God  takes  a- 
way  the  curfe.  Secondly,  becaufe  it  proceeds  from  unfandtified 
hearts;  it  is  the  Altar  that  fanftifles  the  gift;    the  heart,  the 

H  h  h  unity. 


4 1 8  T7j*  Gofpel  of  peace . 


i\Y\uy.  simicitia  non  eft  nift  inter  bonos.  A  Heathen  could  fay, 
true  love  and  friendship  can  only  be  between  good  men ;  but: 
alas  he  knew  not  what  made  a  good  man.    When  God  intends 
in  mercy  to  make  the  hearts  of  men  ^,he  firft  makes  them  «*», 
E2ek.ll.i9.  and  J  will  giv  them  on c  heart, and  I will  put,  a  new 
ipirit  within  yoti  ;  the  peace  of  the  right  kindejisa  fruic  of  the 
Spirit,  and  that  fanclities  before  it  unites.  Thirdly ,  becauTe  the 
end  that  all  fuch  propound  in  their  love  is  carnal,  not  fpirituaJ. 
As  Auftw  did  not  admire  Cicero  for  his  eloquence  and  orato- 
ry fo  much,as  he  did  undervalue  and  pity  him,becaufe  the  Name 
of  Jefus  Chrift  was  not  to  be  found  in  him  ;  fo  this  draws  a  black- 
line  upon  carnal  mens  peace  and  unity  ;  nothing  of  God  and 
ChrilUn  it.Is  it  his  glory  they  aime  at  ?  Chrifts  command  that 
binds  them  to  the  peace  ?  no  alaslherc  is  the  ftill  voice/out  God 
is  not.in  it;  their  own  quiet  and  carnal  advantage  is  the  pr  mum 
mobilefttict  and  unity  are  fuch  good  guefts,and  pay  fo  well  for 
their  entertainment,that  this  makes  men  who  have  no  grace, ("if 
they  have  but  their  wits  left )  defirous  to  keep  up  an  external 
peace  among  themfelves. 

In  a  word;it  is  a  peace  that  will  not  long  laft,bscaufe  it  wants 
a  ftrong  cement;ftones  may  a  while  lie  together  without  mor- 
ter,  but  not  long.  The  only  lafting  cement  for  love, is  the  blood 
of  Chrift,as  Auftin  faith  of  his  friend  Alypim  and  himfelf,they 
were  [anguine  Chrift  1  glutmati, 
Vje  2.         Secondly,  is  the  Gofpel  a  Gofpel  of  peace  in  this  fenfe,as  ta- 
ken for  unity  and  love  ?  This  dips  their  fin  into  a  deep  die,who . 
abufe  the  Gofpel  to  a  quite  contrary  end  ,•  and  make  it  their  in- 
ternment to  promote  ftrife  and  contention  withall;  fuch  the  A-. 
poftle  fyzaVsofyFh:I.i.l  $.fome  indeed  preach  Chrift  out  of  envy 
andftrife.lht  Gofpel  of  peace  is  aftrange  text,one  would  thinV 
to  preach  c(ivifion,and  raife  ftrife  from;and  the  Pulpit  as  ftrange. 
a  Moi:nt  for  to  plant  the  battering  pieces  of  contention  on.  O 
how  ftrangely  do  thefe  men  forget  theirLordthat  fent  them, who 
is  a  Prince  of  pea&ifA  their  work,which  is  not  to  blow  a  trum- 
pet of  fedition  and  confufion,.  or  found  an  alarme  to  battel,but 
rather  a  joyful  retreat  from  the  bloo.7  fight,  wherein  their  lu(ta 
had  engaged  them  againft  God  and  one  another  ?  Indeed,there 
is  a  war  they  are  to  proclaime,  but  'tis  only  againftiin  and 
Satan  -,  and  I  am  fure  we  are  not  /it  to  march  out  againit  them, 

till 


T/#  Gofpel  of  peace.  aiq 


till  we  can  agree  among  our  felves.     What  would  the  Prince 
think  of  that  Captain,  who  inftead  of  encouraging  his  fouldiers 
to  tall  on  with  united  forces,  as  one  man  againft  the  common 
enemy,fhould  make  a  fpeech  to  tet  his  fculdiers  together  by  the 
ears  among  themfelves?  furely  he  would  hang  him  up  for  a  trai- 
tour.Good  was  Luthers  prayer,  zA  Volhrc  glor'ofo^  a  Tajfore 
■coxtextiofofl'  Inutlllbut  ciuxjtlonibus  liberet  Ecclefiam  Dcw.Front 
a  vain- glorious  Dotlor^a  con  entlous  PajloHryand  nice  qaefiioxSythie 
Lord  deliver  his  Church.  And  we  in  thefe  fad  times  have  reafon 
to  fay  as  hearty  an  Amen  to  it,  as  any  fince  his  age.  Do  we  not 
live  in  a  time,when  theChurch  is  turned  into  a  Sep  lifters  Schoopl 
where  fuch  a  wrangling  and  jangling  hath  been,  that  the  preci- 
oufeft  truths  of  theGofpel  are  loft  already  to  many  (whole  eyes 
are  put  out  with  the  duft  thefe  contentions  have  railed  )  and 
they  have  at  laft  fairly  difputed  themfelves  out  of  all  their  fo- 
ber  principles ;  as  fome ill-husbands  that  light  among  curning 
gamefters,  and  play  all  their  money  out  of  their  purfes.  O  woe 
to  fuch  vile  men,  who  have  proftituted  the  Gofpel  to  fuch  de- 
viliuH  ends.  God  may  have  mercy  on  the  cheated  fouls  to  bring 
th:m  back  to  the  love  of  the  truth.     But  for  the  cheaters, 
they  are  gone  roo  far  towards  hell,  that  we  can  look  for  their 
return. 

Thirdly,  this  gives  us  the  reafon  why  there  is  no  more  peace  fjfe 
and  unity  among  the  Saints  themfelves ;  the  Gofpel  cannot  be 
faultedjthat  breaths  peace.  No  !  it  is  not  becaufe  they  are  Go- 
fpellers,  but  becaufe  they  are  but  imperfectly  Gofpellized,  that 
they  are  no  more  peaceful ;  the  more  they  partake  of  the  fpirit 
of  the  Gofpel,  thelefle  will  they  be  haunted  with  the  evil  fpirit 
of  contention  and  ftrife.  The  beft  of  Saints  are  in  part  unevan- 
gelical  in  two  particulars,  from  which  comes  all  the  unkinde 
quarrellings,andunbrotherly  contefts  among  them. 

Firft,in  their  judgments//)^  know  but  In partyand proyhecie  but 
In  part,  i  Cor.i  3.9.  he  that  pretends  to  more,boafts  without  his 
meafure,  and  doth  thereby  difcover  what  he  denies,  his  igno- 
rance (  I  mean  in  the  Gofpel.  )  And  this  defect  and  craze,  that 
is  in  the  Saints  judgments, expofeth  them  fometimes  to  drink  m 
principles  that  are  not  evangelical.  Now  thefe  are  they  that 
make  the  buffle,  and  difturb  their  peace  and  untty.All  truth  is  re- 
ducible to  an  unity;  like  lines  they  lovingly  meet  in  one  Center, 

Hhh2  the 


4  q  o  IheG ofpel  of  peace  i 


the  9'oi  «■/  fr^r/j ;  and  are  fo  far  from  jullling  and  c]a:'hing,that 
(  as  liones  in  an  arch  )  they  uphold  one  another.     And  they 
which  fo  Tweet Iy  agree  in  one,  ca  not  learn  us  to  divide.  No, it 
is  this  ft  ranger  ,Errourjhat  creeps  in  among  the  Saints,and  will 
needs  be  Judge  ;  this  breaks  the  peace,  and  kindles  a  fire  in  the 
houfe,  that  in  a  while,  if  let  alone,will  be  feen  at  the  houfe-top. 
W'holefome  food  makes  no  diiuubance  to  a  healthful  body;  But 
corrupt  food  doth  prefently  make  the  body  feverilh  and  unto- 
ward, and  then,  when  the  ma-n  is  diftempered,  no  wonder  if  be 
begins  to  be  pettiih  and  peevifh;we  have  feen  it  by  woful  experi- 
ence.   Thofe  from  whom  we  had  nothing  but  fvyeernefle  and 
love,  while  they  fed  on  the  fame  difh  of  Gofpel-truth  with  us , 
how  ttrangely  froward  are  they  grown,  fince  they  have  taken 
down  fome  unevangelical  and  erroneous  principles  ?   that  we 
;:now  not  well  how  to  carry  our  felves  towards  them,they  are  fo 
captious  and  quarrelfome  ;  yea,at  the  very  hearing  of  the  Word, 
if  they  have  not  yet  forgot  the  way  to  the  Ordinance ,   what  a 
diftafteful  behaviour  do  many  of  them  (hew?  as  if  every  word 
went  againft  their  ftomack,  and  made  them  fick.    O  Sirs,let  us 
not  blame  the  Gofpel  ;it  is  innocent  as  to  thefe  fad  contentions 
among  u?.  Paul  tells  us  where  ro  finde  a  father  for  this  brat  of 
ttrife  ;  feeatwhofe  door  he  directs  us  to  lay  it,  Rom.  16.  17. 
JNcw  J  befecchyou brethren  jnarkjlem  rthu  h  caufe  divifions  and, 
offences  contrary  to  the  doftrlne  ye  have  lamed.  Where  I  pray 
obferve  how  he  clears  the  Gofpel;  this  dividing  quarrelling  fpi- 
ritis  contrary  to  the  Gofpel ;  they  never  learn 't  it  in  Chrids 
School;and  t\\tntacitely  implies,they  have  it  fomewhere  e!fe 
from  fome  falfe  teacher,and  falfe  doctrine  or  other. Markjhcm 
faith  he,as  if  he  had  faid,obferve  them  well,  and  you  fhall  finde 
them  tainted  fome  way  or  other;they  have  been  warminp  them- 
ielves  at  Satans  fire,  and  from  thence  have  brought  a  coal  with 
them  that  dees  the  mifchief. 

Secondly,  Chriflinns  are  in  part  unevangelical  in  their  hearts 
and  lives.  The  whole  root  of  finne  is  not  ttubb'd  up  at  once  no 
wonder  fome  bitter  tafte  remains  in  the  fruit  they  bear.Saints  in 
heaven  fhall  be  all  grace,  and  no  finne  in  them  ;  and  then  they 
fhall  be  all  love  alfo;  but  here  they  are  part  grace,  part  corrup- 
tion,^ fo  their  love  is  not  perfe6t;how  can  they  be  fully  fodred 
Together  in  unity  never  tofall  out,as  long  as  they  are  not  fo  fully 

recon- 


J  he  Gofpel  of  peace.  a  2 1 


reconciled  to  G6d(|n  point  of  fan&ification)but  now  and  then 
there  happens  fome  oreaches  betwixt  them  and  God  himfejf? 
And  the  leffe  progreffe  the  Gofpel  hath  made  in  their  hearts  to 
mortifie  lu(t,and  tirengttieri  grace,the  lefle  peace  and  love  is  to 
be  expected  amon.gthem.The  Apoflle  concludes  from  the  con- 
tentions among  die  Chriiiians  at  £irjjrtA,chat  they  were  of  lit- 
tle growth  in  grace  jfuch  as  were  not  part  the  child- fpoon  and 
meat,  1  Ci>r.$.2.l  have  fed  you  with  milk^andnot  with  meat, for  hi- 
therto ye  were  not  able  to  bear  it, neither  yet  now  are  ye  able, for  y; 
ere  yet  cdr>ia/.Nzy,hz  conceives  this  to  be  fo  clear  evidence, that 
he  appeals  to  their  confidences  if  itbenotfo,t«r.:;./*r  nhireas 
there  is  among  you  envy  wgs, and  fir  iff, and  divifions,ar;  ye  not  car- 
nal, and  wall^  as  men  ?  But  as  grace  ftrengthens,and  the  Gofpel 
prevails  on  the  hearts  of  Chriiiians ,  Co  does  love  and  a  fpirit  of 
unity  encreafe  with  it.     We  fay,  older  and  wifer ;  though  chil- 
d  ren  ( when  young  )  do  fcratch  and  fight,  yet  when  they  get  up 
into  years ,  they  begin  to  agree  better.  Omne  invalidum  eft  da- 
tura querulum  ;  thole  that  are  young  and  weak,are  peeviln  and 
quarrelfome.    Age  and  ftrength  brings  wifdome  to  overcome 
thofe  petty  differences  that  now  cannotbe  born.     In  the  con- 
troverfie  between   ^Abraham  and  Lots  feryants,  ^Abraham 
who  was  the  elder  and  ftronger  Chriltian,  he  was  moft  forward 
for  peace,fo  as  to  crave  'it  at  the  hands  of  his  Nephew,  every 
way  his  inferiour  ;  Paul jyho  was  a  Chriftian  higher  by  the  head 
than  others,0  how  he  excell'd  in  love'.he  faith  of  himfelf,i  Tim. 
I'.  14.  7  he  grace  of  our  Lord  was  exceeding  abundant,  with  faith 
and  love  which  is  in  Jefus  Christ :  where,  faith  Matter  Calvin  , 
Fides  ittcredulitati  opfomtur  ;  dileBio  in  Chrifio,faviti<e,  quam 
exercusrat  adverfm  f deles.  Faith  is  oppofed  to  his  former  obfti- 
nate  unbelief,  when  a  Phanfee ;  love  in  Chrift  Jefus,  to  the  cra- 
elty  heexpreftagainitChriftians,  when  (breathing  llaughter  ) 
he  vvenr  on  a  perfecting  errand  to  "Damafctis.  Now  he  was  as 
full  of  faith,  as  then  of  unbelief;  now  as  fire-hot  of  love  to  the 
Saints,  as  then  of  cruelty  againft  them.,But  that  I  quote  chiefly 
the  place  for,  is,  to  fee  how  this  pair  of  graces  thrive  and  grow 
together ;  if  abundant  in  faith,  then  abundant  in  love. 


Hhh.3  CHAP, 


422 


TbeGoJpel  of  peace. 


CHAP.  XIII. 

An  ExhertaUon  to  the  Saints  to  maintain  peace 
among  tbemfelves  >  and  promote  it  to  their 
utmojl,  from  three  Arguments. 

,  •T",Hirdiy,it  brings  a  feafonable  Exhortation  to  all  the  Saints, 
Vft  3*  JL  that  they  would  nourifh  peace  what  they  can  among  them- 
felves ;  you  all  profefTe  to  have  been  baptized  into  the  Spi rir  of 
the  Gofpel ;  but  you  do  not  l"hew  it,  when  you  bite  and  fnarle  at 
one  another.The  Gofpd,  that  makes  Wolves  and  Lambs  agree, 
doth notteach  the  Lambs  to  turn  Wolves,  and  devoure  each 
the  other.  Gur  Saviour  told  the  two  Diiciples  whofe  choler  was 
foon  up,  that  they  wouldbe  fetching  fire  from  heaven,to  goon 
their  revengeful  errand  ;  that  they  Tittle  thought  from  what 
hearth  that  wild-fire  of  their  paflion  came,K  know  not  what  fpin't 
yc  arc  of, Luke  p.  ^6.  As  if  he  had  laid,  fuch  fiery  wrathful  fpeech- 
esdo  notfuit  with  the  meek  Matter  you  ferve,nor  with  the  Go- 
fpel of  peace  he  preacheth  to  you.And  if  the  GorpeI  will  not  al- 
low us  to  pay  our  enemies  in  their  own  coine,  and  give  them 
wrath  for  wrath  ;  then  much  leffe  will  it  fuffer  brethren  to  fpit 
fire  at  one  anothers  face.  No,  when  any  fuch  embers  or"  conten- 
tion begin  to  fmoak  ameng  Chriltians,  we  may  know  who  left 
the  fpark;no  other  but  Satan,  he  is  rhe  great  kindle-coal  of  all 
their  contentions. If  there  be  a  tcmpelt  (not  in  rhe  aire)  but  in 
rhe  fpirits  of  Chriftians,  and  the  wind  of  their  paflions  be  high 
nnd  loud;it  is  edtit  ro  rell  who  is  the  Conjurer :  O  'tis  the  Divel, 
that  is  pra&iiing  his  black  Art  upon  their  lufis,  which. yet  are  fo 
much  unmortiried,as  gives  him  too  great  an  advantage  of  railing 
many  times  fad  fiorms  of  divifion  and  ftrife  amongtt  thcm.Trf*/ 

and 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  a  2  3 


jftid  Bar/tub  its  fet  cut  in  a  calme  together,  but  the  Divel  fends  a 
Aorme  after  them,  fuch  a  ftorme  as  parted  them  in  the  nrdrt  of 
rheir  voyage,  Acts  1  ^.39.  And  the  contention  was  (o  (harp  betwixt 
fforhythat  tl  ej  departed  offtrider  one  from  th:  otktrfjfazvz  h  no- 
rhin^fnext  Chrift  and  heiven)  that  the  Dive!  grutcbed  believers 
more  thin  their  peace  and  mutual  love;  if  he  cannot  rend'them 
from  Chrift,(top  them  from  getting  heaven,  yet  he  takes  fome 
tif&fure  to  fee  them  go  thither  in  a  (lorme;like  a  fluttered  fleet 
fever'd  one  from  another,  that  they  may  hive  no  aflittance 
i .0  n,nor  comfort  of  each  others  company  ali  the  way;though, 
where  he  can  divide, he  hopes  to  mine  alfo, well-knowing  this  to 
be  the  moft  probable  means  to  efre£t  it;one  fliip  is  eafier  taken 
than  a  fquadron.  A  Town,ir"  it  can  be  but  fet  on  fire,  the  enemy 
may  hope  to  take  it  with  more  eafe;let  it  therefore  be  your  great 
care  to  keep  theDivels  fpark  from  your  povvder.Certainly  peace 
among  Chrirtians  is  no  {mail  mercy,  that  the  Divels  arrows  fly 
fo  thick  at  its  breaft. Something  I  would  fainfpeak  to  endear  this 
mercy  to  the  people  of  God.     I  love  I  confeflea  clear  and  flill 
aire,  but  above  all  in  the  Church  among  believers,  and  I  am 
made  the  more  fenhble  what  a  mercy  this  would  be,  by  the  dif- 
mal  confequence  of  thefe  divisions  and  differences,thaf  have  for 
fome  years  together  troubled  our  aire,  and  filled  us  with  fuch 
horrour  and  confufion,  that  we  have  not  been  much  unlike  that 
Land  call'd  Terra  del  fog9ythz  Land  of fmohj  ,becaufe  of  the  fre- 
quent flashings  of  lightnings  and  abundance  of  fmoke  found 
there;  what  can  I  compare  errour  to,better  than  fmoke?and  con- 
tention to,than  fire  ?  a  kind  of  Embleme  of  hell  it  felf,  where 
flames  and  darknefle  meet  together  to  encreafe  the  horrour  of 
the  phce.But  to  prefle  the  Exhortation  a  little  clofer ;  give  me 
leave  to  provoke  you  by  three  Arguments  to  peace  and  unity. 


sect,  r? 

Firfl,  for  Cirri  ft  s  fake.  And  me  thinks,when  begging  for 
kisfakelfhould  have  no  nay.  When  you  pray  to  God,  and 
dobutufehis  nameinthebulinefle,  youarefure  tofpeed.  And 
why  {hould  not  an  Exhortation,  that  woes  you  for  Chrirts  fake, 

move 


424  TbeGojpel  of  peace. 


1. 


move  your  hearts  to  duty,as  a  prayer  put  up  by  you  in  his  Name, 
moves  Gods  heart  to  mercy?  Indeed, how  canlt  thou  in  faith  ufe 
Chritts  Name  as  an  Argument  to  unlock  Gods  heart  to  thee, 
which  hath  not  fo  much  credit  with  thy  felf,  as  to  open  thy  own 
heart  into  a  compliance  with  a  duty  which  is  fo  ftrongly  fee  on 
his  heart  to  promote  among  his  people  ?  as-appears, 

Firlt,  by  the  folemne  charge  he  gave  his  Dilciples  in  this  par- 
ticular, John  1  3.  3  4.  -/4  new  Commandment  I  give  unto  you,  that 
ye  love  one  anotker,as  I  have  loved  you,that  ye  nlfo  love  one  ano- 
ther. I  pray  obferve,  how  he  prepares  their  hearts  to  open  rea- 
dily,and  bid  thisCommandment  kindly  welcomejhe  fets  his  own 
Name  upon  it.  A  new  Command  1  give  unto  yon.  As  if  he  had 
laid,  let  this  command,  though  as  old  as  any  other, Lev.i  9.18. 
yet  go  under  my  Name  in  an  efpecial  manner;  when  I  am 
gone,  and  the  fire  of  ftrife  begins  at  any  time  among  you,  re- 
member what  particular  charge  I  now  give  you,  and  let  k 
quench  it  prefently.  Again,  obferve  how  he  delivers  this  pre- 
cept, and  that  is  by  way  of  gift  and  priviledge  ;  A  new  Com- 
mandment I  givz  unto  y-)U.  Indeed  this  was  Chrifts  fare-well 
Sermon,the  very  ftreakings  of  that  milk  which  he  had  fed  them 
withall ',  never  drop't  a  fweeter  difcourfe  from  his  bleffed  lips ; 
he  faved  his  belt  wine  till  the  h[\.  He  was  now  making  his  will, 
and  amongrt  other  things  that  he  bequeaths  hisdifciples,be  takes 
this  Commandment,  as  a  Father  would  do  his  feal-ring  off  his 
finger,  and  gives  it  to  them.  Again,  Thirdly,  he  doth  not 
barely  lay  the  command  before  them,  but  to  make  it  the  more 
afteclual,  he  annexeth  in  a  few  words  the  mo(t  powerful  Argu- 
ment why  they  fhould^as  alio  the  moft  clear  and  full  direction 
how  they  might  do  thi.*,  that  i>  potfible  to  be  given;  As  I  have 
loved  you^that  ye  alfo  love  o;ie  another. O  ChrifHans  !  what  may 
not  the  love  of  Chrilt  command  you?if  it  were  to  lay  down  your 
lives  for  him  that  loved  you  to  death,  would  you  deny  them? 
ond  flmll  not  this  his  love  perfwade  you  to  lay  down  your  ftrifes 
anddtvifions?  this  fpeaks  enough, how  much  weight  he  laid  upon 
this  Commmdment :  but  then  again  obferve,  how  Chritf  in  the 
fame  Sermcn>over  and  over  again  minds  them  of  this ;  which  if 
he  had  not  been  very  folicitous  of,fliould  not  have  had  fo  large  a 
room  in  his  thoughts  then,  when  he  had  fo  little  time  left,  in 
which  he  was  to  croud  and  fum  up  all  the  heavenly  councel  and 

comfort. 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  a^* 


•fort  that  he  dcfired  to  leave  with  them  before  his  departure; 
nay,fo  great  weight  he  lays  on  this,  that  he  feeraes  to  lockup 
his  own  joy  and  theirs  together  in  the  care  that  they  (hould  take 
about  this  one  command  of  loving  one  another,/^.!  5.1 1.  Theft 
■things  have  Jjpofyn  unto  you  that  my  joy  might  remain  in  you  ;  and 
that  ■jour  joj  might  be /W/.Whatthefe  things  were,  appeares  by 
the  precedent  verfe, If  ye  kftVmy  Commandment y  ye  fhall  abide  i» 
my  love.    Thefe  were  the  things  chat  he  fpake  of  in  order  to  his 
joy  in  them,  and  theirs  in  him,  that  they  would  keep  his  Com- 
mandments.   Now,  to  let  them  know,  how  high  a  place  their  o- 
bedience  to  this   particular  command  of  love  and  unity  had  in 
his  heart,  and  how   eminently  it  conduced  to  the  continuing  hi? 
joy  in  them,  and  filling  up  their  own  •  he  choofeth  that   above 
any  for  his  inftance,  in  order  to  what  he  trad  laid,  as  you  may  fee 
verfe  12.  This  is  my  Commandment ,  that  ye  love  one  another.  Ob- 
ferveftill,howChrift  appropriates  this  Commandment  to  him- 
felf.  This  is  my  Commandment^  if  he  would  fignihe  to  them,  that 
as  he  had  one  difciple,who  went  by  the  name  of  the  difciple  whom 
Jefus  hved ;  fo  he  wou'd  hav^  a  darling  commandment,  in  which 
he  takes  fomefingu'ar  delight,  and  that  this  fhould  be  it,  their 
living  one  another.    But  we  are   not  yet  at  thelaft  link  of  this 
golden  cha'n  of  Chrifts  difcourfe.     When  he  hath  put  fome  mere 
warmth  into  their  affedions  to  this  duty ,  by  expofing  his  own 
love  to  them  in  the  deepeft  exprcflion  of  it,  even  to  die  for  them, 
verfe  J],  then  he  comes  on  more  boldly,  and  tells  them  he  will 
own  them  for  his  friends,  as  they  arc  careful  to  obierve  what  he 
had  left  in  charge  with  them,  ver  14.  Teare  my  friends,  if  ye  do 
whatf-'cver  I  ammandyou.     And  now  taking  it  for  granted,  that 
he  had  prevailed  upon  them,  and  they  would   walk  in   unity 
aid    love  as   he  had  commanded   them*,     he  cannot    con- 
cede the  pleafure  he  takes  therein,    yea,   and    in   them   for 
it;  ver.  15.  he  opens  his  heart  to  them,,  and  locks  no  fecret 
fom  them,  yea  bids  them  go  and  open  their  heart  to  God  and 
be  free  to  him,  as  he  is  ro  them,  verfe  \6.  Andmarkfrom  what 
bailed  hour  all  this  familiarity  that  they  are  admitted  to,  beares 
dare.     From  henceforth  I  call  not  you  fervants,  for    the    fervar.t 
h^-.oveeth  nrt  what  hit  Lord  doth.     That  iifrom  the  time  that  yoa 
walk  dutifully  to  mt,  and  lovingly  to  one  another.    One  would 

lii  think 


The  Gofpel  of  peJce. 


2. 


think  row  he  had  faid  enough  •  But  he  thinks  not  fo.  In  the  ve- 
ry next  words  he  is  at  it  again,  verfe  17.  Thefe  things  I  command 
■lofty  thatje  love  one  amtkr  j  as  if  all  he  had  left  elie  in  charge  with 
them,had  been  (ubfervient  to  this. 

A  Second  thing,  that  fpeaksChrifts  heart  deeply  engaged  in 
the  promoting  of  love  and  unity  among  Chriftian«,  is  his   fer- 
vent prayer  for  this. Should  you  hear  a  preacher  with  abundance 
of  vehemency  preffe  a  grace  or    duty  upon  the  people  in  his  pul- 
pit, and  as  foon  as  Sermon  is  done,  you  fhould   go   under  his 
clofet  window,  and  hear  him  as  earneftly  wreftling  with  God, 
that  he  would   give  his  people  what  he   had  fozealouily  preft 
upon  them-,  you  would  eallly  believe  the  man  was  in  earnerh 
Our  bleiled  Saviour  hath  taught  us  Minifters  whither  to  go.when 
we  come  out  of  the  pulpit  and  what  to  do,No  fooner  hath  he  don 
his  Sermon  to  them.but  he  is  at  prayer  with  God  for  them.  And 
what  he  infilled  oh  moil  in  preaching,  heenlargeth  moft  upon  m 
prayer  .unity  and  peace  was  the  legacy  he  defired  fo  much  to  leave 
with  them, and  this  is  the  boon  he  puts  in  ftronglywithGod  to  be- 
llow on  them, ^7.17. 1  1. Father, keep  through  thine  own  power, th^e 
that  thou  haft  given  me.And  why  all  this  auz? that  they  may  be  one  as 
rve  are. hs'it he  had  faid,Father,did  we  ever  fall  out?  was  there  ever 
difcord  betwixr  us  r  why    then   (hould  they  who  .are  thine  and 
mine  difagree  .?  fo  verfe  21.  and  again,  verfe  23.    )rie  is  plead- 
ing hard  for  the  fame  mercy.    And  why  fo  oft  ?  is   it  f »  hardly 
wrung  from  God,  that  C  hrift  himfelf  muft  tugg  fo  often  for  it  ? 
No  fure.  but  as  Chrift  faid  of  the  voice  that  came  from  heaven, 
John  12.30.      This  voice  came  not  far  me,  but  fo>-  year  fakes      So 
may  1  fay  here,  This  ingeminated  zeal  of  Chrift  for  his  peoples  u- 
nity  and  love,  it  was  for  their  fakes. 

Firfi,  he  would  by  this  raife  the  price  of  this  mercy  in  their 
thoughts-,  That  fare  is  worth  th.ir  care  which  he  counted 
worth  his  redoubled  prayer  (when  not  a  word  was  fpoke  for  his 
ownlife),  or  elfe  he  mifplaced  his  Zealand  improved  not  his  time 
with  God,  for  the  bsft  advantage  of  his  people. 

Secondly ,  he  would  make  divisions  appear  more  fcareful  and 
dreadful  things  to  his  people,  by  putting  in  fo  manv  requeits  to 
God  for  preventing  them  Certainly  if  Chrift  had  known  one 
evil  worfe  than  another  like  to  come  upon  his  people  at  his  de- 
parture, he  would  have  been  fo  true  and  kind  to  his  children, 

as 


The  Gofpel  of  peace,  437 


as  to  deprecate  that  above  all,  and  keep  that  off.  He  told  his  chil- 
dren what  they  muft  look  for  at  the  worlds  hand,  all  manner  of 
fufferingsand  torments  that  their  wit  could  help  their  malice  to 
devife^  yet  Chrift  prays  not  fo  much  for  immunity  from  thefe,  as 
from  unbrotherly  contentions  among  themfclves;  he  makes  ac- 
count ,  if  they  can  agree  together,  and  be  in  love,Saint  with  Saint, 
Church  with  Church,  they  have  a  mercy  that  will  alleviate  the  0- 
ther  and  make  it  tolerable,  yea,  joyous-  This  heavenly  fire  of 
love  among  themfclves  will  quench  the  flames  of  their  persecutors 
fire,  at  leait  the  horror  of  them. 

In  a  wW,Chrift  would,as  ftrengthen  our  faith  to  ask  bold'y  for 
that  which  he  hath  befpoke  for  us,fo  alfo  aggravate  thefinneof 
contention  to  fucli  a  height,that  all  who  have  any  love  to  Chrift, 
when  they  (hall  fee  that  they  cannot  live  in  ftrife,  but  they  muft 
finne  againft  thofe  prayers  which  Chrift  with  ftrong  cries  put  up 
for  peace  and  unity, they  may  tremble  at  the  thoughts  of  it. 

Thirdly,  the  price  that  Chrift  gave  for  the  obtaining  of  this 
peace  and  unity.  As  Chrift  went  from  preaching  up  peace  to  pul- 
ling down  peace  from  heaven  by  prayer,  fo  he  went  from  pray- 
ing to  paying  for  it.  Indeed  Chrifts  prayers,  are  not  a  beggars 
prayers  as  ours  are  •,  he  prays  his  Father  that  he  may  only  have 
what  he  pays  for.  He  was  now  on  the  way  to  the  place  of  pay- 
ment, Calvary,  where  bis  blood  was  the  coyne  he  laid  down  for 
this  peace.  I  confefs  peace  with  God  was  the  chief  pearl,  that 
this  wife  Merchant  C  hrift  bought  tip  for  his  people.  But  he 
had  this  in  his  eye  alfo  •  and  therefore  the  Sacrament  of  the 
Lords  Supper,which  is  the  commemoration  feaft  of  Chrifts  death, 
as  it  feals  our  peace  with  God,  foit  fignifies  our  love  one  with 
another,  1  Cor.  10.  And  need  I  nowgiveyou  any  account  why 
our  dear  Lord  purfued  this  defign  foclcfe  of  knitting  his  people 
in  peace  and  unity  together  1  Truly  the  Church  is  intended  by 
Chiiftto  be  his  houfc,  in  which  he  means  to  take  up  his  reft, 
and  what  reft  could  he  take  in  a  houfe  all  on  fire  about  him?  It 
is  his  Kingdome,  and  how  can  his  Laws  be  obeyed,  if  all  his  fub- 
jeds  be  in  arhubbub  one  againft  another  >  ixter  armafilent  leges. 
In  a  word,his  Church  are  a  people  that  are  called  out  of  the  world 
to  be  a  praife  to  him  in  the  light  of  the  Nations  -,  as  Peter  faith, 
Cod  did  viftt  t^e  Gentiles  to  tabe  mt  of  them  n  pesple  for  his  j^jtme, 
Alts  15.14-  that  is,a  people  for  his  honour ;    But  a  wrangling, 

Iii  2  di- 


{ g  The  Gofpd  of  peace 


divided  people  would  be  little  credit  to  the  name  of  Chrift  ;  yea, 
fuch  where  they  are  found  (and  where  alas  are  they  not  to  be 
found  ?  )  they  are  to  the  name  of  Chrift  as  fmoke,  and  dire 
to  a  fair  face  ,  they  crock  and  disfigure  Chrift-  fo  that  the  world 
will  not  acknowledge  him  to  be,who  he  faith  he  is,they  lead  them 
even  into  temptation  to  think  bafely  ofChnft  and  his  Gofpel , 
John  17  23.  Chrift  prays  his  people  may  be  made  perfect  in  one, 
and  mark  his  argument  ^  1  hat  the  world  may  kjiorv  that  thou  ha/} 
Cent  me ;  whofe  heart  bleeds  not  to  hear  Cririit  blafphemed  at 
this  day,  by  fo  many  black-mouths?  and  what  hath  open'd  them 
more  than  the  Saints  divifions } 


SECT.  II. 

2t  The  fecond  Argument  fhall   be   taken   from  your  felves  \ 

for  your  own  fakes  live  in  peace  and  unity.    Confider  your  obli- 
gations to  love  and  unity,  your  relations  call  for  it.    If  belie- 
vers, Paul  tells  you  your  kindred, 'Gal.  3  2.7.  Te  are   all  the  chil- 
dren of  God  bj  faith  in  Chrifl  Jefns.     Not  only  children  of  God, 
fo  are  all  by  Creation,  but  by  faith  in  Jews  Chrift  alfo.     Chrift 
he  is  the  Foundation  of  a  new  "Brother-hood  to  believers.  O  Chri- 
ftians,  confider  how  near  you  are  fet  one  to  another  ^  you  were 
conceived  in  the  fame  womb  of  the  Church,  begot  by  the  fame 
feed  of  the  Word  to  this  new  Creation,  whereby,  as  one  faith, 
you  become  brethren  of  the  whole  blood  ^  and  therefore,  there 
fhould  be  the  more  unity  and  dear  affedion  among  you  than  any 
other,     fofephs  heart  went  out  more  to  'Benjamin^  than  any  of 
the  reft  of  his  brethren,  becaufe  he  was  his  brother,  both  by  fa- 
ther and  mother ;  if  you  fall  out,    who  fhall  agree  ?  what  is  it 
that  can  rationally  break  your  peace?  Thofe  things  which  ufe  to 
b*  bones  of  contention,and  occasion  fquabbling  among  other  bre- 
thren, Chrift  hath  taken  care  to  remove  them  all  •  fo  that  of  all 
others,  your  quarrelings  are  moftchildifh, yea  finful  i  fometimes 
one  child  finds  him  felt  grieved  at  the  partiality  of  his  parents  affe- 
ftion,morefet  on  fome  others  than  himfelf;   and   this   makes 
him  envy  them, and  they  defpifehim  :  But  there  is  no  fuch  fond- 
ling in  Gods  family, all  are  dear  alike  to  Chrift,  Ephef.  5.2,  Walk. 

in 


¥be  Qofpel  of  peace .  a%  y 


in  love,  as  Chrift  hath  loved  us^  and  hath  given  himfe If 'for  tu  •• 
that  is,  for  one  as  well  as  another.  C  hrift  in  the  Church  is  like  to 
the  foul  in  the  body^  he  is  totm  in  toto,  .  &  tot  tain  qualibet  parte. 
Every  member  in  Chrift  hath  whole  Chrift,  his  whole  heart  and 
love,as  if  there  were  none  befides  himfelf  to  enjoy  it. 

jfgain, among  men  though  the  fatter  (hews  not  fo  much  parti* 
ality  in  hisaffedion,yet  oft  great  inequality  in  the  dift.ibution  of 
his  eftate ;  though  all  are  child;  en,  yet  not  all  heirs,and  this  fows 
the  feed  of  ftrife  among  them.    Asjd<rc£  found  by  woful  experi- 
ence.    But  Chrift  hath  made  his  Will  fo,  that  they  are  all  provi- 
ded for  alike,called  therefore  the  common  falvation^  Jude^.  And 
the  inheritance  of  the  Saints  in  light,  i  Col.  12.  for  the  communi- 
ty.   All. may  enjoy  their   happinefs  without  juftling  with,  or 
prejudicing  of  one  another,as  millions  of  people  who  look  on  the 
fame  Sunne,  and  at  the  fame  time,  and  none  ftand  in  anothers 
light;  methinks  that  fpeech   of  Chrift  looks  a  little  this  way , 
John  IJ.-22.  The  glory  which  thou  gavefi  me,  I  have  given  t  hem- 
that  they  may  be  one.  By  glory  there  I  would  underftand  heavens 
glory  principally  ^  Now  faith  Chrift,  J  have  given  it,  that  is,  in 
reversion,  1  have  given  it  them  -?  not  this  or  that  favourite,  but 
them,  I  have  laid  it  out  as  the  portion   of  all  finccre  believers  -y 
and  why?  that  they  may  be one  •  that  all  fquabbles  may  be  filcn- 
ced,  and  none  may  envy  another   for  what  he  hath  above  him  , 
when  he  fees  glor>  is  his.  'Tistiue  indeed,  fome  difference  there 
is  in  Chriftians  -  utwardgarb  ^   fome  poor,   fome  rich,  and  in 
common  gifts  alfo,  fome  have  more  of  them,  fome  lefle.  But  are 
thete  tanti?  of  fuch weight  ro commence  a  warrc upon,  among 
thofethat  wait  for  the  fame  heaven?    If  the  father  clads  all 
his  ch-.ldren  in  the  fame  cloth,  it  were   fad  to  fee  them  ftab  one 
another,  becauie  onehath  a  lace  more  than  the  other  •  nay,  bet. 
caufe  one  his  lace  is  red,  and  the  others  is  green-,  for  indeed  the 
quarrel  among  Chriftians  is  foretimes,  not  for  having  lefs  gifts 
than  another,  butbecaufc   not  the  fame  in  kind,  though  ano- 
ther as  good  and  ufeful »    which  pofTibly  he  wants    whom  we 
envy. 

Secondly,  confider  where  you  are,and  among  whom;  are  yon         2^ 
not  in  your  enemies  quarters  ?  if  you  fall  out,  what  do  you  but 
kindle  a  tire  for  them  to  warme  their  hands  by  ?    Aha,  fo  would 
we  have  it3  fay  they.  The  fea  of  their  rage  will  weaken  this  bank 

Iii  3  fail 


420  Tfoe  Gofpel  of  peace. 


fait  enough,  you  need  not  cut  it  for  them  •,  Theunfeafonablenefs 
of  the  ftrife,  betwixt  Abrahams  Herdf-men,and  Lots  is  aggrava- 
ted by  the  near  neighbourhood  of  the  Heathens  to  them ,     Gen. 
IX. J.     And  there  was  a  ftrife  between  Abrahams  Her  df-men,  and 
the  berdf-fftenof  Lots  cattel.     And  the  Canaanite,  and  Peri^zite 
dwelled  in  the  Land.    To  fall  out  while  thefe  idolaters  lookt  on  , 
this  would  be  town-talk  prefently,  and  put  thcmfelves  and  their 
religion  both  to  fhame.    And  I  pray,  who  have  been  in  our  land, 
al  1  the  while  the  people  of  God  have  been  fcuflling?  Thofe  that 
havecuriouQy  obferv'd  every  uncomely  behaviour  among  them, 
and  told  all  the  world  of  it-,  Such  as  have  wit  and  malice  enough 
to  make  ufe  of  it  for  their  wicked  purpofes.    They  ftand  on  tip- 
toes to  beat  work^only  we  are  not  yet  quite  laid  up  and  difabled 
("by  the  forenefs  of  thofe  our  wounds,  which  we  have  given  our 
felves )  from  withstanding  their  fury .    They  hope  it  will  come 
to  that;  and  then  they  will  cure  us  of  our  own  wounds,  by  gi- 
ving one  if  they  can,  that  fhall  go  deep  enough  to   the  heart  of 
our  life,  Gofpel  and  all.    OChriftians,   (hall  Herod  and  Pilate 
put  you  to  fhame  ?    They  clapt  up  a  peace  to  ftrengthen  their 
hands  againft  Chrift ;  and  will  not  you  unite  againft  your  com- 
mon enemy?     It  is   an  ill  time  for  Mariners   to   be  fight- 
ing, when  an  enemy  is  boring  a  hole  at  the  bottome  of  their 

(hip. 
3.  Thirdly,  confider  the  fad   confequences  of  your   contec- 

ti'">ns. 
1.  Firft,you  put  a  flop  to  the  growth  of  grace.    The  body  may 

as  well  thrive  in  a  feaver,  as  the  foul  profper,  when  on  a  flame 
with  ftrife  and  contention.  No,  firftthis  fire  in  the  bones  muft 
b:  quenched,  and  brought  into  its  natural  temper-  and  fo  muft 
this  unkindly  heat  be  flaked  among  ChrilHans,   before  either 
can  grow.     I  pray  obferve  that  place,   Ephef^.i^.  But  (peak? 
in?  the  truth  in  love  (or  being  (incere  in  \oxz)ms>.y  g row  up  into  him 
in  all  things.     The  Affile   is  upon  a  cure,  fhewing  how  foules 
that  at  prefent  are  weak,  and  then  grace  rather  wan  and  wither, 
than  growing,  may  come  to  thrive  and  flourilh  •,  and  the  receipt 
be  gives  is  a  compofirion  of  thefe  two  rare  drugs,  fmcerity  and 
Uvc-,  prefcrve  thefe,  and  all  will  do  well  ,  as  v.   16.     where  the 
whole  body  is  faid  to  edific  itfclfin  love.  There  may  be  preaching, 
but  no  edifying  without  love.Qur  times  are  a  fad  comment  upon 
this  Texr.  Secondly, 


The  Gofpel  of  peace.  a^:. 


Secondly,  you  cut  off  your  trade  with  heaven  at  the  throne 
or  grace;  you  will  be  little  in  prayer  to  God  I  warrant  you,  if 
much  in  fquabling  with  your  brethren.    It  is  impotfiblc   to  go 
from  w;ang  ing  to  praying  with  a  free  Spirit.  And  if  lyoufhouid 
be  fo  bold  as  to  knock  at  Gods  door,  you  are  fure  to  have  cold 
welcome,  Mat.  5  24.     Leave  thy  gift  before  the  Altar%  and  96 
tkjTVAj;  ft* ft be  reconciled  to  thy  bnther^  and  then  come  and  tjflr 
thy  gift.    God  will  not  have  the  incenfe  of  prayer  put  to   fuch 
flrangefire^  nor  willheeatofourleaven'd  bread,  taite  of  any 
performance  foui'd  with  malice  and  bitternefs  of  Spirit.     Firfir, 
the  peace  was  renewed,  and  a  Covenant  of  love   and   friendship 
{truck  between  Lab  an  and  Jacob ^  Gen.  31.  44.  and  then  -2/^.54. 
facob  offered  faenftee-  upon  the  M>.unt,  and  called  his  brethren  to  eat 
bread.     The  very  Heathens  thought  no  ferious  bufinefle  could  be 
well  done  by  quarrelling  fpirits.    Therefore   the   Senatottr:   of 
RomeXife&to  vifit  the  Temple  dedicated  fevi  dtpifitorio,  becaufe 
there  they  did  deponere  inifweitias, lay  down  all  their  feuds   and 
controverfies,  before  they  went  into  the  Senate  to  confult    of 
State  affaires «  durft  not  they  go  to  the  Senate  till  friends  ?  and 
dare  we  go  up  to  Gods  Mtar,  bow  our  knees  to  him  in  prayer, 
while  our  hearts  are  royled  and  fwolne  with  anger,  envy  and  ma- 
lice ?  O  God  humble  us. 

Thirdly,  as  we  cut  off  our  trade  with  heaven,  fo  with  one  an- 
other-, when  two  countreys  fall  out,  whofe  great  intereft  lies  in 
their  mutual  traffique,    they  muft  needs  both  pinch  by  the  warre. 
Truly,    the    Chriftians  great    gaines  com-  in  by  their  mu- 
tual commerce-   and    they  are   the   richert    Chriftiang  com- 
monly, who  are  leated  with  greateft  advantage  for  this  trade. 
A9  no  Nation  hath  all  their  commodities  of  their  own   growth 
but  needs  fome  merchandife  with  others  -,  fo  there  is  no  Chrinhn 
that  could  well  live  without  borrowing  from  his  brethren.  There 
is  that  which  every  \oynt  fupplieth  according  to  the  effetlual  iwrlqntr 
in  the  meafure  oj  every  part,   Eph.4.  \6    Paul  himfelf  is  not  fo 
well  laid  in,  but  he  hopes  to  get  fomething  more  than  he   hath 
from  the  meaneft  of  tho  e  he  preached  to  >  he  tells  the  Chrifti- 
ans at  Romey  chap.  1 .  he  longs  to  fee  them,  as  to  impart  fome  fpi- 
ritual  gift  f  o  them,  v.  \i.  fo  faith  he,  that  I  may  be  comforted  to- 
get  he;  nithjou,  by  the  mutual  faith  both  of  yon  and  mc0  verfe  12. 

yea,  , 


.2 


a  21  The  Gojpel  of  peace. 


yea,  he  hopes  to  be  filled  -with  their  cempanyy  Rom.  1 5.24.  Ai  a 
man  is  filled  with  good  chear,  he  hopes  to  maki  a  feaft  of  their 
company.  Nowxontentions  and  divifions  fpoile  all  emercourfe 
among  believers.  They  are  as  baneful  to  Chriftian  communion, 
asa.great  peftilenceorplagueistothetradeof  a  Market  Town. 
Communication  flows  from  communion,  and  communion  that 
is  founded  upon  union.  The  Church  grows  under  perfecution  j 
that  fheds  the  feed  all  over  the  ficld.and  brings  the  Gofpel  where 
elfe  it  had  not  been  heard  of.  But  divifions  and  contentions ,  like 
a  furious  ftorm  wafhes  the  feed  out  or  the  land  with  its  heart,  fat- 
jiefs,  and  all. 

Fourthly,  you  do  not  only  hazard  the  decay  of  grace,  but 
gro  wthoffinne.  Indeed  it  (hews  there  is  more  than  a  little  cor- 
ruptio.!  got  within  doores  already,  but  it  opens  the  door  to 
much  more ,  fames  3 .  If  ye  have  hitter  envying,  and  ftrife,  glory 
not-,  that  is,  do  not  think  you  are  fuch  goud  Chriftians.  This 
ftaines  all  your  other  excellencies^,  had  ye  the  knowledge  an  J  gifts 
©f  holy  Angels,  yet  this  would  make  you  look  more  like  Devils 
than  them^  he  gives  the  reafon,  verfe\6.  for  where  envying  and 
ftrife  ts,  there  is  c on fu ft  on  and  every  evil  work:  Contention  is  the 
Devils  forge,  in  which  if  he  can  buc  give  a  Chriftian  a  heat  or 
two,  he  will  no  doubt  but  to  foften  him  for  his  hammer  of  tem- 
ptation. Mofes  himfelfwhen  his  i'pirit  was  a  little  hot,  ffake 
unadtifedly  with  his  lips.  It  muft  needs  be  an  occafion  of  much  fin- 
ring.which  renders  it  impoflible  for  a  man  while  in  his  diftemper 
to=do  anyone  righteous  action.  The  wrath  of  wan  worketh  net 
the  right  ecnfn(fs  of  God.  James  t.-o.  Now  what  a  fad  thing  is 
it  for  Chriftians  to  ftay-longinthat  temper  in  which  they  can  dj 
no  good  to  one  another,  but  provoke  luf  ? 

Fifthly ,they  are  prognofticks  of  judgement  coming.  A  louring 
skiefpeaksfoule  weather  at  hand.  And  Mariners  look  for  a 
ftorm  at  fea,  when  the  waves  begins  ro  fwell  and  utter  a  mur- 
muring noifc  Hath  there  been  nothing  hke  thefe  among  us  ? 
what  can  we  th'nk,  buc  a  judgement  is  breeding  by  the  louring 
countenances  of  Chriftians.  their  fweHings  of  heart,  anddifcon- 
icnted  p?(Tions vented  frv.m  their  fuolne  ipirits,  Ifke  the  mur- 
iDunngof  waters,  or  run  bling  of  thunder  in  the  aire  before  a 
umptft  ?  When  children  right  and  wrangle,  now  is  the  time  they 

may 


The  Gofpel  of  peace  423 


may  expeel  their  father  to  cone,  and  sart  the  in  with  his  rod, 
<JMaLq.6.He  (hall  tirn  the  heart  ol   the  fathers  to  the  childrjn% 
And  the  heart  of  the  ckiliren  to  tki  V  fathers,  left  I  fmit  the  arth 
with  a  cttrfe ;  Itrife  and  contention  fee  a  people  next  door  to  a 
curfe.    God  makes  account  he  brings  a  heavy  judgment  upon  a 
people, when  him felf  leaves  them. If  the  Matter  leaves  thcihip, 
it  is  near  finking  indeed.  And  truly  no  readier  way  to  fend  him 
going,  than  by  contentions.  Theie  fmoke  hi  n  out  of  his  own 
houfe.  Be  of  one  mindey  (  faith  the  Apoftk  )  live  Ik  fe*cey  and 
the  God  of  peace  fhall  be  with  yotey  2  Cor.  I  :>.  1 1.  Lnf  iy''?§,  if  they 
did  not  live  in  peace,  they  muft  not  look  to  have  his  company 
long  with  them.    God  was  coming  in  <Jte>fes  with  a  great 
falvation  to  the  Ifraelltestznd  as  a  handiel  of  the  good  fervices, 
he  was  to  do  for  them  ,  he  begins  to  make  peace  between  two 
difcontented  brethren  as  they  ftrove ;  but  his  kineneife  was 
not  accepted,  and  this  was  the  occafion  of  many  years  mifery 
more  that  they  endured  in  Egypt.  Tfjen  fled  Mofes  at  this  fay- 
ingyand  was  aftranger  in  the  land  of  Afadian^A&S  7.29.  <j4nd 
no  news  of  deliverance  for  the  (face  of  fonrty  years  after yV.^o. 
And  have  not  our  diflfcntions,  or  rather  our  reje&ing  thofe  o- 
verpures,  which  God  by  men  of  healing  fpirits  hath  offered  for 
peace,  been  the  caufe  why  mercy  hath  fled  fo  faft  from  us,  and 
we  kft  to  groan  under  thole  fad  miferies  that  are  upon  us  at 
thisdiy  ?  and  who  knows  how  long  .?0  who  can  think  what  a 
glorious  morning  (hone  upon  England  in  that  famous  Parlia- 
ment begun  1  ^o.and  not  weep  and  weep  again  to  fee  our  hopes 
for  a  glorious  reformation,  that  opened  with  them,  now  ihut  up 
in  blood  and  war,  contention  and  confufion  ?  miferies  too  like 
the  fire  andbrimftone  that  fell  from  heaven  upon  thofe  unhap- 
py Cities  of  the  Plain. 


SECT.   III. 

Thirdly  and  laftly,  O  labour  for  peace  and  unity  for  others 
fake.  I  mean  thofe,  who  at  prefent  are  wicked  and  ungodly, 
among  whom  ye  live ;  we  are  not,faith  Aufiin,to  defpair  of  the 
wicted,but  do  our  utmoft  they  may  be  made  good  and  godly. 

Kkk  g*i« 


4  2  4  The  Gofpel  of  peace , 


Qua  Htuncrtu  fanttorum,femfer  de  numero  in.piorum  anUus  efl. 
BecaufeGoi  ever  calls  his  number  out  of  the  heap  and  multi- 
tude of  the  ungodly  world.     Now,  no  more  winning  means  to 
work  upon  them,andpave  a  way  for  their  conversion,  than  to 
commend  the  truths  and  ways  of  God  to  them,by  the  amiable- 
netfe  of  your  love  and  unity  that  profefTe  the  fame.  This  is  the 
cummin-feed  that  would  draw  fouls  like  Doves  to  the  windows. 
This  is  the  gold  to  over-lay  the  Temple  of  Godf  the  Church )  fo 
as  to  make  all  in  love  with  its  beauty,  that  look  into  it.    Every 
one  is  afraid  to  dwell  in  a  houfe  haunted  with  evil  fpirits.    And 
hath  hell  a  worfe  than  the  fpirit  of  divifion  ?  O  Chriftians  agree 
together,  and  your  number  will  encreafe.    It  is  hid,  j4&s  2. 46. 
7  ley  comiKMid  daily  with  one  accord  in  the  Tentple^and  breaking 
breadfromhoufeto  houfey  did  eat  their  meat  with  gladneft  and 
Jixglexejfe  of  heart. And  mark  what  ioWows^v.^-jjhey  had  favour 
■with  all  the  people yand  the  Lord  added  to  the  Church  daily  fitch  as 
fkoftld  be  faved.  The  world  was  fo  great  a  ft  ranger  to  love  and 
peace,  that  it  was  amufed  and  fet  of  conhdering,  what  heaven- 
ly doctrine  'hat  was,  which  could  fo  mollifie  mens  hearts,  plain 
thvir  rugged  natures,  and  joyn  them  fo  clofe  in  love  together, 
and  were  the  more  eafily  penwaded  to  adopt  themfelves  into 
that  true  family  of  love  But  alas, when  this  gold  became  dim  ( I 
mean  peace  among  Chriiuans  faded,1  then  the  Gofpel  loft  credit 
in  the  world,  and  the  do&rrme  of  it  came  under  more  fufpidon 
in  their  thoughts,  who  feeing  fach  clefts  gape  in  her  walh.were 
more  afraid  to  put  their  heads  under  trs  roof.  Cant.  1.7.1  charge 
yonyO ye  daughters  of  feraj 'x/em^bythe  (\oes.andth Hirdes  of 
the $<■  Id)  that  yc  ftWr.otvp^  w  wa^emy  lav   v  11  he  pie.. f.   Ma- 
fter  Cotton  °n  the  place,0/  the  Roes  and  tiin  U  1  of  the  helJ(\\h\ch 
are  fearful  creatures,eaiily  feared  .iway.yetoih  rwife  vvillin  -  to 
feed  wirh  rhe  (heep, )  taAcs  rh .  Gentiles  to  be  me  n  .  inclinable 
to  embrace  ffie  JewM.  Religion,  but  very  (oon feared aw^y by 
the  trotblefome  (late  of  it.or  any  oflenfive  carriage  of  the  Jews. 
And  what  more  offenuve  carriage  than  di vifions and  ftrifes  ?fee 
ihem  ioyned  tog-  her, R,  m  \6.\  -j.Markjh  m  which  cattCe  divi- 
fions  and  ujjences.li  divi\ons,then  there  are  fure  to  be  offences 
t»lr.n,  and  many  pofT.bly  hir<  'ened  in  their  k'nnes  thereby    Do 
nor  your  heats  tremble  rohyrhe  ftumbling  block  for  any  to 
bieak.his  neck  overPto  .elkho  ftone  over  any  poor  linnets  grave, 

and 


The  Gafpel  o  f  peace.  a  2  c 

and  feil  him  do,vn  in  it,  chat  he  never  have  a  refurre&ion  to 
grace  here,  or  glory  hereafter  ?  As  you  woJd  keep  yor  l'elves 
free  of  the  blood  of  thole  that  die  in  th.ir  finnesJQ  tike  heed 
of  lending  any  rhin^  by  yonr  divifioni  to  the  airdening  of  their 
fouls  in  their  impenitency. 


SECT.    IV. 

The  fourth  and  laft  fort  of  peace  which  I  thought  to  have  fpo- 
ken  of,is  a  peace  with  all  the  creatures,even  the  mod  fierce  and 
cruel.    I  called  it  a  peace  of  indemnity  and  fervice.This  Adam 
in  his  primitive  ftate  enjoyed;  while  he  was  innocent,  all  the 
creatures  were  innocent  and  hfesfefdfc  to  him;the  whole  Crea- 
tion was  at  his  fervice  ;  no  mutinous  principle  was  found  in  any 
creature  that  did  encline  it  in  tht  leaf!  to  rebel  againft  him. 
When  God  fent  the  beafts  of  the  ficld,and  fowles  of  the  aire  to 
receive  names  from  him,it  was  that  they  fhoulddo  their  homage 
to  him,  and  acknowledge  him  as  their  Lord ;  and  that  he,  by 
exercifing  thataifc  of  authority  over  them(in  giving  them  names) 
might  have  an  experiment  of  his  perfect  f  though  not  abfolute 
and  independent )  dominion  over  them.    But  no  fooner  did 
man  withdraw  his  allegiance  from  God,  but  all  the  creatures(as 
if  they  had  been  fennble  of  the  wrong,  man  by  his  Apoftalie  had 
done  his  and  their  Maker  (by  whofe  Patent  be  held  his  Lo^d- 
fhip  over  them  )  they  prefemtly  forget  their  iubje&ion  to  him, 
yea,take  up  Arm*  in  their  fupreme  Lords  quarrel  again!*  Apo- 
ftate  man.And  thus  they  continue  in  aray  againft  him,  till  God 
a*nd  man  meet  together  again  in  a  happy  Covenant  of  peace;  and 
then  the  Commimon  which  God  in  wrath  gave  them  againft  re- 
bel-man is  called  in ;  and  in  the  fame  day  that  God  and  the  be- 
lieving foul  are  made  friends,  the  war  ends  between  him  and 
them.  HxiftaT*  iS.  In  that  Any  will  I  make  a  Covenant  for  them 
with  the  beafis  of  the fie Id,  and  with  the  fowles  of  the  heaven;  and 
mark  the  day  from  whence  this  Covenant  bears  date.    In  that 
day,  that  is,  in  the  day  that  /  betroth  thee  tint c  me,  fo  that  our 
peace  with  the  creatures,  comes  in  by  our  peace  with  God.And 
this  being  the  blefling  of  the  Gofpel,  fo  muft  that  alfo.    But  as 

Kkk2  out 


2  6  Ibe  Gofpel  of  peace . 


our  peace  wich  God  is  not  fo  perfectly  enjoyed  in  this  life,  but 
God  hath  left  himfelf  a  Iibercy  to  chaftife  his  reconciled  ones, 
and  that  ihirply  too ;  fo  our  peace  with  the  creatures  doth  not 
hinder,  but  that  they  may  be  ("yea  often  are)  the  rod  which 
God  ufeth  to  correct  them  with  :  The  water  may  drown  one 
Saint,  and  the  fire  confume  another  to  afhes,and  yet  thefe  crea- 
tures at  peace  with  thefe  Saints,  becaufe  they  are  not  fent  by 
God  in  wrath  againft  them,  foranyreal  hurt  that  God  mean* 
them  thereby.  This  indeed  was  the  Commiflion  that  he  gave  all 
the  creatures  againft  Apoftate  man  as  part  of  his  curie  for  his 
fin.    He  fent  the  creatures  againft  him  (as a  Trince  doth  his 
(jexcral  againft  a  company  of  traytors  in  armes  againft  him  ) 
with  authority  to  take  vengeance  on  them  for  their  horrid  re- 
bellion againft:  their  Maker.  But  now  the  Commiflion  is  alter'd, 
and  runs  in  a  more  comfortable  ftraine.   Go  fire,  and  be  the 
Chariot  in  which  fuch  a  Saint  may  be  brought  home  from  earth 
to  me  in  heavens  glory.    Go  water,  waft  another ;  and  fo  of 
all  the  reft.    Not  a  creature  comes  on  a  worfe  meffage  to 
aSaintj'tis  true,they  are  (harp  corrections  as  to  the  prcfent  fmart 
they  bring ;  but  tney  are  ever  mercies,and  do  a  friendly  office 
in  the  intention  of  God,  and  happy  iffue  to  tht  believer.  iAH 
thmgs   tcorkjogether  for  geod  to  them  that  love  (W,Rom.8.28. 
And  the  uifoslle  fpeaks  it  as  a  common  principle  well  known 
among  the  Saints ,Wir  know  that  all  things  wor^  &c.  as  if  he 
had  faid,  Where  is  the  Saint  that  doth  not  know  this  ?  And  yet  it 
were  happy  for  us  if  we  knew  it  better ;  fome  of  us  would  then 
pafs  our  days  more  comfortably  than  now  we  do.  But  I  intend 
not  a  difcourfe  of  this ;  let  brevity  here  make  amends  for  pro- 
fixity  in  the  former. 


CHAP. 


The  G&fpel  of  peace. 


437 


CHAP.  XIV. 

The  duty  of  a  Chriftkn  to  ft  and  Jhod  with  a 
heart  prepared  for  alt  ft*j}eringsy  with  one 
reason  of  the  point. 


W 


E  come  to  the  third  Enquiry  or  Queftion  from  thefe 
words  propounded. 


SECT.  I. 


«2«*/?.What  is  meant  by  t hit  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  fe-jce, 
with  which  the  Chriftians  feet  are  to  be  ftiod  ?  or  thus,  W  hat 
grace  doth  this  preparation,with  which  we  are  to  be  /hod,  fig- 
nifie  ?  And  why  call'd  the  preparation  of  the  Cofpel  of     An[iv% 
peace  ? 

Anfw.  As  for  the  grace  held  forth  by  this  Preparation  of  the 
Cofpe/y  &c.  I  finde  great  variety  in  the  apprehentions  of  the 
learned,  and  indeed  variety  rather  than  contrariety.  I  fhall 
therefore  fpare  the  mentioning  them,  (many  of  whkh  you  may 
finde  in  a  bunch  collected  by  the  Reverend  Doctor  Gouge  upon 
the  place  with  his  thoughts  upon  them  )  and  crave  the  bold- 
neffe  to  lay  down  (with  due  refpe&  to  others)  the  apprehenfions 
I  have  had  thereon ;  which  I  conceive,  will  rather  ampliate> 
than  thwart  their  fenfe.  Now  what  this  *ni(MtoU,  or  prepara- 
tion is,  will  beft  appear  byconfideringthe  part  it  is  deugn'd  for; 
and  that  is  the  foot ,the  only  member  in  the  body  to  be  fhod,and 
the  piece  of  Armour  it  is  compared  to,and  that  is  the  foxld'rrj 

Kkk3.  jfcwfj, 


j/jm.",  which  (  it  right  J  is  to  be  of  the  (trongeft  make,being  not 
fo  much  intended  for  finery  as  defence  ;  and  that  fo  neceflary, 
that  for  wane  of  it  alone,  the  fouldier  in  fome  cafes  is  di  abled 
•for  fervice ;  as  when  hi  is  called  to  march  far  on  hard  ways,and 
thofe  (maybe)  ftro.ved  with  (harp  (tones;    hew  long  will 
he  go  (  if  not  iliod  )  without  wounding  or  foundring  ?  or  if  the 
way  be  good,  but  the  weather  bad,  and  his  feet  not  fenced  from 
'-the  wet  and  cold,   they  are  notfo  tar  from  the  head,  but  the 
cold  got  in  them,  may  ftrike  up  to  that ;  yea,  bring  a  difeafe  on 
the  whole  body,  which  will  keep  him  on  his  bed,  when  he 
(hould  be  in  the  field :  As  many  almolt  ire  furfeited,  as  (lain  in . 
arniie  \  Now  what  the  foot  is  to  the  body,that  the  will  is  to  the 
fool.     The  foot  carries  the  whole  body,  and  the  will  the  foul; 
yoa,  the  whole  man,  body  and  foul  alto.V  oltwtaf  cfi  hcomotiva 
facylcas ;  we  go  whither  our  will  fends  us.  And  what  the  fhooe 
istoihefoor,  that  preparation,   or  if  you  pleafe  a  readinefs 
and  alacrity  is  to  the  will.    The  man  whofefect  are  well  fhod, 
fcars  no  way;?,  but  goes  through  thick  and  thinjfoule  or  fair , 
(tones  or  (traws,  all  are  alike  to  him  that  is  well  fhod  ;  while  the 
bare-footed  man,or  flenderly  (hooed,(hrinks  when  he  feels  the 
wet,  and  fhrieks  when  he  lights  on  a  (harp  (tone.     Thus  when 
the  will  and  heart  of  a  man  is  prompt,    and  ready  to  do 
any  work,the  man  is  as  it  were  fhod  and  arm'd  againft  all  trou- 
ble and  difficulty,  which  he  is  to  go  over  in  the  doing  of  it. 
They  fay,the  Injh  tread  fo  light  on  the  ground,  that  they  will 
run  over  fome  bogs,  wherein  any  other  almoft  would  flick 
or  (Ink.    A  prepared  ready  heart  I  am  fure  will  do  this  in  a  fpi- 
ritual  fenfe  j  none  can  walk,  where  he  can  run ;  he  makes  no- 
thing of  arfli£ion$,yea,perfecutions,butgoes  Tinging  over  them; 
David  never  fo  merry  as  in  the  Cave,  Pfal.  57.  and  how  came 
he  fo  ?  My  heart  is  prepared \my  heart  is  prep a  red ,  (faith  he)  I  will 
ftvg  and  e^ive praife.lt  Davids  heart  had  not  been  fhod  with  this 
preparation,  he  would  not  have  liked  his  way  fo  well  he  was 
in  ;  you  would  "have  had  him  fing  to  another  tune,and  heard  him 
quarrel  with  his  deftiny,or  fall  out  with  his  profeffion,that  had 
put  him  to  fo  much  trouble,  and  driven  him  from  thepleafures 
of  a  Princes  Court,to  hide  himfelf  under  ground  in  a  Cave  from 
-thofe  that  hunted  for  his  precious  life.  He  would  have  fpent  his 
breath  rather  in  pitying  and  bemoaning  himrelf,than  in  prairlng 

o 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.  4  3  9 


ofGodjan  unprepared  heart  that  is  not  well  fatistfed  mthjts 
work  or  conditionings  backhand  though  it  may  be  brought  to 
fubmit  to  it  with  much  ado,yet  it  is  but  as  a  foundred  hprfe  on 
a  (tony  way,  who  goes  in  pain  every  ftep,  and  would  Oft  be 
turning  out  of  the  path,  if  bit  and  whip  did  not  keep  him 
in. 

£*rft.  2.  But  why  is  it  called  the  Pr  poratlon  of  the  Gojpel  £>ueft.  2. 
*f  'Tease} 

^/w.Becaufe  the  Gofpel  of  peace  is  the  great  inftrument  by  Aifa>. 
which  God  works  the  will  and  heart  of  man  into  this  readinefs 
and  preparation  to  do  or  fuffer  what  he  calls  to.  Tis  the  bufi- 
nefle  we  are  fet  about,  when  preaching  the  Gofpel,  to  make  a 
willing  peoplefifol.llo.  To  make  ready  a  people  prepared  for  the 
Lord^Luk.  1.  As  a  Captain  is  fent  to  beat  up  his  drum  in  a  City, 
to  call  in  a  company  that  will  voluntarily  lift  themfelves  to  fol- 
low the  Princes  wars,  and  be  in  a  readineflfe  to  take  the  field,and 
march  at  an  houres  warning  :  Thus,the  Goffel  comes  to  call  o- 
ver  the  hearts  of  men  to  the  foot  of  God,toftand  ready  for  his 
fervice  whatever  it  coRs  them  ;  now  this  it  doth  as  it  is  a  Gojpel 
of  peace.  It  brings  the  joyful  tydings  of  peace  concluded  betwixt 
God  and  man  by  the  blood  of  Jefus;  and  this  is  fo  welcome  to 
the  trembling  confcience  of  poor  finners,  who  before  melted 
away  their  forrowfuldays  in  a  fearful  looking  for  of  judgment 
and  fiery  indignation  from  the  Lord  to  devoure  them  as  his  ad- 
verfaries ;  that  no  fooner  the  report  of  a  peace  concluded  be- 
twixt God  and  them  founds  in  their  ears  by  the  preaching  of  the 
Gofpel ,and  is  certainly  conftrm'd  to  be  true  in  their  own  con- 
fciences  by  the  Spirit,wh©  is  fent  from  heaven  to  feal  it  to  them, 
and  give  them  fome  fvveet  gulf  of  it,  by  /hedding  abroad  the 
fenfc  of  it  in  their  fouls;but  inftantly  there  appears  a  new  life  in 
them,that  they  who  before  were  fo  fearful  and  Ihy  of  every  pet- 
ty trouble,as  toftart  and  boggle  at  the  thought  of  it  (knowing  it 
could  brin»  no  good  news  to  them  )  are  now  ( fhod  wirh  the 
preparation  of  the  Gofpel  cf  peaceable  to  go  out  fmilin°ly  to 
meet  the  greateft  fufferings  that  are,  or  can  be  on  the  way  to- 
wards theru,  and  fay  undauntedly  to  them  (  as  once  Chrift  did 
to  thofe  that camewith  fwords  and  (iaves  ro  artach  him  )  whom 
fsek^je}  being  jufiifed  by  faith  jve  have  peace  wit.  God,  (faith  the 
ApoiileJ    %j>m.^.i.     And  thu,  how  mightily  doth  it  work? 

eyen 


^  *  a  And  your  feet  jhod  with 


even  to  make  them  gUry  in  tribulations.  The  words  opened, 
aftV'dthefe  two  points. 

Dott.i  .It  is  our  duty  to  be  always  prepared,and  ready  to  meet 
wich  any  trial, ^nd  endure  any  hardlhip  which  God  may  liy  out 
for  us  in  our  Ch  iftiin  wtrfare. 

Dott.  i.  The  peace  which  the  Gofpel  brings  and  fpeaks  to 
2*  the  heart,  will  make  the  creature  ready  to  wade  thorough 

any  trial   or  trouble  that   meets    him    in    his  Chriftian 
courfe. 


i. 


SECT.  IT. 

tDoB.  t.  We  ought  to  maintain  a  holy  readineffe  of  fpirit  to 
endure  any  hardfhip  which  God  may  lay  out  for  us  in  our  Chri- 
ftian courfe  ;  Saints  are  fure  to  want  no  tryals  and  fufferings: 
Thwfe(asChriftfaich  of  the  poor )  wejhallhave  alwayes  with  us. 
The  bloody  fweat  which  Chrift  felt,(ignified  ffairh  Augptfllne) 
the  fufferings  which  in  his  whole  myttical  body  he  ftiould  endure. 
Charts  whole  body  was  lift  upon  theCrofle,  and  no  member 
muft  now  look  to  efcape  the  croflfe;  And  when  the  crofle  comes, 
how  muft  we  behave  our  felves  towards  it  ?  It  will  not  fpeakus 
Chriftians,that  we  are  meerly  pafiive,  aid  make  no  notorious 
refiftance  againft  the  will  of  God  ;  but  we  muft  be  active  in  our 
patience  (  if  I  may  fo  fpeak  )  by  fhewing  a  holy  readineffe  and 
alacriry  of  fpirit  to  be  at  Gods  ordering,though  it  were  to  be  led 
down  into  the  very  chambers  of  death  it  felf.  That  Epitaph 
wouldnotbecomeaChriftiansgrave-ftone,whichI  have  heard 
was  engraved  upon  ones  Tomb,  and  might  too  truly  on  moft 
that  dye,  Here  lies  one  againfi  his  will,Holy  Taul  was  of  a  better 
minde,  ABs  2 1 .1  1. 1  am  ready  not  only  to  be  bortnd^but  alfo  to  dye 
at  Jcrufalem  fir  the  Name  of  the  Lord  ft  fits.  But  may  be  this  was 
but  a  flourish  of  his  colours  when  he  knew  the  enemy  to  be  far 
enough  off ;  he  may  yet  live  to  change  his  thoughts,  when  he 
comes  to  look  death  in  the  face.No,what  he  hathfaid,  he  ftands 
to,!  7  im,q.6.1 am  now  ready  to  be  offered,and  the  time  of  my  de- 
parture is  at  hand,  a-TivAficuy  he  fpeaks  of  it,  as  if  it  were  al- 
ready done  ;  indeed  he  had  already  laid  his  head  on  the  block, 

and 


the  preparation  of  the  Gcfyel  of  peace,  a  4 1 


and  was  dead  before  the  ft  roke  was  given,  not  with  fear  (  as  fome 
have  been)  but  with  a  free  resignation  of  himfelf  to  it ;  and  if 
a  malefa&our  be  nviliter  mo  thm,  dead  in  a  Law  fence,  as  foon 
as  the  fentence  is  out  of  the  judges  mouth,    hough  he  lives  fome 
weeks  after  ^  then  I  am  fure  in  a  Gofpel  fenfe  we  may  fay,  thofe 
are  dead  already,  that  are  ready  to  die ,  that    have  freely   put 
themfelves  under  the  fentence  ofic  in  their  own  wiliingnefs.  And 
this  alacrity  and  ferenity  that  was  on  Pauls  fpirit,  was  the  wore 
remarkable,if  we  confider  how  clofe  he  ftood  to  his  end.    Indeed 
fome  from  the  word  ,  o-Wfjy**  (  which  properly  (ignifieth  a  li- 
bation or  drink-orferingj  conceive  that  Paul  knew  the  very  kind 
of  death  which  he  fliould  fuffer,  namely  Beheading .   and  that 
he  alludes  to  the  pouring  ou  of  blood  or  wine,  ufed  in  facrifice, 
as  that  kind  of  facrifice,  which  did  heft  illuftrate  the  nature  of  his 
death,  viz.  the  pouring  out  his  blood;  which  he  did  as  willingly 
offer  up  in  the  fervice  of  Chrift  and  his  Church,  as  they  did  pour 
out  their  wine  in  a  drink-offering  to  the  Lord.    We  (hall   now 
give  fome  rational  account  of  the  point ,  why  we  are  to  be  ready 
and  prompt  at  fuffcring-work.    The  Reafons  of  the  point  (hall 
fall  under  two  heads.  Firft,taken  from  Chrift,  for  or  from  whom 
we  fuffer.    The  fecond,  from  the  excellency  of  fuch    a  tem- 
per ,    as    this    readinefle    to    endure    any    hardftiip    im- 
ports. 

Firft,  in  regard  of  Chrift.    1.  He  commands  it.    2.  He  de< 
fervesit. 


SECT.    III. 

Firft,he  commands  it.  Indeed  this  frame  of  fpirit  is  implyedin 
every  duty ,as  the  modus  agendi,  that  qualification,  which  (like 
the  ftamp  on  coine)  makes  it  currant  in  Gods  account,  Th.'$  1, 
put  them  in  mind{  faith  the  Apoftle)  to  be  ready  te>  every  good  voork^ 
be  it  aftive  or  pafiive9they  muft  be  ready  for  it,or  elfe  all  they  do 
is  to  no  purpofe.  The  word  there  is  the  fame  with  this  in  the 
Text,  and  is  taken  from  a  vetfdthat  is  fafhioned  and  fitted  for 
theufe  the  mafter  puts  it  to  ,  wedo  not  like,  when  we  are  to  ufe 
a  veflel  (cup or  pot)  to  have  them  out  of  the  wav,  or  to  mend.* 

Lll  and 


4V 


And  yonrfestfljjcl  with 


"and Jcoureat  that  ime  we  call  for  them,  but  look  to  find  them 
at  hand  on  the  (hdf,  clean  and  tit  for  prefen:  ufe  ,  or  our    fer- 
vants  (hall  hear  o  it.     Ihus  Godexpe&>  we  (hould  keep    our 
hearts  clean  from  the  defilements  of  finne  ,  and  our  affedions 
whole  and  entire  for  himfelf;  that  they  be  not  lent  out  to  the 
creature,  nor  broken  and  batter'd  by  any  inordinacy  .of  delight  in 
them    left  we  (hould  be  to  feek  when  he  calls  us  to  do  or  furTer ; 
or  be  found  very  unprepared,without  much  ado  to  fet  us  to  right, 
and  make  us  willing  for  the  work.as  the.  fame  Jpoflle  yzTim.2.~\. 
if a  man  therefore  purge  himfelf  f rem  thefe,  hefhallh  a  veffelnnto 
honor -faiSified  and  meet  for  theMaflers  ufetand  prepared  unto  every 
qood  wo>k    Now,  as  God  commands  thisreadinefs  in  all,  foe* 
specially  in  fuffering-work,  Lnke  9.23 .  If  any  man  will  cme  after 
mt,  let  him  den)  him(elf,  and  tak^e  tip  hU  crojje  daily  and  follow  me. 
Thefe  words  may  be  called  the  Chriftians  Indenture ;  Every  one 
that  will  be  Chnfts  feravnt,  muft  feal  to  this,before  he  hath  leave 
from  Chrift  to  call  him  Mafter  •,  wherein  you  fee  the  chief  provi- 
fionC  hrift  makes,  is  about  fuffering  work ,  as  that   which  will 
moft  try  the  man.  If  the  fervant  can  but  fadge  with  that,  no  fear 
but  hee'l  like  the  other  part  of  his  work  well  enough  v    Now ,  I 
prayobferve,  how  careful  Chrift  is  to  engage  the  heart  in  this 
work  •,  he  will  have  his  fcrvants  not  only  endure  the  hardship  of 
hisfervice,  butftiewthcirreadinefsinit  alfo ;  four  remarkable 
pillages  are  put  in  for  this  purp.  fc. 

Firft.he  mufldeny  himfelf  ,t\\2£  is^eJiver  up  his  own  will  out  of 
hi;  own  hands,  and  from  that  day  that  he  enters  into  Chrifts  fer- 
vice ,  acknowledge  himfelf  not  to  be  ftti  juris,  at  his  own  difpofe-, 
whatever  Chrift  bcares ,  he  cannot ,  to  hear  his  fervants 
(  when  fent  by  him  on  any  bufinefTe  )  fay  ,  J  will 
not. 

Secondly^  He  tells  them  the  wr rft  at  firft,and  choofeth  to  fpeak 
ofthecrofs  they  muft  bear,  rather  than  the  Crown  they  (hall 
atlaft  wear-,  and  withal,  that  he  expects  they  (hi  u!d  not  only 
brar  it  (this  the  wicked  do  full  fore  a^infr  rh.ir  wills)  but  alfo 
take  it  up .  Indeed  he  doth  not  bid  them  maKe  the  crofs ,  runne 
themfelvesiiit  trouble  of  their  own  head,  but  hee'l  have  them 
take  that  up  which  he  makes  for  them  ;  tharis  notftep  out 
of  the  way  by  any  dnful  (hifc  to  efcape  any  ttoub'e,  but  to  accept 
ofthe  burthen  God  layes  for  them,  and  go  chea  iu!y  under  ict 

yea, 


the  prep. ir  at  km  of  t  be  Cofpel  of  peace.  a  4. 3 


yea,  thankfully,  as  if  God  did  us  a  favour  to  employ  us  in  any 
fufferingforhim  ,  we  d>  rot  take  fo  much  p.unes  as  to  ftoop  to 
takeup  that  which  is  not  worth  lomtthing-  Chrift  will  have  his 
people  take  up  thv  cro  s,  as  one  does  to  take  up  a  pearl  that  lies 
on  the  ground  before  him. 

Thirdly,  this  they 'muft  do  every  day,  4nd  ta\e  up  his  crofs  dai- 
ly ;  when  there  is  none   n  bis  back, he  muft  carry  one  in  his  hearc, 
chat  is,continually  b  p  cpanng  himfelf  to  (hnd  ready  for  the  ft  it 
call ;  as-  Porte  s  ftand  at  the  Merchants  doors  in  London,  waiting 
when  their  Matters  have  any  burthen  for  them  to  carry.     T  hus 
<P4#/profeiTeth^  d>ed  daily;  how,  but  by  a  readinefs  of  mind 
to  die?  Hefethimfclf  in  apofture  to  bid  Gods  meiTenger  wel- 
come, when  ever  it  came.    This  indeed   is  to  take  up  the  crofle 
daily  ;   when  our  prefent  en  j  >yments  do  not  make  us  ftrange  to, 
or  fall  out  with  the  thoughts  of  future  trials.    The  Jews  were  to 
cat  the  Pafleover  with  their  lovnes  girded,  their  fh  es  on  their 
feet,  and  their  ftaflfc  in  their  hand,  andallinhafte,  Exod.  12.11. 
WhenGodisfeaftmg  the  Chriftian  vvith  prefent  comforts ,  he 
muft  have  this  Gofpel-ihoe  on,  he  muft  not  fet  to  it  as  if  he  were 
feafting  at  home,  but  as  at  a  running  meal  on  his  way  in  an  lane, 
willing  to  be  goners  foon  as  he  is  refrefht  a  little  for  his   jour- 
ney. 

Fourthly, when  the  crofs  is  on,  what  then  ?  then  he  muft  fo/lotv 
drifts  not  ftand  frill  and  fre  ,but  follow ;  not  be  drawn  and  hail'd 
after  Chrift,  but  follow,  as  a  f  uldier  his  Captain  voluntarily  j 
Chrift  doth  not  as  fome  Generah,drive  the  <  ountrey  before  him, 
and  mafce  his  fervants  fight  whether  th  y  will  or  no>it  he  invites 
them  in,  H>/ea2.T4  I  rvi  -  allure  her  into  the  rcildernep  j  Indeed 
a  gracious  heart  follows  Chrift  into  the  Wildernefs  of  a  iiift  on, 
as  willingly  as  a  lover  his  beloved  into  fome  f  litary  privare  Ar- 
bour or  Bower,  there  to  fit  and  enjoy  his  prefence.  Chrift  ufeth 
arguments  in  his  Word,  and  by  his  Spirit  fo  fatisfa&ory  to 
the  Chriftian,  that  he  is  very  willing  to  follow  him ;  as  thepati- 
ent,who  atfirft,may  be3rtirinks  and  draws  back,when  the  I  hyfici- 
an  talks  of  cuttiug  or  bleeding,  but  when  he  hatb  heard  the  1  ea- 
fons  given  by  him  why  that  courfe  muft  be  taken. and  is  convinced 
'tis  the  beft  way  for  his  health, then  he  very  freely  p:ts  forth  his 
arme  to  the  knife,  and  thanks  the  Phyti  ctan  for  his  pains. 

Lll    2  SECT. 


..  ,  And  your  feet  Jhod  with 


E. 


SECT.  IV. 

Secondly,  ChriiV  deferves  this  frame  of  fpirit  at  our  hands, 
Of  many,  take  but  two  particulars,  wherein  this  will  appear. 
Firft,if  we  confider  his  readinefs  to  endure  trouble  and  forrow  for 
us.Secondiy,his  tender  care  over  us,  while  we  endure  either  for,  or 
from  him. 

i.  His  readinefs  to  endure  forrow  and  trouble  for  us;  when 

God  called  him  to  the  work  of  Media tourthip,  he  found   the 

way  laid  with  {harper  (tones    (.1  hope  )    than  we  do  in  the  road 

that  is  appointed  us  to  walk  in.     He  was  to  tread  upon  fwords 

and  pikes,  all  ma nner  of  forro ws,  and  thofeedg'd  with  the  wrath 

of  God  5  this  was  the  (harpeft  ftone  of  all  ( which  he  hath  taken 

out  of  our  way)  and  yet  how  light  did  he  go  upon  the  ground?  O 

had  not  his  feet  been  well  ftiod  with  love  to  our  fouls,  he  would 

foon  have  turned  back,  and   faid  the  way  was  unpaflable  -,  but 

on  he  goes  and  blunts  not  •  never  did  we  (inne  more  willingly , 

than  he  went  to  furTer  for  our  finne.     Lo,  1  come,  (faith  he  to  his 

Father  )   /  deliglst  to  do  thy  will,  O  my  God,  thj  Law  is  within  my 

heart,  Pfalme4o.7.  O  what  a  full  confent  did  the  heart  of  Chrift 

rebound  to  his  Fathers  call  ?  likefome  cccho  that  anfwerswhae 

is  fpoken  twice  or  thrice  over.    Thu«,  when  his  Father  fpeaks  to 

him  to  undertake  the  work  of  faving  poor  loft  man,  he  doth  not 

give  a  bare  aflent  to  the  call,  but  trebbies  t  •,  i  come,  I  delight  t» 

do  thy  witty  yea,  thj  Law  is  in  my  heart.    He  was  fo  ready  ,  that 

before  his  enemies  laid  hands  on  him,  he  (  as  it  were  )  laid  hands 

on  himfelf,  in  the  inftituemgof  the  Lords  Mipper,  and  there 

did  Sacramcntally  rend  the  fltfhof  his  own  body,  and  broach  his 

own  heart  to  fill  that  ^up  with    his  precious  blood,  which 

with  his  own  hand  he  gave  them,  that  they  might  not  look  upon 

his  death  now  at  hand  as  a  meer  butchery  from  the  hand  ofmans 

violence,  but  rather  as  a  (acrifice,    wherein  he  did  freely  offer 

op  himfelf  to  G<d  for  them  and  all  believers.     And   when  the 

time  was  come  that  the  fad  tragedy  fhould  beaded,  he  knowing 

the  very  place  whether  the  trayrour  with  his  black' guard  would 

come,   gees  out,and  marcheth  into  the  very  mouth  of  t>em    O 

what  a  (hame  were  iy  that  we  (hould  be  unwilling  to  go  a  mile 

Of 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.  A45 

or  two  of  rugged  way  to  bear  fo  fweet  a  Saviour  company  in  his 
furTerings  ?  Could  ye  not  watch  with  me  one  hour  ?  faid  Chrifi  to 
^eter,  Matth<26.4o.  Not  with  me,  who  am  now  going  to  meet 
with  death  it  felf,  and  ready  to  bid  the  bittereft  pangs  of  it  wel- 
come for  your  fakes?  not  with  me?  2. 

Secondly,  Chrift  deferves  this  readinefs  to  meet  any  fuffcring 
he  layes  out  in  his  providence  for  us,  if  we  confider  his  tender 
care  over  his  Saints,  when  he  calls  them  into  a  fuffering  conditi- 
on. Kind  Matters  may  wellexpedt  chearful  fervants.  1  he  more 
tender  the  Captain  is  over  his  fouldiers,  the  more  prodigal  they 
are  of  their  own  lives  at  his  command.  And  it  were  ftrange, 
if  Chrifts  care  which  deferves  more,  (hould  meet 
with  lefs  ingenuity  in  a  Saint.  Now  Chrifts  care  ap- 
pears , 

Firft,  in  proportioning  the  burthen  to  the  back  he  layes  it 
on.    That  which  over-loads  one  (hip,  and  would  hazard  to  fink 
her,  is  but  juft  ballace  for  another  of  greater  burthen.    Thofe 
fufferings  which  one-  Chriftian  cannot  bear,  another  failes  trim 
and  even  under.  The  weaker  flioulder  is  fure  to  have  the  tighter 
carriage.    As  /W  burthen*  d  fome  Churches  (  which  he  knew 
more  able)  to  fpare  others  •,  fo  Chrift  to  eafe  the  weaker  Chri- 
ftian, layes  more  weight  on  the  ftronger.    Paul  laboured  more 
abundantly  than  them  all,  he  tells  us j  I  Cor.  IJ.  ia.  But  why  did 
Chrift  fo  unequaHy  divide  the  work  ?  obferve  the  place,  and  you 
(hall  find  that  it  was  but  neceflary  to  employ  that  abunaant 
grace  he  had  given  him.  His  grate  (faith  he  j  which  was  be  flowed 
on  me,  was  not  in  vain,  but  1  laboured  more,  &c.i    There  was  fo 
much  grace  poured  into  him,  that  fome  of  it  would  have  been  in 
vain,  if  God  had  not  found  him  more  to  do  and  furter  than  the 
reft.      Chrift  hath  a  perfed  rate  by  him  of  every  Saints  fpiritual 
eftace,  and  according  to  this  all  areaiTeft,  and  fo  none  are  op- 
prefTed.    The  rich  in  grace  can  as  eafily  pay  his  pound,  as  the 
poor  his  penny.     P<««/laid  down  his  head  on  the  block  for  the 
caufeof    hrift,as  freely  as  fome  (and  thofe  true,but  weak  Cbri. 
ftiansj  would  have  done  a  few  pounds  out  of  their  purfe.  Heen- 
dured  death  with  lefs  trouble,  than  fome  could  have  done  ic-> 
proach  for  Chrift.  All  have  not  a  Martyrs  faith,   nor  all  the  Mar- 
tyrsfirc.  This  forlorn  confiftscf a  few  files  pickt  out  of  the  whe  U  \ 
army  of  Saints.  < 

Lll  3  .Se- 


And  your  feet  (hod  rviih 


secondly,  the  confolations  he  gives  them  then  (in  execedings) 
above  other  of  their  brethren,  that  are  not  call'd   out  to  fuch 
hardfervice.    That  part  of  an  army  which  is  upon  action  in  the 
field,  is  fure  to  have  their  pay  (if  their  Mailers  have  any   money 
in  their  purfe  or  care  or  them)  •,  yea,  fometimes,  when  their  fel- 
lows left  in  their  Quarters   are  made  to  ftay.     I  am  fure,  there 
is  more  gold  and  filver    fpiritual  joy  I  mean,  and  comfort)  to  be 
found  in  Chrifts  camp  (among  his  furTering  ones)  than  t'neir  bre- 
thren at  home  in  peace  and    profperity,  ordinarily  can  fhew : 
What  are  the  promifes,  but  veflels  of  cordial  wine,tunn'd  on  pur- 
pofe  againft  a  groaning  hour,when  God  ufually  broacheth  them  > 
Call  upon  me  (faith  God)z'»  the  day  of  trouble^  Pfal.50. 1 5 .  and  may 
we  not  do  fo  in  the  day  of  peace  ?  ycs,but  he  wcu  d  have  us  moft 
bold  with  him  in  a  day  ot  trouble.    None  find  fuch  quick   dif- 
patch  at  the  throne  of  grace,  as  fufferirg  Saints.     In  the  day  that 
I  cried  (faith  David)  thou  anfweredft  mey  and  gaveft  me  ftrength 
in  myf6nl,P(.i ,  8.3  .he  was  now  at  a  ftrait,and  God  comes  in  hafte 
to  him      Though  we  may  make  a  well  friend  ftay    (  that  fends 
for  us)  yet  we  will  give   a  lick  friend  leave  to  call  us  up  at  mid- 
night.   In  fuch  extremities  we  ufually  go  with  the  meflenger 
that  comes  for  us -,  and  fo  doth  God  with  the  prayer  ;     Petty 
knock:  at  their  gate(who  were  aflembled  to  feek  God  for  him  El- 
inor! as  foon  as  their  prayer  knockt  at  heaven-gate  in  his  behalf. 
And  truly  it  is  no  more  then  needs.,  if  we  conlider  the  temptati- 
ons of  an  afflicted  condition  •,  we  are   prone  then  to  be  fufpici- 
ousourbeft  friends  forget  us,  and  to  think  every  ftay  a  delay, 
and  neglect  o  us  ;  therefore  God  choofeth  to  (hew  himfelf  moft 
kind  at  fuch  a  time,  As  the fujferings  efChrift  abound  in  us,  fo  onr 
confolation  abomdeth  a)fo  by  Chrft,2  Cor.  i.$.     As    man  laid  00 
trouble,  fo  C  hrift  laid  in  confolation :  Both  tydes  rofe  and  fell  to- 
gether; whenit  wasSp  ing-tyde  with  him  in  affliction,  itwasfo 
with  him  in  his  jov  ;  we  relieve  the  poor,  as  their  charge  encrea- 
fe  h,  fo  thrift  comforts  his  people,  as  their  troubles  multiply; 
And  ow  (Cbriftian)  tell  me,  doth  not  th   dear  Lord  deferve 
a  ready  Spirit  in  thee  10  meet  any; furTering  with,  for,or  from  him, 
who  gives  his  fveeteft  comforts,where  his  peopl  ufc  to  n  pect  iheir 
faddeir  i<:-;  ows  ?  Well  ma.  thefervant  do  his  work  chearfully  , 
when  his  Mafter  n>  fo  careful  01  him,as  with  his  own  hands  to  bring 
him  his  breakfaft  into  the  fields.TheChriftian  ftays  not  til  he  come 

to 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.  a^j 

to  heaven  for  all  his  com  fort.  There  indeed  flfal  be  the  full  fupper 
but  there  is  a  breskfaft  (<-hriftian)of  previous  joys  more  or  lefe;, 
which  Chrift  brings  to  thee  into  the  field,  and  mall  be  eaten  on 
the  place  where  thou  endureft  thy  hardfhip. 

Thirdly,in  the  feafonabie  fuecours  which  Lhrift  fends  to  bring  3. . 

them  off  fafe.  He  doth  not  only  comfo  t  them  in,  but  helps  them 
out  of  all  their  troubles.Tlure  is  ever  a  door  more,than  the  Chri- 
ffian  fees  in  his  prifon,by  which  Chrift  can  with  a  turn  of  his  hand, 
open  away  for  hisSaints  efcape.  And  what  can  we  defire  more?a  \l  is 
well  that  ends  well.  And  what  better  fecuntycan  we  defire  fo  this 
than  the  pronv.fe  of  the  greatGod,with  whom  to  lye  is  impoffible? 
And  I  hope  the  credit  whichGod  hath  in  his  peoples  hearts,isnot 
fo  low,but  a  bill  under  his  hand  will  be  accepted  at  firft  fight  by 
them  in  exchange  of  what  isdeareft  to  them,  life  it  felt  not  exce- 
pted. Look  to  thy  felf  when  thou  haft  to  do  with  others .-  None  I  $> 
firm,   but  may  crack  under  thee,  if  thou  Jayeft  too  much  weight 
on  then^  one  would  have  thought  lo  worthy  a  Captain  as  Vr'.ah 
was,might  have  trufted  his  General,yea  his  Prince(and  he  fo  holy 
amanasZJ^/Wwas^  But  he  was  unworthily  betrayM  by  them 
both  into  the  hands  of  death.Man  may,the  devil    to  be  fure  will , 
leave  all  in  the  lurch  that  do  his  work    But  if  God  fets  thee  on , 
hee'l  bring  thee  off ;  never  fear,  A  hokjhee  to  that  from  his  lips, 
when  thy  faithfulnefs  to  him  hath  broughtthee  into  the  briars^e 
that  would  work  a  wonder,rather  than  let  a  run-away  Prophet  pe- 
rilh  in  his  finful  voyage  (  becaufe  a  good  man  in  the  main  )  will 
heap  miracle  upon  miracle,  rather  than  thou  fhalt  mifcarry  and 
fink  in  thy  duty  •  only  be  not  troubled,  if  thou  bceft  call  over- 
board(like  fc»ah)bcforc  thou  feeft  the  provifion  whichGod  makes , 
fbrthyfafety  •  it  is  ever  at  hand,but  fometimes  lies  clofe.and  out. 
of  the  creatures  fight,like  Jonahs  Whale  (fent  of  God  to  ferry  him 
to  (hore)under  water,and  the  Prophet  in  its  belly,  before  he  knew 
where  he  was  -,  that  which  thou  think'ft  comes  to  devour  thee 
may  be  the  meflenger  that  God  fends  to  bring  thee  fafe  to  land. 
Is  not  thy  flioe,  Chriftian,  yet  on  f  art  thou  not  yet  ready  to 
march  ?  canft  fear  any  ftonc  now  can  hurt  thy  foot  thorough  fo 
thick  a  foale  t 


CHAP, 


a  4.8  And  your  feet  fhod  with 


CHAP.  XV. 

The  fecond  reaf&n  of  the  point  taken  from  the 
excellency  of thh frame  of  fpirit, 

» 
Rea{$»  i.    *~y"  He  fccond  reafon  of  the  point,  is  taken  from  the  excellency 
J.  of  this  frame  ot  fpirit ,  which  will  appear  in  divers  parti- 
culars. 


SECT.  I. 

i  •  Firft,  this  readinefs  of  heart  to  ftoop  to  the  crofs,  evidenceth 

a  gracious  heart ;  and  a  gracious  fpirit  (I  am  fure  )  is  an  excel- 
lent /pint;  flefh  and  blood  never  made  any  willing  to  fuffer  either 
forGod  or  from(jod;hc  that  can  do  this,hath  that  other  fpirit  with 
Num.  14  14.  CWe£,  which  proves  him  of  a  higher  defcent  than  this  world; 
A  carnal  heart  can  neither  aft  nor  fuffer  freely  \  volant  as  libera , 
i»  quantum  liberata,  Luth.  The  will  is  no  more  free,  than 'tis 
made  free  by  grace.  So  much  flelh  as  is  left  in  a  Saint,  fo  much 
awknefsandunwillingnefstocometoGods  foot;  and  therefore 
where  there  is  nothing  but  flcfti,  therecan  be  nothing  but  unwil- 
lingnefs.  He  that  can  find  his  heart  following  God  in  his  com  - 
mand  or  providence  chcarfully,  may  knorvrvho  hath  been  there  (as 
one  faid  of  the  famous  Grecian  Limner  )  This  is  a  line,  that  none 
but  ^od  could  draw  on  thy  foul.  TheMidwives  faid  of  the  If- 
raelitifh  womcn,thcy  were  not  like  the  Egyptian  in  bringing  forth 
their  children,  for  they  were  liveljy  and  deliver  d}ere  the  Midlives 

could 


the  prep  j  ration  of  the  Gofyel  of  peace,  44^ 


could  come  at  them,  Exod.  I .  i  o.    Tru  ly  thus  lively  and  ready  is 
che  gracious  heart  in  any  thing  'cis  cali'd  to  do,  orfuffer.  It  is  not 
delivered  with  fo  much  difficulty  of  a  duty  asa  carnal  heart,which 
muft  have  the  help  and  midwifry  of  fome  carnal  arguments ,  or 
clfeit  fticks  in  the  birth  :  but  the  gracious  heart  has  d-  ne  before 
thefe  come  to  lend  their  helping  hand  ^  pure  love  to  God,  obe- 
dience to  the  call  of  his  command,and  faith  on  the  fecurity  of  his 
promife,  facilitate  the  work,  that'be  it  never  fo  burthenfome 
totheflefti,  yet  it  is  not  grievous  to  the  fpirit;  That  is  ever 
ready  to  iay,  Thy  will  be  done, and  not  mine.     The  Affile  makes 
this  freefubmifiiontothedifpofure  of  Gods  afflicting  hand  to 
evidence  a  fonnes  fpirit ,  Heb.  12.  7.  Jfje  endure  cbaftexing,  God 
dealeth  with  you  as  with  fonnes.     Obferve,  he  doth  not  fay,  if  jott 
be  chaftendjbutjfjoti  endure  cbafiening. Naked  fufFering  doth  not 
prove  fon- (hip ,  but  xsm^ynv nt*iteiv  doth-,  to  endure  it  foas 
not  to  fink  in  our  courage ,  or  fhrink  from  under  the  burthen 
God  layes  on ,  but  readily  to  offer  our  ftiouldcr  to  it,  and  pati- 
ently carry  it,  looking  with  a  chearful  eye  at  the  reward, when  we 
come  ( not  to  throw  it  off)  but  to  have  it  taken  off  by  that  hand 
which  laid  it  on  (all  which  the  word  imports)  this  fhews  a  child- 
like fpirit  •,  and  the  evidence  thereof  muft  needs  be  a  comfortable 
companion  to  the  foul,efpecially  at  fucha  time,  when  that  So- 
fhifrer  of  hell  ufcth  the  afflictions  which  lie  upon  it,  as  an  argu- 
ment to  difprove  its  childes  relation  to  God  j  now  to  have  this 
anfwer  to  flop  the  liars  mouth  at  hand,  Satan,  if  I  be  not  a  child, 
how  could  I  fo  readily  fubmit  to  the  Lords  family-difciplinepThis 
is  no  fmall  mercy. 


SECT.    II. 

Secondly,  this  frame  of  fpirit  makes  him  a  free  man,,  that  hath  2. 
it  •,  and  no  mean  price  ufeth  to  be  fet  upon  the  head  of  liberty. 
The  very  birds  had  rather  be  abroad  in  the  woods  with  liberty 
(though  lean  with  cold  and  care)  to  pick  up  up  here  and  there  a 
little  livelyhood,  than  in  a  golden  cage  with  all  their  attendance! 
Now  truly,  there  is  a  bondage  which  fewarefenfible  of,  and  that 
is  a  bondage  to  the  creature  •,  when  a  man  is  fo  enflaved  to  his 

M  m  m  enjoy- 


a&o  And  your  feet  food  with 


enjoy  merits  and  low  contentments  here  on  earth  ,  that  they  give 
law  to  him  (that  (hould  give  law  to  them  )  and  meafure  out  his 
joy  to  him  (what  he  (ball  have)  littleor  much,  as  he  abounds 
with  ,  oi  is  cut  (hort  of  them.    Thus  fome  are  flaves  to  their  c- 
dates,  it  is  faid,  their  heart  goes  after  their  covetoufneffe^  that  is,  as 
the  fervant  after  the  Matter ,  who  dares  not  be  from  his  back ; 
Their  money  is  the  Mafter,and  hath  the  beft  keeping,  their  heart 
waits  on  it ,  (hall  I  fay  as  a  fervant  after  his  Matter  *  yea  as  a 
dog  at  his  matters  foot-,  others  are  as  great  flaves  to  their,  ho- 
nours-, fo  poor  fpirited,  that  they  cannot  enjoy  themfelves,  if 
they  have  not  the  cap  and  knee  of  all  they  meet,  fuch  a  llave  was- 
Hawan,  the  great  favourite  of  his  Prince ,  who  but  he  at  Court  f 
that  could  at  the  expenceofa  few  words,  get  the  Kings  ring  to 
feal  a  bloody  decree  for  the  maffacringof  fo  manythoufands  of  in- 
nocent perfons  againft  ail  (enfe  and  reafon  ofState,meerly  to  fulfil 
his  lun^had  not  this  man  honour  enough  put  upon  him  to  content 
his  ambitious  fpirit.?No,there  is  a  poor  Jew  at  the  Kings  gate, will 
not  make  a  leg  to  him  as  he  goes  by,  and  this  fo  royles  his  proud 
ftomack,thathehasno  joy  of  all  his  other  greatnefle,£/?&.  5.1$. 
jet  all  this  avaUeth  me  nothing  (faith  the  poor  fpirited  wretch)  fo 
long  as  IfeeMordecai  the  few  fitting  at  the  Kings  gate,  A  third  fort 
are  as  much  in  bondage  to  their  pleafures,  they  are  faid  to  live  in 
fleafttre  on  earth  Jam.$  5  .their  life  is  bound  up  in  their  pleafures,as 
the  rufli  grows  in  the  mud.&  the  fifh  lives  in  the  water^hey  can- 
not live  without  their  pleafures-,  take  them  from  their  feaftsand 
fports,  and  their  hearts  with  Habals,  die  like  a  ftone  in  their  bo- 
ioms.  Now  this  frame  of  fpirit  we  are  fpeaking  of,  breaks  all  thefc 
chains,  and  brings  the  Chriftian  outlof  every  houfe  of  hondage. 
It  learns  him  to  like  what  fare  God  fends  ^  if  profperity  comes, 
he  \nows  how  to  abound  ,  fo,  that  if  he  be  by  a  turn  of  providence 
thrown  out  of  the  faddle  of  his  prefent  enjoyment,  his  foot  (hall 
not  hang  in  the  ftirrup,  or  his  enflaved  foul  d<  ag  him  after  it  with 
whining defires..    No,throughgraceheis  a  free-man ,  and  can 
fpare  the  c  ompany  of  any  creature ,  fa-long  as  he  may  but  have 
Ch"  lis  with  him.    BklTed  Paul  ftands  upon  his  liberty  ^  all 
thing  t  arc  (awful  to  »?«,  but  '  will  not  be  brought  finder  the  pom  r  of 
/tajf,  i  Cor.5  1  .  1  know  the  place  ismeant  or  tho^b indifferent 
things  concerning  which  there  was  a  prefent  difpure  there  is  but 
another  fenfc,in  which  al  things  here  below  were  indifferent  things? 

to 


the  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  peace.  q  51 

to  that  holy  man  -y  honour,,  or  dilhonour^  abundance,  or  want; 
life,  or  death.  Thefe  were  indifferent  to  Paul-,  he  would  not  come 
under  the  power  of  any  one  of  chera  all.  It  did  not  become  a  fer- 
vant  of  Chrift,  he  thought,  to  be  fo  tender  of  his  reputation^  to 
write  himfelf  undone,  when  he  had  not  this  or  that  ;  not  to  be  fo 
in  love  with  abundance,  as  not  to  be  ready  to  welcome  want.Not 
to  be  endeared  fo  to  life,  as  to  run  from  the  thoughts  of  death/. 
Nor  Co  be  fo  weary  of  a  fuffering  life,  as  to  haften  death  to  come 
for  his  ealc.  Major  animus  dicendas  eftfltti  drum  nofam  vit<am  ma- 
gu  elegit  ferre,  quamfugere.  Aug. 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,this  readineffe  to  fuffer  as  it  innobles  with  freedom,  fo 
it  enables  the  Chriftian  for  fervice.  It  is  a  fure  truth,  fo  far  and  no 
more  is  the  Chriftian  fit  to  live  ferviceably ,  than  he  is  prepared 
to  fu  STer  readily.  Becaufe  there  is  no  duty  bat  hath  the  croffe  at- 
tending on  it,  and  he  that  is  offended  at  the  croffe ,  will  not  be 
long  pleafed  with  the  fervice  that  it  brings.  Prayer  is  the  daily 
exercife  of  a  Saint ;  this  he  cannot  do  as  he  (houid  ,  except  he 
can  heartily  fay ,  thy  will  be  done  ;  and  who  can  do  that  in  truth, 
unlefle  ready  to  fuffer?  PraifingGodis  a  ftanding  duty  •  yea, 
in  ever j  thing  we  mu ft  give  thank/,  1  Thcf.  J .  but,  what  if  afflicti- 
on befals  us,  how  fhall  we  tune  our  hearts  to  that  note,if  not  rea- 
dy to  fuffer  ?  can  we  blefle  God  and  murmur  ?  praife  God  and 
repine?  The  Minifters  work  is  to  preach,  woe  to  him  if  he  do  not ; 
and  if  he  do  preach ,  he  is  fure  to  fultcr.  Paul  had  his  orders  for 
the  one,  and  Minimus  for  the  other  together ;  he  was  fentat 
the  fame  time  to  preach  the  grace  of  God  to  the  world  ,  and  to 
endure  the  wrath  of  the  world  for  God  •  fo  God  told  Ananias  % 
that  be  Jhould  bear  hU  Name  before  the  Gentiles ■,  and  fuffer  great 
things  for  his  Names  faleey  A  ds  9  15,  16.  And  if  the  Gofpel  did 
not  pleafe  the  ungrateful  world  oat  of  Pauls  mouth,  who  had 
fuch  a  rare  art  of  fweetening  it,  Itwereftrangethatanywho 
fall  fo  far  (hort  of  his  gifts,  to  move  in  the  Pulpit,  and  of  his 
grace  to  winne  upon  the  hearts  of  men  when  out,  (hould  ( if  they 
meane  to  be  faithful)  think  to  go  without  the  wages,  which  the 

Mmra  2  world 


4  r  2  And  your  feet  fljod  with 


world  paid  him  for  his  pains,  reproach  and  contempt,  if  not  down 
right  blows  of  bloody  perfection  as  he  met  with.  And  is  not  ibis 
(hoe  needful  for  the  preachers  foot,  that  is  to  walk  among  fo  ma- 
ny hifling  Serpents  ?  who  but  a  Paul,  that  had  got  over  the  fond 
love  of  life,  and  fear  of  a  bloody  death,  would  have  been  fo  wil- 
ling to  go  into  the  very  Lions  den ,  and  preach  the  Gofpel  there, 
where  he  invited  death  in  a  manner  to  come  unto  him  ?  I  mean  at 
'F^r-me  it  fclf,  the  feat  of  cruel  Nero.  So  much  <u  in  me  is  Jam  rea- 
dy to  preach  the  Goftel  to  you  that  are  at  Rome  alft,  for  I  am  net  a- 
{Earned  of  the  C/oJpel  ofChrift,  Rom.  1.15,16. 

In  a  word,  'tis  the  duty  of  every  Chriftian  to  make  a  free  pro- 
feflicn  ofChrift.  Now  this  cannot  be  done  without  hazard  many 
times.  And  if  the  heart  be  not  rcfolvM  in  this  point  what  to  do, 
the  tirft  ftorme  that  rifech  will  make  the  poor  man  put  in  to  any 
creek  or  hole ,  rather  than  venture  abroad  in  foul  weather.  John 
12.41.  among  the  chief Rulers  alfo  many  believed  on  him,  but  be- 
caftfc  of  the  'pharifees  the)  did  not  confejfe  him,  left  theyjhonldbeput 
out  of  the  Synagogue.  Poor  fouls,they  could  have  been  content,  if 
the  coaft  had  feen  clear,to  have  put  forth,  but  had  not  courage 
enough  to  bear  a  little  fcornc  that  threatned  them.  O  what  fol- 
ly is  it  to  engage  for  God ,  except  we  be  willing  to  lay  all  at  ftake 
for  him  ?  It  is  not  worth  the  while  to  kt  out  in  C  hrifts  company 
by  profefTion ,  except  we  mean  to  go  thorough  with  him,  and 
not  leave  him  unkindly  when  we  are  half  way,becaufe  of  a  flough 
01  two. 


SECT.    IV. 

This  readinefleof  fpirit  to  fuffer  gives  the  Chriftian  the  true 
enjoyment  of  his  life :  A  man  never  comes  to  enjoy  himfelf  truly 
in  any  comfort  of  his  life,  till  prepared  to  deny  himfelf  readily  in 
it.  3  lis  a  riddle,  but  two  considerations  will  unfold  it.  Fir  ft, 
then  (and  not  till  then)  is  that  which  hinders  the  enjoyment  of 
our  lives  taken  away  ,  and  that  is  fear ;  where  thkis>  there  is  tor- 
ment. Theout-fetting  Deere  is  obferv'd  to  be  leane  (though 
where  good  food  is)  becaufe  alwayes  in  fear.  And  fo  muft  they 
needs  be  in  the  midft  of  all  their  enjoyments,  on  whole  heart  this 

vulture 


the  prepar  0  tion  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.  a  5  2 

vulture  is  continually  feeding.    There  nesds  nothing  dfc  to  bring 
a  mans  joy  into  a  confumption,  than  an  inordinate  fear  of  lofing 
what  he  h  ath  at  prefent :  Let  but  this  get  hold  of  a  mans  fpirit,and 
once  becomeHt^f/V^and  the  comfort  of  his  life  is  gonepaft  reco- 
very.    How  many  by  this  are  more  ciuel  to  themfelves,  than  it  is 
polfible  their  worft  enemies  in  the  world  could  be  to  them  ?  They 
alas,  when  they  have  done  their  utmoft  ,  can  kill  them  but  once  : 
But  by  antidating  their  own  miferics ,   they  kill  themfelves  a 
thoufand  times  over,  even  as  oft  as  the  fear  of  dying  comes  over 
their  miferable  hearts.     But ,  when  once  the  Chriftian  hath  got 
his  piece  of  Armour  on ,  his  foul  is  prepared  for  death  and  dan- 
ger j  he  fits  at  the  feaft ,  which  God  in  his  prefent  providence  al- 
lows him  ,  and  fears  no  meflenger  with  ill  news  to  knock  at  his 
door;  yea,  he  can  talk  of  his  .dying  hour,  and  not  fpoile  the 
mirth  of  his  prefent  condition  ;  as   carnal  men  think   it  does, 
to  whom  a  difcourfe  of  dying  in  the  midft  of  their  junkets,  is 
like  the  coming  in  of  the  officer  to  attache  a  company  of  thieves 
that  are  making  merry  together  with  their  ftollen  goods  abou;: 
them  j  or  like  the  wet  cloth  that  Hazael  clapt  on  the  King  his 
Matters  face  -y  it  makes  all  the  joy  which  flufht  out  before,  fquac 
inonafudden,  that  the  poor  creatures  fie  difpirited  and  alia 
mort,(as  we  fayjcill  they  gee  out  of  this  affrighting  fubjedr, 
by  fome  divertifement  or  other  •,  which  only  relieves  them  for 
the  prefent,  and  puts  them  out  of  that  particular  fit  this  brought 
upon  them  ^  but  leaves  them  deeper  in  flavery  to  fuch  amaze- 
ment of  heart ,  when  ever  the  fame  ghoft  (hall  appear  for  the 
future.    Whereas  the  Chriftian,  that  hath  this  preparation  of 
heart,  never  taftes  more  fweetnefle  in  the  enjoyments  of  this  life, 
than  when  he  dips  thefe  morfeis  in  the  Meditation  of  death  and 
eternity.    It  is  no  mx>re  grief  to  his  heart  to  think  of  the  remove 
of  thefe,  which  makes  way  for  thofc  farre  fwceter  enjoyments, 
than  it  would  be  to  one  at  a  feaft  ,  to  have  the  firft  courfe  taken 
off,  when  he  hath  fed  well  on  it,  that  the  fecond  courfe  of  all  rare 
fwcet  meats  and  banquetting  ftufFmay  come  on,  whichit  cannot 
till  the  otherbe  gone.    Holy  David,  Pfal.  23.4,5.  brings  in 
(as  it  were)  a  deaths  head  with  his  feaft.    In  the  fame  breath  al- 
moft  hefpeaksof  his  dying,  v.  4.  and  of  the  rich  feaft  he  at  pre- 
fent fate  at  through  the  bounty  of  God,  ve  rfe  5.  to  which  he  was 
not  fo  tyed  by  the  teeth ,  but  if  God  that  gave  him  this  cheere, 

{hould 


454  And  your  fetjjjod  with 


{hould  call  him  from  it ,  to  look  death  in  the  face ,   he  could  do 
it  and  fear  no  evilywhen  in  the  valley  ofthejhadtw  thereof,  Pf  23 .4. 
And  what  think  you  of  the  bleffed  ApoftleP^r?  had  not  he, 
think  you,  the  true  enjoyment  of  his  life  *  when  he  could  fleep  fo 
fweetly  in  a  prifcn  (no  dehrable  place)  fafi  bound  between  twa  faul- 
tier s,  no  comfortable  pofturej  and  this  the  very  night  before  He- 
rod  would  have  brought  him  forth  (in  all  probability  to  his  execu- 
tion,) no  likely  time  (one  would  think  J  to  get  any  reft  ,  yet  we 
finde  him,  even'there,  thus,  and  then,  fo  found  a  fleep ,  that  the 
Angel,  who  was  fent  to  give  him  his  goal-delivery,  fmote  him  on 
the  lide  to  awake  him,  Atls  12.  6,  7.  I  queftion  whether  Herod 
himfeif  flept  fo  well  that  night,  as  this  his  prifonerdid.    And 
what  was  the  potion  that  brought  this  holy  man  fo  quietly  to 
reft  ?  No  doubt  this  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace  •  he 
was  ready  to  die  ,  and  that  made  him  able  to  fleep  •  why  (hould 
that  break  his  reft  in  this  world,  which  (if  it  had  been  effe&ed) 
would  have  brought  him  to  his  eternal  reft  in  the  other  ?  Second* 
lyt  the  more  ready  and  prepared  the  Chriftian  is  tofufferfrom 
Vjod,  or  for  God,  the  more  God  is  engaged  to  take  care  for  him 
and  of  him.    A  good  General  is  moft  tender  of  that  fonldiers  life, 
who  is  leaft  tender  of  it  himfeif.    The  lefTe  the  Chriftian  values 
himfeif,  and  his  intcrefts  for  Gods  fake,  the  more  careful  God  is 
oi  him ,  either  to  keep  him  from  fuffering,  or  in  it.    Both  which 
are  meant,  CMatth.  16.28.  Whofoever  mil  lofe  his  life  fir  mj 
fake ,  /hall  finde  it.    Abraham  was  ready  to  offer  up  his  fonne, 
and  then  God  would  not  fuffer  him  to  do  it.     But  if  the  Lord  at 
any  time  takes  the  Chriftians  offer  ,  and  lets  the  blow  be  given 
(though  to  the  fevering  of  foulandbodyjheyet  (hews  his  ten- 
der care  of  him  ,  by  the  high  efteemehefets  upon  their  blood, 
which  is  not  more  prodigally  fpilt  by  mans  cruelty,  than  careful- 
ly gather'd  up  by  God,  precionsin  the  fight  of  the  Lord  it  the  death 
of  his  Saints. 

Thus  we  fee,  that  by  refigning  our  felves  up  readily  to  tfte  dif- 
pofureofGod,  we  engage  God  to  take  care  of  us,  what  ever  be- 
falls us.  And  that  man  or  woman  fure(if  any  other  in  the  world) 
muft  needs  live  comfortably,  that  hath  the  care  of  himfeif  whol- 
ly taken  oft  his  own  (boulders,  and  roll'dupon  God,  at  whofe 
finding  he  now  lives,  The  poor  widow  never  was  better  of  it, 
than  when  the  Prophet  kept  houfe  for  her,  (hec  freely  parted  with 

her 


the  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  peace.         455 


her  little  meal  for  the  Prophets  ufe ,  and  a  reward  of  her  faith  (in 
crediting  the  raeflage  he  brought  from  the  Lord,  fo  far  as  to 
give  the  bread  out  of  her  own  mouth ,  and  childs,  to  the  Prophet) 
fhe  is  provided  for  by  a  miracle,  1  Kings  1 7. 1 2 ,  1 3 .  O  when  a 
foul  is  once  thus  brought  to  the  foot  of  God ,  that  it  can  fincere-* 
ly  fay,  Lord,  here  I  am,  willing  to  deliver  upall  I  have,and  am  to 
be  at  th^  difpofc  ^  my  will  fhall  be  done,  when  thou  ft  a  ft  thy 
will  of  me.  God  accounts  himfclf  deeply  obliged  to  lookaf- 
ter  that  foul. 


CHAP.  XVI. 

The  number  of  true  Chriflians  but  little ,  Jhewn 
from  this  readineffe  to  fuffer^  that  is  required 
in  every  Chrijiian  more  or  leffey  with  an 
Exhortation  to  the  duty  ,  from  two  Argu^ 
mews* 


Firft,  muft  the  Chriftian  ftand  thus  fhod  in  readineffe  to  march  Vfe 
at  the  call  of  God  in  any  way  or  weather  >  This  will  exceed* 
ingly  thin  and  leflen  the  number  of  true  Chriftians,  to  what  they 
appear  to  be  at  the  firft  view ,  by  the  eftimate  of  an  eafie,  cheap 
profeilion,  He  that  fhould  come  into  our  AfTemblies ,  and  fee 
them  thracktand wedg'd info  clofe with  multitudes  flocking  af- 
ter the  Word,  might  wonder  at  firft  to  hear  the  Minifters  fink  the 
number  of  Chriftians  fo  low,  and  fpeak  of  them,as  fo  little  a  com- 
pany. Surely  their  eyes faile  them  ,  that  they  cannot  fee.  wood 
for  trees,  Chriftians  for  multitudes  of  Chriftians  that  ftand  before 
them.    This  very  thing  made  one  of  the  Difciples  ask  Chrift 

with 


ac  6  And  your  feet  (had  with 


with  no  little  ftranging  at  \t.Lord,are  there  few  that  fiallbefawd  ? 
Luke  1 3.23.  Obfervc  the  occafion  of  this  queftion.  Chrift,v.  22. 
yvent  through  the  Cities  and Villages  ,  teaching  and  journeying  to- 
wards Jerusalem.  He  fawChrift  fo  free  of  his  pains ,  to  preach  at 
every  town  he  came,  and  people  throng  after  him,  with  great  ex  - 
preffions  of  joy  that  fell  from  many,  ver.  17.  Then /aid  he,  Lord, 
are  there  fern  that  JhaU  be  faved  ?  As  if  he  hadfaid,This  ftrems  ve- 
ry ftrange,and  almoft  incredible.  To  fee  the  way  to  heaven  ftr ow- 
ed fo  thick  with  peoplesand  the  means  of  falvation  in  fuch  requeft, 
and  yet  but  few  laved  at  Iaft  •,  how  can  this  be  ?  Now  mark  our 
Saviours  unridling  this  Myftery.  And  he  [aid  to  them  (it  feemsthe 
man  fpoke  more  than  his  own  fcruplc,)  slrive  to  enter  in  at  the 
ftr  eight  gate -fir  manj,lfaj  unto  you,  {hall fee^but  JhaU not  be  able, 
ver.  24.  As  if  Chrift  had  (aid,  you  judge  by  a  wrong  rule.  If  pro- 
feffion  would  ferve  the  turne ,  and  flocking  after  Sermons  with 
fome  feeming  joy  at  the  word,were  enough  tofave,heaven  would 
foon  be  full :  Bur  as  you  love  your  fouls,  do  not  boult  or  try  your 
felves  by  this  courfe  five  •,  butftrhe  to  enter,  ajl»ri£s3«,  fight  and 
wreftle,  venture  life  and  limb,  rather  than  fallftiortof  heaven. 
For  many  JhaU fee\^,but  /hall  not  be  able  ^  that  is,  fcek  by  an  eafic 
profeftion,  and  cheap  Religion,  fuch  as  is  hearing  the  Word,  per- 
formance of  duties,  and  the  like-,  of  this  kinde  there  are  many  that 
will  come  and  walk  about  heaven  door,  willing  enough  to  enter, 
if  they  may  do  it  without  ruffling  their  pride  in  a  crowd,  or  ha- 
zarding their  prefent  carnal  intereft  by  any  conteft  and  fcuffle. 
But  they  JhaU  not  be  able, that  is,  to  enter-,  becaufe  their  carnal 
cowardly  hearts  (hall  not  be  able  to  ftrive;  fo  that  take  Chriftians 
under  the  notion  of  Seekers ,  and  by  Chrifts  own  Words ,  they 
are  many  •,  but  confider  them  under  the  notion  of  Striven,  fuch 
'as  ftand  ready  fhod  with  a  holy  refolution,  to  ftrive  even  to  blood 
(if  fuch  trials  meet  them  in  the  way  to  heaven)  rather  than  not 
enter  j  And  then  the  number  of  Chriftian  fouldiers  will  (brink  like 
Gideons  goodly  hoaft,  to  a  little  troop.  O  how  eafie  were  it  toin- 
ftance  in  feveral  forts  of  Chriftians  (fo  called  in  a  large  fenfe)  that 
have  not  this  Gofpel-flioc  to  their  foot ,  and  therefore  (ire  fo 
founder  and  falter,  when  once  they  be  brought  to  go  upon  (harp 
(tones/ 


SECT. 


the  preparation  of  tie  Gcfpelof  peace.  a  5  7 


SECT.  I. 

Fir  ft  ,the  ignorant  Chriftian,what  work  is  he  lik*  to  make  of 
fuflrering for  Chiitt  and  his  Gofpel  ?  and  they  are  not  the  leaft 
number  in  many  Congregations,  they  who  have  not  fo  much 
light  of  knowledge  in  their  under(hnding,as  to  know  whoChrilt 
is,and  what  he  hath  done  for  them,  will  they  have  fo  much  heat 
of  love  as  to  march  chearfully  after  him,  when  every  ftep  they 
rake  muft  fetch  blood  from  ihzm}Nabal  thought  he  gave  a  rati- 
onal anfwer  to  Davids  fervants  (that  asked  fome  relief  of  him 
in  their  prefent  ftraight)when  he  faid,fhall  I  take  my  bread  end 
my  water  yand  my  flejhythat  I  have  killed  for  my  (hearers, and  give 
it  to  men  1  knw  not  whence  they  be  ?  I  Sam.  2  f  .1  i.he  thought  it  too 
much  to  part  with,  upon  fo  little  acquaintance.  And  mil  the  ig- 
norant perfon  think  you,be  ready  to  part,not  only  with  his  bread 
and  fleili  out  of  the  pot,  (  a  little  of  his  eftate  I  mean  )  but  the 
flefh  of  his  own  body, if  called  to  furrer,and  all  this  at  the  com- 
mand  of  Chrift,  who  is  one  he  knows  not  whence  fie  is  ?  Paul 
gives  this  as  the  reafon  why  he  furTer'd,and  was  not  afhamed,f*r 
(faith  he)  I  know  whom  1  have  beli:ved,zlim.i.i  a.Story  tells  us 
of  the  Samaritans  (z.  mungrel  kinde  of  people)both  in  their  de- 
fcent  and  religion  )  that  when  it  went  well  with  the  people  of 
God  the  Ifraelltes,  then  they  would  claime  kindred  with  them, 
and  be  Jews ;  but  when  the  Church  of  God  was  under  any  out- 
ward affli&ion,than  they  would  difclaime  it  again.  And  we  may 
the  lefle  wonder  at  this  bafe  cowardly  fpirit  in  them,  if  we  read 
the  Character  Chrift  dves  of  them,to  be  a  people  that  worfhip't 
they  knew  not  what, Ji oh. 4.2 2.  Religion  hath  but  loofe  hold  of 
them  that  have  no  better  hold  of  it,than  ablinde  mans  hand. 

Secondly,carml  Gofpellers,who  keep  potfdTion  of  their  lulls, 
while  they  make  profelfion  of  Chrht.  A  generation  thefe  are 
that  have  nothing  to  prove  themfelves  Christians  by,  but  their 
baptifme,and  a  Chriftian-name  which  they  have  obtained  there- 
by ;  fuch  as  were  they  to  live  among  Tttrkj  and  Heathens, their 
language  and  conversations  (did  they  but  conceale  whence  they 
came  )  would  never  bewray  them  to  be  Chriftians;can  it  now  be 
rationally  thought  chat  thefe  are  the  men  and  women  who  (land 

N  n  n  ready 


2. 


£  z  o  And  your  feet  food  with 


ready  to  tV.fter  for  Ch rift  and  his  Gofpel  ?  No  Aire,  they  who 
will  not  wearChrilis yoke,  will  much  leffe  b^ar  hisburden.  If 
thi  yoke  of  the  command  be  thought  grievous,  that  binds 
them  to  duty,  they  will  much  more  tnink  the  burden  of  the 
CroiVe  inlupportable.He  that  will  not  do  for  Chrift,wiII  nor  dye 
for  (hat.  That  fervant  is  very  unlike  to  fight  to  blood  in  his 
Matters  quarrel,that  will  not  work  for  him  fo  as  to  fweat  in  his 
lervice. 

Thirdly,  the  Politick  Profeffor.  A  fundamental  Article 
in  whofe  Creed  is  to  fave  himfelf  not  f.om  finne,  but  from 
dan:er;  and  therefore  he  lhidies  the  times  more  than  the  Scri- 
ptures, and  is  often  looking  what  corner  the  winde  Iks  in,  that 
accordingly  he  may  fhapc  his  courfe,  and  order  hjs  profeflU- 
on,  which  like  the  Hedg-hogs  houfe,  ever  opens  towards  the 
vvarm  fide. 
Fourthly,  the  Covetous  Profeffor,  whofe  heart  and  head  are 
**•  fo  full  of  worldly  projects,  that  fuffeiingfor  Chriftmuft  reeds 

be  very  unwelcome  to  him,  andfinde  him  far  enough  from  fuch 
a  difpofition.    You  know  what  the  Egyptians  faid  of  the  Ifra- 
elites,  They  are  tntangled  in  the  landjht  wildernefi  hath  jhttt 
them  /»,Exod.i4.i?.Moretrueitisof  this  fort  of  ProfefTors, 
they  are  intangled  in  the  world ;  this  wildernefle  harh  fliut  them 
in.     A  man  whofe  foot  is  in  a  fnare,  is  as  fit  to  walk  and  run ; 
as  they  to  follow  Chrift,  when  to  do  it  may  prejudice  their 
worldly  intereft.     Our  Saviour  fpeaking  of  the  miferiesthat 
were  to  come  on  Jerufalem^  Woe  (  faith  he  )  unto  them  that  are 
with  childe,and  to  them  that  give  fuckjn  tkofe  daysjtol.  24.I  o. 
becaufe  it  would  be  more  difficult  for  them  to  efcape  the  danger 
by  flight  :    The  big-bellied  mother  being  unable  to  flie  faft  e- 
nough  with  her  childe  in  her  womb,  andthenurfe  as  unwilling 
to  leave  her  dear  babe  behind  her.But  many  more  woes  to  them, 
who  in  days  and  trials  and  perfecution  for  the  Gofpel,fhall  be 
found  big  with  the  world,  or  that  give  fuck  to  any  covetous  in- 
ordinate affection  to  the  creatures, fuch  will  finde  ithardro  e- 
fcape  the  temptation,  that  thefe  will  befet  them  with.  It  is  im- 
poffible  in  fuch  a  time  to  keep  eftate  and  Chrift  together.  And  as 
impolf.blefor  a  heart  that  is  fet  upon  the  world,to  t>e;  willing  to 
leave  it  for  Chrifts  company. 

Fifthly,the  Conceited  Profeffor  who  hath  an  high  opinion  of 

himfelf 


t  be  preparation  of  the  Gvfyel  of  peace,  45^ 

himfelf,  and  is  fo  fir  fro  n  an  hu.nb  t  holy  jealouiie  and  fear  of 
himfelf,  thar  hi  is  felf- confident.  Here  is  a  man  (lied  and  pre- 
pared  he  thinks,but  nor  with  the  ri^hc  Gofpel-fhoo:  Byftrengrh 
Jhali  nomanpreoai!e,l  Sam. 2. 9. He  char  in  £fcteea  iJM  tries  days 
was  fo  free  of  his  flefri  for  Chri(t(as  he  faid)  he  would  fee  hi<;  fat 
melt  in  the  fire(of  which  he  had  good  ftore)rarhcr  than  fail  back 
to  Popery,  lived  (poor  man )  to  lee  this  his  refolution  melr,and 
hrmfelf  cowardly  part  with  his  faith,  tofave  his  fat.    Thole 
thatglory  of  their  valour,when  they  put  on  the  h.unefle,  ever 
put  it  off  with  fhame.  The  heart  of  man  is  deceitful  above  all 
things,a  very  Jacob  that  will  fupplant  its  own  felf.  He  that  can- 
not take  the  length  of  his  own  foot,how  can  he  of  himfelf  fit 
a  fhooe  to  it  ? 


SECT.  II. 

Ba  exhorted  all  you  that  take  the  Name  of  Chrirt  upon  you,      %jr 
to  get  this  fhooe  of  preparation  on,and  keep  it  on.that  you  may         ' 
be  ready  at  all  times  to  follow  the  call  of  Gods  Providence, 
though  it  fhould  lead  you  into  a  fufferin^  condition.     Take  but 
two  Motives. 

Firft,  confider  (  Chrifrian  )  fuffering  worK  may  overtake  thee         1 . 
fuddenly,  before  thou  art  aware  of  it,  therefore  be  ready  fhod. 
Sometimes  orders  come  to  Souldiers  for  a  fudden  march,  they 
have  not  fo  much  as  an  houres  warning,but  muft  be  gone  as  foon 
as  the  Drum  bears.  And  fo  may'it  thou  be  call'd  out  (Chriftian,) 
before  thou  art  aware  into  the  field,  either  to  fuffer  for  God,  or 
from  God.  Abraham  had little  time  given  him  to  deal  with  his 
heart,  and  perfwade  it  into  a  compliance  with  God,for  offering 
hisfon  Jfaac.    Agreattryal,  and  fhort  warning,  Gen.  22.2. 
Tak/  novo  thy  fon^thy  ody  (on  Ifaac>  not  a  year,  a  month,a 
week  hence ;  but  l^oip.  This  was  in  the  night,and  Abraham  is 
gone  early  in  the  morning,  v.  3.    How  would  he  have  enter- 
tained this  ftrange  news,if  he  had  been  then  to  gain  the  confenc 
of  his  heart  ?  but  that  was  not  now  to  do ;  God  had  Abrahams 
heart  already,&therefore  he  doth  not  now  difpute  his  order,  but 
obeys.  God  can  make  a  fudden  alteration  in  thy  private  affairs 

Nnnz  Chrifti- 


5o  And  your  feet  (Jjod  with 


Chritiun  ;  how  couldft  thou  in  thy  perfect  ftrength  and  health, 
endure  to  hear  the  meflnge  of  death?ifGod  flioulo  before  any 
lin^ring  ficknefle  hath  brought  thee  into  fome  acquaintance 
with  death,  fay  no  more,  but  Up  and  <.  ie,as  once  to  Mofes  ?  arc 
thou  (hod  for  fuch  a  journeypcouldft  thou  hy,good  u  the  Word  of 
tl  e  Li^.?what  if  in  one  day  thou  wert  to  ftepout  of  honour  into 
difgrace,to  be  (trip'c  of  thy  filks  and  velvets,and  in  vile  raymenc 
call'd  to  a£t  a  beggars  part  ?  could'&  thou  rejoyce  thar  thou  art 
made  lovv  >   and  finde  thy  heart  ready   to  blefle  the   moll 
High  ?  This  would  fpeak  thee  a  foul  evangelically  fhod  in- 
deed. 

Again,  God  can  as  foon  change  the  fcene  in  the  publick  af- 
fairs of  the  times  thou  lived  in,  as  to  the  Gofpel  and  profelfion 
of  it.  May  be  now  Authority  fmilesonthe  Church  of Godjout 
within  a  while  it  may  frown ,and  the  ftorme  of  perfection  arife, 
^AUs  g.  t>  l.Tken  had  the  Churches  reft  throughout  all  fr*deaythis 
wasablefled  time  ;  but  how  long  did  it  laft  .?  alas  no:  long ,ch. >p> 
1 2.  There  is  fad  news  of  a  bloody  perfecution,  v .  I .  Abo,  t  this 
time  Herod  the  King  fir  etched  forth  his  hand  to  vex  certain  of  the 
Church  ;  in  which  perfecution,  James  the  brother  of  John  loft 
his  life  by  his  cruel  (word;  and  Peter  inprifon,  like  to  go  to 
the  fame  fhambles.  And  the  Church  driven  into  a  corner  to  pray 
in  the  night  together,t/.i2.0  what  a  fad  change  is  here  ?  now  in 
blood,  who  even  now  had  reft  on  every  fide.    It  is  obferv'd 
that  in  Iflands,  the  weather  is  far  more  variable  and  uncertain, 
than  in  the  Cement ;  here  you  may  know  ordinarily  what  wea- 
ther will  be  for  a  long  time  together,but  in  IJlandsjn  the  morn- 
ing we  know  not  what  weather  will  be  before  nightjwe  have  oft- 
times  Summer  and  Winter  in  the  fame  day,and  all  this  is  impu- 
ted to  the  near  neighbour-hood  of  the  Sea  that  furrounds  them. 
The  Saints  in  beaven,they  live(as  I  may  fo  fay)on  the  C  ontinent. 
AblefTed  conltancy  of  peace  and  reft  there  enjoyed.They  may 
know  by  what  peace  and  bliflerhey  have  at  prefenr,  what  they 
have  to  eternity ;  but  here  below,    the  Church  of  Chrift  is 
as  a  floating  Iftand,  co  ^pafled  with  the  world  (  I  mean  men  of 
the  world )  as  with  a  Sea ;  And  thefe  fometimes  blow  hot, 
and  fometimes  cold;  fometimes  they  are  ftill  and  peaceable,and 
fomcrimes  ennped  and  cruel  j  even  as  God  binds  up,  or  lets 
toofe  their  wrath.Now  Ctiridian/loth  it  not  behoove  thee  to  be 

aU 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace,  461 


alwayes  in  a  readinetfe  ?  when  thou  knoweft  not  but  the  next 
moment  the  vvinde  may  turn  into  the  cold  corner,and  the  times 
which  now  favour  the  Gofpel,  fo  as  to  fill  the  failes  of  thy  pro- 
fellion  with  all  encouragement  ,  may  on  a  fudden  blow 
full  on  thy  face,  and  oppo'e  it  as  much,  as  ic  did  before  counte- 
nance it  ? 

Secondly,confider  if  thy  feet  be  not  fhod  with  a  preparation  to  2. 

fufter  for  Chrift  here  on  earth,  thy  head  cannot  be  crown'd  in 
heaven,^<?;w.8.1 7.  If  children  jhen  heirs  Jers  of  (j '  odyioynt-Itirs 
with  Chrift.  Now  mark  the  following  words,  Iffo  be  we  fuffer 
with  Urn, that  we  may  be  alfo  glorified  together ;'tistrue,all  the 
Saints  do  not  dye  Martyrs  at  a  ftake,  but  every  Saint  mnft  have  a 
fpirtt  of  Martyrdome  (as  I  may  fo  call  it)  a  heart  prepared  for 
fuftering.God  never  intended  Ijaae  fhould  be  facrificed,yet  he 
will  have  Abraham  lay  the  knife  to  his  throat.  Thus  God  wilt 
have  us  lay  our  neck  on  the  bIock,and  be(as  P.Wfaid  o'himfelf) 
bound  in  the  Jpirit, under  a  fincere  purpofe  of  heart  to  give  up 
our  felves  to  his  will  and  pleafu re, which  is  called  aprefenting  exr 
bodies  a  living  facrificejioly  and  acceptable  ttntoGodf&om.li.i. 
That  as  the  Jew  brought  the  beaft  alive,and  prefentted  it  free- 
ly before  him  to  be  done  withall  as  God  had  commanded ;    fo 
we  are  to  prefent  our  bodies  before  God  to  be  difpofed  of  as  he 
commands,  both  in  *£tive  and  paflive  obedience.  He  that  re- 
fufeth  to  fuffer  for  Chrift,refufeth  alfo  to  reign  with  Chrift.  The 
putting  ojfthfkoo.-  among  the  fewsywas  a  ftgn  of  a  mans  putting 
off  the  right  of  an  inheritance, Dent.z%. 9,10.  Thus  did  Elime- 
lechs  kinfma  ,when  he  renounced  and  declaimed  any  right  thac 
he  m%hr  have  in  his  eftate?  he  drew  of  his  /fc<w,Ruth  4.7,8, 0 
Chriftian  rake  heed  of;:  utting  off  thy  Gofpel-{hooe;by  this  thou 
doft  difclaim  thy  right  in  heavens  inheritance,  no  portion  is 
there  laid  up  for  any  that  will  not  fuffer  for  Chrift. The  perfecti- 
ons which  the  Saints  endure  for  the  Gofpel,are  made  by  Paul  in 
evident  token  to  them  of  falvation,and  that  of  God,<P/>z7.i  2§. 
furely  then  the  denying  Chrift  to  efcape  fuffer  ing, is  a  fad  token 
of  perdition.O  Sirs,is  not  heavens  inheritance  worth  enduring 
a  little  trouble  for  it  >Naboths  vineyard  was  no  great  matter, 
yet  rather  than  he  wouldfnot  lofe  it,but )  fell  it  to  its  worth  or 
change  ir  for  a  better  in  another  place,he  chofe  to  lay  his  life  at 
Vice  by  provoking  a  mighty  King.Thou  can'flChriftian-jVenture 

N  n  n  3    ■  no 


462 


And  your  feet  food  with 


no  more  for  thy  heavenly  inheritance,  then  he  paid  for  refufing 
to  alienate  his  petty  patrimony  of  an  acre  or  two  of  land  ( thy 
temporal  life  I  mean).  And  belides  the  oddes  between  his  vine- 
yard oil  earth,and  thy  paradiie  in  heaven  ( which  is  infinite,  and 
luffers  no  proportion;)Thouh^ft  this  advantage  alio  of  him  in 
thy  Offerings  for  Chrift.Wben  Naboth  loft  his  life,he  loft  his  in- 
heritance alfo,that  he  fo  ftrove  to  keep;but  thy  perfecuting  ene- 
mies fhall  do  thee  this  friendly  ofHce  againit  their  wills,  that 
when  they  difpofTefle  thee  of  thy  life,they  fhall  help  thee  inro 
potlellion  of  thy  inheritance. 


T^t-  3|»  *jjp  3w?«*^v  <*£ 


CHAP.  XVII. 

Six    Directions  fir    the    helping    on  of  this 
jpiritual  jhooe. 

JjhefiA  £jte&'  T^He  great  Queftion  I  nowexpect  to  fall  from  thy 
X  mouchf  ChriftianJ  is,not  how  thou  majftefcape 
the(e  troubles  and  trials  which(as  the  evil  Gemus  of  the  Gofpel) 
do  always  attend  it ;  but  rather,how  thou  rr.ayft  gee  this  fhooe 
on, thy  heart  ready  for  a  march,to  go  and  meet  them  when  they 
come,  and  chearfully  wade  through  them,  whatever  they  be,or 
how  long  foever  they  flay  with  thee  ? 

■Arfa.  ^7/jp.This  is  a  queftion  well-becoming  a  Chriftian-fouldier; 

to  ask  for  Armour  wherewith  he  may  fight,  whereas  the  coward 
throws  away  his  Armour,  and  asks  whither  hemayflie.  I  uSall 
therefore  give  the  beft  counfel  I  can  in  thefe  few  parti- 
culars. 


SECT. 


the  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  peace.  4  5 3 


SECT.   I. 

Firft,look  carefully  to  the  ground  of  thy  active  obedience ,thit  it 

it  be  found  and  fincere.  The  fame  ri^ht  principles  whereby  the 
fmcere  foul  a5te  for  Chriit,  will  carry  him  to  fufter  for  Cbritf, 
when  a  call  from  God  comes  with  fuch  an  errand.  T7:e  children 
ofEphraim  being  ar  me  d^ard  carrying  bancs  jawed  backjn  th?  day 
of  battelyViz\.  7§.p.  why  ?  what  is  the  matter  ?  fo  well-armed, 
and  yet  fo  cowardly  ?  this  feems  ftrange  ;  read  the  precedent 
verje^  and  you  will  ceafe  wondering ;  they  are  called  there,^ 
g.  n. rat  ion  that  fet  not  their  heart  aright^andwhofe  [pint  mas  not 
jiedfafl  with  God.Lzz  the  Armour  be  what  it  will,yea,if  fouldiers 
were  in  a  Cattle  whofe foundation  were  rock,  and  walls  brafTe  ; 
yet  if  their  hearts  be  not  right  to  their  Prince,  an  eafie-  fiorme 
will  drive  them  from  the  walls,and  a  little  fcare  open  their  gate,. 
which  hath  not  this  bole  of  fincerky  on  it  to  hold  it  faft.  In  our 
'  late  wars  we  have  feen  that  honeft  hearts  within  thin  and  weak 
works,  have  held  the  Town,  when  no  walls  could  defend  trea- 
chery from  betraying  truft.  O  labour  for  hncerity  in  the  enga- 
ging at  flrft  for  God  and  hnGofpel.  Be  oft  asking  thy  owrt 
foul  for  whom  thou  prayeft,  hearert,  reformed  this  practice,  and 
that.  If  thou  can'ft  get  a  fatisfaetory  anfwer  from  thy  foul  here, 
thou  mayft  hope  well ;  if  faiths  working  hand  be  fincere,  then, 
its  fighting  hand  will  be  valiant.  That  place  is  obfervable,, 
Hcb.  Ii.  3  3.  Who  thro'Agh  faith  fubdued  Kingdomesy  wrought 
rightcoufneJfey  obtained  promifesy  flopped  the  mouths  of  Lyonsy 
cjuenched  th?  violence  of  fire  ;  and  with  other  great  things  that, 
faith  enabled  them  to  endure,  as  you  may  read  in  the  34,  *y,_ 
30.  verfes.  Where  I  pray  note,  how  the  power  of  faith  en- 
abling the  Chriftian  to  workji ghteoufieff  ,(that  is,live  holily  and 
righteoufly  )  is  reckon 'd  among  the  wonders  of  futferings,which 
it  (trengthened  them  to  endure.  Indeed  had  it  not  done  this,ic 
would  never  have  endured  rhefe. 


SECT. 


4  $4  A*d>  yoHr  feet  fi°d  wxb 


SECT.    IL 

2>  Secondly,  pray  for  a  fdfering  fpuitj  this  is  not  a   common 

gift,  which.every  carnal  Gofpeller,  and  flighty  profeflbr  hath. 
No,it  is  a  peculiar  gift,and  bellowed  but  on  a  few  lincere  fouls; 
TJntoyouit  u given  in  th.  behalf  of  C  brifi^noi  only  to  believe  on 
kim>  but  alfo  to  ftiffer  for  his  fakf,  Fhil.1.20.  All  the  parts  and 
common  gifts  that  a  man  hath,  will  never  enable  him  to  drink 
deep  of  this  cup  for  Chriftjfuch  is  the  pride  of  mans  heart,  he  had 
rather  fufter  any  way  than  this;  rather  from  himfelf,and  for  him- 
felf,  than  from  Chrift  or  for  Chrift;  you  would  wonder  to  fee 
fometimes  how  much  a  child<z  will  endure  at  his  piay,and  never 
cry  for  it;  this  fall,and  that  knock,  and  no  grear  matter  is  made 
of  it  by  him,becaufe  got  in  a  way  that  is  pleating  to  him  :  but  let 
his  father  whip  him,though  it  puts  him  not  to  half  the  fmarr,yet 
he  roars  and  takes  on,that  th~re  is  no  quieting  of  him. This  men 
can  bring  trouble  on  themfelves,  and  bite  in  their  complaints. 
They  can,  one  play  away  his  eftate  at  Cards  and  Dice,  and  ano- 
ther whore  away  his  health,  or  cut  off  many  years  from  his  life 
by  beaftly  drunkennefle ;  and  all  is  endured  patienely  ;  yea,  if 
they  had  their  money  and  ftrength  again,  they  fhould  go  the 
fame  way;  they  do  not  repent  of  what  their  lufts  have  coft 
them,  but  mourn  they  have  no  more  tobeftow  upon  them; 
their  lulls  fhall  have  all  tru'y  have  to  a  morfel  of  bread  in  their 
cupbourd,  and  drop  of  blood  in  their  veines ;  yea,they  are  not 
afraid  of  burning  in  hell,  as  their  fins  <JAl<rnyrs.  But  come,and 
ask  thefe,rhat  are  fo  free  of  their  purfe,flefh,foul,and  all,in  lufts 
fervice,  to  lay  their  eftate  or  life  for  a  few  moments  at  ftake,  in 
Chrifts  caufe  and  his  truths;  and  you  fhall  feethatGod  is  not 
fomuchbeh olden  to  them.And  therefore  pray  and  pray  again  for 
a  fufferingfpirit  in  Chrifts  caufe;  yea,  Saints  themfelves  need 
earnettly  plead  withjGod  for  this.  Alas!  they  do  not  findefuf- 
fering  work  follow  their  hand  fo  eafily.  The  flefh  loves  to  be 
cocker'd,  not  crucifi'd ;  many  a  groan  it  cofts  the  Chriftian,be- 
fore  he  can  learn  to  love  this  work.  Now  prayer,if  any  means, 
will  be  helpful  to  thee  in  this  particular.He  that  can  wreftle  with 
God,  need  not  fear  the  face  of  death  and  danger ;  Prayer  en- 

gageth 


the  preparation  of  the  Go/pel  of  peace.         ^65 


gageth  Gods  ftrength  and  wifdome  for  our  .help }  and  what    is 
too  bard  for  the  creature,  that  h  ath  God  at  his  b;ck  for  his  help, 
to  do  or  fuffer  ?  we  a  re  b:d  to  a  unt  it  ail  joy,  when  we  fall  into 
divers  temftations,]zmt..  i .  ?.     Not  temptations  to  finne,  but  for 
righteoufnefs  •,  he  means  trc     les  for  Lhr ift  and  his  Gofpel.  Ahi 
but  might  the  poor  Chriftian  iky,  tt  were  caufe  of  more  joy  to 
be  able  to  ftand  under  theie  temptarions,  than  to  faH  into  them . 
Little  joy  would  it  be  to  havethetempcaton,  and  not  the  grace 
to  endure  temptation.    True  indeed;  but  for  thy  comfort  Chri- 
ftian, he  that  leads  thee  into  this  temptation,  (lands  rtady  to 
help  thee  through  [th1  herefore,  v.  5.  there  is  a  gracious  J?  qui*,  kt 
up  ^  Jf  any  of  y  oh  {i.e.  you  fuflferers  chivflyj   lack,  veifdeme,  let 
him  as kjf  God  that  givethto  all  men  liberally,  and  ufbraideth  not, 
and  it  fh all  be  given  him.     This  mcthinks,  fliould  not  much  ftrein 
our  faith  to  believe.    There  are  not  many  Mafters  fj  dif -inge- 
nuous to  be  found,  that  would  twit  and  upbraid  their  fervant  for 
asking  humbly  their  counfel   in  a  work  of  peril  and   difficulty, 
which  they  chearfully  undertake  out  of  love  to  their  perfons  and 
obedience  to  their  command ;  how  much  lefs   needft  tthou  fear 
fuch  dealing  from  thy  God  I  If  thou  haft  fo  much  faith  and  love,  f^e  proverb 
as  to  venture  at  his  command  upon  the  tea  of  furTering  ;  hee'l  indeed  is.    He 
without  doubt  find  fo  much  mercy,  as  to  keep  thee  from  drown-  tb&t  would  km 
ing,  if  feeling  thy  feir  begin  to  fink,  thou  cryeft  earneftly  as  Pe-  'J£f«/But'l 
ter  did  to  him,  Lordjave  me  •,  wert  thou  even  under  water  j  pray-  fhink  Uwere 
er  would  boie  thee  up  again.  But  if  thou  beeft  not  a  man  of  pray-  better  ?hus,He 
er  before  furTering- work  comc,thou  wilt  be  able  to  do  little  at  that  that  would  go 

weapon  then.  ro fe»  C*isl 

mean  of/ufTer- 

■■ ; . — -     mg  )  let  him 

learn  to  pray, 
beforche  comes 
SECT.    III.  there. 

Thirdly,  be  much  in  the  meditation  of  a  furTering  (rate.  Hee'l 
fay  hisleffonbeft,  when  his  Mafter  calls  him  forth,  that  is  of- 
teneflconning  it  over  before  hand  to  himfelf,  do  by  the  troubles 
thou  mayeft  meet  with,  as  Porters  ufe  to  do  with  their  burdens  ^ 
they  will  lift  them  again  and  again,  before  they  take  them  on  to 
their  back.  Thus  do  thou,  be  often  lifting  up  in  thy  meditations 
thofe  evil*  that  may  befall  thec  for  Chrift  and  his  truth  ;  and  try 

O  0  o  how 


a&6  And  your  feet  (bod  with 


how  thou  couldft  fadge  with  them ,  if  called  to  endure  them  ; 
fe:  poverty,  pnfon,  banifhment,  fireand fagot  before  thee  on 
the  one  hand  •  and  the  precious  truths  of  Chrift  on  the  other , 
with   the  fwect  promifes  made  to  thofe  that  (hall  hold  fall 
the  word  of  patience  held  forth  inluch  an  hour  of  temptation. 
Suppofe  it  were  now  thy  very  cafe,  and  thou  wert  put  to  thy 
choice,  which  hand  thou  wouldft  take;  fludy  the  queftion  feri- 
oufly,  till  thou  determine!*  it  clearly  in  thy  conscience;  and 
do  this  often,  that  the  Arguments  which  flefh  and  blood  will 
then  be  fure  to  ufe  for  thy  pitying  thy  felf,  may  not  be  new  and 
unanswered;  nor  the  encouragements  and  ftrong  confolations , 
which  the  Word  affords,be  ftrange  and  under  any  fufp.tion  in  thy 
thoughts,  when  thou  art  to  venture  thy  life  upon  their  credit  and 
tiuth.    That  of  n^uguftine  we  (hall  find  mott  true,  mn  facile  in- 
z  'niuntur  prajiMa  in  adverfitatc^  qua  non  fuerint  in  p/tce  qua  fit  a. 
TIi€  promifes  are  our  Garrifon  and  faftnefs  at   fuch  time;  and 
we  {hall  not  find  it  eafie  to  runne   to  them  in  a  ftreight »  except 
we  were  acquainted  with  them  in  a  time  of  peace  •,  a  ftrangcr  that 
flies  to  a  houfe  for  refuge  in  the  dark  night,  he  fumbles  about 
the  door,  and  knows  not  how  to  find  the  latch;  his  enemy, 
if  nigh,  may  kill  him  before  he  can  open  the  door  h  but  one  that 
lives  in  the  houfe,  or  is  well  acquainted  with  it,  is  not  long  a  get- 
ting in.     Come  my  people  (faith  God)  enter  thou  into  thy  chambers, 
lfa.  26.  He  is  (hewing  them  their  lodgings  in  his  attributes  and 
proraifes,before  it  is  night,  and  their  fuferings  be  corae ,  thai: 
they  may  readily  find  the  way  to  them  in  the  dark. 


SECT.   IV. 

Fourthly  make  a  dailv  resignation  of  thy  fclf  up  to  the  Will  of 
God  Indeed  tins  ould  be,  as  it  were,  the  lockof  the  night , 
and  key  of  the  moaning:  we  fhould  open  and  (hut  our  eyes 
with  this  recommending  of  ou'  fives  into  the  hands  of  Go<f  This 
if  duly  perform'd  ,  n:  t  formiMy  'as  all  duties  frequently  repeat- 
ed, without  the  m  re  ca  e  are  like  to  be  )  but  folemnly,  would 
fweetlydifp  fe  the  foul  for  a  we'eomingo  any  trial  that  can  be- 
fall him.    The  awknefsof  our  hearts  to  fuffer,  comes  much  from 

di- 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.         4  67 

diftraft.  An  unbelieving  foul  treads  upon  the  promife,  ataman 
uponice^tfirft  going  upon  it ,  it  is  full  of  fears  and  cumukuous 
thoughts,  left  it  fhould  crack  j  now  :  his  daily  refrgr;a  Jon  of  thy 
heatt,  asic  will  give  thee  an  occafion  of  converfiog  more  with 
the  thoughts  of  Gods  power,  faithfulnefs  and  other  of  his  attri- 
butes, (for  want  of  familiarity  with  which,  jeabufies  arife  in  our 
hearts  when  put  to  any  great  plunge)  fo  alfo  it  willfurnifti 
thee  with  many  experiences  of  the  reality  both  of  his  attributes 
and  promifes ;  which  though  they  need  not  any  tdtlmony  from 
fence,  to  gain  them  credit  with  u?,  yet  fo  much  are  we  made  of 
fence,  foehildifti  and  weak  is  our  faith,  that  we  find  our  hearts 
much  hclpt  by  thofe  experiences  we  have  had,  to  rely  on  him  for 
the  future.  Look  therefore  carefully  to  this,  every  morning 
leave  tbj  felf  and  wayesin  Gods  hand  as  the  phrafeis,  T/ao.j^. 
And  at  night  look  again,  how  well  God  hath  iook't  to  histruft, 
and  fleep  not  till  thou  haft  affeded  thy  heart  with  his  faithful- 
nefs, and  laid  a  ftronger  charge  on  thy  heart  to  truft  it  felf  again 
in  Gods  keeping  in  the  night.  And  whentany  bretch  is  made,  and 
feeminglofs  befalls  thee  in  any  enjoyment,  which  thou  haft  by 
faith  enfured  of  thy  God  ,  obfervc  how  God  fills  up  that  breach, 
and  makes  up  that  lofs  to  thee  •,  and  reft  nor,  till  thou  haft  fully 
vindicatdd  the  good  Name  of  God  to  thy  own  heartjBe  fure  thou 
lefft  no  difcontent  or  diflatisfa&ion  lie  upon  thy  fpirit  at  Gods 
dealings  i  but  chide  thy  heart  for  it,  as  David  did  his ,  P/al.42. 
And  thus  doing  with  Gods  bleffing,  thou  {halt  keep  thy  faith  |p 
breath  for  a  longer  race,  when  called  to  runit. 


SECT.  V. 

Fifthly,  make  felf-denial  appear  as  rational  and  reafonable 
as  Dhou  canft  to  thy  foul  -,  the  ftronger  the  underftanding  is  able 
to  reafon  for  the  equity  and  rationality  of  any  work  or  duty ,  the 
more  readily  and  chearfuTfy  (if  the  heart  be  honeftand  fincere  ) 
is  it  done  rfappofe  Chriftian,  thy  God  (hould  call  for  thy  eftate, 
tfberty,  yea,  life  and  all,  can  it  feera  unreafonable  to  thee  ?  e- 
fpecially, 

Firft,  if  thou  confidcrcft  that  he  bids  thee  deliver  bis  own  , 

Ooo  2  not 


a  68  And  yeurftetfhod  with 


not  thy  own.  He  lent  thee  thefe,  but  he  never  gave  away  the 
propriety  of  them  from  bimfelf^doeft  chou  wrong  thy  neighbour, 
r.o  call  for  that  money  thou  lent'fthima  year  or  two  pair ■?  no 
Cure-  thou  thinkeft  he  hath  reafon  to  thank  tbee  for  lend* 
ing  it  to  him,  but  none  to  complain  for  calling  it  from 
him. 

Secondly,  confider,  he  doth  not,  indeed .  cannot  bid  thee  deny 
fo  much  for  him,  as  he  hath  done  for  thee     Is  reproach    for 
ChrilVfo  intolerable,  that  thy  proud  fpirit  cannot  brook  it?  why, 
,        who  ar  thou  ?  what  great  houfe  comeft   thou  from  ?  fee  One, 
r  .     m9       that  had  more  honour  to  lay  at  flake  than  I  hope  thou  dareft  pre* 
'  3"7>  tend.to^  Jefus    Chrift,  who  thought  it  m  rubber  J  to  be  equal with 

Cod,  but  made  himfelfofno  reputation. Is  it  pain  and  torment  thou 
art  afraid  of?  O  look  up  to  the  crofs  where  the  Lord  of  life 
hung  fo;  thy  fins :  And  thou  wilt  take  up.thy  own  ctok  more 
willingly,  and  thank  God  too,  that  he  hath  made  thine  fo  light 
and  eafie,  wheniie  provided  one  fo  heavy  and  tormenting  for  his 
beloved  Son. 

Thirdly  ycontidet  whatever  God  calls  thee  to  deny  for  his  truth, 
it  is  not  more  than  he  can  recompence.    Mrfes  law  this,  and  that 
made  him  leap  out  of  his  honours  and  riches  into  the  reproach  of 
C  hrift,  for  he  kad  refpetl  to  the  recompence  of  reward,  Heb.  1 1 .  26. 
It  is  much  that  a  man  will  deny  himfelfin,  for  foraething   his 
heart  ftrongly  defires  in  this  life,     if  a  man  be  greedy  of  gain,  he 
will  deny  himfelfof  half  the  nights  fleep,to  plot  in  his  bed,  or  rife 
early  from  it  to  be  it  his  work,  he  will  eat  homely  fare,  g   in  vile 
raiment,  dwell  in  a  fmoky  hole,  (as  we  fee  in  Lcndvn  )  for  the  con- 
veniency  of  a  (hop,  how  men  of  quality  will  crowd  thcmfelves  up 
into  a  li' tie  corner,  though  t   the  prejudice  of  their  healths,  and 
hazard  fomctimes  of  their  lives,  yet  hope  of  gain  rec  mpenccth 
all.    \  nd  now  put  their  gains  into  the  fcale  with  thine(i  hi  lftian) 
that  are  furc  to  come  in  by  denying  thy  felt  for  Chrift  (which 
thei  -are  not)  and  ask  thy  foul,  whether  it  blufh  not  to  ke  them 
fo  f  eelyder.y  themfllves  of  the  comfort  of  their  lives  for  an  ima- 
g  nary,  un  e-  tain,  at  belt  a  (hort  advantage,  while  thou  hut  left  fo 
with  v  hrft  for  a  few  outward  enjoyments,  which  (hail  be  paid 
thee  over  an  hundred  fold  here,and  beyond  what  thou  canit  now 
conceive,  when  thou  comeft  to  heavens  glory  ? 

SECT. 


the  preparation  of  the   Gofpei of peace.  40^1 


SECT.   VI. 

Sixthly,  la  hour  to  carry  on  the  work  of  mortification  every  day, 
to  further  degrees  than  other.    "Tis    the  fap   in  the  wood  that 
makes  it  hard  to  burn ,  and  corruption  unmodified  thac  ma^es 
the  Chriftian  loth  to  fufTer  y   dryJd   wood  will   not  'kindle 
fooner,  than  a  heart  dryed  and  mortified  to  the  lufts  of  the  world, 
will  endure  any  thing  for  Chrift .    The  JpoftJe  fpeaks  of   fome 
that  were  torturedjtit  accepting  ddiverancey  that  they  might  obtain 
*  better  rcfftrretlion,  Heb.n   35.  They  did  not  like  the  world  fo 
well,  as  being  fo  far  on  their  journey  to  feeavcn  ( though  in  lard 
way)  to  be  willing  to  come  back  to  live  in  it  any  longer.    Take 
heed  Chriftian,  of  leaving  any  worldly  luft  unmodified  in    thy 
foul  -,  this  will  never  confent  thou  fhouldeft  endure  much    for 
Chrift-,  few  (hips  fink  at  fea-  they  are  the  rocks  and  fli  Ives  that 
fplit  them  •,  couldft  thou  get  off  the  rocks  of  pride  and  unbelief, 
and  icape  knocking  on  the  fands  of  fear  of  man  ,  love  of  the 
world  and  the  like  lufts  j  thou.wouldft  do  well  enough  in  the 
greateft  ftorm  that  can  overtake   thee  in  the  fea  of  this   world. 
Jfamanpurgebimfelffr$m  theje,  hejhallhe  avejfel  unto  honour  „ 
fanclificd  and  meet  for  hU  Mjftersnfey  and  prepared  mto  every 
good  wor k^  2  Tim.  2.2 1.  O  that  we  knew  the  heaven  that  is  in  a 
mortified  foul !  one  that  is  crucified  to  the  world  and  lufts  of  it ; 
He  hath  the  advantage  of  any  other   in  doing  or  fuffering  for 
Chrift ,  and  enjoying  Chrift  in  both,     A  mortified  foul  lives  out 
of  all  noife  and  dilturbance  from  thofe  carnal  pa/lions ,  which  put 
all  out  of  quiet  where  they  come. .  VVheq  the  mortified  foul  goes 
to  duty,  here  are  not  thole  rude  and  unmannerly  intrufions  o/im? 
pertinent,  carnal,  yea,finful  thoughts  between  htm  and  his  God. 
Ishetogotoprifon  >  here  is  not  fuch  weeping  and  taking  on; 
no  luft  to  hang  about  his  legs,  and  break  hi-  heart  wich  its  in- 
frnuations-,  no  felf-love  to  entreat  him  thac  he  would  pity  him- 
felf,his  heart  is  free,got  out  of  the  acquaintance  of  thefe  troublers 
ofhis  peace,  andaprifonto  him,  it  he  may  .coupon  fo  honour- 
able an  errand  as  teftifying  to  the  truth  is     O  how  welcome    is 
ittohim.'  whereas  an  unmodified  heart  is  wedgM  in   with   fo 
great  acquaintance  and  kindred,  (as  I  may  fo  fay)  which  his  heart 

Ooo  3  hath 


4rfO  And  your  feetfljod  with 


hath  in  the  world,  that  it  is   impoftible  to  get  out  of  their  em- 
braces into  any  willingnefs  to  fuffer.     A  man  that  comes  into  an 
lnne  in  a  ftrange  place,  he  may  rife  at  what  time  he  pleafeth , 
and  be  gone  as  early  as  he  pleafeth  in  the  morning;    There  are 
none  entreat  him  to  ftay.    But  hard  to  get  out  of  a  friends  houfc-, 
thefe  like  the  Z^wYw  father  inlaw,  will  bedefiring  him  to  ftay 
one  day,and  then  one  more,and  another  after  that.    The  morti- 
fied foul  is  the  ftranger^  He  meets  with  no  difturbance  ( I  mean 
comparatively.)  in  his  journey  to  hcaverr,  while  the  unmodified 
one  is  linkt  in  faft  enough  for  getting  on  his  journey  in  hafte,  e- 
fpeciallyfo  long  as  the  flefh  hath  fo  fair  an  excufe  as  the    foul- 
nefs  of  the  way  or  weather,  any  hardftiip  likely  to  be  endured  for 
his  profeflion.I  have  read  of  one  of  the  Catoes,th&t  in  his  old  age 
he  withdrew  himfelf from  Rome  to  his  Countrey-houfe,  that  he 
might  fpend  his  elder  years  free  from  care  and  trouble.    And  all 
the  Romans  as  they  rode  by  his  houfe.ufed  to  fay,  Ifiefolusfcit  vl- 
vere.    This  man  alone  knows  how  to  live.    I  know  not  what  Art 
Catehid  to  disburthen  himfelf(byhis  retiring)of  theworlds  cares-, 
I  am  fure,a  man  may  go  into  the  Countrey,  and  yet  not  leave  the 
City  behind  him  •,  his  mind  may  be  in  a  crowd,  while  his  body  is 
in  the  folitude  of  a  Wilder  nefs.  Alas  poor  man,  he  was  a  ftranger 
to  the  Gofpel  j  had  he  been  but  acquainted  with  this ,   it  could 
have  (hewn  him  a  way  out  of  the  worlds  crowd,  in  the  midft  of 
Rome  it  felf,  and  that  is  by  mortifying  his  heart  to  the  world  both 
in  the  pieafurcs  and  troubles  of  it;  aRdthen  that  high  commen- 
dation might  have  been  given  him  without  an  hyperbole -y  for  to 
fpeak  ttuth,He  only  knows  aright  how  to  live  in  the  world,  that 
hath  learnt  to  die  to  the  world.  And  fo  much  for  theflrft  Point ; 
which  was,  that  the  Chriftian  is  to  ftand  ready  for  all  trials  and 
troubles  that  may  befall  him.  Thefecondfollows,whichis    ■■     ■ 


CHAP. 


the  preparation  of  the  Go/pel  of  peace.         qri 


CHAP.  XVIII. 


Sheweth   who  kthe  perfon  that  hjbodandpre- 
paredfor  fnjferings^  i.  e.     he  that  hath  the 
Cofpels  peace  in  hk  bofome  5  and  how  this  peace 
doth  prepare  for  foffering,  with  a  brief  Appli- 
cation of  all. 

THat  he  who  enjoys  the  peace  of  the  Gofpel  in  his  bofome  , 
is  the  perfon,  and  the  only  perfon,  that   Hands  (hod  for  all 
wayes,  prepared  for  all  troubles  and  trials. 


Dott.  zl 


SECT.  I. 

None  can  make  a  (hoe  to  the  creatures  foot,  fo  as  he  (hall  go 
eafie  on  hard  way,  but  Chrift  •,  he  can  do  it  to  the  creatures  full 
content ;  and  how  doth  he  itpTruly  no  other  way,  then  by  under- 
layingit,  or  if  you  will,  lining  it  with  the  peace  of  the  Gofpel  • 
what  though  the  way  be  fet  with  (harp  ftones  ?  if  this  (hoe  go 
between  the  Chriftians  foot  and  them,  they  cannot  much  be  felt. 
Salomon  teWsus^Tkewajes  ofwifdome  (that  is  Chrift)  are  vajes 
offleafanmtfs.  Buthowfo,  when  fome  of  them  arewayesof 
fuffering  ?  the  next  words  refolve  us,  And  all  her  paths  are  peace \ 
Prov.  3 .  17.  where  there  is  peace,fuch  peace  as  peace  with  God  and 
confcience,there  can  want  no  pleafure.  David  goes  merry  to  bed, 
when  he  hath  nothing  to  fupper ,   but  the  gladnefs  that  God 

by 


472  And  yon  r  feetjbod  with 


by  this  puts  into  his  heart,  and  promifeth  himfelf  a  better  nights 
reft  than  any  of  them  all,  that  are  feafted  with  the  worlds  chear, 
c7y^/.4  7.8.  Thou  ha fi  put gUdnefs  in  mj  hearty  more  than  in  the 
time  that  their  corn  and wine  encreafed.  J  will  both  lay  me  dorr* 
in  peace  and  [eep.  This  fame  peace  with  God  enjoy'd  in  the 
confeience,  redounds  to  the  comfort  of  the  body.  Now  David 
can  fleep  iweetly,whenhelies  on  a  hard  bed  what  here  he  faith 
he  would  do,  PJalme  3. 5^  he  faith  he  had  done,  /  laid  me  down 
andflcpt,  I  awaked,  for  the  Lord  fufiained  me.  The  title 
of  the  Pfalme  tells  us,  when  D*vid  had  this  fweet 
nights  reft  ;  not  wrien  he  lay  on  hisbedofdoun  in  his  (late- 
ly Palace  at  femfalem,  butwhen  hefted  for  his  life  from  his  un- 
natural [on  Abfalom,  and  poffibly  was  forced  to  lie  in  the  open 
field  under  the  Canopy  of  heaven.  Truly  it  muft  be  a  fofc  pillow 
indeed,  that  could  make  kim  forget  his  danger;  who  then  had 
fuch  a  difloyal  Army  at  his  back  hunting  ofhlm-  yea,fo  tranfeen- 
dent  is  the  fweet  influence  of  this  peace,  that  it  can  make  the  crea- 
ture lie  down  as  chearfully  to  fleep  in  the  grave,  as  on  the  foft- 
cft  bed  ;  you  will  fay  chat  childe  is  willing,  that  calls  to  be  put  to 
bed^  fome  of  the  Saints  have  defired  God  ro  lay  them  at  reft  in 
their  beds  of  duft:,  and  that  not  in  a  pet  and  difcontent  with 
their  prefent  trouble  as  Job  did  :  but  from  a  fweet  fence  of  this 
peace  in  their  bofomes.  Now  let  thj  fervant  depart  in  peace  ,  for 
mine  ejes  have  feenthy  [alvation,  was  the  Swan-like  feng  of  old 
Simeon.  He  /peaks  like  a  Merchant  that  had  got  all  his  goods  on 
(hip-board,  andnowdefirestheMafteroftheShip  tohoifefaile, 
2nd  be  gone  home-wards.  Indeed  what  ftiould  a  Chriftian,  that 
isbutafor-reigner  here,  defire  to  ftay  any  longer  for  in  the 
world,  but  to  get  this  full  lading  in  for  heaven?  and  when  hath 
hethar,if  not  when  he  is  aflured  of  his  peace  with  Cod  ?  This 
peace  of  the  Gofpel,  and  fenfe  of  the  love  of  God  in  the  foul  doth 
fo  admirably  conduce  to  the  enabling  of  a  perfon  in  all  difficul- 
ties and  temptations,and  troubles  •,  that  ordinarily  before  he  calls 
hisSaints  to  any  hard  fervice,or  hot  work,he  gives  them  a  draught 
of  this  cordial  wine  next  their  hearts  tochear  them  up,  and  im. 
boldcn  them  in  the  conflict.  God  calls  Abram  out  of  his  native 
countrey,  Gen.jz.t.  and  what  fo  fit,  asapromife  ofChrift  to 
bring  his  heart  to  Gods  foot,  v  2,3.  A  fnd  errand  it  was  that 
lent  Jar-L  to  Pad<*n~  Aram  3  he  fled  from  an  angry  wrathful  Bro- 
ther. 


the  preparation  of  the  Gofpel  of  peace.  473 

ther  that  hid  murdered  him  already  in  his  thoughts^  to  an  un- 
kinde  deceitful  Vncley  under  whom  he  fhould  endure  much 
hardfliip. 

Now  God  comes  in  a  fweet  Gofpel- vifion  to  comfort  this 
poof  pilgrim;for  by  that  ladder^!  ofe  foot  flood  on  earthy  nd  up 
reached  heavcn.Chrift.  was  iignified  to  his  faith  in  whom  heaven 
and  earth  meet,God  and  man  are  reconciied^and  by  the  moving 
npanddovtnof  the  Angels  on  the  /adder^tht  Miniitry  of  the  An- 
gels,which  Chrift  by  his  death  and  i ate rceilion  procures  for  his 
Saint$,that  they  fhall  tend  on  them,as  fervants  on  their  Matters 
childrenjfo  that  the  fum  of  all  is  as  much  as  if  God  had  faid,^- 
r*£,thy  brother  £/<*/*  hates^h£e,but  in  Chrift  I  am  redoncikd  to 
theejthy  Vncle  Labany  he  wilKwrongthee,  and  deal  hardly  by 
thee,but  fear  him  not ;  As  I  am  in  Chrift  at  peace  with  thee,fo 
through  him  thcu  fhalt  have  my  ei^ecial  care  over  thee,and  the 
guardianftiip  of  the*  holy  aAngels  about  thee ,  to  defend  thee 
where  ever  thou  goeft.The  Ifrae/ttes,  when  ready  to  take  their 
march  out  of  Egypt  into  a  defolate  wildernefle,  where  they 
ftisuld  be  put  to  many  plunges,and  their  faith  tryed  to  purpofe ; 
to  prepare  them  the  more  for  thefe,he  entertains  them  at  a  Go- 
fpel-fupper  before  they  goforth,I  mean  thePafleover,  which 
pointed  to  Chrifi  ;  andno  doubt  the  fweetnefs  of  this  feaft,made 
fome  gracious  fouls  among  them  (that  tafted  Chrift  in  it  Jendure 
the  hardship  and  hunger  of  the  wildernefle  the  more  chearfully. 
And  the  fame  care  and  love  did  our  Lwd  fefns  obferve  in  the  in- 
ftitution  of  hisSupper,chooiing  that  for  the  time  of  ere&ing  this 
fweet  Ordinance,when  his  Difciples  feet  flood  at  the  brink  of  a 
Sea  of  forrows  and  troub!es,which  his  death  and  the  confequen- 
ces  of  it  would  inevitably  bring  upon  them.  Now  the  pardon  of 
their  fins  feal'd  to  their  fouls  in  that  Ordinance,  muft  needs  be 
welcome)and  enable  them  to  wade  through  their  fufferings  the 
more  comfortably.  Indeed  the  great  care  which  Chrift  took  for 
his  DifcipleSjwhen  be  left  the  world,was  not  to  leave  them  a  qui- 
et world  to  live  in,but  to  arm  them  againft  a  troublefom  world ; 
and  to  dc  this,  he  labours  to  fatisfie  their  poor  hearts  with  his 
love  to  them,  and  his  fathers  love  t^  them  for  his  fake  y  he  be- 
queaths unto  them  his  peace,and  empties  it  in  the  fweet  confola- 
tions  of  it  into  their  bofomes ;  for  which  end  he  tells  them,  as 
foon  as  he  got  to  heaven,  he  would  fray  his  father  to  fend  the 

P  p  p  Comforter 


474         ^n^  ymr  feet  fioc^ Wli^ 


Comforter  to  them  with  all  lpeed,and  fends  them  to  ferufalemy 
there  toftay  privately, and  not  ^o  into  the  field, or  openly  con- 
ceit with  the  angry  world.till  they  received  the  ftrength  and  fuc- 
conr  which  the  Spirit  in  his  comforts  fhould  bring,  with  him.  By 
all  which  it  doth  abundantly  appear  how  powerful  this  Gofpel- 
peace  is  to  enable  the  foul  tor  differing.  Now  I  proceed  to  uSew 

how  this  peace  doth  prepare  the  heart  for  all  frfferings.  And  that 

it  doth  thefe  two  ways. 

1 .  Firft,as  it  brings  along  with  ir,and  poffefleth  the  foul(where  it 
comes)  with  fuch  glorious  priviledges,as  lift  k  above  all  danger 
and  damage  from  any  fufferings  whatever,  from  God, Man  or 
Dive  Is. 

2,  Secondly,  as  it  is  influential  into  the  Saints  graces  and 
affections,  exciting  them,  and  making  them  ait  to  fuch  a 
height ,  as  lifts  the  Chriftian.  above  the  fear  of  tr .  uble  and 
fuffering.. 


SECT.  Hi 

Firft,by  poffefling  the  believing  foul' of  fuch  glorious^  prrvi- 
ledges  as  fecure  it  from  any  real  hurt  that  the  worlt  of  fufferings 
can  do  it.  If  a  man  could  be  aflured,that  he  mighr  walk  as  fafely 
on  the  waves  of  the  Sea,or  in  the  flames  offireas  he  dottvin  has 
garden,  he  wouldbe  no  more  afraid  of  the  one,than  he  is  to  do 
the  other;or  if  a  man  had  fome  coat  of  maile  fecretly  about  him, 
that  would  undoubtedly  refill  all  blows,and  quench  all  (hot  that 
are  fenc  again(ibim,it  would  be  no  fuch  fcareful  thing  for  him  to 
ftand  in  the  midfl  of  fwords  and  guns :  Now  the  foul  that  is  in- 
deed at  peace  with  God,  is  inverted  with  fuch  privi ledges  as  do 
fet  it  above  all  hurt  and  damage  from  fufferings.  7  he  peace  of  God 
(is faid  )  to garrlfw  the  believers  heart  and  »»/W^,Phil;^.7. he 
is  furrounded  with  fuch  bleffed  priviledges,  that  he  is  as  fafe  as 
one  in  an  impregnable  £aflle.  A  perfon  at  peace  with  God,be« 
comes  than  a  childe  of  God^nd  when  once  tbeCh  riftian  comes 
to  know  his  relation,and  the  dear  love  Of  his  heavenly  Father  to 
him  ;  afflictions  from,or  fiiferings-from  him  dread  him  not,be- 
caufeJieinows  it  is  inconiifknt  with  the  love  of  a  father,either 

to 


the  preparation  eftbe  Gofpel  of  peace,  a  j* 

rohurt'hischilde,  himfelf,  or  furrer  him  to  be  hurt  by  another, 
if  he  can  help  it.    I  have  often  wondred  at  Ifaac's  patience  to 
fub.iiit  to  be  bound  for  a  facrifice,  and  fee  the  knife  fo  near  his 
throat  vvithout  any  hideous  out-cries  or  ftruglmgs  that  we  read 
of  ,•  he  was  old  enough  ro  be  apprehenfive  of  death,  and  the 
horrour  of  it,being  conceiv'd  by  fome  to  be  above  twenty  years 
of  age  ;  that  he  was  of  goodgrowth,is  out  of  doubt  by  the  wood 
which  Abraham  caufed  him  to  carry  for  the  facrifke  ;  but  fuck 
was  the  authority  Abraham  had  over  his  fon,and  the  confidence 
chat  Ifaac  had  in  his  father,  that  he  durft  put  his  lite  into  his 
hands,  which,  had  the  knife  been  in  any  other  hand,  he  would 
hardly  have  done ;  who  ever  may  be  the  inftrument  of  any  trou- 
ble to  a  Saint,  the  rod  or  fword  is  at  Gods  difpofure.  Chrift  faw 
the  cup  in  his  Fathers  hand,and  that  made  him  take  it  willingly. 
&r;W/y,every  foul  at  peace  with  God,is  heir  to  God.  This  fol- 
lows his  relation;//  children,  then  heirs ,  heirs  of  Godyand  jayfit- 
kelrs  with  Chrift,  Rom. 8. 1 7.  This  is  fuch  a  transcendent  pfivi- 
ledge,that  the  foul  to  whom  the  joyful  news  of  itcomes,is  lifted 
up  above  the  amazing  and  afTrihgtning  fears  of  any  fuffering.The 
ssfpoftlc  having  (in  the  fore- named  place)  but  a  little  fweeten'd 
his  thoughts  with  a  few  medications  on  this  foul-ravifhing  fub- 
je£t,fee  how  his  blefled  foul  is  raifed  into  a  holy  fleighting  of  all 
the  troubles  of  this  life;/  reckon  that  the  Offerings  of  this  frefent 
tim*,are  mot  worthy  to.be  compared  with  the  glory  that  {hall  be  re- 
vealed ir.  us,  ver.i  S.He  will  not  allow  his  own  foul,  or  any  that 
hath  the  hope  of  this  inheritance,fo  far  to  undervalue  the  glory 
thereof,  or  the  love  of  God  that  fetled  ic  on  them,  as  to  men- 
tion chegreatnefs  of  their  fufferings  in  any  way  of  pitying  them- 
felves  for  them.  As  if  he  had  faid,Hath  God  made  us  his  heirs, 
and  bellowed  heaven  upon  us  in  reverfion  ?  and  fhall  we  be  fo' 
poor-fpirited,to  fit  down  and  bemoan  our  felves  for  our  prefent 
forrows,that  are  no  more  to  be  compared  with  the  °lory  that  we 
are  going  to,than  the  little  point  of  time  (into  which  our  lhort 
life  with  all  our  fufferings  are  contracted  )  is  to  be  compared 
with  the  vaft  circumference  of  that  eternity  which  we  are  to 
fpend  in  endleffe  blifs  and  happinefs  ?  He  is  a  poor  man  we  fay, 
that  one  or  two  petty  lofles  quire  undoes.  And  he  a  poor  Chri- 
fiian  that  cries  out  he  is  undone  by  any  croife  in  this  life  ;   we 
mayfafely  conclude  fuch  a  one  either  is  heire  to  nothing  in 

Ppp2  the 


476  And  your  feet  (bed  with 


2. 


i. 


the  other  world,  or  huh  lictle  or  no  evidence  for  what  he  hach 

Secondly.this  peace  fhooes  and  prepares  the  Chriftian  forfuf- 
fermgvs  it  s  influential  into  his  graces  and  affeftions ;  mat  „. 

&  s  * as    s lum above the  fcir ot a™  <£- 

„  £!&  .thif.P£/5eL^erf>"  felt.makes  the  Chrifliau  uncon- 
querable m  his  fanh.Nothing  is  too  hard  for  fuch  a  one  to  be- 
lieve chatcarries  a  pardon  in  his  confcience.and  hath  his  pcTcc 
w.thGodfealedtohim..V<,/,,  was  to  meet  with  many  difficul- 
ties in  that  great  work  of conduaing  l[ml<m  olEgi  towards 

c*T"l thlref^e £ LWke them a" a Inore «& conoueft  to fe 
faith,  when  he  foouldbcaiTaulced  with  them,  GodghU  h  mat 
bs  very  firft  entnng  upon  his  charge  an  experiment  of  his 
mighty  power  w  fome  miracles,as  the  mrmnghU  roi  Z°IsT- 

jhrmg,taglli»,.btaifmni  M  ief*re,tbit  he  might  never  think 
any  thing  too*ard  for  that  God  to  do  towards  their  falvarinn 
and  del.verance.when  thingsfeem  moft  defpe  a^lnd how 2 
conquerable^,  was  after  thefe  in  his  faith,  wefee  Tru- 
ly,whenGodfpCakstoapoorfoul,he  gives  fuch  a  ceftimony  of 
his  Almightypower  and  love,  that  fo  long  as  the  fweet  fenfe  of 
S  '^.foul.the  creatures  faith  cannot  be  pofed  •  what 
doth  God  in  his  pardoning  mercy.but  turn  the  Serpent  of  the 
Law  with  M  its  threatn.ngs.from  which  the  finner  fled,  a°  chat 
which  would  fling  him  to  deatb.into  the  bloflbmin*  rod  of  The 
Gofpel.that  bnngsforth  the  fiveetfruit  of  peaceYn/hfe  ?And 

prous  hand  made  clean  and  founder  a  poor  finner  heart  Cous 

wnh  firj,made  c  ean  and  pure  by  wafting  in  rhe  blood  of Thrift* 

erra.nlythjsm.rac/e  of  mercy,  where  It  is  ftrongly  klievedt 

be  done,wi!l  make  it  eafie  for  that  foul  to  truft  God  in  » <feT  ^.f 

tempordMerings,andchearf,J[yforovvhim Throuoh  a  who?J 

S«K£&  '*?*&&**  D-^comt°u- 
2  Z  a  o„  1  J  nS  ft1*  "*  mer<-7-tfien  his  faith  is  up, 
am  can  ltron.,1,  afl  on  God  for  temporal  ddivennce  «•,,«£ 
finde  hnn  inder  ,hS  fBM  fcnfc  of  hi,  peace  wfthGodable'to 

/ytrfe 


the  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  peace.  477 

verfe  5.  and  now  fee  to  what  a  height  his  faith  a&s  on  God  as  to 
outward  troubles,wr/?  j.Thou  art  my  hiding  pUce,  thou  [halt 
preferve  me  from  trouble \thou  jkalt  comfraffe  n.e  about  with  fongs  of 
deliverance. Ht^ptUs  this,which  isthekfTe,from  the  other^that 
is  incomparably  the  greater  mercy. 

Secondly,  this  peace  with  God,  where  it  is  felt,  fills  the  heart  2. 

with  love  to  Chrift.  The  Chriftians  love  to  Chrift  takes  fire  at 
Chrifts  love  to  him.  And  the  hotter  Chrifts  love  lies  on  the 
foul,the  ftronger  reflection  doth  the  creature  make  of  love  to 
him  igain.She  loved  muchjo  whom  much  was  forgiven^LwV.-j.^-j. 
And  the  more  love,the  lefte  fear  there  will  be  of  fuffering.Wee'i 
venture  far  for  a  dear  friend ;  when  Chrift  told  his  difciples,L*- 
sjarw  was  dead ;  Thomas  would  needs  go  and  dye  with  him  for 
company, John  11.16.  fo  powerful  is  love,  even  as  ftrong  as 
deathjFor  a  good  man  (faith  the  Apoftle)y£;«f  would  even  dare  to 
dye ;  that  is  a  merciful,kmde  man^vhofe  Iovq  had  endeared  him 
to  them. How  much  more  daring  will  a  gracious  foul  be  to  facri- 
fice  his  life  for  a  good  God?  Thy  name  (faith  theSpoufeof 
Chrift)  is  as  oyntment  poured  forth,therefore  the  Virgins  love 
thee,G**M.2.Then  Chrifts  name  is  poured  forth,wheii  the  love 
of  God  through  him  is  fhed  abroad  in  the  foul. Let  this  precious 
box  be  but  broke,and  the  fweet  favour  of  it  diffufed  in  the  heart, 
and  it  will  take  away  the  unfavoury  fcent  of  the  moft  flinking  pri-  . 
fon  in  the  world.  This  heavenly  fire  of  Chrifts  love,  beaming 
powerfully  on  the  foul,will  not  only  put  out  the  kitchuvfire  of  . 
creature-love,  but  alfo  the  hell-fire  (as  I  may  call  it)  of  flavifh  , 
fear :  What  makes  us  fo  agalh't  at  the  thoughts  of  death,efpecial* 
ly  if  it  comes  towards  us  in  a  bloody  dreffe,  and  hath  fome  cir* 
cumftances  of  perfecutors  cruelty ,co  put  a  further  grimneffe  on 
its  unpleafing  countenance?furely  rhis  comes  from  guilt  and  un*  . 
acquaintance  with  Chrift,  and  what  he  hath  done  for  us ;  who  . 
came  partly  on  this  very  errand  into  the  world^To  deliver  them 
who  through  fear  of  death  were  all  their  life-time  fubjeU  to  bon* 
dage,  Heb.2.1 5.And  how  hath  he  done  iff  but  by  reconciling  us 
to  God,and  fo  reconciling  us  to  the  thoughts  of  death  it  felf,  as 
that  which  can  only  do  us  this  kinde  office,to  bring. us  andChrift 
( that  hath  done  all  this  for  us )  together. 

Thirdly ,this  peace  enjoy 'd  in  theChriftians  bofom.hath a  fweet        3.*  -. 
influence  into  his  felf-denial.  A  grace  fo  neceflary  to  Suffering, 

Ppp  3  tha;  • 


8  And  yottr  feet  JJjod  wi\ b 

that  ChuLt  lays  the  Crofleas  I  may  To  fry  upon  the  bick  of  this 
grace. /J^  ofoe'ver  will  come  after  me  Jet  him  deny  himfelf,  and 
take  up  bif  Croffe  s.r.d  follow  »*r,Mark  8. 3.;.  Another  f  with  Sim  n 
of  Cyrer.c )  may  be  compelled  to  carry  Chnfts  Crofle  after  him 
a  little  way;  but  'cis  the  felf-denyingfoul  that  will  (loop  wil- 
lingly ,and  down  of  his  knees  to  have  this  burthen  laid  on  him 
atChrifts  hand.  Now  the  feme  of  a  fouls  peace  with  God 
will  enable  the  creature  in  a  two-fold  felf-denial,  and  by 
both  fweecly  dii'pofe  him  for  any  furthering  from  or  for 
Chrift. 

Fir  sty  it  will  enable  him  to  deny  himfelf  in  hisiuiful  felf.Stn 
may  well  be  call'd  our  felf,it  cleaves  fo  clofe  to  us,even  as  mem- 
bers to  our  body  ;  as  hard  to  mortifie  a  luft,as  to  cut  orf  a  joynt. 
And  fome  hns  are  more  our  felf  than  others,  as  our  life  is  more 
bound  up  in  fome  members  than  others ;  welljet  them  be  what 
they  wil^thereisagooddayjin  which,if  Chrift  asks  the  head  of 
the  proudeftluft  among  them  all,he  fhall  have  it  with  leiYe  re- 
gret than  Herodias  obtain'd  the  Baptifis  at  Hero  is  hands.  And 
what  is  that  gaudy  day,in  which  the  Chriftian  can  fo  freely  deny 
his  fin,and  deliver  it  up  to  juftice,bat  when  (Thrift  is  feafting  him 
with  this  hidden  Manna  of  pardon  and  peace  ?  A  true  friend  will 
rather  deny  himfelf  than  one  he  loves  dearly,if  it  be  in  his  power 
to  grant  his  requeft :  but  leaft  of  all  can  he  deny  him,  when  his 
friend  is  doing  him  a  greater  kindnefle  at  the  fame  time,  that  he 
asks  a  lefTe.  No  fuch  picklock  to  open  the  heart  as  love.  When 
love  comes  a  begging,and  that  at  a  time  when  it  is  fhewing  it 
felf  in  fome  eminent  expreflion  of  kindnefle  to  him  at  whofe 
door  (he  knocks,there  is  little  fear  but  to  fpeed.£/?^r  chofe  that 
time  to  engage  Ahafhtterus's  heart  againlt  Haman  her  enemy, 
when  fhe  expreft  her  love  moft  to  Aha(huemsy  viz.  at  a  ban- 
quet. When  doth  God  give,  or  indeed  when  can  he  give  the  like 
demonftracion  of  his  love  to  a  poor  foul,  as  when  he  entertains 
it  at  this  Gofpehbanquet  ?  Now  fure,  if  ever,  God  may  prevail 
with  bis  child  to  fend  the  curfed  Amalakfte  to  the  gallows,  his 
Juft  to  the  gibbet ;  do  you  think  that  (JMary  Magdal  n  when 
thatblellednews  dropt  from  Ch rift  into  her-  mournful  heart, 
that  her  fins  which  were  many  ft  ere  aU  forgiven  her,could  now 
have  been  periwaded  to  have  opened  the  door  to  any  of  her 
forme  rlovers,and  gone  out  of  thefe  embraces  of  Chrifts  love, 

to 


the  preparation  of  the  Gojpel  of  peace.  479 

to  have  plaid  the  whore  again?  No,  I  doubr  not  but  fhevsouJd 
fooner  have  chofe  the  flames  of  Martyrdome  than  of  li.ft.  In- 
deed that  which  can  make  the  creature  deny  a  lutf,can  make  the 
creature  it  fhall  not  deny  a  CrofTe. 

Secondly^  the  fenfe  of  this  peace  will  enable  the  Chriftian  to 
deny  his  camalenjoyments.  Andthefethe  Chriflian  finds  his 
great  pul-backs  from  fuffering.As  the  heartburns  in  the  hot  fit  of 
love  to  the  pleafures  and  profits  of  this  world  when  he  abounds 
with  them ;  in  that  degree  will  his  fl  taking  fit  of  fear  and  grief 
be ,  when  Chrift  calls  him  to  part  with  them. What  the  fweet 
wines  and  dainty  fare  of  Capita  was  to  Uanlbals  fouIdiers,that 
we  {hall  finde  any  intemperance  of  heart  to  the  creature  will  be 
to  Us;  it  will  enervate  our  fpirits,  and  fo  effeminate  us  that  we 
lhall  have  little  mind  to  endure  hardfhip,when  drawn  into  the 
field  to  look  an  enemy  in  the  face.Now  the  fe  ife  of  this  Gofpel- 
peace,will  dead  the  heart  to  the  creature,and  facilitate  the  work- 
offelf-denialjas  to  the  greateft  enjoyments  the  world  hath.9<^ 
forb'idffzilh.  Paftl)that  I  fkould  glory  fave  in  the  Crojfe  of  our  Lord 
Jefus^by  whom  the  world  is  crucified  to  me,and  1 unto  the  world  ; 
G*\.6.i4.rPauls  heart  is  dead  to  the  world; now  mark  what  gave 
the  deaths  wound  to  his  carnal  affections.  By  whom  (  faith  he) 
the  world  is  crucified  tom?yandI  unto  /V,that  is,  Chriftand  his 
CrofTe.  There  was  a  time  indeed  that  Taul  loved  the  world  as 
well  as  who  mofobut  fince  he  hath  been  acquainted  with  Chrift, 
and  the  mercy  of  God  in  him  to  his  foul  pardoning  his  fins,  and 
receiving  him  into  favour  and  fellowship  with  himfelf ;  now 
he  is  of  another  minde ;  he  leaves  the  world  as  Saul  his  feeking 
of  the  Afles  at  the  news  of  a  Kingdome;his  haunt  lies  another 
way  now.  Let  the*  Zibaes  of  the  world  take  the  world,  and  all 
they  can  make  of  it  with  their  foft  husbandry.  Hee'l  -  not  grutch 
them  their  happinefs,forasmuch  as  his  heavenly  Lord  and  King 
iscomeinpeacetohisfoul.  None  can  part  with  the  comfort 
of  the  creature  fochearfully  as  he  who  hath  his  mouth  at  the 
fountain-head,  the  love  of  God  himfelf.  Parents  are  near,and 
friends  are  dear,  yet  a  loving  wife  can  forget  her  fathers  houfe 
and  leave  her  old  friends  company  to  go  with  her  husband, 
though  it  be  to  a  prifonjhow  much  more  will  a  gracious  foul  bid 
adue  xo  thefe,  yea,  life  it  felf,  to  go  to  Chrift,  efpecialLy 
'jvhen.  he   hath  iciiL  the  Comforter  into,  his   bofome,    to 


hear. 


.-.~.-.i.~.-* 


480  And  your  feet  fliod  with 


cheers  Wax  in  the  tblitarineffe  of  the  way  with  his  i weet  com- 
pany. 

A  fourth  fuflfering  grace  which  the  fweet  fenfe  thisGofpel- 
peace  doth  promoters  ^Patience  ;  affli&ion  and  fuff_*ring  to  a 
patient  foul  are  not  grievous.  Patience  is,  as  one  calls  it, 
T-^f  <?  tyj$c ,  The  conco^ive  faculty  of  the  foul.  That 
grace  which  digefts  all  things,and  turns  them  into  good  nourifh- 
ment.  Meats  of  hard  digeltion  will  not  do  well  with  fqueamifh 
weak  ftomacks,and  therefore  they  are  dainty  and  nice  in  their 
diet ;  whereas  men  of  ftrong  ltomacks,they  refufe  no  meat  that 
is  fet  before  them  ;  all  fare  is  alike  to  them.  Truly  chus  there  are 
fome things  are  of  very  hard  digeflion  to  the  fpirits  of  men;the 
peevith,  paflionate,  fhort-fpirited  profeffor  will  never  concoft 
reproaches,  prifonand  death  it  felf,  but  rather  quarrel  with 
his  profelfion,  if  fuch  fare  as  thefe  attend  the  Gofpel.wfc*»  tri- 
bulation  or  perfictttion  arifeth  becaufe  of  the  Word  by  and  by  he  is 
ojfendcdy1A.it.  13.21.  This  will  not  fby  in  his  ftomack,but 
makes  him  caft  up  even  that  which  elfe  he  could  have  kept,  (  a 
profeflion  of  Chrirt  )  might  he  have  had  it  with  a  quiet  life  and 
a  whole  skin.  But  now  the  patient  foul,  he  makes  his  meal  of 
what  God  in  his  providence  fees  before  himjif  peace  and  pro- 
fperity  be  ferv'd  up  with  the  Gotyel,  he  is  thankful,and  enjoyes 
the  fweetnefsof  the  mercy  while  it  latts;if  God  takes  thefe  away, 
and  inftead  of  them  will  have  him  eat  the  Gofpel-feaft  with 
foure  herbs  of  affliction  and  perfection,  it  fhall  not  make  him 
fkk  of  his  chear.lt  is  but  eating  the  more  largely  of  the  comforts 
of  the  Gofpel  with  them,and  they  go  down  very  well  wrapt  up  in 
them.  Indeed  the  Christian  is  beholden  to  tbofe  confolations 
which  flow  from  the  peace  of  the  Gofpel  for  bis  patience.  It 
were  impoflible  for  the  people  of  God  to  endure  what  fome- 
times  they  meet  with  from  men  and  Divels  alfo,as  they  do,had 
they  not  fweet  help  from  the  fenfe  of  Gods  love  in  Chrift,  that 
lies  glowing  at  their  hearts  in  inward  peace  and  joy.The  J-poftle 
refolves  all  the  Saints  patience  experience  and  hope,  yea,  glory- 
ing in  their  tribulati©ns,into  this,as  the  caufeof  all ;  becanfe  the 
love  of  Cjod  isfked  abroad  in  our  hearts  by  the  holy  Cjhoftfvhith  is 
given  unto  «4,Rom.5.f.fin  makes  fuffe ring  intolerable ;  when 
that  is  gone,the  worft  part  of  the  trouble  is  removed;a  light  care 
goes  thorough  that  flough  eafily,  where  the  cartdeeplyloaden 

is 


the  preparation  of  the  Gifpcl  of  peace. 


is  fee  faft ;  guilt  loads  the  foul ,  andbemiresitin  any  fuftering^ 
take  that  away ,  and  let  God  fpeak  peace  to  his  foul ,  and 
he  that  raged  before  like  a  mad  man  under  the  croffe,  (hall 
carry  it  without  winching  and  whining.  The  peace  of  God 
Jball  keep  yonr  hearts  and  mindes ,  Phil.  3  Now  what  is  pa- 
tience but  the  keeping  of  the  heart  and  minde  compofed  and 
ferene  in  all  troubles  that  befall  us?  But  a  word  or  two  for 
Application. 


SECT.  nr. 

Firft,  this  informs  our  judgements  in  two  particulars.    Firft,  „  ^re  r 
what  to  judge  of  their  patience  in  affliction,  that  have  no  intereft 
in  the  Gofpels  peace.  Secondly,  what  to  think  of  their  peace, 
who  in  affli&ion  have  no  patience  at  all. 

Firft,  fome  you  (hall  fee  very  ftill  and  quiet  inaffii&ion,  yet 
meer  ftrangers  to  this  peace,  ignorant  of  Chrift  the  Peace- maker, 
walking  in  oppofition  to  the  terms  God  offers  peace  in  the  Gof- 
pcl  upon  ,  a^d  yet  very  calme  in  affli&ion.  Certainly  all  is  not 
right  with  this  poor  creature ;  if  he  had  any  fenfe  how  it  is 
with  him,  he  would  have  little  patience  to  fee  himfelf  under  the 
hand  of  God-,  and  not  know  but  it  may  leave  him  in  hell  before 
it  hath  done  with  him.  When  I  fee  one  runne  over  ftones  and 
hard  way,  barefoot  and  not  complaine,  I  do  not  admire  his  pati- 
ence, but  pity  the  poor  creature  that  hath  benummed  hisfeet,and 
as  it  were  foled  them  with  a  brawny  dead  kinde  of  flefh  ,  fo  as 
to  lofe  his  feeling  :  But  fave  your  pity  much  more  for  thofe 
whofe  confeiences  are  fo  benummed,  and  hearts  petrified  into  a 
fenlkffe  ftupidity  ,  that  they  feelc  their  mifery  no  more 
than  the  (tone  doth  the  Mafons  (aw  which  cuts  it  afunder.  Of  all 
men  out  of  hell,  none  more  to  be  pitied,  than  he  that  hangs  over 
the  mouth  of  it,  andyetisfearlelTeofhisc'anger^  while  thus  the 
poor  wretch  is  uncapable  of  all  means  for  his  good .  What  good 
does  Phyfick  put  into  a  dead  mans  mouth  ?  if  he  cannot  be  cha- 
fed to  fome  fenfe  of  his  conditional!  applications  are  in  vain.  And 
if  afflictions  (which  are  the  ftrongeft  Phyfick)  leave  the  creature 
fenfelefTe  ,  there  is  little  hope  left  that  any  other  will  work  upon 
him.  Q^q  q  Se- 


(j  I  Andyi  ur  feet  fbud  with 


Secondly,  what  (hall  we  think  of  thofe  that  are  great  preten- 
der to  this  peace,  ut  cannot  think  with  any  patience  of  luftcring 
from  God  or  for  ood  ?  certainly  io  far  as  thee:  eature  is  acquain- 
ted with  this  peace,  and  hath  the  ti  ue  fenfe  of  Gods  love  in  ^  lirift 
Jying  warme  at  his  heart,  he  cannot  but  fiude  proportionably  his 
heart  ftand  ready  to  fubmic  to  any  fufTcrir.g  that  God  layes  out 
for  htm.  And  therefore  it  behoves  us  well  to  rry  cur  peace  and 
comfort.  If  thou  haft  no  heart  to fuffer  for  God,  bur  choofeft 
aiinnetoefcapeacroflc,thy  peace  is  falfej  if  thou  hail  but  lit- 
tle patience  under  ordinary  afrli&ions,  to  compofe  thy  fyirit  from 
murmuring,  and  fuftaine  thy  heart  from  finking, thy  faith  on  the. 
promife  is  weak.  If  thou  faint  in  the  day  ofadverfetj^  thy  Jirtngth 
# ]W/rProv,24  io. 
Vfe  2.  Secondly,  let  this  ftirre  thee  up,  Cfariftian,  to  be  very  tender 

and  chary  of  thy  peace  with  God  and  thy  own  confeience.  Keep 
this  peace  clear  and  unbroken ,  and  it  will  keep  thy  heart  whole, 
when  the  whole  world  breaks  about  thee.  So  long  as  this  peace 
of  God  rules  in  yc  ur  hearts ,  you  are  fafc  from  lear  or  danger, 
though  in  a  prifon,  at  a  ftake.  But  if  thou  fuffereft  that  to  be 
wounded,  then  thy  enemies  will  come  upon  thee  as  Simeon  and 
Levi  on  the  men  of  Secbem  when  fore,  and  be  too  had  for  thee. 
O  'tis  fad  ,  (friends)  you  will  finde  it  fo ,  to  go  with  fore  and 
fmarcing consciences  into  a  iurTering  condition.  A  thorne  in  the 
foot  will  make  any  wayunealieto  the  traveller,  and  guilt  in 
the  confeience  any  condition  uncomfortable  to  the  Chriftian, 
bot  moft  of  all  a  fuffering  one.  Now,  if  you  will  keepy?  ur  peace 
unbroken ,  you  muft  beftow  fome  attendance  on  it ,  and  fet  as 
it  were  a  life  guard  about  it.  The  choiceft  flowers  need  moft* 
looking  to.  1  he  richer  the  treafure ,  tru  fafer  we  lay  it.  This 
/*eace  is  thy  trealure,  look  well  where  thou  layeft  it.  Two  ways 
our  Saviour  tells  us,  that  worldly  treafure,  fuch  as  filver  and  gold 
is  .  may  be  loft  •,  by  thieves  that  breakjn  and  carry  it  away, and  by 
rvft  that  eats  and  corrupts  it, Mat  6. 1 9  .There  are  two  ways  fome- 
thirg'ike  thcfe,whe.  in  theCbrtftian  may  go  by  thelolTe  in  this  his 
heavci.lyt  eafure  of  inward  peace  nnd  comfort-  prefumptuous 
fnr.es  ,  thefc  are  the  thieves  that  break*  through  andftealethe 
Saints  comfort  away-,  when  the  ChriPian  comes  to  look  into 
his  fuul  after  fuch  a  bold  act ,  and  thinks  to  entertain  himfelf  (as 
formerly  J  with  the  comfo.ts  of  his  pardoned  ftate,  /ntereft  in 

Chrift 


the  preparation  of:  he  Ccjpel  of  peace.  a  § 

Chrift,  and  hopes  of  heaven  through  him,  alas  he  fin  d<  a  /ad 
change;  no  promife  that  will  give  out  irs  conflations  to  him. 
The  i  ellar  door  is  lockt, Chrift  with-drawn,  and  the  keys  carried 
away  with  him.    He  may  even  cry  out  with  a  fad  complaint,  as 
Mary  when  (he  found  not  Cbnfts  body  in  the  Sepulchre,  They 
have  taken  away  my  Lard  ,  and  I  know  not  where  they  have  laid 
kirn.  |  T  hus  the  Chriftian  may  with  aking  heart  bemoane  his  fol- 
ly ;  my  pride,  my  uncleannefle ,  my  earthly-mindednefTe,  they 
have  taken  away  my  treafure ,  rob'd  me  of  my  comfort- 1  could 
never  have  comfortable  fightofGods  face  in  any  duty  or  promife 
fince  I  fell  into  that  foulfinne.    And  therefore  Chriftian,  have 
a  care  of  l'uch  robbers  of  thy  peace  as  this.     The  jfirit  of  man  i* 
called  the  candle  the  Lord,  Prov.  20. 27.     Hath  God  lighted  thy 
candle  (Chriftian)  cheared  thy  fpirit,  (I  mean  J  with  the  fenfe  of 
his  love?  Take  heed  of  prefumptuous  finocs ;  if  fuch.  a  thief  be 
futfered  in  this  thy  candle,  thy  comfort  will  foon  fwaile  out.  Haft 
thou  fallen  iuto  the  hand*  of  any  fiich  prefumptuous  finnes,    * 
that  have  ftollen  thy  peace  from  thee?  fend  fpeedily  thy  hue 
and  cry  after  then^  I  mean,  make  thy  fad  raoane  to  God,renew 
thy  repentance  out  of  hand,  and  raife  heaven  upon  them  by  a  fpi- 
rit of  prayer.    This  is  no  time  to  delay-  the  further  thouletteft 
thefe  finnes  go  without  repentance,  the  harder  thou  wilt  finde  it 
to  recover  thy  loft  peace  and  joy  out  of  their  hands  j  and  for  thy 
encouragement  know,  God  is  ready  upon  thy  feriousand  folcmn 
return,  to  reftore  thee  to  the  joy  of  his  falvation  ,  and  do  juftice 
upon  thefe  enemies  of  thy  foul  for  thee  by  his  mortifying  grace, 
if  thou  wilt  rrofecute  the  Law  upon  them  clofely  and  vigoroufly, 
without  relenting  towards  them,  or  being  bribed  with  the  p!ea- 
fure>or  carnal  advantage,  that  they  will  not  fpare  toorTer,n  their 
lives  may  be  fpared. 

Again,  as  prefumptucus  finnes  are  the  thieves,  that  with  a 
high  hand  rob  the  Chriftian  of  his  comfort .  fo  floth  and  negli- 
gence are  as  the  ruft,  that  in  time  u  ill  fret  into  hiscomfurr,  and 
eat  out  the  heart  and  ftrength  of  it.  It  is  imp  fiible  that  the 
Chriftian  win  is  carelefle  and  fecurc  in  his  walking,  infrequent  or 
negligent  in  his  communion  with  God,  fhou'd  long  be  owner  of 
mnch  peace  or  comfort  that  is  true  j  what  if  thou  doeft  not 
pour  water  of  preiumpiuous  finnes  into  the  Lamp  of  thy  foy'tb 
quench  it  ?  'tis  enough,  if  thou  doeft  not  pourojlcofcury  to 

Qj]  q  2  feed 


> 


484 


Above  all  taking 


feed  and  maintaine  ic.     Thou  art  a  murthercr  to  thy  comfort  by 
ftarving  it  as  well  as  by  ftabbing  of  if. 


Ver.   i  6. 

Above  all ,  taking  the  jhield  of  faith,  whereby  ye 

foall  be  able  to  quench  the  fiery  darts 

of  the  wicked, 

He  fourth  piece  in  the  Ghriftian  ?  amply  , 
prefents  it  felf  in  this  verfe  to  our  confi- 
deration.  And  that  is,  The  Jbield  of  faith. 
A  grace  of  graces  it  is ,  and  here  fitly 
placed  in  the  midft  of  the'other  her  com- 
panions.lt  ftands(me  thinks)among  them 
as  the  heart  in  the  mid  ft  of  the  body  ^  or 
if  you  pleafe ,  us  David,  when  Samuel 
anointed  him  in  the  midft  of  his  brethren  , 
i  Sam.  1 6  1 3.  The  Apoftle,  when  he  comes-to  fpeak  of  this  grace, 
he  doth  as  it  were,  lift  up  its  head,  and  anoint  it  above  all  its 
fellows,  asfbeve  all  take  the  fhield  of  faith,  and  the  words  cafi- 
ly  fall  into  thefe  two  general  parts. 

1.  An  exhortation,  above  all  take  the  fhield  of  faith. 

2.  A  powerful  argument  prefling  the  Exhortation,   Whereby 
ye  fhall  be  able  to  quench  the  fiery  darts  of  the  wicked. 


CHAP. 


the  fjield  of  faith. 


485 


CHAP.  I. 


Ihe  Explication  of  the  words  in  a  four- 
fold enquiry. 

IN  the  Exhortation,  thefe  four  particulars  call  for  our  enquiry 
towardsthe  Explication  of  the  words* 
Fir  ft  y  what  faith  it  is,  that  here  is  commended  to  the  Chriftian 
fouldier.  Secondly, having  found  the  kinde,  we  are  to  enquire 
what  this  faith  is  as  to  its  nature.  Thirdly ,  why  it  is  compared 
to  a  fhield,  rather  than  other  pieces.  Fourthly,  what  is  the  impor- 
tance of  this  em  Taw,  above  all. 


SECT.     I. 

Firft,  what  faith  it  is  that  here  is  commendedjThis  willfoon  be  <§*eft°  l 
known,if  we  confider  the  caufeand  end  for  which  it  is  commended 
to  the  Chriftian  ±  and  that  is  to  enable  him  to  quench  all  the  fiery 
darts  of  the  wicked ,  i.  e.  of  the  wicked  one  the  Devil.  Now 
look  upon  the  fevcral  kindes  of  faith  ■,  and  that  among  them  muft 
be  the  faith  of  this  place  ,  which  enables  the  creature  to  quench 
Satans  fiery  darts  •  yea,  all  his  fiery  darts.  Hiftoricalfaith  can- 
not do  this,  and  therefore  is  not  it  •  This  is  fo  far  from  quench- 
ing Satans  fiery  darts,  that  the  Devil  himfelf,  that  (hoots  them, 
hath  t  his  faith,/**  w  2.19,  The  'Devils  believed-,  Temporary  faith 
cannot  doit^  this  is  fo  far  from  quenching  Satans  fiery  darts,that 
itfelf  is  quenched  by  them.  It  makes  a  goodly  blaze  of  profef- 
fion,and endures  foratvhile,Mitth.  13.  21.  but  foon  difappears; 
Miraculous  faith }  this  falls  as  fhort  as  the  former.  fudaSs  mi- 
raculous 


4g6  Above  M  taking 


raculous  faith,  which  he  had  with  other  of  thcApoftlcs  (for 
ought  chat  we  can  read )  enabling  him  to  caft  Devils  out  01  o- 
thers ,  left  himfelf  poffefled  of  the  Devil  of  covet^ufnefle,  hypo- 
cific  and  treafon  ,  yea  a  whole  legion  of  lufts  that  hurried  him 
down  the  hill  of  delpaire,  into  the  bottomlefle  pit  of  perdition. 
There  is  onely  one  kinde  of  faith  remains,  which  is  it  the  Apoftle 
means  in  this  place ,  and  that  is  juftifying  faith.    This  indeed  is  a 
grace  that  makes  him,  who  ever  hath  it,  the  Devils  match.  Sataa 
hath  not  fo  much  advantage  of  the  Chriftian  by  the  tranfeenden- 
cyofbis  natural  abilities,  as  he  hath  of  Satan  in  this  caufc  and 
this  his  weapon.  The  Apoftle  is  confident  to  give  the  day  to  the 
Chriftian,  before  the  fight  is  fully  over-  ye  havewcrccme  the 
wicked  one,  i  John  2.13.  that  is,  you  are  as  lure  to  do  it,  as  if  you 
were  now  mounted  your  triumphant  chariot  in  heaven.    The 
Knight  (hall  over- come  the  Giant  •  the  Saint,  Satan;  and  the 
fame  Apoftle  tells  us  what  gets  him  the  day,  i  ;  ohn  5 . 4.  This  U 
the  vitlory  that  overcomcththe  world,  even  our  faith. 


SECT.  II. 

®»eft*  z.       The  fecond  enquiry  is,  what  this  juftifying  faith  is  ? 

jirjfv.  1  (hall  anfwer  to  this  ^  Firft ,  negatively  ^  Secondly ,  affir- 

matively. 

1 .  Negatively  ,  in  two  particulars. 

1.  Juftifying  faith  is  nGt  a  naked  aiTent  to  the  truths  of  the 
Gofpel.  This,  juftifying  faith  doth  give  •,  but  this  doth  not 
make  it  juftifj  ing  faith.  A  dogmatical  faith  or  hiftorical ,  is  com- 
prehended in  juftifying  faith  •  but  dogmatical  faith  doth  not 
infer  juftifying  faith.  Juftifying  faith  cannot  be  without  a  dog- 
matical •  It  implies  it ,  as  the  rational  foul  in  man  doth  the  ieuli- 
tive.  But,  the  dogmatical  may  be  without  the  juftifying,  as 
the  fenfitive  foul  in  the  beaft  is  without  the  rational,  Judo* 
knew  the  Scrip  ures ,  and  without  doubt  did  afTent  to  the  truth  of 
them,  when  he  was  fo  zealous  a  preacher  of  the  Cofpel  •,  But  he 
never  had  fo  much  as  one  drammc  of  juftifying  faith  in  his  foul, 
Jehu  6,  64-    Tberc  are  firm  tfjou  which  hfitve  not  -Jor  fcftts  k»cw 

from 


the  jhield  of  faith.  ^87 


from  the  beginning^who  they  were  that btlievtd not, Andwho  fbottld be- 
tray him  i  "yea,  ?*<ta"s  Matter,  the  Devil  lumfelf,  one  far  enough 
(I  fuppofejfrom  juftifying  faith,  yet  he  afTents  to  the  truth  cf  the 
Word.    He  goes  againft  his  confcience ,  when  he  denies  them  i 
when  he  tempted  Chnft,  he  did  not  difpute  againft  the  Scrip- 
ture, but  from  the  Scripcure ,  drawing  his  arrows  out  of  this 
quiver,  Aiatth.  4.  6.  And  at  another  time,  he  makes  as  full  a  con« 
fcffion  of  Chrift  (for  the  matter)  as Teter  himfelf  did, Mut.%  s ;. 
compared  with  Mat.  16. :  7.  Aifent  to  the  truth  of  the  Word  is 
but  an  aft  of  the  under  (landing ,  which  reprobates  and  Devils 
mayexercife.    But  juftif) ing  faith  is  a  compounded  habit,  and 
hath  its  feat,  both  in  the  under  (landing  and  will  >y  And  therefore 
called  a  believing  with  the  heart,  Rom.    O.  10.   yea,  a  believing 
■with  all  the  hearty  Ads  8.37.  Philip  (aid,  if  then  btlievefi  with  all 
thy  heart \  thou  may  eft.     it  takes  in  ail  the  powers  of  the  foul. 
There  is  a  double  objeft  in  the  promife  4  one  proper  to  the  un- 
derftanding,  to  move  that  •,  another  proper  to  the  will,  to  excite 
and  work  upon  that.     As  the  promife  is  true,  fo  it  callsfor  an  aft 
of  affent  from  the  underftanding^  and  as  it  is  good  as  well  as  true, 
fo  it  calls  for  an  a  ft  of  the  will  to  embrace  and  receive  it :  T  here- 
fore  he  which  only  nationally  knows  the  promife,  and  fpecula- 
tively  a  (Tents  to  the  truth  of  it,  without  clinging  to  it ,  and 
embracing  of  it ,  he  doth  not  believe  favingly ,  and  can  have 
no  more  benefit  from  the  promife,  rhan  the  nourifhment  from  the 
food  he  fees  and  acknowledged  to  be  wholefome ,  but  eats 
none  of  it. 

Secondfy,  faith  is  not  afltirance.    If  it  were,  Saint  John  might 
have  fparcd  his  pains  ,  who  wrote  to  them  that  believed  on  the 
Name  of  the  Sonne  of  God ,  that  they  might  k»ow  that  they  had  eter- 
nal life  ^  1  John  5. 1 3.    They  might  then  have  faid,  we  do  this  ah- 
ready  j  wha:  elfe  is  our  faith  >  but  a  believing  that  we  are  fuch 
as  through  Chrift  are  pardoned ,  and  (hall  through  him  be 
faved  ?  But  this  cannot  be  fo  :  If  faith  were  affurarce;  then 
a  mans  finnes  would  be  pardoned  before  he  believes,  for  he  muft 
neceflfarily  be   pardoned ,   before  he  can   know   he   is   par- 
doned.    The  candle  mult  be  lighted,  before  1  can  fee  it  is  light' 
ed.    The  ehilde  muft  be  borne,  before  T  can  be  atfured  it  is  borne, 
The  objeft  muft  be  before  the  aft.    AlTurance  is  rather  the  fruit 
of  faith  ,  than  faith  it  felf.    It  is  in  faith  as  the  flower  is  in  the 

root; 


4&£  Above  all  taking 

toot;  faith  in  tinae,  after  muchcommunion  with  God,  acquain- 
ancc  with  tl>e  Word,and  experience  of  his  dealings  with  the  foul, 
may  fluurilh  into  aflurance ;  But ,  as  the  root  truly  lives  before 
the  flower  appears,  and  continues ,  when  that  hath  (hed  its  beau- 
tiful leaves ,  and  is  gone  again  :  fo  doth  true  juftifying  faith 
live,  before  aflurance  comes,  and  after  tt  difappears.    Aflu- 
rance  is  as  it  were  the  creame  of  faith  j  now  you  know ,  there  is 
milk,  before  there  is  creame-  (this  rifeth  not  but  after  fome 
time  Handing)  and  there  remains  milk  after  it  is  fleted  off.  How 
|  many  (a'asj  of  the  precious  Saints- of  God  muft  we  fhut  out  from 
bemg  believers,  if  no  faith,  but  what  amounts  to  aflurance  ? 
We  muft  needs  offend  againftthe  generation  of  Gods  children, 
among  whom ,  fome  are  babes ,  not  yet  come  to  the  ufe  oi  their 
refled  a&  of  faith ,  fo  as  to  own  the  grace  of  God  in  them  to  be 
true,  upon  the  review  that  they  take  of  their  own  a&ings^  And 
muft  not  the  child  be  allowed  to  be  a  child  ,  till  he  can  fpeak  for 
himfelf,  and  fay,  he  is  fo?  Others  there  are  in  Chrifts  family, 
who  are  of  higher  ftature,  and  greater  experience  in  the  wayes  of 
God,  yet  have  loft  thofe  apprehenfions  of  pardoning  mercy, 
which  once  they  were  (through  the  goodnefle  of  God)  able  to 
have  (hewn :  (hall  we  fay  their  faith  went  away  in  the  departure 
of  their  aflurance  ?  how  oft  then  in  a  year  may  a  believer  be 
no  beleever  ?  even  as  oft  as  God  with- draws  and  leaves  the  crea- 
ture in  the  dark.    Aflurance  is  like  the  Sun-flower ,  which  opens 
with  the  day,  and  fliuts  with  the  night.     It  follows  the  motion 
of  Gods  face ;  if  that  looks  fmilingly  on  the  foul,  it  livts^if 
that  frowns  or  hides  it  felf,  it  dies.    But  faith  is  a  plant  that  can 
grow  in  the  (hade,  a  grace  that  can  flnde  the  way  to  heaven  in  a 
dai  k  night .    It  can  walk,  ™  darknt jfe ,  and  jet  trhfl  in  the  Name 
of  the  Lord,  Ifa.  5  c.  10.  In  a  word,  by  making  the  efTence  of  faith 
to  lie  in  aflurance,  we  (hould  not  only  t  fTendagair.it  the  genera- 
tion of  Gods  children  ,  but  againft  the  God  and  Father  of  thefc 
children,  for  at  one  clap  we  turne  the  greater  number  of  thofe 
children  he  hath  here  on  earth  out  of  doors ,  ye  we  are  cruel  to 
thofe  that  he  is  moft  tender  of ,  and  make  fad  the  hearts  of  thofe 
that  he  would  have  chiefly  comforted.    Indeed  it  this  were  true, 
a  great  part  of  Gofpel-provifionlaidupin  thepromifes,is  of  Lit- 
tle u  e ;  we  read  ofpromifes  to  thofe  that  mourn  ,  they  pull  h 
comforted ;  to  the  contrite,? hejpall  be  revived-^  to  him  that  walks 

in 


the  fhieldoffailh,  ^So 

indarkncfs,  J/4.  50.  and  the  like  •  thefc  belong  to  believers, 
andnoneelfe;  furely  then  there  are  fome  believers  that  are  in 
the  dark,  under  the  hatches  of  forrow,  wounded  and  broken 
with  their  fmnes,  and  temptation  for  them  •■  but  they  are  not 
fuch  as  are  allured  of  the  love  of  God,  their  waiter  rs  turned  into 
joy,  their  night  into  light,  their  fighs  and  fobs  into  joy  and 
praife. 

Secondly,  I  (hall  anfwer  affirmatively,  what  juftify  ing  faith  is  -t 
and  in  the  defcription  of  it  I  frnll  confider  itfolely  as  jufti- 
fying.  Andfotakeitintheiefewwords,  ft  is  that  ad  of  the 
foul,  whereby  it  refts  on  Chrift  crucified  for  pardon  and  life,  and 
that  upon  the  warrant  of  the  promife.  In  the  defcription  ob- 
fcrve, 

1.  Thefubjed  where  faith  is  feated,  not  any  fingle  faculty,         r< 
bat  the  foul ;  Of  this  I  have  fpoke  fomething  before. 

2.  Here  is  the  object  of  faith  as  juftifying,  and  that  is  Chrift 
crucified.  The  whole  truth  of  God  is  the  object  of  juftify- 
ing  faith ,  it  trades  with  the  whole  Word  of  God,  and  doth 
firmly  aflent  unto  it  •,  but  in  its  juftifying  aft,  it  fingles  out 
Chrift  crucified  for  its  object.  Firft,  the  perfon  of  Chrift  is 
the  object  of  faith  as  juftifying.  Secondly ,  Chrift  as  cru- 
cified. 

Firft,  the  perfon  of  Chrift,  not  any  axiome  or  proposition  in 
the  Word ;  This  is  the  object  of  afTurance,  not  of  faith.  AfTu- 
rance faith,  I  beleeverayfinnes  are  pardoned  through  Chrift; 
Faiths  language  is,  I  bdeeve  on  Chrift  for  the  pardon  of  them. 
The  Word  of  God  doth  direct  our  faith  to  Chrift,  and  termi- 
nates it  upon  him  j  called  therefore,  a  coming  to  Chrift,  Matth. 
11.28.  a  receiving  of  him,  John  X.I 2.  a  believing  oh  him%Joh. 
17.20.  The  promife  is  but  the  difh,  in  which  Chrift  the  true 
food  of  the  foul  is  ferved  upi  and  if  faiths  hand  be  on  the  promife, 
it  is  but  as  one  that  draws  the  difh  to  him,  that  he  may  come  at 
the  dainties  in  it.The  promife  is  the  marriage- ring  on  the  hand  of 
faithjnow  we  are  not  married  to  the  ring,but  with  it  unto  Chrift. 

All promifes,  faith  the  Apoftle ,  are  Tea  and  Amen  in  him. - 

They  have  their  excellency  from  liim,  and  efficacy  in  him.  I 
mean  in  a  fouls  union  to  him.  To  runne  away  with  a  promife, 
and  not  to  clofe  with  Chrift,  and  by  faith  become  one  in  him,is,as 
if  a  man  (hould  rend  a  branch  from  a  tree,  and  lay  it  up  in   his 

Rrr  cheft, 


4CO  Above  all  taking 

cheft,  expecting  it  totaar  fruit  there.  Promises  are  dead  Blan- 
ches fevered  from  Chrift  :  But  when  a  foul  by  faith  becomes  u- 
nited  to  Chrift,  then  he  partakes  of  all  his  fatnefs ;  notapromife 
bu t  yields  fwectnefs  to  it. 

Secondly,  asChrift  is  the  primary  objed  of  faith,  fo  Chrift  as 
crucified.  Not  Chrift  in  his  perfonal  excellencies  j  fo  he  is  the 
objed  rather  of  our  love  than  faith  .  but  as  bleeding,  and  that  to 
death  under  the  hand  of  divine  juftice  for  to  make  an  attone- 
mentby  Gods  own  appointment  for  the  finnes  of  the  world.  As 
the  handmaids  eye  is  to  her  MiftrelTes  hand  for  direction,  fo  faiths 
eye  is  on  God  revealing  himfelf  in  his  Word-,  which  way  God  by 
it  points  the  foul,  thither  it  goe*.  Now  there  faith  finds  God 
intending  to  fave  poor  finners  pitcht  on  Chrift,  and  Chrift  a- 
lone  for  the  tranfading  and  effecting  of  it,  and  him  whom  God 
choofeth  to  truft  with  the  work,him  and  him  alone  wil  faith  chufe 
to  lay  the  burden  of  her  confidence  on. 

Again,  faith  obferves  how  Chrift  performed  this  great  work, 
and  accordingly  how  the  promife  holds  him  forth  to  be  applied 
for  pardon  and  falvation.  Now  faith  finds,  that  then  Chrift 
made  the  full  payment  to  the  juftice  of  God  for  finne,  when  he 
poured  out  his  blood  to  death  upon  the  crofs ;  all  the  preceda- 
neous  ids  of  his  humiliation,  were  but  preparatory  to  this.  He 
was  born  to  die,  he  was  fent  into  the  world  as  a  lamb  bound 
with  the  bonds  of  an  irreverfible  decree  for  a  facrifice.  Chrift 
himfelf  when  he  came  into  the  world  undcrftood  this  to  be  the 
errand  he  was  fent  on,  Hebh  105.  when  he  comet h  into  the  worlds 
he  faith,  Sacrifice  and  burnt  offering  thou  veeuldjl  not,  but  a  body 
thou  hafi  prepared  me ,  i  e.  to  be  an  expiatory  facrifice  ^  without 
this, all  he  had  donc,would  have  beenlabour  undone.No  redempti- 
on, but  by  his  blood,  Ephtf.  1.7.  In  whom  vse  have  redemputn 
through  hi*  bloody  the  for  git  emfs  of our  finnes.  No  Church  with- 
out his  blood,  Alls-  20.28  The  Church  cfGodjvhich  he  hath  pur- 
chafed  with  his  blood ;  t  latere  Chtftirncricntu  extitit  EcclcJi«.Thc 
C  hutch  is  taken  out  of  dying  Jefus  his  fide,  as£^foutof  fleeping 
Adams.  Chrift  ciid  not  tedeem  and  fave  poorfouls,  by  fitting 
in  Majvfty  on  liis  heavenly  throne,  but  by  hanging  on  the  (hame- 
ful  crofs,  under  the  toiincr. ting  hand  ofmansfuiy,  and  Gods 
)uft  wrath.  And  therefore  the  poor  foul,  that  would  have  par- 
don of  Jinnc  is  dir«dcd,to  place  bit  faith  not  only  on  Chrift ,  but 

on 


the  fhkld  of  faith.  aq{ 


on  bleeding  Chnft,i?o^.  3. -25.   Whom     odhathfet  forth  to  be  a  pro- 
pitiation through  faith  in  hu  bkod. 

3.  The  aft  of  faith  upon  this  ob;'e&,  and  that  is   refting   on 
Chrift  crucified  for  pardon  and  life.    I  know   there  arc    many 
afts  of  the  foul  antecedent  to  this,  without   which  the  creature 
can  never  truly  exercife  this.  As  knowledge,efpeeially  of  God  and 
Chrift,upon  whofe  authority  and  teftimony  it  relies,  lltnn»  whom 
1  have  believed,  2Tim.i.i2.  none  will  readily  truft  a  ttrangerk 
that  he  is  wholly  unacquainted  with.    Abraham  went  indeed  he 
knew  not  whether,  but  he  did  not  go  with  he  knew  not   who. 
The  great  thing  that  God  laboured  to  inftruct  Abraham  in,  and 
fatishe  him  with,was  the  knowledge  of  his  own  glorious  felf,  who 
he  was,  that  he  might  take  his  word  and  relieonit,  how  harfh 
and  improbable,  yea,  impoffible  foever   it  might  found  in  fenfe 
or  reafons  eare,  lam  the  Almighty  God,  -walkjjifore  me,  and  be 
thou  perfett.    Secondly,afTent  to  the  truth  of  the  Word  of  God  • 
if  this  foundation-ftone  be  not  laid,  faiths  building  cannot  go  on. 
Who  will  truft  him,  that  he  dares  not  think  fpeaks  true  >  Third- 
ly, a  fenfe  of  our  own  vilenefsandemptineis.    By  the  one   to 
fee  our  demerit,  what  we  deferve,  hell  and  damnation  •    By  the 
other  our  own  impotency,  how  little  we  can  contribute,  yea,  juft 
nothing  to  our  own  reconciliation  •,     I  Joyn  them  together,, 
becaufe  the  one  arifeth  out  of  the  other  ;  fenfe  of  this  emptinefs 
comes  from  the  deep  apprehenfionsa  foul  hath  of  the  others  ful- 
nefs  in  him  j  you  never  knew  a  man  full  of  fclf-confidence,  and 
felf- abafement  together.    The  confeience  cannot  abound  with 
the  fenfe  of  finne,  and  the  heart  with  felf-conceit  at  the  fame  time. 
When  the  Commandment  came^Jinne  revived3and  1  died,  Rom.  7.9. 
that  is,when  the  Commandment  came  in  the  accufations  of  it  to 
his  confeience  •  finne,that  like  a  fleepy  lyon  had  lien  ftill,  and  he 
fecure  and  confident  by  it,  when  that  began  to  roare  in  his  con- 
feience, then  he  died,  that  is,  his  vain  confidence  of  himfelf  gave 
uptheghoft.    Both  thefe  are  nccefTary  to  faith-  fenfe  of  fin, 
like  the  fmart  of  a  wound,  tomakethe  creature  think  of  a  plai- 
fter  to  cure  it ;  and  fenfe  of  emptinefs  and  infufficiency  in  himfelf 
or  any  creature  to  do  the  cure,  neceffary  to  make  him  go  out  to 
Chrift  for  cure.    We  do  not  go  abroad  to  beg  what  we  have  of 
our  own  within  doors.    Thefe  (  with  forne  other  )  are  necefTary 
to  faith  J  but  the  receiving  of  Chrift,  and  refting  on  Chrift,  is 

Rrr  2  that 


4oa  Above  all  taking 


that  ad  of  faith  to  which  juftification  is  promifed ,  John   3 .  18. 
He  that    believeth   on  him  is  not  condemned,  but  he  that  beleeveth 
not  it  condemned  already ,  becaufe  hath  be  not  believed  in  the  T^ame 
of  the  only  begotten  Sonne  of  God.    Now  every  one  that  aflents  to 
the  truth  of  what  the  Scripture  faith  of  Chrift,  doth  not  beleeve 
on  Ch'ift.     No,  this  believing  on  Chrift  implies  an  union  of  the 
foul  to  Chrift,  and  fiduciary  recumbency  onChrift.    Therefore 
we  are  bid  to  take  hold  of  C  hrift,  J  fa.  27,  5,  (who  is  there  cal- 
led Cjodsftrength,  as  elfewherc  hisarme)  that  rec  may  ma\e 
peace  with  God^  and  rvejhall  make  peace  -with  him  •,    it  is   not    the 
fight  of  a  mans  arme  ftretched  out  to  a  man  in  the  water  will  fave 
him  from  drowning, but  the  taking  hold  of  it.    Chrift  is  a  ftone^ 
faith  builds  upon  Chrift  for  falvation^  and  how,  but   by  laying 
its  whole  weight  and  expectation  of  mercy  on  him  ?  what  cpattlt 
zTim.i.n.  calls  believing  in  the  former  part  oftheverfe,  he 
calls  in  the  latter  part  a  committing  to  him  to  be  kef  t  againfi  that 
day. 

The  fourth  and  laft  branch  in  the  defcription,  is  the  war- 
rant and  fecurity  that  faith  goes  upon  in  this  aft.    And  this  it 
takes  from  the  promife ;  indeed  there  is  no  way,  how  God  can 
be  conceived  to  contraft  a  debt  to  his  creatuse,  but  by  promife. 
There  are  wayes  for  men  to  become  debtors  one  to  another , 
though  never  any  promife  paft  from   them.    The  father   is  a 
debtor  to  his  child,  and  owes  him  love,  provifion  and  nurture. 
The  child  a  debtor  to  his  parent,  and  owes  him  honour  and  obe- 
dience,though  neither  of  them  promifed  this  to  each  other.Much. 
more  doth  the  creature  ftand  deep  in  Gods  debt-book,  and  owes 
himfelfwith  all  he  hath  to  God  his  Maker,  though  he  hath  not 
the  grace  voluntarily  to  make  thefe  over  to  God  by  promife  and 
Covenant     But  the  great  God  is  fo  abfolute  a  Soveraign,  that 
none  can  make  a  law  to  binde  him  but  himfelf ;  till  he  be  pleafc'd. 
to  pafs  an  aft  of  grace,  of  his  own  good  will,  to  give  this,  or 
do  that  good  thing,  to  and  for  his  poor  creatures,  no  claim  can 
be  laid  to  the  leaft  mercy  at  his  hands.    There  are   two  things 
therefore  that  are  greatly  to  be  heeded  by  the  foul  that  would  be- 
lieve. 

I     Firft,  he  muft  enquire  for  a  promife  to  bear  his  faith  out,  and 

■  warrant  him  to  expect  fuch  a  mercy  at  Gods  hand.    And  then 

Jc.condly,  when  he  hath  found  a  promife,  and  objerved  the  terms. 

•  well 


the  Jhield  of  faith.  aq^ 


well  on  which  it  runs,  not  to  ftay  for  any  further  encouragement,* 
but  upon  the  credit  of  the  naked  promife  to  fet  his  faith  on  W(  rk, 
Firft,  to  enquire  out  a  promife,  and  obferve  well  the  termeson 
which  it  runs;  indeed  upon  the  point  it  comes  all  to  one,  io  bJieve 
without  a  promife,or  to  believe  on  apromife,but  not  obferve  the 
terms  of  it  Both  are  prefumptuous,and  fpecd  alike.  A  Prince  hath 
as  much  reafon  to  be  angry  with  him  that  doth  not  keep  clofe  to 
his  commiftion,as  with  another  thatacts  without  any  commiilion. 
O  how  little  considered  is  this  by  many  ?  who  make  bold  of  Gods 
arme  to  lean  on  for  pardon  and  falvation,  but  never  think,  that 
the  promife  which  prefents  Chriftto  be  leaned  on  as  a  Savi- 
our, prefents  him  at  the  fame  time  to  be  chofenas  a  Lord  and 
Prince  •,  fuch  were  the  rebellious  lfraetites,  who  durft  make  God 
and  his  promife  a  leaning-ftock   for  their  foule  elbows  to  reft 
On-,  They  call  themfelves  of  the  holy  City,  and  ftaj  themfelves  up- 
on the  God  ofl/rael,  Ifa.  4? .2.  but  they  were  more  bold  than  wel, 
come.    God  rejected  their  confidence,     and  loathed   their 
faucinefs.    Though  a  Prince  would  not  difdain  to  let  a  poore 
wounded  man  (faint  with  bleeding,  and  unable  to  go  alone  )  up- 
on his  humble  requeft,make  ufe  of  his  arm,  rather  than  he  ftiould 
perifh  in  theftrcets ;  yet  he  would  with  indignation  reject  the 
fame  motion  from  a  filthy  drunkard  that  isbefmear'd  with  his 
vomit-,  if  he  fhould  defireleave  tojeane  on  him,becaufe  he  cannot 
go  alone.    Iamfure,  how  welcome  foever  the  poore  humble 
foul  ( that  lies  bleeding  for  his  finnes  at  the  very  mouth  of  hell  in 
his  own  thoughts)is  to  God,  when  he  comes  upon  the  encourage- 
ment of  the  promife  to  lcane  on  Chrift-,  yet  the  profane  wretch 
that  emboldens  himfelf  to  come  to  Chrift,  ftiall  be  kickt   away 
with  infinite  difdaine  and  abhorrency  by  a  holy  God  ,  for   abu- 
fing  his  promife. 

Secondly,  when  a  poor  (inner  hath  found  a  promife ,  and  ob- 
ferves  the  termes  with  a  heart  willing  to  embrace  them ,  now  he  is 
to  put  forth  an  ad  of  aith  upon  the  credit  of  the  naked  promife, 
withoutftayingforany  other  encouragement  elfewhere.  Faith 
is  a  right  pilgrim-grace  ;  It  travels  with  us  to  heaven,  and  when 
it  fees  us  fafe  got  within  out  Fathers  doors  Y  heaven  Imeane)  it 
takes  leave  of  us.  Now  the  promife  is  thi?  pilgrims  ftarTe,  with 
which  it  fets  forth  1  though  (like  Jacob  on  his  way  to  Padan-A- 
r*w  )  it  hath  nothing  die  with  it,    Remember  thj  -mrd  unto  thy  - 

ftrvant 


aqa  Above  all  taking 


Cervunt  (fakh  DAvid)  upon  which  thou  haft  captfedme  to  hope,  PfaT. 
119.49.  The  word  of  prornife  was  all  he  had  to  (hew;  and  he 
counts  that  enongh  to  fee  his  faith  on  work.    But  alas ,   fome 
make comrort  the  ground  of faith,and experience  their  wairantto 
believe.  They  will  believe  when  God  manifefts  himfelf  to  them, 
and  fends  in  fome  fcnfiblc  demonftration  of  his  love  to    their 
fouis ;  but  till  this  be  donc,the  prornife  hath  little  authority  to  (1- 
lence  their  unbelieving  cavils,  and  quiet  their  mifgiving  heart* 
into  a  waiting  on  God  for  the  performance  of  what  there  isfpokc 
from  Gods  own  mouth.    Like  old  ?*cot>t  who  gave  no  credit  to 
*  his  children,  when  they  told  him  fofeph  was  yet  alive,  and  Gc~ 
vernour  over  all  the  land  of  Egypt.    This  news   was  too    good 
and  great  to  enter  into  his  belief,  who  had  given  him  for  dead 
fo  long  •,  It  is  faid,&/*  heart  fainted,  for  he  believed  them  not,  Gen . 
25..  6.  But  when  he  faw  the  Waggons  that  fofeph  had  fent  to 
carry  him  thither,  then  'tis  faid,  thefj>iritoffacobrevived,vtt. 
27.    Truly  thus,  though  the  prornife  tells  the  poor  humbled  fin* 
ner,  Chri-ft  is  alive,  Governour  of  heaven  it  felf,  with  all  power 
there  and  on  earth  put  into  his  hand,  that  he  may  give  eternal 
life  unto  all  that  believe  on  him ;  and  he  be  therefore  exhorted 
to  reft  upon  Chrift  is  the  prornife,  yet  his  heart  faints  and   be- 
lieves not  -,  'tis  the  Waggons  he  would  fain  fee,   fome  fenfibie 
expreffions  of  Gods  love  that  he  liftens  after  •,  if  he  did  but  know 
thathewasanEleft  pcrfon,  or  were  one   t^.at  God  did  love, 
then  he  would  believe.    But  God  hath  little  reafon  to   thank 
him  in  the  mean  time  for  fufpending  his  faith  till  thefe   come. 
This  is  as  I  may  fo  fay,  to  believe,  for  fpiritual  loves,  and  is  rather 
fenfe  than  faith. 


SECT.     III. 

Queft^        £laeft>  3-  Why  is  faith  compared  to  a  (hield  ? 

Ar.fw.         An(-n>.  For  a  double  refemblance,  that  is  between  this  grace 

and  that  piece  of  armour.  ' 

Fir  ft,  the  {hield  is  not  for  the   defence  of  any  particular  part 

of  the  body,  as  almoft  all  the  other  pieces  are,  helmet  fitted 

for  the  head,  plate  defigned  for  the  breaft,  and  fo  others,  they 

have 


the  jhkldof  faith.  a  a? 


have  their  feveral  parts,  which  they  are  fattened  to.    But  the 
fhield  is  a  piece,  that  is  intended  for  the  defence  of  the   whole 
body.    It  was  ufcd  therefore  to  be  made  very  Jarge,for  its  broad- 
nefs  called  #u?s«f  of  Si/pa,  a  gate  or  door,    becaufe   fo   long 
and  large,  as  in  a  manner  to  cover  the  whole  body.    To  which 
that  place  alludes,   Pfa/me  5.12.  Thou  Lordwilt  bleffe  the  righte- 
ous, with  favour  thou  wilt  com fajfe  him  as  with  afhield.     And    if 
the  (Held  were  not  large  enough  at  once  to  cover  every  part, 
yet  being  a  movable  piece  of  armour,  the  skilful  fouldier  might 
turn  it  this  way  or  that  way,  to  catch  the  blow,  or  arrow   from 
lighting  on  any  part  they  were  directed  to.    And  this  indeed 
doth  excellently  well  fct  forth  the  univerfal  ufe   that  faith  is  of 
to  the  Chriftlan.     It  defends  the  whole  man  ;  every  part  of  the 
Chriftian  by  it  is  preferv'd.  Sometimes  the  temptat  on  is  leveiM 
at  his  head  j  Satan  he  will  be  difputing  againft  this  truth   and 
thatjto  make  theChriftian,if  he  can,call  them  into  queftion,mear- 
ly  becaufe  his  reafon  and  understanding  cannot  comprehend 
them  -,  and  he  prevailes  with  fomc  that  do  not  think  thcmfelves 
the  unwifeft  in  the  world,  upon  this  very  account,  to  blot    the 
Deity  of  Chrift3with  other  myfterious  truths  of  the  Gofpel,  quite 
out  of  their  Creed.  Now  faith  interpofeth  between  the  Chrillian 
and  this  arrow.lt  comes  into  the  relief  of  the  Chriftians  weak  un- 
derftanding as  feafonably,  asZerviabdidto  CD avid,  when  the 
Giant  Ijbbi-  benob,  thought  to  have  (lain  him.  Vte  truft  the  Wot d 
of  God  faith  the  believer,  rather  than  my  own  pur- blind1  reafon, 
Abraham  not  being  weakjn  faith  .ccnfider'dnot  his  own  body  now  dead, 
Rom. 4. 1 9    if  fenfc  fhould  have  had  the  hearing  of  that  bufinefs- 
yea,  if  that  holy  man  had  put  it  to  a  reference  between  fenfe  and 
reafon  alfo,  what  refolution  his  thoughts  foould  come  to  con- 
cerning this  ftrange  meflagc  that  was  brought   him,  he  would 
have  been  in  danger  of  calling  the  truth  of  it  inqueftion,  though 
God  himfelf  was  the  mcflcnger :     Bnt  faith  brough  him  honou- 
rably off. 

Again,  is  it  confidence  that  the  tempter  aflaults?  (And  it  is 
not  feldome  that  he  h  (hooting  his  fiery  darts  of  horrour  and 
terror  at  this  mark  )  faith  receives  the  ftiock,and  faves  the  crea » 
tare  harmlefs.  /  had  fainted  unlefs  I  had  believed  (  faith  David  ) 
Pfal.27.1z.  He  means  when  falfe  witnetfes  rofe  up  againft 
him,  and  fuch  as  breathed  out  cruelty,  as  appears  verfe  11.  faith 

was 


a  06  Abov9  M  taking 


was  bis  bcft  fence  againft  man9  charge,  and  fo  it  is  againft  Satana 
and  confcienccs  alfo.  Never  was  man  in  a  (adder  condition,  than 
the  poor  jay  lour,  Atts  i6.much  ado  he  had  to  keep  his  own  hands 
from  offering  violence  to  himfelf  ^  who  that  had  fcen  him   fall 
trembling  at  I3  ml  and  Silas  k^t,  with  that  fad  queftion  in  his 
mouth,  Sin%  whatmtsfi  Idstobe  faved  ?  ver.  30.  could   have 
thought  this  deep  wound  that  was  now  given  his   confeience, 
would  fo  loon  have  been  clofed  and  cured  ?  as  we  find  it,  v.  34. 
The  earth. quake  of  horrour  that  did  fo  dreadfully  (hake  his  con- 
feience is  gone,  and  his  trembling  turn'd  into  rejoycing-,  now 
mark  what  made  this  blefled  calm.'2?*/t>z/f(faith  Panl)onthe  Lord 
fefttt,  and  thou  Jhalt  befaved ,  ver.  3 1 .  And  ver.  3  4.  it  is  faid,  he 
rejoyced,  believing  in  God  with  hit  whole  houfe.     It  is  faith  ftills  the 
ftorm  which  finne  had  raifed  •,  faith  that  cbang'd  his  doleful  note 
into  joy  and  gladnefs.  Happy  man  he  was,  that  had  fuch  skil- 
ful Cfairurgions  fo  necr  him,  who  could  dired  him  the  nearcft 
way  to  a  cure. 

Again,  Is  it  the  W  ill  that  the  temptation  is  laid  to  catch?  fome 
commands  of  God  cannot  be  obeyed  without  much  felf-denial,be- 
caufe  they  crofs  us  in  that,  which  our  own  wills  are  carried  forth 
very  ftrongly  to   defire;  fo  that   we  muft  deny  our    will, 
before  we  can  do  the  Will  of  God.  Now  a  temptation  comes  ve- 
ry forcible,  when  it  runnes  with  the  tyde  of  our  own  wills. 
What/aith  Satan,  wilt  thou  fcrve  a  God  that  thus  thwarts  thee  in 
everything?    If  thou  loveft  any  thing  more  than  other,  pre- 
fently  he  muft  have  that  from  thee:  no  lamb  in  all  the  flock  will 
ferve  for  a  facrifice,  but  Ifaac ,  Abrahams  only  child,  he  muft  be 
offered  up.No  place  will  content  God,that  Abraham  ftiould  ferve 
him  in,  but  where  he  muft  live  in  baniftiment  from  his  dear  re- 
lations and  acquaintance  -t  wilt  [thou  faith  Satan,  yield  to  fuch 
hard  termes  as  thefe>  now  faith  is  the  grace  that  doth  the  foul  ad- 
mirable fervice  at  fuch  a  pinch  as  this :  It  is  able  to  appeafe  the 
tumult ,  which  fuch  a  temptation  may  raifein  the  foul ,  a  d  dif- 
miffe  the  rout  of  all  mutinous  thoughts,  yea,  to  keep  the  King 
of  heavens  peace  fo  fweetly  in  the  Chriftian9  bo  fome,  that  fuch  a 
temptation,  if  it  comes,flhalln"ndefewor  none  to  declare  for  it. 
Heb   1 1.  8.  by  faith  fit  is  faid)  Abraham  obeyed,  and  went  out  not 
knvn'rwg  whither.    And  we  do  not  read  of  one  fond  look  that  his 
heart  caft  back  upon  his  dear  native  countrey,  as  he  went  from  it, 

ft 


thejbieldoffaitb.  jgj 


fo  well-pleafcd  hid  faith  made  him  with  his  journey.lt  was  hard 
work  tor  (JWofes  toftriphimfelf  of  the  Magiitrates  robes,and 
put  his  hands  on  his  fervants  head  ;  hard  to  leave  another  to  en- 
ter upon  his  labours,and  reap  the  honour  of  lodging  the  Ifra- 
el'n  s  colours  in  (.  anaan,  after  it  had  coft  him  fo  many  a  w^ary 
ftep  to  bring  them  within  iight  of  ic,yec  faith  made  him  willing. 
He  law  better  robes  that  he  fhould  put  on  in  heaven,  than  thofe 
he  was  called  to  put  oflfon  earth/The  loweft  place  in  glory  -is  be- 
yond all  compare,greater  preferment,than  the  higheft  place  of 
honour  here  belowjto  Hand  before  the  Throne  there,  and  mini- 
fter  to  God  in  immediate  fervice,than  to  fit  in  aThrone  on  earth 
and  have  all  the  world  waiting  at  his  foot. 

Secondly  ,the  ftiield  doth  not  only  defend  the  whole  body,but 
is  a  defence  to  the  fouldiers  Armour  alfo.  It  keeps  the  arr  ow 
from  the  helmet  as  well  as  head,  from  the  breaftand  breaft- 
plate  alfo.  Thus  faith  it  is  Armour  upon  Armour,  a  grace  that 
preferves  all  the  other  graces.  But  of  this  more  hereafter. 


SECT.    IV. 

£fteft.  4.    What  doth   this  \m  nrim  {above   all)   im-   J%*eft.  4, 
port  ? 

cAnfw.  There  is  variety  among  Interpreters  about  it.  Jerome     Anfw, 
reads  it,  in  omnibus,  famentes  [cm am  fidei.  In  all  things  taking 
the  fiSield  of  faith,  i.e.  In  all  duties,enterprizes,temptations  or 
afflictions  ^  whatever  you  are  called  to  do  or  fuffer,  take  faith; 
Indeed  faith  to  the  Chriftian,  is  like  fire  to  the  Chymift;nothing 
can  be  done  without  it  Chiifthnly. without  faith  it  U  tmfojjible 
to  pteafeGod-,Hzb.  11. 6.  And  how  can  the  Chriftian  pleafe  him- 
felf  in  that  wherein  he  doth  not  pleafe  his  God  ?  others  read  it, 
over  all  take  the  fhield  of  fatthj..z.  Take  it  over  all  your  graces, 
as  trtat  which  will  cover  them.All  other  graces  have  their  fafety 
from  faith  ,they  lie  fecure  under  the  fliadow  of  fakh,as  an  Army 
lies  fafe  under  the  protection  and  command  of  a  ftrongCaftle 
planted  round  with  Cannon.  But  we  fhall  follow  our  tranflati- 
on  as  being  moft  comprehenfive,and  that  which  will  take  thefc 
within  its  compaffe.  <^4bov;  all  take,&c.  that  is,among  all  the 

S  f  f  pieces 


498 


Above  all  talking 


pieces  of  Armour  which  you  are  to  provide,  and  wear  for  your 
defence,lec  this  have  the  preheminence  of  your  care  to  get,  and 
having  got,to  keep  it.Now  that  t  he  Apoitle  meant  to  give  a  pre- 
heminence to  faith  above  other  graces ,    appears,  Firft  by  the 
piece  of  Armour  he  compares  it  to ;  thejhield,wh\ch  of  old  was 
prized  above  all  other  pieces  by  fouldiers.  They  counted  it  grea- 
ter fhame  to  lofe  their  fhield,than  to  lofe  the  field,and  there- 
fore when  under  the  very  foot  of  their  enemy,  they  would  not 
part  with  it,but  efteemed  it  an  honour  to  dye  with  their  fhield  in 
their  hand.    It  was  the  charge  that  one  laid  upon  her  fcnne, 
going  into  the  wars,when  fhe  gave  him  a  fhield,  That  he  fhonld. 
either  bring  his  fhield  horn?  with  him,or  he  be  brought  home  upon  his 
jkieU  ;  fhe  had  rather  fee  him  dead  with  it,  than  come  home  a- 
live  without  it.    Secondly,  by  the  noble  effect  which  is  here, 
afcribed  to  faith;#y  which  ye  frail  qn>,ch  all  the  fiery  darts  of  the 
wicked.     The  other  pieces  are  nakedly  commended,  Take  the 
girdle  of  truth,  breaft-plate  of  righteoufneffe,  and  fo  the  reft, 
but  nothing  finely  afcribed  to  any  of  them,whar  they  can  do;but 
when  hefpeaks  of  fakh,  healcribes  the  whole  victory  to  it.This 
quencheth  all  the  fiery  darts  of  the  wicked.  And  why  thus  ?  are 
the  other  graces  of  no  ufe,and  doth  faith  do  all  ?  what  need  then 
the  ChnlUan  load  himfelf  with  more  than  this  one  piece  ?  I  an- 
fwer,every  piece  hath  its  neceflary  ufe  in  the  Ch  iftians  warfare;. 
not  any  one  part  of  the  whole  fuit  can  be  fpared  in  the  day  of  bat- 
tel ;  but  the  reafon(l  humbly  conceive  J  why  no  particular  effect 
is  annex't  feverally  to  each  of  thefe,but  all  afcribed  to  faith,is  to 
let  us  know,  that  all  thefe  graces,  their  efficacy,  and  our  benefit 
from  them,is  in  their  conjunction  with  faith,and  influence  they 
receive  from  faith  ;  To  that  this  is  plainly  the  de£gn  of  the  Spirit 
of  God  to  give  faith  the  precedency  in  our  care  above  the  reft ; 
only  take  heed  that  you  ^o  nor  fancy  any  indifferency  or  negli- 
gence robe  allo.ved  you  in  your  endeavours  after  the  other  gra- 
ces, becaufe  you  are  miB  e  fl  onsly  provoked  and  excired  up  to. 
the  .ettinp,  and  keeping  rhi^.     The  Apod:  w  rll  intend  your 
ere  hee,bi:t  nor  remit  it  there  ;  carnor  we  bi  1 1  fouldier  above 
all  parts  of  hi   body  to  beware  of  a  worn  H  n  his  heart,  bur  he 
muft  needs  think  prefently  he  need  take  no  care  toguaidhis 
bead?  cnJy  fuch  a  one  would  deferve  a  crack't  crovvaro  cure  him 

of 


the  fhielcl  of  faith*  Tgg 

of  his  folly. The  words  thus  opened,we  (hill  concent  our  fdves 
with  one  general  obfervation  from  them,  and  'tis  this. 

* 

*-»3  ->wk»  Sfj  >WE  -^■i>   »#■*  ■»*»  *•***  5y**  5*'  Sft  csms 

fit-iffffffp 

CHAP.  II. 

Sheweth  the  preheminence  of  faith  above  other 
graces  in  foure  particulars. 

THat  faith  of  all  graces  is  the  chief,and  chiefly  to  be  laboured        &*&+ 
for.     There  is  a  precedency  or  preheminence  peculiar  to 
this  above  all  other.    It  is  among  graces,  as  the  Sun  is  amon» 
the  *P  lanets;or  &s  Solomons  vertuom  woman  among  the  daughters y 
Prov.  3 1 .2p.  Though  every  grace  hath  done  vertH)ufly,yzt  thou 
O  faith  excelleft  them  all.  The  Affile  indeed  gives  the  prece- 
dency to  love,and  fets  faith  on  the  lower  hand,  i  Cor.i  3. 1 3.  JVow 
aifideth  faithyho^e ^charity ythefe  three >but  the  greatefi  is  charity ; 
yet  you  may  obferve,  that  this  prelation  of  it  before  faith,hath 
a  particular  refpeft  to  the  Saints  blifleful  ftate  in  heaven ;  where 
love  remains,  and  faith  ceafeth  ;  in  which  regard,love  indeed  is 
thegreater,becaufe  ic  is  the  end  of  our  faith  ;  we  apprehend  by 
faith,  that  we  may  enjoy  by  love :  but  if  we  confide r  the  Chri- 
(Hansprefent  (tate,  while  militant  on  earth,  in  this  refpeel:  love 
muft  give  place  to  faith  ;   'tis  true,  love  is  the  grace  thac  ftiall 
triumph  in  heaven;  but  ic  is  faith,  not  love,  which  is  the  con- 
quering grace  on  earth.  This  is  the  viBory  that  overcometh  the 
rvorld^  ever,  our  faith,  1  Joh.  ^4-love  indeed  hath  its  place  in  the 
battel,  and  doth  excellent  fervice,  bur.  it   is  under  faith  its 
leader,GW.  5.6. faith  which  worketh  by  lav  ;  even  as  the  Captain 
fightethbyhisfouldiers,whomheleads  on;  fo  faith  works  by 
love,  whictiit  excites.  Love  (  'tis  true  )  is  the  grace  that  at  lalt 
pofleffeth  the  inheritance,  but  it  is  faith  that  gives  theChrifti-  * 
an  right  unto  it,  without  which  he  fhould  never  have  enjoyed 

S  f  f  2  it. 


£-co  Above  all  tahjng 


it.  fol:n  l.  12.  10  as  m*.ny  as  received  him  fie  gate  power  to  be- 
com:  the  fons  of  Cody  ev'.n  to  them  that  %dieve  on  his  Name. 
In  a  word,ir  is  love  that  unites  God  and  glorified  Saints  together 
in  heaven ;  but  it  was  faith  that  firft  uniced  them  to  Chritt^viiik 
thzy  W'ZK  on  tmh,Eph.3A7.that  Chrift  maj>  dwell in your  hearts 
by  faithhnd  if  Chrift  had  not  dwelt  in  them  by  faith  on  earth, 
they  fhould  never  have  dwelt  with  God  in  heaven.  But  I  pro- 
ceed to  fhew  wherein  it  appears,  that  faith  hath  fuch  a  prelati- 
on  above  other  graces ;  which  take  in  thefe  following  par- 
ticulars. 


SECT.  I. 

i .  Firft ,in  the  great  enquiry  that  God  makes  after  faith  above  all 

other  graces.    Nothing  more  fpeaks  our  efteem  of  per  fons  or 
things,  than  our  enquiry  after  them.  We  ask  firft  and  moft  for 
thoie  that  ftand  higheft  in  our  thoughts.//  your  father  well  (faid 
fof'ph  )  the  old  man  of  whom  ye  ffake^is  he  alive  }  Gen.4  3.27.N0 
doubt  there  were  others  of  whofe  welfare  fofeph  would  have 
been  glad  to  hear  of  alfo,  but  being  moft  pent  and  pained  with  a 
natural  affection  to  his  father,  he  eafetn  himfelf  of  this  firft. 
And  when  David  ask't  for  ^Abf  lom  above  all  others ;  Is  the 
young  man  Abfalomfafe:2.n<{  over  again  with  ir  to  Cufh,  2  Sam. 
1  fc.it  was  eafie  to  guefle  how  highly  he  valued  his  life.  Now  you 
fliall  finde  the  great  enquiry  that  (Jod  makes  is  for  faith.    When 
the  Son  of  ^an  comet  hy  (hall  he  finde  faith    on  th    "anh">  Luke 
18.8.  Implying,  that  this  is  the  grace  which  he  will  efpecially 
lo  kfor,  and  defires  to  finde.  Weread,  ftf/>#  p.  of  a  great  mi- 
racle, a  man  by  Chrift  reftored  to  his  fight,that  was  born  blind. 
This  fo  enraged  the  malicioi  is  'Tharifeesjhit  they  excommuni- 
cate the  poor  manto*  no  o  her  fault,  but  giving  his  merciful 
Phyfuian  a gooHvo-d.  This  brings  Chrift  the  fooner  to  him, 
fo  tenders  he  of  ihofe  that  ntfer  for  him,  that  they  ("hall  not 
long  want  hi $  fweet  to  npany*and  he  hath  no  caufe  to  complain 
forbci  g  czft  out  of  m  n-;  fociety,that  gains  Chrifts  prefence  by 
the  fame. Now  obferve  what  Chrift  faith  to  him  at  his  firft  meet- 
ing,^. 3  %-Jefui  i.  eard  that  they  had  caft  him  oityand  when  he  had 

found 


the  fhield  of  faith.  5  o  1 

fomd.  him,  he  fatd  unto  him^dofi  thm  believe  on  the  Son  of  God} 
The  man  had  already  expreft  fome  zeal  for  Ch  ift,in  vindicating 
him,and  fpeaking  well  of  him  to  the  head  of  the  bittereft  ene- 
mies he  had  on  earth,  for  which  he  was  now  a  fufferer  at  their 
hands.    This  was  very  commendable,  but  there  is  one  thing 
that  Chrift  prizeth  above  all  this,  and  that    is  faich.     This  he 
enquires  after,  dofi  thou  believe  on  the  Son  of  God}  As  if  he  had 
faid,  all  this  thy  zeal  in  fpeaking  for  me,  and  patience  in  fuffer- 
ing  are  nothing  worth  in  my  account,except  thou  hart  faith  alfo. ! 
Indeed  moft  of  Gods  dealings  with  his  people,  what  are  they,  \ 
but  enquiries  after  faith,  either  the  truth  or  ftrength  of  it/when ' 
he  afflicts  them,  it  is  for  the  trial  of  their  faith,  1  Pet.  1.7.  Affli-j 
ftions  they  are  Gods  Spade  and  Mattock,  by  which  he  digs  into 
his  peoples  hearts  to  find  out  this  gold  of  faith; not,but  that  he] 
enquires  for  other  graces  alfo,  but  this  is  named  for  all,  as  the 
chief,  which  found,  all  the  other  will  foon  appear.  When  God 
feems  to  delay  and  makes  (  as  it  were  )  a  halt  in  his. providence, 
before  he  comes  with  the  mercy  he  promifeth,and  we  pray  for ; 
'tis  exploratory  to  faith. O  woman,great is thy  faith >,be  it  unto  thee 
even  as  thou  wilt,  Mat.  15.  28.   She  had  received  her  anfwer 
without  fo  much  ado  ;  only  Chrift  had  a  mercy  in  rtore  for  her 
more  than  uSe  thought  of ;  with  the  granting  of  herfuit  in  the 
cure  of  her  daughter,  he  had  a  minde  to  give  her  the  evidence 
of  her  faith  alfo,  and  the  high  efteem  God  hath  of  his  grace,  as 
that  which  may  have  of  him  what  it  will. 


SECT.   II. 

i  The  commendations  that  are  given  to  faith  above  other  graces, 
you  fhall  obferve  that  in  the  fame  action,  wherein  other  gra- 
ces are  eminently  exercifed  as  well  as  faith,  even  then  faith  is 
taken  notice  of,and  the  crown  fet  upon  faiths  head,  rather  than 
any  of  the  other.  We  hear  nothing  almort  of  any  other  grace 
throughout  the  whole  eleventh  of  the  Hebrews  ,but  faith;£y  faith 
Abaln.m,  by  faith  facob,md  the reft  of  thofe  worthies  did  all 
thofe  famous  exploits. There  was  a  concurrence  of  the  other  gra- 
ces with  faith  in  them  all.But  all  goes  under  the  name  of  faith. 

Sff3  The 


cos  Above  all  tah^ng 

The  whole  Army  fight,yet  the  General  or  Captain  hath  the  ho* 
.  nour  of  the  victory  afcribed  to  him.  Alexanders  and  Cajurs 
names  are  tranfmitted  to  pofterky  as  the  great  conquerors,thac 
over-came  Co  many  battels, not  the  private  fouldiers  that  fought 
under  them.  Faith  is  the  captain-grace;  all  thole  famous  acts 
of  thofe  Saints  are  recorded  as  the  achievements  of  faith.  Thus 
concerning  the  Centurion,  Mat.  8.10.  Verily  (  faith  ChrU) 
/  have  not  found  fo great  faithyno  not  in  Jfrael.ThttC  were  Other 
graces  very  eminent  in  the  Centurion  beiides  his  faith  ;  his  con- 
fciencious  care  of  his  poor  fervant,for  whom  he  could  have  done 
no  more,if  he  had  been  his  own  childe ;  there  are  fome  that  call 
themfelves  Chf  iftians,  yet  would  not  have  troubled  themfelves 
fo  much  for  a  fick  fervant ;  fuch  alas  are  oft  lefle  regarded  in 
ficknefle,  than  their  Matters  beaft.  But  efpecially  his  humility, 
this  fhined  forth  very  eminently ,in  that  felf-abafingexpretfion, 
Lord,I  am  not  worthy  that  thou  fhoula  ft  come  under  my  roofyv.S. 
Confider  but  his  calling  and  degree  therein,  and  it  makes  his  hu- 
mility more  confpicuous.  A  Sword-man,  yea,  a  Commander ; 
fuch  ufe  to  fpeak  big  and  high.  Power  is  feldome  a  friend  to  hu- 
mility ;  furely  he  was  a  man  of  a  rare  humble  fpirit,  that  he, 
vvhofe  mouth  was  ufed  fo  much  to  words  of  command  over  his 
fouldiers,couldfodimit  and  humble  himfelf  in  his  addreffe  to 
Chrift;yet  his  faith  out-fhines  his  humility  in  itsgreateit  flrength. 
Not,I  have  not  found  fuch  humility,but  fuch  faith  in  all  Ifrael. 
As  if  Chrifi  had  faid, there  is  not  one  believer  in  all  Ifrael,  but  I 
Know  him,  and  how  rich  he  is  in  faith  alfo  ;  but  I  have  not 
found  fo  much  of  this  heavenly  trcifure  in  any  ones  hand,as  in 
this  Centurions.  Indeed  the  Christians  chief  riches  is  in  faiths 
hand.  Hath  not  God  chof  n  the  poor  of  this  world  rich  in  faith}] am. 
2.  5.  Why  rjch  in  faith,  rather  than  rich  in  patience,rich  in  love, 
or  any  oxher  grace  ?  O  great  reafonfor  it;  when  the  creature 
comes  to  lay  claim  to  pardon  of  fin,the  favour  of  God,and  hea- 
ven it  felf,  it  is  not  love,  patience,&c.  but  faith  alone  that  lays 
down  the  price  of  all  thefe.  Not  Lord  pardon,fave  me,here  is 
my  love  and  patience  for  it  :  but  here  is  Chrift,and  the  price  of 
his  blood,which  faith  prefents  thee  for  the  full  purchafe  of  them 
all ;  and  this  leads  to  a  third,  and  indeed  the  chief  of  all. 


SECT. 


the  fhield  of  faith.  503 


SECT.    III. 

Thirdly, the  high  office  that  fairh  is  fet  in  above  other  §races,in 
thebufinefs  of  our  juttiEcation  beforeGod.#?//sg  -nfiifd  by  aith 
we  have  peace  with  (7<?^,  Rom.  5.1. Not  juftified  by  love,re.en- 
cance,patience,or  any  other  grace  befide  faith.O  how  harfh  do  h 
it  found  in  aChriftianear,juftifying  patience,  juiiifying  repe-i- 
tancepand  if  they  were  concern 'd  in  the  a&  of  juttihcation,  as 
faith  is,the  name  would  as  well  become  them,  as  it  doth  faith  ic 
feif.But  we  find  this  appropriated  to  faith,and  the  reit  hecg'd  out 
from  having  to  do  in  the  act  of  juftirication,though  included  and 
fuppofed  in  the  perfon  who  is  juftified.    It  is  faith  that  jmiiries 
without  works.This  is  Pauls  task  to  prove,  Rom.  3.  But  this  faith. 
which  ju(Uries,is  not  dead  or  idle,  but  a  lively  working  faith, 
which  feems  to  be  James  his  defign,^/?.  2.  of  his  Epift/e.As  God 
did  Angle  Ch  rift  out  from  all  others,to  be  the  only  Mediae  or  be- 
twixt him  and  man,and  his  righteoufnefs  to  be  the  meritorious 
caufe  of  our  juftiflcationjfo  he  hath  fingled  faith  out  from  all  the 
other  graces,  to  be  the  inftrument  or  means  for  appropriating 
this  righteoufnefs  of  Chrift  to  our  felres.Therefore  as  this  rigi> 
teoufnefs  is  called  therightconfneffe  of  £/oi,andoppofedroour 
own  righteoufnefle  (though  wrought  by  God  in  us)  Rjm.  1  o.  j, 
becaufe  it  is  wrought  by  Chritt  for  us,  but  not  inherent  in  us  as 
the  other  is.So  alfo  it  is  called  the  righteoafneffe  offalth^Kom.^, 
11,13.  Not  the  righteoufnefle  of  repentance,love  or  any  other, 
grace.    Now  wherefore  is  it  called  the  righteoufnefle  of  faith, 
and  not  of  love,repentance,&c  ?  Surely,not  that  faith  it  feif  is 
our  righteoufnefle  ;  then  we  {hould  be  juftified  by  works,  while 
we  are  juitihed  by  faith,  contrary  to  the  Apoftle,  who  oppofeth, 
faith  and  works,  Rom.  4. 

In  a  word,  then  we  fhould  be  juftified  by  a  righteoufnefle  of 
our  own,for  faith  is  a  grace  inherent  in  us,and  as  much  our  own 
work,  as  any  grace  befides  is.But  this  is  as  contrary  to  the  tame 
ApofllesdoArine,  T^/7.?.9.whcreour  own  righteoufnefle, and 
the  righteoufnefs  whichis  by  faich  are  declared  to  be  inconiiftent. 
It  can  therefore  be  called  the  righteoufneis  of  faith  for  this  rea- 
fon  and  no  other ;  becaufe  faith  is  the  only  grace  whofe  office  ic 

is 


cc4  Above  all  taking 


is  to  lay  holdcnChriit,  and  lb  to  appropriate  his  righteouf- 
ncfle  for  juftification  to  our  fouls.  Chrift  and  faith  are  relatives, 
which  muit  not  be  fever'd.  Chrift  he  is  the  treafure,  and  faich 
rhe  hand  which  receives  it.  Chriils  rightcoufneffc  is  the  robe, 
faith  the  hand  that  puts  it  on;  fo  that  it  is  Chriit  who  is  the 
treafure,  by  his  blood  he  difchargeth  our  debt,  and  not  faith; 
whofe  office  is  only  to  receive  Chrift,whereby  he  becomes  ours. 
Ir  is  Ch  rifts  righteoufneflfe  that  is  the  robe  which  covers  our  na- 
kedneife,  and  makes  us  beautiful  in  Gods  eye,only  faith  hath  the 
honour  to  put  the  robe  on  the  foul ;  and  it  is  no  fmall  honour 
that  is  therein  put  upon  faith  above  other  graces.  As  God  gra- 
ced Afofes  exceedingly  above  the  reft  of  his  brethren  (the//"- 
raelites )  when  he  was  called  up  the  Mount  to  receive  the  Law 
from  Gods  mouth,  while  they  had  their  bounds  fet  them.,  to 
ftand  waiting  at  the  bottom  of  the  hill,  till  he  brought  it  down 
to  them  ;  fo  doth  God  highly  honour  faith,  to  call  this  up  as  the 
grace,by  whofe  hand  he  will  conveigh  this  glorious  priviledge  of 
juftification  over  to  us. 
Queft.  Qgeft-  But  why  is  faith  rather  than  any  grace  elfe  employed 
""^  in  this  act  ? 

JlnUv.  i .  e/^»/».  i .  Becaufe  there  is  no  grace  hath  fo  proper  a  fitnefle 
for  this  office  as  faith.  Why  hath  God  appointed  the  eye  to 
fee,  and  not  the  ear?  why  the  hand  to  take  our  food,  rather 
than  the  foot  ?  It  iseafily  anfwered,b:caufe  thefe  members  have 
a  particular  fitnefle  for  thefe  functions,  and  not  the  other.Thus 
faith  hath  a  fitnefle  for  this  work  peculiar  to  it  felf ;  we  are  jufti- 
fied  not  by  giving  any  thing  to  God  what  we  do,  but  by  recei- 
ving from  God  what  Chriit  hath  done  for  us.  Now  faith  is 
the  only  receiving  grace  ,  and  therefore  only  fit  for  this 
office. 
2.  2.  There  is  no  grace  that  God  could  truft  his  honour  fo  fafe- 

ly  with  in  this  bufineffe  of  juftification,  as  with  faith.The  great 
defign  God  hath  in  juftifyingapoor  finner,  is  to  magnifie  his 
free  mercy  in  the  eye  of  his  creature  ;  this  is  writ  in  fuch  fair 
characters  in  the  Word,  that  he  which  runs  may  read  it.  God 
was  refolv'd  that  his  free  mercy  fhould  go  away  with  all  the 
honour,  and  the  creature  fhould  be  quite  cut  out  from  any  pre- 
tentions to  partnerfhip  with  him  therein.  Now  no  way  like  to 
this  of  being  juftifled  by  faith,  for  the  fecuring  and  fafe-guarding 

the 


the  pj  is  Id  of  faith.  505 


the  glory  of  Gods  free  grace  ,  Rom^.2%^  26.  when  the  Apoftle 
hath  in  fome  verfes  togecher  difcourfed  of  the  free  j unification 
of  a  (inner  before  God,    He  goes  on  to  A  ew  how  this  cuts  the 
very  comb,  yea3throat  of  all  felf- exalting  thoughts^  *L7-   Where 
is  boafling  then  ?  it  is  excluded  :  *Bj  what  law  ?  of  worlds  >  nay,but 
by  the  Law  of  faith,     princes  of  all  wrongs,  moft  difdaine   and 
abhor,  to  fee  their  royal  bed  defiled  •,  fo  jealous  they  have  been 
of  this,  that  for  the  prevention  of  all  fufpition   of  iuch  afoule 
fad,  it  hath  been  of  old  the  cuftome  of  the  greateft  CMonarcbs, 
that  thofe  who  were  their  favourites,  and  admitted  into  nearefl 
attendance  upon  their  own  perfons  and  <|Wfw,fhould  beEunuchs^ 
fuch  whofe  very  difability  of  nature,  might  remove  all  fufpition 
of  any  fuch  attempt  by  them.    Truly  God  is  more  jealous  of  ha- 
ving the  glory  of  his  grace  raviiht  by  the  pride,  and  feif-glorying 
of  the  creature,  than  ever  any  Prince  was  of  .having  his  Queen 
defloured.    And  therefore  to  fecure  it  from  any  fuch  horrid   a- 
bufe,  he  hath  chofen  faith,  this  Eunuch  grace  (  as  I  may  fo  call 
k)  to  ftand  fo  nigh  him,  and  be  employed  by  him  in  this  high 
a&  of  grace,  whofe  very  nature  (  being  a  felf- emptying  grace) 
renders  it  uncapable  ofentring  into  any  fuch  defigne  againft  the 
glory  of  Gods  grace  ^  faith  hath  two  hands ;  with  one  it  pulls  off 
itsownrighteoufrtefs,and  throws  it  away,    as  David  did  Sauls 
armour  ^  with  the  other  it  puts  on  Chrifts  righteoufnefs   over 
the  fouls  fhame,  as  that   in  which  it  dares  alone  fee  God ,  or 
be  feen  of  him.     This  makes  it  impoffihle  (  faith  learned  and  holy 
Mafter  Ball)  how  to  conceive  that  faith  and  works  fbould  be  cen- 
joyn'd  as  cor.-caufes  injuftification  ;  feeing  the  one,  that  is  faith ,  at- 
tributes all  to  the  free  grace  of  God  -y  the  other,  that  is  works,  chal- 
lenge to  themf  elves  :   Theme  (that  is  faith)  wiU  afyire  no  higher , 
but  to  be  the  infirumental  caufe  of  free  remi(pon-y  the  other  can  fit  no 
lower ,  but  to  be  the  matter  of 'j unification ,  if  any  caufe  at  all;  for  if 
works  be  accounted  to  us  in  the  room,  or  place  of  ex  all  obedience  in  free 
juftification^do  they  notfupply  the  place  ?  are  they  not  advanced  to  the 
dignity  of  works  compleat  andperfccl  irtjufiificationfrcm  jufiice  ? 
Treatife  of  Covenant  of  grace  Jig.  70. 


Ttt  SECT. 


*0£  Above  all  taking 


SECT.    LV.. 

fourthly,  the  mighty  influence  ,yea,univerfal,  that  faith  hath 
\'         upon  all  her  filler- graces,  fpcaksher  the  chief  of  them  all.  What 
makes  the  Sunnelo  glorious  a  creature,  but  hecaufe  it  is  a  com- 
mon oood,  and  ferves  all  the  lower  world  with  light  and  influ- 
ence? faith  is  a  grace,  whofe  Miniftry  Cod  ufcth  as  much  for  the 
good  ofthefpiritual  world  in  the  Saints  (called  in  Scripture  the 
Kauri  kt'hw,  the  new  ere ation,  Gal. 6. 1 5.)  as  he  doth  the'unne 
for  the  corporeal.     Tfytbing  x  hid  from  the  heat  of  the  Sunne ,Pfal. 
1  p.  <5,    And  no  grace  that  faiths  influence  reacheth  cot  un- 
to. 
*»  Firft,  faith  finds  all  the  graces  with  work.     As  the  rich  tradef- 

man  gives  out  his  wool,  fome  to  this  man,and  fomc  to  that,  who 
all  fpin  and  work  of  the  ftock  he  gives  them  out,  fo  that  when 
he  ceafeth  to  trade,  they  muft  alfo,  becaufe   they  have  no  ftock 
but  what  he  affords  them.    Thus  faith  givesout  to  every  grace, 
what  they  ad  upon.    If  faith  trades  not,  neither  can  they.     To 
inftance  in  one  or  two  graces  for  all  the  reft.     Reper  tance,  this 
is  a  iweet  grace,  but  fet  on  work  by  faith.     Ninevths  repentance 
is  attributed  unto  their  faith,  Jonah  3.5.     The  peofle  of  Nineveh 
believed  Godyand  proclaimed  a  faft,  and  put  on  fatk^clotb.   It  is  VC- 
ly  like  indeed  that  their  repentance  was  no  more  than  legal,  but 
it  was  as  good  as  their  faith  was-,  if  their  faith  had  been  bet- 
ter, fo  would  their  repentance  alfo.     All  is  whift  and  quiet  in  an 
unbelieving  foul ;  no  news  of  repentance  ,   nor  noife  of  any 
complaint  made  agairft  finne,  til  faith  begins  to  ltir.     When 
faith  prefents  the   threatning,  andbindesthe  truth  and  terrour 
of  it  to  theconfeience,  then  the  (inner  hath  fomethingto  work 
upon.     A  slight  actuates  colours,  and  brings  the  eye  acquainted 
with  its  object,  whereupon  it  falls  to  work,  fo  doth  faith  actuate 
finne  in  the  confcier.ee  ^  Now  muting  thoughts  will  foon  rife,and 
like  cltud«jthicken  apace  into  a.ftorm,  till  they  befprcad  the  foul 
with  an  univcrfai  blacknefsof  horrour  and  trembling  for  finne  : 
Eut  then  alfo  the  creature  is  at  a  lofs,  and  can  go  no    further  in 
the  tulintfs  of  repentance,  till   faith  fends  in  more  work  from 
thcrromife,  by  p:efer.tinga  pardon  (herein,  to  the  returning 

foul. 


the  pAdd of  faith.  t$0j 


foul ;  which  no  fooner  is  heard  and  believed  by  the  creature,  but 
the  work  of  repentance  goes  on  apace.  Now  the  cloud  of  hor- 
rour  and  terrour,  which  the  fear  of  wrath  (from  confi  deration 
of  the  threatning)  had  gather'd  in  the  confeience,  diffolves  into 
a  foft  rain  of  Evangelical  forrow,  at  the  report  which  faith  makes 
from  the  promife. 

Love  is  another  heavenly  grace:    But  faith  gathers  the  fuel 
that  makes  this  fire;  fpeak  Chriftian,  whofe   foul  now  flames 
with  love  to  God,  was  it  alwayes  thm?  no  fure,  there  was  a 
tiT.e  (I  dare  fay  for  thee)  when  thy  hearth  was  cold,  not  a  fpark 
of  this  fire  to  be  found  on  the  altar  of  thy  heart.  How  is  it  then 
Chriftian,  that  now  thy  foul  loves  God,  whom  before  thou  dtdft 
fcotne  and  hate  >  furely  thou  haft  heard  fome  good  news  from 
heaven,  that  hath  chang'd  thy  thoughts  of  God,  and  turn'd  the 
ftreame  of  thy  love  which  ran  another  way ,  .into   this    happy 
channel.     And  who  can  be  the  mefTenger  befides  faith,  that 
brings  any  good  news  from  heaven  to  the  foul ?    It  is  faith  that 
proclaimes  the  promife,  opens  Chrifts  excellencies,  poures  out 
his  Name,  for  which  the  Virgins  love  him.  when  faith  hath 
drawn  a  character  of  Chrift  out  of  the  Word,  and  prefented  him 
in  his  love  and  lovelinefs  to  the  foul ,  now  the  creature  is  fweec- 
ly  inveigled  in  his  affe&ionsto  him  ^  now  the  Chriftian  hath    a 
copious  thearae  to  enlarge  upon  in  his  thoughts,  whereby  to  en- 
dear Chrift  more  and  more  unto  him.     Vnto  him  that  beli  vex, 
he  isfrechw,  i  Pet.  1,7.  and  the  more  faith,  the  more  precious. 
]  f  we  fhould  fit  in  the  fame  room  bythe  deareft  friend  we  had  in  all 
the  world.and  our  eyes  were  held  from  feeing  him,we  would  take 
no  more  notice  of  him  ,and  give  no  more  refpect  to  him  than  to  a 
meer  ftranger  ^  But  if  one  fhould  come  and  whifper  us  in  the  ear, 
and  tell  us  this  is  l'uch  a  dear  friend  of  yours,  that  once  laid  down 
his  life  to  fave  yours,  that  hath  made  you  heirs  to  all  the  goodly 
eftate  that  he  hath,  will  you  not  (hew  your  refpect  to  him  ?    O 
how  our  hearts  would  work  inoutbreafts,  and  make  hifte   to 
come  forth  in  fome  paflionate  expreffion  of  our  dear  affection 
to  him?yea,how  heartily  afhamed  would  we  be  for  our  uncivil  and 
unbecoming  behaviour  towards  him,  though  occafioned  by  our 
ignorance  of  him  I    Truly  thus  it  is  here  ±  fo  long  as  faiths  eye 
hath  a  mift  before  it,  or  is  unacYive,  and  as  it  were  afleep  in  the 
dull  habit,  the  Chriftian  may  fit  very  nigh  Chrift  in  an  Ordinance, 

T  1 1  2    •  in 


*o8  Above  all  taking 


in  a  providence,  and  be  very  little  afTe&ed  with  him,  and  drawn 
out  in  loves  to  him.  But  when  faith  is  awake  to  fee  him  as  he 
pafleth  by  in  his  love  and  lovelinefs,  and  active  to  make  report 
to  the  foul  of  the  fweet  excellencies  it  fees  in  C  hrift,  as  alfo  of 
his  deare  bleeding  love  to  his  foul  •,  tbeChriftians  love  now  can- 
not chufe  but  fpring  and  leap  in  his  bofome  at  the  voice  of  faith, 
&s  the  babe  dxd'm  Elizabeths  womb  at  thefalutationofhercofin 

Mary. 

2*  Secondly,  as  faith  fets  the  other  graces  on  work,  by  actu- 

ating their  object,  about  which  they  are  converfant  ^  fo   faith 
helps  them  all  to  work   by  fetching  ftrength  from  Chrift  to  a& 
andre-inforcethem  ^  faith  is  not  only  the  inftrument  to  receive 
the  righteoufnefs  of  Chrift  for  our  juftification  ;  But  alfo  it   is 
the  great  inftrument  to  receive  grace  from  Chrift  for  our  fanctifi- 
catton;     Of his  fulnefs  we  rtceivt 'grace  fir  grace,  John  1. 15.  But 
huw  do  we  receive  itr  even  by  faith  ^  faith   unites   the  foul  to 
Chrift  •  and  as  by  a  pipe  laid  clofe  to  the  mouth  of  a  fountaine, 
water  is  carried  to  our  houfe.  for  the  fupply  of  the  whole  family  ; 
fo  by  faith,  is  derived  to  the  foul  fupply  in  abundance,  for  the 
particular  offices  of  all  the  feveral  graces.    He  that  believes,  mt 
of  his  belly  [haU  flow  rivers  »f  living  waters ,  John  7.  3  8.  That  is, 
he  that  hath  faith,  and  is  careful  to  live  in  the  exercife  of  it,  (hall 
have  a  flow  and  an  encreafe  of  all  other  graces,  called  here  living 
waters.    Hence  it  is,  that  the  Saints ,  when  they  would  advance  to 
a  high  pitch  in  other  graces,  they  pray  for  the  encreafe  of  their 
faith.    Our  Saviour,  L#fcf  17.3,4*  fets  his  Apoftles  a  very  hard 
leflbn,  when  he  would  winde  up  their  love  to  fuch  a  high   pitch,, 
as  to  forgive  their  offending  brother  feven  times  in  aday^  Now 
mark,  ver.$.  The  Affiles  (  apprehending  the  difficulty  of  the 
duty)  [aid  ants  the  Lord, Encreafe  our  faith.     But  why  did  they 
not  rather  fay,  encreafe  our  love,  feeing  that  was  the  grace  they 
were  to  exercife  in  forgiving  their  br<  ther  ?     Surely  it  was 
becaufe  love  hath  its  encrra'e  from  aitb;   if  they  could  g*t  more 
faith  on  Chrift,  t' ey  might  be  fu  e  the\  fliould  have  more  love 
to  their  brother  alfo.     The  more  ttn»ngly  rhey  could  believe-on 
Chrift  for  the  pardon  of  their  own  finnes.  not  feven,    butfeventy 
times  fn  a  day  committed  agamft   -cd  the  more  eafiei:  w<  uld  be 
to  forgive  their  brother  offending  them  (elves  feven  time  nd<y. 
which  interpretation,  our  Saviours  repl)  to  their  prayer  :or  faith 

fa- 


the  jhield  of  faith .  t  Qp 


favours,  v. 6.  And  the  Lord  [aid,  if  ye  had  faith  as  a  graine  ofmu- 
jfardfecd^ye  might  fay  to  this  Sycamore  treejte  thouyluckt  up  by  the 
roots  and  it  fbould  obey  jot*-,  Where  Chrift  (hews  the  efficacy  of 
juftifying  faith,  by  the  power  of  a  faith  off'miracles^  As  if  he 
hadfaid,  you  have  hit  on  the  right  way  to  get  a  forgiving  fpi- 
rit«t  it  is  faith  indeed  that  would  enable  you  to  conquer  the  un* 
mercifulnefs  of  your  hearts-,  though  it  were  as  deeply  rooted  in 
you,  as  this  Sycamore  tree  is  in  the  ground,  yet  by  faith  you 
(hould  be  able  to  pluck  it  up  •  when  we  would  have  the  whole 
tree  fruitful,  we  think  we  do  enough  to  water  the  root,  know- 
ing what  the  root  fucks  from  the  earth,  it  will  foon  difperfe  into 
the  branches.  Thus,  that  fap  and  fatnefs,  faith,  which  is  the  ra- 
dical grace,  draws  from  Chrift,  will  be  quickly  dirTufed  through 
the  branches  of*he  other  graces,  and  tafted  in  the  pleafantnefs  of 
their  fruit. 

Thirdly,  faith  de'ends  the  Chriftian  in  the  exercife  of  all   his 
graces.    By  faith  n>e  fl  and fk.om.  1 1.20.  Asa  fouldier  under  the 
prote&ionofhisfhield,   {lands  his  ground,   and  doth  his  duty, 
notwithftandingallthefhot  that  are  made  againft  him,  to  drive 
him  back  •,  when  faith  failes,  then  every  grace  is  put  to  the  runne 
and  rout.     Abrahams  Simplicity  and  fincerity,  how  was  it  put  to 
diforder,  when  he  diflembled   with  AbimiUch  concerning  his 
wife?  and  why,  but  becaufe  his  faith  failed  him  ?   Jobs  patience 
received  a  wound,  when  his  hand  grew  weary,  and  his  fhield  of 
faith,  which  (hould  have  covered  him,  hung  down.    Indeed  no 
grace  is  fafe,  iff  om  under  the  wing  of  faith  •,  Therefore  to  fecure 
Peter  from  falling  f  om  all  grace  ,  Chrift  tells  him,  he  had pray *d 
that  his  faith  fhmld  not  fail ,  Luke  22.32.    This  was  the  referve 
that  Chrift  took  care  fhould  be  kept,  to  recover  his  other  graces, 
when  foiled  by  the  enemy,  and  to  bring  him  off  that  encounter, 
wherein  he  was  fofadly  bruifed  andbrokea    It  is  faid,  that 
Chrift  could  net  do   many  mighty    things   in  his    oven    ccuntrey^ 
btcaufe  of  their  unbeliefs  Mat.    13.  58.     Neither  can  Satan  do  a- 
ny  great  hurt  to  the  Chriftian ,  fo  long  as  faith  is  upon  the 
place.    It  is  true,  heaimestofightfaithaloveall,  as  that  which 
keeps  him  from  coming  at  the  reft,  .but  1  e  is.  or  able  long   to 
ftand  before  it.     Let  a  ^aint  be  never  io  ht  m-bh*  patient,  devout, 
alas,  Satan  will  eafily  pick  fome  hole  cr  ot^  e  m  thefe  graces,  and 
break  in  upon  him  when  he  ftands  in  f  he  be  ft  a  ay  ;  if  faith   be 

not 


h10  Above  all  taking 


not  in  the   field    to  cover  thefe.     This   is  trie  grace    that 
makes  him  face  about ,  and  take  him  to  his   heeles ,     1    per. 

5  °- 
Fourthly,  faith  alone  procures  acceptance  with  God  for  all 

the  other  graces,  and  their  works.    Byfaiih  Abel  <ffered  that  ex- 
cellent facrif\ce%  to  which  God  gave  fuch  a  gracious  teftimony  , 
Jieb.  1 1  4.  When  the  Chriftian  hath  wrought  hardeft  m  a  day , 
and  hath  fpun  the  fineft,  cveneft  thread  of  obedience  at  the  wheel 
of  duty  ,  he  is  afraid  to  carry  home  his  work  at  night  with  an 
expectation  of  any  acceptance  at  Gods  hands  for  his  work  fake. 
No,  it  is  faith  he  makes  ufe  of,  to  prcfent  it  thorough  Chrift    to 
God  for  acceptance ;  wearefaid,  1  /Yf.2.5.  to  iffer  up  fplritual 
facrjjieej  acceptable  to  Gad  b)  fefus  Chrift  }   that  is,    by  faith    in 
Chrift-,  for  without  faith,  Chrift  makes  none  of  our  facrifices 
acceptable     God  takes  nothing  kindly,  but  what  the  hand  of 
faith  prefents  ■  And  fo  prevalent  is  faith  with  God,   that  he  will 
tike  light  gold,  broken  fervices  at  her  hand  ;  which,   were  they 
to  come  alone,  would  be  rejeded  with  indignation.  As  a  favou- 
rite that  hath  the  eare  of  his  Prince ,  findes  it  eafie  to  get   his 
poor  kindred  entertained  at  Court  alfo.    So  fo/eph   brought  his 
brethren  into  Pharaohs  prcfence  with  great  demonftrations  of 
favour  (hewn  them  by  him  for  his  fake.     And  Efther  woond 
Mordecai  into  a  high    preferment  in   Ahajhuvus  Court ,  who 
upon  his  own  credit  could  get  no  further  than  to  fit  at  the  gate. 
Thus  faith  brings  thofe  works  and  duties  into  Gods  prefence , 
which  elfe  were  fure  to  be  (hut  out.and  pleading  the  righteoufnefs 
ofChrift,procures  them  to  be  received  into  fuch  high  favour  with 
God,that  they  become  his  delight,  Prov.  15.8.  and  as  a  pleafant 
perfume  in  his  noftrils, Mal.i  .4. 

Fifthly,  faith  brings  in  fuccours,when  other  graces  faile.  Two 
wayes  the  Chriftians  graces  may  failej  In  their  a&ivity,or  in  their 
evidence. 

1 .  In  their  activity^  is  low  water  fometimes  with  the  Chrifti- 
an. He  cannot  a<ft  fo  freely  and  vigoroufly  then,  as  at  another 
time  when  the  tyderunncs  high,  through  divine  afliftances  that 
flowinamaineuponhim^  chofe  temptations  which  he  could  at 
one  time  fnap  afunder,  as  eafily  at  Sawpfindid  lis  cords  of  flax , 
at  another  time  he  is  fadly  hampered  with,  r  hat  he  cannot  fhake 
them  off.     Thofe  duties  which  he  performs  with  deligk  and 

>°y> 


the  jhield  of  faith.  g»lt 


yoy,  when  his  grace  is  in  a  healthful  piight ,  at  another  time  he 
pants  and  blows  at;  as  much  as  a  tick  man  doth  to  go  up  a  hill 
10  heavily  doth  he  tinde  them  come  off.    Were  not  the  Chrifti.! 
an,  think  you,  iil  now  on  it,  if  he  had  no  comings  in,  but  from 
his  own  (hop  of  duty  ?  Here  now  is  the  excellency  of  faith  ,   it 
fuccours  the  Chriftian  in  this  his  bankrupt  condition.  A  tf$fefh  got 
over  his  brethren  to  him,  and  nouriftit  them  out  of  his  granaries 
all  the  time  of  famine,fo  doth  faith  thcChriftian  in  this  his  penury 
of  grace  and  duty.  And  this  it  doth  two  wayes ; 

Firft,  by  laying  claim  to  the  fulnefs  of  that  grace  which  is   in 
Chrift  as  its  own -,  why  art  thou  dejeded,  O  my  foul,  faith  the 
Chriftians  raith,for  thy  weak  grace  ?  There  is  enough  in  Chrift. 
all  fulnefs  dwells  in  him-,  itplcafed    theFather  it  fhould  be  for 
and  that  to  pleafure  thee  in  thy  wants  and  weakneffes.  It  is  a  mi- 
nifterial  fulnefsas  the  clouds  carry  rain  not  for  themfelves  but  the 
earth,fo  doth  Chrift  his  fulnefs  of  grace  for  thee.  He  is  made  ifGM 
to  tawifdome,  andrighteoufnefs,  and fanElificaticn, and  redemption , 
1CV.130.  When  tftfc  rags  ofthe  Chriftians  own  rightecufnefs 
difcourage  and  (name  him, faith  hath  a  robe  to  put  on, that  covers 
all  this  uncomelinefs  ^  Chrift  is  my  righteoufnefs,  faith   faith, 
and  inhimwe are ccmpleatyCo\.2. 10.  Faith  hath  two  hands,  a 
working  hand,  and  a  receiving  hand .  and  the  receiving  hand  re- 
lieves the  working  hand,  or  elfe  there   would  be  a  poorehoufe 
kept  in  the  C  hriftians  bofome.    We  find  Taut  himfelf  but  in  a. 
ftarving  condition,  for  all  the  comfort  his  own  graces  could  with 
their  earning?  afford  him  -,  he  is  a  wretched   man  in  his  own  ac- 
count, if  thefe  be  all  he  hath  to  live  upon,  Rom.  7.  24.  yet  even 
then,  when  he  fees  nothing  in  his  own  cupboard,  his  faith   puts, 
forth  its  receiving  hand  to  Chrift,  and  he  is  prefently  let  at  a 
rich    fea(t  ,     for    which    you    finde    him    giving    thanks  ( 
verfe  25.  /  thankGod  through  JeftuChrtft  cur  Lord. 

Secondly,  faith  fuccours-  the  Qhriftian  in  the  weaknefs  and 
inactivity  of  his  graces,  by  applying  the  promifes  for  the  Saints 
perfeverance  in  grace.  It  brings  great  cemfort  to  afick  man, 
though  very  weak  at  prefenr,  to  hear  his  Phyflcian  tell  him3  that 
though  he  is  low  and  feeble,  yet  there  is  no  fear  he  will  die.  The 
prefent  weaknefs  of  grace  is  fad,  but  the  fear  of  failing  quire  a- 
way  far  fadder.  Now  faith,  and  only  fa!th,canbethemeilerger 
to  bring  this  good  news  to  the  foul,  that  it  (hall  perfcvere.Serce 

an& 


:, 


5I3 


Above  nil  taking 


and  reafon  are  quite  pofed  and  duaced  here.     It  feems  irnpof- 
fibletothem, ' that  fuch  a  bruifed  reed  fhould bear  up   againft  all 
the  counterblafts  of  hell,  becaufe  they  confider  only  what  grace 
itfelf  can  do,  and  finding  it  foover-matcht  by  the  power  and 
policy  of  Satan,  think  it  but  rational  to  give  the  victory  to   the 
ftronger  fide.  But  faith  when  it  feeth  fymptoraes  ofdeathinthe 
Saints  grace3finds  life  in  the  promife,&comforts  the  foul  with  this, 
that  the  faithful  God  will  not  fuffer  his  grace  to  fee  corruption, he 
hath  undertook  the  phyficking  of  his  Saints,  foh.  i  j.  2.  Every 
branch  in  me  that  beareth  fruit, he  purgeth  it  that  it  may  bring  forth 
■mere  fruit.  When  Ha^ael  came  to  enquire  of  Elifha  for  hisfick 
Matter,  whether  he  fhould  live  or  die;  the  Proplec  tent  him 
with  this  anfwer  back  unto  the  King  his  Mailer,    Then  mayefi 
certainly  recover  Joowbeit  the  Lord  hath/hewed  me  that  hefball  fure- 
iydie,  2King.8.io.  That  is,  he  might  certainly  recover  for  all 
his  difeafe,but  he  (hould  die  by  the  traitercus  bloody  hand  ofHa- 
x,ael  his  fervant ;  give  me  leave  only  to  allude  to  this,  when  the 
Chriftian  confults  with  his  faith,  and  enquires  of  it,  whether  his 
weak  grace  will  fail  or  hold  out,  dye  or  live  ;  faiths  anfwer  i»,tlj 
yeeak&race  may  certainly  die  and  fall  away,  but  the  Lord  hath  /hew 
cdmeitfhallliveandperfevere,th&tis,'mrcgMdor\ts  own  weak- 
fiefs  and  the  mutability  of  mans  nature, the  Chr  iftians  grace  might 
certainly  die  and  come  to  nothing,butGod  hath  fhewn  faith  inthe 
promife,  that  it  {hall  certainly  live  and  recover  out  of  its  ioweft 
weaknefs.What  David  faid  in  regard  of  his  houfe,that  every  Chri- 
ftian may  fay  in  regard  of  his  grace.     Though  his  grace  be  net  fo 
with  God,fo  ftrong,fo  unchangeable  in  its  fcl^  yet  he  hath  made 
with  me  an  everlaftingCovenant,orderedin  all  things  and  fure-foi 
thisisallmy  falvationandmydefire,2»S,<*w.  23.5.  This  faltofthe 
Covenant  is  it,  that  (hall  keep  (faith  faith)  thy  weak  grace  from 
corruption.lV&j  art  thou  cafi  down  (faith  the  cPfalmift)0  my  foul  ? 
hope  thou  inGod,forI  fhallyet  praife  himywho  ps  the  health  of  my  coun- 
tenance,and  my  Cyo^Pf.42. 1 1  .f  he  health  of  Davids  countenance, 
was  not  in  his  countenancc,but  in  his  God,and  this  makes  hisfaith 
filence  his  fears,and  fo  peremptorily  refolve  upon  it,that  there  is  a 
time  coming  (how  neer  fo  ever  he  now  lies  to  the  graves  mouth  ) 
when  be  fhall  yet  praife  him.    The  hea'th  and  life  of  thy  grace 
lie  both  of  them,  not  in   thy  grace  (faith  faith  )  but  in  God, 
who  is  thy  God  j  therefore  I  fhall  yet  live   and  praife  him. 

I 


the  [Lidd of  faith.  c  §  ^ 

I  do  not  wonder  that  the  weakChriftian  is  melancholy  and 
(ad,  when  he  fees  his  fickly  face  in  any  other  glaffe  but 
rhis. 

Secondly  ,theChriftians  grace  may  fail  in  the  evidence  of  it.  2. 

It  may  diiappear,  as  ftars  do  in  a  cloudy  night,-  how  oft  do  we 
hear  theChriftun  fay  in  an  houre  of  defertion  and  temptation, 
I  know  not  whether  I  love  God  or  no  in  (incerityrT  dare  not  fay 
I  have  any  true  godly  forrowfor  (in;  Indeed  I  have  thought 
formerly  thefe  graces  had  a  being  in  mejbut  now  I  am  at  a 
Ioue,what  to  think,yea,fometimes  I  am  ready  to  fear  the  worft. 
Now  in  this  dark  benighted  ftate,faith  under-girds  the  fouls  fhip, 
and  hath  two  Anchors  it  calls  forth,whereby  the  foul  is  ftaidfrom 
being  driven  upon  the  devouring  quick-fands  of  defpair  and 
horrour. 

Firft,  faith  makes  a  difco very  of  the  rich  mercy  in  Chrift  to 
poor  finners,  and  calls  the  foul  to  look  up  to  it, when  it  hath  loft 
the  fight  of  his  own  grace.  It  is  no  fmall  comfort  to  a  man  that 
hath  loft  his  acquittance  for  a  debt  paid,  when  he  remembers 
that  the  man  he  deals  with  is  a  merciful  good  man ,  though 
his  difcharge  be  not  prefently  to  be  found.  That  God  whom 
thou  haft  to  do  with,  is  very  gracious  ;  what  thou  haft  loft,  he 
is  ready  to  reftore ;  fthe  evidence  of  thy  grace  I  mean  J  'David 
begg'd  this  and  obtain'd  it,  Tfal.  ^  i .  Yea,  faith  faith,  if  it  were 
true  what  thou  feareft,  that  thy  grace  was  never  true  ,•  there  is 
mercy  enough  in  Gods  heart  to  pardon  all  thy  former  hypocri- 
fie,if  now  thou  comeft  in  the  fincerity  of  thy  heart,  and  fo  faith 
perfwades  the  foul  by  an  ail  of  adventure  to  caft  it  felf  upon 
God  in  Chrift ;  wilt  thou  not,  faith  faith,  expeft  to  find  as 
much  mercy  at  Gods  hands,as  thou  canft  look  for  at  a  mans  ?  it 
is  not  beyond  the  line  of  created  mercy,  to  forgive  many  un-  f 

kindneflfes,  much  falfenefle  and  unfaithfulnefle,upon  an  humble 
fincere  acknowledgment  of  the  fame.  The  world  is  not  lobad, 
but  it  abounds  with  Parents  that  can  do  thus  much  for  their  chil- 
dren,and  Mafters  for  their  fervants ;  And  is  that  hard  for  God  tc 
do,  which  is  fo  eafie  in  his  creature  ?  thus  faith  vindicates  Gods 
Name.  And  fo  long  as  we  have  not  loft  thefight  of  Gods  merci- 
ful heart,our  head  will  be  kept  above  water,though  we  want  the 
evidence  of  our  own  grace. 
Secondly,  faith  goes  further  ,*  When  the  Chriftian  cannot  fee 

11  u  u  this 


tiA  Above  all  tahjng 


thisoraceor  chat  in  hisown  bofome,  then  faith  mafcesa  difco- 
veryof  them  in  thepromife,  where  they  may  be  had.  And  'tis 
fome  comfort, though  a  man  hath  no  bread  in  his  cupboard,  to 
hear  there  is  fome  to  be  had  in  the  Market.    O  faith  the  com- 
plaining ChriRian,  there  were  fome  hope,  if  I  could  find  but 
thofe  relentings  and  meltings  of  foul  which  others  have  in  their 
bofomes  for  tin;  then  I  could  run  under  the  fhadow  of  that 
promiie,  and  take  comfort,  blcffed  are  they  which  mourn^  fir 
they  {kail  be  comfort ed^  Mar.  5  .but  alas,my  heart  is  as  hard  as  the 
flint.    Well  faith  faith,  for  thy  comfort  know,there  are  not  on- 
ly promifes  to  the  mourning  foul  and  broken  heart,  but  there 
are  promifes,  that  God  will  break  the  heart,  and  give  a  (pint  of 
mourning  ;  fo  for  other  graces,  not  only  promifes  to  thofe  that 
fear  God,  but  to  put  the  fear  of  God  into  our  hearts. Not  only 
promifes  to  thofe  that  walk  in  his  Statutes,  and  keep  his  judg- 
ments,but  alfo  to  put  his  Spirit  within  us ^and  caufe  us  to  walkjn 
Ezek.  36.17.  his  Statutes.    Why  then  Omy  foul,  doft  fit  here  bemoaning 
thy  felf  fruitlefly,  for  what  thou  fayft  thou  haft  not,  when  thon 
know'ft  where  thou  may'ft  have  it  for  going  ?  As  Jacob  faid  to 
his  fons ,  why  do  ye  look,  one  upon  another  I  behold  I  have  heard 
there  is  corn  in  Egypt ;  get  you  down  thither^and  buy  for  hs  from 
thence^  that  we  may  live  and  not  dye ,  Gen.  42.  I,  2.     Thus 
faith  rouzeth  the  Chriftian  out  of  his  "amazed  thoughts  upon 
which  his  troubled  fpirit  dwells  like  onedeftitute  of  counfel,not 
knowing  what  to  do  ;   and  turns  his  bootlefle  complaints, 
wherein  hemuft  neceflarily  pine  and  ftarve,  into  fervent  prayer 
for  that  grace  he  wants.There  is  bread  in  the  promife(faith  faith) 
fit  not  here  languishing  in  a  flupgifh  defpondency,  but  get  you 
down  upon  your  knees,  and  humbly,  but  valiantly  befiege  the 
Throne  of  grace,  for  grace  in  this  time  of  need.  And  certainly, 
the  Chrifiian  may  fooner  get  a  new  evidence  for  his  grace,  by 
pleadirg  the  promife,and  plying  the  Throne  of  grace,  than  by 
yielding  fofar  to  his  unbelieving  thoughts,  as  to  fit  down,  and 
melt  away  his  ftrength  and  time  in  the  bitterneflTe  of  his  fpirit, 
(  which  Satan  dearly  likes  )\\ithoi  t  rrngthe  mems,   which  he 
will  never  do  to  any  purpofe,  tillfaiili  brings  thus  much  encou- 
ragement from  the  prom  ife,  that  what  he  wants  is  there  to  be 
had  freely  and  fully. 

S  E  C  T> 


the  jhield  of  faiib.  *  t  * 

SECT.  V. 

fifthly,  as  faith  fuccours  theChiiftian  when  his  other  gra- 
ces fail  him  mort,  fo  it  brings  in  his  comfort,   when  they         f» 
moft  abound.    Faith  is  to  the  ChrifUan,  as  Nehemiah   was 
to  (i/trtaxerxes ,  Nehem.  2.  i.     Of   all    the   gr?.ces,   this 
is  theChriftians  cup-bearer.    The  ChrifUan  takes  the  wine 
of  joy  out  of  faiths  hand  ,   rather   than  any  other   grace , 
2^jw.  i  j.  I  3.     The   Cjod  of  peac:  fill  you  with  all  joy  in   be- 
lieving.   It  is  obfervable,  1  Yet.  1.  to  fee  how  the  Apo- 
fHe  there  doth   as  it  were    crofle  his  hands,    as  once 
facob  did  in  bleffing  his  fon    Jofephs  children,  and  gives 
the  preheminence  to  faith,  attributing  the  ChrifUans  joy  to 
his  faith,  rather  than  to  his  love  ;    ver.  8.    whom  having 
not  feen  ye  love,  in  whom  thongh  novo  ym  fe;    him  mt ,  yet 
believing^  ye  rejoyce  with  joy  unfpeakable  and  full   of  glory. 
Mark,  believing  ye  rejoyce ,  here  is  the  door,  the  ChrifUans 
chief  joy,    yea,  all  his  fiduciary  joy  comes   in   at.     It  is 
Chrift  that  we  are  in  this  refpecl:  allowed  only  to  rejoyce 
in,  'Phil.  3.  3.    For  we  are  the    chrcnmcifion  which    worjhip 
God  in  the  Spirit,  and  rejoyce  in  Chrifi  fefw,  -and  have  no 
confidence  in  the  flffh ;   where  Chrift  is  made  the   fole  fub- 
je£t  of  our  rejoycing  fiduciarily,   in  oppofition  to  all  qKq; 
even  our  graces  themfelves,  which  become  flefti,  when  thus 
rejoyced  and  gloried  in.    Chrifts  blood  is    the   wine   that 
only  glads  the  heart  of  God  by  way  of  fatisfa6Uon  to  his 
juftice,  and  therefore  only  that  can  bring  true  gladneffe  in- 
to the  heart  of  man.    When   Chrift  promifeth  the  Com- 
forter, he  tells  his  Difciples  from  what  vefiel  he   fhould 
draw  the  wine  of  joy  that  he  was  to  give  them,  John  16. 
I  ?.  He  [ball  take  of  mine,  and  fhall  Jhew  it  yon.     No  grape 
of  our  own  Vine  is  preft  into  this  fweet  Cup ;  as  if  Chrift 
had  faid,  when  he  comes  to  comfort  you  with  the  pardon 
of  your  finnes ,   he  fhall  take  of  mine ,  not  any  thing  of 
yours;    my   blood  by  which  I  purchafed  your  peace  with 
God;    not  your  own  tears  of  repentance,  by  which  you 
have  mourned  for  your  finnes.    All   the  blefled  privileges 
which  believers  are  jn-ftated  into,   they  are  the  fruits  of 

U  u  u  2  Chrifts 


^,6  Above  all  taking 


Chriils  purchafe,  noc  of  our  earnings.  Now  the  Chrllti- 
ans  joy  flowing  in  from  Ch  ift,  anci  not  any  thing  that 
he  poor  creature  cloth  or  harh  ;  hence  it  comes  to  pafle, 
that  faith  above  all  the  graces,  brings  in  the  Chilians  joy 
and  comfort,  becaufe  this  is  the  grace  that  improves  Chrift 
and  what  is  Chrifts,  for  the  fouls  advantage,;  as  of  grace, 
fo  of  comfort.  Faith  is  the  good  fpie  that  makes  diicove- 
ry  of  the  excellencies  in  Chrifi  and  t hen  makes  report  of 
all  to  the  foul  it  fees  in  him  and  knows  of  him.  It  is 
faith  that  broaches  the  Promifes,  turns  the  Cock,  and  [<tts 
them  a  running  into  the  foul.  It  doth  not  only  fliew  the 
foul  how  excellent  Chrift  is,  and  what  dainties  are  in  the 
Promifes;  but  it  applies  Ghrift  to  the  foul,  and  carves 
out  the  fweet  viands  that  are  diuYt  forth  in  the  Promifes; 
yea,  it  puts  them  into  the  very  mouth  of  the.  foul,  it  ma- 
iticates  and  grinds  the  Promife  fo,  that  the  Chriftian  is 
filled  with  its  ftrength  and  fweetneffe.  Till  faith  comes 
and  brings  news  of  the  fouls  welcome  ,  O  how  maiden- 
ly and  uncomfortably  do  poor  creatures  fit  at  the  Table 
of  the  Promife?  like  Hannah,  they  weep  and,  eat  not;  no 
alas,  they  dare  not  be  fo  bold  -,  but  when  faith  comes , 
then  the  foul  falls  to,  and  makes  a  fatisfying  meale 
indeed ;  no  difh  on  the  Table  but  faith  will  tatte  ok 
Faith  knows  God  fets  them  not  on  to  go  off  untouch't. 
It  is  though  an  humble,  yet  a  bold  grace,becaufe  it  knows 
it  cannot  oe  fo  bold  with  God  in  his  own  way ,  as  it  is 
welcome. 


CHAP. 


the  Jhield  of  faith. 


5*7 


.  CHAP.  ILL 


Sheweth  unbelief  to  have  the  precedency  among 
fins,  as  faith  hath  among  graces. 

IS  faith  the  chief  of  graces  ?  this  may  help  us  to  conceive  of 
the  horrible  nature  of  unbelief.  This  Aire Jy  will  deferve  as- 
high  a  place  among  fins,  as  faith  among  graces.    Unbelief, 
it  is  the  Beelzebub,  the  Prince  of  fins.    As  faith  is  the  radical 
grace,  fo  is  unbelief  a  radical  fin,  a  finning  fin.    As  of  all  fin* 
ners,  thofearemo(Unfamous,who  are  ring-leaders  and  make 
others  fin ,  which  is  the  brand  that  God  hath  fet  upon  Jerobo- 
ams name  Jeroboam  the  [on  of  TS{ebaty  who  Jinn'dy  and  made 
Israel  to  fin,  i  Kings  14.  16*.    So  among  fins  they  are  moft: 
horrid  that  are  moft  productive  of  other  fins;  fucha  one  is 
unbelief  above  any  other.    It  is  a  ring-leading  fin,a  (in  making 
fin.    The  firft  poyfonous  breath  which  Eve  fuck't  in  from  the 
tempter,  was  fent  in  thefe  words,    Tea,  hath  God  [aid \ye [hall 
not  eat  of  every  tree  of  the  garden  ?  Gen.  3.1.  As  if  he  had  faid, 
confider  well  on  the  matter,do  you  believe  God  meant  fo  ?  can  • 
you  think  fo  ill  of  God,  as  to  believe  he  would  keep  the  beft 
fruit  of  the  whole  garden  from  you?  this  was  the  Traitors  gate  at 
which  all  other  fins  entred  into  her  heart ;  and  it  continues  to 
this  day  of  the  fame  ufe  to  Satan,  for  the  hurrying  fouls  into  o- 
therfins,  called  therefore  an  evil  heart  of  unbelief  in  departing 
from  God,  Heb.  3. 12.    The  Divel  fets  up  this  fin  of  unbelief, 
as  blinde  betwixt  the  finner  and  God;    that  the  (hot  which 
come  from  the  threatnihg,and  are  level'd  at  the  finners  breaft, 
may  not  be  dreaded  and  feared  by  him  ;  and  then  the  wretch 
can  be  as  bold  with  his  luft  as  the  Pioneer  is  at  his  work,  when 

U  u  u  3  once 


V/c 


jg  Above  all  tah^ng 


once  he  hath  got  his  basket:  of  earth  between  him  and  the  ene- 
mies bullets.Nay,  this  unbelief  doth  not  only  choak  the  bullets 
of  wrath  which  are  fent  out  of  the  Laws  fiery  mouth,  but  it 
clamps  the  motions  of  grace  which  cone  from  the  Gofpel ;  all 
the  offers  of  love  which  God  makes  to  an  unbelieving  heart, 
they  fall  like  feed  into  dead  earth,or  like  fparks  into  a  river,they 
are  out  as  fooh  as  they  fall  into  it. 

The  Word  (  it  is  faid,  Heb.  4. 2.  )  did  not  profit  themy  not  being 
mixed  with  faith  in  them  that  hrard  /V.The  fixength  of  the  whole 
body  of  fin  lies  in  this  lock  of  unbelief.  There  is  no  matter- 
ing of  a  finner,while  unbelief  is  in  power;this  will  carry  all  ar- 
guments away  (  whether  they  be  from  Law  or  Gofpel )  that  are 
prefled  upon  him,  as  eafily  as  Sampfon  did  the  doors,pofts,with 
bar  and  all  from  the  City  (jaz>a,  Judg.  i<5.  2.  It  is  a  fin  that 
doth  keep  the  field,  one  of  the  tell  of  all  others;  that  which 
the  finner  is  laft  convinced  of,and  the  Saint  ordinarily  laft  con- 
queror of.  It  is  one  of  the  chief  ftrengths,  andfaiineflfe  unto 
which  the  Divel  retreats,  when  other  fins  are  routed.  O  how 
oft  do  we  hear  a  poor  finner  confefle  and  bewaile  other  fins  (he 
hath  lived  in  formerly  )  with  brinifh  tears,but  will  not  hearken 
yet  to  the  offer  of  mercy  in  Chrift ;  bid  him  believe  on  Chrift, 

A&s  16.  j  1.  and  he  ftiall  be  faved,  (  which  was  the  doctrine  Paul  and  Silas 
preach't  to  the  trembling  jaylour )  alas  he  dares  not,he  will  nor, 
you  can  hardly  perfwade  him  it  is  his  duty  to  do  fo.  The 
Divel  hath  now  betaken  himfelf  to  this  City  of  gates  and 
bars,  where  he  ftands  upon  his  guard ;  and  the  more  ftrongly 
to  fortifie  himfelf  in  it,  he  hath  the  moft  fpecious  pretences  for 

r  it,  of  any  other  fin.    It  is  a  fin  that  he  makes  the  humbled 

foul  commit,ouc  of  a  fear  of  finning;and  fo  ftabsthe  good  Name 
of  God,forfearof  dilliortouring  him  by  a  faucy  prefumptuous 
faith.  Indeed  it  is  a  fin  by  which  Satan  intends  to  put  the 
greateft  fcorn  upon  God,  and  unfold  all  his  cankred  malice  a- 
gainft  him  at  once.  It  is  by  faith  that  the  Saints  have  all  obtain  d 
a  good  report ;  yea,  it  is  by  the  Saints  faith,that  God  hath  a  good 
report  in  the  world ;  and  by  unbelief,the  Divel  doth  his  worft, 
to  raife  an  evil  report  of  God  in  the  world ;  as  if  he  were  not 
what  his  own  promife,and  his  Saints  faith  witnefle  him  to  be.  In 
a  word,  it  is  a  fin  that  hell  gapes  for  of  all  other.  There  arc 
two  fins  that  claim  a  preheminence  in  hell.     Hypocrific  and 

unbelief ; 


the  fhield  of  faith.  5  j  n 


unbelief-,  and  therefore  oiher  finners  are  threatned  to  have  their 
■portion  rvjth  hypocrites ',  Mat. ,24.  ^.  and  with  unbeliev  rs^Lul^iz. 
46.  As  if  thole  infernal  Manfions  were  taken  up  principally  for 
thefe,  and  all  others  were  but  inferiour  priibners.    But  of  the 
two,  unbelief  is  the  greateft,  and  that  which  may  with  an  Em- 
phajisy  be  called  above  this  or  any  other,     The  damning  fin. 
He  that  believes  r.ot  is  condemned  already ,  Joh.  3. 1 8.  He  hath 
bis  ijilittimw  already  to  jaiie ;  yea,he  is  in  it  already  in  a  fenfe; 
he  hath  the  brand  of  a  damned  perfon  on  him.    The  Jews  are 
faid,  Rom.  1 1 . 3  2 .  to  be  jhut  up  in  unbelief. A  furer  prifon  the  Divel 
cannot  keep  a  finner  in.    Faith  Ihuts  the  foul  up  in  the  promife 
of  life  and  happinefle,  as  God  fluit  Noah  into  the  Ark±  It  is 
faid,  Gen. -j. 16.  The  Lord  (hut  him  in ;  thus  faith  fhuts  the  foul  up 
in  Chri(t,and  the  Ark  of  his  Covenant  from  all  fear  of  danger, 
from  heaven  or  hell;  and  on  the  contrary,  unbelief  /huts  a 
foul  up  in  guilt  and  wrath,  that  there  is  no  more  pofhbility  of 
efcaping  damnation  for  an  unbeliever,  than  for  one  to  efcape 
burning,   that  is  fhut   up  in  a  fiery  Oven]    no   hdp  can 
come  to  the  finner,  fo  long  as  this  bolt  of  unbelief  is  on 
the  door  of  his  heart.  As  our  falvation  is  attributed  to  faith,  ra- 
ther than  to  other  graces,  though  none  wanting  in  a  fa ved  per- 
fon; fo  finners  damnation  and  ruine  is  attributed  to  their  un- 
belief, though  other  {ins  found  with  it  in  the  perfon  damned; 
the  Spirit  ofGodpafTeth  over  the  few  hypocrifiejinurmuring, 
rebellion,  and  lays  their  deftru&ion  at  the  door  of  this  one  iin 
of  unbslicfyHcb.^.ig.They  could  not  enter  in  bee  aufe  of  unbelief, 
O  finners,(you  who  live  under  the  Gofpel  I  mean)if  you  perifh, 
know  before  hand,what  is  your  undoing,  it  is  your  unbelief  that 
does  it.    If  a  Malefactor  that  is  condemned  to  dye,be  offered 
his  life  by  the  Judge,  upon  reading  a  Pfalme  of  mercy ,and  he 
reads  it  notjwe  may  fay  his  not  reading  hangs  hi  n.The  promile 
of  the  Gofpel  is  this  Pfalme  of  mercy, which  God  offers  in  his 
Son  to  Law-condemned  finnersjbelioving  is  reading  this  Pfalme 
of  mercy;if  thou  believed:  not,and  art  damned,thou  goeft  to  hell 
rather  for  thy  final  unbelief, than  any  of  thy  other  hns,for  which 
a  difchirge  is  offered  thee  upon  thy  receiving  Chrirt,  and  belie- 
ving on  him.    Let  this  caufe  us  all  to  rife  up  againrt  this  (in,  as 
the  Philifiins  did  againft  Samyf. »,whom  they  ailed  the  deftroy-  ■ 
er  of  their  Countrey,  fudo.  16.24.  This  is  the  deftroyer  of  your 

foul?,. 


^io  Above  all  taking 


fouls,  and  that  is  worfe ;  yea,  it  deftroys  them  wuh  a  bloodier 
hand  than  other  fins  do,  that  are  not  aggravated   with  this. 
We  finde  two  general  heads  of  inditements,upon  which  the 
whole  world  of  tinners  fhall  be  condemned  at  the  great  day, 
2  77*/.  i.  8.  where  Chrifts  coming  to  judgment  isexprett;  and 
thofe  mifcrable  undone  creatures,  that  (hall  fall  under  his  con- 
demning fentence,they  are  comprized  in  thefe  two;fuch  as^ow 
not  God,  and  fuch  as  obey  ntt  the  Gojpel  of  Jefus  Chrift.Tht  Hea- 
thens negative  unbelief  of  the  Gofpel,fhall  not  bz  charged  upon 
them,  becaufe  they  never  had  itpreach't  to  them;  No,they  fhall 
be  fent  to  hell,  for  not  knowing  God,  and  fo  fhall  efcape  with  a 
lighter  damnation  by  far,  than  fetvs  orChriftian  G  entiles,  to 
whom  the  Gcfpel  hath  been  preach't  (though  to  fome  of  thefe, 
with  a  ftronger  and  longer  continued  beam  of  light,than  others) 
The  difmal  charge  which  fhall  be  brought  againft  thefe,  will  be 
that  they  have  not  obeyed  the  Gofpel  of  our  Lord  Jefus,  thac  is, 
not  'believed  on  Chrift,  called  therefore  the  obedience  of  faith, 
Rom.i<5.26VAnd  certainly  we  cannot  but  think,that  there  friali 
be  a  torment  proper  to  thefe  Gofpel-refufers,  which  thofe  that 
never  had  the  offer  of  grace,fhall  not  feel  in  hell.  And  among 
thofe  that  obey  not  the  Gofpel, the  greateft  vengeance  waits  for 
them  that  have  had  the  longeft  and  paflfionatett  treaty  of  mercy 
allowed  them.    Thefe  are  they  who  put  God  to  the  greateft  ex- 
pence  of  meFcy,and  therefore  muft  neceflarily  expec-i  the  grea- 
teft proportion  of  wrath  and  vengeance  to  be  meafured  to  them; 
yea,their  unbelief  puts  Chrift  and  the  grace  of  God  in  him,to  the 
greateft  fliame  and  fcorn  that  is  pofliblefor  creatures  to  do ;  and 
it  is  but  righteous  that  God  fhould  therefore  put  their  unbelief 
and  themfelves  with  it  to  the  greateft  (hame  before  men  arid 
Angels,  of  any  other  finners. 


CHAP. 


the  (Iwld of  faith. 


531 


CHAP.  IV. 

«£<?«»£  Arguments  to  make  us  feriom  in  the  trial 
o\  our  faiths  with  one  Dire&ion  taken  from  the 
manner  of  the  Spirits  working  faith. 

IS  faith  the  chief  of  graces  ?  Let  this  make  us  the  more  curious     <u[e  2. 
and  careful,  that  we  be  not  cheated  in  our  faith.    There  arc 
fome  things  of  fo  inconfiderable  worth,  that  they  will  not  pay  us 
for  the  pains  and  care  we  take  about  themj  and  there  to  be  choice 
and  fcrupulous  is  folly  ;  to  be  negligent  and  incurious,  wifdome. 
But,there  are  other  things  of  fuch  worth,&  weighty  confequencc, 
that  none  but  he  that  means  to  call  his  wifdome  in  queftion,  can 
be  willing  tobemiftaken  or  cozened  in.  Who  that  is  wife,would 
pay,  as  for  a   precious  ftone,  and  havcapeble,  or  at  beft  a 
Briftol- ftone  put  upon  him  for  his  money  ?  who,  when  his  life  is 
at  ftake,  and  knows  no  way  to  fave  it,  but  by  getting  fome  one 
rich  drug  which  is  very  fcarce,  but  to  be  had,  would  not  be  very 
careful  to  have  the  right  ?  O  my  dear  friends,  doth  it  not  infi- 
nitely more  conce.  n  you,  to  be  careful  in  your  merchandize  for 
this  peai  1  of  precious  faith?  can  you  be  willing  to  take  the  Devils 
falfefophifticated  ware  off  his  handfa  mock  faith  which  he  would 
cheat  you  with,  rather  than  obtain  the  faith  unfeigned  ,  which 
God  hath  to  give  unto  his  children  ;  called  therefore  the  faith  of 
c,cds  Siett  ?  will  the  Devils  dregs,  that  are  fure  to  kill  thee,  ferve 
thy  turn,  when  thou  art  ofifer\i  by  God  himfelf  a  rich  drug  that 
will  cure  thee?  When  thou  goeft  to  buy  a  garment,thou  askeft  for 
the  beft  piece  of  ftufTe,  or  cloth  in  the  i*hop.     In  the  Market  thou 
wouldft  have  the  beft  meat  for  thy  belly  ^  when  with  the  Lawyer, 
the  beft  counfcl  for  thy  eftate  t  andofthePhyfician,    theb^ftdi- 

X  x  x  redions 


tQ2  Above  all  talking 


rcdions  for  thy  health.  Art  thou  for  the  beft  in  all ,  but  for  thy 
foul  i  wouldft  thou  not  have  a  faith  of  the  beft  knd  alfo }  \i  a 
man  receives  fa! fe  money,  who  doth  he  wrong  but  himfelff  and 
if  thou  beeftguli'd  with  afalfefaltb,  the  lois  is  thy  own,  and 
that  n^fmall  one-,  thy  felf  will  think  fo,  when  thou  comeft  to 
the  bar,andGod  (hall  bid  thee  cither  pay  the  debt  thou  oweft  him, 
or  go  to  rot  and  roare  in  hells  prifor-  •  then  how  wilt  thou  be 
confounded  ?  when  thon  produced  thy  faith,  and  hopeft  to 
favethy  felf  with  this,  that  thou  beleeveft  on  the  Lord  Jefus, 
but  (halt  have  thy  confidence  rejected,  and  God  tell  thee  to  thy 
teeth,  it  is  not  faitb,but  a  lye  in  thy  right  hand  that  thou  haft  got, 
and  therefore  be  will  not  accept  the  payment,  though  it  be 
Chrift  himfclf  thou  offered  to  lay  down;  nay,  that  he  will  give 
thee  up  into  the  tormentours  han  J  and  that  not  only  for  not  be- 
lieving, but  alfo  for  counterfeiting  the  King  of  heavens  coyn,  and 
fettinghisNameonthy  falfe  money  j  which  thou  doeftby  pre- 
tending to  faith,  when  it  is  a  falfe  one  thou  haft  in  tty  boforae. 
This  were  enough  to  awaken  yourca^e  in  the  tryai  of  your  faith; 
but  to  give  fome  further  weight  to  the  exhortation,  we  fhall  raft 
in  thefe  three  confederations. 


SECT.  I. 

*.  Firft,  as  thy  faith  is,  fo  are  all  thy  other  graces.    As  a  mans 

marriage  is,fo  are  all  his  childrenjegitimatcor  illegitimate.!  hus, 
as  our  marriage  is  to  Chrift ,  fo  all  our  graces  are.    Now,  it  is 
faith    by  which  we  are  married  to  Chrift.    1  have  efpoufed  joh  to 
one  husband,  faith  Paul  to  the  Corinthians, 2  Cor.i  i .  2,  how,  but 
by  their  faith  ?  'Tisfaith  whereby  the  foul  gves  its  confent  to' 
take  Chrift  for  her  husband.     Now  if  our  faith  be  fa  fe,  then  our 
marriage  to  C  hrift  is  feigned  •,  and  if  that  be  feigned,  then  all  our 
pretended  graces  are  bale  bom  ,  how  goodly  an  out-fide  foever 
they  have  (as  a  baftard  may  haveafaire  face  )  they  are  illegi- 
timate ^  our  humility.patience^temperance,  all  baftards^  and  you 
know,  a  baftard  tvas  not  to  enter  into  the  Congregation ,  Deut.  2  3 .  ?# 
No  more  fhall  anv  baftard  grace,  enrer  into  the  Congregation^ 
the  juft  in  heaven. He  that  hath  children  of  his  own,will  not  make 
mothers  baftard  his  heir.  God  hath  children  of  his  own,to  inherit 

hea, 


the  fine  Id  of  faith.  5  ^  ^ 


heavens  glory,  in  whofeheMts  he  hath  by  his  own  Spirit  begot- 
ten thofe  heavenly  graces,  w  h  ch  do  truly  refembie  his  own  hoiy 
nature  ^  furely  he  will  never  fettle  it  upon  Grangers,  coun- 
terfeit Beleevcrs  ,  that  are  the  Devils  brats  and  by- 
blows. 

Secondly,  confider,the  excellency  of  true  faith,   makes  falfe         2- 
faith  fo  much  the  more  odious.  Becaufe  a  Kings  fonne  is  an  extra- 
ordinary perfonage,  therefore  it  is  lb  high  a  crime  for  an  ignoble 
perfon  to  counterfeit  himfelf  to  befuch  a  one.    It  is  by  faith  that 
wc  become  the  fonnes  of  Gody  i  Joh.  12.  and  what  a  high  preem- 
ption is  it  then,  that  by  a  falfe  faith  thou  committeft  ?  Thou  pre- 
cendeft  thyfelfto  be  achilde  of  God, when  no  heaven- blood  runs 
in  thy  veins,  but  haft  more  reafon  to  look  for  thy  kindred  in  hell, 
and  derive  thy  pedigree  from  Satan  •,  this  pafleth   for   no  lefs 
than  blafphemy  in  the  account  of  the  Scripture,  Rev.  2.9.  /  know 
the  blafphemy  of  thofe  who  fay  they  are  fews,andare  not9  but  are  the 
Synagogue  of  Satan.    God  Joaths  fuch  with  his  heart.    A  falfe 
f  iend,  is  worfe  than  an  open  enemy  in  mans  judgement.    And  a 
hypocritical  judo*,  moreabhorr'd  by  God  than  a  bloody  Pilate-, 
either  therefore  get  true  faith,  or  pretend  to  none.    The  Ape  ,  . 
becaufe  he  hath  the  face  of  a  man,  but  not  the  foul  of  a  man,  is 
therefore  the  moft   ridiculous    of  all    creatures.     And    of 
all  finners,  none  will  be  put  more  to  fhame,  at  the  laft  day, 
than  fuch  as  have  aped  and  imitated  the  beleeverin  fomeexteriour 
poftures  of  profeflion.but  never  had  the  fpirit  of  a  believer,  h  as 
to  performe  one  viral  aft  of  faith.    TheTfalmifl  tells  usof  fome, 
rphofe  image  God  will  de/pife,  Pfalme  73.20.     J  t  is  fpoken  chiefly 
of  the  wicked  mans  temporary  profperity(which  for  its  (hortcon- 
tinuance,    is  compared  to  the  image  or  reprefenration  of  a  thing 
in  the  fancy  of  a  flecping  man  that  then  is  bufie,  and  pleafeth  us 
with  many  fine  pleafing  objects,  but  all  are  loft ,  when  our  fleep 
leaves  us)  this  God  will  defpife  at  the  great  day,  when  he  fhali 
not  give  heaven  and  glory,  by  the  eftatcs  and  honours,  that  men 
had  in  the  world,  but  tumble  them  down  to  hell,  if  gracelefs  as 
well  as  the  pooreft  beggar  in  the  world.    But,  there   is  another 
fort  of  perfons  whofe  image  God  will  at    that    day    dc- 
fptfe  more  than  thefe,  and  that  is,  the  image  of  all  temporary 
beleevers,    and    unlound   profeflburs,    who  have   a  phan- 
taftical  faith,  which  they  fet  up,!ike  an  image  in  their  imag'mati- 

XXX    2  Oi'jS, 


c^a  Above  all  taking 


on*,  and  dance  about  it  with  as  many  felf-pleafing  thoughts,  as 
a  man  doth  that  is  dreaming  himfclf  to  be  fome  great  Prince ; 
but  this  great  Idol  fhall  then  be  broken,  and  the  worfhippers  of 
it  biffed  down  to  hell  with  the  greateft  (hame  of  any  o- 
ther. 

Thirdly, None  ftand  at  greater  difadvantage  for  the  obtaining 
a  true  faith,than  he  who  flatters  himfelf  with  a  falfe  one.SeeJi  thon 
a  man  wife  in  his  oven  conceit?  there  is  more  hope  of  a  fool  than  of  him, 
Prov.26. 1 2.  that  is,  there  is  more  hope  of  perfwading  him  j  of 
all  fools,  the  conceited  fool  is  the  worft.  Pride  makes  a  man  un- 
capable  of  receiving  counfel.  Nebuchadnezzar s  mindet  is  faid  to 
be  hardened i»  pride  tD&n.  5. 20 .There  is  noreafoning  with  a  proud 
man  j  he  caftles  himfelf  in  his  own  opinion  of  himfelf,  and  there 
ftands  upon  his  defence  againft  all  arguments  that  are  brought. 
BidaconceicedProfeffour  labour  for  faith,  or  he  is  undone  ^ 
and  the  man  will  tell  you,  that  you  miftake  and  knock  at  the 
wrong  door-,  It  is  the  ignorant  pcrfon  or  profane  you  (hould  go 
to  on  that  errand-,  he  thanks  God  he  is  not  now  to  feek  for  a  faith; 
and  thus  he  bleffeth  himfelf  in  his  good  condition,  when  God 
.  k'Ows,  he  feeds  of ajhes,  but  A  deceived  heart  hath  fo  turned  him 
afidejhat  he  cannot  deliver  his  own  foul,  nor  fay ,  u  there  not  a  lye  in 
mj  right  hand}  Ifa.  44.  20.  The  ignorant  profane  perfon ,  like 
the  Vfalmifts  man  of  low  degree,  is  plaine  vanity :  It  is  not  hard 
to  make  themfelvcs  to  acknowledge  as  much,  that  they  have  no- 
thing, deferve  nothing,  can  look  for  nothing  as  they  are,but  hell 
and  damnation  •,  but  fuch  as  pretend  to  faith ,  and  content  tbem- 
felves  with  a  falfe  one,  they  are  like  the  mtn  of  high  degree  )  a  lye, 
which  is  vanity  as  well  as  the  other,  but  with  a  fpecious  cover  o- 
veriMhath  desit;  therefc  re  the  devil  is  forward  enough  to  put 
poor  filly  fouls  on  believing,  that  he  may  foreftal  (if  he  can)  the 
Sp  r't  market,and  prevent  the  creatures  obtaining  of  a  true  faith, 
byiheatir  g  of  it  with  a  counterfeit ,  like  Jeroboams  wicked  poli- 
C'  <vho  to  ke^p  the  fr.xtlltet  from  goi;  ,g  to  Jert'.faltm,  and  han- 
kering a::ter  the  true  worfhip  oi  God  there,  fet  up  fomething  like 
a  eligious  worihip  nearer  hand  at  home  in  the  glJ.m  calves; 
ai  •  1  his  pleafcd  many  well  enough,  that  they  mi/led  not  their 
waikto  'jerufalem.  O  friends  ,takc  heed  therefore  of  being  cheat' 
ed  with  a  falfj  faith.  Everyone,!  know,  would  have  the  living 
child  to  be  hers,  and  r.ot  the  dead  one.    We  would  all  paffe   for 

fuch, 


the  Jhze/d  of  faith.  •  545 


fuch,  as  have  the  true  faith,  and  not  the  falfe  ;  but  be  not  your 
own  Judges;  appeal  to  the  Spii  it  of  God,  and  let  him  witn  the 
fword  of  hisWord  come  and  decide  the  controverfie,which  faith  is 
thine,  the  true  or  falfe. 


SECT.  II.    . 

By  this  time  poffibly,you  may  be  folicitous  to  know  what  your 
faith  iSj  and  how  you  may  come  to  judge  of  the  truth  of  it.  Now 
for  your  help  therein,  take  thefe  two  directions.  One  taken  from 
the  manner  of  the  Spirits  working  faith,  the  other  from  the  pro- 
perties ©f  faith  when  it  is  wrought. 

Firft,from  the  manner  of  the  spirits  work'ng  faith  in  the  foul. 
It  is  incomparably  the  greateft  work,  that  pafleth  uponthefoul 
from  the  Spirit  of  Chrift  ^  It  is  called,  the  vVsp/Scoxop  pAy.Sos  w< 
J>vvaL[j.ios  ,cuiTvi  The  exceeding  greatnefs  of  his  power   to  us -ward  who 
believ f,Eph.  1,19.    O  obferve  with  what  a  heap  of  exprefiions 
the  S  pirit  of  God  loads  our  weak  understandings,  that  labouring 
under  the  weight  of  them,  and  finding  the  difficulty  of  reaching 
the  fignificancy  of  them,  we  might  be  the  more  widened  ,  to 
conceive  of  that  power  ,  which  can  never  be  fully  underftood  by 
us  (being  indeed  infinite,  and  fo  too  bigge  to  be  inclofed  within 
the  narrow  walls  of  our  underftandings)  power,  greatneiTe  of 
power,  exceeding  greatnefle,  and  laftly  exceeding  greatnefle  of 
his  power,  that  is  of  GeJ.  What  Angel  in  heaven  can  tell  us,whaE 
all  thefe  amount  to  ?  God  f  with  reverence  be  ir  fpoken)  fets  his 
whole  force  to  this  work.     It  is  compared  to  no  lefTe  than  the 
working  rfhis  mighty  power ,  which  he  wrottght  in  Chrift  ,  when  he 
TAtfcd  him  from  thedeadfandfet  him  at  his  own  right  hand  in  the  h  a- 
venlj  places  ^fa*  above  all  principality  a«d  powe>-t  &c.  V  r.  20.  2  r . 
toKiiiear.y  onefrom  the  dead  is  a  mighty,  an  Almighty  work;. 
Rat  toraiie  Chrift  from  the  dead,  car  ies  more  wonder  with   iry 
than  Co  raife  any  other ;  he  had  a  heavier  grave-ftonc  to  keep  him 
down  than  any  befides,  the  weighc  of  a  worlds  finnela     upnri 
him,  yet  notwithstanding  this,  he  tsraifed  with  power    by  the 
Spirit,notonly  out  oftheg'ave,but  mtogloy    Now  the  power 
God  puts  forth  upon  the  fuul  in  working  faith,  is  according    ro 

Xxx  3  this 


q  -j  6  Above  all  takjng 


this  of  railing  Chrift,  for  indecd3thcfinncrs  foul  is  as  really  dead 
infinne,  as  cJuittsbody  was  in  the  grave  for  finne.  Now  (peak, 
poor  creature  >,  arc  thou  any  way  acquainted  with  fuch  a  power 
of  God,  to  have  been  at  work  in  thee?  or  doeft  thou  think 
(lightly  of  beleeving,  andfofhewthyfelf  aftranger  to  this  my- 
Itery  ?  certainly,this  one  thing  might  refolve  many  ( if  they  de- 
fired  to  know  their  own  ftate  )  that  they  have  no  faith,  becaufe 
they  make  faith  fo  triviar  and  light  a  matter,  as  if  it  were  as  ea- 
fie  to  believe,  as  to  fay  they  do  ^  and  it  were  of  no  more  difficulty 
to  receive  Chrift  into  their  fouls  by  faith,  than  to  put  a  bit  of 
bsead  into  their  mouths  with  their  hand.  Ask  fome,  whether  e- 
ver  fuch  a  day  or  time  of  Gods  power  came  over  their  heads,  to 
humble  them  for  finne,  drive  them  out  of  themfelves,  and  draw 
them  effectually  unto  Chrift  j  And  they  may  anfweryou  as  thofe 
did  Pe ter,  when  he  askt,  whether  they  had  received  the  ho lyGhoft 
ftneethey  btlieved^  7  hey  [aid  unto  him ',  we  have  net  fo  much  04 
heard  whether  there  be  Any  holy  Ghift ,  Ads  19.2.  fothefe  might 
fay,  we  know  not  whether  there  be  any  fuch  power  required  to 
the  working  of  faith  or  no. 

But  to  defcend  into  amore  particular  consideration  of  this  pow- 
erful work  of  the  Spirit  upon  the  foul  for  the  production  of  faithi 
to  which  it  will  be  neceflary  to  confider  what  pofture  the 
Spirit  of  Chrift  finds  the  foul  in  before  he  begins  this  great 
work;  and  then  how  he  makes  his  addrefTes  to  the  foule, 
and  what  acts  he  puts  forth  upon  the  foul  tor  the  working 
faith. 

Firft,  forthepoftureofthefoul;  The  Spirit  findes  the  creature 
in  fuch  a  ftate,  as  it  neither  can,  nor  will  contribute  the  leaft  help 
to  the  work.  As  the  Prince  of  the  world,  when  he  came  to  tempt 
Chrift,  found  nothing  in  him,  to  befriend  and  further  his  tempt- 
ing defigne  ■  fo  when  the  Spirit  of  Chrift  comes,  he  findes  as  lit- 
tle encouragement  from  the  (inner-,  no  party  within  the  Caftle 
of  the  foul,  to  fide  with  him,  when  he  comes  firft  to  let  down  be- 
fore it,  and  lay  (lege  to  it  ^  But  all  the  powers  of  the  whole 
man  in  arms  againft  him. Hence  it  is  thatfo  many  fcornful  anfwers 
are  fent  out  to  the  fummons  that  are  given  finners  to  yield.  He 
came  unto  his  own,  and  his  even  received  him  not,  John  1 .  1 1 .  Never 
was  any  Garrifur;  more  refolved  to  ftand  out  agair.ft  both  the 
treaties    and  batteries  of  an  aflailing  enemy  ,    then  the  carna( 

heart 


the  fhield  of  faith.  c  ^  y 


heart  is  againft  all  means,  that  God  ufeth  to  reduce  it  into  his 
obedience.  The  nobleft  operations  of  the  foul,  they  are  earthly, 
/f»/«<i/J<iew7j(/&Jarn.3.i5.fo'that,excepc  heaven&ea'th  can  meet; 
f enfual,and  fpintual  pleafe  one  palate  •  God  and  the  D<'.vil  agree; 
there  is  no  hope  thata  (Inner  of  himfdr  fhould  like  the  motion 
Chrift  makes,or  that  with  any  argument  he  fhou'd  be  won  over  10 
like  it,  fo  long  as  the  ground  of  diflike  remains  in  his  earthly, fen- 
fual  and  devilfh  nature. 

Secondly,we  proceed  to  fliciv  how  theSpirit  makes  h's  addreffes 
to  the  foul,  and  what  ads  he  puts  forth  upon  it  for  the  working 
faith.    Now  the  Spirits  addrefs  is  fuited  to  the  feveral  faculties  of 
the  foul;the  principal  of  which  arethefe  thiee^nderftanding^ovfci' 
'  ence  attdtVi^Thek  arc  like  three  forts,one  within  the  othcr^which 
muft  all  be  reduced  before  the  Town  be  taken,  the  finnerl  mean 
fubdued  to  the  obedience  of  faith.    And  to  thefe  the  Spirit  makes 
his  particular  addrefTes,  putting  forth  an  ad  of  Almighty  power 
upon  every  one  of  them,  and  that  in  this  order.  Firft,  theSpirit 
makes  his  app.oach  to  the  understanding, and  on  it  he  puts  forth 
an  ad  of  illumination.    The  Spirit  will  not  work  in  a  dark  fhopv 
the  firft  thing  he  doth  in  order  to  faith,  is  to  beat  out  av.hdow 
in  the  foul,  and  let  in  fome  light  from  heaven  into  it.     Hence  be- 
lievers are  faid  to  be  renewedin  the  Jpirit  of  their  mindes,  Eph.4.23. 
which  the  fame  Apoftle  calleth  being  renewed  in  knowledge^  Col. 
3.T0.    By  nature  we  know  little  of  L>od,  and  nothing  of  Chrift, 
or  the  way  offalvationbybim.    The  eye  of  the  creature  there- 
fore muft  be  opened  to  fee  the  way  of  life,  before  he  can  by  fa:  th 
get  into  it.    God  doth  not  ufe  to  waft  foul  s  to  heaven,  like  paf- 
fengcrs  in  a  (hip,  who  are  (hut  under  the  hatches,  and  fee  noth  fog 
all  the  way  they  arefayling  to  their  pore  ^  if  fo,  that  prayer 
might  have  been  fpared,  which  the  Pfalmift  infpired  of  God, 
breaths  forth  in  the  behalf  of  the  blind  Gentiles,  Pfal.  67.   2. 
That  thy  way  may  be  kvown  upon  earthy  and  thy  fating  health  amir? 
all  Nations.    As  faith  is  not.a  naked  affent  without  affiance  and 
innitency  on  Chrift  ;  fo  neither  is  it  a  blind  aflent,  without  fome 
knowledge.    If  therefore  thou  continued  ftill  in  thy  brutilh  ig- 
norance, and  knoweft  not  fo  much  as  who  Chrift  is,  and  what  he 
hath  done  for  the  falvation  of  poor  finners,  andwhatthou  muft 
de  to  get  intercft  in  him,  thou  art  farre  enough  from  believing; 
U  the  day  be  not  broke  in  thy  loule ,    much  JelTe   is   tl  e 

Sun 


^  j 8  Above  nil  taking 

Sunneofrighteoufnefsarifen  by  faith  in  thy  foul. 

.^gainiecondly,  when  the  Spirit  of  God  hath  fprung  with  a 
divine  light  into  the  underftanding,  then  he  makes  his  add  re  fTe 
to  the  confeience, and  the  ad  which  pafleth  upon  that,  is  an  *& 
of  convifticn,  John  I6-&.   be  JbaU convince  the vcorld,&c.  Now  this 
conviction  is  nothing  but  a  refkdion  of  the  light  that  is  in  the  un- 
derftandingupon  ttv;  confeience,  whereby  the  creature  feels  (he 
weight  and  force  of  thofetiuths  he  knows,  fo  as  to  be  brought 
into  a  deep    fenfe  of  them.    Light  in  a  dired  beame  heats  nut, 
nor  doth  knowledge  fwimmirig  in  the  braine  affed.    Moft  under 
the  Gofpel,know  that  unbelief  is  a  damning  finne,  and  that  there 
is  no  name  to  be  faved  by,  but  the  Name  of  Chrift .  yet  how  few 
ofthofe,know  this  convincingly,  fo  as  to  apply  this  to  their  own 
confeiences,  and  to  be  affeded  with  their  own  deplored   date, 
who  are  thennbelievers  andChriftlefs  perfons?  As  he  is  a  convided 
drunkard  in  Law,  who  in  open  Court,  or  before  a  lawful  autho- 
rity, upon  clear  teftimony  and  depofition  of  witnefTes,  is  found 
and  judged  to  be  fuch  :•    So,  he  Scripturally  is  a  convinced  finner, 
who  upon  the  dear  evidence  of  the  Word  brought  againft   him 
by  the  Spirit,  is'oundby  his  own  confeience    (  Gods  officer  in 
his  bofome )  to  be  fo-  fpeak  now  poor  creature,  did  ever  fuch  an 
ad  of  the  Spirit  of  God  pafs  upon  thee,  asthisis.?  which    that 
thou  niayelt  the  betrer  difcern  of,  try  thy  felf  by  thefe  few  chara- 
ders  of  a  convinced  perfon. 

*  Tirfti  a  finner  truly  convincedjs  not  only  convinced  of  this  fin 
or  that  finne,  hue  of  the  evil  of  all  finne.  It  is  anillfigne,  when 
a  perfon  feeme*  in  a  pafiion  to  cry  out  of  onefinne,and  to  befenl- 
le's  of  another,  finne.  A  par- boy  led  confeience  is  not  right, 
fort  in  one  part,  and  hard  in  another^  the  spirit  of  God  is  uniform 
in  its  work. 

Secondly f  the  convinced  iinner  is  not  only  convinced  of  ad;  of 
finne,  but  of  the  ftate  of  finne  aJfo«,  he  is  not  only  afFeded 
with  what  he  hath  done(chis  Law  broken,  and  that  mercy  abufed) 
but  with  what  his  ftate  and  prefent  condition  is.  Peter  leads 
SirmntJtftgtu  from  that  one  horrid  ad  he  committed, to  the  con- 
fidcration  of  that  which  was  worfe,  the  difmal  ftate  that  he  difco- 
vered  him  to  be  in  ^  /  perceive  that  thou  art  in  the  gall  if  bitternefs% 
r.rd  in  the b/,id of  ;';»^/>7,  Ads  8.23.  Many  will  confefle  they 
do  net  do  as  they  (hould,who  will  not  think  by  any  means  lb  ill  of 

them- 


the  (hie Id of  faith.  5^ 


themfelves,  thac  their  ftate  is  naught ,  a  ftate  of  finne  and  death; 
whereas  the  convinced  foul  freely  puts  himfelf  under  tnisfencence 
of  death,owns  his  condition. and  diiTernbles  not  hispedigree^  I  am 
a  rnoft  vile  wretch  (faith  he)a  limb  of  Saran,full  of  fin,  a*,  (he  toad' 
is  of  rank  poifon-  my  whole  nature  lies  in  wiekedneiT^even  as  the 
dead  rotten carcalTe  dotb  in  itsflimeand  putrefadion.     i  ain  a 
child  of  wrath ,born  to  no  other  inheritance  than  hell  flamesi  and 
if  God  will  now  tread  me  down  thither,  I  have  not  one  righteous 
fyllable  to  objed  againft  his  proceedings,  but  there  is  that  in  my 
own  confeience  which  will  clear  him  from  having  done  me  any 
ivrong  in  my  doom. 

Thirdly  she  convinced  finner  doth  not  only  condemn  himfelf  for 
what  he  hath  done  and  is ,  bat  he  defpairs  of  himfelf ,  as  to  any 
thing  he  can  sow  do  to  fave  himfelf  j  many,  though  they  go  fo 
farre  as  to  confefTe  they  are  vile  wretches,  and  have  lived  wicked- 
ly, and  for  this  deferve  to  die ;  yet  when  they  have  put  the  rope 
about  their  neck  by  a  fclf-condemning  ad,  they  are  fo  farre  from 
being  convinced  of  their  own  impotency,  that  they  hope  to  cue 
the  rope  with  their  repcntance,rcformation,and  I  know  not  what 
bundle  of  good  works,  which  they  think  (hall  redeeme  their  cre- 
dit with  God,  and  recover  his  favour,  which  their  former  (innes 
have  unhappily  loft  them.  And  this  comes  to  pafTc,  becaufe  the 
plough  of  convidion  did  not  go  deep  enough  to  teare  up  thofe 
fecret  roots  of  felf-confidence ,  with  which  the  heart  of  every 
finner  is  wofully  tainted  •  whereas  every  foul  throughly  convin- 
ced by  the  Spirit ,  is  a  felf-defpairing  foul ;  he  fees  himfelfc  be- 
yond his  own  help,  like  a  poor  condemned  prifoner ,  laden  with 
fo  many  heavy  irons,  that  he  fees  it  is  impoflible  for  him  to  make 
an  efcape  with  all  his  skill  or  ftrength  out  of  the  hands  of  juftice; 
O  friends,  look  whether  the  work  be  gone  thus  farre  in  your  fouls 
or  no.  Moft  that  perifh,  it  is  not  their  difeafe  that  kills  them., 
but  their  Phyfician^  they  think  to  cure  themfelves,  and  this  leaves 
them  uncurable.  S  peak  foul,  did  the  Lord  ever  ferret  thee  out  of 
this  burrow  where  fo  many  earth  themfelves  >  Art  thou  as 
much  at  a  lofle  what  to  do ,  as  fenfible  for  what  thou  haft  done  ? 
Doeft  thou  fee  hell  in  thyfinne,  and  defpaire  in  thy  (elf  ?.  Hath 
God  got  thee  out  of  this  Keilah ,  and  convinced  thee  if  thou 
fhouldft  ftay  in  the  felf-  confidence  of  thy  repentance, reformation, 

Yyy  and 


<~o 


Above  all  taking 


and  duties ,  they  would  all  deliver  thee  up  into  the  hands  of 
Gods  juftice  and  wrath,  when  they  tliall  come  againft  thee  ?  then 
indeed  thou  haft  efcaped  one  of  the  fineft  fnares  that  the  wit  of 
hell  can  weave. 

Fourthly,  the  convinced  finner  is  not  only  convinced  of  finne, 
fo  as  to  condemn  himfelf,and  defpair  of  himfelf ,  but  he  is  con  . 
vinced  of  a  full  provifion  laid  up  in  Chrift  for  felf-condemncd  and 
felf-defpairing  ones,  John  1 6.  He  Jhall convince  the  world  of  ftnne. 
ver.  9.  andof  right eo * fnejfe^vei.  10.  And  this  is  as  ncceffary  an 
antecedent  to  faith,  as  any  of  the  former.  Without  this ,  the 
foul  convinced  of  finne,is  more  like  to  go  to  the  gallows  with  ?#• 
dot,  or  fall  on  the  fword  of  the  Law,  as  the  J  ay  lour  attempted  to 
do  on  his  (when  he  thought  his  condition  defperate)  than  think 
of  coming  to  Chrift,who  will  go  to  his  door,that  hath  not  where- 
withal to  relieve  him. 

The  third  and  laft  faculty  to  be  dealt  with  it  the  mil,  and  on 
this  (for  the  production  of  faith  J  the  Spirit  puts  forth  an  atl «/ 
renovation,  whereby  he  doth  fweetly,  but  powerfully  erxline  the 
will  (which  before  was  rebellious  and  refractory)  to  accept  of 
Chrift,and  make  a  free  deliberate  choice  of  him,  for  his  Lord  and 
Saviour.  I  fay  a  free  choice,  not  only  cudgeled  into  him  with  ap- 
prehenfionsofwrach,asonemayrunne  under  an  enemies  pent- 
houfe  in  a  ftorm,whofe  door  he  would  have  pa  (Ted  by  in  fair  wea- 
ther,and  never  have  lookt  that  way.  Speak  foul,  doeft  pleafe  thy 
felf,inchoofingChrift>doeft  goto  Chrift,notonly  for  fafety,but 
delight?  fo  the  Spoufe,  /  fate  under  hiifhadow  with  great  di  light, 
Cant.  2.3.  I  fay  a  deliberate  choice,  wherein  the  foul  well  weighs 
the  terms  Chrift  is  ottered  on,and  when  it  hath  confideed  all  ie- 
rioufly,likes  them , and  clofeth  with  him.Like  Ruth.who  wheniV*- 
tmi  fpake  the  worft  (he  could  to  difcourage  her,  yet  liked  her  mo- 
thers company  too  well,to  lofe  it  forrhofe  troubles  that  attended 
her- fpeak  foul.hath  the  S  pirit  of  God  thus  put  hi<  golden  key  m:o 
the  lock  of  thy  will,  to  open  the  everlafting  door  of  thy  heart  to 
let  Chrift  the  King  of  glory  in  t  Hath  he  not  only  open'd  thee,  e 
of  thy  underftandmg.  asheawaktTVrfr  afleep  in  prifon,  and 
caufed  the  chains  of  fenfleffenefs  and  ftupidity  to  fall  offthy  con- 
science, but  alfo  open'd  the  iron  gate  of  thy  will  to  let  thee  out 
of  the  prifon  of  impenirency,whereeven  now  thou  wcrt  faft  bolt- 
ed in,  yea,  brought  thee  to  knock  at  heaven  door  for  entertain- 
ment 


the  fhield  of  faith.  53 


ment*  As  Peter  did  at  the  houfe  of  M.irj  ( where  the  Church  was 
met)  be  of  good  comfort,  thou  mayeft  know  afluredlyjthat  God 
hath  fent  not  his  Angel,  but  his  own  Spirit ,  and  hath  delivered 
thee  out  of  the  hand  of  finne,Satan  and  juftice. 

We  proceed  to  the  tryat  of  our  faith  from' the  proper- 
ties, of  tiue  faith  j  and  we  (hall  contentent  our  felveswith 
three. 


CHAP.     V. 

Where  our  faith  k  put  upon  tryalbyits  obedience, 
with fome  particular  Characters  that  faiths  obe- 
dience isjiampt  with* 

THis  choice  excellent  faith,  it  is  an  obediential  faith,  that  is,  i. 

true  faith  on  the  promife,  works  obedience  to  the  command. 
Abraham  is  famous  for  his  obedience,  no  command,  how  difficult 
focver ,  came  amifle  to  him.  He  is  an  obedient  fervant  indeed, 
that  when  he  doth  but  hear  his  matter  knock  with  his  foot, 
leaves  all  and  runs  prefently  to  know  his  Mafters  will  and 
pleafure.  Such  a  fervant  had  God  of  Abraham,  -who  raffed  up  the 
righteous  man  from  the  Eaft  ,  called  him  to  his  foot  ?  Ifaiah  41.2. 
But  what  was  the  Spring  that  fet  Abrahams  obedience  a  going  ? 
fee  for  this,  Heb.  1 1 . 8.  By  faith  Abraham,  when  he  was  called  t9 
go  out  into  a  place,  which  he  Jhould  after  receive  for  an  inheritance^ 
obeyed,  and  be  went  cut ,  &c  As  it  is  impoffible  to  pleafe  Go4 
without  faith ,  fo  it  isimpoflible  not  to  defire  to  pleafe  <^od 
with  faith.  It  may  well  go  for  an  idol  faith  that  hath  hands, 
but  doth  not  work,  feet  but  doth  not  walk  in  the  Statutes  of 
God.  No  fooner  had  Chrift  cured  the  woman  in  the  Gofpel  of 
her  fcavcr,  but  it  is  faid  ,/he  rofe  and  mini  fired  unto  them$AsX&.  1 5. 
Thus,  the  beleev'ng  foul  Hands  up  and  Minifters  unto  Chrift,  in 
gratitude  and  obedience.     Faith  is  not  lazy ,  it  inclines  not 

Yyy  2  the 


c  2  q  ^fcw  d/i  taking 

the  foul  to  flee  p,  but  work-,  it  fends  the  creature  not  to  bed, 
there  to  fnort  away  his  time  in  eafe  and  floth,  but  into  the  field. 
The  night  of  ignorance  and  unbelief ,that  was  the  creatures  fleep- 
ingtime^  but  when  the.tunne  of  righteoufneiTcarifeth,  and 'tis 
day  in  the  foul ,  then  the  creature  rifeth  and  goeth,  forth  to  his 
labour.  The  tirft  words  that  break  out  oi  faiths  lips*  are  thofe  of 
.£*«/,  in  his  hour  of  converfion,  Lord,  what  wilt  thou  have  me 
to  do  ?  Ads  9.  6.  Faith  turnes  the  Jordan  ,and  alters  the  whole 
courfe  of  a  man.  We  were  (faith  the  Apoftle)  fodifh  and  difobedi- 
ent,  Tit.  3.3.  'But  after  the  ^indnefje  and  love  of  (Jod  our  Saviour 
towards  man  appeared,  ver.  4.  then  the  cafe  was  altered, as  it  fol- 
lows. And  therefore  take  your  foul  fingers  offthe  promife,and 
pretend  no  more  to  faith ,  if  ye  be  children  of  Be //W,fuch,whofe 
necks  do  not  freely  ftoop  to  this  yoke  of  obedience.  The  De- 
vil himfelf  may  as  foon  pafTe  for  a  beleever ,  as  a  difobedieot 
foul.  Other  things  he  can  ihew  as  much  as  you;  doeft  thou  pre- 
tend to  knowledge  ?  thou  wilt  not  deny  the  Devil  to  be  a  great- 
er Scholar  than  thy  felf(T  hopejand  that  in  Scripture  knowledge; 
doeft  thou  believe  the  Scripture  to  be  true  ?  and  doth  not  he  more 
ftrongly  ?  doeft  thou  tremble?  he  much  more.  It  is  obedience  he 
wants;and  this  makes  him  a  Devil ,  and  it  will  make  thee  like  him 
alfo. 

£heft.  J&eft-  But  you  may  ask,  what  ftamp  is  there  to  be  found  on 

faiths  obedience,  which  will  diftinguifh  it  from  all  counterfeits?for 
there  are  many  fair  femblances  of  obedience,  which  the  Devil  wiH 
never  grutch  us  the  having. 

Anlw  Anjw.  Take  thefe  two  Characters  of  the  obedience  of  faith. 

1.  Faiths  obedience  begins  at  the  heart,  and  from  thence  it 
diffufeth  and  dilates  it  felf  to  the  outward  man,  till  it  over-fpreads 
the  whole  man  in  a  fincere  endeavour.  A  s  in  natural  life,  the  ftrft 
part  that  lives  is  the  heart,  fo  the  firft  that  faith  fubdues  into  o- 
bediencc  is  the  heart.  It  is  called  a faith  which  purifieth  the  heart, 
Acts  15.9.  And  thebeleeving  Romans  obeyed  from  the  heart  the 
form  of  DMrixe  which  was  dt  liver  ed  tot*  em, \\om,6.ij.  Whereas 
a  falfe  faith  ,  which  apes  this  true  faith(as  Art  imitates-  Nature) 
begins  without ,  and  there  ends.  All  the  feeming  good  works  of 
a  counterfeit  beleever,  they  are  like  the  beautiful  colour  in  a  pi- 
ctures face,  which  comes  not  from  a  princ  pie  of  life  within,  but 
the  Painters  pencil  without  j  fuch  were  thofe,  John  2.23.  who 

are 


1, 


the  Jhield  of  faith.  533 


Sitf- 


;t> 


are  faid  to  believe  on  Chrift.  But;  Chrifl  did  not  commit  Umfclfto 
themr\et.  24.  and  why  ?  fee  ver.2$.  for  he  knew  what  was  in  man^ 
he  cared  not  for  the  painted  porch  and  goodly  out-fide-,  he  knew 
what  was  in  man,  and  by  that  knowledge  he  knew  them  to  be 
rotten  at  core,  naught  at  heart,  before  they  were  fpcckt  on  the 
skin  of  their  exteriour  converfacion. 

Sueft.  But  how  may  I  know  my  obedience  is  the  obedience  of 
the  heart  I 

An[vf.  If  it  comes  from  love,  thenit  is  the  obedience  of  the  ^  r 
heart.  He  commands  the  heart,  that  is  Mafter  of  its  love.  The 
Caftlc  muft  needs  yeild,  when  he  that  keeps  it,  and  hath  the  keyes 
of  it,fubmits.  Love  is  the  affection  that  governs  this  royal  Fort 
of  mans  heart  •,  we  give  our  hearts  to  them  we  give  our  love. 
And  indeed  thus  it  is,  that  faith  brings  the  heart  over  into  fub- 
jection  and  obedience  to  God,  by  putting  it-under  a  Law  of  love, 
GW.5.6.  fatth  which  workethbj  love.  Firft,  faith  workcthlove, 
and  then  it  workcth  by  it.  As  firft  the  workman  fets  an  edge 
on  his  tooles,  and  then  he  carves  and  cuts  with  them  •  fo  faith 
fharpens  the  fouls  love  to  God,  and  then  ads  by  it;  or  as  a  Sta- 
tuary ,  to  makefome  difficult  piece,  before  he  goes  a  bout  it,  find- 
ing hands numme  with  cold,  that  he  cannot  handle  his  tooies 
fo  nimbly  as  he  (hould,  goes  firft  to  the  fire,  and  with  the  help  of 
its  heat  chafes  them,  till  they  of  ftiffe  and  numme ,  become  agile 
and  active,  then  to  work  he  falls  •  fo  faith  brings  the  foul,  awke 
and  liftlcflc  enough  (God  knows)  to  any  duty,  unto  the  medita*. 
tion  of  the  peerlciTe  matchleife  love  of  God  in  Chrift  to  it ,  and 
at  this  fire  faith  ftayes  the  Chriftians  thoughts,  till  his  affections 
begin  to  kindle ,  and  come  to  fome  fenfe  of  his  love  of  God,  and 
now  the  Chriftian  beftirs  himfelf  f0r  God  with  might  and 
maine. 

Slwfi.  2.   But  how  may  I  know  my  obedience  is  from  QUefl,  2; 
love?  *^ 

Anfw.  Y\z  fend  you  to  Saint  John  to  be  refolved  of  thisQue-.  j  r 
ftion,  i  Efift.  $.^.This  is  the  love  ofGodjhat  ne  keep  his  Command- 
wents,  and  his  Command  ments  are  not  grievous ;  fpeakfoul,  what 
account  have  you  of  the  Commendmcms?do  you  look  upon  them 
asan  iron  chain  about  your  leg«,  and  think  your  felves  prifoners 
becaufe  you  are  tied  to  them  ?  or  do  you  value  then  as  a  chaine 
of  gold  about  your  neck,  and  cfteem  your  felves  favourites  of  the 

Yyy  3  King  . 


534  Above  all  taking 

King  of  heaven ,  that  he  will  honour  you ,  to  honour  him  by 
iervmgofhim?  fo  did  as  great  a  Trince  as  the  world  had,  who 
am  I,  and  what  is  mj  people,  that  wefhmld  be  able  to  offer  fo  willing- 
ly ,  i  Chron.  29.  Not,  who  ami,  that  I  fhould  bea  King  over 
my  people  ?  But ,  that  I  (hould  have  a  heart  fo  graciou«,  to 
offer  willingly  with  my  people  ?  not,  who  am  I,that  they  fhould 
ferveme,  but  that  thou  wilt  honour  me  with  a  heart,  to  fcrve 
thee  with  them  ?  The  fame  holy  man  in  another  place  fpeaks  of 
finne,  as  his  prifon,  and  his  obedience  as  his  liberty.  /  will  walk, 
at  liberty, for  Jfeek,thy  precepts,  Pfal.r  19,  45,  when  God  gives 
him  a  lage  heart  for  duty,  he  is  as  thankful  as  a  man  that  was 
bound  in  prifon  is,  when  he  is  fet  at  liberty  ,  that  he  may  vifit 
his  friends,  and  follow  his  calling.  The  only  grievous  thing  to  a 
loving  foul,  is  to  be  hindrcd  in  his  obediencej  this  is  that  which 
makes  fuch  a  one  out  of  love  with  the  world,  and  being  init^ 
becaufe  it  cumbers  him  in  his  work ,  and  many  times  keeps  hira 
from  it.  As  a  confcionable  faithful  fervant ,  that  is  lame  or 
fickly  and  can  do  his  mafter  little  fervice,  O  how  it  grieves  him  ? 
Thus,  the  loving  foul  bemoanes  it  felf,  that  it  fhould  put  God 
to  fo  much  coft ,  and  be  fo  unprofitable  under  it  ?  fpeak,  is  this 
thy  temper  ?  bleffed  art  thou  of  the  Lord  /  There  is  a  jewel  of 
two  diamonds,  which  this  will  prove  thou  art  owner  of,  that  the 
crown  jewels,  of  all  the  Princes  of  the  world ,  are  not  fo  worthy 
to  be  valued  with,  as  a  heap  of  duft  or  dung,  is  to  be  com- 
pared with  them.  The  jewel,  I  mean,  is  made  of  this  paire  of 
gtaces,  faith  and  love,  they  are  thine,  and  with  them,  God  and  all 
that  he  hath  and  is.  But,  if  the  commandments  of  God  be  grie  • 
vous  fas  they  are  to  every  carnal  heart)  and  thou  counteft  thy 
felf  at  eafe,  when  thou  eanft  make  an  cfcape  from  a  duty  to  com- 
mit a  finne,  as  the  bcaft  doth,  when  his  collar  is  off,  and  he  in 
his  fat  pafture  again  ^  now  thou  art  where  thou  wouldft  be ,  and 
can  fhewfomefpirits,  that  thou  haft  ;  but  when  confeience  puts 
on  the  trace  again ,  thou  art  dull  and  heavie  again  ^  Q  it  fpeaks 
thee  to  have  nolovetoGod,and  therefore  no  faith  on  God,  that 
is  true.  That  is  a  jade  indeed ,  who  hath  no  mettal  but  in 
the  pafture. 
2.  Secondly,  the  obedience  of  faith  is  full  of  felf-denial.    Faith 

|fcfc«s  the  creature  low,  asin  what  heharh,  fo  in  what  he  doth. 
/  live t  yet  tot  I \btttCkr!filivethinmr,G2\.2   :o.  As  if  he  had 

(aid. 


the  pjield  of  faith.  c  a* 


faid,  I  pray  miftake  mc  not,  when  1  fay,  I  live,  I  mean  not  that 
I  live  by  my  felf,or  of  my  felf ,  but  Chrift  in  me.     1  live ,  and 
that  delicioufly  ,  but  it  is  Chrift  that  keeps  the  houfe  not  i.    I 
mortifie  my  corruptions ,  and  vanquifh  temptations ,  but  I  am 
debtor  to  Chrift  for  the  ftrength.    None  can  write  here,  as  one 
did  under  Pope  Adrians  ftatue  (where  the  place  of  his  birth  was 
named,and  thofe  Princes  that  bad  prefcrr'd  him  from  ftep  to  ftep, 
till  he  mounted  the  Popes  cbaire ,  but  God  left  out  of  all  the  fto- 
ry)  Nihil  hie  Detis  fecit,  God  did  nothing  for  this  man.  No,  blef- 
fed  Paul,  and  in  him  every  believer,  acknowledgeth  God  for  folc 
founder  and  benefa&our  too  of  all  the  good  he  hath  and  doth. 
Thcyarenotaftiamedto  acknowledge  who  they  are  beholden 
to  for  all.     Thefe  are  the  children  which  God  hath  graciouflj  given 
me,  faid  ^facob.    And,  thefe  the  Services  which  God  hath  graci* 
oufly  a  flitted  me  in,  faith  Paul,  1  Cor.  15.  10./  laboured  mere  a~ 
bundantlj  than  they  all ,  yet  not  J ,  but  the  grace  of  God  which  was 
with  me ;  all  is  exdonoD:i.     O  how  chary  are  Saints  of  wri- 
ting themfel  ves  authours  of  their  own  good  works,  parts,  or  abi- 
lities >  Art  thou  able  (faid  the  King  to  Daniel)  to  make  known  un- 
to me  the  dreame  which  1  have  feen  ?  Dan.  -226   Now  mark,  he 
doth  rot  fay,  as  the  proud  Aftrologers,  chap  2  4.  wenill  fh=w 
the  interpretation;  that  fitted  their  mouths  well  enough  who  had 
no  acquaintance  with  God,  but  not  Daniels,  the  fervant  of  the  li- 
ving God-,  though,  at  that  very  time  he  had  the  fecret  reveal* 
ed  to  him  ,  and  could  tell  the  King  his  dream,  yet  he  was  careful 
to  ftand  clear  from  any  filching  of  Gods  glory  from  him . 
and  therefore  he  anfwers  the  King,  by  telling  him  what  his  God 
could  do ,  rather  than  himfelf .     There  is  a  God  in  heaven  that  re- 
vealeth  fecret:  y&c.    And  what  makes  'Daniel  fo  felf-denying  > 
Truly,  it  was,  becaufe  he  had  obtained  this  fecret  of  God,  by 
faith  at  the  throne  of  grace  •  as  you  may  perceive  by  chap,  z.v, 
1 5,1 6,  1 7.  compared.    That  faith  which  taught  him  to  beggc  the 
mercy  of  God,  enabled  him  to  deny  himfelf,  and  give  the  entire 
glory  of  it  from  himfelf  to  God.    As  rivers  empty  their  ftrearas 
again  into  the  bofome  of  the  fea,  whence  they  at  hxft  received 
them-,  fo  men  give  the  praife  ©f  what  they  do, unto  that,by  which 
they  do  it.    If  they  attempt*  any  enrerprize  with  their  own  wit, 
or  induftry ,  you  fhall  have  them  bring  their  frerifice  to  their 
wit  or  net.    No  wonder  to  hear  ^buchadnes^ar  (who  lookt 

r.o 


o5  Above  all  taking 


no  higher  than  himfelf  in  building  his  great  Babylon)  ^knbe  the 
honour  of  it  to  himfelf.,  Dan  4.  30.  Isntt  this  great  11  *by Ion  that 
1  have  built,  by  the  might  of  my  power, and  for  the  honour  of  my  Mx- 
jefty  ?  But  faith  teachcth  the  creature  to  blot  out  his  own  name, 
and  write  the  Name  of  God  in  its  roome  upon  all  he  hath  and 
doth.  When  the  fervants,  Luke  19.  16.  came  to  give  up  their 
accounts  to  their  Lord,  every  one  for  his  pound,  thofe  that  were 
faithful  to  improve  it ,  how  humbly  and  felf-denyingly  do  they 
fpeak  ?  Lord,  thy  pound  hath  gained  ten  pounds  faith  the  firft,z/.  1 6. 
Thy  pound  hath  gained  five,  faith  another,  v.  18.  Mark ,  not  1 
have  gained, but  thy  pound  hath  gained  ten  and  five.  They  do 
not  applaud  themfelves ,  but  afcribe  both  principal  and  increafe 
to  God ,  thy  talent  hath  gained ,  that  is ,  thy  gifts  and  grace, 
through  thy  affiftance  and  blcfting,  have  gained  thus  much  more. 
Only,  he  that  did  lcaft,  comes  in  wi  th  a  brag,  and  tells  his  Lord 
what  he  had  done,  Behold,  here  is  thy  pound, which  I  have  kept  laid 
upift  a  napkjn.  Leaft  doers  are  greatelt  boafters. 


CHAP.  VI. 

Tm  properties  of  faith ,  It  is  prayerful^  and 
nniforme  in  its  a&ing. 

TRue  faith  is  prayerful ;  prayer  it  is  the  childe  of  faith  •  and 
as  the  childe  bears  his  fathers  name  upon  him/o  doth  prayer 
the  name  of  faith  j  what  is  it  known  by, but  by  the  prayer  of  faith? 
James  5.i<;.Prayer,  it  is  the  very  natural  breath  of  faith  ;fuppiica- 
tion  and  thank lgiving(the  two  parts  of  prayer)  by  thefe  (  as  the 
body,  by  the  double  motion  of  the  lungs)  doth  theChriftian  fuck 
in  mercy  from  God,  and  breath  back  again  that  mercy  in  praife 
to  God;  but  without  faith,  he  could  do  neither ;  he  could  not 

by 


the  fbield  of  faitb.  5  57 


by  fupplication  draw  mercy  fro.n  God  ;  for  h?  that  cjm-s  to  God 
mujl  believe  that  he  island  that  he  is  a  revarde  r  of  them  that  dili- 
gently eck^him>Hzb.iT.6.  Neither  could  he  return  praifes to 
God  without  faith.  Dw*V.r  heart  mutt  be  nxt,before  he  can  fing 
and  give  thanks.  Thankfgiving  is  an  ail:  of  felf-denial,  and  'tis  PLta  j<*. 
faith  alone  that  will  (hew  us  the  way  out  of  our  own  doors;  and 
as  the  crearure  cannot  pray  (I  mean  acceptably)  without  faith,fo 
with  faith  he  cannot  but  pray.  The  new  creature  ( like  our 
infants  in  their  natural  birth  J  cones  crying  into  the  world: 
And  therefore  Chrift  rells  it  for  great  news  to  Ananias  of  Saul 
(a  new  born  believer)  behold  he  frays.  But  is  that  fo  ftrange, 
that  one  brought  up  at  the  foot  of  Gamaliel,  and  fo  precife  a 
Phanfee  as  he  was,  fhould  be  found  upon  his  knees  at  prayer  ? 
Truly  no;  it was  that  his  Seft  gloried  in,  their  fading  and  pray- 
ing; and  therefore  he  being  ft  rift  in  his  way,  was  (  no  doubt)  ac- 
quainted with  this  work  as  to  the  exterior  part  of  it ;  but  he  ne- 
ver had  the  Spirit  of  prayer,till  he  now  had  the  Spirit  of  grace, 
whereby  he  believed  on  Jefus  Chrift.  And  therefore  if  you  will 
try  your  faith,it  muft  not  be  by  bare  praying,but  by  fome  peculi- 
ar Characters,  which  faith  imprints  prayer  withall. 

Now  there  are  three  afts  by  which  faith  difcovers  it  felf  in  re- 
ference to  this  duty  of  prayer. 

Firft,  it  puts  forth  an  exciting  aft  whereby  it  ftirs  up  the  1^ 

Chriftian  to  pray.  _ 

Secondly,  an  aflifting  aft  in  prayer.  2. 

Thirdly,  «a  fupporting  aft  after  prayer.  3. 


SECT.    I. 

Firft,  faith  puts  forth  an  exciting  aft,  whereby  it  provokes  the  1 . 
Chriftian,  and  ftrongly  prefleth  him  to  pray.  And  this  it  doth, 
firft,  by  difcovering  to  the  creature  its  own  beggery  and  want, 
as  alfo  the  fulneffe  that  is  to  be  had  from  God  in  Chrift  for  his 
fupply ;  both  which  faith  ufeth  as  powerful  motives  to  quicken 
the  foul  up  to  pray.  As  the  Lepers  (aid  to  one  another,  why 
Jit  vee  here  nntill  we  dye}lf  we  fay  we  willent-r  into  the  Cityjhere  is 
famine  to  flay  ni\come  let  w  fall  into  the  Hoft  of  the  Syrians. 1\msz  King.  7.3,4. 

Ziz  faith 


--#  Above  all  talking 


faun  rouzeth  the  lbul  up  to  prayer ;  It  thou  ttayeit  at  thy  own 
door,0  my  foul, thou  art  fure  to  tfarve  and  dye  j  what  feeft  thou 
in  thy  telf,  but  hunger  and  famine  ?  no  bread  there,no  money  to 
buy  any  in  thy  own  purfe  ;  Up  therefore,hafb  thee  to  thy  God, 
and  thy  foul  (hall  live.  O  Sirs,are  you  prett  with  this  inward  feel- 
in3  of  your  own  wamsfprenetothe  Throne  of  grace  as  the  only 
way  lcfr  for  your  fupply  ;  you  may  hope  it  is  faith  that  fends  you; 
faith  is  the  principle  of  our  new  life./  live  (  faith  Taut)  by  the 
faith  of  the  Son  ef  (W,Gal.a.2o.This  life  being  weak,is  craving 
and  crying  for  nourifhment,and  that  naturally  as  the  new-born 
babe  doth  for  the  milk;i;'  therefore  you  finde  this  inward  fcnfc 
prompting  and  provoking  of  you  to  cry  toGod,it  fhewsthis 
principle  of  life  (  faith  I  mean )  is  in  thee. 

Object.  But  may  not  an  unbeliever  pray  in  the  fenfe  of  hs 
0  J  wams,and  be  inwardly  pinched  with  them  jwhich  may  make  him 

pray  very  feelingly  ? 
Anfa  Anfrv.  We  mutt  diftinguifh  of  wants.  They  are  either  fpiri- 

'       tual,or  carnal.    It  cannot  be  denied  but  an  unbeliever  may  be 
very  fenfible  of  outward  carnal  wants,and  knock  loud  at  heaven- 
gate  for  fupply.  We  finde  them  howling  on  their  beds^and  aff ena- 
bling themselves  for  corn  and,  mneyHoteA  7.1 4.  There  is  the  cry 
of  trie  creature,  and  the  cry  of  the  new  creature.  Every  crea- 
ture hath  a  natural  cry  for  that  which  fuits  their  nature.  Hence, 
Tfal.  104.  7.  The  young  Lyons  roar  after  their prey^and  feekjhelr 
neat  of  God.    But  give  the  Lyon  flefh,  and  he  will  not  roar 
for  wan^  of  grafle ;  give  the  Oxe  grafle,    and  you  /hall  not 
hearhim  lowing  for  flefh;fo  give  the  faithlefle  gracelefle  perfon 
his  fill  t>f  his  carnal  food,  fenfual  enjoyments,  and  you  {hall 
have  little  complaints  of  fpiritual  wants  from  him.    They  are 
therefore  fpii  itual  wants  you  mutt  try  your  faith  by  ;  if  thou  canft 
heartily  pray  for  \o\c  to  Chritt,fa;th  on  him,or  any  other  grace , 
feeling  the  want  of  them  as  a  hungry  man  doth  of  his  food;thou 
-may'tt  conclude  fafely  there  is  this  principle  of  new  life,  which 
Clike  the  veins  at  the  bottome  of  the  ttomack^by  its  fucking  puts 
thee  to  pain  till  it  be  heard  and  fatisfied  ;  for  thefe  graces  be- 
ing proper  to  the  new  creature,  can  be  truly  defired  of  none 
but  one  that  is  a  new  creature.    . 

<SWW/v,faith  excites  to  prayer  from  an  inward  delight  it  hath 
^n  communion  with  God./**  u  g-o  I  for  me  (faith  the  Pfittmift  J  to 

draw 


the  flrield  of  faith.  5  ?o, 


drat*  n:ar  to  (jod  ',  now  mark  the  next:  wo'ds,/  have  pat  my  trufi 
in  the  Lord^  Pfal.  73.28.  We  take  delight  to  hi  often  looking, 
where  we  have  laid  up  our  treafure.  This  holy  man  had  hid  up 
his  foul,  and  all  he  had  in  God  by  fairh^o  be  kept  lafely  for  him; 
and  now  he  delights  oft  to  be  with  God,  he  hath  that  which  in- 
vites him  into  his  prefence  with  fweet  conrent.By  faith  the  foul 
is  contracted  to  Chrift ;  Now  being  efpo'ufed  to  Chrift,  there  is 
no  wonder  at  all  that  it  fhould  delire  commnn  on  with  him. 
Arid  prayer  being  the  place  of  meeting,where  Chrift  and  the  foul 
can  come  the  neareft  on  this  fide  fieaven,therefore  the  believer 
is  feen  fo  oft  walking  that  way.  Canft  thou  fay  poor  CouU 
that  this  is  thy  errand,  when  praying,  to  fee  the  face  of  God  ? 
can  nothing  lefle,  and  need'ft  thou  nothing  more  to  fatisfie 
and  recreate  thy  foul  in  prayer,than  communion  with  God?  cer- 
tainly God  hath  thy  faith,orelfe  thou  couldft  not  fo  freely  be- 
ftow  thy  love  on  him,  and  take  delight  in  him. 


SECT*   II. 

Secondly,  faith  puts  forth  aa  aflifting  act  in  prayerjto  inftance 
only  in  two  particulars. 

Firft,  it  aflifts  the  foul  with  importunity ;  faith  is  the  wreftling 
grace;it  comes  up  clofe  toGod,takes  hold  of  God,and  will  not 
eafily  take  a  denial.  It  infires  all  the  arfe&ions-,and  fets  them  on 
work ;  this  is  the  fouls  eye  by  which  it  fees  the  filth,the  hell  that 
is  in  every  fin;  and  feeing  arre&s  the  heart,  and  puts  it  into  a 
paflion  of  forrow,when  the  foul  fpreads  its  abominations  before 
the  Lord.  The  creature  now  needs  no  onion  to  make  it  weep ; 
tears  come  alone  freely,as  water  from  a  flowing  fpring.lt  makes 
a  difcovery  of  Chrift  to  thefoul,in  the  excellencies  of  his  per- 
fon,love  and  graces  from  the  glaflfe  of  the  promife;at  the  fight  of 
which  it  is  even  fick  with  longing  after  them;  and  fuch  pangs  of 
love  come  upon  it,as  make  it  fend  forth  ftrong  cryes  and  fuppli- 
cations  for  that  it  fo  impatiently  defires ;  yea  further,faith  doth 
not  barely  fet  the  creatures  teeth  on  edge,  by  difplaying  the  ex- 
cellency of  Chrift  and  his  grace ;  but  it  fupplies  him  with  argu- 
ments,^ helps  the  foul  to  vveild  and  ufe  them  both  valiantly, 

Zzz2  and 


2, 


S4 


<io 


Above  all  tahjtig 


and  vidorioully  u^on  the  Almighty.  Never  could  he  tell  what 
todowiihapromife  in  prayer  till  new  that  faith  teachech  him 
to prefs  God  \\i:h  it.hu mbly,yer  boldly.  wh*t  wilt  thou  do  unto- 
ti.y  preat'K'-M  ffaiih  b:lie\ ing  JoJkn/by  ch.7-9.as  it  he  had  faid, 
thou  art  fo  hil  bound  to  thy  people  by  promile  and  oath,  that 
thou  canli  not  leave  them  to  perifli,but  thy  Name  will  fufter  with 
rhem;faith  melts  promiies  into  arguments,  as  the  fouldier  doth 
leadeintobulLets ;  and  then  help  the  Chriftian  to  fend  them 
with  a  force  to  heaven  in  fervent  prayer;whereas  apromifein  an 
NnbelUvers  mouth,  is  like  a  fhot  in  a  Guns  mouth  without  any 
ire  to  put  to  if.  O  how  cold  and  dead  doth  a  promife  drop  from 
him  in  prayer  f  he  (peaks  promiies,  but  canno:  pray  promifes,or 
preffe  promifes.And  therefore  try  thy  felf,not  by  naked  praying, 
but  by  importunity  in  prayer;and  that  not  by  theagiration  of  thy 
boJly  fpiiits,but  the  inward  working  of  thy  foul  and  fpirit,whe- 
iher  carried  out  to  plead  the  promiie,and  urge  it  upon  God  with 
an  humble  importunity  or  nor. 

Secondly /ait  h  enables  the  foul  to  perfevere  in  the  workjfalfe 
faith  may  fhew  fome  mettel  at  hand,  buthee'l  jade  at  length  ; 
■Witt  the  hypocrite  pray  always  t  Job  27. 1  o.     No,as  the  wheel 
wears  with  turning,  till  it  breaks  at  laft,  fo  doth  the  hypocrite  ; 
he  prays  himfelf  weary  of  praying ;  fomething  or  other  will  in 
time  make  him  quarrel  with  that  dury,which  he  never  inwardly 
liked;whereas  the  fincere  believer  hath  that  in  him  which  makes 
it  impoflible  he  fhould  quite  give  over  praying,  except  he 
fhould  alfo  ceafe  believing  j  prayer,it  is  the  very  breath  of  faith; 
Hop  a  mans  breath,  and  wnere  is  he  then  ?  'tis  true,the  believer 
through  his  own  negligence  may  finde  fome  more  difficulty  of 
fetching  his  praying  breath  at  one  time  then  at  another(as  a  man 
in  a  cold  doth  for  his  natural  breath  )  alas,  who  is  fo  careful  of 
his  fouls  health,  that  needs  not  bewail  this  ?  but   for  faith  to 
live,  and  this  breath  of  prayer  to  be  quite  cut  off  is  impoflible ; 
we  fee  Dav  id  did  but  hold  his  breath  a  little  longer  than  ordina- 
ry,andwhatadiftemperitputhiminto,iillhe  gave  himfelf  eafe 
aga;n  by  venting  his  foul  in  prayer}/ held  myp?ace>*nd  my  frrrow 
ftirred,  my  heart  -was  kot  "within  me\vohile  1  was  mufwg,  the  fire 
burntdythan  fpake  /  veith  my  tongue^Lord  make  me  to  know  my  e»dy 
Pf.^o.Doft  thou  O  man  find  thy  felfundera  necetfky  of  praying, 
as  the  little  babe  who  cannot  choofe  but  cry,  when  it  ailes  or 

wants 


the  fhield  of faith .  5  ^  t 


wants  any  thing>becaufe  it  hath  no  other  way  to  help  it  lelf  than 
by  crying  to  haften  its  mother  or  nurieto  its  helpftheChriliians 
want?,  fins  and  temptations  continuing  to  return  upon  him,  he 
cannot  but  continue  alfo  to  pray  againit  them.  From  the  en  Is  of 
the  earth  mil  1  cry  mtotb.c,imh  /-^/^,Pfal.<5 1.2. where  ever 
lam,  Tie  finde  thee  out ;  priion  me,  baniih  me,  or  do  with  me 
what  thou  wilt,  thou  fhalt  never  be  rid  of  me,  /  will  abid:  in  thy 
Tab  made  for  ev,r,  ver.  4.  But  how  could  David  do  thar,  when 
baniili't  from  it  ?  furejy  he  means  by  prayer ;  the  praying  Chri- 
ilian  carries  a  Tabernacle  with  him;  as  long  as  David  can  come 
at  the  Tabernacle,  he  will  not  neglect  it ;  and  when  he  cannot 
through  ficknefle,banifliment,&c.  than  he  will  look  towards  it,, 
and  as  devoutly  worfhip  God  in  the  open  fields,  as  if  he  were  in 
it.     Let  my  prayer  be  ft  before  thee  as  incenfe^andthc  lifting  up 
of  my  hands  as  evening  facrificey]?h\.  141.  2.    he  fpeaks  cf 
fuch  a  time  when  he  could  not  come  to  offer  facrificeat  the  Ta- 
bernacle. 


SECT.  III. 

Faith  hath  a  fupporting  ad  after  prayer.  1.  It  fupportsthe 
foul  to  expect  a  gracious  anfwer;  /»/iK<//r*ff  my  prayers  unto  thee,, 
and  mlltookjip-,  Pfal.  5. 3 .  or  I  will  look  ;  for  what,but  for  a  re- 
turn ?  an  unbelieving  heart  fhoots  at  randome,and  never  minds 
where  his  arrow  lights,  or  what  comes  of  his  praying ;  but  faith 
fills  the  foul  with  expectation.  As  a  Merchant  when  he  cafts  up 
his  eftate,  he  counts  what  he  hath  fent  beyond  Sea,  as  well  as 
what  he  hath  in  hand ;  fo  doth  faith  reckon  upon  what  he 
hath  fent  to  heaven  m  prayer  and  not  received,  as  well  as  thofe 
mercies  which  he  hath  received,and  are  in  hand  at  prefenr.  ^ow 
this  expectation  which  faith  raifeth  in  the  foul  after  prayer,  ap- 
pears in  ths  power  that  it  hath  to  quiet  and  compofe  the  foul  in 
the  interim  between  the  fending  forth  (  as,  I  may  fay  )  the  (Lip 
of  prayer,and  its  return  home  with  its  rich.lading  it  goes  for;and 
it  is  more  or  leffe  according  as  faiths ftrength  is;fometimes  faith 
comes  from  prayer  in  triumph,and  crys  vittoria  ;  it  gives  fuch  a 
being&exiftence  to  the  mercy  pray 'd  for  in  theChrilUans  foul, be- 

Z  2  2  3  fore 


cai  Above  all  taking 


fore  any  likelihood  of  it  appears  to fenfe  and  reafon,  that  the 
Chriflian  canfilence  all  his  troubled  thoughts  with  the  expecto- 
tion  of  its  coming.     So  Hannah  pray 'd,  and  was  no  more  j  ad  ^ 
i  Sam.  1. 1 8.  Yea,  it  will  make  the  ChrilUan  ciisburfe  his  praifes 
for  the  mercy  long  before  it  is  received.  Thus  high  faith  wrought 
in  David^ViiX.  %6.  ^q.At  what  time   I  am  ap-aid^f  will  trujr 
in  thee;  and  in  the  next  words,  ver.  4.  In  God  will  I  praife  h/> 
Word ;  that  is,  he  would  praife  God  for  his  promife,before  there 
were  any  performance  of  it  to  him,  when  it  had  no  exiftence 
but  i^  Gods  fait hf nine jfey  and  1>avids  faith.This  holy  man  had 
fuch  a  piercing  eye  of  faith,as  he  could  fee  th  1  promife  when  he 
was  at  loweft  ebbe  of  mifery,fo  certain  and  unquestionable  in  the 
power  and  truth  of  God,  that  he  could  then  praife  God,  as  if 
the  promifed  mercy  had  been  actually  fulfilled  to  him.    But  I 
would  not  have  thee,  Chriftian,try  the  truth  of  thy  faith  by  this 
heroick   high  ftraine  it  mounts  to  in  fome  eminent  believers. 
Thou  may'ft  be  a  faithful  fouldier  to  Chrilt,  though  thou  attain- 
ed not  to  the  degree  of  a  few  Worthies  in  his  Army,  more  ho- 
nourable in  this  refpeifc , than  the  reft  of  their  brethren.There  is 
a  lower  a&  of  faith,which  if  thou  canft  finde,  may  certifie  thee 
of  its  truth ;  that  ( I  mean  )  which  though  it  doth  not  prefently 
disburthen  the  foul  (upon  praying)  of  all  its  anxious  difquieting 
thoughts ,  yet  keeps  the  fouh  head  above  the  waves ,    and 
gives  a  check  to  them  that  they  abate,(though  by  little  and  little) 
astheftream  in  a  channel  doth  at  a  falling  tyde.    When  God 
took  the  Deluge  from  the  earth,he  did  not  do  it  in  a  moment.lt 
is  faid  the  waters  returned  from  off  the  earth  continually ,Gen.8. 5 . 
That  is,  it  was  falling  water  from  day  to  day,  till  all  was  gone  ; 
Canrt  thou  not  finde  Chriftian,  that  fome  of  thy  tumults  us 
difquieting  thoughts  are  let  out  at  the  flnce  of  prayer,and  that  it 
is  fome  eafe  to  thy  encombred  fpirit,that  thou  haft  the  bofome 
of  a  gracious  God  to  empty  thy  forrowful  heart  into  ?  and 
though  praying  doth  not  dreine  away  all  thy  fears>  yet  it  keeps 
thee^doth  it  not  from  being  over-flown  with  them,  which  thou 
could 'it  not  avoid  without  faith  ?  a  fowl  wholly  void  of  faith, 
prays,  and  leaves  none  of  its  burthen  with  God,  but  carries  all 
back  with  it  that  it  brought,  and  more  too;   calling  on  God 
gives  no  more  relief  to  him,than  throwing  out  an  Anchor  that 
hath  no  hooks  to  take  hold  on  the  firme  earth,  doth  the  finking 

{hip. 


the  fhield  of  faith.  543 


{hip.  If  therefore  poor  foul  thou  flndeft  upon  throwing  one 
thy  Anchor  of  faith  in  pnyer,that  it  takes  fuch  hold  0.1  Chrift  in 
the  promife,  as  to  ftay  thee  from  being  driven  by  the  fury  of 
Satans  affrighting  temptations,or  thy  own  defpairing  thoughts, 
blefle  God  for  it.  The  (hip  that  rides  at  Anch  or  is  fife  f  though 
it  may  be  a  litth'tofled  too  and  fro)fo  long  as  the  Anchor  keeps 
its  hold.  And  fo  art  thou  poor  foul  ;  that  faith  will  fave 
from  hell,  that  will  not  wholly  free  the  foul  here  from 
fears. 


SECT.   IV. 

True  faith  is  uniform.  As  fincere  obedience  doth  not  pick 
and  choofe,take  this  Commandment,and  leave  thatjbut  hath  re- 
fpeft  to  all  the  precepts  of  God ;  fo  faith  unfeigned,  hath  re- 
fpeil  to  all  the  truths  of  God.  It  believes  one  promife  as  well 
as  another.  As  the  true  Chriftian  muft  not  have  the  faith  of  our 
Lordjtftu  with  reffett  cf  ferfou^  Jam.  2, X.  fonot  with  rejpeti 
to  truths.  To  pretend  to  believe  one  promife,  and  to  give  no 
credit  to  another ;  this  is  to  be  partial  in  the  promifes,  as  the 
prieftsarecharg'dtobeinthedutiesof  the  Law,  CM at.  z.  g. 
The  honour  of  God  is  as  deeply  engaged  to  perform  one  pro- 
mife as  another.  Indeed  as  the  breach  but  of  one  Command- 
ment would  put  us  under  the  guilt  of  the  wholejfoGods  failing 
in  one  promife  (  which  is  blafphemy  to  think  )  would  be  the 
breaking  of  his  whole  Covenant;  promifes  are  copulative  as  well 
as  commands ;  and  therefore  neither  can  God  keep  one,except 
he  perform  all ;  nor  we  believe  one,except  we  believe  all.God 
hath  fpoke  all  thefe  words  of  promifes,  as  he  did  of  thofe  pre- 
cepts ;  his  feal  is  to  all,  and  he  looks  we  ihould  compafle  all 
within  the  embraces  of  our  faith.  'David  bears  witneile  to  the 
whole  truth  of  God,  Tfal.  1 19. 1 60.  Thy  Word  is  true  from  the 
beginnings  and  every  one  of  thy  righteous  judgments  endureth  for 
ever.  Try  now  thy  faith  here;  poihbly  thou  pret^ndeft  to  be- 
lieve the  promife  for  pardon,  and  art  often  pleailng  thy  telf 
with  the  thoughts  of  it ;  but  what  faith  ha&thou  on  the  pro- 
mife for  fanttifying  thy  nature,  and  fubduing  thy  corruptions  ? 

may 


~.a  Above  all  taking 


may  be  thou  mindeft  not  thefe,  improved  nor,  thefe  ;  this-fruit 
may  hang  long  enough  on  the  branches  of  the  pro:nifes,before 
thou  gathereft  it ;  the  other  is  for  thy  tooth,not  thefe ;  whereas 
true  faith  would  like  one  as  well  as  the  other.  See  how  hearti- 
ly David  prays  for  the  performance  of  this  promife,  P/V.  z  i 9. 
132,  be  merciful  unto  mey  as  thox  nfeji  to  do  unto  thofc  that 
love  thy  name  ;  order  my  fteps  in  thy  Word, and  let  no  im  uity  have 
dominion  over  me.  David  would  not  Iofe  any  priviledge  that 
God  hath  by  prormfe  fetled  on  his  children  ;  do  with  me,  faith 
he,  as  th  uufi-ft  to  */<?.This  is  no  more  than  family  fare,what  thou 
promifeft  to  do  for  all  that  love  thee  ;  and  let  not  me  go  worfe  . 
clad  than  the  reft  of  my  brethren.  May  be  thou  fancied,  thou 
haft  a  faith  for  the  eternal  falvation  of  thy  foul;  but  haft  thou 
faith  to  rely  on  God  for  the  things  of  this  life  ?  A  ftrange  belie- 
ver is  he  not,  that  lives  by  faith  for  heaven,  and  by  his  wits  and 
linful  policy  for  the  world  ?  Chrift  proves  that  iheyfoh.  5.  44. 
did  not  believe  on  him*  becaufe  they  durft  not  truft  him  with 
their  names  and  credits.If  we  cannot  truft  him  with  the  lefs,how 
eanweinthe  greater? 

I  deny  not,  but  he  that  hath  a  true  faith,  yea,  a  ftrong  faith  for 
heaven,may  be  put  to  a  plunge,and  his  faith  foiled  about  a  tem- 
poral promife;  but  we  muft  not  from  an  houreof  temptation, 
(wherein God  leaves  his  eminenteft Saints  to  humble  them  ) 
judge  of  the  conftant  ordinary  frame  of  the  believers  heart. 
Though  Abraham  difizmblzd  once  to  fave  his  life,  which  he 
thought  in  fome  danger  for  his  wives  beauty  ;yet  he  did  at  other 
times  °ive  envnent  teftimony  that  he  trufted  God  for  his  tem- 
poral life,as  well  as  for  his  eternal  falvation.I  do  not  therefore 
tid  thee  queftion  the  truth  of  thy  faith, for  every  fainting  fit  that 
comes  over  it,asro  the  good  things  of  the  promife  for  this  life. 
A  man  may  in  a  time  of  war,have  fome  of  his  eftate  lie  under  the 
enemies  power  for  a  time,and  he  fo  long  have  no  profits  from 
ir;but  ftill  ha  reckons  it  as  his  eftate,  is  troubled  for  his  prefent 
great  lofle,and  endeavours,as  foon  as  he  can, to  recover  it  again 
out  of  his  enemies  hand  ;  fo  in  the  hurry  of  a  temptation,when 
Satan  thefouls  great  enemy  is  abroad,and  God  withdraws  his  af- 
fiftance,the  believer  may  have  little  fupport  from  fome  particu- 
lar promifejbut  the  believer  ever  counts  that  his  portion,as  well 
*~  any  other,mourns  he  can  acl  his  faith  no  more  upon  it,and  la- 
bours 


the  Jbield  of  faitb.  54  c; 


hours  to  reinforce  his  faith  with  new  ftrength  from  heaven  what 
he  can,  that  he  may  be  able  to  live  upon  it,  and  improve  it  more 
to  his  comfort,  fo  that  ftill  it  holds  true ,  if  we  believe  not  God  / 
for  this  life,  neither  do  we  for  the  other.  In  a  word,  may  be 
thou  prerendeft  to  a  faith  for  thy  temporals,  and  feemeft  to  trull; 
Gqd  for  things  of  this  life  j  but  art  meer  ftrangcr  to  thofe  prime 
ads  of  faith,  whereby  the  believing  foul  clofeth  with  Chrift,  and 
receiveth  him  as  his  Lord  and  Saviour,  and  fo  feals  to  the  Cove- 
nant, that  in  the  Gofpel  is  tendred  to  poor  tinners.  Canft  thou 
fo  far  fight  againft  thy  own  reafon,  as  to  think  that  any  tempo- 
ral promife  belongs  to  thee  without  thefe  >  What  gives  the  wo- 
man right  to  her  joynture,  but  her  marriage- covenant. ?And  what 
gives  the  creature  a  trueclaime  to  thefe  promiies,  or  any  other  in 
the  Covenant  of  grace,  but  its  union  to  Chrift,  and  accepting  of 
him  as  he  is  offered  ?  The  firft  ad  of  Gods  love  to  the  creature, 
is  that  whereby  he  choofeth  fuch  a  one  to  be  his,  and  fets  him  a- 
part  in  his  unchangeable  purpofe ,  to  be  an  objed  of  his  fpeciaf 
love  in  Chrift.and  chercfore  called  thefomdatimfs  that,on  which 
God  layes  the  fuperftrudure  of  all  other  mercies.  The  foundati- 
on of  God  ftandeth  fure,  having  tbisfeal,  the  Lord  knoweth  them  that 
are  his,  2  Tim.  2. 1 9.  Firft,  God  choofeth  a  perfon  to  be  his,  and 
on  this  foundation  be  builds ,  and  beftows  all  his  further  cofr  of 
mercy  upon  the  creature,  as  one  that  is  his.  So  on  the  creatures 
part,  firft,  faith  clofeth  with  Chrift,  fevers  him  in  his  thoughts 
from  all  others,  and  choofeth  him  to  be  his  Saviour,  in  whom  a- 
lone  he  will  truft ,  and  whom  alone  he  will  fervej  which  done, 
then  it  trades  with  this  Promife  and  that ,  as  the  portion  which 
falls  to  him  by  marriage  with  Chrift.  And  therefore  fee  how  j)0ftc 
prepofterous  thy  courfe  is  who  fnatcheft  thefe  promifes  to  thy 
felfj  before  there  hath  paft  any  good-will  from  thee  to  Chrift. 


CHAP. 

Aaaa 


546 


Above  all  taking 


Vfe  J. 


CHAP.  vn. 

An  Exhortation  to  all  in  a  jiate  of  unbeliefs  to  en- 
deavour for  faitb^  with  one  direction  toward  the 
attaining  of  it* 

IS  faith  fo  precious  a  grace  ?  Let  it  provoke  you ,  who  want  it, 
to  get  it.  Can  you  hear  of  this  pearle ,  and  not  wifli  it  were 
yours  ?  wherefore  hath  the  Spirit  fpoken  fuch  great  and  glori- 
ous things  of  faith  in  the  Word,  but  to  make  it  the  more  defin- 
able in  your  eye  I  Is  there  any  way  to  get  Chrift,  but  by  getting 
faith  ?  or  doeft  not  thou  think  that  thou  needed  Chrift  as  much 
as  any  other?  there  is  a  generation  of  men  in  the  world,would 
almoft  make  one  think  this  was  their  judgement  j  who ,  becaufe 
their  corruptions  have  not  ( by  breaking  out  into  plague-fores  of 
profaneneffej  left  fuch  a  brand  of  ignominy-upon  their  name,  as 
fbme  others  lie  under,  but  their  converfations  have  been  ftrowed 
with  fome  flowers  oY  morality ,  whereby  their  names  have  kept 
fweet  among  their  neighbours^  therefore  they  do  not  at  all  liften 
to  the  offers  of  Chrift ,  neither  do  their  confciences  much  check 
them  for  this  neglect.  And  whyf  ?  fu  ely  ,  it  is  not  becaufe 
they  are  more  willing  to  go  to  hell  than  o  hers,  for  they  do 
that  to  efcape  it3  which  many  others  will  not  •,  but  becaufe  they 
think  the  way  they  are  in  ,  will  bring  them  in  good  time  to  hea- 
ven, without  any  more  ado.  Poor  deluded  creatures  1  Is  Chrift 
then  font  to  b  !p  onely  fome  more  debauched  Tinners  to  heaven, 
fuch  as  drunkiids  fwearers,and  .  f  that  rank?  And  are  civil3moral 
men  left  to  walk  thither  on  their  own  leg  es  ?  r  am  Jure,  if  the 
Word  may  be  believed,  we  have  the  cafe  rcfolved  clear  enough: 
That  tells  but  «;f  one  way  t  heaven  for  all  that  mean  to  come 
there  j    As  thee  is  but  one  (j'od  y  iobuionc  MeSatottr  between 

Qod 


the  fhk Id of  faith.  547 


God  and  man,  the  man  Chriflfefus^  I  Tim. -2.  5.  And  if  but  one 
bridge  over  the  gulf  e ,  judge  what  is  like  to  become  of  the  civil 
righteous  man  (for  all  hisfweet  kntcd  life)  if  he  miffe  this  one 
bridge ,  and  goes  on  in  the  road  he  hath  fet  out  in  for  heaven  ? 
O  remember  proud  man  who  thou  art ,  and  ceafe  thy  vaine  at- 
tempt. Art  not  thou  of  Adams  feed  ?  h*ft  not  thou  traitours 
blood  in  thy  veincs  ?  if  every  mouth  be  flopped,  Rom.  3.  19,20. 
how  dareft  thou  open  thine  ?  if  all  the  world  become  guilty  be- 
foreGod ,  that  by  the  deeds  of  the  Law ,  noftefhean  be  jx (lifted  in 
his  fight  •  where  then  (halt  thou  ftand  tc  plead  thy  innocency  be- 
fore hi  m,  who  fees  thy  black  skin  under  thy  white  feathers,thy  foul 
heart  through  thy  faire  carriage  ?  It  is  faith  on  Chrift,that  alone 
can  purifie  thy  heart ,  without  which  thy  wafht  face  and  hands 
(external  righteoufnefle  I  mean)wil  never  commend  thee  toGod. 
And  therefore  thou  art  under  a  horrible  delufion ,  if  thou  doeft 
not  think  that  thou  needed  Chriit ,  and  a  faith  to  intereftthee 
in  him  as  much  as  the  bloodieft  murtherer,orfilthicft  Sodomite 
in  the  world.  If  a  company  of  men  and  children  in  a  journy,were 
to  wade  through  fome  brook ,  not  beyond  a  mans  depth ,  the 
men  would  have  the  advantage  of  the  children  •,  but  if  to  crofTe 
the  fea,  the  men  would  need  a  fhip  to  waft  them  over,  as  well  as 
the  children  ;  And  they  might  well  pafle  for  mad  men ,  if  they 
fhould  think  to  wade  through,  without  the  help  of  a  fhip ,  that 
is  offcr'd  them  as  well  as  the  other ,  becaufe  they  are  a  little 
taller  than  the  reft  are  •,  fuch  a  foolifh  defperate  adventure 
wouldft  thou  give  for  thy  foul  ,  if  thou  fhouldft  think  to  make 
thy  way  through  the  juftice  of  God  to  heaven,  without  {hipping 
thy  felf  by  faith  in  Chrift,  becaufe  thou  arc  not  fo  bad  in  thy-ex- 
ternal  conversation  as  others.  Let  me  therefore  again  and  a* 
gain  befeech  all  that  are  yet  deftitute  of  faith, to  endeavour  for  it, 
aod  that  fpeedily .  There  if  nothing  deferves  the  precedency  in 
your  thoughts  before  this.  David  refolvM  not  to  give  fleep  to 
bis  eyes 5  nor  /lumber  to  his  eye-lids \  till  he  found  vat  a  place  for  the 
Lord,  an  habitation  for  the  mighty  God  of  Jacob,  Pfalme  1 3  2. 4,  $. 
The  habitation  which  pleafeth  God  moftjs  thy  heart,  but  it  muft 
be  a  believing  heart ,  Ephef.  3.17.  thatChrifl  may  dwell  in  yonr 
heart  by  faith.  O  how  dare  yon  fleep  a  night  in  that  houfe 
where  God  doth  not  dwell  ?  and  he  dwells  not  in  thee,  if  thou 
carrieft  an  unbelieving  heart  in  thy  bofome.    There  is  never  a 

Aaaa  2  Gofpel 


S4&  Above  all  taking 

Gcfpel  Sermon  *"<>«  heareCb^l^^ 

m,  take  heed  of  multiply  ingunkindneffes,  in  den.  \Tum  enter 
tamment  •  howknoweft  thou  ,  but  Godmav  Z?£i/£   £ 
fo  oft  to  by  unbelief  again*  his  J^"^ 
under  final  unbelief?  y  eai  £hcc  "P 

£&fi;  But  poffibly  thou  wilt  ask  now,  how  thou  ma- eft  Pet 
this  precious  grace  of  faith  ?  '  uuraJ clt  Set 

^'      diretons. ThC  anfWCr  C°  thlS  qUCfti0n '  takc  in  ■***  foll^'ing 


<tf*. 


I. 


SECT.  I. 


Sgsfis thy  end;avours  A'^Sdl 

sa?e^ w*»  "etei  s  sag; 

vinceth  the  creature  of  his  '«uStf*te  SCJl^  ^ 
theft  burrows  in  which  he  did  ufe  toearcf  andh  KfeTf  "ft 
hath  noeafe  in  his  fpirit,  from  thofc  plaifters  „ow  whi  h  f    ; 
ly  have  relieved  him.aud  fo  kept  him  KZ'^fe 

prefent  ftate,  faith  the  Voirit  of  PnH     P  {  G  ^  be  was-  Thy 


the  fhield  of  faith.  tAg 


thou  art,  and  wilt  be  found  at  the  great  day,  to  be  the  drunkard, 
and  Atheift  (for  all  thy  Teeming  reformation)  except  by  an  in, 
tervening  faith,  thou  gainfta  new  name;  what  though  thou  bceft 
drunk  no  more ,  yet  the  guilt  rcmaines  upon  thee,till  faith  ftrikes 
it  off  with  the  blood  of  Chrift.  God  will  be  paid  his  debt  by 
thee ,  or  Chrift  for  thee ;  and  Chrift  payes  no  reckoning  for 
unbelievers. 

Again ,  as  the  guilt  remaines ,  fo  the  power  of  thofe  lufts  re- 
maine,  (To  long  as  thou  art  an  unbeliever  )  however  they  may 
difappear  in  th«  outward  ad.    Thy  heart  is  not  empty'd  of  one 
finne,  but  the  vent  ftopt  by  reftraining  grace;  A  bottle  full  of 
wine,  clofe  ftopt ,  (hewes  no  more  what  it  hath  in  it ,  than  one 
that  is  empty^  and  that  is  thy  cafc^how  is  it  poilible  thou  fhouldft 
truly  morttfie  any  one  luft,  that  hath  no  faith,  which  is  the  onely 
viftory  of  the  world  ?  In  a  word ,  if  under  the  eonvincement 
of  thy  unbelief,  thou  wilt  finde  (how  little  a  finne  foever  now 
it  is  thought  by  thee)  that  there  is  more  malignity  in  it ,  than 
in  all  thy  other  finnes.    Haft  thou  been  a  liar?  that  is  a  grie- 
vous finne  indeed  •  hell  gapes  for  every  one  that  loveth  and  tel- 
leth  a  lie,  Rev,  22.  15.    But  know  poor  wretch,  the  loudelt 
lie ,  which  ever  thou  told'ft  is  that ,  which  by  thy  unbelief 
thou  telleft  ;   here,   thou  beareft  falfe-witnefle  againft  God 
himfelf ,  and  telleft  a  lye ,  not  to  the- holy  Cjhofi ,  as  Ananias 
did ,  but  a  lye  of  the  holy  CJhoji  j  as  if  not  a  word  were  true 
he  faith  in  the  promife*  of  the  Gofpel,     If  be  that  bekeves 
fets  to  his  feale  that  God  is  true  •,  judge  you,  whether  the  in*, 
believer  makes  him  not  a  lyar  ?  Haft  thou  been  a  murtherer, 
yea ,  had  thy  hand  in  the  blood  of  Saints ,  the  beft  of  men  ? 
This  is  a  dreadful  finne,  Iconfefle;  But  by  thy  unbelief,  thou 
are  a  more  bloody  murtherer ,  by  how  much  the  blood  of  God 
is  more  precious  than  the  blood  of  meere  men.    Thou  killeft 
Chrift  over  again  by  thy  unbelief,  and  treadeft  his  blood  un- 
der thy  feet ,  yea ,  throweft  it  under  Satans  feet  to  be  tran> 
pled  on  by  him.  ,' 


Aaaa  3  SECT* 


ceo  Above  all  taking 


SECT.  ii. 

J2jiefi'         gueft.  But  how  can  unbelief  be  fo  great  a  fin,  when  it  is  not  in 

the  Tinners  power  to  believe  ) 
Avfrv,  Anfw.  By  this  reafon  the  unregeneratc  perfon  might  wipe 

off  any  other  finne  ,  and  (hake  off  the  guilt  of  it,  with  but  fay- 
ing, It  is  not  my  fault  that  I  do  not  keep  this  commandment  or 
that,  for  1  have  no  power  of. my  felf  to  do  them.  This  is  true,  he 
cannot  performe  one  holyaftion  holily  and  acceptably  ^  They 
that  are  in  the  fie fh .cannot  pleafe  GW,Rom.  8. 8.  But,  it  19  afalfe 
inference,  that  therefore  he  doth  not  finne,  becaufe  he  can  do  no 
other. 

Firfl,  becaufe  this  inability  is  not  created  by  God ,  but  con- 
tracted by  the  creature  himfelf.  God  made  mannptight ,  but  they 
fought  out  many  inventions,  Ecclef.  7. 29.  Man  had  not  his  lame 
hand  from  God ;  No,  he  was  made  a  creature  fit  and  able 
for  any  fervice  his  Maker  would  pleafe  to  employ  him  in  •,  But 
man  cripled  himfelf-,  And  mans  fault  cannot  prejudice  Gods 
right.  Though  he  hath  loft  his  ability  to  obey ,  yet  God  hath 
not  loft  his  power  to  command  •,  who  among  our  felves  thinks  his 
debtor  difcharg'd,  by  wafting  that  eftate,  whereby  he  was  able  to 
have  paid  us  t  '  Tis  confeft,  had  man  ftood,  he  fhould  not,  indeed 
could  not  have  believed  on  Chrift  for  falvation,  as  now  he  is  held 
forth  in  the  Gofpel  ^  but  this  was  not  from  any  difability  in  man, 
but  from  the  unmeetnefle  of  fuch  an  objeft  to  Adams  holy  ftate. 
If  it  had  been  a  duty  meet  for  God  to  command,  there  was  abili- 
ty in  man  to  have  obeyed. 

Sec ondly,  mans  prefent  impotency  to  yield  obedience  to  the 
commands  of  God,  and  in  particular  to  this  of  believing  (where 
it  is  promuiged)  doth  afford  him  no  exoife;  becaufe  it  is  not  a 
fimple  inability,  but  complicated  with  an  inward  enmity  againit 
the  command.  'Tis  true,  man  cannot  believe  •  but  it  is  as  true, 
man  will  not  believe:  Ye rvi/l  not  come  unto  me ,  that  ym  might 
have  life,  John  5.40.  It  is  pofiible,  yea  ordinary,  that  a  man  may 
(through  fome  feeblenefle  and  deficiency  of  ftrength)  bedifabled 
to  do  that  which  he  is  very  willing  to  do,  and  this  draws  out  our 
pity  x  fuch  a  one  was  the  poor  criple,  who  lay  fo  long  at  the  poole, 

fohn 


the  Jhield  of  faith. 


John$.  5.  He  was  willing  enough  to  have  ftept  down,if  he  could 
have  but  crept  thither  ;  or  that  any  other  ftiould  have  helpt  him 
in ,  if  they  would  have  been  fo  kinde :  But ,  what  would  you 
think  of  fuch  a  criple,  that  can  neither  go  himfelf  into  the  pools 
for  healing,  nor  is  willing  any  fhould  help  him  in,  but  flies  in 
the  face  of  him  that  would  do  him  this  friendly  office  ?  every  un- 
believer is  thiscriple  .-  He  is  not  only  impotent  himfelf,  but  a 
refifter  of  the  Holy  Ghoft ,  that  comes  to  wooe  and  draw  him 
unto  Chrift.  Indeed,  every  one  that  believes,  believes  willingly  j 
But  he  is  beholden,  not  to  nature,  but  to  grace  for  this  willing- 
nefle ;  none  are  willing  till  the  day  of  power  comes,  Tfabne  no. 
3.  in  which  the  Spirit  of  God  overfhadows  the  foul ,  and  by  his 
incubation  fas  once  upon  the  waters)  he  new  formes  and  moulds 
the  will  into  a  fweet  compliance  with  the  call  of  God  in  the 
Gofpel. 


551 


*gs>  4§J>3|£**«>  ^  •  gjp  <rg>  c^5  4^t-  ^p$g*  #|i.  {2||  *g* 


CHAP.    VIII. 


Containes  a  fecond  Direction  for  the  ob- 
taining faith. 

TAkeheedof  refifting  or  oppofing  the  Spirit  of  God  r  when 
he  [offers  his  help  to  the  work,  tf  ever  thou  belicveft,  he 
muft  enable  thee^  take  heed  of  oppofing  him.  Matter- work- 
men love  not  to  be  controul'd.  Now,  two  wayes  the  Spirit  of 
God  may  be  oppofed.  J*V/?,when  the  creature  waits  not  on  the 
Spirit,  where  he  ordinarily  works  faith.  Secondly ,  when  the  crea- 
ture ,  though  he  attends  on  him  in  the  way  of  means  t  yet  con- 
trols him  in  his  work, 

1.  Take  heed  thou  oppofeft  not  the  Spirit,  by  not  attending 
on  him  in  the  way  and  means ,  by  which  he  ordinarily  works 
faith,    thou  knoweft  where  Jefus  ufeth  to  pafTe  \  and  his  spirit 

breath; 


2V 


I, 


6$2  Above  all  taking 


breathe ^  and  that  is  in  the  great  Gofpel  Grdinance,theMiniftry 
of  the  Word.  Chriftsfheep  ordinary  conceive  when  they  are 
drinking  the  water  of  life  here.    The  hearing  of  the  Gofpel,  it 
is  called,  Gal.  3.2.  The  hearing  of  faith,  becauie  by  hearing  the 
doctrine  of  faith,  the  Spirit  works  the  grace  of  faith  in  them. 
This  is  the  ftill  voice  he  fpeaks  to  the  fouls  of  finners  in.    Thine 
ejesjba/l  fee  thy  Teachers,  and  thine eares  Jhall  hear  a  word  behind 
thee,  faying  ,  thU  is  the  way,  rvall^ye  in  it,  Ifa.  50. 20.  here  are 
God  and  man  teaching  together.    Thou  canft  not  neglect  mans 
teaching,  but  thou  refifteft  the  Spirits  alfo.It  was  for  fomething 
that  ths  Apoftle  placed  them  fo  near,  2  Thef  5.19.   he  bids  us, 
quench  not  the  Sprit ;  and  in  the  next  words,  desfifenet  frophe- 
cying;  furcly  he  would  have  us  know  that  the  Spirit  is  dange* 
roufly  quencht,  when  prophecying  or  preaching  of  the  Gofpel  is 
defpifed.  Now  the  moft  notorious  wayofdefpifing  prophecying 
or  preaching,is  to  turn  our  back  off  the  Ordinance,and  not  attend 
on  it.  When  God  fcts  up  the  Miniftry  of  the  Word  in  a  place,  his 
Spirit  then  opens  his  School,  and  expects  that  all,  who  would  be 
taught  lor  heaven,  fhould  come  thither  -,  O  take  heed  of  playing 
the  truant,  and  abfenting  thy  felf  from  the  Ordinance,  upon  any 
unneceflary  occafion,  much  IclTe  of  calling  off  the  Ordinance.  If 
he  tempts  God,  that  would  be  kept  from  (inne ,  and  yet  will  not 
keep  out  of  the  circle  of  the  occafion  ,  that  leads  to  the  finne  •, 
then  he  tempts  God  as  much,  that  would  have  faith,  and  pretends 
his  defire  is,  that  the  Spirit  fhould  work  it ;  but  will  not  come 
within  the  ordinary  walk  of  the  Spirit,  where  he  doth  the  work; 
whether  is  it  moft  fitting ,  that  the  Scholar  fhould  wait  on  his 
Mafter  at  School  to  be  taught ,  or  that  the  Matter  fhould  runne 
after  his  truant  Scholar  at  play  in  the  field  to  teach  him  there, 
judge  you  ? 
2.         -  2.  Take  heed  that  in  thy  attendance  on  the  Word,  thou  doeft 
not  control  the  Spirit  in  thofe  feveral  fteps  he  takes  in  thy 
foul ,  in  order  to  the  production  of  faith.    Though,  there  arc 
no  preparatory  works  of  our  own  to  grace ;  yet  the  holy  Spirit 
hath  his  preparatory  works,  whereby  he  difpofeth  fouls  to  grace. 
Obferve  therefore  carefully  the  gradual  approaches  he  makes  by 
the  Word  to  thy  foul,  for  want  of  complying  with  him  in  which 
he  may  withdraw  in  a  diftafte,  "and  leave  the  work  at  a  fad  ftand 
for  a  time,  if  not  quite  give  it  over,  never  more  to  returnc  to  it. 

We 


the  fljUldof  faith.  5.^3 


We  read,  Attsj.  23.  how  it  curve  into  the  heart  of 'Mofes  to  m- 
(it  hu  brethren  in  Egypt  (  ftirr'd  up,  no  doubt,  by  God  himfelf  Co 
che  journey  )  there  he  begins  to  (hew  his  good  will  to  them,  and 
zeale  for  them  in  flaying  an  Egyptian,  that  had  wronged  an  tfra- 
elite;  which  though  no  great  matter  towards  their  full  delive- 
rance out  of  Egypt  ^  ytlhefuppofed  (  itisfaid,  ver.2^.)  his  bre* 
thren  would  have  under flood  (  by  that  hint)  how  that  God  would  by 
his  hand  deliver  them  •,  but  they  did  not  comply  with  him,  nay, 
rather  oppoTed  him  ;  and  therefore  he  withdrew,  and  they  hear 
no  more  of  Mofes  or  their  deliverance/or  \ourty  years  /pace,  v.  40. 
7  hus,may  be  the  Spirit  of  God  gives  thee  a  vifit  in  an  Ordinance, 
direds  a  word  that  fpeaks  to  thy  particular  condition ;  he  would 
have  thec  underftand  by  this,  finner,how  ready  he  is  to  help  thee 
out  of  thy  houfe  of  bondage,  thy  ftate  of  fwne  and  wrath,  it 
now  thou  wilt  hearken  to  his  counfel  and  kindly  entertaine  his 
motions ;  Carry  thy  felf  rebellioufly  now  againft  him ,  and  God 
knows  when  thou  mayeft  hearc  of  him  againe  knocking  at  thy 
door  upon  fuch  an  errand.  God  makes  fhort  work  with  fome 
in  his  judiciary  proceedings;  if  he  findes  a  repulfe  once ,  fome- 
times  he  departs ,  and  leaves  a  difmal  curfe  behind  him  as  the 
puniftimentofit,  Lufe  14.  24.  J fay  unto  y oh  ,  that  none  eft hofe 
men  which  were  bidden,  /hall  tafte  of  my  Supper.  They  were  but 
once  invited,  and  for  their  firft  denial  this  curfe  clapt  upon  their 
heads.  It  is  not  faid  they  (hall  never  come  where  the  Supper 
ftands  on  the  board ,  but  they  (hall  never  tafte.  Many  fit  under 
the  Ordinances ,  where  Chrift  in  Gofpel- dirties  is  fet  forth  admi- 
rably, but  through  the  efficacy  of  this  curfe  upon  them,  never  tafte 
of  thefc  dainties  all  their  life?  they  heare  precious  truths,  but 
their  hearts  are  fealed  up  in  unbelief,  and  their  mindes  made  re- 
probate and  injudicious,  that  they  are  not  moved  at  all  by  them. 
There  is  a  kinde  of  phrenfie  and  madnefs,  (I  have  heard  of )  in 
which  a  man  will  difcourfefoberly  andrationally,tillyou  come  to 
fpeak  of  fome  one  particular  fubjed  that  was  the  occafion  of  his 
diftempcr,  and  firft  broke  his  brain  ;  here  he  is  quite  out,  and 
prefenrly  lofes  his  reafon,  not  able  to  fpeak  with  any  undemand- 
ing of  it.  O  how  many  men  and  women  are  there  among 
us,  ("frequent  attenders  on  the  Word)  who  in  any  matter  of  the 
world,  are  able  to  difcourfe  very  underftandingly,and  rationally  -y 
bucwhen  you  come  to  fpeak  of  the  things  of  God,  Chrift   and 

Bbbb  heaven. 


tfi  Above  all  taking 


heaven jt  is  ftiangc  to  fee  how  foon  their  reafon  is  loft  ,and  all  un- 
ckriUnding  gone  from  them  ^  they  arc  not  able  to  fpeak  of 
thcfe  matters  with  any  judgement  I  Truly  I  am  afraid,  in  ma- 
ny (  who  have  fee  long  under^the  mcanes,  and  the  Spirit  hath 
been  making  iomc  attempts  on  them  )  this  in;ud:cioufnefs  of 
mind  in  the  things  of  God,  is  but  the  confequence  of  that  ([  iri- 
tual  curfe,  which  God  hath  paft  upon  them,  for  refitting  thefe 
tfTays  of  his  Spirit.  1  befeech  )OU  theefore,  beware  of  oppo* 
lingerie  Spirit-,  doth  he  beame  any  light  from  his  Word  into 
thy  undcrftand.ng ,  whereby  thou  ''who  wert  before  an  ignorant 
i'oi)  comeft  to  know  fomething  of  the  evil  offinne,  rhe  excel- 
lency of  Chnft,  and  canftdifcourfe  rationally  of  the  truths  of  the 
Scripture  ?  look  now  to  it,  what  thou  doeft  with  this  candle  of 
thsLord,  that  islghtcdinthy  minde-,  take  heed  thou  beeft  not 
found  finning  with  it ,  or  priding  thy  felf  in  it ,  leaft  it  goes  out 
in  a  lnurf,  and  thou,  for  rebelling  agawfl  the  light ,  comeft  at  laft 
to  die  wit  hour  knowledge,  as  is  threatned,  Job  3  6. 1 1 .  ]f  the  Spirit  of 
Gcd  goes  yet  further,  and  fortifies  the  light  in  thy  underftandwg, 
that  it  fets  thy  confeierce  on  fire  with  the  fenfe  of  thy  finnes,  and 
apprchenfions  of  the  wrath  due  to  them  •  Now,  take  heed 
ofrefifting  the  holy  Spirit,  that  in  mercy  to  thy  foul,  kindles 
this  fire  in  thy  bolome,to  keep  thee  out  of  a  worfc  in  hell ,  if  thou 
wilt  be  ruled  by  him.  Thoumuft  expect,  that  Satan,  now  his 
houfe  is  on  fire  over  his  head,  will  beftirre  him  what  he  can,  to 
quench  it;  thy  danger  is,  laft  thou  (houldft  liften  to  him  for 
thy  prefent  eafe.  Take  heed  therefore  where  thou  dra weft  thy 
water,  with  which  thou  quencheft  this  fire  •  that  it  be  out  of  no 
Well,  bat  out  of  the  Word  of  God.  In  thinking  to  quiet  thy 
confeience,  thou  mayeft  quench  the  Spirit  of  God  in  thy  confid- 
ence-, which  is  the  mifchief,  the  Devil  longs,  thou  fhouldft  pull 
Q(X)n  thy  own  head.  There  is  more  hope  of  afickman,  when 
his  difeafe  comes  out,  then  when  it  lies  at  the  heart,  and  no- 
thing is  feen  outwardly  ;  you  know  how  Hazaelhelpt  his  Ma- 
fier  to  his  fad  end,  who  might  have  lived  for  all  his  difeafe , 
2  Kin<ts  815.  He  teo^  a  thic\  cloth,  and  dipt  it  in  water ,  and 
spread  it  fn  his  face  fo  tbtt  h  died;  and  it  follows,  And  Haz,a- 
tl reigned  in  hi*  fte<*d.  Thus  the  wretch  came  to  the  Crown.  He 
faw  the  King  like  to  recover  a^d  he  fquatted  his  difeafe  (in  all 
probability)  to  his  heart  by  the  wet  cloth,  and  fo  by  his   death 

made 


the  Jhield of  faith.  555 


made  a  wayforhimfelfto  the  Throne.  And  truly  ratan  will  not 
much  fear  co  recover  the  throne  of  thy  heart  (  which  this  prefect 
combuftionin  thy  confcience,  puts  him  in  great  fearof  1  ;fing  ) 
can  he  but  perfwade  thee  to  apply  I'l-me  carnal  coolings  to 
it ,  thereby  to  quench  the  Spirit  ia  his  convincing  work. 
Thefe  convictions  are  fent  thee  mercifully  in  order  to  thy  fpiricutil 
delivery,  and  they  (houid  be  as  welcome  to  thee,  as  the  kindly 
bearing  paines  of  a  woman  in  travel  are  co  her  i  without  them 
-fhe  could  not  be  delivered  of  her  childe  •,  nor  without  thefe, 
more  or  lefle,  can  the  new  creature  be  brought  forth  in  thy 
foul. 

Again,  may  be  the  Spirit  of  God  goes  yet  further,  and  doth 
not  onely  dart  light  into  thy  minde,  hell  fire  into  thy  con- 
fcience, but  heaven  fire  alfo  into  thy  affections  j  my  meaning  is, 
He  from  the  Word,  difplays  Chrift  fo  in  his  own  excellencies, 
andthefitnefsofhiminallhis  offjjes  to  thy  wants,  that  thy 
affections  begin  to  work  after  him-,  the  frequent  difcourfes  of 
him  and  the  mercy  of  God  through  him  to  poor  finners,  are  fo 
lufcious,  that  thou  beginneft  totafte  ibme  fweetnefsin  hearing 
of  them,  which  ftirs  up  fomc  paflionate  defires,  whereby  thou 
art  in  hearing  the  Word  often  Tallying  forth  infuch  like  breath- 
ings as  thefe-  O  that  Chrift  were  mine,  (hall  I  ever  be  the  hap- 
py foul,  whom  God  will  pardon  and  fave  ?  yea,  poffibly  in  the 
heat  of  thy  affections,  thou  art  curfing  thy  lutts,  and  Satan,  who 
have  held  thee  fo  long  from  Chrift  •,  and  fudden  purpofes  are  ta- 
ken up  by  thee,  that  thou  wilt  bid  adue  to  thy  former  ways,  and 
break  through  all  the  entreaties  of  thy  deareftlufts,  to  come  to 
Chhil.  Ofoul,  now  the  KingdomeofGod  is  nigh  indeed  unto 
thee.  Thou  art,  as  (I  may  fo  fay)  even  upon  thy  quickcning,and 
therefore  above  all,  this  is  the  chief  feafon  of  thy  care,  leaft  thou 
fhouldft  mifcarry ;  if  thefe  fudden  dclires  did  but  ripen  into  a  de- 
liberate choice  of  Chrift;  and  chefe  purpofes ,  fettle  into  a  per- 
manent resolution  to  renounce  fin  and  felf,and  fothou  caft  thy  felf 
on  Chrift ,  F  durft  be  the  meiTenger  to  joy  thee  with  the  birth  of 
this  babe  of grace  ( faith  I  mean  J  in  thy  foul.  I  conieffe  affecti- 
ons are  up  and  down ;  yea,like  the  winde,  how  ftrongly  foever 
they  feem  to  blow  the  foul  one  way  at  prefent,  are  often  found 
in  the  quite  contrary  point  very  foon  after.  A  man  may  be  drunk 
with  paffion  and  affection,  asreally  as  with  wine  or  beer-     And, 

B  b  b  b  z  as 


55 


<5  Above  all  taking 

as  it  is  ordinary  for  a  man  to  make  a  bargain,  when  he  is  in  beer 
or  wine,  which  he  repents  of  as  foon  as  he  is  fober  again  ^  fo  it  is 
as  ordinary  for  poor  creatures,  who  make  choice  of  Chrift  and 
his  wayes  in  a  Sermon,  (while  their  affc&ions  have  been  elevated 
above  their  ordinary  pitch  ,  by  fome  moving  difcourfe  )  to  re- 
pent of  alhhey  have  done,  a  while  after,  when  the  impreflionof 
the  Word  (which  heated  their  affe&ions  in  hearing)  be  worne 
off;  and  then  they  come  to  ihemfelves  again,  and  are  what  they 
were,  as  far  from  any  fuchdefires  after  Chrift,  as  ever.  Content 
not  therefore  thy  felf  with  fome  fudden  pangs  of  affeftion  in  an 
Ordinance,  but  labour  to  preferve  t  hofe  impreflions,  which  then 
the  Spirit  makes  on  thy  foule,- that  they  be  not  defaced ,  and 
rub'd  off  (like  colours  newly  laid  on  before  they  are  dry  J  by  the 
next  temptation  that  comes.  This  is  the  caveat  of  the  Jpoft/e, 
Heb.2.  I.  Therefore  roe  ought  to  give  the  more  earnefi  heed  to  the 
things  which  we  have  heard  Jffi  at  any  time  rre  fhouU  let  them 
Jlip,vr  run  out  as  leaking  veifek  May  be  at  prcfent,  thy  heart  is 
melting,  and  in  a  flow  with  forrow  for  thyfinnc*,  and  thou 
thinkeft,  Surely  now  1  (hall  never  give  my  !uft  a  kind  look  more 
(indeed  one  might  wonder  to  fee  the  folemn  mournful  counte- 
nances under  a  Sermon  ,  which  of  thefe  could  be  the  man 
or  woman,  that  would  afterwards  be  feen  walking  hand  in  hand 
with  thole  finnes  they  now  weep  to  hear  mentioned  )But,as  thou 
loveft  thy  life,  watch  thy  foul,  leaf!  this  prove  but  as  the  early 
dew,  none  of  which  is  to  be  fcen  at  noon.  Do  thou  therefore  as 
thofedo,  who  have  ftood  fome  while  in  a  hot  bath,  out  of  which 
when  they  come,  they  do  not  preftntlygo  into  the  open  aire 
fthat  were  enough  to  kill  them)  but  betake  themfelves  to  their 
warmebed,  that  they  may  nourifli  this  kindly  heat,  and  now 
while  their  pores  are  open,  by  a  gentle fweat,  breathe  out  more 
effectually  theremaining  dregs  of  their  diftemper.Thus  betake  thy 
felf  to  thy  cloilv  t,  and  there  labour  to  take  the  advantage  of  thy 
prcfent  relenting  frame  for  the  more  free  pouring  out  of  thy  foul 
to  C  od,  now  the  Ordinance  hath  thawed  the  tap,  and  with  all  thy 
foul  beg  of  God,  he  would  not  leave  thee  fhert  of  faith  and  fuffer 
thee  to  mifcarry  now  he  hath  tjiee  upon  the  wheel  but  make  thee 
a  vcfTel  ui.to  honour  which  follows  as  the  third  direction. 

CHAP. 


the  Jhield  of  faith. 


CHAP.  IX. 

Contain? s  three  DireSlions  more  towards  the  ob- 
taining faith* 

j,  r    IF T  up  thy  crie  aloud  in    Prayer    to    God    for 
L,  faith. 


557 


SECT.  L 

£uefl.  But  may  an  unbeliever  pray  ?  fome  think  he  ought      Q*efi. 
not. 

Anfw.  This  is  ill  news  if  it  were  true>even  for  fome  who  do  be-     Anfw, 
lieve,but  dare  not  fay  that  they  are  believers.    It  were  enough  to 
fears  them  from  prayer  too ;  and  fo,  it  would  be  as  Satan  would 
have  it  •,  that  God  fhould  have  few  or  none  to  vouch  him  in  this 
folemn  part  of  his  worfhipifor  they  are  but  the  feweft  of  believers 
that  can  walk  to  the  Throne  of  grace  in  view  of  their  own  faith  -, 
Prayer ,it  is  medium  cultns^xA  alfo  medium  gratia.  A  means  wher- 
by  we  give  worfhip  to  God,  and  alfo  wait  to  receive  grace  from 
Godj  fo  that  to  fay,  a  wicked  man  ought  not  to  pray,  isto  fay, 
he  ought  not  to  worfhip  God  and  acknowledge  him  to  be  his  Mar- 
ker j  And  alfo,  that  he  ought  not  to  wait  on  the  means    where- 
by he  may  obtain  g  ace,  and  receive  faith.     Prayer  is  the  fouls 
motion  God-war  J,  faith  Reverend  Matter  Baxter  •,  and  to  fay  an 
unbeliever  fhould  not  pray,  is  to  fay  he  Jhould  not  turn    to   God  ± 
who  yet  faith  to  the  wicked,    Seek^  the  Lord  while  he  may  be  found  ^ 
and  call  upon  him  while  he  is  near.     Defire  is  the  foul  of  prayer , 
(faith  the  fame  Learned  Authout)and  who  dares  fay  to  the  wicked, 
Be  fire  not  fait  hy  dhfire  not  Chrift  or  God  ?    In  his  right  m.thod  for 

peace 


c;s8  Above  all  taking 


ftccco{conjcicnce^g.6l.  It  cannot  indeed  be  denied,  but  that 
an  unbeliever  finnes  when  he  prays  •,  but  it  is  not  his  praying  is 
his  linne,  but  his  praying  unbelievingly.  And  therefore  he  fins 
lefle  in  praying  than  in  neglecting  to  pray  ;  becaufe,  when  he 
prays,  his  linnc  lies  but  in  the  circumftance  and  manner ;  but 
when  he  doth  not  pray,  then  he  ft  an  ds  in  a  total  defiance  to  the 
duty  God  hath  commanded  him  to  perform ,  and  means  Gcd 
hath  appointed  him  to  ufe  for  obtaining  grace.  I  muft  there- 
fore poor  foul,  bid  thee  go  on  for  all  thefe  bug  bears,  andneg- 
led  not  this  grand  duty ,  which  lies  upon  all  the  fons  and  daugh- 
ters of  menj  only  go  in  the  fenfe  of  thy  own  vilenefs,and  take  heed 
of  carrying  purpofes  of  going  on  in  hn  with  thee  to  theThrone  of 
grace  ;  this  were  a  horrible  wickedneft  indeed.  As  if  a  trai- 
tour  fiiould  put  on  the  livery  which  the  Princes  fervants  wear, 
for  no  other  end  but  to  gain  more  eafie  accefs  to  his  perfon  , 
that  he  might  ftab  him  with  a  da  gger  he  hath  under  that  cloke. 
Is  it  not  enough  to  finne,  but  wouldft  thou  make  God  accefTory 
to  his  own  dishonour  alfo?  By  this  bold  entcrprize  thoudoeft 
what  Iks  in  thee  to  do  it.  Should  this  be  thy  temper  (which 
God  forbid  )  if  I  fend  thee  to  pray,  it  mult  be  with  'Peters 
couafel  to  Sjmotf  C#/>g#*,Acts  $.22.  Repent  if  this  thj  -niche chiefs, 
and  pray  God,  if  perhaps  the  thought  of  thine  he.irt  maj  h  forgiven 
thee*  But,  lfuppofe  thee  ( to  whom  now  1  am  diie&ing  my  ad- 
vice,) to  be  of  a  far  different  complexion,  one  brought  to  lonie 
fenfe  of  thy  deplored  ftate,  andfo  foftened  by  the  Word,  that 
thoucouldft  be  content  to  have  Thrift  upon  any  termeSi  onely 
thou  arc  at  a  lofs  in  thy  own  thoughts,how  fuch  an  impotent  crea- 
ture, yea,impudentfinneras  thou  haft  beenfhould  ever  come  to 
believe  on  him.  So  that  'tis  not  the  love  of  any  prefentfinne 
in  thy  heart,  but  the  fear  of  thy  paft  finnes  in  thy  confeience  that 
keeps  thee  from  believing.  Now  for  thee  it  is,  that  I  would  ga- 
ther the  belt  encouragements  I  can  out  of  the  Word,  and  with 
them,  ftiow  thy  way  to  the  Throne  of  grace.  Go  poor  foul  to 
prayer  for  faich  ^  1  do  not  fear  a  chiding  for  fending  fuch  cufto- 
mers  to  Gods  door.  He  that  fends  us  to  call  linners  home  unto 
him,  cannot  be  an^ry  to  hear  thee  call  upon  him.  He  is  not 
f<>  cbrongM  with  fuch  fuitours,  as  that  he  can  rind  in  his  heart 
to  fend  them  away  with  a  denial,  that  come  with  thisrequeft  in 
their  mouths.     Chrift  complaincs,  that  finners  will  not  come  unto 

him 


the  fJjield  of  faith,  5^0 


him ,  that  they may  have  life  ^  and  doeft  think,   he  will   let  any 
complain  of  him,  chat  they  dcfirc  to  come,  and   he  is  unwilling 
they  Ihould  ?  cheer  up  thy  heart  poor  creature,  and  knock  Bold- 
ly ;  thou  haft  a  friend  in  Gods  own  bofome,that  will  procure  thy 
welcome.    He  that  could  without  any  prayer  made  to   him  , 
give  Chrift  for  thee,  will  not  be  unwilling  now  thou  Jo  earneftly 
prayeft,  to  give  faith  urto  thee.    What    thou  prayeft  God   to 
give,  he  commands  thee  to  do.     Thu  is  his  Cnwm.ir.dmer.tt  that 
we  fbottld  believe  on  the  Name  of  his  Sonne  Jefns  Chrift  ,    i    John 
3.  23.  fothat  in  praying  for  faith,  thou  prayeft    that  lis  Will 
may  be  done  by  thee  i  yea,  that  part  of  his  Will,  which  above  all 
he  dedres  (hould  be  done,  called  therefore  with  an    Emphafts 
The  WorkjfCjcd,  John  6.29.  This  is  the  rvork^  cf  Gcd,  that  ye  be- 
lieve en  him  whom  hehathfent.    As  if  Chrift  had  faid,  Jfye  do  not 
this,  ye  do  nothing  for  God  •  And  furely  Chrift  knew  his  Fathers 
mind  ben\0  how  welec  me  muft  that  prayer  be  toGod,wbich  falls 
in  with  his  chiefeft  defignel     joab  found  his  requeft   in   the 
mouth  of  the  woman  of  Teckoa^  to  take  as  he  would    have  it; 
how  could  itdootherwife,  when  he  askt  nothing  but  what  the 
King  liked  better  than  himfelf  did,  or  could  ?    And  doth  it   not 
pleafeGod  more  (thinkeft  thou, how  ftrong  foever  thy  defires  for 
faith  are)  that  a  poor  humbled  (inner  (hould  believe,  then    it 
can  do  to  the  creature  himfelf?  Methinks   by  this  time,  thou 
fliouldft  begin  to  promife  thy  felf  (poore  foule  )  a  happy  return 
of  this  thy  adventure,  which  thou  haft  now  fent  to  heaven.  But 
for  thy  further  encouragement  know,  that  this  grace  which  thou, 
(o  wanteft  and  makeft  thy  moan  to  God  tor  ^  it  is  a  principal 
part  of  C  hrifts  purchale.    That  blood,  which  is  the  price  of  par. 
don,  is  the  price  of  faith  a! fo,  by  whuh  poor  finners  may  come 
to  have  the  benefit  of  that  pardon.  As  he  hath  bought  off  that 
wrath,  which  mans  fin  had  juftly  kindled  in  Gods  heart  againft 
him  •,  fohchathalfo,  that  enmity  which  the  heart  of  the  crea- 
ture is  filled  with  againft  God-,  and  paid  for  a  new  ftock  of  grace, 
wherewith  his  banckrupt  creature  may  again  fet  up-,  fo  that  poor 
foul,  when  thou  gocft  to  pray  for  faith,  look  up  unto  Chrift  ,  as 
having  a  bank  of  grace  lying  by  him,   to  give  out  to  poor  finners 
who  fee  they  have  nothing  of  their  own  to  begin  with,  and  in 
the  fenfe  of  this  their  beggary,  repair  to  h:m.     Thou  haft  afcended 
cnhighy  then  haft  led  captivity  captive  tthctt  haft  received  gifts  fcr 

men} 


6oo  Above  alt  taki??" 


^ 


rne>j,yea9for  the  rebellious  alfo,  that  the  Lord  God  might  dwell   a- 
wwgf^w, Pfalme68.ib'.  Thisisbeyond  all  doubt,  meant   of 
Chrift,  and  to  him  applyed,  Eph.^.S.  Nowobfcrvc,  Fir  ft,  a 
bank  and  treafure  of  gifts  in  the  hand  of  Chrift  ,  Then  haft. 
Sec.ndly,  whoentrufts  him  with  them,  and  that  is  his  Father. 
Thou  haft  received  gifts,  that  is,  Chrift  of  his  lather.     Thirdly, 
when,  or  upon  what  confederation,  doth  the  Father  depofuc  this 
treafure  into  Chrilh  hands?  Thou  haft  a[c ended  on  high,  thou  haft 
led  captivity  captive,  thou  haft  received^&c.  that  is,  when  Chrift 
had  vanquivht  linne  and  Satan  by  his  death,  and  rode  in  the 
triumphant  chariot  of  his  afcention  into  heavens  glorious  City, 
then  did  Chrift  receive  thefe  gifts ,  as  the  purchafe  of  his   blood, 
and  the  payment  of  an  old  debt,  which  God  before  the  foundati- 
on of  the  world  (when  the  Covenant  was  tranfa&ed  and  ftruck) 
promied  his  Sonne,  upon  the  condition  of  his  difebarging  finful 
mans  debt,  with  the  effufion  of  his  own  precious  blood   unto 
death.    Fourthly,  the  perfons  for  whofe  uie  Chrift  received  thefe 
gifts ;  for  men,  not  Angels ,  for  rebellions  men,  not  men  without 
iinne^  fo  that  poor  foul,  thy  finful  nature  and  life  do  not  make 
thee  an  excepted  perfon,  aud  (hut  thee  out  from  receiving  any 
of  this  dole.    Laftlj ,  Obferve  the  nature  of  thefe  gifts;  and  the 
end  they  are  given  Chrift  for  -,  that  God  may  dwell  in  them  or  with 
thew,  now  nothing  but  faith  can  make  a  loul  (that  hath  been 
rebellious )  a  place  meet  for  the  holy  God  to  dwell  in.     This 
is  the  gift  indeed  he  received  all  other  gifts  for,  in  a  manner  -, 
wherefore  the  gifts  of  the  Spirit  and  Mniftry  ,  Apofilts,  leach- 
ers,  Faftors,&c.  but  that  by  thefe  he  might  work  faith   in  the 
hearts  of  poor  (inner*  ?  Let  this  give  thee  boldnefs  (poor  foul) 
humbly  to  preffe  God  for  that  which  Chrift  hath    paid   for  •, 
fay, Lord, I  have  been  a  rebellious  wretch  indeed,  but  drtrChrift 
receive  nothing  for  fuch  ?  1  have  an  unbelieving  heart,  but  ]  hear 
there  is  faith  paid  for  in  thy  Covenant;  Chrift  (hed  his  blood, tha: 
thou  might' a  fhed  forth  thy  fpirit  on  poor  finners.  Doeft   thou 
think,  that  while  thou    art  thus  pleading  with  God,  and  uiing 
Chrifts  Name  in  prayer  tomuvehim,  that  Chrift  himfelf  can  fit 
within  hearing  of  all  this,  and  not  befriend  thy  motion  to    his 
*    Father?  furely  he  is  willing,  that  what  God  is  indebte4  to  him, 
fhould  be  paid  ;  and  therefore  when  thou  beggeft  faith  upon  the 
account  of  his  death,  thou   {halt  finde  him  ready  to  joyn  iffue 

with 


the  jbield  of  faith.  56s 


with  thee  in  the  fame  prayer  to  his  Father.  Indeed  be  went  to 
heaven  on  purpoie,  that  poor  returning  fouls  might  not 
wantafriend  at  Court,  when  they  come  with  their  humble 


petitions  thither. 


SECT.    II. 

Eourthly,converfe  much  with  the  promifes.and  be  frequently- 
pondering  them  in  thy  mufing  thoughts.  It  is  indeed  the  Spirits 
work,and  only  his,  to  bottome  thy  foul  upon  the  promiie,  and 
give  his  Word  a  being  by  faith  in  thy  heart ;  this  thou  canft 
not  do ;  yet  as  fire  came  down  from  heaven  upon  Elijahs  facri- 
fice,  when  he  had  laid  the  wood  in  order,  and  gone  as  far  as  he 
could ;  fo  thou  mayeft  comfortably  hope  that  then  the  Spirit  of 
God  will  come  with  fpiritual  light  and  life,  to  quicken  the  pro- 
mife  upon  thy  heart, when  thou  haft  been  confcionably  diligent 
in  meditating  on  the  promife ;  if  withall  thou  owneit  God  in  the 
thing,  as  he  did,  who  when  he  had  laid  all  in  order,  lifts  up  his 
heart  to  God  in  prayer,  expecting  all  from  him,  1  King.  1 8. 56. 
I  know  no  more  fpeedy  way  to  invite  the  Spirit  of  God  into  our 
aitiftancethan  this.  Ashe  tempts  the  Divel,  to  tempt  him,that 
lets  his  eyes  ga2e,  or  his  thoughts  gad  upon  a  luftful  object ;  fo 
he  befpeaks  the  holy  Spirits  company,that  lets  out  his  thoughts 
upon  holy  heavenly  objects.  We  need  not  doubt  but  the  Spirit 
of  God  is  as  willing  to  cherifh  any  good  motion,as  the  infernal 
fpirit  is  to  nourinS  that  which  is  evil. We  finde  the  Spoufe  fitting 
under  the  fhadow  of  her  beIoved,as  one  under  an  Apple-tree, 
C*w.2.,3.and  prefently  (he tells  uSjhisftut't  wasfweet  to  her  tafte. 
What  dorh  this  her  fitting  under  his  fhadow  better  fignifie  than 
a  foul  fitting  under  the  thoughts  of  Chrift,and  the  precious  pro- 
mifes  that  grow  out  of  him,  as  branches  out  of  a  tree  ?  Do  but 
(  O  Chrifiian  )  place  thy  felf  here  awhile,and  it  were  ftrange  if 
the  Spirit  fhouid  not  fhake  fome fruit  from  one  branch  or  ano- 
ther into  thy  lap.  Thou  knoweft  not,but  as  Jfaac  met  his  bride 
when  he  went  into  the  fields  to  meditate ,  fo  thou  may'ft  meet 
thy  beloved,while  walking  by  thy  meditations  ia  this  garden  of 
the  promifes. 

Cccc  SECT, 


^6}  Above  all  taking 


SECT.  III. 

Laftly,preiTe  and  urge  thy  foul  home  with  that  (Irong  obliga- 
tion that  lies  upon  thee,  a  poor  humbled  (inner  to  be.ieve  pof- 
hbly  God  hath  iliamed  thee  in  the  fight  of  thy  own  confcience 
for  other  fins, that  thou loatheft the  very  thought  of  them, 
nnd  durft  as  well  run  thy  head  into  the  fire,  as  allow  thy  felf  in 
them;  if  thou  fhoukift  wrong  thy  neighbour  in  his  perfon,  name 
o:  eftat£,  it  would  Kindle  a  fire  in  thy  confcience,and  make  thee 
afraid  to  look  within  doors  (  converfe  I  mean  with  thy  own 
thoughts  )  till  thou  hadft  repented  of  it ;  and  is  faith  the  only  in- 
different thing,  a  bufmeiTe  left  to  thy  own  choice,whether  thou 
wilt  be  fo  good  to  thy  felf,  as  to  believe  or  no  ?  truly  the  ten- 
demefie  of  confcience  which  many  humbled  finners  exprefle  in 
trembling  at,and  fmiring  them  for  other  fins,compared  wiih  the 
little  fenfe  they  exprefle  for  this  of  unbelief,  fpeaks  as  if  they 
thought    they    offended   God  in  them,  and  only  wronged 
themfelves  by  this  their  unbelief.    O  how  greatly  art  thou  de- 
ceived and  abufed  in  thy  own  thoughts,  if  thefe  be  thy  appre- 
hensions? yea,  if  thou  doll  not  think  thou  dilhonou reft  God, 
and  offendeft  him  in  a  more  tranfcendent  manner  by  thy  unbe- 
ftfe  lief,thanby  all  thy  other  (ins.  What  Bernard  faith  of  a  hard  heart, 
I  may  fay  of  an  unbelieving  heart  -y  IUndcor  vere  dnrum^  qstod 
r.on  tretidfit  ad  nomen  cordis  duri    That  is  a  hard  heart  indeed 
( faith  ne  )  that  trembles  not  at  the  name  of  a  hard  heart.  And 
that  an  unbelieving  heart  indeed,  that  trembles  not  at  the  name 
of  an  unbelieving  heartjcall  thy  felf  Oman  to  the  bar,and  hear 
what  thy  foul  hath  to  fay  for  its  nofclofing  withChrift,   and 
thou  fhalt  then  fee  what  an  unreafonable  reafon  it  will  give.  It 
muft  be  either  becaufe  thou  likeft  not  the  terms ;  or  elfe  becaufe 
thou  feareft  they  are  too  good  ever  to  be  performed. Is  the  firft 
of  thefe  thy  reafon,  becaufe  thou  likelhiot  the  terms  on  which 
ChriftisorTer'd?  poflibly  might'ft  thou  but    have  had  Chrilt 
and  thy  lulls  with  him,  thou  wouldft  have  been  better  pleafed ; 
but  to  part  with  thy  kfts  to  gain  a  Chrift,  this  thou  thinkeft 
is  a  hard  faying.     Tisftrange  this  fhou  Id  offend  thee,  which 
God  could  not  have  left  out,and  truly  have  loved  us. Thou  art  a 

fist,, 


the  Jbield  of  faith*  5  6  j 


for,  a  divel,  if  thou  doft  not  think  thy  fins  the  worft  piece  of 
thy  mifery.  O  what  is  Chrift  worth  in  thy  thoughts,if  thou  da- 
reft  not  truft  him  to  recompence  the  Jofs  of  a  bafe  luft?That  man 
values  gold  little,  who  thinks  he  ilia  11  pay  too  dear  for  it  by  throw- 
ing the  dirt  or  dung  out  of  his  hands  (  with  which  th  :y  are  full  J 
to  receive  it.  Well  finner,the  terms  for  having  Chrift(it  feems) 
content  thee  notjask  then  thy  foul  how  the  terms  on  which  thou 
hold 'ft  thy  lufts  like  thee  ;  canft  thoufthjrikeft  thou)  better  fpare 
the  blifieful  prefence  of  God  and  Chrift  in  hell,  where  thy  lufts 
(if  thou  holdeft  of  this  mind)are  fure  enough  to  leave  thee  at  Ixi}, 
than  the  company  of  thy  lufts  in  heaven,whether  faith  in  Chrift 
would  as  certainly  bring  thee ;  Then  take  thy  choice,and  leave 
it  for  thy  work  in  hell  to  repent  of  thy  folly.But  I  fhould  think 
if  thou  wouldft  be  fo  faithful  to  thy  felf,as  to  ftate  the  cafe  right, 
and  then  ferioufly  acquaint  thy  foul  with  it,  giving  it  time  and 
leifure  to  dwell  upon  it  daily,  that  thou  would'ft  foon  come  to 
have  better  thoughts  of  Chrift,  and  worfe  of  thy  fins.But  may 
be  this  is  not  the  reafon  that  keeps  thee  from  believing ;  the 
terms  thou  likeft  highly,  but  it  cannot  enter  into  thy  heart  to 
think  that  ever  fuch  great  things  as  are  promifed,  fhould  be 
performed  to  fuch  a  one  as  thou  art.  Well,  of  the  two  it  is  bet- 
ter the  rub  in  thy  way  to  Chrift  fhould  lie  in  the  difficulty 
that  thy  underftanding  findes  to  conceive,  than  in  the  obftinacy 
of  thy  will  not  to  receive  what  God  in  Chrift  offers  ;  but  this 
muft  be  removed  alfo.  And  therefore  fall  to  work  with  thy  foul, 
and  labour  to  bring  it  to  reafon  in  this  particular,*  for  indeed 
nothing  can  be  more  irrational, than  to  object  againft  the  reali- 
ty and  certainty  of  Gods  promifes.  Two  things  well  wrought  on 
thy  foul,  would  fatisfie  thy  doubts,  and  fcatter  thy  fears  as  to 
this. 

Firfiy  labour  to  get  a  right  notion  of  God  in  thy  underftand- 
ing, and  it  will  not  appear  ftrange  at  all  that  a  great  God  fhould 
do  fo  great  things  for  poor  finners ;  if  a  beggar  fhould  promife 
youathoufandpoundsayear,you  might  indeed  flight  it,  and 
ask  where  he  (hould  have  itpbut  if  aprince  fhould  promife  more, 
you  would  liften  after  it,becaufe  he  hath  an  eftatethar  bears  pro- 
portion to  his  promife.  God  is  not  engaged  for  more  by  pro- 
mife, than  infinite  mercy,  power  and  faichfulnefle  can  fee  dil- 
charg'd.     Be  ftill^and  k»ow  that  I  am  God,  Pfal.46.  10.  or 

C  c  c  c  2  this 


56* 


Above  all  talking 


this  eP(ah»i  Lather  would  lay  in  times  of  great  confufion  in  the 
Church,  Let  us  pngth  fix  and  fourty  lJfu!me  in  ft'igkt  of  the 
Vtv:l  an  i  all  Ins  IttfirHmcnts.kxA  this  claufe  of  it,poor  humbled 
foul,  thou  may'fl  fing  with  comfort  in  fpight  of  Satan  and  fin 
alfo,  Be  ftill  O  my  foul,  and  know  that  he  who  offers  thee 
mercy,   l.c  is  God;  they  that  hnovo  his  N.we    will  trust  in 

him. 

Secondly,  perufe  well  the  fecurities  which  this  great  God 
cjves  for  the  performance  of  his  promife  to  the  believer,  and 
thou  fhalt  finde  them  fo  many  and  great,  ('though  his  bare  word 
deferves  to  be  taken  for  more  than  our  fouls  are  worth  )  that  if 
we  had  the  molt  flippery  cheating  companion  in  the  world  un- 
der fuch  bonds  for  the  paying  of  a  fumme  of  money,  we  ihould 
think  it  were  fure  enough  ;  and  wilt  thou  not  ret*  fati>fied,when 
the  true  and  faithful  God  pur.s  himfelf  under  thefe  for  thy  fecu- 
rity,  whofe  truth  is  fo  immutable,  that  it  is  more  poflible  for 
light  to  fend  forth  darkneffe,than  it  is  that  a  lye  fhould  come  out 
of  his  blefled  lips  ? 


CHAP.   X. 


An  Exhortation  to  Believers^  above  all  to  looh^  to 
i  their  faith,  with  fome  directions  for  the  f re- 
serving it. 

I  Now  turn  my  felf  to  you  that  are  believers,  in  a  double  Ex- 
hortation. 

Firft,  feeing  faith  is  fuch  a  choice  grace,  be  furred  up  to  a 
more  than  ordinary  care  to  preferve  faith.  Keepthat,and  it  will 
&.ep  thee,  and  all  thy  other  graces.  Thouftandeftby  faith;if  that 
fails,  thou  falleft  j  where  ("hall  we  finde  thee  then  out  under  thy 
enemies  feet  ?  be  feeble  of  any  danger  thy  faith  is  in ;  like  that 

(jreciax 


the  fbield  of  faith.  565 


Cjrecian  Captain^  who  bein^  knock't  down  in  fighr,ask't  as  loon 
as  he  came  to  himfelf,  where  his  ihield  was.   This  he  vv^s  felici- 
tous for  above  any  thin^  elfe.    O  be  asking  in  this  temptation, 
and  that  duty,  where  is  thy  faith,  and  how  it  fares  ?  this  is  the 
grace  which  God  would  nave  us  chiefly  jud^e  and  value  our 
ielves  by,becaufe  there  is  the  leaft  danger  of  priding  in  this  felf- 
emptying  grace  of  any  other,  %om.\z.-$.I  fay  through  the  grace 
of  (jod  given  unto  meyto  every  man  that  is  among  youjiot  to  thinly 
more  highly  than  he  ought  to  thmk^ bat  to  think^fob  -rly  ^according 
as  God,  hath  dealt  to  every  man  the  meafure  of  faith.  There  were 
many  gifts  which  the  Corinthians  received  from  God,  bat  he 
would  nave  them  think  of  themfelves  rather  by  their  faith;  and 
the  reafon  is,  that  they  may  think  Joberly.  Indeed  all  ocher  gra- 
ces are  to  be  tryed  by  our  faith ;  if  they  be  not  fruits  of  faith, 
,  they  are  of  no  true  worth.    This  is  the  difference  between  a  1 
Chrittian  and  anhoneft  Heathen.  He  values  himfelf  by  hispa- 
tience,temperance,liberality,and  other  moral  vertues  which  he 
hath  to  fhew  above  others ;  thefe  he  expects  will  commend  him 
to  God,  and  procure  him  a  happinefle  after  death  ;  and  in  rhefe 
he  glories,  and  makes  his  boaft  while  he  lives.  But  the  Chriftim 
he  is  kept  fober  in  the  fight  of  thefe,  ( though  they  commence 
graces  in  him,  that  were  but  vertues  in  the  Heathen  )  becaufe  he 
hath  a  difcovery  of  Chrift,  whofe  ri^hteoufnefle  and  holineffe 
by  faith  become  his ;  and  he  values  himfelf  by  thefe,  more  than 
what  is  inherent  in  him.    I  cannot  better  illuftrate  this,than  by 
two  men;  the  one  a  IWf/Vr,  the  other  a  Conntrey-maH^ncl, 
a  ftranger  to  Court ;  both  having  fair  eftates,  but  the  Courtier 
greateft  by  far.   Ask  the  Countrey-Gentleman  that  hath  no 
relation  to  Court,  or  place  in  the  Princes  favour,  what  he  is 
worth;and  hee'l  tell  you  as  much  as  his  lands  and  moneys  amount 
to ;  thefe  he  values  himfelf  by  :  but  ask  the  Courtier  what  he  is 
worth  ;  and  he  ( though  he  hath  more  land  and  money  by  far 
than  the  other )  will  tell  you  he  values  himfelf  by  the  favour  of 
his  Prince,  more  than  by  all  his  other  eftate.    I  can  fpeak  a  big 
word  (faith  he  J  what  my  Prince  hath  is  mine,(except  his  Crown 
and  Royalty)hispurfe  mine  to  maintain  me; his  love  to  embrace 
me,  his  power  to  defend  me.    The  poor  Heathens  being 
ftrangers  to  God,  and  his  favour  in  Chriit,they  bleft  themfelves 
inthe  improvement  of  •  their  natural  ftock,  and  that  treafure  of 

C  c  c  c  3 ,  moral 


c^66  Above   all  taking 


moral  vermes  which  they  had  gathered  together  with  the  ir 
induftry,  and  the  reftraint  that  was  laid  upon  their  corruptions 
by  a  fecret  hand,they  were  not  aware  of.     But  the  believer  ha- 
^  ing  accefle  by  faith  into  this  grace  wherein  he  Hands  fo  high  in 
Court-favour  with  God  by  JefusChrift  ,  he  doth  and  ought  to 
value  himfelf  chiefly  by  his  faith,  rather  than  any  other  grace. 
Though  none  can  ihew  thefe  graces  in  their  true  heavenly  beauty 
betides  himfelf,  yet  they  are  not  thefe,  but  Chrift  ( who  is  his  by 
faith)  that  he  blefleth  himfelf  in.     The  believer  he  can  fay 
through  mercy  that  he  hath  a  heart  beautified  with  thofe  heaven- 
ly graces  to  which  the  Heathens  mock-vertues,  and  the  proud 
felf  Judiciary  his  mock-graces  alfo,are  no  more  to  be  compared, 
than  the  image  in  the  gla(Te  is  to  the* face,  or  the  fhadow 
to  the  man  himfelf.  He  can  fay,  hehaththatholineflein  truth, 
which  they  have  but  in  fhew  and  femblance.  And  this  grace  of 
God  in  him,he  values  infinitely  above  all  the  worlds  treafure  or 
pleafure;  he  had  rather  be  the  ragged  Saint,  than  robed  Tin- 
ner ;  yea,above  his  natural  life,which  he  can  be  willing  to  lofe, 
and  count  himfelf  no  lofer,  may  he  thereby  but  fecure  this  his 
fpiritual  life. But  this  is  not  the  biggeft  word  that  a  believer  can 
fay;heis  not  only  partaker  of  the  divine  nature  by  that  princi- 
ple of  holinefs  infufed  to  him,but  he  is  heir  to  all  the  holinefs , 
yea,all  the  glorious  perfections  that  are  in  God  himfelf.All  that 
God  is,  hath  or  doth,  he  hath  leave  to  call  his  own.    God  is 
pleafed  to  be  called  his  peoples  God.  The  God  of  Ifraelyi  Sam. 
2  3 .  2.  As  a  mans  houfe  and  land  bears  the  owners  name  upon  it; 
So  God  is  gracioufly  pleafed  to  carry  his  peoples  name  on  him, 
that  all  the  world  may  know  who  are  they  he  belongs  to.     Na- 
botbs  field  is  called  the  fort  ion  of  Nabotb,  2  Kings  9.21.  fo  God 
is  called  the  portion  of  facob,]^:.  Io.  16.  Nothing  hath  God 
kept  from  his  people  ( faving  his  Crown  and  glory  ;  that  indeed 
he  will  not  give  to  another,  Ifa.  42.  8.  )if  the  Chriittan  wants 
ftrength,  God  would  have  him  make  ufe  of  his;  and  that  he  may 
do  it  boldly  and  confidently,  the  Lord  calls  himfelf  his  peoples 
ftrength,  I  Sam.  1  <j.  29.  The  flrength  of  Jfrael  will  not  //V.Is  it 
rtghteoufnelTe  and  holinefTe  he  is  fcanted  in  ?  behold  where  it 
is  brought  unto  his  hand;  Chrift  is   made  UKto  m  righteoxfneffe, 
1  Cor.  1.  :o.  called  therefore  the  Lord  our  n'ghtcoufnejfe,  Jcr. 
33.16.  is  it  love  and  mercy  they  would  have  ?  All  the  mercy  in 

God 


the  Jfjield  of  faith.  t*&y 


God  is  at  their  fervice  \  Pfal.  3 1, 19.  O  how  great  is  thy goodnefs 
which  thou  hafi  laid  up  for  them  that  fear  thee  !  Mark  the  phrafe, 
laid  up  for  them-^m  mercy  andgoodneflfe  it  is  intended  for  them; 
as  a  father  that  lays  by  fuch  a  fumme  of  money,  and  writes  on 
the  bag,  this  is  a  portion  for  fuch  a  childe.  But  how  comes 
the  Chriftian  to  have  this  right  to  God,and  all  that  vaft  and  un- 
told treafure  of  happinetfe  which  is  in  him  ?  This  indeed  is 
greatly  to  be  heeded;  it  is  faith  that  gives  him  a  good  title  un- 
to aU  this.  That  which  maketl  him  a  childe,makes  him  an  heir. 
Now  faith  makes  him  a  childe  of  God  John  1. 1 2.  To  as  many 
as  received  him,  to  them  gaze  he  power  to  become  the  fons  of  God, 
even  to  them  that  believe  ea  bim.As  therefore  if  you  would  not 
call  your  birth-right  into  queftion,  and  bring  your  intereft  in 
Chrifl,  and  thofe  glorious  priviledges  that  come  along 
with  him,  under  a  iad  difpute  in  your  fouls,  look  to  your 
faith. 

Ssfi*  But  what  counfel  (may  the  Ch  iftian  fay)can  you  give       9mfi,. 
for  the  preferving  of  my  faith  ? 

tyi*fir.    To  this   I  anfvver   in    thefe   following   parti-      ^  r0 
culars.  '    \ 

1.  That  which  was  inftrumental  to  beget  thy  faith,wiil  be  1. 
helpful  to  preferve  thy  faith.  I  mean  the  Word  of  God.  As  it 
was  feed  for  the  former  purpofe  in  thy  converficn ,  fo  now  it  is 
milk  for  the  prefent  fomentation  of  thy  faith ;  lie  fucking  at  this 
breaft,  and  that  often.  Children  cannot  fuck  long,  nor  digeft 
much  at  a  time,and  therefore  need  the  more  frequent  returns  of 
their  meals ;  fuch  children  are  all  believers  in  this  world :  pre- 
ce{  t  muft  be  upon  precept,  line  upon  line,  here  a  little  and  there  a  lit- 
tle 1  The  breaft  often  drawn  out  for  the  nourishing  of  them  up 
in  their  fpiritual  life,  or  elfe  they  cannot  fubfift.  It  was  not  or- 
dinary that  CMofes  fliould  look  fo  well  as  he  did,  after  he  had 
faftedf  fo  long,  Exod.  34.  And  truly  it  is  a  miraculous  faith  they 
muft  have,  who  will  undertake  to  keep  their  faith  alive,  without 
taking  any  fpiritual  repaft  from  the  Word.I  have  heard  of  fome 
children  that  have  been  taken  from  their  mothers  breaft  as  foon 
almoftasborn,  and  brought  up  by  hand,  who  yet  have  done 
well  for  their  natural  life ;  but  I  fhall  not  believe  that  a  creature 
can  thrive  in  his  fpiritual  life,who calls  off  Ordinances,and  weans 
himfelf  from  the  Word,tilH  hear  of  fome  other  way  of  provision, 

thac- 


58  Above  all  taking 


that  God  hath  made  for  the  ordinary  maintenance  of  it  befides 
this;  and  I  defpair  of  living  fo  long  as  to  fee  this  proved.    I 
know  fome(that  we  may  hope  well  of)have  been  for  a  time  per- 
fvvaded  to  turn  their  backs  on  the  Word  and  Ordinances ;    but 
they  have  return'd  well  hunger-bit  to  their  old  fare  again  ;  yea* 
with  Naomi  her  bitter  complaint  in  their  mouths,  /  went  outftdly 
and  the  Lord  hath  brought  ?ne  home  again  cwptj^Ruth  1.2 1.  And 
happy  for  them  that  they  are  come  to  their  ftomacks  in  this  life, 
before  this  food  be  taken  off  the  table,never  more  to  be  fet.on. 
He  that  taught  Chriftians  to  pray  for  thei  r  daily  bread,  did  fup- 
pofe  they  had  need  of  it ;  and  furely  he  did  not  mean  only  or . 
chiefly  corporal  bread,  who  in  the  fame  chapter  bids  them  feel^ 
firft  the  Kingdome  of  (W,  Mat.  6.3  ^.Weli  Chriftian,  prize  thou 
the  Word,feedfavourIyonthe  \Vord,whether  it  be  difh't  forth 
in  a  Sermon  at  the  publick,  or  in  a  conference  with  fome  Chri- 
i»Uan  friend  in  private,  or  in  a  more  fecret  duty  of  reading  and 
meditation  by  thy  folitary  felt.  Let  none  of  thefe  be  difufed,  or 
carnally  ufed  by  theejand  with  Gods  blellin^  thou  fhalt  reap  the 
benefit  of  it  in  thy  faith;  when  thy  ftomack  fails  to  the  Word,  thy 
faith  muft  needs  begin  to  faile  on  the  Word.   O  that  Chriftians, 
who  are  fo  much  in  complaints  of  their  weak  faith,  would  but 
turn  th^ir  complaints  into  enquiries, why  it  is  fo  weak  and  decli- 
ning?It  is  not  becaufe  faith  hath  mift  its  wonted  meals  from  the 
Word?Thou  haply  haft  formerly  broke  through  many  ftraits  to 
keep  thy  acquaintance  with  God  in  his  WTord,and  wert  well  paid 
for  that  time  which  thou  didft  borrow  of  thy  other  occafions  for 
this  end,by  that  fweet  temper  then  thou  founded  thy  heart  in,to 
truft  God  and  rely  upon  him  in  all  conditions  -T  but  now  fince 
thou  haft  discontinued  thy  acquaintance  with  God  in  thofe  his 
Ordinances,  thou  perceiveft  a  fad  change  ;  where  thou  couldit 
have  trufted  God,now  thou  art  fufpicious  of  him;  thofe  promifes 
that  were  able  in  a  mutiny  and  hububof  thy  unruly  paifions  to 
have  hulVt  and  quieted  all  in  thy  foul  at  their  appearing  in  thy 
thoughts^have  now  alas  but  little  authority  over  thy  murmuring 
unbelieving  heart,to  keep  it  in  any  tolerable  order ;  if  it  be  thus 
with  thee  poor  foul,  thy  cafe  is  fad,  and  I  cannot  give  thee  bet- 
ter counfel  for  thy  foul,than  that  which  Phyficians  give  men  in 
a  confumption  for  their  bodies.  They  ask  them  where  they  were 
born  and  bred  up;  and  to  that  their  native  aire  they  fend  them, as 

the 


tie  (hield  of  faith.  J6p 


the  beft  means  to  recover  them.  Thus  foul,  kt  me  ask  thee,  if 
thou  ever  hadlt  faith,  where  was  it  borne  and  bred  up  >  was  it 
not  in  the fweet  airs  of  Ordinances,  hearing,  meditating,  confer- 
ring of  the  Word,  and  praying  over  the  Word/  Go,  poor  crea- 
ture, and  get  thee  as  faft  as  thou  canft  into  thy  native  aire,  where 
thou  didft  draw  thy  firft  Chriftian  breath,  and  where  thy 
faith  did  fo  thrive  and  grow  for  a  time.  No  meanes  more 
hopeful  to  fet  thy  feeble  faith  on  its  Iegges  againe ,  than 
this. 

2.  Wouldft  thou  pre (erve  thy  faith,   look  to  thy  conscience.  £ 
A  good  confeience  is  the  bottom  faith  failes  in  ;  if  the  confeience 
bewrackt,   how  can  it  be  thought  that  faith  mould  be  fafe  /    If 

faith  be  the  Jewel,  a  good  confeience  is  the  cabinet,  in  which  it  is 
kept :  And  if  the  cabinet  be  broken,  the  Jewel  muft  needs  be  in 
danger  of  lofing*  Now  you  know,  what  finnes  wafte  the  confei- 
ence ;  finnes  either  deliberately  committed,  or  impenitently  conti- 
nued in. 

O  take  heed  of  deliberate  finnes,  like  a  ftone  thrown  into  a 
clear  ftream,  they  will  fo  royle  thy  foul  and  muddy  it,  that 
thou,  who  even  now  couldft  fee  thy  intereft  in  the  promife,  wilt 
now  be  at  a  Ioife,  and  not  know  what  to  think  of  thy  felf.  They 
are  like  afire  on  the  top  of  the  houfe,  it  will  be  no  eaiie  matter 
to  quench  it.  But  if  thou  haft  been  fo  unhappy,  as  to  fall  into 
fuch  a  (lough,  take  heed  of  lying  in  it  by  impenitencyj  the  fheep 
may  fall  into  a  ditch,  but  it  is  the  fwine  that  wallows  in  it,  and 
therefore,  how  hard  wilt  thou  finde  it  (thinkft  thou)  to  aft  thy 
faith  on  the  Promife,  when  thou  art  by  thy  filthy  garments,  and 
befmeared  countenance,  fo  unlike  one  of  Gods  holy  ones  ?  It  is 
dangerous  to  drink  poifon,  but  far  more,  to  let  it  lie  in  the  body 
long.  Thou  canft  not  aft  thy  faith,  ("though  a  beleever)  on  the 
promife,  fo  as  to  apply  the  pardon  it  prefents  to  thy  foul,  till  thou 
haft  renewed  thy  repentance. 

3.  Exercife  thy  faith,  if  thou  meanefl:  to  preferve  thy  faith.  We         - 
live  by  faith,  and  faith  lives  by  exercife.     As  we  fay  offome  ftir- 

ring  men  ;  they  are  never  well,  but  at  work  ;  confine  them  to 
their  bed  or  chair,  and  you  kill  them  ;  fo  here,  hinder  faith  from 
working,  and  you  are  enemies  to  the  very  life  aud  being  of it.Why 
do  we  aft  faith  fo  little  in  prayer,  but  becauft  we  are  no  more  fre- 
quent in  it  ?    Let  the  child*  feldome  fee  its  father  or  mother,  and 

D  d  d  d  when 


5 ;  o  JboVe  all  taking 

when  he  comes  into  their  pretence,  he  will  not  make  much  arter 
them.  Why  are  we  no  more  able  to  live  on  a  promife,  when  at 
a  plunge?  furely,  becaufe  we  live  no  more  with  the  promife.  The 
more  we  converfe  with  the  promife,  the  more  confidence  we 
ftiall  put  in  it.  We  do  not  truft  ftrangers  as  we  do  our  neigh- 
bours, in  whofe  company  we  are  al  mo  ft  every  day.  It  were  a 
rare  way  to  feeure  our  fair.h,  yea,  to  advance  it  and  all  our  o- 
ther  graces,  would  we  in  our  daily  courfe,  labour  to  do  all  our 
actions,  as  in  obedience  to  the  command,  fo  in  fahh  on  the  pro- 
mife. But  aks.how  many  enterprize  s  are  undertaken, where. faith 
is  not  called  in,  not  the  promife  confulced  with  from  one  end  of 
the  bufinefle  to  the  other?  And  therefore,  when  we  would 
naakeufe  of  faith  in  fome  particular  ftreight,  wherein,  we  think 
our.felves  to  be  more  then  ordinary  at  a  lofTe,  our  faith  it  felf 
is  at  alofTe,  and  to  feek,  like  a  fervant,  who,  becaufe  his  Ma- 
iler very  feldom  employes  him,  makes  bold  to  be  gadding  abroad, 
and  fo  when  his  Maiter  doth  call  him  upon  fome  extraordinary  oc- 
casion, he  is  out  of  the  way,  and  not  to  be  found.  O  Chriftian, 
take  heed  of  letting  your  faith  be  long  out  of  work;  if  you  do  not 
ufe  it  when  you  ought,  it  may  faile  you,  when  you  deiire  moft  to 
aft  it. 
4;  Fourthly,  take  fpecial  notice  of  that  unbelief  which  yet  remains 

in  thee,  and  as  it  is  putting  forth  daily  its  head  in  thy  Chriftian 
courfe,  be  furethou  loadeft  tby  foul  with  the  fenfe  of  it,  and 
deeply  humbled:  thy  felf  before  God  for  it.  What  thy  faith  lofeth 
by  every  a&  of  unbelief,  it  recovers  again  by  renewing  thy  repent- 
ance. Davids  faith  was  on  the  mending  hand  when  he  could 
fhamc  himfclf  heartily  for  his  unbelief,  Pfalme  73*  22.  hecon- 
felfeth  how  foolifl  and  ignorant  he  was-,  yea,  iaith  he,  /  was  a 
beaji  before  thee;  fo  irrational  and  brutifh  his  unbelieving 
thoughts  now  appeared  to  him.  And  by  this  ingenuous  humble 
confeifion,  the  malignity  of  his  diftemper,  breathes  out,  that  he  is 
pxcfenily  in  his  old  temper  again, and  his  faith  h  able  to  aft  as  high 
as  ever.  "Thou  hafi  boldm  me  by  my  right  bandy  Thou  jhalt  guide 
me  with  tby  counjel,  and  after  receive  me  to  glory ,  verie  23,  24. 
But,  fo  long,  thy  unbelief  is  fure  to  grow  upon  thee,  as  thou  beeft 
unhumbledforit.  We  have  the  reafon  why  the  people  of  LaiJJh 
were  (o  bad.  Judges  18.7.  there  was  no  Magijirate  in  the  land 
thai  mi&ht  fut  them  to  flame  in  an)  thing.    Chriftian,  thpu  haft  a 

Ma-  ■ 


thefiield  of  faith*  57  i 

Magiftrate  in  thy  bofome  commi ffionated  by  God  himfelfe,  to 
check,  reprove  and  thame  thee,  when  thou  finneft  :     Indeed  all 
things  go  to  wrack  in  that  foul,  where  this  doth  not  office  ; 
hear  therefore  what  this  hath   to  charge  thee  with  ,  that  thoit 
mayft  be  a-lhamcd  ;  There  is  no  finne  dishonours  God  more  than 
unbelief,  and  this  fword  cuts  his  Name  deepefi,  when  in  the  hand 
of  a  Saint.  O.to  be  wounded  in  the  houfe  of  his  friends,this  go.* 
neere  the  tender  heart  of  God.     And  there  is  region  enough^ 
why  God  mould  tike  this  finne  fo  unkindly  at  a  Saints  hand,  if 
wee  coniiderthe  ncere  relation  fuch  a  one  (rands  in  to  God.    Tc 
would  grieve  an  indulgent  father ,  to  fee  his  own  childe  come  in- 
to court,  and  there  bear  witnefleagainft  him,  and  charge  him  of 
fome  untruth  in  his  words,  more  than  if  a  Granger  mould  do  it ; 
Becaufe,  the  teftimony  of  a  childe,though  when  it  is  tor  the  vin* 
dication  of  a  parent  may  lofe  fbme  credit  in  the  opinion  of  thofe 
that  hear  it ,  upon  the  lufpicioii  of  partiality  ;  ytt  when  againli 
a  parent,  itieems  to  carry  fome  more  probability  of  truth,  than 
what  another  that  is  a  rtranger  fayes  againft  him ;  Becaufe  the 
band  of  natural  affection  with  which  the  childe  is  bound  to  his 
parent,  is  fo  facred,  that  it  will  not  be  eaiily  fufpefred  ;  hee  can 
offer  violence  to  it,  but  upon  the  more  inviolable  neceiTity  of 
bearing  witnefsto  the  truth.     O  think  of  this  (Chriftian)  again 
and  again  ;  by  thy  unbelief  thou  beared  falfe-witnefs  againltGod ; 
And  ir  thou,  a  childe  of  God,  fpeakeft  no  better  of  thy  heavenly 
Father, and  preienteft  him  in  no  fairer  character  to  the  world  ;    ic 
will  be  no  wonder  if  they  be  confirm'd  in  their  hard  thoughts  of 
God,   even  to  final  impenkency  and  unbelief,  when  they  (hall 
fee  how  little  credit  hee  find^s  with  thee,  for  all  thy  great  profef. 
fion  of  him,3nd  neer  relation  to  him  j  When  wee  would  fink  the 
reputation  of  a  man,  the  loweft  poifible,  wee  cannot  think  of  an 
cxpredion,  that  will  do  it  more  efft  equally,  than  to  fay,  Hee  is  fuch 
a  one,  as  thofe  that  are  neereft  to  him,  even  his  own  children  dari 
not  truft  him,  or  will  not  give  hira  a  good  word.     O  Chriltian, 
ask  thy  felr,  whether  thou  couldfl  be  willing  to  be  the  unhappy  in- 
ftrumenc  to  defame  God,  and  take  away  his  good  name  in  the 
World  ;  certainly  thy  heart  trembles  at  the  thought  of  it,  if  a 
Saint  j  and  if  it  doih,  th.nfurely  thy  unbelief,  by  which  thou 
haft  done  this   fo  oft,    will  wound   thee  to   the  very   heart  $ 
and  bleeding  for  what  thou  haft  done,  thou  wilt  beware  of  taking 

Dddd  2  that 


571  Ahye  all  taking 


that  fword  into  thy  hand  again,  with  which  thou  haft  given  fo 
many  a  wound  to  the  Name  of  God  and  thy  own  peace 

Fifthly,if  thou  wouldft  preferve  thy  faith, labour  to  encreafe  thy 
faith.  None  in  more  danger  of  lofing  what  they  have,  than  thofe 
poor  fpirited  men, who  are  content  with  what  they  have.  A  fpark  is 
fooner  fmothered  than  a  flame ;  a  drop  eafilier  drunk  up  and  dried 
than  a  river. The  ftrongerthy  faith  iF,the  fafer  thy  faith  is  from  the 
enemies  affaults.  I  he  intelligence  which  an  enemy  hath  of  a  Cattle, 
being  weakly  provided  for  a  fkge,  is  enough  to  bring  him  againft 
it,  which  elfe  lliould  not   have  been  troubled  with  his  company. 
The  Devil  is  a  coward,  and  he  loves  to  fight  on  the  greateft  ad- 
vantage, and  greater  hee cannot  have,  than  the  weaknefs  of  the 
Chriftians  faith  ;  didft  thou  but  know  (ChriftianJ  the  many  pri- 
viledges  of  a  ftrong  faith  above  a  weak,  thou  wouldeft  never  reft: 
till  thou  hadit  it.     Strong  faith  comes  conquerour  out  of  thofe 
temptations,where  weak  faith  is  foiled  and  taken  prifoner,  Thofe 
Philiftims  could  not  ftand  before  Samfjon  in  his  ftrength,  who 
durft  dance  about  him  fcornfully  in  his  weaknefs.     When  Davids 
faith  was  up,  how  undauntedly  did  hee  look  death  in  the  face? 
i  Sam.$o.6.    But,  when  that  was  out  of  heart,  O  how  poor 
fpirited  is  he,  ready  to  run  his  head  into  every  hole,  though 
never  fo  dishonourably ,  to  fave  himfelf  >    i  Sam  21.  13.  ftrong 
faith,  it  frees  the  Chriftian  from  thofe  heart-rending  thoughts, 
which  weak  faith  muft  needs  be  oppreft  with.   T'hou  wilt  %ep   him 
in  f erf  ell  feace  wbofe  minde  it  flayed  on  tbeet  Efay  26.5.   10  much 
faith,  fo    much   inward  peace   and    quietnefi.      If  little  faith, 
then    little    peace    and    ferenity  ,    through   the   ftormes    that 
our    unbeleeving  feares     will     neceffarily    gather.       If  ftrong 
faith,  then  ftrong  peace,  for  fo  the  ingemination  in  the  Hebr* 
feace,   feace ,  imports.      Tis  confeft,  weak  faith  hath   as  much 
peace  with  God  through  Chrift,  as  the  other  hath  by  his  ftrong 
faith,   but  not  fo  much  bofom-peace.     Weak  faith  willasfurely 
land  the  Chriftian  in  heaven  as  ftrong  faith  5  for  it  is  impollible 
the  leaft  dram  of  true  grace  ftiou  Id  peri  (h,  being  all  incorruptible 
feed  ;    But  the  weak  doubting  Chriftian  is  not  like  to  have  fo 
plcaf ant  a  voyage  thither,  as  another  with  ftrong  faith.     Though 
ail  in  the  fhip  come  fafe  to  fhore,  yet  he  that  is  all  the  way  (ea- 
lick,  hath  nor  fo  comfortable  a  voyage,  as  he  that  is  ftrong  and 
heakhfuII.There  are  many  delightfull  profpefts  occur  in  a  joumy, 

which 


thejhield  of  faith.  573 

which hee  that  is  fick  and  weak  lofeth  the  pleafureof  j  Butthe 
ftrong  man  views  all  with  abundance  of  delight  5  and,  though  he 
wifheth  with  all  his  heart  he  was  at  home,  yet  the  entertainment 
he  hath  from  thefe,domuch  fhorten  and  iweeten  his  way  to  him. 
Thus  Chriftian,  there  are  many  previous  delights,  which  Saints 
travelling  to  heaven  meet  on  their  way  thither  (belides  what  God 
hath  for  them  at  their  journeys  end.)  But,  it  is  the  Chriftian, 
whofe  faith  is  ftrong  and  aftive  on  the  promife,  that  findes  them  : 
This  is  hee,  who  fees  thofe  fpiritual  glories  in  the  promife,  that 
ravifh  his  foul  with  unfpeakable  delight,  while  the  doubting 
Chriftianseyeof  faith,  isfogurnm'd  up  with  unbeleeving  feares, 
that  he  can  fee  little  to  affeft  him  in  it..  This  is  he,  that  goes  Ting- 
ing all  the  way  with  thepromife  in  his  eye  \  while  the  weak  Chri- 
llian  ("kept  in  continual  pain  with  his  own  doubts  and  jealoulies) 
goes  hghing  and  mourning  with  an  heavy  heart,  becaufe  his  inte- 
reft  in  the  promife  is  yet  under  a  difpute  in  his  own  thoughts.  As 
you  would  not  therefore  live  uncomfortably  ,  and  have  a  dull 
melancholy  walk  of  it  to  heaven  ,  labour  to  ftrengthen  your 
faith. 

Quefi.     But,  may  be,  you  will  ask,  how  may  1  know  whether      Ghtefl. 
my  faith  be  ftrong  or  weak  ? 

*s4n[w.  I  anfwer,  by  thefe  following  characters.  Jin\v)4 

Firft,the  more  entirely  the  Chriftian  can  relye  on  God,upon  his  i, 

naked  word  in  the  promife,  the  ftronger  his  faith  is.  He  furely 
putteth  greater  confidence  ip  a  man,  that  will  take  his  own  word, 
or  finglebond  for  a  fumme  of  money,  than  hee,  who  dares  not, 
except  fome  others  will  be  bound  for  him.  When  we  truft  God  for 
his  bare  promife,  we  truft  him  on  his  own  credit,  and  this  if  faith 
indeed.  Hee  that  walks  without  ftaff  or  crutch  is  ftronger  than 
hee  that  needs  thefe  to  lean  on.  The  promife  is  the  ground 
faith  goes  on ;  fenfe  and  reafon,  thefe  are  the  crutches  which  weak 
faith  leans  on  too  much  in  its  acting.  Now  foul,  enquire,  F/r/r, 
canft  thou  bear  up  thy  felf  on  the  promtf.',  though  the  crutch  of 
fenfe  andprefent  feeling  be  not  at  hand?  may  be  thou  haft  had 
(bmedifcovtries  of  Gods  love,  and  beamings  forth  of  his  favour 
upon  thee,  and  fo  long  as  the  Sun  fhined  thus  in  at  thy  window, 
thy  heart  was  lightfome,  and  thou  thoughtft  thou  fhouldft  never 
diftruft  God  more,  or  liften  to  thy  unbeleeving  thoughts  more; 
but  how  findeft  thou  thy  heart  now,  fincc  thofe  fenfible  demon- 

ftrations 


574  JboVe  nil  taking 


ftrations  are  withdrawn,  and  may  be  fame  frowning  providence 
lent  in  the  room  or  them  >  doit  thou  prefently  difputc  the  pro- 
mifeinthy  thoughts,  as  not  knowing  whether  thou  may  ft  ven- 
ture to  cair  anchor  on  it  or  no  ?  Btcaufe  thou  haft  loft  thefenfe 
ofhisluve,  docs  thy  eye  of  faith  fail  thee  alfo,  that  thou  haft  loll 
the  light  of  his  mercy  and  truth  in  thepromiie?  furely  the  eye  of 
faith  is  weak, or  elfe  it  would  read  the  promife  without  thefe  fpe- 
fracl-s.     The  little  childe  indeed  thinks  the  mother  is  quite  loft, 
if  fhee  goes  but  out  of  the  room  where  hee  is;  but  as  it  grows 
older,  Co  hee  will  be  wifer :     And  truly  fo  will  the  beleever  alfo. 
Chriftian,  bleftTe  God  for  the  experiences  and  feniible  tafts  thou 
haft  at  any  time  of  his  love  ;  but  know,  that  wee  cannot  jud^e  oi 
our  faith,  whether  weak  or  ftrong  by  them.     Experiences  (faith 
Parijitnjis)  are  likr  crutches,  which  do  indeed  help  a  lame  man 
to  go ,  but  they  do  not  make  the  iarne  nan  found  or  ftrong, 
food  and  Phyfick  muft  do  that*     And  therefore  Chriftian,  labour 
toleane  more  on  the  promife,  aud  lefTe  on  fenfible  exprefiions  of 
Gods  love,  whether  it  be  in  the  prefent  feeling,  or  part  experi- 
ences of  it.     I  would  not  take  you  off  from  improving  thefe,  but 
leaning  on  thefe,  and  limiting  the  actings  of  our  faith  to  thefe. 
A  ftrong  man,  though  hee  doth  not  lean   on  his  ftafTe  all  the 
way  hee  goes,  as  the  lame  man  doth  on  his  crutch  (which  beares 
his  whole  weight)  yet  hee  may  make  good  ufe  of  it  now  and 
then,to  deferid  himfelf,when  fee  upon  by  a  thief  or  dog  in  his  way* 
Thus  the  ftrong  Chriftian  may  make  good  ufe  of  his  experiences, 
in  fbme  temptations,  though  hee  doth  not  lay  the  weight  of  his 
faith  upon  them,  but  the  promife.  Canft  th-.^u,  Secondly^  bear  thy 
felf  upon  the  promife,  when  the  other  crutch  of  Pvafou  breaks 
under  thee,or  does  thy  faith  even,  fall  to  the  ground  with  it?  That 
is  a  ftrong  faith  indeed  that  can  trample  upon  the  improbabilities 
andampoffibiilities  ,  which  reafon  would  be  objecting  againft  the 
performance  of  the  promife,and  gives  credit  to  the  truth  of  it  with 
a  noKobjiante.  Thus  A^bfell  hard  to  work  abour  the  A;  k  upon  the 
credit  he  gave  both  to  the  threatning  and  prom  ifory  part  of  Gods 
Word3and  never  troubled  his  head  to  clear  the  matter  to  Ivs  rea- 
son, how  thefe  ftrange  things  could  come  to  p-afle.     And  it  is  im- 
puted to  the  ftrengthof  Abrahnns  faith,  that  rue  w  >uld  notfuf- 
fer  his  own  narrow  reaion  to  h  ivt  the  he  ring  of  the  bulinefle, 
when  God  promifed  him  a  iJMkbacimM  f}iin&  (as  I  may  fo  fay) 

a  iuii 


the  jfjhiM  of  faith. 


a  fonne  in  his  old  age-     Rem-  4.  i<?.  And  being  not  weal\  in  faitb3 
bee    (onfidered  not  kis  <wn  body ,   thai  was  now  dead  j   and  skilful! 
fwimmers  are  not  afraid  to  go  above  their  depth,  whereas  young 
learners  feel  for  the  ground,   and  are  loth  to  go  farre  from  the 
banck  tide,     Strong  faith  feares  not,  when  God  carries  the  crea- 
ture beyond  the  depth  of  his  reafon  ;  Wee  know  not   what  to  do 
(aid  good  Jebofoayhat}  but  out  eyes  are  ufon  thee,  2  Chron.20. 
As  if  hee  had  (aid,  wee  are  in  a  fea  of  troubles*  beyond  our  own 
help,  or  any  thought,  how  wee  can  winde  out  of  thefe  firaits,  but 
our  eyes  are  upon  thee,  wee  dare  not  give  our  cafe  for  defperate, 
fo  long  as  there  is  (trength  in  thine  arn?,tendernefs  in  thy  bowels, 
and  truth  in  thy  promife.     Whereas  weak  faith,  that  is  groping 
for  fome  footing  for  rea(bn  to  ftand  on,  it  is  taken  up,  how  to  re- 
concile the  promife  and  che  creatures  underftanding  ;  h'rnce  thofe 
many  queftions  which  drop  from  its  mouth.     When  Chrift  faid, 
(Jive  yee  them  to  eate,  Mark  6.   his  DifcipJes  ask  him ,  Shall  w& 
go  and  buy  two  hundred  fenniwortb  of  bread  ?    as    if  Chrifts  bare 
Word  could  not  fpai  e  that  coft  and  trouble.      Whereby  (ball  1 
k?:ow  this  (faith  Zacharias  to  the  Angel)  for  I  am  an  old  man? 
Luke  r.     ALjs,  his  faith  was  not  ftrong  enough  to  digeii,  at  pre- 
sent, this  ftrange  news.  1 
Secondly,  the  more  compofed  and  contented  the  heart  is  urn 
der  the  changes,  which  providence  brings  upon   the  Chrillans 
fiate  and  condition  in  the  world,  the  ftronger  his  faith  is;  weak 
bodies  cannot  bear  change  of  weather,  fo  well,  as  healthfulland 
ftrong  do  ;  hot  and  cold,  fair  or  foul,  caufe  no  great  alterati- 
on in  the  ftrong  mans  temper  •,  but  alas,  the  other  is  laid  up  by 
them,  or  at  beft,  goes  complaining  of  them.     Thus  ftrong  faith;, 
can  Jive  in  any  climate,  travel  in  all  weather,  and  fadge  with 
any  condition.  .  1  have  learnt   in  whatever  fiate  I  am,  therewith' 
to  be  content,  faith  Paul,  PM.411.     Alas,  all  Chrifts  Scholars  are 
not  of  Pauls  form;  weak  faith  hath  not  yet  got  the  maHery  of' 
this  hard  lefibn.     When  God  turnes  thy  health  into  ficknene,thy 
abundance  into  penury,  thy  honour  into  (corn  and  contempt,-, 
In  what  language  doeit  thou  now  make  thy  condition  known  to 
God  ?  Is  thy  fpirit  imbittered  into  difconteut,  which  thou  vent- 
eft  in  murmuring   complaints  ?  or  art  thou  well  fatisfied  with 
Gods  dealings,  fo  as  to  acquiefce  cheerfully  in  thy  prelent  por- 
tion}  not  from  an  unfejniiblcnefs  of  the  ajfii&ion,  but  approbation  • 

of-.. 


*«y6  Above  all  taking 


of  divine  appointment?     if  the  latter, -thy  laith  is  ftrong.     Firft> 
it  (hews  God  hath  a  throne  in  thy  heart;     thou     reverenced  his 
authority,  andowneft  his  fovereignty,  or  elfe  the  u  would  ft  not 
acquiefce in  his  orders.     1  was  dumb  becaufe   tbou  didft  it,     Pfalme 
g p.p.     If  the  blow  had  come  from  any  other  hand,  he  could  noc 
have  taken  it  foiilently.     When  the  fervant  lirikes  the  childe,  he 
runnes  to  his  father,  and  makes  his  complaint; but  though  the  fa- 
ther doth  more  to  him,    he  complains  not  of  his  father,  nor  feeks 
redreffe  from  any  other  ;  becaufe  it  is  his  father,whofe  authority 
he  reveres.     Thus,    thou  comporteft  thy  felftoward  God,  and 
what,  but  a  ftrong  faith,  can  enable  thee?    Be  flill,  and  knew  that 
I  em  God}  Pfalme  46.  11.  we  mult  know  Godbelievingly,  to   be 
what  he  is,  before  our  hearts  will  be  Mill.  Secondly,  this  aequief- 
cency  of  fpirit,    under  the  difpohtion  of  Providence,   fhewes, 
that  thou. doeft  not  only   fland  in  awe  of  his  fovereignty,    but 
haft  amiable  comfortably  thoughts  of  his  mercy  and  goodneffe 
inChrift.     Thou  believed:  he  can  foon,   and  will  certainly  make 
thee  amends,  or  elfe  thou  could/l  not  fo  eafily  part  with  thefe 
enjoyments.     The  childe  goes  willingly  to  bed,  when  others  may 
be,  are  going  to  Supper  at  a  great  feaft  in  the  family  ;  but  the  mo- 
ther promifeththe  childe,    to  fave    fomething   for  him  againft 
the  morning,    this  the  childe  believes,   and  is  content.     Surely, 
thou  haft  fomething  in  the  eye  of  thy  faith,    which  will  recom- 
pence  all  thy  prefent  loffe,  and  this  makes  thee  faft  fo  willing'y, 
when  others  feaft,  be  fick,   when  others  are  well.     Paul   tells  us, 
why  he  and  his  brethren  in  affli&ion  d'd  not  fainr,  2  Cor.  14.16. 
they  faw  Heaven  coming  to  them,  while  earth  was  going  from 
them.     For  ■which  caufe  we  faint  not,  •  for  our    light  afflifiion, 

which  is  fat  for  a  moment,    worketb  for  us  a  far  more  exceeding  and 
eternal  weight  of  glory. 

Thirdly,  the  more  able  to  wait  long  for  anfwers  to  cur  defires 
and  prayers,  theftronger  faith  is.  It  mews  the  trades- man  to  be 
poor  and  needy,when  he  muft  have  ready  money  for  what  he  fells. 
They  that  are  fore-handed,  are  willing  to  give  time,  and  able 
to  forbear  long.  Weak  faith  is  all  for  the  prefent  3  if  it  hath  not 
prefently  its  defires  anfwer'd,  then  it  grows  jealous,  layes  down 
(ad  conclufions  againft  it  felf,  his  prayer  was  not  heard,  or  h« 
is  not  one  God  loves,  and  the  like;  much  ado  to  be  kept  out  of 
a  fainting  fit*    1  [aid  in  mjbajle9  all  mm  are  liars',    but  ftrong 

faith. 


tie  [hkld  of  faith.  '5*7 


faith,  that  can  trade  with  God  for  time,yea,  wait  Gods  leifure,  be 
that  believes  makes  not  'baffe,\i~a.2%*i6.  He  knows  his  money  is  in  a 
good  hand,  and  he  is  not  over- quick  to  call  for  it  home,knowing 
well,  that  the longeft  voyages  have  the  richeft  returns.  As  rich 
lufty  ground  can  forbear  rain  longer,  than  lean  or  fandy,  which 
nmir  have  a  fhower  ever  and  anon,  or  the  corne  en  it  fades  5  or 
as  a  ftrong  healthful  man,  can  faft  longer  without  faintnefTe, 
than  the  lickly  and  weak  :  fo  the  Chriftian  of  ftrong  faith,  can 
ftay  longer  for  fpiritual  refreshing  from  the  prefenceoftheLord9 
in  the  returns  of  his  mercy  ,and  diicoveries  of  his  love  to  him,than 
one  of  weak  faith. 

Fourthly,  the  more  the  Chriflian  can  lofe  or  futfer  upon  the         &, 
credit  of  the  promife,  the  ftronger  his  faith  is  3    if  you  fhuuld  fee 
a  man  part  with  a  faire  inheritance,   and  leave  his  kindred  and 
countrey,where  he  might  pafle  his  days  in  the  embracements  of  his 
dear  friends,  and  the  delicious  fare,which  a  plentiful  eftate  Would 
afford  him  every   day,  to  follow  a  friend  to  the  other  end  of  tfie 
world,  with  hunger  andhardfhip,  through  fea  and  land,  and  a 
thousand  perils  that  meet  him  on  every  hand,    you  would  fay, 
that  thit  man  had  a  ftrong  confidence  of  his  friend,and  a  dearlove 
to  him,  would  you  not  ?     Nay,  if  he   mould  do  all  this  for  a 
friend,   whom  he  never  faw,    upon   the  bare  credit  of  a  letter, 
which  he  fends  to  invite  him  to  come  over  to  him,  withapromife 
of  great  things  that  he  will  do  for    him ;     now   to  throw  all 
his  prefent  pofleflions  and  enjoyments  at  his  heels,   and  willing- 
ly put  himfelf  into  the  condition  of  a  poor  Pilgrim  and  Traveller 
(with  the  loffe  of  all  he  hath)  that  he  may  come  to  his  dear  friend, 
this  adds  to  the  wonder  of  his  confidence.     Such  gallant  fpirits 
wereadeof,     i  Pet.   i.  6,  J  8.     fPhom  having  not  feen,  ye  love9 
in  whom,    though  novo  ye  fee  him  not,  yet  believing,  ye  rejeyce,   &c* 
obferve  the  place,  and  you  mail  finde  them  in  forrowfull  plight, 
inbeavinclje  through  ?nanifold  temptations',  yet,    becaufe   their  way 
Ires  through  th?  floudis,     to  the  enjoyment  of  God  and  Chrift: 
(fvhom  they  never  faw   or  knew,     but  by  the  report  the   word 
mikes  of  themj  they  can  turne  their  back  ofFthe  worlds  friend- 
ihip  and  enjoyments,   (with  which  it  courted  them  as  well  as 
othrrsj  and  go  with  a  merry  heart  through  the  dcepeft  of  them 
all?   here  h  glorious  faith  indeed.      It  is  not  praiiing  of  heaven, 
and  withing  we  were  there,  but  a  cheerfull  abandoning  the  deareft 

Eer« 


5/8  Abm  all  taking 


pleasures,  and  .embracing  the  greateft  iuffeiiugs  .of  the  world 
(when  calkd  fie  ik:  iWij.  will  evidence  our  faiUiio  be  both  true 
and 

Fifthly,  tlu;  moxeeaiily  thatiUiS  Ghriuian  can  repel  motiorw, 
ftiidrefrfj  tern^u.  unnc.tUeiirorigejr  is  his  faith.  The  inare 

or  net  which  holds  the  little  fifh  fail.   The  greater  and  ftronger  nth 
caiiiy  bitaks  thorough*  The  Cvuiftians  iuitaisiiroiig  or  weaksis 
;ids  ic  cuiii.-  or  hard    io  bleak  froiu  temptations   to  linne  ; 
\  I  .  n  an  ordinary  temptation   holds  th':t  by  the  heel,  and    rjioti 
art  enian^Ld  in  it,  like  a  £ie  fa  the  fpidcrs  weSx,  much  ado  to  g 
off,  and  periwade  thy  heart  From  yeeldin£  :  truly  it  ipcaks  f-.-di 
very  feeble  :  to  have  no  itreugth  to  oppose  the  a;i*ufts  or  finne 
and  luft, .fpe-ks  the  heart  void  of  faith  ;  where  laitb  hath  noc 
a.hand  to  proilrate  an  enemy,     it  yet  hath  a  hand  to  liicxip  acinic 
it,     and  a  voice  to  cry  out  tor  help  to  hcavenj    ibme  way  or    o- 
ther  faith  will  flic*  its  diQike,  and  enter  its  proteft  againit  linne  5 
And  to  have  little  'flrengtu  to  reiift,     eviden.:eth  a  weak  !anh. 
Tuers  faith  was  weak,     wlun  a  maids  voice  dafht  him  out  or  coun- 
tenance, but  it  was  well  amended,  when  he  could  withhaud,  and 
with  a    noble   conilancy  diidain    threats   of  a  whole  counsel, 
Ails  i4.i7.Chriiiian,     compare  thy  felf  wich  thy  fe]i,and  give 
righteous  judgement  on  thy  felf:     Do  now  thy  Ju(U  as  powerful- 
ly inveigle  thy   heart,  and  cany    it  away  from  God  as    they 
did  fome  months  or   yeais  agoV    or  canit  thou   in  truth   lay, 
thy  heart  is  got  above  them,   fince  thou  hail  known  more  of 
Chrift,  and  had  a  view  of  his  fpiritual  glories,  thi>u  canit  now  p.ifie 
by  their  door  and  not  look  in,  yca,whcn  thty  knock  at  thy  door  in 
a  temptation,  thou  canft  (hut  it  upon  them,  and  di'daine   the 
motion  V  furely  thou  may e(t  know  thy  faith  is  grown  itronger. 
When  we  fee  that  the  cloaths,  which  a  year  or  twoagoe  were  e- 
ven  fit  for  the  perfon,will  not  now  come  on  him(they  are  fo  little) 
we  mayeafily  be  perfwadtd  to  believe  theperfon  is  much  grown 
fince  that  time*  If  thy  faith  were  no  more  grown,  thole  tempta- 
tions, which  fitted  thee  then,  would  like  thee  as  well  now,  finde 
but  the  power  of  finne  die,  and  thou  mayelt  know  that  faith    is 
more  lively  and  vigorous.    The  harder  the  blow,  the  ftrongeq 
the  arme  is  that  gives  it.    A  childe  cannot  f  rike  fuch  a  blow  as  a 
man.   Weak  faith  cannot  give  fucli  a  home  blow  io  un  as  a  iirong 
faith  ciru 

Sixthly,;^ 


the  p?ield  of  faith.  579 

Sixthly. the  mo  re  ingenuity  and  love  is  in  thy  obediential  walk-  *. 

ing,  the  (rfortger  thy  faith  is.  Faith  works  by  love,  and  therefore 
its  ftrtngrh  erweaknefll.  may  be  difcovered  by  the  ftrength  or 
trezflfneffe  of  that  love  it  puts  forth  in  theChriftians  aQSbgr,  Tbz 
fltengtn  of  a  mans  arm,  that  drawes  a  bowe,is  f'een  by  me  force 
the  artow  which  h*e  (hoots  flies  with.  And  cermnly}  the  Orenirth 
of  our  fa>th  may  be  known,  by  the  force  that  our  love  HWiill'js  to 
God  with.  It  isimpofiible,  that  weak  faith  (which  ft  unable  to 
draw  the  promife  a«  a  ftrong  faith  can)  mould  leave  fecft  a  for- 
cible impreflioH  on  the  heart  to  love  God,  as  the  ftrongrr1  fai*** 
doth.  If  therefore  thy  hearths  ftrongly  carried  out  from  fr»ye 
to  God  ,  to  abandon  ilnne,  perform  duty,  and  exert  afts  of  obe- 
dience to  his  command  ;  know  thy  place,  and  take  it  with  humbl? 
thatik'nlneffe,  thou  art  a  graduate  in  the  Arc  of  bele^vin*.  The 
Ghriftians  love  advanceth  by  equal  paces  with  his  faith  ;  as  the 
heat  of  the  day  encreafeth  with  the  climbing  Sunne  ;  tHe 
higher  that  mounts  toward*  its  Meridian,  the  hotter  the  da f 
grow?.  So,  the  higher  frith  lifts  Chrift  upin  theGhriffian,  the 
moreintenfe  his  love  to  Chrift  grows,  which  now  (ets  him  on 
work  after  another  fort,than  hee  was  wont.  Before,  when  hee  was 
to  mourn  for  his  finnes,  hee  was  afted  by  a  flavifii  fear,  and  made 
an  Hgfy  face  at  the  worlc,  as  one  doth  that  drinks  fomeun  plea  ling 
poti'»nt  butnowa&s  of  repentance  are  not  dilbftefull  an  i  foi<- 
inidable,  hnce  faith  hath  difcovered  mercy  to  fit  on  Juftices  brow, 
nnd  und^cfived  the  creature  of  thofe  falfe  and  cruel  thoughts  of 
God,  which  ignorantly  hee  had  taken  up  concerning  him.  Hee 
ooth  not  now  hate  the  word  Repentance'-,  (as  JjmVrfaid  hee  once 
did,  before  hee  underftood  that  place,  Rom  i.ij.)  but  goes  abouc 
the  work  with  amiable  tweet  apprcheniions  of  a  good  God,  that 
ftands  ready  with  the  fpunge  of  his  mercy,  dipt  in  Chrifts  bloo^, 
to  blot  out  his  finnes,  as  faff  as  heefcores  them  up  by  his  humble 
forrowhill  confeflion  of  than.  And  the  fame  might  be  faid  con- 
cerning ail  other  offices  of  Chrifiian  piety?  ftrong  faith  makes 
the  foul  ingenuous, it  doth  not  pay  the  performance  of  any  duty, 
as  an  oppielTed  fubje&doth  an  heavy  taxe,  with  a  deep  iigh,  to 
th'nk  ho  v  much  hee  parts  with,  but  as  freilyasa  chitde  would 
prelent  Irs  father  with  an  apple  of  that  orchard ,  which  hee  holds 
by  gift  from  him;  indeed  the  child  ,  when  young,  is  much  /er- 
vileT  and  fclfifej  forbearing  what  his  father  forbid^  for  feare  of 

E  e  e  e  a  tb£ 


-     I 1 m : ■      •—  x 

580  Ahove  all  taking 

the  rod,  and  doing  what  hee  commands,  for  fome  tine  thing  or 
other ,  that  his  father  bribes  him  with  ,  more  than  for  pure 
love  to  his  perfon,  or  obedience  to  his  will  3nd  plea fure  :  But  as 
hee  grows  up,and  comes  to  underftand  fumfelf  better,  and  the  re- 
lation hee  ftands  in,  with  the  many  obligations  of  it  to  filial  obe- 
dience ,  then  his  tervility  and  felfifhnefle  wear  off,  and  hiss"of>«. 
or  natural  affection,  will  prevail  more  with  him  to  pleafe  his 
father ,  than  any  other  argument  what  ever.  And  fo  will 
it  with  the  Chriftian  ,  where  faith  is  of  any  growth  aiK 
ripenefle. 
j.  Seventhly,  to  nama  no  more;The  more  able  faith  is  to  fweete/ 

the  thoughts  of  death,  and  make  it  delirable  to  the  Chriftian 
the  ftronger  his  faith*     Things  that  are  very  (harp  or  fowre,wi, 
take  much  fugar  to  make  them  fweet-     Death  is  one  of  thoi 
things,  which  hath  the  mod  ungrateful!  talle  to  the  creatures  pa 
late,  that  can  be.    O  it  requires  a  ftrong  faith  to  make  the  ferr 
ous  thoughts  of  it  fweet  and  defirable.     I  know  fome  in  a  p< 
and  paflion,  have  profeft  great  defires    of  dying,  but.it  hatl 
been,  as  a  rick  man  defires  to  change  his  place  ,  meerly  out  of 
wearinefs  of,  and  difcontent  with  his  prcfent  condition,  withoi 
any  due  confideration  of  what  they  defire.     But  a  foul,that  knov 
the  conferences  of  death,  and  the   unchangeableneffe  of  th 
(fate  (whether  of  blifle  or  mifery  )  that  it   certainly  marri 
us  to,  will  nevet  cheerfully  call  for  death  in  his  cordial  deiir*.  t 
till  hee  be  in  fome  meafure  refolv'd  from  the  promife,  what  enti 
tainment  hee  may  expeft  from  God,  when  hee  comes  into  th> 
other  world *,  And  thata  weak  faith  will  not  do,without  abundan 
of  fears  and  doubts.     1  confefle,  that  fometime  a  Chriftian  of  ve- 
ry weak  faith  may  meet  death  with  as  little  fear  upon  his  fpirii 
yea,  more  joy,  than  one  of  a  farr  ftronger  faith,  when  hee  is  hel 
up  by  the  chin,  by  fome  extraordinary  comfort  poured  into  hit> 
foul  from  God  immediately  *,  which  mould  God  with-draw,  his 
fears  would  return  upon  him,  and  hee  feel  again  his  faintings,   as 
a  lick  man  that  hath  been  ftrangely  cheer'd  with  a  ftrong  cordial, 
docs  his  feeblenefle,  when  the  efficacy  of  it  is  fpent:  But  wee 
(peak  of  the  ordinary  way  how  Chriftians  come  to  have  thai 
hearts  raifed  above  the  feare,  yea,  into  a  Mrong  defire  of  death 
and  that  is    by  attaining    to    a   ftrong  faith.     God  can  in- 
dted  make  a  feaft  of  a  few  loaves,    and  multiply  the  weak 

Chri- 


thejhield  of  faith.  581 

Ghriftiam  little  faith  on  a  fudden,  as  he  lies  on  a  lick  bed,  into  a 
fpread  table  of  all  varieties  of  confolations,  but  I  fear  that  God 
will  not  do  this  miracle  for  that  man  or  woman,  who  upon  the 
expectation  of  this,  contents  himfelf  with  the  little  provision  of 
faith  hee  bath,  and  labours  not  to  encreafe  his.  ftore  againft  that 
(pending  time* 


K$r«* 


CHAP.    XI 


Sbeweth,  it  U  the  duty  of  a   Cbrlflwi  to  own  the 

grace  of  God  in  him  ,  and  not  deny  it  ;   "frith 

the    refolution    of  fame  fcruples  ,.    with    Which 

weak   Saints  dilute   agawjltbe    truth  of  their 

own  faith* 

WEE  come  to  the  fecond  word  of  exhortation,  wee  have  to 
fpeak  to  the  Saints.  If  faith  be  fuch  a  choice  grace,  i.nd 
thou  haft  ir,deny  not  what  God  hath  done  for  thee.    Which  is 
worft,  thinkeft  thou  j  thelinnerto  hide  his  finne  and  deny  it,  or 
the  Chriltian  to  hide  and  deny  his  faith  ?  I  confefle  the  firft  does 
worft,  if  w<?e  look  to  the  intention  of  the  perfons  ;  for  the  finner 
hides  his  finne,  out  of  a  wicked  endy  and  the  doubting  foul  means 
well,  hee  is  afraid  to  play  the. hypocrite  ,  and  be  found  a  lyar 
in  faying  hee  hatb,what  hee  fears  hee  hath  not ;  but  if  wee  confider 
theconlequcnceofthe  Chriftians  dif-owning  the  grace  of  God 
in  him,  and  what  ufe  the  devil  makes  of  it,  for  the  leading  him 
into  many  other  iinnes,    it  will  not  be  fo  eafie  to  refolvc,  whofe 
finne  is  the  greateft  :  Good  Jofefb  meant  pioufly,  when  hee  had 
thoughts  of  putting  ^way  fecretly  his  efpoufed  Mary  ("thinking 
no  other,  but  that  fhee  had  played  the  whore)  and  yet,  it  would 
have  been  a  fad  aft,  if  hee  had  per/lifted  in  his  thoughts;  efpeci- 

ally  ■; 


Above  all  taking 

illy  after  the  Angel  had  told  him,,  that  which  was  conceived  in 
her  to  b?  of  the  holy  G  ioft.     Thustiou^  poor  mournin  ■  f  ml* 
miy  b?  art  oft  thinking  to  put  away  thy  iaieh,  as  Tone  by  blow 
of  S3tan,  and  bale  bom  counterfeit  grace,  begot  on  thyhypo.-ii- 
tical  heart  by  the  father  of  lits.     Well. take  heed  what  thou  dot!'  | 
h.ift  thouhad  no  vifion,  (not  extraordinary  of  an   Angel  or  im-; 
im mediate  revelation)  but  ordinary  of  the  Spirit  of  God,  (1  meai  ) 
in  his  Word  and  Ordinances,  encouraging  thee  from  thofe  cha- 
i  afters  which  are  in  the  Scripture  given  of  faith^  and  theconior* 
roity  thy  faith  hath  to  them,  to  take  and  own  thy  faith,  a?  that? 
which  is  conceived  in  thee  by  the  holy  Ghoftj  fttid  not  a  braC 
form'd  by  thedelufion  of  Satan  mthe  womb  of  thy  oWn  ground- 
It  f«  imagination  ?  If  fo,  be  afraid  of  bearing  falfe  witnefle  again  ft 
the  grace  of :  God  in  thee.     As  there  is  that  makes  himfelf  rich  in 
fait)},  that  hath  nothing  of  this  grace, fo  there  is  that  makcth  him- 
felf  poor,  that  hath  great  (tore  of  this  riches.     Let  us  ther«fore 
hear  what  are  the  grounds  of  this  thy  fufpicion,  that  wee  msy 
fee    whether   thy    feares    or   thy    faith    be    imaginary    and 
falfe. 

Objeft.  t.  Saith  the  poor  foul,  I  am  afraid  1  have  no  true  faith, 
becaufe  I  have  not  thofe  joyes  and  confolation*,  which  others 
have,  who  beleeve. 

Anjvo.  l.  Thou  mayeft  have  inward  peace,  though  notjoy. 
The  day  may  be  Mill  and  calme,  though  not  glorious  and  Sun* 
fhine;  ;  though  the  Comforter  be  not  come  with  his  ravifhing 
confolations,  yet  hee  may  have  hufht  the  Morme  of  thy  trou- 
bled fpirit,  and  true  peace  as  well  as  joy  is  the  confequent  of  faith 
unfeigned. 
3  2.  Suppofe,thou  haft  not  yet  attained  fo  much  as  to  this  inward 

p?ace,  yet  know,  thou  halt  no  reafon  toqueftion  the  truth  of 
thy  faith,  for  want  of  this.  Wee  have  peace  with  God  as  Toon  as 
wee  beleeve,  but  not  alwayes  with  our  felves.  The  pardon  nuy 
be  paft  the  Princes  hand  and  Seal,  and  yet  riot  put  into  the  prilun- 
ers  hand.  Thou  think'ft  them  too  rafli,  doeft  not?  who  judt;'cJ 
Taul  a  murderer  by  the  viper  that  faftened  on  his  hand.  A  id 
what  art  thou  ,  who  condemn'^  thy  (elf  for  an  unbeliever,  bc- 
cnile  of  thole  troubles  ,  and  inward  agonies  5  which  tw.iy 
fatten  for  a  time  on  the  fpiric  of  the  moft  gracious  chiJJe  Go  J 
Jhathon  e.rth* 


the  jlndd  of  faith*  5  83 

Uh]ccu2.  O  but  can  there  be  any  true  faith;,  where  there  Is  Co  Objett.  2. 
much  doubting  as  I  finde  in  my  felf  ? 

Anty.  There  is  a  doubting  which  the  Scripture  oppofeth  tc\Anfy. 
the  ktU  degree  of  faich.  Our  bieifed  Saviour  tells  them  what 
Wonders  they  {hall  do,  if  they  beleeve  and  doubt  not,  Mattk.w. 
i\.  And  Luke  ij,6*  hee  tells  his  difciples.  If  they  have  faith  m  a 
$xaim  of  nr.ifi.vd  feed,  (hey  (hall  do  as  much.  That  which  is  a  fait'i 
Bfldh 0  a  doubting  m  Matthew,  is  faith  as  agraineof  mufrarcMeed 
in  Luke,  but  a.^ain,  mere  is  a  doubting  which  the  Scripture  op- 
h  not  tj  |hi  'ruth  of  faith,  but  the  rtrength  of  faith,  Mwh. 
1431.  0  ihou  sf  little  faith,  wherefore  didji  thou  doubt  ?  Tlvy 
aie  a.e  words  or  Chriii  to  faking  Peter,  in  which  hee  fochid.s 
his  doubling,  as  yet  to  acknowledge  the  truth  of  hisfaith.though 
weak.  All  doubring  i-  evil  in  its  nature,yet  fome  doubting*  though 
evii.  in  it  ielr,  doth  evidence  Come  grace  that  is  good  to  be  in  the 
per.on  lo  doubting.  As  fmoke  proves  fome  fire,  and  peevifh- 
utile,  and  petti ihne IT;  in  a  lick  person,  that  before  lay  fenfelefle, 
is  a  good  imne.  Of  fome  mending,  though  it  felfe  a  thing  bad  e- 
iio.i^h-  But  the  thing  here  defirable,  (I  conceive)  would 
be,  to  give  fomr  help  to  the  doubting  foul,  that  hee  may  know, 
what  his  doubting  is  fymptomatical  of  ;  whether  of  true  faith 
(chuiigh  weak)  or  of  no  faith.  Now  for  this,  I  (hall  lay  down 
four  chara&jis  of  thofe  doublings  which  accompany  true 
iair.ii. 

Firft,  the  doubtings  of  a  true  beleever,  are  attended  with  ranch  IV 
ihameandlorrowotfpirit ,  even  for  thofe  doubtings.  I  appeal 
to  thy  confeience  (poor  doubting  foul)  whether  the 'con  federati- 
on of  this  one  iinne,  doth  not  coft  thee  many  a  fait  teare,  and 
heavy  iigh,  which  others  know  not  of  r  Now  I  pray,from  whence 
come  thefe  ?  will  unbelief  mourn  for  unbelief?  or  (inne  put  it  (elf 
tolhame?  no  Cure,  it  (hews  there  is  a  principle  of  faith  in  the 
foul  y  that  takes  Gods  part ;  and  cannot  fee  his  promifef,  and 
name  wrong'd  by  unbelief  without  protefting  againft  it,  and 
mourning  under  it,  though  the  hands  of  this  grace  be  too  weak 
at  prelent  to  drive  the  enemy  out  of  the  foul.  The  Law  clear'd  Deuc.i22.27i 
the Dantofe 1 9  that  eyed  out  in  the  field  ,  and  Co  will  the Gofpel 
thee,  who  fincerely  mourned  for  thy  unbelief*  That  holy  rmns 
who  ever  hee  was,  Pjdm  77.  was  tarre  gone  in  this  doubting  dif- 
eaiJe,    How  many  times  do  wee  iinde  his  unbelief,  putting  the 

mercy 


^84  JboVe  all  taking 


mercy  and  faithrulnefs  of  God  f  which  fhcuJd  be  beyond  all 
difputc  in  our  hearts^)  to  the  quell  ion  and  dubious  vote  in  his 
dhtempered  foul  \  Hee  might  with  as  much  reafon  have  askt  his 
foul ,  whether  there  was  a  God,  as  whether  his  mercy  was  clean 
gone,  and  his  promife  fail  >  yet  fo  farr  did  his  fears  in  this  hurry 
carry  him  afidej  but  at  laft  you  have  him  acknowledging  his  folly, 
verfe  10.  and  I  [aid  ,  'this  is  my  infirmity.  This,  I  may  thank 
theefor,0  my  unbelief,  thou  enemy  ot  God  and  my  foul :  Thou 
wilt  be  puzlingmee  with  needlels  fears,  and  make  mee  think  and 
fpcak  fo  unworthily  of  my  God.  This  prov'd  there  was  faith  at 
the  bottom  of  his.unbelief, 
t.  Secondly,  thedoubtings  of  a  fincere  beleever,  are  accompani- 

ed with  ardent  defires  after  thofe  things,  which  it  moft  calls  in 
queftion  and  doubts  of.  The  weak  beleever,  hee  quelHons,whether 
God  loves  him  or  no,  but  hee  defires  it  more  than  life ;  and  this 
is  the  language  of  a  gracious  foul  ?  Pfalm  63.  3.  'thy  loving 
kjndeneffe  is  better  than  life.  Hee  doubts  whether  Chrift  be  his,yet 
if  you  fhould  ask  him,  what  value  hee  fets  upon  Chrift,  and  what 
hee  would  give  for  Chrift,  hee  can  tell  you,  and  that  truly, 
that  no  price  fhould  be  too  great  if  hee  were  to  be  bought;  no 
condition  that  God  offers  Chrift  upon,  appeares  to  him  hare?, 
butalleafie  and  cheap.  And  this  is  the  judgement  which  only 
the  beleeving  foul  can  have  of  Chrift.  1  Pet  2.7.  unto  you 
therefore  which  believe,  hee  is  frechus.  In  a  word,  hee  doubts 
whether  hee  be  truly  holy  or  only  counterfeit ;  but  his  foul  pants 
and  thirds  after  thole  graces  moft,which  he  can  fee  lead  ;  he,to  him 
fhould  be  the  more  welcome  mefTenger ,that  brings  him  the  news 
of  a  broken  heart,  than  another  that  tells  him  of  a  whole  Crown 
and  Kingdome  fallen  to  him  ;  hee  difputes  every  duty  and  a&iun 
heedoth,whetheritbe  according  to  the  rule  of  the  Word  i  and 
yet  hee  pafJionately  defires  that  hee  could  walk  without  one  wry 
flepfromit;  and  doth  not  quarrel  with  the  Word,  becaufe  it  is 
fo  drift,  but  with  his  heart,  becaufe  it  is  fo  loofe-,  and  how  great 
a  teftimony  thefe  give  of  a  gracious  frame  of  heart ,  fee  Pfttffi[ 
119.  verfes  20,  140.  where  David  brings  theft,  as  the  evidence 
of  his  grace.  Canft  thou  therefore,  poor  foul,  1 1  out  thy  heart 
ftrongly  after  Chrift,  and  his  graces,  while  thou  d^eil  not  fee  thy 
intereft  in  either  ?  Be  of  good  cheer,  thou  art  not  fo  great  a. 
(Iranger  with  thefe  as  thOu  thinkeft  thy  fclf.     Thefe  ftrong  Az- 

iircs 


tie  (hield  of  faith. 


fires  are  the  confequentof  fome  tafte  thou  haft  had  of  them  alrea- 
dy.    And  thele  doubts  may  proceed,  not  from  an  abfolute  want 
(as  if  thou  vvert  wholly  deiiitute  of  them_)  but  the  violence  of  thy 
ddirts,  which  are  not  fatisfied  with  what  thou  half.  It  is  very  ordi- 
nary tor  exceflive  love  to  beget  exce dive  fear,  and  thofe  ground- 
foile.  The  wife,  becaufe  fhe  loves  her  husband  dearly,  fears  when  he 
is  abroad,  (he  fhall  never  fee  him  more ,  one  while  (he  thinks  he  is 
fick ,  another  while  killed  ,  and  thus  her  love  torments  her  with- 
ouc  any  juft  caufe,  when  her  husband  is  all  the  while  well,  and  on 
his  way  home.     A  jewel  of  great  price,  or  ring  ,  that  we  highly 
value,  if  but  laid  oct  of  fight,  our  extreme  eftimate  we  feton 
them,  makes  us  presently  think,  them  loft.     It  is  the  nature  of  paf- 
lions  in  this  our  imperfect  ftate,  when  ftrong  and  violent , to  di- 
fturb  our  reafon ,  and  hide  things  from  our  eye ,  which  el(e  were 
eaiie  to  be  Teen-  Thus  many  poore  doubting  fouls  are  looking  and 
hunting  to  finde  that  faith,  which  they  have  already  in  their  bo- 
fomes,  being  hid  from  them,meerly  by  thevehemency  of  their 
delire  of  it ,  and  fear  they  (hould  be  cheated  with  a  falfe  one  for  a 
true$  as  the  Vamofel,  opened  not  the  door  for  gladnejfe  to  Peter.     A&s 
i'2#  14-  her  joy  at  prefent  made  her  forget  what  (he  did;    fo  the 
high  value  the  poor  doubting  Chriftian  fets  on  faith,  together 
with  an  excefle  of  longing  after  it ,  fuffer  him  not  to  entertain  fo 
high  an  opinion  of  himfelf,  as  to  think  ,  he  at  prefent  hath  that 
Jewel  in  his  bofome,  which  he  fo  infinitely  prizeth. 

Thirdly,  the  doubcings  of  a  trucly  beleeving  foul,  make  him  more 
inquilitive  ,  how  he  may  get ,  what  he  fometimes  feares  he  hath 
not  ;  many  fad  thoughts  pafle  to  and  fro  in  his  foul ,  whether 
Chrift  be  his  or  no  ,  whether  he  may  lay  claime  to  the  promife,  or 
no  j  And  thefe  caufe  fuch  a  commotion  in  his  fpiritj  that  he  cannot 
reft  till  he  come  to  fome  refalution  in  his  own  thoughts  from  the 
Word  concerning  this  great  cafe ;     therefore  as  Abafiuerus,  when 
he  could  not  deep,    called  for  the  Records  and  Chronicles  of  his 
Kingdome  3    fo  the  doubting  foul  betakes  himfelf  to  the  Records 
of  Heaven  (the  Word  of  God  in  the  Scripture)and  one  while  he 
is  reading  there,  another  while  looking  into  his  own  heart,  if  he 
can  flnde  there  any  thing,  that  anfwers  the  characters  of  Scripture- 
faith,  as  the  face  in  the  glafs  doth  the  face  of  man.     David,   Pfal. 
77.  when  he  was  at  a  lofs,  what  to  think  of  himfelf,  and  many 
doubts  did  clog  his  faith,  in  fo  much  that  the  thinking  of  God 

■Ffff  -en- 


58(5 


Above  all  taking 

CD 


encreafed  his  trouble,  he  did  not  fit  down  and  let  the  (hip  drive 
("as  vvc  fay)not  regarding,  whether  God  loved  him,  or  no;  But 
communes  with  bis  own  heart,  and  bis  [pirit  makes  diligent  fearcb  ; 
Thus  it  is  with  every  (incere  foul  under  doubting?,  he  dares  no 
more  fit  down  contented  in  that  nnrefclv'd  condition,  than  one, 
who  thinks  he  fmells  (ire  in  his  houfc,  dares  fettle  himfelfe  to 
fleep,  till  he  hath  lookt  in  every  room  and  corner,  and  fatisfied 
himielf  that  all  is  fafe,  left  he  fhould  be  waked  with  the  fire  a- 
bout  his  eares  in  the  night;  and  the  poor  doubting  foul  much 
more  afraid,  left  it  mould  wake  with  hell  fire  about  it.  Where- 
as a  foul  in  a  ftate  and  under  the  power  of  unbelief,  is  tecure  and  . 
careleflfe.  The  old  world  did  not  believe  the  threatning  cf  the 
flood,  and  they  fpend  no  thoughts  about  the  matter;  it  is  at 
their  doores  and  windows,  bifjre  they  had  u(ed  any  means  how 
toefcape  it. 

Fourthly,  in  the  midfl  of  the  true  beleevers  doubtings,  there  is 
an  innitencycf  his  heart  on  Chrift,  and  a  fecrtt  purpofe  ftill  to 
cleave  to  him;  at  the  fame  time,  that  Peters  f^et  were  (inking  in- 
to the  waters,  he  was  lifting  up  a  prayer  to  Chrift,     and  this 
prov'd  the  truth  of  his  faith,  as  the  other  its  weaknefie:     So  Jo- 
nab,  he  had  many  fears,  and  fometimes  fo  predominant,  that  as  bad 
humours  fettle  into  a  fore,  Co  they  gathered  into  a  hally  unbelie- 
ving conclufion;     yet  then  his  faith  had  fome  little  fecret  hold 
on  God*     Jonah  2.  4.  Then  I  [aid,  I  am  caft  out  of  tky  fight,  yet  I 
will  loo\  again  toward  fty  holy  Temple  ,  and  v.  7.  When  my  [oul 
fainted  within  me,     I  remembred  the  Lord-  Holy  DavidAfo,  though 
he  could  not  rid  his  foule  cf  all  thofe  f.ars,  which  got  into  it 
through  his  weak  faith,  as  water  into  a  leaking  fhip,  yet  he  hath 
his  hand  at  the  pump,  and  takes  up  a  firme  refolution  again 0: 
them,  Pfalm^6*  3.  At  what  time  I  am  afraid,  I  wil!  trufi  in  tbee. 
The  doubting  Chriftian  finks,  but  as  a  traveller  in  a  (lough,  where 
the  bottome  is  firme,  and  Co  recovers  himfelf;but  theunbdeever, 
he  finks  in  his  f.ars,  as  a  man  in  a  qmck  find,  lower  and  lower  till 
he  be  fwallowed  up  intodefpaire.  The  weak  Chriflians  doubting 
is  like  the  wavering  cfa  fhip  at  anchor;  he  is  moved,  yet  not 
removed  f.om  his  hold  on  Chi  id;  but  the  unbeleevers,  like  the 
wavering  of  a  wave,  which  having  nothing  to  ftay  it,  is  wholly 
at  the  mercy  of  the  winde  ,  James  1.  6.    Let  him  ask,  in  faith 
ng   wavering,  fox   he  that  waverett,  is   like   a  wave    of  the 

M 


the  fhidd  of  faith.  5S7 


fea,  driven  ■Kith  the  xvinde,  and  loafed. 

Objed.  3.   Obur,  faith  another,  I  far  mine  is  a  prefumptuous  Objefi.  % 
fiith,  and  if  io,   to  be  fare,  it  cannot  be  right. 

Anfw.    For   the   filler    affoyling   this    objection  ,     I  (ball  An[w. 
by  down  three  chira&ers  of  a  prefumptuous  frith. 

i.   A  prefumptuous  frith,  it  is  an  eafie  faith  ;it  hath  no  enemy         Ia 
of  Satan  or   our  own  corrupt  hearts  to  oppofe  it,  and  Co  like  a 
uVnking  weed,  fhoots  up  and  grows  rank  on  a  fudden.   The  devil 
never  hath  the  (inner  furer,  than  when  dreaming  in  this  fools  Pa» 
radiie,    and  walking  in  his  ileep,   amidft  his  vainephantaftical 
hopes  of  Chriit  and  falvation.     And  therefore  he  is  fo  farr  from 
waking  him,  thit  he  draws-the  curtains  clofe  about  him,  that  no 
light  nor  noife  in  his  conference  may  break  his  reft;    did  youe- 
ver  know  the  thief  call  up  him  in  the  night,  whom  he  meant  to 
rob  and  kill?   no,  flcep  is  his  advantage.     But  true  faith  he  is  a 
fworne«nemy  againft ;  heperfecutes  it  in  the  very  Cradle,  as  He- 
rod  did  Chri;t  in  the  cratch  ;  he  poures  a  flood  of  wrath  after  ir, 
as  foon  as  it  betrays  its  own  birth,   by  crying  and  lamenting  af- 
ter the  Lord  ;    if  thy  tilth  be  legitimate,   Kapbtali  may  be  its 
name '-,     and  thou  mayeil  fay,   with  great  wrejilings  have  I  mett- 
led with  Satan  and  my  own  Safe  heart,   and  at  laft  have  prevailed. 
You  know  the  anfwer  that  Rebecca  had,  when  (he  enquired  of 
God  about  the  fcuf^s  and  ft  riving  of  the  children  in  her  womb  , 
Two  Nations   ("God  told  her)jme  in  her  womb;     If  thou   can  ft 
findc  trie  like  ftrife  in  thy  foul,  thou  mayeft  comfort  thy  felf,  that 
it  is  from  two  contrary  principles,  frith  and  unbelief,  which  are 
lulling  one  againft  another,  and  thy  unbelief  which  is  the  elder 
(however    now  it   ftiives  for  the  maftery)  (hall  ferve  faith  the 
younger 

2.  Prefumptuous  faith  h  lame  cf  one  hand,  it  hath  a  hand  to  2: 

receive  pardon,  and  heaven  from  God,  but  no  hand  to  give  up  it 
felf  to  God;  True  faith  hath  the  ufe  of  both  her  hands.  My 
beloved  is  mip.e  ,  there  the  foul  takes  Chrifc;  and  I  am  his ;  there 
(he  furrenders  herfclfto  the  ufe  and  fervice  of  Ghrift.  Now, 
didft  thou  ever  pafle  over  thy  felfi  freely  to  Chrift?  I  know 
none  but  will  prcfrilethey  do  this.  But  the  prefumptuous  foul, 
like  Ananias^  lies  to  the  Holy  Gbofi9  by  keeping  back  part,  yea, 
the  chiif  part  cf  that  he  promiied  to  lay  at  Chrifts  fret-  This 
luit  he  fends  out  cf  the  way  ,  when  he  mould  deliver  it  up  to 

Ffrf  2  juftice  5 


588  y^fcove  all  taking 


julticc  i  and  that  creature- enjoyment  he  twines  about,  andean- 
nut  perfwade  his  heart  to  truit  God  with  the  difpofure  of  it,  but 
cries  out  when  the  Lord  calls  for  it,  Btnjamin  fballmt  go  j  hi* 
life  is  bound  up  in  it,  and  if  God  will  have  it  from  him,  he  muft 
take  it  by  force,  for  therein  no  hope  of  gaining  his  conlent.  « 
this  is  the  true  picture  of  thy  faith,  and  temper  of  thy  foule, 
then  verily  thou  bleiieft  thy  it-lf  in  an  idol,  and  miitakeft  a  bolJ 
face,  for  a  beJeeving  hearc  5  But  if  thou  beeft  as  willing  to  be 
faithiull  toChriftj  js  to  pitch  thy  faith  on  Chrift  ;  if  thou  coun- 
teftit  as  great  a  priviledge,  that  Chrift  mould  have  a  Throne  in 
thy  heart  and  love,  as  that  thou  fhouldit  have  a  place  and  room 
in  his  mercy.  In  a  word,  if  thou  beeft  plain  hearted,  and  wouldfl: 
not  hide  a  finne ,  nor  lock,  up  a  creature  enjoyment  from 
him,  but  defireft  freely  to  give  up  thydearefr  Juft  to  the  gibbet, 
and  thy  fweeteft  enjoyments,  to  fiay  with ,  or  go  from  thee, 
as  thy  God  thinks  fit  to  allow  thee  (though  all  this  be  with  much 
regreet  and  difcontent  from  a  malignant  party  of  the  fiefti  within 
thee)  thou  prov^ft  thy  felf  a  foUHd  beleever.  And  the  Devil  may 
as  well  fay  that  himfelf  beleevcth,as  that  thou  prefumeft;  if  this 
be  to  preiume,  be  thou  yet  more  prefumptuous.  Let  the  Devil 
nickname  thee  and  thy  faith  as  hee  pleafeth  ;  the  Rofe-water  is  not- 
the  leffe  fweet,  becaufe  one  writes  Worm- wood  water  on  the 
glafle.  The  Lord  knows  who  are  his  3  and  will  own  them  for 
his  true  children  ,  and  their  graces  for  the  Cweet  fruits  of  his  Spi- 
rit, though  a  falfe  title  be  fet  on  itam  by  Satan  and  the  world3 
yea,  fometimes  by  believers  on  themfelves.  The  father  will  not 
deny  his  cMlde,  becaufe  hee  in  a  violent  fit  of  a  fever  talks  idle  and 
denies  him  to  be  his  father. 
k,  3.  The  prefumptuous  faith  is  a  faplefie  and  unfavoury  faith  ; 

when  an  unfound  heart  pretends  to  greateft  faith  on  Chrift, 
even  then  it  findes  little  favour,  taftes  little  fweetneft  in  Chrift. 
No,  hee  hath  his  old  tooth  in  his  head,  which  makes  him  relifh 
ftill  the  grofTefood  of  fenfual  enjoyments  above  Chrift  and  his 
fpiritual  dainties  j  would  hee  but  freely  fpeak  what  he  thinks,  hee 
muft  confefs,.that  if  hee  were  put  to  his  choice,  whether  hee  would 
fet  with  Chrift  and  his  children,  to  be  entertained  with  the  plea- 
fures  that  they  enjoy,  from  fpiritual  communion  with  him  in 
his  Promises,  Ordinances,  and  holy  wayes  5  or  had  rather  fet 
with  the  fervants,  and  have  the  fcrap?,  which  God  allows  the 

men 


the  fhield  of  faith.  5  8? 

men  c# the  world  their  full  bagges  and  bellits  ofcarnall  trea- 
fure;  that  he  would  prefer  the  latter  before  the  former:  He 
brags  ofhisintereft  in  God,  but  he  cares  not  how  little  he  is  in 
the  prefence  ofGcd  in  any  duty  or  Ordinance;  certainly  if  he 
were  fuch  a  favourite  as  he  fpeaks,  he  would  be  more  at  courG 
then  he  is.  He  hopes  to  de  faved ,  he  faith  ,  but  he  draws  not 
his  wine  of  joy  at  his  tap.  It  is  not  the  thoughts  of  heaven 
that  comforts  him ,  but  what  he  hath  in  the  world  and  of  the 
world.thefe  maintaine  his  joy  ;  when  the  worlds  vefltl  is  out, 
and  creature-joy  fpent ,  alas,  the  poore  wretch  can  finde 
little  reiiefe  from ,  or  rJifh  in  his  pretended  hopes  of  heaven  ,. 
and  inttreft  in  Chriit  ,  but  he  is  ftilt  whining  after  the  o- 
ther.  Whereas  true  faith  alters  the  very  creatures  palate  'y 
No  feaft  fo  fweet  to  the  bcleever  ,as  Chrift  is  ;  Let  God  take 
all  other  ditties  off  the  board ,  and  leave  but  Chrift  ;  he  counts  his  - 
read:  is  not  gone  ,  he  hath  what  he  likes ;  but  let  all  elfe  (land,  , 
health  ,  eftate ,  friends  ,(and  what  elCe  the  world  fets  a  high  value 
on)  if  Chrift  be  withdrawn,  he  foon  mifleth  his  difh ,  and  makes • 
his  moan,  and  faith,  alas,  who  hath  taken  away  my  Lord  ?  it  is 
Chrift  that  feaLnsthefe  and  all  his  enjoyments,  and  makes  them 
favoury  meat  to  his  Palate;  but  without  him,  they  have  no  more 
tafte  than  the  white  of  an  egge  without  fak, 

CHAP.    xir. 

The  Sa'mts  enemy  defcribed  with  hit  Warlike  proYifim\ 
fiery  darts yand  what  they  are. 

WE  have  done  with  the  Exhortation.  And  now  com«  to 
the  fecond  generall  part  of  the  ver.  i.  e.  A  powerful  ar- 
gument  prilling  this  exhortation,   contained  in  thefe  words; 

Whereby  ye  fiall  Is  able  to  quemb   all  tbe  fiery  darts  of  the  wicked ', 

Is 


Above  all  taKmg 


i. 


Jc  fball  be  able y  not  an  uncertain,  may  be  ye  fhall ;  biff  he  is 
peremptory  and  abfolute;  ye  fhall  be  able,  but  what  to  do? 
able  to  quench,  not  only  to  refift  and  re  pel,  but  to  quench,But  what 
lhall  they  quench  ?  not  ordinary  temptations  only,  but  the  worft 
arrows  thedtvil  hath  in  his  quiver,  fiery  dirtsy  and  not  fome 
few  cf  them,  but  ad  l  he  fiery  darts   of  the  wicked. 

In   this    fecond    general,    there    are    theft    two    paiticu* 
lars. 

i.  The  Saints  enemy  defcribed- 

2.  The  power  and  puiifancecf  fiith  over  this  enemy.     Fiift, 
of  thefiift. 

i.    The    Saints,  enemy  defcribed  ,    that   in  three    particu- 
lars. 

Firft>    in  his  nature,  wicked. 

Secondly,   in  their  unity,  wicked,    or  wicked  one,  nvmi*t   ~m 

the  lingular  number. 
Thirdly,  their  warlike  furniture  and  provifion,   with  which 
they  take  the  field  againftthe  Saints.     Darts,  and  they 
fierie* 
i,  Firtt,  here  is  the  Saints  enemy  defcribed  by  their  nature;  Wick^ 

edj  fomethingl  have  faidof  this  vex.  12.  where  Satan  is  called 
jfirjtual  wickedneffes ',  Khali  at prefent  therefore  pafs  it  over  with 
tin  lighter  hand.  Certainly  there  is  fome  fpecial  lefTon, that  God 
would  have  his  people  learn  even  fom  this  attribute  of  the  devil 
and  his  limbs  f  for  the  whole  pack  of  devils,and  devillifh  men  are 
here  intended.)  that  they  are  r^prefented  to  the  Saints  confede- 
ration by  this  name  fo  ofc  as  wicked.  I  mall  content  my  fe]f  with 
two  ends,  that  I  conceive  God  principally  aimes  at  by  this  name; 
Firft,  they  are  called  wicked,  as  an  odious  name,  whereby  God 
would  raife  hi*  peoples  ftonucks  to  a  loathing  of  them,  yea, 
provoke -their  pure  foules  to  the greateft  hatred  of  them,  and  c< 
Specially  of  finne  that  makes  them  fo  odious. 
fj  Fit  ft,  they  are  called  wicked,  as  an  odious  name,  whereby  God 

would  raife  his  childrens  ftomacks  into  a  loathing  of  finne  above 
all  things  in  the  world,  and  provoke  their  pure  fouls  as  to  hatred 
and  deteftation  of  all  finne,  fo  a  vigorous  refilhnce  cf  the  de- 
vil, and  his  inftruments,  as  fuch  who  are  wicked;  which  is  a 
name  that  makes  himdetcfhble  above  any  other.  God  would 
hav."  us  know,  that  when  he  himfelf  would  fpeak  the  worft  he  can 

cf 


thejlmli  of  faith.  f?t 


of  the  devil,  he  can  think  cf  no  name  fjr  the  purpofe,  like  this , 
to  fay,  he  is  the  wicked  one;  The  name  which  txiks  God  high- 
eft,  and  is  the  very  excellency  c  fall  his  other  excellencies,  is,  that 
he  is  The  holy  one,  and  none  holy  as  the  Lord.  This  therefore 
gives  the  devil  the  blacked  brand  cf  infamy,  that  he  is  the  wick- 
ed one  ,and  none  wicked  to  that  heighth  ,  befides  himfclf.  Could 
holineffe  be  feparated  from  any  other  of  Gods  attributesfvvhich 
is  the  heighth  cf  blafphemy  to  think  )the  glory  of  them  would 
be  departed.  And  could  the  devils  wickednefle  be  removed  from 
his  torments  and  milery,  the  cafe  would  be  exceedingly  altered* 
we  ought  then  to  pity  him ,  whom  now  we  muft  no  lefte  than  hate 
and  abominate  with  a  perfect  hatred- 

F/'r/?,  confider  this,  all  ye  who  live  in  finne,  andblufh  not  to  1. 
be  feen  in  the  practice  c  f  it.  O  that  you  would  behold  your  fa- 
ces in  this  glalfe  and  you  fhould  iee  whom  you  look  like;  truly  , 
no  other  than  the  devil  himfelf,  and  in  that  which  makes  hina 
moft  odious ,  which  is  his  wickedneHTe,  never  more  fpic  at  the 
name  of  the  devil  ,  nor  feem  to  be  feared  at  any  ill  fhapen  pi- 
cture cf  him,  for  thou  carrkft  a  fir  more  ugly  one,  (and  the 
trueftofhim  that  is  poflible  )  in  thy  own  wicked  bofome.  The 
more  wicked,  the  more  like  the  devil;  who  can  draw  the  devils 
picture  like  himfelf/1  If  thoubeeft  a  wicked  wretch,  thou  art  of  the 
devil  himfelf.  Cain  (it  is  Ca\d)was  of  that  wicked  sne,  1  Joh*}.  12. 
Every  finne  thou  committed,  is  a  new  line,  that  the  devil 
draws  on  thy  foul.  And  if  the  image  of  God  in  a  Saint,  which 
the  Spirit  of  God  is  drawing  for  many  years  together  in  a  Saint, 
will  be  10  curious  a  piece,  when  the  laft  line  {hall  be  drawn  in  hea- 
ven; O  think  then  ,  how  frightful  and  horrid  a  creature  thou  wile 
appear  to  be,  when  after  all  the  devils  paines  here  on  earth  to 
imprint  his  image  upon  thee,  thou  (halt  fee  thy  felf  in 
hell;  as  wicked  to  the  full,  as  a  wicked  devil  can  make 
thee. 

Secondly,  confider  this,0  ye  Saints ,  and  beftow  firft  your  pity  2. 
on  thofe  poor  forlorne  fouls  that  are  under  the  powf  r  of  a  wicked 
devil-  It  is  a  lamentable  judgement  to  live  under  a  wicked  go- 
vernment though  it  be  but  of  men.  For  afervantin  a  family  to 
be  under  a  wicked  matter,  is  a  heavy  plague.  David  reckons  ic  * 
among  other  great  curfes,  Pfalme  109.  6.  Set  a  wicked  man  over 
Mm.    O  what  is  it  then  to  have  a  wicked   ipirit  over  him  P 

he. 


5pi  AhoVe  aU  taking 


hee  would  (hew  himfelf  very  kinde  to  his  friend,  that  (hould  wi(h 
him  to  be  the  worft  (live  in  7Vi<y,  rather  than  the  beft  fervant  of 
finne  or  Satan.  And  yet  fee  the  folly  of  men  ;  Solomon  tells  us, 
when  tbe  wicked  bar  rule,  the  feofle  mourn,  Prov.9  2.  but  when 
a  wicked  devil  rules,  poor  befotted  linners  laugh  and  are  merry. 
Well,  you  who  are  not  out  of  your  wits  Co  farr,  but  know  finnes 
fervice  to  be  the  creatures  iitmoft  mifery,  mourn-  for  them,  that  go 
themfelves  laughing  to  fin,  and  by  fin  to  hell.  And,  Secondly,  let  it 
fill  thy  heart  (Chriilim)  with  zeal  and  indignation  againft  Satan 
in  all  his  temptations,  remember  hee  is  wicked,  and  hee  can  come 
for  no  good ;  Thou  k  no  we  ft  the  happinefs  of  ferving  a  holy  God, 
furely  then  thou  haftan  anfwer  ready  by  thee,  againft  this  wicked 
one  comes  to  draw  thee  to  fun  Canft  thou  think  of  fouling  thy 
hands  about  his  bafe  nafty  drudgery,  after  they  have  been  tifed  to 
Co  pure  and  fine  work  as  the  ferviceof  thy  God  is?  Men  not  to 
Satans  motions,  except  thou  haft  a  minde  to  be  wicked* 

Secondly,  they  are  called  wicked,  as  a  name  of  contempt,  for 
the  encouragement  of  all  beleevers  in  their  combate  with  them. 
As  if  God  had  faid,  fear  them  not,  they  are  a  wicked  company 
you  go  againft ;  caufe,  and  they  who  defend  it,  both  wicked.  And 
truly,  if  the  Saints  muft  have  enemies,  the  worfe  they  are,  the  better 
it  is.  It  would  put  mettle  into  a  coward,  to  fight  with  fuch  a 
crew.  Wickednefle  muft  needs  be  weak  ;  the  Devils  guilt  in  their 
own  bofomes  tells  them,  their  caufe  is  loft,  before  the  battel  is 
fought.  They  fear  thee,  Chriftian,  becaule  thou  art  holy,  and 
therefore  thou  needft  not  be  difrray'd  at  them  who  are  wicked. 
Thou  lookeft  on  them  as  fubtile,  mighty  and  many,  and  then  thy 
heart  fails  thee,  but  look  on  all  thefe  fubtile  mighty  fpii  its  as  wic- 
ked ungodly  wretches,  that  hate  God  more  than  thee,  yea  thee,  for 
thy -kindred  to  himi  and  thou  canft  not  but  take  heart-  Whofe 
fide  is  God  on,  that  thou  art  afraid  >  Will  hee,rhat  rebukt  Kings, 
for  touching  his  anointed  ones,  and  doing  them  harm  in  their  bo- 
-dies  and  eftates,fiandftiil  thinkeft  thou,  and  fuffer  thefe  wicked 
fpirits,  to  attempt  the  life  of  God  himftif  in  thee,  thy  grace, 
thy  holinsffe  without  coming  in  to  thy  help  >  It  is  impof- 
fible. 
0.  Secondly;,  the  Saints  enemy  is  fet  out  by  their  unity  ■,  fiery  d  irts 

of  the  wicked*  ra  *rovifi}  of  the  wicked  one.     As  if  a!!  were  [hoc 
out  of  thefams  bowe,  and  by  the  fame  hand.     As  if  the  Chrifti- 

ans" 


tie  p?ield  of  faith.  593 


ans  fight  were  a  Angle  duel  with  one  Tingle  enemy.  All  the  legi- 
ons or  Devils  ,  and  multitudes  of  wicked  men  and  women  ,  make 
tut  one  great  enemy  ;  They  are  all  one  myflical  body  of  wicked- 
ncfle:  as  Chrift  and  his  Saints  one  myftical  holy  body.  One  Spi- 
rit acts  Ch rid  and  his  Saints  ;fo  one  fpirit  afts  devils,  and  un- 
godly men  his  limbs ;  the  foul  is  in  the  little  toe;  and  the  fpi- 
rit of  the  devil  in  the  Icaftof  finmrs.  But  1  have  fpoke  fomething 
of  this  fubjccl:  elfewhere. 

Thirdly ,  the  Saints  enemy  is  here  defcribed  by  his  warlike  pro- 
vifion,or  weapons  he  ufeth  in  fight  againft  them.  Darts,  and 
thofeof  the  worft  kindjferj  darts. 

Fii  ft  j  darts ,  the  devils  temptations  are  the  darts  he  ufeth  again  ft 
the  fouls  of  men  and  women,  and  may  fitly  be  Co  called  in  a  three- 
fold refp  eft. 

i .  Darts  or  arrows ,  they  are  fwift  >  Thence  is  our  ufual  expreffi- 
on ,  As  fwift  as  an  arrow  out' of  a  bowe.  Lightning  is  called  Gods 
arrow ,  becaufe  it  flies  fwiftly.  Ffalm  18.  14.  He  fent  out  bis  ar- 
rows and  fcattcrcd  them  ,  be  jhot  out  lightnings,  and  difcomfited  tbemt 
that  is,  lightning  like  arrows.  Satans  temptations  flie  like  a  flafh 
of  lightning,  not  long  of  coming.  He  needs  no  more  time  than 
the  caft  of  an  eye  for  the  difpatch  of  a  temptation.  Davids  eye 
did  but  unawares  fall  upon  Bathfbeba  ,  and  the  devils  arrow  was 
in  his  heart  9  before  he  could  (hut  this  calement :  or  the  hearing 
of  a  word  or  two ;  Thus  when  Davids  fervants  had  told  what 
Nalal  the  churle  faid ,  Davids  choler  was  prefently  up  ;  An  ar- 
row of  revenge  wounded  him  to  the  heart  j  what  quicker  than  a 
thought?  yet,  how  oft  is  that  a  temptation  to  us?  one  liUy 
thought  rifethina  duty,  and  our  hearts  (before intent  upon  the 
work  )  are  on  a  fudden  carried  away  ,  like  a  fpaniel  after  a  bird  , 
that  fprings  up  before  him  as  he  goes  after  his  Mafter  5  yea,  if 
one  temptation  fpreds  not ,  how  foon  can  he  fend  another  after 
it  ?  (as  quick  as  the  nimbkft  Archer )  no  fooner  that  one 
arrow  is  delivered ,  but  he  hath  another  on  the  firing. 

2.  Darts  or  arrows  flie  fecretly ;  -And  fodo  temptations.  Fiiji, 
the  arrow  oft  comes  afar  off;  a  man  may  be  wounded  with  a  dart , 
and  not  fee  who  (hot  it.  The  wicked  are  faid  ,  to  fboot  their  ar- 
rows in  fecret  at  the  perfe ft ,  Pfalme  64.  4.  and  than,  tbey  fay,  who 
fball  fee  them  ?  ver.  4.  Thus  Satan  lets  flie  a  temptation  fo  fe- 
cretly ,  that  he  is  hardly  fufpe&ed  in  the  thing.    Sometimes  he 

Gggg  ufeth 


594  Move  all  taking 


ufttha  wifes  ton^uetodo  his  errand-,  another  while,  he  gets  be- 
hinde  the  bick  or  a  husband,  friend,  fcrvanr,  &c.  and  is  not  firen 
all  the  while  he  is  doing  his  work.  Who  would  have  thought  to 
have  found  a  devil  in  Tetcr  tempting  his  Matter  ,  or  fufptftedjthat 
^rdftdwihouldbehisinftrumcnt,  to  betray  his  beloved  wife  in- 
to the  hands  of  a  fmne  ?  yec  it  was  fo.  Nay,  fometimes  he  is  Co 
fecretj  that  he  borrows  Godsbowe  to  (hoot  his  arrows  from,  and 
the  poore  Chriftian  is  abtifed,  thinking  it  is  God  chides  and  is 
angry ,  when  it  is  the  devil  that  tempts  him  to  think  To,  and  only 
counterfeits  Gods  voice.  Job  cries  out  of  the  arrows  of  the  Almighty, 
how  the  foifonof  item  dranl^up  bis  ffirit  ,  and  of  the  terrcurs  of  $od, 
that  did  fct  tbemfelves  in  arr.y  tgainfi  him,  Job  6.  ^  when  ic 
was  Satan  all  the  while  that  was  praftifing  his  malice,  and  play- 
ing his  pranks  upon  him,  God  was  friends  with  this  good  man, 
onely  Satan  begg'd  leave  (and  God  gave  it  for  a  time)thus  to 
afright  him.  And  poor  Job  cries  out,  as  if  God  had  caft  him  off, 
and  were  become  his  enemy*  Secondly,  darts  or  arrows,  they 
make  little  or  no  noife  as  they  go,  they  cut  their  paflage  through 
the  aire,  without  telling  us  by  any  crack  or  report  (as  the  can- 
non doth  Jthat  they  are  coming  •■>  Thus  infenfibly  doth  tempta- 
tion make  its  approach  ,  the  thief  is  in,  before  we  think  of  any 
ncedtothut  the  doors.  Thswinde  is  a  creature  fecret  in  its  mo- 
tion ,of  which  our  Saviour  faith ,  we  know  not  whence  it  comes ,  nor 
wkitber  it  goes ,  John  3.  8«  yet ,  we  hear  the  found  thereof,  as  our 
Saviour  faith  in  the  lame  place.  But  temptations  many  times 
come  and  give  us  no  warning  by  any  found  they  make.  The 
devil  layes  his  plot  fo  clofe ,  that  the  foul  fees  not  his  drift ,  ob- 
ferves  not  the  hook  till  he  findes  ic  in  his  belly.  As  the  woman  of 
"Tekf*  told  her  tale  fo  handfomly,  that  the  King  pafTeth  judge* 
ment  againft  himfelf  in  the  perfon  of  another  before  he  fmelt  out 
the  bufinefle. 

3 .  Darts  have  a  wounding  killing  nature ,  efpecially  ,  when  well 
headed  ,  and  (hot  out  of  a  ftrong  bowe ,  by  one  that  is  able  to 
draw  it ",  fuch  are  Satans  temptations  ,  headed  with  defperate  ma- 
lice; and  drawn  by  a  ffrength  no  lefTe  than  angelical  $  and  this  a- 
gainft  fopooreaweak  creature  as  man ;  that  it  were  impofJible, 
had  not  God  provided  good  armour,  for  our  foul  to out-ftand 
Satans  power,  and  get  fafe  to  heaven.  Chrift  would  have  us 
fenlible  of  their  force  and  danger ,  by  that  petition  in  his  prayer 

which 


tie  p?ield  of  faith,  fp$ 


which  the  beft  of  Saints  on  this  fide  heaven  have  need  to  ufe ; 
lead  us  net  into  temftattin.  Chrift  was  then  but  newly  out  of 
the  lift  5  where  he  had  tailed  Satans  tempting  skill  and  tlrength, 
which  though  beneath  his  wiidome  and  power  to  defeat ;  yec 
well  he  knew,  it  was  able  to  worft  the  ftrongdt  of 
Saints.  There  was  never  any  befides  Chrift,  that  Sa^an  did  not 
foyle  more  or  Iefie;  'Twas  Chrifts  prerogative  to  be  tempted  • 
but  not  led  into  temptation.  Job,  one  of  the  chief  worthies  in 
Gods  army  of  Saints ,  who  from  Gods  mouth  is  a  none-fuch  ;  yet 
was  galPd  by  thefe  arrows  fhot  from  Satans  bowe,and  put  to 
great  diforder.  God  was  faine  to  pluck -him  out  ofthed  vrls 
gripe,  or  elfe  he  had  beene  quite  uorrytd  by  that  Ly- 
on. 

Secondly,  Satans  warlike  provifion  is,  notonely  darts,butjftry  gi> 

darts  j  fome  reftraine  thefe  fiery  darts  to  fome  particular  kinde 
of  temptation,  as  defpaire ,  blafphemy ,  and  thole  which  fill  the 
heart  with  terrour  and  horroun  but  this  f 1  conceive  )is  too 
ttrait ;  becaufe  faith  is  a  fhield  for  all  kinde  ot  temptations  ,  and 
indeed  there  is  none  but  may  prove  a  fiery  temptation  j  fo  that  I 
fhould  rather  incline  to  think  j  all  forts  of  temptations  to  be  com- 
prehended here,  yet  fo  as  to  refpeft  fome  in  an  efpeci- 
al  manner  more  than  other;  which  afterwards  (hail  be  in- 
ftancd  in. 
§hefi.  Why  are  Satans  darts  call'd  fiery  ones?  Quiff. 

Anfw.  i.  They  may  be  faid  to  be  fiery ,in  regard  of  that  fiery  Anlw.u 
wrath  with  which  Satan  (hoots  them;  they  are  the  fire,  this  dragon 
fpits ,  full  of  indignation  againft  God  ind  his  S  lints*  Saul ,  it  is 
/aid,  breath' d  out  tbreatning  and  jlaughter  agtirifi  the  Church , 
Acts  p.  i.  as  one  that  U  inwardly  inflamed;  his  breath  is  hot; 
a  fiery  fleam  of  Perfecuting  wrath  ,  came  as  out  of  a  burning  fur- 
nace from  him  ;  temptations  ire  the  breathings  of  the  devils 
wrath. 

2.  Fiery, in  regard  of  the  end  they  lead  to ,  if  not  quench'd ,  and        -2, 
that   is  hell  fire,  there  is  a  (park  of  hell  in  every  temptation. 

And  all  fpirks  flic  to  their  element »  fo  all  temptations  tend 
to  hell  and  damnation ,  according  to  Satans  intent  and  pur- 
pofe. 

3.  And  chiefly  !  fiery  Jn  regard  of  that  malignant  quality,  they         3# 
have  on  the  fpirits  of  men  ,  and  that  i$  to  enkindle  a -fire  in  the 

Gggg  2  heart 


596  Above  all  taking 

heart,  and  confciences  of  poor  creatures ;  the  Apoftle  alludes 
to  the  cuftom  of  cruel  enemies,  who  ufed  to  dip  the  heads  of 
their  arrows  in  fome  poifon  ,  whereby  they  became  more  deadly, 
and  did  not  only  wound  the  part  where  thy  light ,  but  enflame  the 
whole  body,  which  made  the  cure  more  difficult;  Job  fpeaks  of 
the  pifon  ef  tbemwbicb  drankjip  bis  Jf iritst  Job  6. 4  they  have  an 
envenoming  and  inflaming  quality. 

CHAP.  XIII, 

Tie.  fiery  nature  of  Satans  enticing  temptations  with 
faiths  power  to  quench  them, 

'T'Keyare  of  two    forts,  either  thofe  that  do  plcafingly  entice 
and  bewitch  with  fome  feeming    promifes  of  fatisfaclion  to 
the  creature  ;  Or 

Secondly,  fuch  as  af.ight,  and  carry  horrour  with  them ; 
both  are  fiery;  and  quenched  by  faith ,  and  only  faith.  We  mall 
begin  with  the  fir  ft  5  fuch  as  doe  pleafihgly  entice.  And  the  Note 
is  this, 

X)ocft       That  faith  will  enable  afoul  to  quench  the  fire  of  Satans  mofl 
pleafing  temptations. 

*•  Li  We  (hall  (hew  you,  that  thefe  enticing  temptations  have  a 

fiery  quality  in  them. 

2'  2.  That  faith  is  able  to  quench  them. 

l'  Fiift,  of  the  firft,  they  have  an  enflamins;  quality.  There  is 

a  fecret  difpofition  in  the  heart  of  all ,. to  all  finne;  temptation 
doth  not  fall  on  us  as  a  ball  of  fire  on  ice  or  fnow  ,  but  as  a  fpark 
on  tinder  ♦  or  lightning  on  a  thatcht  roofe,  which  prefently  is  on 
a  flame ;  hence  in  Scripture  ,  though  tempted  by  Satan ,  yet  the 
fin  1$  charged  onus.  James  1.  14.  Every  man  is  tempted ,  when  be 
is  drawn    away  of  his  own  lujls ,   and  enticed 5   Mark!  'tis  Satan 

tempsy 


the  JJiield  of  faith.  597 

tfwpttjhut  our  own  luft  draws  us.Tbx  fowler  lays- the  thrapp  ,  buc 
the  birds  own  defire  b. trays  it  into  the  net.  The  heart  of  man 
is  marvellous  prone  to  take  fire  from  thefe  darts.  Where  m 
wood  is  j  the  fire  goes  out ,  Prov.  26.  and  does  no  hurt ,  thus  did 
they  on  Chrift  ;  there  was  no  combuftible  matter  of  corruption  in 
him  for  Satan  to  work  upon.  But  our  hearts  being  once  heat 
in  Adam>  could  never  coole  fince.  A  Tinners  heart  is  compar'eT 
to  an  oven  ,  Hofea  7.  4.  'tbej  are  all  adulterers ,  as  an  oven  heated 
hjhths  baker.  The  heart  of  man  is  the  oven  3  the  Devil  the  Biker  , 
and  temptation  the  fire  with  which  he  heats  it,  and  then  no  fin 
c;mcs  amiffe  ;  I  dwell,  faith  David  y  Pfal.  17.  among  ibofe  that 
are  fet  on  /ire;  and  I  pray  who  fets  them  on  fire?  the  Apoftle 
will  refolve  us ,  James  3.  6.  fet  on  fire  of  hell.  Oh  friends  !  when 
once  the  heart  is  inflamed  by  temptation ,  what  Arrange  effects 
doth  it  produce?  how  hard  to  quench  fuch  a  fire  3  though  in  a 
gracious  perfon  ?  David  himfelf  under  the  power  of  a  temptati- 
on, fo  apparent,  that  a  carnal  eye  could  fee  it3(Joab  I  mean  , 
who  reprov'dhim  )  yet  was  hurried- to  the  Io(Te  of  ieventy  thou- 
fand  mens  lives  (for  fo  much  that  one  finne  coft.)  And  if  the  fire 
b:  To  raging  in  a  David;  what  work  will  it  mike ,  where  no  wa- 
ter is  nigh ,  no  grace  in  the  heart  to  quench  it  ?  Hence  the  wicked 
are  faid  fo  be  mad  on  their  [inns  ,  Jerem.  ^o.  58.  fpurring  on  with- 
out fear,  or  wit.  5  like  a  man  enflamed  with  a  feaver,  that  takes 
his  head;  there  is  no  holding  of  him  then  in  his  bed  ;  Thus  a 
foul  po(T  ft  with  the  fury  of  temptation  ,  runs  into  the  mouth  of 
death  and  hell ,  and  will  not  be  flopped. 

Vfe  1.  Oh  how  mould  this  make  us  afraid  of  running  into  a  yr 
temptation  3  when  there  is  fuch  d  witchery  in  it.  Some  men  are 
too  confident ,  they  have  too  good  an  opinion  of  themfelves,  as  if 
they  could  not  be  taken  W'th  fticha  difeafe  5  and  therefore  will 
breath  in  any  aire.  Tisjuft  with  God  to  let  fuch  be  (hot  win 
one  of  Satans  darts,  to  make  them  know  their  own  hearts  bet- 
ter. Who  will  pity  him,  whofe  houfe  is  blown  up,  that  kept 
his  powder  in  the  chimney  corner?  Am  la  dogge  ?  ( faith 
Haziel)  2  Kings  8.  do  you  make  me  a  bea  ft ,  funk  fo  farre  below 
the  nature  ofman  3  astoembrew  my  hands  in  thefe  horrid  mur- 
ders ?  yet ,  how  foon  did  this  wretch  fall  into  the  temptation  , 
and  by  that  one  bloody  aft  upon  his  own  Leige  Lord  (whi:h  he 
perpetrated  as  foon  as. he  got  home  )  (h;w,  that  the  other  evils,, 

which- » 


5?S 


AVtf  all  tahjny 


which  the  Prophet  foretold  of  him  ,  weie  not  Co  improbable  as  at 
firii  he  thought.  Oh  ftand  off  the  devils  maik,  unleife  you 
man  to  have  one  of  the  devils  arrows  in  your  fide !  keep  as  far 
from  the  whhle  of  temptation  as  may  be.  For  if  once  he  get 
you  within  his  circle,  thy  head  may  f00n  be  dizzy.  Oneiln 
helps  to  kindle  another;  the  Uffe  che  greater ,  as  the  brum  the 
Iogges.  Hofeaj.%.  When  the  courtiers  had  got  their  King  to 
caroufe ,  and  play  the  drunkard ,  he  foon  learnc  to  play  the  fcorn- 
enpe  Princes  have  made  bim  ficl^mth  bottle;  of  vine ,  be  (tracked 
out  bis  band  with  [corners. 

2'  u  S.econd,y'  hath  SaUns  darts  fucn  an  enkindling  nature>  take 
heed  of  being  Satans  initrument,  in  putting  fire  to  the  corrupti- 
on of  another.  Some  on  purpofe  do  it,  thus  the  whore  per- 
fumes her  bed,  paints  her  face;  Idolaters  as  whorifti  as  the  other, 
lmV  ,  r  TemP,eS  and  AI»rs  with  fuperftitious  pitting  , 
embcihmed  with  all  the  coft  that  gold  and  filver  can  afford  them, 
to  bewitch  the  fpeclatours  eye.  Hence  they  are  faid  ,  to  be  enfla- 
med  rcttb  their  idols  9  Efay  57.5  ,as  much  as  any  lover  with  hisMi- 
nion  in  her  whorim  drefTe.  And  the  drunkard  he  enkindles  his 
neighbours  Juft,  putting  the  bottle  to  A/w,Hab.  2.  15.  Oh  .'what  a 
bale  work  are  thele  men  employed  about?  by  the  Law 'tis  death 
tor  any  wilfully  to  fet  fire  on  his  neighbours  houfe  >  what  then 
deferve  they ,  that  fet  fire  on  the  fouls  of  men ,  and  that  no  Life 
than  hell  fire  ?  But  'tis  polTible  thou  mayert  doe  it  unawares  ,  by 
a  lelfe  matter  than  thou  dreameft  on.  A  filly  child  plying  with 
a  lighted  draw,  may  fet  a  houfe  on  fire,  which  many  wife  men 
cannot  quench  And  ttuely  Sat.n  may  ufe  thy  follyand  carelefie- 
neile,  to  kindle  luft  in  anothers  he^rt  Perhaps  an  idle  light 
fpeech  drops  from  thy  mouth  ,  and  thou  nua...  ft  no  great  hurt  ; 
but  a gult  of  temptation  may  carry  this  fFa.k  into  thy  friends 
do  ome,  and  kindle  a  fad  fire  there.  A  wanton  attire;  ('Perhaps 
naked  breafts  and  moulders  )which  we  will  fuppofe  thou  wear- 
fit  with  a  chaft  heart,  and  only  btcmCe  'tis^he  fefhion,  yet 
rnay  enfnare  anothers  eye.  And  if  he  that  kept  a  pit  open  but  to 
the  hurtofabeaft.finn^howmuchmore.ht^,  who given" occa- 
lion  to  a  fouls  finne,  which  is  a  worfe  I  urt  >  Paul  would  not 
"tfiejbj  while  tbe  wold  flood,  if it  made  bis  bwber  offend,  1  Cor.  8. 
13.  and  can!*  thou  doat  on  a  foolifh  drefTe,  and  immodett  fafhi- 
od,  whereby  many  may  offend  ftill  to  wearck>7fo  body,  Oirift 

faith' 


the  Jhirld  of  faith.  599 

faith  is  better  thin  ujnunt:  The  foul  then  of  thy  brother  is 
more'  to  fo  valued  furely  than  an  idle  fifhton  of  thy  ray- 
rnent. 

We  come  to  the  fecond  branch  of  the  point*  2.  That  faith 
will  enable  a  foul  to  quench  thefe  temptation?.  This  is  call'dour 
victory  over  tbe  world,  even  cur  faith  ,  i  John  5.  4.  Faith  lets 
its  triumphant  banner  on  the  worlds  head.  The  fame  Saint 
John  will  tell  you  ,  what  i3  meant  by  the  world,  Chaf  ,  2  .  15  ,  16. 
Love  not  tbe  world,  for  all  that  is  in  the  world ,  tbe  Juft  of  tbe  flejh,  the 
lujloftbe  eye,  and  tbe  pride  of  life  ,  is  not  of  tbe  father ,  but  of  tbe 
world.  All  that  is  in  the  world  is  fiid  to  be  lufi ,  because  it  is 
food  and  fuel  fir  luft.  Now  faith  enabhs  the  foul  to  quench 
thofe  darts,  which  Satan  dips  an  J  invenomes  with  thefe 
worldly  luft?.     Cal!  'd  by  feme  the  worldlings  Trinity. 

I.  For  the  lufc  of  the  flefh3  under  which  are  comprehended 
thofe  temptations ,  that  promife  pleufure  and  delight  to  the  flefh  ; 
thefe  indeed  carrie  £re  in  the  mouth  of  them  :  and  when  they 
light  on  a  carnal  heart,  do  foon  enflimeic  with  unruly  padions , 
and  beaftly  affections.  The  Adulterer  is  faid  to  burn  in  his  luft, 
Rom.  1.27.  The  drunkard  to  bt  enflamd  with  bis  wine.  Efay  5. 
n.nofortof  temptation  works  more  ftrongly,  than  thofe  which 
prefent  fenfualpleafure,  and  promife  delight  to  the  flefh ;  Tinners 
are  faid ,  to  work,  aU  uacleanneffe  with  greedinefe ;  with  a  kind  of 
covetoufneiTe,  for  the  word  imports  ,  they  never  have  enough  5 
when  the  voluptuous  perfon  hath  wafted  his  eftate,  jaded  his  bo- 
dy in  luxury ,  dill  the  fire  barns  in  his  wretched  heart  5  no  drink 
will  quench  a  poyfon'd  mans  thiift:  nothing  but  faith  can  be 
helpful  to  a  foul  in  thefe  flame?.  We  finde  Dives  in  hell  burning  ,, 
and  not  a  drop  of  water  to  cool  tbe  tif  of  bis  tongue  ,  found  there.  The 
unbeleeving  finner,isin  a  hell  above  ground,  he  burns  in  his 
Juft  ,  and  not  a  drop  of  water  (for  want  of  faith)  to  quench  the 
fire;  by  faith 'tis  faid  thofe  glorious  cJMartyrs  ,  Heb.  u.  quench' 
edtbe  violence  of tbe  fire ;  and  truly  the  fire  of  luft  is  as  hot,  as 
the  fire  of  Martyrdome ;  by  faith  alone  this  is  quenched  alfo,  'tit, 
3.3.  4. We  were  fome times  foolijb ,  ferving  divers  lufis ,  and  fleafures  , 
but  after  that  tbe  kjndneffe  and  love  of  God  our  Saviour  toward  man 
affearedjeforebe  favedus.  Never  could  they  make  off  thefe  lufts  , 
the  old  companions,till  by  faith  they  got  a  new  acquaintance  with 
the  grace  of  God  revealed  in  the  Gofpel,     ' 

5  CHAP. 


6qq  Above  all  taking 

CHAP.  XIV. 

How  faitb  quoicheth  the  lufts  of  the  flefl?    lujls  of 
the  eye  yanA  pride  of  life. 

SECT.  I 
Oueft.      tlOw  doci    faith   quench    this   fiery   dart    of   fenfual    de- 

^  liJight3> 

Anfo.  ^s  n  undeceive$,and  takes  offthe  myfte  from  the  Chriftianseye*, 

whereby  he  is  rfow  enabled  to  fee  fin  in  its  naked  being  ,  and  callow 
principles ,  before  Satan  hath  plum'd.     It  gives  him  the  native 
tafte  and  relirti  of  finne,  before  the  devil  hath  fophyfticated  it 
with  his  fagared  fa  wee.     And  truly  ,  now  finne  proves  a  homely 
peice ,  a  bitter  morfd.     Faith  hath  a  piercing  eye,  it  is  the  evi- 
dence of  things   not   feen ;  it  looks   behinde  the  curtaine  of 
fenfe,  and  fees  finne  before  its  finery  was  on  ,  and  it  be  dreft  for 
the  ftage;  to  be  a  brat  that  comes  from  hell,    and  brings  hell 
with  it.     Now  l:t  Satan  come  if  he  pleafe ,  and  prefent  a  lull 
never fo enticing;  The  Chriflians  anfwer  is  ready ;  be  not  chea - 
cd  oh  my  foul  (faith  faith)  with  a  lying  fpirit.     He  (hews  thee  a 
faire  Rachel ,  but  he  intends  thee  ablear-ey'd  Leah'-,  hepromifes 
jcy,buthe  will  pay  thee  forrow.     The  cloaths  that  make  this 
lult  (b  comely,  are  not  its  own.     The  fweetneGe  thou  tafleft  is 
not  native,  but  borrowed  to  deceive  thee  withal.    Thou  art 
Saul  (faid  the  woman  of   Endor)   why  bajl  thou   deceived   me-. 
Thus,  faith  can  call  finne  and  Satan  by  their  own  names,  when 
they  come  in  a  difguife ;  thou  art  Satan  ,  faith  faith  ,  why  wouldft 
thou  deceive  me  \  God  hath  faid ,  fmt\Q  is  bitter  as  gall  and 

worm- 


the  fine  Id  of  fait  b.  £Qg 


wormwood,  and  wouldft  thou  make  mc  believe  I  can  gather 
the  fweet  fruits  of  true  delight  from  this  root  of  bitterneiTe  ? 
grapes  from  thefe  thornes  ? 

Sccondly,faith  doth  not  only  enable  the  fou!  to  fee  the  natureof 
fin  void  of  all  true  treasure,  but  alfo  how  tranfcient  itsfalfe  plea- 
sures are. I  will  not  lofe,faith  faith,fure  mercies,  for  tranfcient  un- 
certain pleafures.This  made  Mofes  leap  out  of  the  pleafures  of  the 
Egyptian  court,intothe  fireof  affli&ion,Hf£.  1 1 .25  .becaufe  he  faw 
them  p  leaf  ares  for  afeajon.  Should  you  fee  a  man  in  a  (hip,  throw 
himfelf  over-board  into  thefea,  you  might  at  firft  think  him  out 
of  his  wits,  butifa  little  while  after  you  (hould  fee  him  ftand 
fafe  on  the  fhoare  ,  and  the  (hip  fwallowed  up  of  the  waves;  you 
would  then  think  he  took  the  wifeft  courfe.    Faith  kes  the  world, 
and  all  the  pleafures  of  finne  finking,there  is  a  leak  in  them  which 
the  wit  of  man  cannot  flop.  Now  is  it  not  better  to  fwim  by  faith 
thorow  a  fea  of  trouble,  and  get  fafe  to  heaven  at  laft-,  than  to 
fitinthelapoffinful  pleafures,  till  we  drown  in  hells  gulf  ?  'tis 
impofiible  the  pleafureof  fin  fhoaldJaft  long. 

Firft,  becaufe  'tis  not  natural.  Whatever  is  not  natural ,  foone  1 . 
decayes  •,  the  nature  of  fugar  is  to  be  fweet,and  therefore  it  holds 
its  fwcetnefs,  but  fweeten  beer  or  wine  never  fo  much  with  fugar, 
in  a  few  dayes  they  will  lofe  their  fweetnefs  5  The  pleafure  of 
finne  is  extrinfccal  to  its  nature,and  therefore  will  corrupt.  None 
of  that  fweetnefs,  which  now  bewitches  finners,  will  betaftedin 
hell.  The  finner  (hall  have  his  cup  fpiced  there,  by  his  hand  that 
will  have  it  a  bitter  draught. 

Secondly,  the  pleafures  of  finne  muft  needs  be  ftiort,  becaufe  - 

life  cannot  be  long,  and  they  both  end  together.  Indeed  many 
times  the  pleafure  of  fin  dies,  before  the  man  dies,  finners  live  to 
bury  their  joy  in  this  world.  The  worm  breeds  in  their  con- 
feience,  before  it  breeds  in  their  flefti  by  death.  But  be  fure,  the 
pleafure  of  finne  never  furvives  this  world.  The  Word  is  gone 
out  of  Gods  mouth,  every  finner  (hall  lie  down  inforrow,  and 
wa^e  in  forrow-Jdt\  is  too  hot  a  climate  for  wanton  delights  to  live 
in.  Now  faith  is  a  provident  wife  grace,  and  makes  the  foul  be- 
think it  felf  how  it  may  live  in  another  world  ^  whereas  the  car- 
nal heart  is  all  for  prefent^  his  fnout  is  in  the  trougb.and  while  his 
draught  lafts,  he  thinks  it  will  never  end.  But  faith  hath  a  large 
ftridc,  at  one  pace  it  can  reach  over  a  whole  life  of  years,  and  fee 

Hbhh  them 


2. 


6io  Above  all  taking 


2. 


them  done  while  they  are  but  beginning ;  J  have  fee*  an  end  of  all 
perfeftiwjaith  David  ^  he  faw  the  wicked  when  growing  on  their 
bed  of  pleafure,  cut  down,and  burning  in  Gods  Ovcn,asif  it  were 
done  already,  Pfil.^7.2.  And  faith  will  do  die  like  for  every 
Chnftian,  according  to  its  ftrength  and  adivity.  And  who 
would  envy  the  condemned  man  his  feafl,which  hs  hath  in  his  way 
to  the  gallows  ? 

Thirdly)  faith  out- vies  Satans  proffers,  by  fhewing  the  foule 
where  choicer  enjoyments  are  to  be  had  at  a  cheaper  rate.  In* 
deed,  beft,  u  beft  cheap.  Who  will  not  go  to  that  (hop  where  he 
maybe  beft  ferved  f  This  Law  holds  in  force  among  (irmers 
themfelves-,  The  drunkard  goes  where  he  may  have  the  beft 
wine ;  the  glutton ,  where  he  may  have  the  beft  chcare  ; 
Now  faith  prefents  fuch  enjoyments  to  the  foul,  that  arc 
beyond  all  compare  beft  v  it  leads  to  the  promife,  and  entertains 
itthereatChriftscoft,  with  all  the  rich  dainties  of  the  Gofpel ; 
not  a  difh  that  the  Saints  feed  on  in  heaven,  but  faith  can  fct  ic 
before  the  foul,  and  give  it  (though  not  a  full  meal)  yet  fuch  a 
tafte  as  (hall  melt  it  in  joy  unfpcakable  and  full  of  glory  .This  fure 
muft  needs  quench  the  temptation.  When  Satan  fends  to  in> 
vite  the  Chriftian  to  his  grofs  fare,  will  not  the  foul  fay  ^  Should 
I  forfake  thofe  pleafures  that  cheared,  yea,  ravifh  my  heart,  to 
go  and  debafe  my  felf  with  finnes  polluted  bread,  where  I  fhall 
be  but  a  fellow- commoner  with  the  beaft,  (who  (hares  in  fenfual 
pleafures  with  man  )  yea ,  become  worfc  than  the  beaft ;  a  dcviJ, 
like  fftdat,  who  arofe  from  his  Mailers  table,  to  fit  at  the 
devils  ? 


SECT.  II. 

The  fofts  efthe  eyes  thefe  are  quench'd  by  faith  ;  by  the  Iuft  of 
the  eye,  the  AroftU  means  thofe  temptations  which  are  drawn 
from  the  worlds  pelf  tad  trcsfure  5  cal'ed  fo  Firft,  kcaufe  'tis 
the  eye  that  commits  adultery  with  thefe  things-  As  the  unclean 
eye  looks  up  n  another  mars  wife,  fo  the  covetous  eye  looks  on 
anothers  wealth  to  luit  after  it.  Srcoud/y,  beraufe  all  the  good 
that  in  a  manner  is  receiv'd  from  them,  is  tut  topleafetheeye, 
Ecclef.};  1 1 .     What  good  is  there  to  the  owners  thereof,  faving  the 

be' 


fix  Jhield  of  faith.  61 1 


beholding  them  with  their  tjes}  That  is,  if  a  roan  hath  but  to 
buy  any  food  andrayment,  enough  to  pay  hu  daily  'not  ofn.cef- 
fary  expcnces,  the  furplufage  fcrves  only  for  the  :ye  to  play  the 
wanton  with  .,  yet  we  fee  how  pleafing  a  morfel  they  are  to  a 
carnal  heart.  'Tis  rare  to  find  a  man  that  will  not  ftoop  by 
bafe  and  fordid  pra&ices,  to  take  up  this  golden  apple.  When 
I  confider  what  fad  efe&s  this  temptation  hid  on  ±A- 
hab,  who  to  gain  a  fpot  oft  ground  of  a  few  acres,  ( that  could 
not  adde  much  to  a  Kings  revenues)durft  fwim  to  it  in  the  owners 
blood ;  I  wonder  not  to  fee  men,  whofe  condition  is  neccffitous, 
nibbling  at  the  hook  of  temptation,  where  the  baite  is  a  farre 
greater  worldly  advantage.  This  is  the  door  the  devil  entred 
into  fud&  by-,  This  was  the  break«neck  of  'Demas's  faith, 
he  embrac'd  this  prefect  world.  Now  faith  will  quench  a  tempta- 
tion edg'd  with  thefe. 

Firft,  faith  perfwades  the  foul  of  Gods  fatherly  care  and  pro- 
vidence over  it.  And  where  this  breaft-workisrais'd,  the  foul 
is  fafe,  fo  long  as  it  keeps  within  its  line.Oh !  faith  Satan,  if  thou 
woulcfe  but  venture  on  a  lye,  make-bold  a  little  with  God  in  fuch 
a  command,  this  wedge  of  gold  is  thine,  and  that  advantage  will 
accrue  to  thy  eflatc.  Now  faith  will  teach  the  foul  to  reply  ;  I 
am  well  provided  for  already-,  Satan,  I  need  not  thy  pennon  • 
why  fhould  I  play  the  thief  for  that,  which  if  good,  God  hath 
promis'd  to  give ?  H^.13.5.  Let  your  converfation  be  without 
covctou/netfe,  and  be  content  with  fuch  things  as  you  have,  fir  he 
hath  [aid,  1  will  never  leave  thee  nor  forf alee  thee.  How  canft 
thou  want,  oh  my  foul,  that  by  the  promife  haft  command 
of  Gods  purfe  ?  Let  him  that  is  without  God  in  the  world, 
ihift  and  fherke  by  his  wits^  do  thou  live  by  thy 
faith. 

Secondly,  faith  teaches  the  foul,  that  the  creatures  comfort  and  *• 
content  comes  not  from  abundance,  but  Gods  blefiing ;  And  to 
gaine  the  world  by  afinne,  is  not  the  road  that  leads  to  Gods 
blefling  ,  Prov-2%  20.  A  faithful wan  abounds  with  bltffings  ; 
but  he  that  mahrth  hafle  to  be  rich,  Jhall  not  be  innocent.  Shouldft 
thou  (faith  faith)  heap  up  the  worlds  goods  in  an  evil  way,  thou 
art  never  the  nearer  to  the  content  thou  expe&enV  cis  hard  to  fteal 
ones  meat,  and  then  crave  a  bkffing  on  ic  at  Cods  hands.  What 
thou  getft  by  fin,  Satan  cannot  give  thee  quiet  poffeflion  of,  nor 

Hhhh  2  dif- 


*. 


£ia  Above  all  taking 


diichargc  thofe  iuits,  which   God  will  furely  commence  againft 

thee. 

Thirdly,  faith  advanccth  the  foul  to  higher  proje&s,  than  to 
feek  the  things  of  this  life.  It  difcovers  a  world  beyond  the  Moon; 
And  there  lies  faiths  Merchandize  ^  Leaving  the  Colliers  of  this 
world  to  load  themfelves  with  clay  and  coals,  while  it  trades  for 
grace  and  glory  -,  faith  fetcheth  its  riches  from  on  far.    Saul  did 
not  more  willingly  leave  feeking  his  fathers  aiTcs,  when  he  heard 
otaKingdome,  than  the  believing  foul  leaves  proling  for  the 
earth,  now  it  hears  of  Chrift  and  heaven,  P/^/396, 7.  verfe% 
the  ft  xtbw  chad  holy  Dav  id  branding  the  men   of  the  world 
for  folly,  that  they  troubled  themfelves  fo  much  for  naught ; 
Stir  el)  (faith  he)  thej  are  difquietedinvaine,  he  heapethup  riches, 
and kgowtk not  who  fhall gather -them,  and  v.  7.    wc  have  him 
with  a  holy  dtfdain,  turning  his  back  upon  the  world  ,  as  not 
worth  his  paines,  and  norprLordywhat  wait  J  for*  As  if  he  had  faid, 
is  this  the  portion  I  could  be  content  to  fet  down  with  ?  to  fet 
upon  a  greater  heap  of  riches,  than  my  neighbour  hath  ?    lMj 
hope  is  in  thee,  deliver  me  from  all  my  tranfgreffions,  verfe  8.     E- 
very  one  as  they  like.    Let  them  that  love  the  world,  take  the 
world  j  but  Lord  pay  not  my  portion  in  gold,  orfilver,  but  in 
pardon  of  (inne,  this  I  wait  for.    Abraham,  he  by  faith  had  fo 
low  an  efteem  of  this  worlds  treafure,  that  he  left  his  own 
countrey  to  live  here   a  ftranger,    in  hope  of  a   better, 
Beb.il. 


SECT.  in. 

The  third  lufl  of  the  world,  The  pride  of  life.    There  is  an  itch 
of  pridein  mans  heart  after  the  gaudy  honours  of  the  world-,  And 
this  itch  of  mans  proud  flefti,  the  Devil  labours  to  fcratch   and 
irritate  by  futable  proffers.    And  when  the  temptation  without, 
and  luft  within  meet,  then  it  works  to  purpofe^  Balaam  lov'd 
the  way  ;  hat  led  to  C  urt  •  and  therefore  (purs  on  his  confcience 
("that  b.'ggi'd  more  than  the  AfTe  herond  onjtill  die  blood  came. 
The  Jews  when  convinced  of  Chriftsperfon,  and  doctrine  ;  yet 
were  fuch  ilaves  to  their  honour ,  and  credit  y    That  chey  part 

with 


the  jhield  of  faith.  6 1  3 


with  Chrift,  rather  than  hazard  that,     ^ohn  1 2.43 .  For  they  love 
thepraifeofmtn,  more  than  the pra'tfe  of Gcd,  Now  faith  quenches 
this  temptation,  and  with  a  holy  fcorne  difdaines ,  that  all  the 
preferment  the  world  hath  to  heap  on  him  ,  (hould  be  a    bribe 
for  the  leaft  finne,  Help.  1 1 .24.    Bj  faith  Mofis,  when  he  was  come 
tojeares,  refufed    to    be  called  thefunneof  Pharaohs    daughter. 
Though  by  his  Adoption,  he  might  have  been  heir  for  ought 
we  know,  to  the  Crown  j  yet  this  he  threw  at  his  heels :     It  is 
not  faid,  he  did  not  feek  to  be  the  fonne  of  Tharaohs  daughter , 
though  that  would  have  founded  a  high  commendation,  having 
fo  faire  an  opportunity  ^  fome  would  not  have  fcrupl'd  a    little 
Courr. flattery,  thereby  to  havecologued  themfelves  into  further 
favour  (having  fo  faire  a  ftock  in  the  Kings  heart  to  kt  up  with^ 
but  he  refufed  to  be  called ;  honour  came  trouling  in  upon  hin^  As 
water  at  a  flowing  tyde ;  now,to  ftand  againft  this  flood  of  pre- 
ferment, and  no  breach  made  in  his  heart  to  entertaine  it  -}  this 
was  admirable  indeed.    Nay,he  did  no  refufe  this  prefermentfor 
any  principality  that  he  hoped  for  elfewhere.    He  forfook    not 
one  Court  to  go  to  another,  but  to  joyne  with  a  beggarly  re- 
proached people  ^  yea,  by  rejecting  their  favour,  he  incurred  the 
wrath  of  the  King,  yetfaith  carried  him  through  ail  thofe  heights 
and  depths  of  favour,  and  difgrace,  honour,  and  diihonour  1 
And  truly,  where-ever  this  grace  is  fallowing  for  its  ftrength  and 
weaknefs,  )  it  willdo  the  like  •  wefinde,  verfe  33.  in  the  fame 
chapter,  how  Samuel  and  the  Prophets, through  faith  fubdued  King" 
domes:  which  fure  is  not  only  meant  of  the   conqueft  of  the 
fword(though  fome  of  them  performed  honourable  achievements- 
that  way,)  but  alfo  by  defpifing  the  honour,  and  preferments  of 
them.    Thisindeed  many  of  the  Tr  op  he  ts  are  famous  for;  and  in 
particular  S*muel,vtho  at  Gods  command  gave  away  a  Kingdom 
from  bis  own  houfe  and  family,by  anointing  Sauljhough  himfelf 
at  prefent  had  pofTeflion  of  the  chief  Magiftrates  chair.     And  o- 
therSj-t/f  rfe  3  7.  we  read  were  tempted  ;  that  is(when  ready  to  fuf- 
fer  )  were  offer'd  great  preferments,  if  they  would  bend  to  the 
times  by  receding  a  little  from  the  bold  profeffion  of  their  faith  .- 
But  they  chofe  rather  the  flames  of  Martyrdom,  than  the  favour, 
of  Princes  on  thofe  terms. 

But  more  particularly  to  fliew  you,  how  faich  quenches  thi; 
temptation. 

Hhhh  3  1, Faith 


Above   all  taking 

i.  Faith  takes  away  the  fuel  that  feeds  this  temptation-  wirh- 
drawthcoyle,and  the  Lamp  goes  out.  Now  that  wb'ch  is  fuel 
to  this  temptation,  is  pride  ^  where  this  Iuft  is  in  any  ftrengtl.,  tio 
wonder  the  creatures  eyes  are  dazled  with  the  fight  ofthat  which 
fuits  the  defires  of  his  heart  lb  well.  1  he  devil  now  by  a  tempta- 
tion does  but  broach,  and  fo  give  ventto  what  the  heart  it  ielf  is 
full  with,  Simon  Magus  had  a  haughty  fpirit, he  would  be  Simon 
yXyA?  ,  fome  great  man,  and  therefore  when  he  did  but  think  an 
opportunity  was  offer*  d  to  mount  him  up  the  ftage.  he  is  all  on  fire 
with  a  defire  of  having  a  gift  to  work  miracles,  that  he  dares  offer 
to  play  the  huckfter  with  the  Apoftle.  Whereas  a  humble  fpirlt 
loves  a  low  feat,  is  not  ambitious  to  ftand  high  in  the  thoughts 
of  others,  and  fo,while  he  ftoops  in  his  own  opinion  of  himfelf, 
the  bullet  flies  over  his  head,  which  hits  the  proud  man  on  the 
hrcaft.  Now 'tis  faith  lays  the  heart  low.  Pride  and  faith  are 
oppoted  ;  like  two  buckets,if  one  goes  up,  the  other  goes  down 
in  the  foul,H<*£.2  4.  Beheld,  ht-sfoul  that  is  lifted  ttp.is  not  upright 
in  him  j  but  the  juftfhall  live  b)  his  f, lit h. 

Secondly ,faith  is  Chrifts  favourite  ;  and  fo  makes  the  Chriftian 
expe&all  his  honour  from  him  j  indeed 'tis  one  of  the  prime  ads 
of  faith,  to  caft  the  foul  on  God  in  Chrift,  as  alfufficient  to 
makeitcompleatly  happy.  And  therefore  when  a  temptation 
comes  i  foul,  thou  mayeft  raifethyfe!f  in  the  world,  to  this 
place,  or  that  eftceme,  if  thou  wilt  but  diffemble  thy  profefiion, 
or  allow  thy  felf in  fuch  a  finne.  Now  faith  choaks  the  bullet. 
Remember  whefe  thou  art,  Ohmyfoulei  haft  thou  not  taken 
God  for  thy  Liege  Lord,  and  wilt  thou  accept  preferment  from 
anothers  handf  Princes  will  not  fuffer  their  Courtiers  to  become 
pensioners  to  a  forreigne  Prince,  leaftofalltoa  Prince  in  hoftili- 
ty  to  them .-  Now  faith  faith,  the  honour  or  applaufe  thou  get- 
teft  by  finne,  makes  thee  penfioner  to  the  devil  himfelf,  who  is 
'  the  greatefl  enemy  God  hath. 

Thirdly,  faith  (hews  the  danger  offuchabargaine,  fhoulda 
Chriftian  gain  the  glory  of  the  world  for  one  fin. 

Firft,  faith  faith,  hadft  thou  the  whole  worlds  Empire3  with  all 
bowing  before  thee,  this  would  not  adde  to  thy  ftature  one  cubit 
in  the  eye  of  God.  But  thy  finne  which  thou  payeft  for  the  pur- 
chafe,  blots  thy  name  in  his  thoughts,  yea,  makes  thee  odious  in 
Irs  fight  j  Godmuft  firft  be  out  of  love  with  himfelf,  before  he 

can 


the  pjield  of  faith,  6 1  j- 


can  love  a  (inner  as  fuch.    Now  wilt  thou  incur  this  for  that  ?  is 
it  wifdora  to  lofe  a  prize,  to  draw  a  bknek  I 

Secondly ,  faith  faith,  the  worlds  pomp  and  glory  cannot  fatif- 
fie  thee ;  it  may  kindle  third ings  in  thy  foul,  but  quench  none ; 
itwill  beget  a  thoufand  cares  tand  fears ,  but  quiet  none.  Tut 
thy  (innethat  procures  thefe,  hath  a  power  to  torment  and  tor- 
ture thy  foul. 

Thirdly,  when  thou  haft  the  worlds  crown  on  thy  bead,  how 
long  (halt  thou  weare  it  ?  They  arefick  at  Rome  (as  he  faidj  and 
die  in  Princes  Courts,as  well  as  at  the  fpittlCjyea,Kings  thcmfelves 
are  put  as  naked  to  their  beds  ofduft  as  others.  In  that  day  all 
thy  thoughts  will  perifh  with  thee :  But  the  guilt  of  thy  finne, 
which  was  the  ladder  by  which  thou  didft  climb  up  the  hill  of 
honour,  will  dogge  thee  into  another  world.  Thefe  and  fuch 
like  arc  the  confederations  by  which  faith  breaks  off  the  bar- 
gaine. 

Fourthly ,  faith  prefents  the  Chriftian  with  the  exploits  of  for- 
mer Saints,  who  have  renounced  the  worlds  honour,and  applaufe, 
rather  than  defile  their  confeiences,  and  proftitute  their  fouls  to 
be  defloured  by  the  leaft  finne.    Great  Tamberlane  carried    the 
lives  of  his  Anceftours  into  the  field wi.h  him,  in   which  he  u  fed 
to  read  before  he  gave  battel,  that  he  might  beftirred  up  not 
to  ftaine  the  blood  of  his  family  by  cowardize,   or  any  unworthy 
behaviour  in  fight.    Thus  faith  perafes  the  roll  of  Scripture- 
Saints,  and  the  exploits  of  their  faith  over  the  world,  that  the 
Chriftian  may  be  excited  to  the  fame  gallantry  of  fpirit.    This 
was  plainly  the  Afoftlet  defigne,  in  recording  'thofe  Worthies, 
with  the  trophyes  of  their  faith  Heb.  i  i.that  fome  of  their  noble- 
nefs  might  fteal  into  our  hearts,  while  we  are  reading  of  them, 
as  appears  chap.  1 2.  I .     Seeing  rve   alfo  are  compaffd   fibcut  with 
fo great  Acloudcfrvitnejfes,  let  us  lay  afide  every  weight,    and  the 
fin  that  does  ft  eajily  beftt  us,     Ob,  what  courage  does  it  put  into 
the  fouldier,to  fee  foriie  before  him  to  run  upon  the  face  of  death? 
SUfba  having  feen  the  1 miracles  God  wrought  by  Elijah,  fmites 
the  waters  of /V^tt  with  his  Mantle,  faying,  Where  is  the   Lord 
God  of  Elijah}  and  thej  parted-,  2  Kings  2  14.  Thus  faith  makes 
ufe  of  the  exploits  of  former  Saints ,  and  turnesthem  into  pray- 
er.    Oh  where  is  the  Lord  God.  of  Abraham,  Afofcs,  Samuel, 
and  thofe  other  Worthies,  who  by  faith  haye  trampled  on  the 

worlds 


£xb  Above  all  talking 


worlds  pomp  and  glory,  fubduedatemptations,  ftopt  the  mouths 
of  lion-like  lufts  ?  Arc  not  thou  O  God,  the  God  of  the  valleys, 
the  meaneft  Saints,  aswellasofthemountaines,  moreeminenc 
Heroes?  Do  not  the  fame  blood,  and  fpirits  runne  in  the  veines 
of  all  believers  ?  Were  they  vi&orious,  and  (hall  I  be  the  only 
flavc,  and  of  fo  proftrate  afpirit,  like  Iffackir,  to  couch  un- 
der my  burden  of  corruption  without  ftiaking  it  off  ?  Help  me 
oh  my  God  that  I  may  be  avenged  of  thefe  mine  enemies.  And 
when  it  hath  been  with  God,  it  will  alfo  plead  with  the  Chrifti- 
anhimfelf.  Awake,  faith  faith,  oh  my  foul,  and  prove  thy  felf 
akin  to  thefe  holy  men,  that  thou  art  born  of  God  as  they  were, 
by  thy  vi&ory  over  the  world. 


CHAP.     XV. 

Shewetb  the  difference  between  faiths  conqitefi  o~ 
<uer  the  world,  by  quenching  the  fiery  darts 
jbotfromit)  and  that  yffiory  which  fome  of 
the  better  Heathens  attainted  to*  As  alfo 
a  tryal  of  our  frith  propounded,  by  this  power 
to  quench  Satans  enticing  temptations  more  or 
lejfe, 

Objett.  O  Uc  fome  may  fay,  if  this  be  all  faith  enables  to,  this  is  no 
ID  more,  than  fome  Heathens  have  done.  They  have  trampled 
on  the  profits,  pleafures  of  this  world,  who  never  knew  what  faith 
meant. 

Av[#.  Indeed  many  of  them  have  done  fo  much  by  their  moral  prin- 

ciplesasmay  make  fome  (who  would  willingly  pafs  for  belie- 
vers, afliam'd)  to  be  out-gone  by  them  who  fhot  in  fo  weak  a 

fcowe 


the  fljield  of  fait b. 


bowe.  Yet  it  will  appear,  that  t'  ere  is  a  vidory  or  faith,  winch 
in  the  true  believer  out- (hoots  them  more  than  their  moral 
conqueft  doth  the  debauched  converfations  of  Icofer  Chnfti- 
ans. 

Fa- th  quenches  the  luft  of  the  heart ,    i.    Thofe  very  embers         I- 
of  corruption,  which  are  fo  fecretly  rak't  up  in  the  inclination 
ofthefoule,  finde  the  force  and  power  of  faith  to  quench  them. 
Faith  purifies  the  heart,  Ads  15.  9.  Now,  none  of  their  conquefts 
reach  the  heart.     Their  longeft  ladder  was  too  fliort  to  reach 
the  walls  of  this  Caftle  -,  They  fwept  the  door,  trim'd  a  few  out- 
ward roomes  ■,    But  the  feat  and  link  of  all  (in  the  corruption  of 
mans  nature)  was  never  cleanfed  by  them  ;    fo  that  the  fire  of 
luft  was  rather  pent  in,  than  put  out.    How  is  it  pofiible  that 
could  be  cleanfed,  the  filthinefs  of  which  was  never  known  to 
them  >  Alas,  they  never  lookt  fo  near  themfclves  to  find  that 
enemy  within  them,  which  they  thought  was  without  •,    Thus 
while  they  laboured  to  keep  the  thief  out,  he  was  within,  and 
they  knew  it  not  •  for  they  did  either  proudly  think ,  that   the 
foul  was  naturally  endued  with  principles  of  vertue,  or  vainly 
imagine  it  to  be  but  an  abrafa  Tabnla,  white-paper,  on   which 
they  might  write  good  or  evil  as  they  pleafed.     Thus  you  fee  the 
feat  of  their  warre  was  in  the  world  without  them,  which  aftep 
fome  fort  they  conquer'd.  But  the  luft  within  remained  untouch'c, 
becaufe  a  terra  incognita  to  them ;  It  is  faith  from  the  Word  that 
firft  difcovers  this  unfound  land. 

Secondly ,  faiths  vidory  is  uniform  •,  finne  in  Scripture  is  call'd  %m 

a  bodf,  Rom.  6.  6.  becaufe  made  up  of  feveqil  members ,  oras 
the  body  of  an  Army,  confiftingofmany  troops  and  Regiments ; 
'tis  one  thing  to  beat  a  troop,  or  put  a  wing  of  an  Army  to 
flight,  and  another  thing  to  rout  and  break  the  whole  Army. 
Something  hath  been  done  by  moral  principles,  like  the  former  •, 
they  have  got  fome  petty  vidory,  and  had  the  chafe  of  fome 
moregrofs,  and  exteriour  finnes  ^  but  then  they  were  fearfully 
beaten  by  fome  other  of  finnes  troops:  When  they  feem'd  to 
triumph  over  the  luft  of  the  fkfh,  and  eye  the  worlds  profits  and 
pleafares.  They  were  at  the  fame  time  fUves  to  the  pride  of  life; 
rueer  gloria  animals,  kept  inchaines  by  the  credit  and  applaufe 
of  the  world.  As  the  fea  (which  they  fay)  lofes  as  much  in  one 
place  of  the  land,  as  it  games  in  another ;  fo  what  they  got  in  a 

•-  I  i  i  i  feemiog 


£  '  &  Above  all  taking 


feemin^  victory  over  one  tinne,  they  loft  again  by  being  in  bon- 
ds qe  to  another,  and  that  a  worfe,  becaufemore  fpiritual.  But 
now  faith  is  um'.orm,  and  routs  the  whole  body  orfinne,  that 
not  one  fingle  iuft,  ftands  in  its  unbroken  ftrcngth.  Slnne  Jball 
net  have  demhion  overjeu,  for  yon  are  not  under  the  Larcy  but  un- 
der grace,  Rom.  6. 1 4.  bin  (hall  not,  that  is,  no  fin;  it  may  fttr  like  a 
wounded  fouldier  on  his  knees;  they  may  rally  like  broken  troops, 
but  never  be  long  matter  of  the  field  where  true  faith  is  feen. 
3.  Thirdly,  faith  enables  the  foul,  not  only  to  quench  thefe  lufts; 

but  the  temptation  being  quench'd,  it  enables  him  to  ufe  the 
world  it  fclf  againft  Satan,  and  fo  beat  him  with  his  own  weapon, 
by  ftriking  his  own  cudgels  to  bis  head.  Faith  quenches  the  fire 
of  Satans  carts,  and  :hen  (hoots  them  back  on  him;  This  it  doth, 
by  reducing  all  the  enjoyments  of  the  world  which  the  Ghriftian 
is  po.fefTed  ofrinto  a  ierviceab'enefs,  and  fubordination  for  the 
glory  of  od  -,  Some  of  the  Heathens  admired  champions,to  cure 
the  luft  of  the  eye,  have  (ftoma  blind  zeal  )  pluckt  them  outs 
To  (hew  the  contempt  of  riches,  have  thrown  their  money  into 
the  fea  .•  To  conquer  the  worlds  honour  and  applaufe,  haye  fe- 
queflred  themfelves  from  all  company  in  the  world.  A  prepofte- 
rous  way ,  that  God  never  chalked.  Shall  we  call  it  a 
victory, or  rather  a  phrenfie!  The  world  by  this  time  perceives 
their  folly.  But  faith  enables  for  a  nobler  conqueft.  Indeed,when 
God  calls  for  any  of  thefe  enjoyments,  faith  can  lay  all  at  Chrifts 
feet;  but  while  God  allows  them,  faiths  skill  and  power  is  in 
Sanctifying  them;  it  corrects  the  windinefs,  and  flatulent  nature 
of  them,  fo  that,  what  on  a  naughty  heart  rots  and  corrupts,  by 
faith  turnestogood  nourifhmentin  a  gracious  foul.  If  a  honfe 
were  on  fire,which  wouldyou  count  the  wifer  man.?he  that  goes  to 
quench  the  fire  by  pulling  the  houfe  down,  or  he,  that  by  throw- 
ing good  ftoreofwateronit,doth  this  as  fully  ,andalfo  leaves  the 
houfeftanding  for  your  ufe?  The  Heathen  and  foir.e  fuperftiti- 
ous  Chriftians,  think  to  mortifie,by  taking  away  what  God  gives 
us  leave  to  ufe;  but  faith  puts  out  r  he  fire  of  luft  in  the  heart,  and 
leaves  the  creature  ro  be  improved !  or  Gods  glory, and  enjoyed  to 
theChriftianscom  ort. 
%Jfe  i.  Vfn.  This  mr,  be  a  touch- ftone  for  cur  faith  ;  whether  of 
the  rght  make  o  no ;  Ts  thy  fairh  a  temptation-quenching  faith? 
Many  fay ,  they  belicve?yes  that  thej  do;they  thank  God  they  are 

not 


the  fhkldof  faith.  6  ?  9 


not  infidtls :  Well,  v  hat  exploits  canft  thou  do  with  thy  favh  ? 
Is  it  able  to  defend  thee  in  i  day  of  battel  ?  and  cover  thy  foul  in 
fafety,  when  Satan:,  darts  flie  thick  about  thee  ?  or  is  it  fuch  a 
forry  fhield,  that  tecs  every  arrow  of  temptation  pierce  thy  heart 
thorowit?  Thou  believeft,  but  full  as  very  aflave  to  thy  luft 
as  ever  •,  when  a  good  fellow  calls  l  bee  ou:  Co  a  drunken  meeting, 
thy  faith  cannot  keep  thee  out  of  the  fnare,  but  away  thou  gocft, 
as  a  fool  to  the  flocks.  If  Satan  tells  thee  thou  mayeft  advantage 
thy  eftate  by  a  lye,or  cheat  in  thy  (hop,thy  fauh  Hands  very  tame- 
ly by,  and  makesno  refiftance.  In  a  word,  thou  haft  faith,  and 
yet  driveft  a  trade  offin  in  the  very  face  ofit.  Oh  God  forbid, 
that  any  (hould  be  under  fo  great  a  fpirit  of  delufion  ,  to  carry 
fuch  a  lye  in  their  hand,  and  think  it  a  faving  faith.  Will  this 
faith  ever  carry  thee  to  heaven,  that  is  not  able  to  bring  thee 
out  of  hell  ?  for  there  thou  liveft,  while  under  the  power  of  thy 
luft.  Will  joufieal,  murder ,  and  commit  adultery  ,andfrv  ear  falfe- 
ly,  and  came  and  ft and before me}  Jer.7.i0.If  this  be  faith,  wel- 
fare the  honeft  Heathens,  who  cfcap't  thefe  grofs  pollutions  of 
the  world,  which  you  like  beafts  with  your  faith  lie  wallowing 
in.  I  had  rather  be  a  fober  Heathen,  than  a  drunken  Cbriftt- 
an ;  a  chafte  Heathen,  than  an  unclean  believer.  Oh  venture 
not  the  life  of  your  fouls  with  fuch  a  paper,  fhield-  come  to  him 
for  a  faith,  that  is  the  faith-maker,  God  I  meane  ;  he  will 
help  thee  to  a  faith,  that  (nail  quench  the  very  fire  of  hell  it 
felf,  though  kindled  in  thy  bofomc,  and  divide  the  waves  of  thy 
luftjin  which  now  thou  art  even  drown'd(as  once  he  did  the  feafor 
Jfrael)  that  thou  (halt  go  on  dry  land  to  heaven,  andthylufts 
not  be  able  to  knock  off  the  wheels  of  thy  chariot.  But  if  thou 
attempted  this  with  thy  falfe  faith,  the  Egypians  end  wil  be  thine, 
Heb.  II.29.  By  faith  the j  faffed  through  the  red  fea  as  by  dry 
land,rphich  the  Egyptians  ajj ailing  te  dojvere  <afow»d.Though  true 
faith  gets  fafely  thorough  the  depths  of  temptation ,  yet  falfe 
faith  will  drown  by  the  way,  But  perhaps  thou  canft  tell 
us  better  news  than  this,and  give  us  better  evidence  for  the  truth 
of  thy  faith,  than  fo.  Let  us  therefore  hear  what  fingular  thing 
hath  been  done  by  thee  (ince  a  believer.  The  time  was ,  thou 
wcrtasweakas  water-  every  puffofwinde,  blaft  of  temptation 
blew  thee  down  •,  thou  wert  carried  as  a  dead  fi(h  with  the 
ftreaaa  •  but  canft  thou  fay,  fince  thou  haft  been  acquainted  with 

Iiii  a  Chrrft, 


•    Q  Above  all  talking 

Chrift,  thou  arc  endued  with  a  power  to  repel  ihofe  temptati- 
ons   which  before  held  thy  heart  in  f  erfect  obedience  to  their 
commands  ?  Canft  thou  now  be  content  to  bring  thy  lulls,  which 
once  were  of  great  price  with  thee  (as  thofe  believers  did  their 
conjuring  books,  Alls  19. 19.  and  throw  them  into  the  fire  of 
Gods  love  in  Chrift  to  thy  foul,  there  to  confume  them?  pof- 
fibly  thou  haft  not  them  at  prefent  under  thy  foot  in  a  full  con- 
qucft,yet  have  they  begun  to  fall  in  thy  thoughts  of  them  ,  and 
is  thy  countenance  changed  towards  them  to  what  it  was  >  be  of 
good  comfort,  thisis  enough  to  prove  thy  faith  of  the  royal  race. 
When  Chrift  comes  (faid  the  convinced  Jews)  mil  he  do  mere  ni- 
YAtlts  than  thefe  ,  which  this  man  hath  done,  John  7.  3  1  ?  And 
when  Chrift  comes  by  faith  into  the  heart,  will  he  do  greates 
works  than  thefc  thy  faith  hath  done  ? 


CHAP.  XVI. 


An  ObjeSlion  againjl  believing,anfwered :  And 
jbme  dire&ions  bow  to  uje  thk  (bield  to  quench 
enticing  temptations. 

%}fc  2»     T  His  helps  to  anfwer  that  Objection  by  which  many  poore 
J    fouls  are  difcouraged  from  believing,  and  doling  with  the 
promife.    Oh, faith  the  tempted  foul,  ye  bid  me  believe^  alas, 
how  dare  I,  when  I  cannot  get  victory  of  fuch  a  luft,  and  am  o* 
vercome  by  fuch  a  temptation  ?  what  h  3 ve  fuch  as  I  to  d  o  with  a 
promife?  See  here  (poor foul)  this  Cvliah  proft rated  •,    Thou 
art  not  to  believe  becaufe  thou  art  victorious  ^  but,   that   thou 
mayeft  be  victorious.    The  reafon  why  thou  art  foworftedby 
thy  enemy,  is  for  want  of  faith-   Jfjon  believe  net ,  fitrely   yon 
jball  not  be  cftablipjfd,  ]fa.  7. 9.  wouldft  c hou  be  cured  before  thou 

goeft 


the  jbidd  of  faith. 


21 


goefttothePhyikian?  that  founds  harfh  to  thy  own    reafon 
andisasifthoufhouldftfay,  thou  wile  not  goto  the  Phyfician, 
till  thou  haft  no  need  of  him.    No,  go  and  touch  (  hrift  by  faith, 
that  vertue  may  flow  from  him  to  thy  foul  ;  thou  muft  not  think 
to  eat  the  fruit,  before  thou  planted  the  tree.     Victory  over  cor- 
ruption is  a   fweet  fruit;     but  found  growing  only  upon  fauhs 
branches.     Satan  does  by  thee,  as  Saul  did  by  the  ljrae/ites-y  who 
weakned  their  hands  in  battel  by  keeping  them  failing.    Up  and 
eat  ( Chriftian)  afullmealonthepromife;  if  thou  wouldftfind 
thy  eyes  enlightned,  and  thy  hands  ftrengthencd  for  the   com* 
bate  with  thy  lufts.    'Tis  one  part  of  the  do&rine  of  devils,  which 
we  read  of,  i  Tim.  4.  To forbid  meat /,  which  God  hath  created  to 
be  received  with  thanksgiving.     But  the  grand  doctrine  of  the  de- 
vil, which  above  all  he  would  promote,  is  to  keep  poor  trem- 
bling foules  from  feeding  by  faith  on  the  Lord  Jefus ;  asifChrift 
were fome  forbidden  fruit;  whereas  Cod  hath  appointed  him  a- 
bove  all  other,  that  he  fhould  be  received  with  thankfgiving  of 
all  humble  finners.    And  therefore  in  tie  Name  of  God  1  invite 
you  to  this  feaft  ;  Oh,  le:  not  y6ur  fouls  (who  fee  your  need  of 
Chrift,  and  are  pinched  at  your  very  heart  for  want  of  him  )  be 
leanefrom  day  to  day,  through  your  unbelief;    But  come  eat, 
and  your  fouls  (hall  live.    Never  was  child  more  welcome  to  his 
fathers  table,than  thou  art  to  Chrifts ;  and  that  feaft  which  ftands 
On  the  Gofpel-board. 

Vfe  3 .  Make  ufe  of  faith  oh  ye  Saints ,  as  for  other  ends  Vfe  %, 
and  purpofes,  fo  particularly  for  this,  of  quenching  this  kinde 
of  fiery  darts.  'Tis  not  the  having  ofafhield,  but  the  hold- 
ing and  weilding  of  it,  that  defends  the  Chriftian.  Let  not  Satan 
take  thee  with  thy  faith  cut  of  thy  hand,  as  'David]  did  Saul  in 
the  cave,  with  his  fpear  flicking  in  the  ground,  which  fhould  have 
been  in  his  hand. 

gueft.  But  how  would  you  have  me  ufe  my  fhield  of  faith  for       £?ue/i 
my  defence  againft  thefe  fiery  darts  of  Satans  enticing  tempta-  ' 

tions  ? 

Anfn>.  By  faith  engage  God  to  come  in  to  thy  fuccour  againft      An[»% 
them.    Now,  there  are  three  engaging  ads  of  faith  ,  which  will 
bind  God  (as  we  may  fo  fay  with  reverence)  to  helpthee,  becarfe 
he  binds  himfelf  to  help  fuch. 
Thcfirft  is  the  prayerful  ad  of  faith.    Open  thy  cafe  to  God         t. 

I  i  i  i  3  in 


£3  2  Above  all  taking 

in  prayer,  and  call  in  help  from  heaven.  As  the  govemour  of  a 
bdiegcd  CalUe,  would  fend  a  fecret  mefifehger  co  his  General  or 
Prince  co  let  htm  know  his  ftate,  and  ttraits.  i  he  *Apc  (?  ft  m. 
4.2.  faith,  Ye  fight  andwarre jet  you  have  not,  hetau  .:■ ■_)-..  ;  0:. 
Our  victory  rnuft  drop  from  heaven  if  we  have  any  ;  but  it  itayes 
tili  prayer  comes  for  it.  Though  God  had  a  purpo.'c  to  deliver 
Jfrae I  out  of  Egypt,  yet  no  news  of  his  coming,  till  the  groanes 
of  his  people  rang  in  his  earcs.  This  gave  heaven  the  alarum  , 
Excd.l. 24. Their  cry  came  up  unto  God,  and  he  heard  their  grow- 
ings andremembred  his  covenant.  Now, the  more  to  prevaile  up- 
on God  in  this  ad  of  faith  ,  fortune  thy  prayer  with  thofe  ftrong 
reafons,  which  Saints  have  ufed  in  like  cafes  j  As,  Firft,  engage 
God  from  his  promife,  when  thou  prayeft  againft  any  finne  -, 
(hew  God  his  own  hand,  in  fuch  promifes  asthefe;  Sinne  fhall 
not  have  dominion  over  you,  Rom.  6.  He  mil  fab  due  eur  iniqui  ■ 
ties  under,  Micah  7.  Prayer  is  nothing  but  the  promife  revcrs'd, 
or  Gods  Word  form'd  into  an  argument,  and  retorted  by  faith 
upon  God  againe.  Know  Chriftian,  thou  haft  Law  on  thy  fide, 
bills  and  bonds  muft  be  paid,P/*/.i  1936,  (Davidis  there  pray- 
ing againft  the  finnes  of  a  wanton  eye,and  a  dead  heart ;  Tume 
aveay  mine  eyes  from  beholding  vanity,  and  quicken  thou  me  in  thy 
way;  and  fee  how  he  urgeth  his  argument  in  the  next  words, 
ftablift  thy  Word  unto  thy  fervant.  A  good  man  is  as  good  as 
his  word,  and  will  not  a  good  God?  but  where  findes  David 
fuch  a  word  for  help  againft  thefe  finncs>  furely  in  the  Covenant, 
'tis  in  the  Magna  Charta.The  firft  promife  held  forth  thus  much, 
The  feed  of  the  woman  ft:  all  breaks  the  Serpentt  head.  Secondly, 
plead  with  God  from  relation.  Art  thou  one  God  hath  taken 
into  his  family  ?  Haft  thou  chofen  God  for  thy  God  /  Oh 
what  an  argument  haft  thou  here !  /  am  thine ,  Lord  fave  me, 
faith  David.  Who  will  look  after  the  childc,  if  the  father  will 
not?  Is  it  for  thy  honour,  Oh  God,  that  any  childc  of  thine 
fhould  be  a  flave  to  finne  ?  Be  merciful  unto  me^  as  thou  ufeft  to  do 
unto  thofe  that  love  thy  Name-^  Order  my  ft  eps  in  thy  Word,  and  let 
not  any  iniquity  have  dominion  ever  me,  Pfal.  1 1 9.  1  3  2.  Thirdly, 
engage  God  from  his  Sonnes  bloody  death  to  help  thee  againft 
thy  lufts,  that  were  his  munherers .-  What  died  Chrift  for, but  to 
redeeme  us  from  all  iniquitie,  and  purifie  unto  kimfelf  a.  peculiar 
people  ?  Titus  2. 14.    And  (hall  not  Chrift  be  re*imburft  of 

what 


the  Jhkld  of  faith. 


2, 


what  he  laid  out  ?  fhati  he  not  have  the  price  of  his  blood ,  and 
purchafe  of  his  death  ?  Inaword,  what  is  Chrifts  proving  for  in 
heaven,  but  what  was  in  his  mouth  when  praying  on  earth  ?  that 
his  Father  would fanclife  them,  and  keep  them  from  the  evil  of  the 
world :  Thou  coraeft  in  a  good  time,  to  beg  that  of  Gcd,  which 
thou  findeft  Chrift  hath  askt  for  thee. 

A  fecond  way  to  engage  God,is  by  faiths  expeding  ad  ;  when 
thou  haft  been  with  God,  exped  good  from  God.  J  will  direft. 
my  prayer  to  thee,  and  will  look  ftp,  Pfalmej.;.  for  want  of  this, 
many  a  prayer  is  loft.  If  you  do  not  believe,  why  do  ycu  pray  ? 
and  if  you  believe,  why  do  you  not  exped  ?  by  praying  you  feem 
to  depend  on  God  ^  by  not  expeding,  you  again  renounce  your 
confidence,  and  ravel  out  your  prayer ;  What  is  this,  but  to  take 
his  name  in  vaine,  and  to  play  bo-peep  with  God  ?  as  if  one  that 
knecks  at  your  door,  (hould  before  you  can  come  to  open  it  to* 
him,  go  away,  and  not  ftay  to  be  fpokewith.  Oh  Chriftian, 
ftand  to  your  prayer  in  a  holy  expedation  of  what  you  have 
begg'd  upon  the  credit  of  the  promife,  and  you  cannot  mifs  of  the 
ruine  of  your  lufts. 

£Zue5l.    O  but  faith  the  poor  foul ,    {hall  not  I  prefume      £ueft-, 
to    exped— wben^  I   have  prayed   againft  my  corruptions, 
that  God   will  befrow  fo  great  a    mercy   on    me    as  this 
is? 

Anfw.  i.  Doeft  know  what  it  is  to  prefume?  He  prefumes,,    jinfik 
that  takes  a  thing  before  it  is  granted,    He  were  a  prefumptuous 
man  indeed,  that  fhould  take  your  meat  offyour  table,  who  ne- 
ver was  invited:    But  I  hope  your  gueft  is  not  over- bold,  that 
ventures  to  cat  of  what  you  fet  before  him.  For  one  to  break  into 
your  houfe,  upon  whom  you  (hut  the  door,    were  pre- 
fumptuous •,    but  to  come  out  of  a   ftorrae  into  your  houfe , 
when  you  are  fo  kinde  as  to   call   him   in ,     is   no    pre- 
fumption,    but   good    manners.    And,   if  God   opens  not 
thedoorofhis  promife  to  be  afanduary    unto  poor  humbled 
finners.flying  from  the  rage  of  their  luft  •  truly  then  I  know  none 
of  this  fide  heaven,  that  can  exped  welcome.    God  hath  pro<« 
mifed  to  be  a  King,  a  Law-  giver  to  his  people  •  now  'tis  no  pre- 
fumption  in  Subjeds  to  come  under  their  Princes  (hadow,  and 
cxpec>protedionfrom  them, ,7/*-3  3 n}Z2.    God  there  pro- 

mifeth.. 


604  Above  all  taking 


milcth,  he  wifi  be  a  p lac e  of broad  ■waters  and  fire am s  ,  wherein 
no  Gaily  Jhall go  with  Oars,  neither  Jhall  gallant  fiips  pafs  there- 
by. For  the  Lord  is  our  Judge,  the  Lord  is  our  L*w  giver,  the 
Lord  is  our  King,  he  willfave  m.  God  fpeaks  to  his  people,  as  a 
Prince  or  a  State  would  to  their  Subjects :  He  will  fecure  them  in 
their  traffique  and  merchandize,  from  all  Pyrats  and  Pickroons ; 
they  (hall  have  a  free  trade :  Now  foul,  thou  art  molefted  with 
many  Pyrat-lufts  that  tnfeft  thee,  and  obftrud  thy  commerce 
with  heaven;  yea,  thou  haft  complained  to  thy  God,  what  lofs 
thou  haft  fufferedby  them  •,  is  it  now  preemption  to  expect  re- 
lief from  him,  that  he  will  refcue  thee  from  them,  that  thou  may- 
eft  ferve  him  without  fear  who  is  thy  Leige  Lord  ? 
Secondly,  ycu  have  the  Saints  for  your  presidents :  Who  when 
2*  they  have  been  in  corabate  with  their  corruptions :  yea,been  foil- 
ed by  them,  have  even  then  aded  their  faith  on  God,and  expect- 
ed the  ruine  of  thofe  enemies,  which  for  the  prefeni  have  over- 
f unne  themyPfa/me  6$  3 .  iniquities  prevaile  againfi  me  (he  means 
his  own  finnes,and  others  wrath)  but  fee  his  faith  •,  at  the  fame 
time  thatthey  prevailed  over  him,  he  beholds  Cod  deftroying  of 
them.  As  appears  in  the  very  next  word)  As  fir  our  twnfgref- 
JtoKSythmJhalt  purge  them  array  .See  here  poo  rChriftian,who  think- 
cft  that  thou  (halt  never  get  above  deck  Holy  Davidhzs  a  faith, 
not  only  for  himfelf,  but  alfo  all  believers,  (of  whole  number  I 
fuppofe  thee  one  )  M  for  our  tranfgrejjions,  thou  Jha/t  purge  them 
away !  And  mark  the  ground  he  hath  for  this  his  confidence 
verje^..  taken  from  Gods  choofing  ad,  Blejjed  is  the  man  whom 
thou  choofefi  ^  and  caufefi  to  approach  unto  thee %  that  he  may  dwell 
in  thy  Qmrts.  As  if  he  had  faid,  furely  he  will  not  let  them  be 
under  the  power  of  finne,  or  want  of  his  gracious  fuccour,  whom 
he  fees  fo  nigh  himfelf.  This  is  Chrifts  own  argument  againft 
Satan  in  the  behalf  of  his  people.  The  Lord  rebuke  thee  O  Satan, 
even  the  Lord  that  hath  chnfen  Jerufalem^  rebuke  thee,  Zech.  3 .2. 

Thirdly,  thou  haft  encouragement  for  this  expeding  ad  of 
faith,  from  what  God  already  hath  enabled  thee  to  do.  Thou 
canft(ifa  believer  indeed )  through  mercy  fay,  thac  finne  is  not 
inthatftrength  within  thy  foul,  as  it  was  before  thy  acquaint- 
ance with  Chrift,  his  Word  and  wayes-,  Though  thou  art  not 
what  thou  wouldeft  be  ;  yet  alfo,7  thou  art  not  what  thou  haft 
b?en.  There  was  a  time,  when  (in  plaid  Ke'x  in  thy  heart  with- 
out 


the  fhtddof  faith.  635 


out  controul.  Thou  didft  go  to  finne  as  a  fttp  to  Tea  before  wind 
^&nd  tyde.     Thou  didft  dilate,and  ipie;d  ::hy  affcdions  to  receive 
the  gale  of  temptation.-    But  now  the  tyde  is  tur.  ed>  and  runnes 
againft  thofe  motions.though  weakly  (being  but  new  flood  )  yet 
thoufindeft  afectet  wrefthng  with  them,  and  God  feafonably 
fuccouring  thee  •  fo   that  Satan  hath  not  ail  his  wtli  on  chee. 
Well,  here  is  a  fweet  beginning,  and  let  me  teilthee,  this  pro- 
raifeth   thee  a  readinefs  in  God    to  perfect  the  victory ;  yea, 
God  would  have  thy  faith  improve  this  into  a  confidence   for  a 
total  deliverance.    Mofes,  when  he  flew  the  Egyptian,  he  [up- 
psfedhis  brethren  would  have  underfiood  (by  that  little  hint,  and  ef- 
fay  )  how  that  God  veonld  deliver  them,  Acts  7.  2  j.     O  'tis  a  bad 
improvement  of  the  fuceours  God  gives  us,  to  argue  from  them 
to  unbelief  He  [mote  the  rockjhatthe  waters  gtt/hed  out;  but  can  he 
give  bread  alfoe  He  broke  my  heart  (  faith  the  poore  creature  ) 
when  it  was  a  rock,  a  flint  j  and  brought  me  home,  when  I  was 
walking  in  the  pride  of  my  heart  againft  him  -y  but  can  he    give 
bread  to  nourifti  my  weak  grace?  lam  out  of  Egypt  •,  but  can 
he  maftcr  thofe  Giants  in  iron  chariots  that  ftand  betwixt  me  and 
Canaan  ?  he  helpt  me  in  fuch  a  temptation,  but  what  (hall  I  do 
the  next  bout  ?  Oh,  do  not  grieve  a  goc/d  God  with  thefe  heart- 
akingqueftions.    You  have  the  former  raine,  whyfhouldyou 
queftion  the  latter  f  Benjamin  was  a  good  pawne  to  make  old 
Jacob  willing  to  go  himfelf  to  Egypt.    The  grace  which  Gocf 
hath  already  enriched  thee  with,  is   a  fure  pledge  that  more  is 
coming  to  it. 

Thirdly,  the  expecting  a&  of  faith  muft  produce  another ,  an 
endeavouring  ad  to  fet  the  foul  on  work,  in  the,  confidence  of 
that  fuccour  it  expe&s  from  God  ■>  when  fehofiapbat  had  prayed 
and  ftablifht  his  faith  on  the  good  word  of  pro  mi  fe ,  then  he 
takes  the  field  and  marches  out  under  this  victorious  banner  a- 
gainft  his  enemies,  2  Chron.  20.  Go  Chriftian,  do  as  he  did  ,ahd 
fpeedashefped:  What  David  gave  in  counfel  to  his  fon  S de- 
mon, that  give  I  to  thee,  1  Chron.22. I 6.  Arife,  and  be  doing,  and 
the  Lord  be  with  thee-,  that  faith  which  fets  thee  on  work  for 
God,  againft  thy  finnes  as  his  enemies,  will  undoubtedly  fet 
God  on  work  for  thee  againft  them  as  thine .  The  Lepers  in  the 
Gotyt-l  were  cured,  not  fitting  {till,  but  walking,  Luke  17.  14. 
It  came  topafs  that  as  they  went,   they  were  cleanfed.    They  met 

Kkkk  their 


~6^$  Above  all  taking 


their  cure  in  an  aft  of  obedience  to  Chrifts  command,  the  promife 
fa\th,Sinne  fball  not  have  dominion  over  you;   the  command  bids, 
mortifieyour  earthly  members,  go  thou,and  make  a  valiant  attempt 
againtttby  lufts,  upon  this  Word  ot  command,  and  in  doing  thy 
duty,  thou  (halt  finde  the  ptrformar.ee  of  the  promife  -,    The 
reafonoffomany  fruitlefs  complaints  among  Chriftians ,  con- 
cerning the  power  of  their  corruptions,  lies  in  one  ofthefetwo 
mifcarriages;  either  they  endeavour  without  a&mg  faith  on  the 
promife,  and  fuch  indeed  go  at  their  own  peril ;  like  thofe   bold 
men,  Numb.  14  40.     who  prcfumptuoujly  went  up  the  kill,  to 
fight  the  Canaanites^  though  Mofes  told  them,  the  Lord  voas  net 
fm<>ngthtm\  thus,  flighting  the  conduct  of  'Mofes  their  Leader  , 
as  if  they  needed  not  his  help  to  the  viftor\\a  clearrefcmblar.ee  of 
thofe  who  go  in  their  own  ftrength  to  refift  their  corruptions;and 
i'o  fail  before  them^Or  elfe  they  pretend  to  believe,  but  it  is  Otio/a 
Me,  their  faith  doth  not  fet  them  on  a  vigorous  endeavour.  They 
ufe  faith  as  an  eye,  but  not  as  an  hand  ^  they  look  for  victory 
to  drop  from  heaven  upon  their  beads,  but  do  not  fight  to  ob» 
taineit:  thisisameerfiftion,  a  fanciful  faith  •  he  that  beleeves 
God  for  the  event,  believes  him  for  the  means  alfo;  if  the  Patient 
dare  truft  the  Phyflcian  for  his  cure,  he  dare  alfo  follow  his  prc- 
fcriptionin  order  to  it  -y  And  therefore  Chriftian  fit  not  ft  ill,  and 
fay  thy  finnes  (hall  fall,  but  put  thy  felf  in  array  againft  them ; 
God  who  hath  promifed  thee  victory,  calls  thee  to  thy  acmes* 
and  means  to  ufe  thy  own  hands  in  the  battel,  if  ever  thou  gettelt 
it :    Get  thee  up  (  faid  the  Lord  to  Jojhuah  )  -wherefore  Heft  thou 
thus  upon  thy  face}  Jofti.7.  io.God  liked  the  prayer  and  moar.e  he 
made  very  well  h  but  there  was  fomething  elfe  for  him  to  do,  be- 
fides  praying  and  weeping,  before  the  Amorites  could  be  over- 
come :  And  fo  there  is  for  thee  Chriftian  with  thy  faith  to  do,be- 
fides  praying  and  expecting  thy  lufts  down,  and  that  is  fearching 
narrowly  into  thy  heart,whetherthere  be  not  fome  neglect  on  thy 
part  as  an  Achan,  for  which  thou  art  fo  worfted  by  (in,  and  fleeft 
before  the  face  of  every  temptation. 


CHAP. 


the  Jbield  of  faith.  63  y 


CHAP.     XVII. 

Of  the  fecond  fort  of  temptations   that  are    more 
affrigbtingy  and  bow  faith  qnencbeth  theje  darts 
in   particular     temptations     to     Atheifme^ 
which  is  overcome    not  by  reafon,  but    by 
Faith, 


Aving  thus  difpatcht  the  firft  kinde  of  fiery  darts  -,  tempta- 
tions,  which  are  enticing  and  alluring.  We  now  proceed 
to  the  fecond  kinde,  fuch  as  are  of  an  affrighting  nature ,  by 
which  Satan  would  difmay  and  difpirit  the  Chriftian  ;  and  my 
taskisftill  the  fame,  to  (hew  the  power  of  faith  in  quenching 
thefe  fiery  darts.  Let  then  the  point  be  this. 


SECT.  I. 

That  faith, and  only  faith,can  quench  the  fiery  darts  of  Satans  af-  jr^ 
frighting  temptations.  This  fort  of  fiery  darts  is  our  enemies 
referve  •,  when  the  other  proves  unfuccefleful,  then  he  opens  this 
quiver,  and  fends  a  (ho wer  of  thefe  arrows  to  fet  the  foule  on 
flame,  if  not  of  fin,  yet  of  terrour  and  horrour;  when  he  cannot 
carry  a  foul  laughing  to  bell,  through  the  witchery  of  pleafing 
temptations,hee'l  endeavor  comake  him  go  mourning  to  heaven, 
by  amazing  him  with  the  other.  And  truly,  it  is  not  the  leaft  fup- 
port  to  a  foul  exercifed  with  thefe  temptations,  to  confider,  they 
are  a  good  figne,  that  Satan  is  hard  put  to  it ,  when  thefe  arrowes 
are  upon  his  firing.  You  know  an  enemy  that  keeps  a  Caftle, 
will  preferve  it  as  long  as  he  can  hold  it,  but  when   he  fees  he 

Kkkk  2  muft 


£2%  Above  all  taking 


muft  out,  then  he  fets  icon  fire  to  render  ic  if  poflible,  ufcJefs  to 
them  that  come  after  him  ;  while  the  ftrong  man  can  keep  his 
houfe  under  his  own  power,  he  labours  to  keep  it  in  peace;   he 
quenches  thofe  fire-balls  of  conviction,  that  the  fpirit.is  often 
fhooring  into  the  confeience:  but  when  he  perceives  it  is  no  lon- 
ger tenable,  the  mutiny  within  encreafes,  and  there  isafecrct 
whifper  in  the  foul  of  yielding  unto  Ctirift  -  now  he  labours  to 
let  the  foul  on  fire,  by  his  affrighting  temptations  ^  Much  more 
doth  he  labour  to  do  it,  when  Chrift  hath  got  the  Caftle  out  of 
his  hands,  and  keeps  it  by  the  power  of  his  grace  againft    him. 
'Tis  very  obfervable,  that  all  the  darts  (hot  againft  fob ,  were  of 
this  fort  •,  he  hardly  made  any  ufe  of  the  other,  when  God  gave 
hirn  leave  to  practice  his  skill^why  did  he  not  tempt  him  withfome 
golden  apple  of  profit,orpleafurc,orfuch- like  enticing  temptati- 
ons? furely,the  high  teftimony  God  gave  to  this  his  eminent  fer- 
vant,difcouraged  Satan  from  this  method ;  yea,no  doubt,  he  had 
tried  Jobs  manhood  before  this  as  to  thofe,  and  found  him  coo 
hard;  fo  that  now  he  had  no  other  way  left  probable  to  attain 
his  delign  but  this. 

I  (hall  content  my  felf  with  three  inftances  of  this  fort  of  fiery 
darts,{hewing  how  faith  quenches  them  all.Temptations  to  Ather 
ifme,  Blafphemy,  and  Defpaire. 


SECT.  II. 

The  firft  is  his  temptation  to  *s4theifme,  which  for  the  horrid 
nature  thereof,  may  well  be  called  a  fiery  dart  j  partly,  becaufe 
by  this  he  makes  fo  bold  an  attempt,  ftriking  at  the  being  of 
Cod  himfelf  j  as  alfo,  becaufe  of  the  confternation  he  producetb 
in  a  gracious  foul  wounded  with  it  •  'Tts  true,  the  devil  who  can- 
not himfelf  turn  Atheift,  is  much  lefs  able  to  make  a  childe  of 
God  an  Atheift,who  hath  not  onely  in  common  with  other  men, 
an  indelible  ftamp  of  a  Deity  in  his  confeience,  but  fuch  a  fcul- 
pture  of  the  divine  nature  in  his  hearths  irrefiftibly  demonftrates 
aGod  ^  yea,  lively  reprefents  a  holy  Cod,  whofe  imageitis^  fo 
that'ek  impoflible  a  holy  heart  fhould  be  fully  overcome  with 
this  temptation, having  an  argument  beyond  all  the  world   of 

wick. 


the  jhield  of  faith.  6 : 9 


wicked  men,  and  devils  themfelves  to  prove  a  Deity,  viz,,  anew 
nature  in  him,  created  after  God  in  righteoufnefs    and  true    holi- 
riefi  ;  by  which,  even  when  he  is  buffeted  with  atheiftical  inje- 
ctions, he  faith  in  his  heart  there  is  a  God,  though  Satan  in  the 
Paroxyfme  of  the  temptation,  clouds  his  reafbning  faculty  for  the 
prefent  with  this  fmoke  of  hell,  which  doth  more  offend  and  af- 
fright, than  perfwade  his  gracious  heart  to  efpoufe  fuch  a  princi- 
ple's it  doth  in  a  wicked  man  ^  who  when  on  the  contrary  he  is 
urged  by  his  confeience  to  believe  on  God,  faith  in  his  heart  there 
is  no  God ;  that  is,he  wiftieth  there  were  none ;     And  this  may 
exceedingly  comfort  a  Saint  (  who  notwithftanding  fuchinje- 
dionsto  Athcifme,  cling* about  God  in  his  affedions,  and  dares 
not  for  a  world  allow  himfelf  to  fin  againft  him-,no  not  whenmoft 
oppreft  with  this  temptation  )  that  he  (hall  not  pafs  for  an  A- 
thcift  in  Gods  account,  whatever  Satan  makes  him  believe:  As 
the  wicked  (hall  not  be  cleared  from  Atheiffne  by  their  naked  pro- 
feffion  of  a  Deity,  fo  long  as  thofe  thoughts  of  God  are  fo  loofe 
and  weak,  as  not  to  command  them  into  any  obedience  to   his 
commands,  Tfalme  35.  1 .  The  tranfgreffion  of  the  wicked,  faith  in 
mine  heart9that  there  is  nofeare  of  God  before  his  eyes  •,     The  holy 
Prophet  argues  from  the  wickednefs  of  the  finners  life,  to  the  A- 
theifmeof  his  heart:  fo  on  the  contrary,  the  holy  life  of  a  gra- 
cious perfon,  faith  in  mine  heart,  that  the  fear  of  God  is  before 
his  eye .-   it  appears  plainly  that   he  believes  a  God,  and  reveres 
that  God  whom  he  believes  to  be.    Well,    though  a  gracious 
heart  can  never  be  overcome,yet  he  may  be  fadly  haunted  and  dif- 
quieted  with  it.    Now  in  the  next  place  I   am  to  (hew  you, 
how  the  Chriftian  may  quench  this  fiery  dart,  and  that  is  by  faith 
alone. 

£l**efi.  But  what  need  of  faith  ?  will  not  reafon  ferve  the      c§^/> 
turn  to   ftop   the   devils  mouth  in   this  point  ?  cannot  the 
eye  of  reafon  fpie  a  Deity  except  it  look  through  the  fpedaclcs  of 
faith  ? 

Arifiv.  I  grant,that  this  is  a  piece  of  natural  divinity, and  reafon.  ^^, 
is  able  to  demonftrate  the  being  of  a  God  ^  where  the  Scriptures 
never  came,  a  Deity  is  acknowledged,  Micah^.  5.  All  people 
mil  walk*  every  one  in  the  T^ame  of  his  God.  Where  it  is  fuppo  - 
fed,  that  every  Nation  owns  Tome  deity,  and  hath  a  worfhip  for 
tbatGod.  they  own;yet  in  a  furious  affault  of  rem  ptation/tis  faith' 

Kkkk  3  alone. 


630  Above  all  taking 


alone,  that  is  able  to  keep  the  field ,  and  quench  the  fire  of  this 
dart. 
i.  Firft,  that  light  which  reafon  affords,  is  dusktfh  and  confufed, 

ferving  for  little  more  than  in  general  to  (hew  there  is  a  God  -,  It 
will  never  tell,  who,  or  what  this  God  is.  Till  Paul  brought  the 
Athenians  acquainted  with  the  true  God,  how  little  of  this  firft 
principle  in  Religion  was  known  among  them?  though  that  City 
was  then  the  very  eye  of  the  world  for  learning.  And  if  the 
worlds  eye  was  fo  dark,  as  not  to  know  the  God  theywor- 
fliipt ;  what  then  was  the  worlds  darknefsitfelf?  thofe  bar- 
barous places,  f  I  mean)  which  wanted  all  tillage  and  culture  of 
humane  literature,  to  advance  and  perfed  their  underftandings. 
This  is  a  Scripture  notion,  and  fo  is  the  object  of  faith,  rather 
than  reafon,  Heb.l  1.6.  tie  that  comes  to  God,  muji  believe  that  he 
is ,  Mark  that,  he  muft  believe ;  now  faith  goes  upon  the  credit  of 
the  Word,  and  takes  all  upon  truft  from  its  authority  :  He  muft 
believe  that  he  is,  which  as  Mailer  Perkins  on  the  place  faith,  is 
not  nakedly  to  know  there  is  a  God,  but  to  k»ow  God  to  be  God^ 
which  reafon  of  it  ielf  can  never  do  ;  fuch  is  the  blindnefs  and  cor- 
ruption of  our  nature,  that  we  have  very  deformed  and  mifhapen 
thoughts  of  him,  till  with  the  eye  of  faith ,  we  fee  his  face  in  the 
glafs  of  the  Word,  and  therefore  the  fame  learned  man  is  not  a- 
fraid  to  affirme,  that  all  men,  who  ever  came  of  Adam  (  Chrift: 
alone  excepted  )  are  by  nature  Atheifts,becaufe  at  the  fame  time 

\  that  they  acknowledge  a  God,  they  deny  him  his  power,prefence, 
and  Juftice,  and  allow  him  to  be  only  what  pleafeth  themfel  ves. 
Indeed  it  is  natural  for  every  man  to  (fefire  to  accommodate  his 
lufts  with  fuch  conceptions  of  God,as  rrlay  be  moft  favourable  to, 
and  fuit  beft  with  them.  God  chargeth  fome  for  this,  Pfal.  5  o. 
Thou  ehoughtft  1  was  altogether  fuch  as  ihj/e/f.  Sinners  doing  with 

vt    God  as  the  Ethiopians  with  Angels, whom  they  picture  with  black 
faces  that  they  may  be  like  themfelves. 
2-  <yMW/y,fuppofe  thou  wert  able  by  reafon  to  demonftrate  what 

God  is,yet  it  were  dangerous  to  enter  the  lift,  and  difpute  it  out, 
by  thy  naked  reafon  with  Satan,  who  hath  ,  though  the  worft 
caufe,yet  the  nimbler  head.  There  is  more  oddes  between  thee 
andSatan  (though  the  reafon  and  underftanding  of  many  the 
ripeft  wits  were  met  in  thee,)  than  between  the  weakeft  idiot,and 
the  grcateft  Scholar  in  the  world.    Now  who  would  put  a  caufe 

of 


the  [hie  Id  of  faith.  63  1 


of  fo  great  importance  to  fuch  a  hazard,  as  thou  muft  do ,  by 
reafoning  the  point  with  him,  that  fofarre  out  matches  thee  ? 
but  there  is  a  divine  authority  in  the  Word,which  faith  builds  on, 
and  this  hath  a  throne  in  the  confcience  of  the  devil  himfelf;  he 
flies  at  this :  for  which  caufe,  Chrift,  though  he  was  able  by  rea- 
fon  to  have  baffled  the  divel,  yet  to  give  us  a  pattern,what  armes 
to  ufe  for  our  defence  in  our  conflids  with  Satan,  he  repels  him 
oneiy  by  lifting  up  the  (hield  of  the  Word.    It  n  written ,  faith 
Chrift^  Luke  4  4   and  again,  vtrfeS.     It  is  nritten.     And  it  is 
very  obfervable,how  powerful  the  Word  quoted  by  Chrift  was  to 
nonpltu  the  devil  ;  fo,  that  he  had  not  a  word  to  reply  to  any  So  i  - 
pture  that  was  brought,  but  was  taken  off  upon  the  very  menti- 
on of  the  Word,  and  forc't  to  go  to  another  argument •    Had 
Eve  but  Rood  to  her  fir  ft  an  fwer,  God  bath  Jaid,    Tefiall  not  eat 
of  it,  Gen.  3  3.  (he  had  been  too  hard  for  the  devil;  but  letting 
her  hand  hold  go,  which  (he  had  by  faith  on  the  Word,  prefent- 
ly  (he  fell  into  her  enemies  hand.    Thus  in  this   particular, 
when  theChriftian  in  the  heat  of  temptation,by  faith  ftands  upon 
his  defence,  interpofing  the  Word  between  him  and  Satans  blows; 
I  believe  that  God  is,  though  I  cannot  comprehend  his  nature,nor 
anfwer  thy  fophiftry;  yet  I  believe  the  report  the  Word  makes  of 
God;  Satan  may  trouble  fuch  a  one,  but  he  cannot  hurt  him  ^ 
nay,  *cis  probable  he  will  not  long  trouble  him  •,  The  devils  anti- 
pathy is  fo  great  to  theWord,that  he  loves  not  to  hear  it  found  in 
his  earc  ;  but  if  thou  throweft  down  the  (hield  of  the  Word,  and 
thinkeft  by  the  dint  or  force  of  thy  reafon  to  cut  thy  way  through 
the  temptation,  thou  mayeft  foone  fee  thy  felf  furrounded  by 
thy  fubtile  enemy,  and  put  beyond  an  honourable  retreat;  This 
is  the  reafon  I  conceive,  why  among  thofe  few  which  have  pro- 
felted  themfelves  Atheifts,  moft  of  them  have  been  great  preten  - 
ders  to  reafon,  fuch  as  have  neglected  the  Word,  and  gone  forth 
in  the  pride  of  their  own  underftanding,by  which  (through  the 
righteous  judgement  of  God  )  they  at  laft  have  difputed  them- 
felves into  flat  Atheiime-,  while  they  haveturnM  their  back  upon 
God  and  his  Word,  thought  by   digging  into  the  fecrets  and 
bowels  of  natare,to  be  admired  for  their  knowledge  above  others, 
that  hath  befallen  them,  which  fometimes  doth  thofe  in  Mines, 
that  delve  too  far  into  the  bowels  of  the  earth;  a  damp  from  Gods 
fecret  judgement  hath  come,  to  put  out  that  light  which  atfirft 

they 


fizz  Above  all  taking 


they  carried  down  with  them  •,  and  fo  5  that  of  ihe  Jpoftle  is  veri- 
fied on  themJVkere  is  the  difputer  of  the  world  ?  hath  not  god  made 
foelift  the  wifdeme  of  this  world  }  I  Cor.  i  .2 1 .  Indeed,  'tis  the  wif- 
dome  ofGodtthat  the  world  by  wifdcme(th^r  own  trufted  too)Jhonld 
not  know  God, 

Thirdly,he  that  aflents  to  this  truth,  that  there  is  a  God,  meer- 
ly  upon  grounds  of  reafon,  and  not  of  faith,  and  refts  in  that,  he 
doth  not  quench  the  temptation,  forftill  he  is  an  infidel,  and  a 
Scripture  Atheift,  he  doth  not  believe  there  is  a  God  at  the  re- 
port of  Gods  Word,  but  at  the  report  or  his  Reafon,  and  fo  in- 
deed he  doth  but  believe  himfelf,and  not  God,  and  in  that  makes 
himfelf  a  God,  preferring  the  teftimony  of  his  own  reafon  before 
the  teftimony  of  Gods  Word,  which  is  dangerous. 

.£>uej!.  ^Hcft.  But  may  fome  fay,  Is  there  no  ufe  of  reafon  in  fuch 
principles  as  this,whieh  are  within  its  fphere  ?  may  I  not  make  ufe 
of  my  reafon  to  confirm  me  in  this  truth,  that  there  is  a  God  ? 

Anfvo.  Anfw.  'Tis  beyond  all  doubt  that  there  is,  wherefore  q\(c  did 

God  fetup  fuch  a  light,  if  not  to  guide  us  ?  but  it  muft  keep  its 
place,and  that  is  to  follow  faith,  not  to  be  the  ground  of  it,  or  to 
give  Law  and  meafure  to  it,  Our  faith  muft  not  depend  on  our 
reafon,  but  our  reafon  on  our  faith.  I  am  not  to  believe  what  the 
Word  faith,  meerly  becaufeit  jumps  with  my  reafon,  but  believe 
my  reafon,  becaufe  'tis  futable  to  the  Word :  The  more  perfect 
light  is  to  rule  the  lefs ;  now  the  light  of  the  Word  which  faith 
follows,  is  more  clear  and  fure  than  reafon  is,  or  can  be-  for 
therefore  it  was  written,  becaufe  mans  natural  light  was  fo  de- 
fective ;  thoureadeftinthe  Word  there  is  a  God,  and  that  he 
made  the  world  •,  thy  eye  of  Reafon  fees  this  alfo,  but  thou  lay- 
eft  the  ftrefs  of  thy  faith  on  the  Word,  not  on  thy  Reafon^  and 
fo  of  other  truths  ^  The  Carpenter  layes  his  rule  to  the  timber, 
and  by  his  eye  fees  it  to  be  right  or  crooked  -y  yet  it  is  not  the  eye 
but  the  rule  that  is  the  meafure,  without  which  his  eye 
might  fail  him.  All  that  I  (hall  fay  more  to  fuch  as  arc  annoy- 
ed with  Atheiftical  injections,  is  this ;  fix  thy  faith  ftror.gly  on 
the  Word,  by  which  you  (hall  be  able  to  overcome  this  Goliah  - 
and  when  thou  art  more  free,  and  compofed,  and  the  ftorm  is 
over,  thou-ihalt  do  well  to  back  thy  faith  what  thou  canft  with 
thy  reafon  ;  let  the  Word(like  Davids  ftone)  in  the  lling  of  faith, 
ftm  proftrate  the  temptation,  and  then,  as  he  ufed  GAiahs  fword 

to 


the  fhield of  faith.  632 

to  cut  off  bis  head,  fo  mayeft  thou,  with  more  eafe  and  fafety 
make  ufe  of  thy  Rcafon  to  compleat  the  victory  over  thefe  Athc- 
iftical  fuggeftions. 

CHAP.  XVIII. 


Oftemptations  to  blajpbemy^  andhoxv  faith  quench- 
eth  them,  and  defeats  Satans  double  de- 
figne. 

THe  fecond  fiery  dart,  with  which  he  affrights  the  Chnfti 
an,  is  his  temptation  to  blafphemy.  Every  finne  in  a  large 
fenfe  is  blafphemy ;  but  here  we  take  it  more  ftri&ly.  When  a 
man  does,  fpeaks,  or  thinks  any  thing  derogatory  to  the  holy 
Nature  or  Works  of  God ,  with  an  intent  to  reproach  him  or. 
his  wayes ;  This  properly  is  blafphemy.  Jobs  wife  was  the  de- 
vils Solicitor,  to  provoke  her  husband  to  this  fin  ^  Curfe  God 
(faith  (he)  and  Me:  The  devil  was  fo  impudent,  to  aflault 
Chrift  hirafelf  with  this  fin,  when  he  bade  him,  Faff  down  and 
worjhip  him  -y  but  he  hath  an  advantage  of  making  a  nearer  ap« 
proach  to  a  Saint  than  he  bad  to  Chrift.  All  that  he  could  do  to 
him,  was  to  offend  his  holy  eare  with  an  external  motion.  Ic 
would  not  ftand  with  the  dignity  or  holinefs  of  Chrifts  Perfon, 
to  let  him  come  any  further ,  but  he  can  ftioot  this  fiery  dart  in- 
to the  imagination  of  a  Saint,  to  the  great  difturbance  of  his 
thoughts,  endeavouring  thereby  to  ftir  up  fome  unworthy 
thoughts  of  God  in  him:  Though  thefe  commonly  are  no  more 
welcome  to  a  gracious  foule,  than  the  frogs  which  crept  into  the 
bed  chamber  of  Pharaoh,  were  to  him.  Two  things  Satan  aims 
at  by  thefe  inje&ions :  Firjl%  to  fet  the  Saint  a  defaming  God, 
Which  he  loves  a  life  to  heare :  but  if  this  failes  ,•  Then  Secondly 

Llll  he 


J 


-4  Above  all  taking 

he  is  content  to  play  at  lower  game,  and  intends  the  Chriftians 
vexation,  by  forcing  thcfe  unwelcome  guefts  upon  him.  Now 
faith,  and  only  faith  can  only  quench  thefe  fire-balls  in  both  re- 
fpe&s. 

Fir  ft,  faith  is  able  to  defeat  Satans  firft  plot,  by  keeping  the 
foule   from   entertaining   any    unbecoming   or  blafphemous 
thoughts  of  God,'  andnonebut  faith  can  do  this.    There  is   a 
natural  difpofition  in  every  wicked  man  to  blafphcme  God.    Lee 
God  but  crofs  a  carnal  wretch  in  his  way,  and  then  fuffer  Satan 
to  edge  his  corruption,  and.  he  will  foon  flic  in  Gods  face  •  If  the 
devtis-foppofition  had  been  true  (as  it  was  indeed,  moft  falfe)  that 
fob  was  an  hypocrite  ;  then  that  tale  which  he  brought  againft 
him  to  God ,  would  have  been  true  alfo.    Put  forth  now  thj  hand, 
and  touch  all  that  he  hathx  and  he  will  enrfe  thee  to  thj  face,  Job 
i,  1 1.    Had  fob  been  the  man  he  took  him  for,  the  devil   had 
not  lied-,  becaufe'eis  natural  to  every  wicked  man,  to  have  bafe 
thoughts  of  God  ^  and  when  provoked,  the  inward  rancour  of 
his  heart,  will  appear  in  the  foulnefs  of  his  tongue.    ThU  evil 
k  of  the  Zcrd,  what  jhottld  I  wait  for  the  Lord  any  longer  ?  2  Kings 
6. 3  3>    A  loud  blafphemy,  the  feed  of  which  is  round  in  every 
unbeliever.    There  is  but  one  fpirit  ofwickedncfiinfinners,  as 
but  one  Spirit  of  grace  in  Saints.    Peter  tells  SiwnLMagw,  he 
-was  in  the  gall  of  but  erne fi ,  Ads  8.  23.     that  is,  in  a    ftate  of 
fin;  every  unbeliever  is  of  a  bitter  fpirit  againft  God,  and  all 
that  bears  his  name  ^  there's  no  trufting  of  the   tameft  of  them 
all,  though  coopM up  by  reftraining  grace:  Let  the  Lion  out  of 
his  grate,  and  he  will  foon  (hew  his  bloody  nature.     An  unbe- 
liever hath  no  more  in  him  to  quench  fuch  a  temptation,  than 
dry  wood  hath  to  quench  the  fire  that  is  put  to  it     But,  now 
Set  us  fee  what  exploits  faith  can  do  in  quenching  this  fiery  dart, 
and  how  faith  does  it. 
1.  .FjV/?-,  faith  fets  God  before  the  foul,  within  fight  and  hearing 

of  all  it?  thoughts  and  wayes  ^  and  this  keeps  the  foul  in  awe, 
that  it  dares  harbour  Nothing  unworthy  of  God  in  its  moft  fe« 
cret  thoughts.  David  gives  the  reafon,  why  the  wicked  are  fo 
bold,  VJ*l  86  14.  Thef  have  not  fet  thee  Ixfcre  them.  Such 
as  defame  and  afpcrfe  the  names  of  others,  do  it  commonly  bc- 
hinde  their  b?.cks.-  Jin  in  this  life  feldom  comes  to  fuch  a  ripe- 
mfSj  as  to  blafphcme  God  to  his  face -,  this  is  properly  the  lan- 
guage 


the  fbield  of  faith.  6 


5 


guage  of  hell.    Thereis  a  mixture  of  Athetfm,  with  the   blaf- 
phemy of  finners  while  on  earth  :     T  hey  do  with  God ,  as  thofe 
wretched  mifcreants  did  with  Chrift,  they  cover  his  face,  and  chen 
fmite  him  :  they  draw  a  curtain  by  fomc  Atheiftical  principles  be- 
twixt God  and  them,  and  then  they  belch  out  their  blafphe- 
fniesagainft  that  God,  whofcOmnifcience  they  do  nor  believe. 
Now  faith  eyes  God  eyeing  the  foul,  and  fo  preterm it,    Curfe 
not  the  King  (faith  Solomon,)  no,  not  in  thy  thought ,  nor  the  rich 
in  thj  bed-chamber,  for  a  bird  of  the  aire  fk.tfl  carry  the  vAcei  and 
that  which  hath  wings  ,  {ball  tell  the  matter,  Eccl.  10.20.     Such 
fcinde  of  language  faith  ufetb.    Biafpheme  not,  (  faith  faith  )  O 
my  foul,  the  God  of  Heaven  -,  thcu  canft  not  whifper  it  fo  foft- 
fy,  but  the  voice  is  heard  in  his  eare,  who  is  rearer  to  thee,  than 
thou  to  thy  felf;  and  thus  it  breaks  the  fnare  the  devil  Jaycs. 
Tbofe  unbefeeming  fpeeches  which  dropc  from  fobs  mouth, 
through  the  length  and  extremity  of  his  troubles,  though   they 
did  not  amount  to  blafphemy,  yet  when  God  prefented  himfelf 
to  him  in  his  Majefty,  they  foon  vanifhed,  and  he  covered   his 
face  with  (hame  before  the  Lord  for  them  -,  2fyw  mine  eye  feeth 
thee,  wherefore  I  abhor  my  ft  If, and  repent  in  duft  and  afhes  Job  42. 

Secondly,  faith  credits  no  report  of  God,  butfrom  Gods  own  2, 
mouth-,  and  thus  it  quencheth  temptations  co  blafphemy.  Tis 
unpoiFiblca  foul  fhould  have  any  but  holy  ard  loyal  thoughts 
of  God,  who  (hapes  his  apprebenfionsofhimby  the  Word  of 
God,  which  is  the  only  true  glafs  to  behold  God  in ,  becaufe 
it  alone  prefents  him  like  himfelf  in  all  his  Attributes,  which  Sa- 
tan by  this  fin  of  blafphemy  one  way  or  other  afperfes.  Faith 
•conceives  its  notions  of  God  by  the  Word,  refolvesall  cafes  of 
confeience,  arid  deciphers  all  Providences,  (  which  God  writes 
in  myfterious  figures)  by  the  Word  ;  for  want  of  which  skill, 
Satan  drives  the  creature  very  oft  to  have  hard  thoughts  of  God> 
tfera"(e  he  cannot  make  prefently  good  fenfe.of  his  adminiftrati- 
dnftn  the  world,  "fchtj^there  bavebeen,who  foolifhiy  have  charg- 
ed Gods  Juftice.becanfe  fome  ouc-ragious  finners  have  not  been  o- 
vertaken  with  fuch  fpeedy  judgement,  as  (hey  deferve ;  others 
have  charg'd  as  deeply  his  care  and  faithfulncfs,  in  providing  no 
better  for  his  fervants,  whom  they  have  feen  kept  long  under  the 
hatches  of  great  a  ffliftions  •,  likening  that  feeing  a  company  of 

L1I1  2  Chri» 


(i  ,  6  Above  all  taking 


Chriftians  in  poor  ragged  cloathes,  faid,  he  would  nocfervc  that 
God,  who  kepi  his  lervams  no  better.  Thcfe,  and  fuch  like, 
are  the  broken  glafles  that  Satan  prefent*  God  in,  that  he  may 
disfigure  him  to  the  creatures  eye ;  and  truly,  if  we  will  look  no 
fuither,  but  judge  God  to  be,  what  he appearsto  be  by  them, 
we  fhall  Toon  condemn  the  Holy  One,and  be  within  the  whirle  of 
this  dangerous  temptation. 

Thirdly,  faith  quenches  temptations  to  blafphcmy  as  it  it 
praifeful.  It  difpofeth  the  Chriftian,  to  blefle  God  in  the  faddeft 
condition  that  can  befall  it.  Now  thcfe  two,  blefling  and 
blafphemy  are  moft  contrary  •,  By  the  one  we  think  and  fpeak  e- 
vilt  and  by  the  other,  good  of  God  ,  and  therefore  cannot  well 
dwell  under  the  fame  roof:  They  arc  like  contrary  tunes,  they 
cannot  be  plaid  on  the  fame  inftrument,  without  changing  all 
the  firings.  ItispaftSatans  skill  to  ftrike  foharfti  a  itroak  as 
blafphemy  is,  on  a  foul  tuned  and  fet  to  praife  God  y  Now  faith 
doth  this,  Afj  heart  is  fixed,  (ia\ih  David)  there  was  his  faith  y 
then  follows,  1 •  »  ill  fing  and  give  fraife,  Pfal.57.7.  It  was  faith 
that  tuned  his  fpirit,  and  fee  his  affe&ions  praife-way.  And 
would  not  Satan  (think  you)  have  found  it  a  hard  task  to  have 
made  Drft^blafpheme  God,  while  his  heart  was  kept  in  a  prai- 
fing.frame?  Now,two  way es faith  doth  this.  Firft,  as  itfpies 
mercy  in  the  greateft  affliction,  an  eye  of  white  in  the  faddeft 
mixture  of  Providence ;  fo  that  when  the  devil  provokes  to  blaf- 
phemy from  the  evil  that  the  creature  receives  from  God ,  faith 
fheives  more  good  received  than  evil  *  Thus  fob  quenched  this 
dart,  which  Saun  (hot  at  him  from  his  wives  tongue.  Shall  we 
Yicetve  food  at  the  hand  of  God,  and  JhaU  not  we  receive  evil} 
Shall  a  few  prefent  troubles  be  a  grave  to  bury  the  remembrance 
of  all  my  paft  and  prefent  mercies  ?  Thou  freakyi  as  one  of  the 
foolijh  women ;  What  God  takes  from  me  is  lefs  than  I  owe  him ; 
but  what  he  leaves  me  is  more  than  he  owes  me.  Salomon  bids 
xayln  the  day  of  adver.fity  confider,  Eccl.  7.  1 4.  our  unbel^enrjjg 
thoughtsand  words  of  God,  arc  the  product  of  a  rafh  tiafty 
fpirit.  Now  faith  is  a  confidering  grace  y  He  that  believes  wilt 
not  make  hajle,  no  not  to  think  or  fpeak  of  God.  Faitb  hath  a 
good  memory,  and  can  tell  the  Chriftian  many  ftones  of  ancient 
mercies  j  and  when  his  prefent  meal  falls  fhort,  it  can  entertain 
the  foul  wjch  acolddifb,  and  not  complain  that  God  keeps  a 

bad. 


the  jhield  of  faith.  637 


bad  houfe  neither.     Thus  David  recovered  himtclf  .when  he  was 
even  tumbling  down  the  hill  of  temptation.     Thti  umy  infirmi- 
ty, but  I  will  remember  the  jeares  of. the  right  hand  of  the    mefi 
High,  I  will  remember  the  wor^s  of  the  Lord,  furely  i  will  remem- 
ber thy  wonders  of  old ',  Pfal.  77.  10,  11.    Therefore  Chr  ftian  , 
when  thou  art  in  thy  depths  of  affliction,  and  Satan  tempts  thee 
to  afperfe  God,  as  if  he  were  forgetful  of  thee,  flop  his  mouth 
with  this,  No. Satan ,  Cfodhath  not  forgot  to  do  for  me,  but  I  have 
forgot  what  he  hath  done  for  me,  or  elfel  could  not  quefiion  his  fa- 
therly care  at  prefent  over  me ;    Go  Chriftian,  play  over  thy  old 
lelTons,  praiieGodfor  paft  mercies,  and  it  will  not  be  long  be- 
fore  thou  haft  a  new  fong  put  into  thy  mouth  for  prefent  mercy. 
Secondly,  a$  faith  fpies  mercy  in  every  affliction,  fo  it  keeps  up  an 
expedation  in  the  foule  for  more  mercy;  which  confidence  dif- 
pofeth  the  foul  to  praifc  God  for , as  if  the  mercy  were  then  in  be- 
ing,   Daniel ',  when  in  the  very  fhadow  of  death,  the  plot  laid  to 
takeaway  his  life,  three  times  a  day  he  prayed,  and  gave  thanks 
before  his  God.    To  have  heard  him  pray  in  that  great  ftreight, 
would  not  have  afforded  fo  much  matter  »f  wonder:    but  to 
have  his  heart  in  tune  for  cbankfgiving  in  fuck  a  fad  houre  ,  this 
was  admirable,  and  his  faith  enabled  him,  Dan.  6  1 0.     Mercy  in 
thePromife,  is  as  the  Apple  in  the  feed  •,  faith  fees  it  growing 
up,  the  mercy  a  coming.    Now  a  foul  under  expectation  of  deli- 
verance, how  will  it  fcorn  a  blafphemous  motion?  when  relief 
is  known  to  be  on  its  way  for  a .  uarrifon  befieged,  it  raifcth  their 
fpirits^  they  will  not  then  hearken  to  the  traitorous  motion   of 
the  enemy,    'tis  when  unbelief  is  the  C  ounfellour,  and  the  foul 
under  doubts  and  fufpicions  of  Gods  heart  to  it,  that  Satan  findes 
welcome  upon  fuch  an  errand ,  an  excellent  inftance  for  both 
wehavcinonechapter,  'fa.  8.  we  tiad.verjt  17.  what  is  the 
effeft  of  faith,  and  that  is  a  chearful  waiting  on  God  in   ftraits. 
J  will  wait  upon  the  Lord,  tl  at  hideth  hto  face  from  the  houfe  of  fa- 
nob,  and  J  will  lookjor  him,  and  ver.  2 1 .  We  have  the  fruit  of  un- 
belief, and  that  is  no  lefs  than  blafphemy  ;    And  it  fhall  come  to 
pafs%  that  when  they  (ball be  hungry ythey  (haU  fret  themfelves,  and 
curie  their  King,   and  their  God,  and  lookj*pward.     Faith   keeps 
the  believer  in  a  waiting  pofture  •,  and  unbelief  fets  the  (inner   a 
curling  both  God  and  man .    None  efcapes  his  la(h,  that  crofTcth  . 
him  in  his  way,no  not  Godhimfelf. 

LIU:  3  Fourthly, 


5^8  Above  all  taking 


Fourthly ,  faith  quenches  this  fiery  dart,  by  purifying  the  heart 
of  that  enmity  againft  God,  which  in  mans  corrupt  nature  is 
fuel  for  fuch  a  temptation.  Backbiters,  haters  ofGcd ,  and  de- 
lightful, are  joyned  together,  Rom.  i .  30.  No  wonder,  that  a 
man  whofe  fpirit  is  full  of  rancour  againft  another,  (h^uldbc 
eafily  perfwaded  to  revile  him  he  hates  fo  much.  Every  unbe- 
liever is  a  hater  of  God,  and  foil  in  a  difpofition  to  blafpheme 
God,when  his  will  or  luft  is  croffed  by  God.  But  faith  flays  this 
enmity  of  the  heart,  yea,  it  works  love  in  the  foul  to  God,  and 
then  works  by  this  love.  Now  it  is  one  property  of  love,  to 
think^tto  evil,  iCor.  13.5.  that  is,  a  man  will  neither' plot  any 
evil  againft  him  he  loves  •,  nor  eafily  fufpeft  any  evil  to  be  plot- 
ted by  him  againft  himfelf.  Love  reades  the  actions  of  a  friend 
through  fuch  clear  fpe&acles  of  candour  and  ingenuity,  as  will 
make  a  dark  print  fecm  a  fair  chari&er .,  It  interprets  all  he  doth, 
with  fo  much  fweetnefs  and  (implicity,  that  thofe  paiTagcs  in 
his  behaviour  towards  her,  which,  to  another  would  ftem  in- 
tricate and  fufpicious^are  plain  and  pleafingto  her  •,  becaufe  (he 
ever  puts  the  moft  favourable  fenfe  upon  all  he  doth  that  is  pof- 
fible.  The  believer  dares  not  himlelf  plot  any  evil  of  fin  againft 
God,  whom  (  from  the  report  that  faith  hath  made  of  him  to 
hisfoule)  he  loves  fo  dearly.  And  as  love  will  not  fuffer  him 
:  to  turnetraitour  againft  a  good  God,  io  neither  will  it  fuffer 
him  to  harbour  any  jealous  thoughts  of  Gods  heart  towards 
him ;  as  if  he,  who  was  the  firft  lover,and  taught  the  foule  to  lovt 
him,  by  making  love  to  her,  could  after  all  this,  frame  any  plot 
of  real  unkindnefs  againft  it.  No,  this  thought,  though  Satan 
may  force  it  in  a  manner  upon  thefc hriftian,  and  violently  prefs 
for  its  entertainment,  under  the  advantage  of  fome  frowning 
providence,  (which  feems  to  countenance  luch  a  fufpition)  yet 
iccan  never  find  welcome,  fo  far  as  to  be  credited  in  the  foul , 
where  love  to  God  hath  any  thing  to  do.  And  fnrely  there  is  no 
fear,  that  foul  will  be  perfwaded  wickedly  to  belch  out  blafphe- 
mies  againft  God,  who  fo  abominates  but  the  furmifing  theleaft 
fufpicion  of  God  in  her  moft  fecret  thoughts. 

The  fecouddefigne  Satan  hath  in, thefe  blafphemous  tempta- 
tions, is  the  Chriftians  trouble  and  vexation.  Though  he  doth 
not  find  the  Chrlftianfo  kind,  as  to  take  thefe  his  gue'fts  in,  and 
give  them  lodging  for  his  fake,  yet  he  knows,  it-will  not  a  little 

difturb 


the  Jbield  of  faith.  639 


d  ifturband  break  his  reft,  to  have  them  continually  knocking  and 
rapping  at  his  door  j  yea,  when  he  cannot  pollute  the  Chriftian^ 
by  obtaining  his  confcnt  to  them  -  even  then  he  hopes  to  create 
him  no  little  difquiet  and  diftrac"tion,  byaccafing  him  for  what 
he  will  not  commit  ^  and  fo  of  a  defiler  (  which  rather  he  would 
have  been)  he  is  forced  to  turneflanderous  reviler  and  falfe  accu- 
ser.   Thus  the  whore  fometimes  accufeth  the  honeft  man,  meerjy 
to  be  revenged  on  him,  becaufe  he  will  not  yield  to  fatisfte  her 
luft.     fofeph  would  not  lie  with  his  Miftrky  and  (he  raifeth  a 
horrible  lye  on  him.    The  devil  is  the  blafphemer,  but  the  poor 
Chriftian  (becau[e  he  will  not  joyn  with  him  in  thefaftj  (hall 
havethe  name  and  bearc  the  blame  of  it.    As  the  Jews,  com- 
pelled  Simon  of  Cyrene  to  carry  Chrifts  crofs,  fo   Satan  would 
compel  the  tempted  Chriftian,  to  carry  the  guilt  of  his  finne  for 
him.    And  many  times  he  doth  fo  handfomely ,  and  with  fuch 
flight  of  hand  fhifc  it  from  himfelf  to  the  Chriftians  back,  that  he 
poor  creature,  perceives  not  the  juglers  art  of  conveighing  it 
unto  him,  but  goes  complaining  only  of  the  bafcncfs  of  his  own 
heart.    And  as  it  fometimes  fo  falls  out,that  a  true  man,in  whofc 
houfeftolen  goods  are  found,  fuffers,  bccaufe  he  cannot  find  out 
the  thief  that  left  them  there.    So  the  Chriftian  fuffers  many  fad 
terroursfromthemeerprefenceofthefe  horrid  thoughts  in  his 
bofome,  becaufe  he  is  notable  to  fay,  whofe  they  are ;  whether 
(hot  in  by  Satan*  or  the  -(teaming  forth  of  his  own   naughty 
heart.    The  humble  Chriftian  is  prone  to  fcare  the-worft  of  him-  - 
felf,even  where  he  is  not  confcious  to  himfelf.    Like  the  Patri- 
archs, who  when  the  cup  was  found  in  Benjamins  fack ,  took  the 
blame  to  themfelves,  though  they  were  innocent  in  the  fad;.  And  . 
fnch  is  the  confuiion  fometimes  in  the  Chriftians  thoughts,  that 
he  is  ready   to  charge  himfelf  with  thole  brats,  that  fhould  be. 
laid  at  another  door.    Satans,  I  mean.    Now  here  I  (hail  (hew 
you  how  faith  defcateth  this  fecoud  defign  of  the  devil  in   thefe  . 
blafphemons  motions.    And  this  it  doth  two  wayes.    F.irft,  by 
helping  the  Chriftian  to  difcern  Satans  injections  from  the  mo- 
tions of  his  own  heart.    Secondiy,by  fuccouringhim  though  they 
rife  of  his  own  heart. 

Firft,  faith  teaches  the  Chriftian  todifcerne,  and  diftinguifh 
thofe  fire-balls  of  temptations,which  are  thrown  in  at  his  window 
by  Satan  t  from  thofe  (parks  of  corruption,  which  fly  from  his 

own  > 


I 


640  Above  all  taking 

own  hearth ,  and  take  fire  at  his  own  fir.ful  heart.  And  cer- 
tainly ,  thole  blafphemous  thoughts ,  of  which  many  gracious 
fouls  make  fuch  fad  complaint ,  will  be  found  vety  often  of  the 
former  fort ,  as  may  the  more  probably  appear ,  if  we  con- 
(ider  -,  The  time  when  they  firft  ftirre  and  are  moft  bufies  The 
manner  how  they  come ,  and  laftly ,  the  efted  they  have  on 
theChriftians  heart. 

Firft ,  the  time,  when  they  begin  to  ft  irrc,  and  the  foul  to  be 
haunted  with  them ,  and  that  is  ordinarily,  when  the  work  of 
conversion  hath  newly  parted ,  oris  palling  upon  him :  when  the 
creature  falls  off  from  his  old  finful  courfe ,  to  embrace  Chrift, 
and  declares  for  him  againft  finne  and  Satan-,  This  is  the  time 
when  thefe  blafphemous  fuggeftions  begin  to  make  their  appa- 
rition, and  thefe  vermin  arc  feen  to  crawl  in  the  Chr  iftians  bofom: 
a  (trong  probability  that  they  do  not  breed  thetc ,  butarefent 
from  Satan  by  way  of  revenge  for  the  fouls  revolt  from  him ; 
The  Devil  dealing  by  the  Chriftian  in  this,  not  much  unlike  to 
what  his  own  fworn  fervants  (witches  I  mcanej  are  known  to  do, 
who  to  expreffe  their  fpight  againft  thofe  that  erode  them,  fomc- 
times  caufe  them  to  fwarme  with  lice,  or  fuch  kinde  of  vermin,  to 
make  them  loathfome  to  themfelves-  And  as  one  that  never 
found  fuch  vermin  crawling  about  him  before,  might  well  wonder 
to  fee  himfelf  fo  fuddenly  ftockt  with  a  multitude  of  them;  yea, 
might  rather  impute  it  to  the  witches  malice,  than  to  the  corrup- 
tion of  his  own  body  that  bred  them.  So  in  this  cafe.  Indeed 
'tis  very  improbable  to  think,  that  the  creature  fhould  in  this 
juncture  of  time  above  all ,  fall  fo  foul  with  God  by  (inning 
againft  him ,  at  fuch  a  height  as  this  ^  is  it  likely ,  that  he  can, 
while  he  is  in  tears  for  the  finncsof  his  part  life,  commit  a  greater 
than  any  of  them  he  mourns  for  f  or,  that  he  dare,  while  he  is 
crying  for  pardoning  mercy  with  a  trembling  heart,  block  up  the 
way  to  his  own  prayers  ,  and  harden  Gods  heart  into  a  denial  of 
them  ,  by  fuch  horrid  finncs  as  thefe  are  ?  In  a  word,  feems  it  not 
ftrange, thatallthcwhilche wasafirangcr  to,  yea,  an  enemy 
againft  God ,  he  durft  not  venture  on  this  fin  for  the  prodigious 
nature  of  it,  and  that  now  he  begins  to  love  God,  thole  Wafphe- 
roiesftiould  fit  his  mouth,  which  were  too  big  and  horrid  before 
for  him  to  m;ddle  with. 

Secondly ,  the  manner  how  thefe  blasphemies  rife  in  the 

Chriftians 


the  (fjield  of  faith.  &a\ 


Chriftians  thoughts ,  will  encreafe  the  probability,  that  they  are 
inje&ions  from  Satan  without ,   rather  than  motions  of  the 
Chriftians  own  heart  within.     They  are  commonly  violent  and 
fuddain-,  they  come  like  lightning ,  flafhing  into  the  Chriftians 
thoughts,  before  he  hath  time  to  deliberate  with  nimfelf  what  he 
is  doing  ^  whereas  that  luft  ,  which  is  the  ebullition  of  our  own 
hearts,  is  ordinarily  gradual  in  its  motion ;  it  moves  in  a  way 
more  ftill  and  futable  to  mans    nature  s  it    doth   entice  the 
foul ,  and  by  degrees  Highly  enveagles  it  into  a  confent ;  making 
firft  the  affections  on  its  Tide,  which  then  it  employeth  to  corrupt 
the underftanding ,  and  take  it  off  from  appearing  againft  it  (by 
putting  its  eye  out  with  fome  bribe  of  fenfual  pleafure  and  profit) 
and  fo,  by  thefe  paces  it  comes  at  laft  to  have  a  more  eafie  accefle 
to,  and  fucceffe  over  the  will  •,  which  being  now  deprived  of  her 
guard ,  yields  the  fooner  to  the  fummons  that  luft  makes.  But 
thefe  fudden  dartings  of  blafphemous  thoughts,  they  make  a 
forcible  entry  upon  the  foul,  without  any  application  ufedto 
gain  its  good  will  to  come  in ;  their  driving  is  like  the  driving  of 
that  hcllifh  Jehu,  it  is  the  Devil  that  is  got  into  the  box,  who  elfe 
could  drive  fo  furioufly?  yea,  not  only  their  fuddenncfle  and 
violence ,  but  incoherence  with  the  Chriftians  former  thoughts 
andcourfe ,  do  ftill  heighten  the  probability ,  that  they  are  darts 
(hot  from  the  Devils  bowcPete r  was  once  known  to  be  of  Chrifts 
company  by  his  voice :  thy  ffreech  (fay  they)  bewray eth  thee  j  he 
fj?ake  like  them,  therefore  was  judged  one  of  them;  on  the  con- 
trary, we  may  fay  of  thefe  blafphemous  motions,  They  are  not 
the  Chriftians  •  their  language  bewrays  them  to  be  rather  the 
belching  of  a  Devil,  than  the  voice  of  a  Saint.  If  they  were  woven 
by  the  foul ,  they  would  be  fomething  like  the  whole  piece,from 
which  they  are  cut  off.  There  is  ordinarily  a  dependency  in 
our  thoughts ,  we  take  the  hint  from  one  thought  for,another;as 
circle  rifeth  out  of  circle  in  the  moved  water ,  fo  doth  thought 
out  of  thought ,  till  they  fpread  into  a  difcourfe.  Now,  may  not 
the  Chriftian  well  wonder  to  fee ,  may  be  when  he  is  at  the  wor- 
fhip  of  God ,  and  taken  up  with  holy  and  heavenly  meditations,a 
blafphemous  thought  on  a  fudden  appear  in  the  midftoffuch 
company,  to  which  it  isfo  great  a  ftranger.'  andalfohowit 
(hould  get  in  among  them  ?  if  a  holy  thought  furprizeth  us  on  a 
fudden ,  when  we  (tand  as  it  were  with  our  back  on  heaven,  and 
there  be  nothing  in  the  difcourfe  our  hearts  at  prefent  are  hold- 

Mmram  ing, 


£.2  Above  all  taking 


inq,to  ulheritin,  we  may  take  it  as  a  pure  motion  of  the  Spirit  of 
Chrill  •,  who  indeed  but  he,  could  be  fo  foon  in  themidftofthe 
foul,  when  the  door  is  (but,  even  before  the  creature  can  turn  his 
thoughts  to  open  it  for  him  ?  and  probably  thefe  blafphemies 
which  rufh  upon  thee,  O  Chriftian,at  a  time,when  thy  foul  is  at 
the  fartheft  diftancc  from  fuch  thoughts,  yea,  failing  to  the  clean 
contrary  point,  in  thy  praying  to  and  praiiing  of  God,  are  the 
irruptions  of  that  wicked  one,  and  that  on  purpofe  to  interrupt 
thee  in  that  work,  which  of  all  other  he  feares  and  hates 
raoft, 

Thirdly,  the  effed  thefe  blafphemous  notions  have  on  the 
heart,  may  make  us  think  they  are  Satans  brats,  rather  than  the 
birth  or  the  Chriftians  own  heart :    And  that  is,a  difmal  horrour 
and  confternation  of  the  Chriftians  fpirit,which  reachcth  often  to 
thedifcompofureofthebody.    So  that  an  apparition   of  the 
devil  to  their  bodily  eyes,  could  not  affright  them  more   than 
thefe  blafphemies  do,  that  walk  in  their  imagination.    Yea,they 
do  not  only  caufe  an  horrour,  but  ftir  up  a  vehement  indignation 
and  abhorrency  in  the  foul  at  their  prefence.    If  now  they  be  the 
birth  of  the  Ghriftmns  own  heart,  why  this  horrour  ?  whence 
this  indignation  r  thofe  motions  which  arife  from  our  felves,  ufe 
to  plea/c  us  better.    It  is  natural  for  men  to  love  the  children  of 
their  own  loynes,thcugh  black  ar  d  deformed  ^  and  as  nattiral,to 
liKe  the  conceptions  of  their  own  minds.     Solomon  found  out  the 
true  mother,  by  her  tendernefs  to  the  child.     If  thefe blafphe- 
mies w.re  the  i  flue  of  the  heart,  familiarity  with  them  might  be 
expscVd,  rnherthan  horrour  at  the  fight  of  them  j  favour  to 
them,  rather  than  abhorrency  of  d.em  i  were  it  not  more  likely 
(poor  foul  J  that  thou  wouldft  kifs  them  (  if  thy  own  )  than 
fcek  to  kill  them  ?  draw  out  thy  breaft  tonurfe  and  fuckle  them, 
than  the  fword  of  the  Spirit  to  deftroy  them  ?    And  if  fo  ( faith 
faith,)  that  thefe  be  Satans  brats,  why  then  art  thou  troubled 
becaufe  helayesthematthy  doore  ?    Is  thechafte  woman  the 
more  whore,  becaufe  force  foul  tongue  calls  her  fo  ?  have  pati- 
ence a  little  poore  foul  •  the  Judge  is  at  the  doore,  and  when  he 
comes,thou  (halt  be  called  by  thy  right  name.    Sit  not  thou  any 
longer  wounding  thy  foul  wi:h  his  dart,  and  troubling  thy  felffor 
the  devils  (in,  but  go  and  complaineof  him  to  rhy  God  :     And 
when  thou  haft  fpread  his  bh^Iumies  before  the  Lord,  as  //W- 


the  fbield  of  faith.  ddo 


.  t 


kjah  did  l\ab{h(kabt ;  comfort  thy  feF  with  :his ,  that  Go^  will 
fpread  thy  caufe  againft  thisfalfe  accufer.and  fend  him  away  with 
as  much  fhame,  and  as  little  fuccefie ,  as  he  did  that  barking  dog, 
who  fo  reviled  God,  and  railed  on  his  people. 

But  fecondly ,  fuppofe  thefe  blasphemous  motions ,  be  the 
Chnftians  own  ilns ,  bred  in  his  own  heart,  and  not  the  Devils 
brats  falfly  fathered  on  him  ^  yet  here  faith  relieves  the  Chr  fti- 
an,  when  diftrefTed  with  the  guilt  of  them  and  vaan  labours 
raoft  to  aggravate  them.  Now  the  fuccour  faith  brings  the  foul 
here,  is  manifold. 

Faith  can  aflure  the  foul  uponfolid  ^cripturebottome,  that 
thefe  blafphemous  thoughts  are  pardonable  ,  Mat.  12. 3 1  11 
manner  of  finne  and  blafcbcmj  fhall  be  forgiven  unto  men ,  bu-  the 
blafyhemy  againft'  the  holy  Ghofi  [hall  not  be  forgiven  unto  m^n,  And 
it  were  ftrange,  if  thy  fancy  fhould  be  fo  wild  and  melancholy,  as 
Co  think  thoufeeft  this  only  unpardonable  blafphemy  ( which  is 
ever  markt  on  the  forehead  with  final!  impcnitency  and  defperate 
hatred  againft  Godjin  thofe  loofe  roving  thoughts,  that  never 
yet  could  gain  any  confent  from  thy  heart  to  them,  but  continues 
Co  difavow,  and  pr  teft  againft  them.  I  fay  it  were  very  ftrange 
that  thou  couldft  long  miftake  thofe  unwelcome  guefts  for  that 
wicked  fin.  Now  for  thy  comfort ,  thou  heareft  all  manner  of 
blafphemy  befides  that  one  fhall  heforgiven^  a  pardon  for  them 
may  be  fiKd  out  in  the  court  of  mercy,  how  terrible  and  amazing 
foever  their  circumftances  are  to  thy  trembling  foul,  and  if  the 
creature  believes  this,  Satans  dart  is  quencht;  for  his  defigne  is  to 
make  ufe  of  thefe  temptations  as  a  trap-door,by  which  he  may  let 
thy  foul  down  into  defpair. 

Faith  refolves  the  foul,  that  the  ebullition  of  fuch  thoughts  is  2, 

not  mconfiitent  with  the  Hate  of  grace  •  and  if  the  foul  be  well 
fatisfied  in  this  point,  the  Devils  fiery  dart  hath  loft  its  invenom'd 
head,  which  ufes  fo  much  to  driok  up  the  Chriftians  fpirits.  The 
cotgunon  inference  which  he  makes  tempted  fouls  draw  from  the 
prefcoce of  thefe  thoughts  in  them,  is,  furely  I  am  not  a  Saint; 
This  is  not  the  fpot  of  /ods  children;  but  faith  is  able  to  dis- 
prove this,  and  challenges  Satan  to  fhew  (as  well  read  as  he  i«  in 
the  veriptmes)  one  place  in  all  the  Bible,  that  countenanceth  fuch 
aconclufion.  Indeed  there  is  none.  It  is  true ,  the  b'afphemy 
ej  bUfphemies  (T  meane  the  fin  againft  the  holy  Ghoft)  with  this 

Mm  mm  2  the 


6  a  a  Above  all  tahjtig 


the  evil  one  (hall  never  touch  a  true  believer;  but  I  know  no  kinde 
of  fin,  (hort/of  chat ,  from  which  he  hath  any  fuch  protection,  or 
immunity,  as  makes  it  impofliblehefhouldforatimebefoiled 
by  it.  1  he  whole  body  of  fin  indeed  is  weakned  in  every  believer, 
and  a  deadly  wound  given  by  the  grace  of  God  to  his  corrupt  na- 
ture ,  which  it  (hall  never  claw  off,  but  at  laft  dye  by  it.  Yet  as 
a  dying  tree  may  beare  fome  fruit ,  though  not  fo  much,  nor  that 
lb  full ,  and  ripe,  as  before s  as  a  dying  man  may  move  his 
hmbs ,  though  not  fo  ftror.gly  as  when  he  was  in  health  j  fo  o- 
riginal  corruption  in  a  Saint  will  be  ftirring ,  though  but  feebly; 
and  (hewing  its  fruit ,  though  it  be  but  crumpted  and  unripe  j 
and  thou  haft  nocaufe  to  be  difcouragedjthatitftirs^but  to  be 
comforted  that  it  can  but  ftir,    O  be  thankful  thou  haft  got 
thy  enemy ,  who  even  now  was  matter  of  the  field,  and  had  thee 
tyed  to  his  triumphant  chariot ,  now  himfelf  on  his  knees,  under 
the  victorious  f word  of  Chriftand  his  grace  ,  ready  to  drop  into 
bis  grave,  though  lifting  up  his  hand  againft  thee  to  (hew  his 
enmity  continues ,  when  his  power  failes  to  do  execution  as  he 
would. 

Thirdly ,  faith  can  clear  it  to  the  foul,that  thefc  blafphemous 
thoughts,  as  they  are  commonly  entertained  in  a  Saint,  are  not 
fo  great  finsin  Gods  account ,  as  fome  other ,  that  paffe  for  lefle 
in  our  account.    The  Chriftian  commonly  contracts  more  guilt, 
by  a  few  proud  ,  unclean,covetous  thoughts,  than  by  many  blaf- 
phemous ;  becaufe  the  Chriftian  feldome  gets  fo  clear  a  victory 
over  thofe ,  as  over  thefe  of  blafphemy.   The  fiery  darts  of  blaf- 
phemy  may  fcare  the  Chriftian  more,  but  fiery  lufts  wound  fooner 
and  deeper.     It  was  the  warme  fun  made  the  travcllour  open  his 
cloak ,  which  the  bluftering  wind  made  wrap  clofer  to  him. 
Temptations  of  pleafure  entice  the  heart  to  them  -,  whereas  the 
horrid  nature  of  the  other,  ftirs  up  the  Chriftian  to  a  more  vali- 
ant refiftanceof  them.    O  the  Chriftian  is  foon  overtaken  with 
thefe,  they  are  like  poifonin  fweetwine,  they  are  down  before 
he  is  aware,;- nd  do  diflfufe  a  pace  into  his  arFed:ion5,poyfoning  the 
Chnitiansfpirits ,  but  thefe  of  blafphemy  are  like  poyfon  in  fome 
bitter  potion  ,  either  it  is  fpit  out  before  it  is  down  ,  or  vomited 
upb   the  Chriftian  be  ore  it  hathfpread  it  felf  far  into  hisaffe- 
ftions.    :  inncs  arc  great  or  fmall,by  the  (hare  the  will  hath  in  the 
acting  of  them,  and  blafphemous  thoughts  commonly  having 

lefle 


the  jhield  of  faith.  64  c 


lefTc  of  the  Chriftians  will  and  affe&ions  in  them,  than  the  other, 
cannot  be  a  greater  (in. 

Fourthly,  faith  tells  the  foul  that  God  may  have,  yea,  un- 
doubtedly hath  gracious  ends  in  differing  him  to  be  haunted  with 
fuch  troublefome  guefts,  or  elfe  they  (hould  not  be  fent  to  quar- 
ter on  him,    Poffibly ,  God  faw  forae  other  finne  thou  were  in 
great  danger  of ,  and  he  fends  Satan  to  trouble  thee  with  thefe 
temptations,  that  he  may  not  overcome  thee  in  the  other.  And 
though  a  plaiftcr  or  poulteiTe  be  very  offensive,  and  loathfome, 
yet  better  endure  that  a  while,  than  a  difeafe,  which  will  hazard 
thy  life.    Better  tremble  at  the  fight  of  blafphemous  thoughts, 
than  ftrut  thy  felf  in  the  pride  of  thy  heart  at  the  fight  of  thy 
gifts  and  priviledges.    The  firft  will  make  thee  think  thy  felf  as 
vile  as  the  Devil  himfelf  in  thy  own  eyes  •  but  the  other  will 
make  thee  prodigioufly  wicked  ,  and  fo  indeed  like  the  Devil  in 
Gods  eyes. 

Faith  will  puttheChriftian  on  fome  noble  exploits  for  God, 
thereby  to  vindicate  bimfelf,  and  prove  the  Devils  charge  a  lyc^s 
one  that  is  accufed  for  fome  traiterous  defigne  againft  his  Prince, 
to  wipe  off  that  calumny,  doth  undertake  fome  notable  enter- 
prize  for  the  honour  of  his  Prince.    This  indeed  is  the  fulled  re- 
venge the  Chriftian  can  take ,  either  of  Satan  for  troubling  him 
with  fuch  inje&ions ,  or  his  own  heart  for  tlTuing  out  fuch  im- 
pure ftreames.  When  cDavid  preferM  Sauls  life  in  the  cave  above 
a  Kingdome ,  which  one  hearty  blow  might  have  procured  him, 
he  proved  all  his  enemies  lyars  that  had  brought  him  under  a 
fnfpition  at  C»urt  •,  Thus  Chriftian ,  do  thou  by  the  honour  of 
God,  when  it  cometh  in  competition  with  fin  and  felf  j  and  thou 
wilt  ftop  the  Devils  mouth,  who  fometimesis  ready  to  make  thee 
jealous  of  thy  felf,  as  if  thou  wert  a  blafphemcr.     Such  heroick 
ads  of  zeale  and  felf-denial ,  would  fpeak  more  for  tby  purgation 
before  God  and  thy  own  conlcience,  than  thefe  fodden  thoughts  ^ 
can  do  againft  thee. 


Mm  mm  3-  CHAP, 


6*  6  Above  all  tal^ng 


'5?4?  *?(£*  t  k*?<i.  «*£**<  >•*=?»  -r«*»  i>»i<«i <•**»  ir**i 

W^'  qjj*f*  *5*  ;jg*  ^ *J*  -*£ 


CHAP.   XIX. 

The  third  fiery  dart  of  de/pair,  and  the  chief  argu- 
ment which  Satan  urgetb  mofi  upon  fouls  to 
drive  them  into  it  (taken  from  the  greatneffe  of 
finne  )refeUvd}as  alfo  the  fir fi  anfwer  with  which 
faith  fumijbeth  the  foul  for  this  pnrpofe, 

■ 

THc  third  fiery  dart  which  Satan  lets  flie  at  the  Chriftian  is, 
his  temptation  to  defpaire.  This  curfed  fiend  thinks  he 
can  neither  revenge  himfelfe  further  on  God ,  nor  engrave 
his  own  image  deeper  on  the  crearure ,  than  by  this  finne-,  which 
at  once  caftecb  the  greateft  fcornc  upon  God ,  and  brings  the 
creature  neareft  the  complexion  of  Devils  and  damned  fouls  ^ 
who  by  lying  continually  under  the  fcorching  wrath  of  God,  in 
hells  horrid  zone,  are  blackt  all  over  with  defpaire.  This  is  the 
finne  ,  that  of  all  Satan  chefly  airaes  at  •,  other  finnes  are  but  as 
previous  difpofition>  ro  introduce  that ,  and  make  the  creature 
more  receptive  for  fuch  a  temptation.  As  the  wool!  hath  a  tin- 
cture o/  fome  lighter  colours  given  it ,  before  it  can  be  dyed  into 
a  deep  graine;  fo  Satan  hath  his  more  lightfome  and  pleafant 
finnes,  which  he  at  firft  entices  to,  that  he  may  the  better  difpofe 
the  a  eature  to  this^  bu  t  this  is  kept  by  him  as  a  grear  fecrct  from 
the  creatures  knowledg.  The  Devil  is  too  cunnng  a  fowler,  to 
lav  his  net  in  the  birds  fight  he  means  to  take  j  defpair  is  the  net, 
other  finnes  are  but  the  fhrap,whereby  he  covers  it,and  fo  flatters 
them  into  it  •  which  done ,  h$  hath  them  fafe  to  eternity.  This 
above  all  finnes  puts  a  man  into  a  kind  of  actual  poffefiion  of  hell. 
O  ther  fins  bind  over  to  wrath,but  this  gives  fire  to  the  threatning 

and 


the  Jbield  of  faith.  547 

and  fets  the  foul  on  a  light  flame  with  horrour.     As  it  is 
faiths  excellency  to  give  a  being  to  the  word  of  promife;  fo 
it  is  the  cruelty  of  defpair ,  that  it  gives  an  exiftence  to  the 
torments  of  hell  in  the  confeience.    This  is  the  arrow  that 
drinks  up  the  fpirit,  and  makes  the  creature  executioner  to 
it  felf.    Defpair  puts  a  foul  beyond  all  relief;  the  offer  of  a  par- 
don comes  too  late  to  him  that  hath  turnM  himfelf  off  the  Lad- 
der.   Other  temptations  have  their  way  to  efcape  ;  faith  and 
hope  can  open  a  window  to  let  out  the  fmoke  that  offends 
the  Chriftian  in  any  condition  ,  be  it  at  prefent  never  fo  fad 
and  forrowful  •  but  then  the  foul  muft  needs  be  choaked,  when  k 
is  fhutup  within  the  defpairing  thoughts  of  its  ownfinnes,  and 
nocrevis  of  hope  left ,  to  be  an  out-let  to  any  of  that  horrour 
with  which  they  fill  him. 


SECT,  I. 

I  might  here  inftance  in  thofe  many  Media  s  or  Arguments  Sa- 
tan uteth  to  difpute  fouls  into  defpair  from,  and  how  able  faith, 
and  onely  faith  is,  to  anfwer  and  refel  them;  but  I  (hall  content 
my  felfe  with  one  to  dilate  upon-  whichis  the  chief  ofallSatans 
ftrength  ,  and  that  is  taken  from  the  greatneflfe  and  multitude  of 
the  creatures  iinnesj  which  When  it  is  enlightned  to  fee,and  hath 
the  brawniheis  of  its  confeience  pared  off,  to  feel  with  remorfe, 
and  then,  God  do  but  allow  Satan  to  ufe  his  Rhethorick  in  de- 
claiming againft  the  hainoufnefs  of  them  ;  the  poor  creature 
muft  need-  be  in  a  doleful  condition ,  and  of  neceffity  fink  into 
the  depths  of  defpaire ,  for  all  the  help  it  can  finde  from  it   felf 
within,or  any  other  creature  without  doors.    Perhaps  fome   of 
you  ,  (who  havefleighty  thoughts  of  your  own  finnes  )  think  it 
proves  but  a  childifh  impotent  fpirit  in  others,  to  be  fo  troubled 
for  theirs-,  and  in  this  you  (hew  that  you   never  were  in  .' atans 
frocks,  pinched  by  his  temptations  ^  thofe  who  have,  will  fpeak 
in  another  language,  and  tell  you,  that  the  fins  which  are  un- 
feltby  yoi1,  have   layen  like  a  mountain  ofiead  upon  their  fpi- 
rits.     O,  when  a  breach  is  once  made  in  the  confeience,  and  the 
waves  of  guilt  poure  in  amain  upon  the  foul,  it  foon  overtops 
alUhe  creatures  fhifts  and  apologies ,  as  the  floe'd  did  the   o:d 

world, 


5 a.8  Above  all  taking 


world  ,  that  covered  the  tailed  trees  and  higheft  mountains :  As 
nothing  then  was  vifible  but  fea  and  heaven  •  fo  in  fuch  a 
foul  9  nothing  but  finne  and  hell ;  his  finnes  flare  him  in  the  face, 
as  with  the  eyes  of  fo  many  Devils ,  ready  to  drag  him  into  the 
bottomleffe  pit  -y  every  (illy  flic  dares  creep  upon  the  Lion  while 
afleep ;  whofe  voice  all  the  beafts  in  the  forreft  tremble  at,  when 
he  awakes.  Fools  can  make  a  mock  of  finne,  when  confidences 
eye  is  out ,  or  fhut  ^  they  can  then  dance  about  it ,  as  the  Phi- 
liflines  about  blinde  Samffon-y  but  when  God  arms  fin  with  guilt, 
and  caufeth  this  ferpent  to  put  forth  his  fting  upon  the  confci- 
cnce ,  then  the  proudeft  (inner  of  them  all  flie  before  it.  Now  it 
is  faith  that  alone  can  grapple  with  fin  in  its  ftrength  -  which  it 
doth  feveral  wayes. 


SECT.  I. 

I%  Firfi,  faith  gives  the  foul  a  view  of  the  great  God.    It  tcach- 

eth  the  foul  to  fet  his  Almightineffe  againft  finnes  magnitude,and 
his  infinitude  againft  finnes  multitude^  and  fo  quencheth  the  tem- 
ptation. The  reafon  why  the  prefumptuous  finner  fears  fo  lit- 
tle, and  the  defpairing  foul  fo  much,  is  for  want  of  knowing  God 
as  great ;  therefore  to  cure  them  both  ,  the  ferious  confiderati- 
onof  God  under,  this  notion  is  propounded,  Pfal.  46. 10.  Be 
ftiU%  and  know  that  I  am  God:  as  if  he  faadfaid,  Know,  Oye 
wicked,  that  I  am  God,  who  can  avenge  my  felf  when  I  pleafe, 
upon  you ,  and  ceafe  to  provoke  me  by  your  finnes  to  your  own 
confuiion.  Again,  Know  ye  trembling  fouls,  that  I  amGod% 
and  therefore  able  to  pardon  the  greateft  fins,  and  ceafe  to  dif- 
honour  me  by  your  unbelieving  thoughts  of  me.  Now  faith  a- 
lone  can  thus  (hew  God  to  be  God.  Two  things  are  required  to 
the  right  conceiving  of  God.  Firfi,  we  muft  give  him  the  infini- 
tude of  all  his  Attributes,that  is,conceive  of  him  not  only  as  wife, 
for  chat  may  be  a  mans  name,  but  infinitely  wife  -s  not  mighty, 
butAlmighty,&c. 

2«  Secondly y  this  infinitude  which  we  give  to  God,  we  muft  deny 

to  all  befides  him,what  or  whatfoever  they  be.  Now  faith  alone 
can  realize  and  (is  this  principle  fo  in  the  heart,  that  the  creature 

fhalJ 


the  (biddof  faith.  £49 


fhall  ad  fuitably  thereunto  ^  indeed  none  fo  wicked,  who  will 
not  fay,  (if  you  will  believe  themj  that  they  believe  God  is  in- 
finite in  his  knowledge,  and  Omniprefent  at  their  heels  wherever 
they  go  :  infinite  in  hi*  power,  needing  no  more  to  erTed  their 
ruine,  than  his  fpeaking  it  ^  but  would  they  then  in  the  view  of 
thefe,  go  and  fin  (6  boldly  ?  They  durft  as  well  run  their  heads 
into  a  fiery  Oven,  as  do  it  in  the  face  of  fuch  a  principle.  Soo- 
thers, they  believe  God  is  infinite  in  mercy  •  but,  would  they 
then  carry  a  hell  flaming  in  their  bofomes  with  defpair ,  while 
they  have  infinite  mercy  in  their  eye  ?  No, 'tis  plain,  God  ap- 
pears not  in  his  true  greatnefs  to  fuch.  Defpair  robs  God  of 
his  infinitude,  and  afcribes  it  to  fin  ;  By  it  the  creature  faith,  his 
fin  is  infinite,  and  God  is  not  j  too  like  thofe  unbelieving  Jfrae- 
/itt\r,Pfal.  106.7.  They  remembred  not  the  multitude  of  his  mer- 
cies,  but  provoked  him  at  the  fea,  even  at  the  red  fea ;  they  could 
not  fee  enough  in  God  to  ferve  their  turne  at  fuch  a  ftraitj 
they  faw  a  multitude  of  Egyptians  to  kill,  and  multitude  of  wa- 
ters to  drown  them,  but  could  not  fee  multitude  enough  of  mer- 
cies to  deliver  them  :  Thus  the  del  pairing  foul  fees  multitude  of 
great  fins  to  damne,  but  not  an  infinitude  of  mercy  in  the  great 
God  to  fave  him.  Reafon  alas,  is  low  of  ftature,  like  Zacche- 
w,  and  cannot  fee  mercy  in  a  croud  and  prefs  of  finnes ;  'Tis 
faith  alone  that  climbs  the  Promife  j  then,  and  not  till  then  will 
the  foulc  fee  Jefus,  faith  afcribes  mercy  to  God  with  an  over- 
fins^  lf*-%%>7*  He  vpiU  abundant h  pardon  :  multiply  to  par- 
don, fo  the  Hebr.  He  will  drop  pardons  with  our  fins,  which  are 
moft,  He  -will  fptb due  our  iniquities,  and  thou  veilt  cafi  all  their  fins 
intothedepthscfthefea.  This  is  faiths  language:  he  will  pardon 
with  an  over  flowing  mercy  •,  caft  a  ftone  into  the  fea,  and  'tis 
not  barely  covered,  but  buried  many  fathom  deep.  God  will 
pardon  thy  greateft  fins  ('faith  faith)  as  the  fea  doth  a  little  pebble 
throwen  into  it  •  a  few  fins  poured  out  upon  the  confluence,  ( like 
a  pale  of  water  fpilt  on  the  ground)  feems  a  great  flood  •  but  the 
greateft  poured  into  the  fea  of  Gods  mercy,  are  fwallowcd  up 
and  not  feen.  Thusjvhen  the  iniquity  of  ifraclfball  be  fought  for, 
(the  Scripture  faith  )  there  ft  all  be  none  >,  and  the  fins  of  fudah, 
they  fhall  not  be  found.  And  why  fo?  for  J  mil  pardon,  there  is 
the  reafon,  Jer.$ 0.20. 

Nnnn  SECT. 


5° 


Above  all  taking 


i. 


SECT.  III. 

Ob)ett.  O  but  faith  the  trembling  foul,  the  consideration  of  Gods  in- 
finitude, cfpccially  in  two  ot  his  Attributes,  drives  me  faftcft  co 
defpair  j  Ot  all  other  my  perplexed  thoughts,  when  I  think,how 
infinitely  holy  God  is,  may  I  not  fear,  what  will  become  of  me 
an  unholy  wretch  f  when  again  1  look  upon  him  as  juft,  yea,  in- 
finitely juft,  how  can  1  think  he.  will  remit  fo  great  wrongs  as  I 
have  done  to  his  glorious  Name  I 

AnUv.  Faith  will,  and  none  but  faiths  fingers  can  untie  this  knot,  and 

give  the  foule  a  fatisfa&ory  anfwer  to  this  queftion.     And  firft 
for  the  firft  Attribute,  The  Holinefs  of  God. 

Faith  hath  two  things  to  anfwer.  Firft,  that  though  the  in- 
finite holinefs  of  Gods  nature  doth  make  him  vehemently 
hate  fin,  yet  the  fame  doth  ftrongly  encline  his  heart  to  fhew 
mercy  to  finners.  What  is  it  in  the  creature,  that  makes  him 
hard-tiearted.butfinoe  ?  The  tender  mercies  of  the  wicked  are 
cruel,  Prov  12.  -Q.  if  wicked,  then  cruel-,  and  the  more  holy,  the 
more  merciful  ^  hence  it  is,  that  ads  of  mercy  and  forgivenefs, 
are  with  fo  much  difficulty  drawn  (many  times)  from  thofe  that 
are  Saint«,even  like  milk  out  of  a  warded  breaft  ;  becaufe  there  are 
remainders  of  corruption  in  them,wbich  caufc  fometohave  hard* 
refs  of  heart,  andunwillingncfs  to  that  work;  Be  mt  overcome 
with  eviljbut  overcome  evil  with  good,  filth  the  ApoftJc,2?0»z.  i  2.2  t. 
implying,  it  is  a  hard  work  which  cannot  be  done,  till  a  victory 
begorovertheChriftiaus  own  heart-,  who  hath  contrary  paf- 
fiors,  that  will  ftrongly  oppofefuch  an  ad.  How  oft,  alas,  do 
we  hear  fuch  language  as  this,  from  thofe  that  are  gracious  ?  my 
patience  is  fpent  j  I  can  bear  no  longer,  and  forgive  no  more : 
but  Cod,  who  i&  purity  without  drofs-  holinefs,  without  the 
leaft  allay  ar  d.rn  xtureoffinne,  hath  nothingto  fourc  his  htart 
rnfobny  uritnerofulnefe.  Ky-  J  ingevil,  (faith  (hrift)  know 
hove  to  give  gW  gifts  ity*  year  clilaren-,  hsw  much  more ,  Jbali 
your  Father  rrLick  u  m  Irh&ven  gix  e  good  things  to  them  that  fui^ 
him  r  Mat. 7. 1  fj  thrifts  defig'.  m  this  place,  is  to  help  them 
to  larger  apprehenfions  concerning  the  rnercifoLnefs  of  Gods 

heart ; 


the  fhiMnf  faith.  65 1 

heart  j  which  that  he  may  do,  he  directs  them  to  the  thoughts  of 
his  holinefs,  as  that  which  would  infallibly  demonixrate  the 
fame.  As  if  Chrift  had  faid,Can  you  perfwade  your  hearts,  (di- 
ftempered  with  finful  paffions  J  to  be  kinde  to  your  children? 
how  much  more  eafie  is  it  to  think,  that  God  who  is  holinefs 
itfelf,  will  be  lb  to  his  poor  creatures,  proftratc  at  his  ka  for 
mercy  ? 

Secondly ,  faith  can  tell  the  foul,  that  the  holinefs  of  God  is  no  *• 

enemy  to  pardoning  mercy  ^  for 'tis  the  holinefs  of  God,  that 
obligeth  him  to  be  faithful  in  all  his  Prornifcs  •,  and  this  indeed, 
isasfullabreaftofconfolition,  aslknowany,  to  a  poor  trem- 
bling foul :  when  the  doubting  foul  reades  thofe  many  precious 
Promifes  which  are  made  to  returning  finners  ^  why  doth  he  not 
take  comfort  in  them  ?  furely,  itisbecaufethe  truth  and  faith- 
fulnefs  of  God  to  perform  them,  is  yet  under  fomedifputeinhis 
foul.  Now,  the  ftrongeft  Argument  that  faith  hatb,  to  pur  this 
queftion  out  of  doubt,  and  make  the  finner  accept  the  Promife  as 
a  true  and  faithful  Word,  is  that  which  is  taken  from  the  holinefs 
of  God,  who  is  the  Promife-Maker.  It  muft  be  true  (faith  faith,) 
what  the  Promife  fpeaks  •  it  can  be  no  other,  becaufe  a  holy 
God  makes  it ;  Therefore  God,  to  gain  the  more  credit  to  the 
truth  of  his  Promife  in  the  thoughts  of  his  people,  prefixeth  fo 
often  this  Attribute  to  his  Promife,  /  mil  help  thee  ,  faith  the 
Lordy  and  thj  Redeemer,  the  Holy  One  of  ifrael,  Ifa.  41 .  14.  That 
which  in  theHebre w  is  UMercies\vi  the  Septuagint  is  often  r<t  o<nx^ 
Holy  things.  See  l[a.  55.3.  Indeed  the  mercies  of  God  are 
founded  in  holinefs,  and  therefore  are  fure  mercies.  The  reafon 
of  mans  unfaithful nefs  in  Promifes,proceeds  from  forne  unholmefs 
in  his  heart ;  the  more  holy  a  man  is,  the  more  faithful  we  may 
exped  him  to  be  .  a  good  man  ( we  fay)  will  be  as  good  as  his 
word  •  to  be  fure,  a  good  God  w.  11 .  How  many  times  did  La- 
ban  change  Jacobs  wages  after  promife  t  but  Gods  Covenant 
with  him  was  inviolably  kept,  though  hcob  was  not  fo  faithful 
on  his  part  as  he  ought  •,  And  why  ?  but  btcaufe  be  had  to  do 
wirhaholyGodinthisj  but  with  a  finful  man  in  the  other  ; 
whofe  paffions  altered  his  thoughts,and  changed  his  countenance 
towards  him ;  a<;  we  fee  the  clouds  and  winde  do  the  face  of  the 
heavens,  and  temper  of  :he  feafons. 

We  come  to  the  fecond  Attribute,  which  fcares  the  tempted 

Nn  n  n  2  o  ful, 


£ej  3  Above  all  taking 

foul,  and  fcems  fo  little  to  befriend  this  pardoning  Aft  of  Gods 
mercy.  And  that  is,  his  Juftice,  which  proves  often  matter  of 
amazement  to  the  awakened  finner,  racher  than  encouragement, 
efpecially  when  the  ferious  thoughts  of  it  poflcfle  his  heart ;  In- 
deed (my  brethren)  the  naked  confideration  of  this  Attribute, 
(rent  from  the  other)  and  themufingonit,  without  a  Gofpel- 
Comment,  through  which  alone  it  can  be  fafely  and  comfort- 
ably viewed  by  afin-fmitten  foul  J  muft  needs  appale  and  difpirit 
him  whoever  he  be,  yea,  kindle  a  fire  of  horrourin  his  bo- 
fome:  for  the  creature  feeing  no  way  that  God  hath  to  vindi- 
cate his  provoked  juftke,  but  by  the  eternal  deftrudion  and  dam- 
nation of  the  (inner,  cannot  without  an  univerfal  confternarion 
of  all  the  powers  of  his  foul,  think  of  that  Attribute,  which  brings 
to  his  thoughts  fo  fearful  an  expectation  and  looking  for  of 
judgement.  Hematt,  though  a  holy  man,  yet  even  loft  his  wits 
with  mufing  on  this  fad  fubjeft,  P/4/.88.  i  ?,  1 6.  while  Jfuffer 
thy  terrours,  I  am  difttatled.  But  faith  can  make  good  work  of 
thisalfo;  faith  will  enable  the  foul  to  walk  in  this  fiery  Attri- 
bute, with  his  comforts  unfinged ,  as  thofe  three  Worthies, 
'Daa-S.  did  in  the  flaming  furnace  -  while  unbelieving  finners  are 
icorched,  yea,  fwallowed  up  into  defpair ,  when  they  do  but 
come  in  their  thoughts  near  the  mouth  of  it.  There  is  a  three- 
fold confideration  with  which  faith  relieves  the  foul,  when  the 
terr our  of  this  Attribute  takes  hold  on  it. 


SECT.  IV. 

j  t  Firft,  faith  (hews,  (and  this  upon  the  beft  evidence)  that  God 

may  pardon  the  greateft  finner,if  penitent  and  believing,  without 
the  leaft  prejudice  to  his  juiticc. 

2.  Secondly,  faith  goes  further,and  fliews,that  God  in  pardoning 

the  believing  finner,  doth  not  only  lave  his  juftice,  but  advance 
the  honour  of  it. 

3  Thirdly,  that  God  doth  not  only  fave  and  advancehis  Juftice 

in  pardoning  a  believing  foul-,  but  fas  things  ftand  now,)  he 
hath  no  other  way  to  fecure  his  juftice,  but  by  pardoning  the 
believing  fouje  his  fins,  bertiey  never  fo  great.    Thefe  three 

well 


I. 


the  Jhield  of  faith.  653 

well  digeftcd,  will  render  this  Attribute  as  amiable,  lovely,  and 
comfortable  to  the  thoughts  of  a  believer,  as  that  of  mercy  it 
felf. 

Firft,  of  the  firft,  faith  fhews,  (and  that  upon  the  beft  evi- 
dence,) that  God  may  pardon  its  fins,  though  never  fo    great 
and  mountainous,  with  fafety  to  the  juftice  of  God.    That  que- 
ftion  is  not  now  to  be  difputed,  whether  God  can  be  juft   and 
righteous  in  pardoning  finners.    This  (faith  faith)  was  debated 
and  determined  long  ago,  at  the  Counfel- board  or  Heaven  by 
God  himfelf,  before  fo  much  as  a  vote,   yea,  a  thought,  could 
pafle  from  Gods  heart  for  the  benefit  of  poor  finners ;  God  ex* 
preflcth  thus  much  in  the  Promife,  Hofeaz.  19.    I  will  betroth 
thee  unto  me  for  ever ,  yea,  1  will   betroth  thee  unto  me  in  riglote* 
oufnt ft  and in  judgement.    Who  is  this   that  God  means  to  mar- 
ry ?  one  that  had  played  the  whore,  as  appears  by  the  former 
part  of  the  chapter.    What  doth  he  mean  by  betrothing?  no 
other,  but  that  he  will  pardon  their  fins,  and  receive  them  into 
thearmesofhis  love  and  peculiar  favour .-  but  how  can  the 
righteous  God  take  one  that  hath  been  a  filthy  {trumpet,  into  his 
bofome?    betroth  fuch  a  whorifh  people,  pardon  fuchhigh 
climbing  fins?  how  ?     Mark,  He  will  do  it  in  judgement  and  in 
rigbteeufne/s.    As  if  God  had  faid,  Trouble  not  your  thoughts 
to  clear  my  juftice  in  the  act ;    I  know  what  I  do  •,  the  Cafe  is 
well  weighed  by  me.     It  is  not  like  the  fudden  matches  that 
archudledupbymen  in  one  day,  andrepentedofonthenext  f 
But  is  the  rcfult  of  the  Counfel  of  my  holy  Will  fo  to  do.    Now 
when  Satan  comes  full  mouth  againft  the  believer  with  this  ob- 
jection, What,  fuch  a  wretch  as  thou  find  favour  in  the  eyes  of 
God  ?  faith  can  eafiiy  retort.     Yes  Satan,  God  can  be  as  righ- 
teous in  pardoning  me,  as  in  damning  thee.    God  tells  me,  *  f  is 
in  judgement  and   in  righteoufnefs.    I  leave  thee  therefore  to 
difpute  this  cafe  out  with  God,  who  is  able  to  juftifie  hi*  own 
ad.    Now,  though  this  in  the  lump  were  enough  to  refel   Sa- 
tan, yet  faith  is  provided  with  a  more  particular  evidence,  for  the 
vindication  of  the  juftice  and  righteoufnefs  of  God  in  this  his 
pardoning  ad.    And  this  is  founded   on  the  full    fatisfadion 
which  Chrift  hath  given  to  God  for  all  the  wrongthe  believer 
hath  done  him  by  his  fin.    Indeed,  it  was  rh?  great  undertaking 
of  Chrift,  to  bring  Juftice  to  kifs  Mercy  •,  that  there  might  not 

ND.nn.3  te.- 


654  ^    Above  all  taking 


be  a  duienung  Attribute  in  Go.i ,  when  this  vote  IhouKi  palfe , 
but  the  ad  ot  pardoning  mercy  mi^ht  be  carried  clear,  mHq 
contradicente.  Therefore  thrift,  before  he  follickes  the  tinners 
caufe  with  God '  by  requcft  ,  perform  es  firft  the  oiher  of  fati?fa- 
Ction  by  facrifce:  He  pays,  and  then  prays ,  tor  what  h:  hath 
paid  ,■  prefenting his  Petition  in  the  bvhaltot  belLving  Hnners, 
written  with  his  own  blood,  th.it  fo  juliice  migbc  not  -oifdain  to 
read  or  grant  it.  I  will  not  dtlpute,  whether  ( >od  could  v-  by  a 
Prerogative  mercy  ('without  a  fatisfa&ion )  have  ifliied  out  an 
acl:  of  pardon  •,  but  in  this  way  of  fatisfaclion,  the  righteoufhefs 
of  God  ( I  am  fure^  may  be  vindicated  in  the  confidence  of  the 
greateit  tinner  on  earthy  yea,  the  devil  himfelf  is  but  a.faint  Dif- 
putant ,  when  faith  pinches  him  with  this  Argument :  'cis  a 
trench,  which  he  is  not  able  to  climbe.  Indeed  God  laid  our 
falvation  in  this  method  ,  that  even  we  weak  ones  might  be  able 
to  jultifie  him,  in  jufiifying  us,  to  the  head  of  the  moil  malici- 
oufeit  devil  in  hell.  Perufe  that  incomparable  place,\vhich  hath 
balme  enough  in  it,  to  heal  the  wounds  of  ail  the  bleeding  con- 
fciences  in  the  world ,  where  there  is  but  faith  to  drop  it  in ; 
and  for  ever  to  quench  the  fire  of  this  dart,  which  is  headed  with 
the  juftice  of  God,  Rom.  '5.24,2  $&6.  Bring  jujiifed  freely  by  his 
grace,  through  the  Redemption  that  is  in  fefus  (,  hrift,  whom  C/od 
hathfet  forth  to  be  a  propitiation,  through  faith  in  his  blood, to  de- 
clare his  righteoufnefs  for  the  remiffon  of  fins  that  arc  pafv,throuoh 
th<  forbearance  of  God:To  declare,  Ifay  ,  at  this  time  his  righte- 
oufnefs,that  he  might  bejtift,  and  the  jufiifier  of  him  which  belie- 
veth  in  Jefus.  O  what  work  will  faith  make  of  this  Scripture?  a 
foul  caftled  within  thefe  walls  is  impregnable ;  Fir  (I,  obferve  , 
Chriit  is  here  called  a  propitiation,  or  if  you  will,  ^propitiatory^ 
IhcL^tiv,  alluding  to  the  M  rcy-feat ,  where  God  promifed  to 
meet  his  people ,  that  he  mLht  converfe  with  them,  and  no 
dread  from  his  Majeltyfall  upon  them,  Exod.  2<j.  Now,  you 
know,  the  <JMcrcy-fe*t  was  placed  over  rhe  Ark,  to  be  a  cover 
thereunto ,  it  being  the  Aik,wherein  the  holy  Law  of  God  was 
kept,  from  the  violation  of  which,  all  the  fears  of  a  guilty  foul 
arife ;  Therefore  'tis  obiervableftrnt  the  dimenfions  of  the  one, 
were  proportioned  to  the  other ;  The  M<.  cy-feat  was  to  be  as 
long,  and  broad  to  the  full,  as  the  ^n^was,tlut  no  part  there- 
of might  be  umhadowed  by  it;  verfe  1  d.  compared  with  ver.17. 

Thus, 


the  Jbield  of  faith.  65  5 


Thus,  Chrifl our  true  VrofuUtery,  covers  ail  the  Law,  which 
elfewouldcomeinto  accufe  the  believer  ^  but  not  one  threate- 
ning now  can  arreft  him,  fo  long  as  this  fcrcen  remains  for  faith 
tointerpofe,  between  Gods  wrath  2nd  the  foule.  Juftice  now, 
hath  no  mark  to  level  at  j  God  cannot  fee  the  nr.ner  for  Chiifl: 
that  hides  him.  This  is  not  the  man  (faith  wrath)  that  I  am  to 
ftrike.  See  how  he  flies  to  Chrift,  and  takes  Sanctuary  in  his 
fatisfa&ion,  and  fo  is  got  out  of  my  walk  and  reach,  thac  being  a 
privileged  place,  where  I  muft  not  come  to  arreft  any.  Jt  is 
ufual,  you  know,  in  battels,  towearea  Ribband,  riandxef  chief, 
or  fome fuch  thing,  to  diflinguifh  friends  from  foes.  Chriiis  fa- 
tisfa&ion  worne  by  faith,  isrhe  figne  that  diftinguifheth  Gods 
friends  from  his  enemies  -,  The  fcariet  thread  on  <Rahabs  win- 
dow, kept  the  deftroying  fword  out  of  her  houfe  •  aad  the  blood 
of  Chrift  pleaded  by  faith,  will  keep  the  foul  from  receiving  any 
hurt  at  the  hands  of  divine  juftice. 

Secondly,  obferve  ,  what  hand  Chrift  hath  his   Commifiion 
from,  whm  God hath  fet  forth,   to  be  a  propitiation  through  faith  in 
hit  blood.    Chrift,  we  fee,  is  the  great  Ordinance  of  heaven ;  him 
the  Father  haihfealedy  be  is  tingled  out  from  all  others,  Angels 
and  men,  and  fet  forth  astheperfonchofenofGod,  to  make  a- 
tonereent  for  finners,  (as  the  Lamb  was  taken  out  of  the  flock, 
and  fet  apart  for  the  Pafeover.)     When  therefore  Satan  feu 
forth  the  believers  fins  in  battel- array  againft  him,  and  confronts 
him  with  their  greatnefs  j  then  faith  runs  tinder  the  (belter  of 
this  Caftle,  into  the  holesofthts  Rock     Surely  (  faith  faithjmy 
Saviour  is  infinitely  greater  than  my  greateft  tins.     I  ihould  im- 
peach  the  wifdom  of  Gods  choice,  to  think  otherwife.    God, 
who  knew  what  a  heavy  burthen  he  hsd  to  lay  upon  his  fhoulders, 
was  fully  fatisfledof  his  ftrength  to  be.^r  it.    He   that  re/ufed 
facrifice?nd  burnt  off-ring  for  their  inf  ffieiency, would  not  have 
called  him,  h*d  he  not  been  al-  fufTicient  for  the  work.    Indeed, 
herelesthe  veight  ofthe  whole  building;  a  weak  faith   may 
fave,  but  a  weak  S-viour  cannot  •     faith  hach  Chrft  to  plead  for 
it,    but  Chrjft  hath  none  to  plead  for   fin  •    faith  leans    on 
Chriftsarm;  but  Chrift  ftaod  upon  h.sown  legs,  and  if  he 
had   funk  under  the   burthen  of  our  finnes,     he  had  been 
paft  the  reach  of  any  creature  in  heaven   or  earth    to    help 
him  up. 

Thirdly,  % 


656  Above  nil  taking 

Thirdly,  obfervcthereafon,  why  God  chofe  this  way  of  if- 
fuing  out  his  pardoning  mercy  ^  and  that  is,  to  declare  his  righteouf- 
nefsforthe  remiffion  of  (tunes.  Mark,  not  to  declare  his  mercy, 
that  is  obvious  to  every  eye.  Every  one  will  believe  him  mer- 
ciful, that  is  forgiving-,  but  to  conceive,how  G  od  fhould  be  righ- 
teous in  forgiving  (innersithis  lies  more  remote  from  the  creatures 
apprehenfions  i  and  therefore  it  is  ingeminated  and  repeated, 
■ver.26.  To  declare ,  I fa) ,  at  this  time  bis  right  eeuftcefs^  that  he 
might  be '/»/?,  and  the  jnftifier  of  him  which  believeth  in  fefits. 
As  if  God  had  faid,  I  know  why  it  fcems  fo  incredible  (poor  tin- 
ners) to  your  thoughts,  that  I  fhould  pardon  ail  your  iniquities, 
fo  great  and  many ;  you  think,  becaufc  1  am  a  righteous  God*, 
that  I  will  fooner  damne  athoufand  worlds  of  finners,  than  af- 
.perfe  my  juftice,  and  bring  my  name  under  the  leaft  fufpicionof 
unrighteoufnefs,  and  that  thought  is  rhofttruc.  I  would  in- 
deed damn  them  over  and  over  again,  rather  than  ftainethe  ho- 
nour of  my  juftice,  which  is  my  felf ;  but  I  declare,  yea,  again  I 
declare  it,and  command  you,and  the  greateft  finners  on  earth,  up- 
on pain  of  damnation  to  believe  it ;  that  I  can  be  juft,  and  yet  trie 
juftifier  of  thofe  finners  who  believe  in  Jefus  j  O  what  boldnefTe 
may  the  believer  take  at  this  news  ?  methinks  I  fee  the  foul,  that 
was  even  now  pining  to  death  with  defpair,  and  lotting  upon  hell 
in  his  thoughts  (as  one  already  free  among  the  dead,)  now  revive 
and  grow  young  again  at  thefe  tidings  -,  as  Jacob,  when  he  heard 
Jofeph  was  alive :  What  ?  Is  juftice(the  only  enemy  I  fear'd,and 
Attribute  in  Gods  heart,  which  my  thoughts  fled  from)  now*  be- 
come my  friend  ?  then  chear  up  my  foul,  Who  (hall  condemn  ,  if 
God  juftifies  ?  And  how  can  God  hirafelf  be  againft  thee,  when 
his  very  juftice  acquits  thee  ? 


SECT.  V. 

Objetl,  But  Satan  will  not  thus  leave  the  foul  h  Doeft  thou ,  poore 
creature,  (faith  he)  believe  this  ftrange  Divinity  ?  is  it  juft  for 
God  to  pardon  thee  for  the  fatisfa&ion  that  another  makes? 
one  man  commit  the  murder,  and  another  man  that  is  innocent 
hang'd  for  it ;  call  you  this  juft  ;    the  Law  demands  the  perfon 

finning 


/  be  fhkld  of  faith .  657 

— ! ■ —  * —r 

finning  to  be  delivered  up  to  juftce-  we  finde  no  mention  of  a 
furety  to  be  allowed  by  the  Covenant ,  in  the  day  that  thou  eatefi 
thou  foalt  die. 

Firft, faith  teaches  the  foul  to  acquiefce  in  the  declaration  that  *  r 
God  mak^s  of  his  own  minde.  Now  though  the  threading  at  n^w% 
firft  acquaints  us  with  the  iinners  name  only-,  yet  faith  (indes  a 
graci  )us  relaxation  of  thatthreatningintheGofpel-Co^enantj 
where  to  the  believers  everlafting  comfort,  God  promifeth  to  ac- 
cept the  (inners  debt  at  ChriiVs  hand  ,  whom  therefore  we  finde 
arretted  upon  our  action,  Efa.  $i$.  We  was  wounded  for  our 
tranfgreffions  ,  he  was  bruifed  for  our  iniquities ,  the  chaftifement 
ef  our  peace  was  upon  him,  and  with  his  prices  we  are  healed.  Here 
is  bottom  ftrong  enough  for  faithjo  reft  on.  And  whyfhould 
we  ((hallow  creatures  J  ruffle  Gofpel  truths,  to  the  enfnarling 
our  own  thoughts,  by  thinking  to  fathom  the  bottomlefle  depths 
of  Gods  juftice  ,  with  the  fhort  cordage  of  our  reafon,  which  we 
fee  dunced  by  the  meaneft  piece  in  Gods  work  of  creation  ?  faith 
fpies  a  devil  in  this  beautiful  Serpent,Reafon,which  for  its  fmooth 
tongue  Satan  ufeth  on  a  mifchievous  defigne  to  undermine,  as  o- 
ther,  fo  in  particular,  this  one  moll  fweet  and  fundamental  truth 
of  the  Gofpel ,  I  meane  the  fatisfaction  of  Chrift  ;  and  therefore 
faith  protcfts  againft  the  illegality  of  reafons  court.  What  indeed 
hath  reafon  to  call  before  her  lower  bench  thefe  myfteries  of  our 
faith  ,  that  are  purely  fupernatural ,  and  fo  not  under  her  cogni- 
zance >  and  O  that  thofe ,  in  this  proud  age  of  ours,  would  conft  - 
derit,  who  go  to  law  (as  I  may  fofay)  with  the  higheft  Gofpel 
truths,  before  this  heathen  Judge,  Reafon ;  whereby  they  evacuate 
one  great  end  of  the  Gofpel, which  is  to  facrifice  our  (hallow  rea- 
fon on  faiths  Altar,  that  fo  we  might  give  the  more  fignal  honour 
to  the  truth  of  God,  in  believing  the  high  myfteries  of  the  Gofpel 
upon  his  naked  report  of  them  in  the  Word,  Reafon  with  its  little 
fpan  cannot  comprehend  them, 

Secondly,  the  believer  can  cleare  God  as  juft  in  receiving  the  2- 
debt  at  Chrifts  hand,  from  that  neer  union  that  ts  betwixt  Chrift 
and  his  people  The  husband  may  lawfully  b£  arretted  for  his 
wives  debt  ,  becaufe  this  union  is  voluntary  •,  and  it  is  to  be  fup- 
pofed ,  he  did ,  or  ought  to  have  confidered  what  her  eftate  was 
before  he  contracted  fo  near  a  relation  to  her.  A  fuite  may 
juftly  be  commenced  againft  a  furety ,  becaufe  it  was  bis  own  a  A 

O  0  0  o  to 


£^g  Above  all  taking 


to  engage  for  the  debt.  To  bs  fure,Chrift  was  moft  free  in  enga- 
ging himfelf  in  the  Tinners  caufe.He  knew  what  a  fad  plight  mans 
nature  was  in  i  and  he  had  an  abfolute  freedome  to  pleafe  him- 
ifelf  in  his  choyce  ^  whether  he  would  leave  man  to  perifh,or  lend 
his  helping  hand  towards  his  recovery  5  he  hadalfoan  abfolute 
power  of  his  own  life,  which  no  meer  creature  hath  •  fo  that  it 
being  his  own  offer  (upon  his  Fathers  calij  to  take  our  nature  in 
marriage,  thereby  to  intereft  himfelf  in  our  debt,  and  for  the  pay- 
ment of  it,  to  disburfe  and  pourc  out  his  own  precious  blood  to 
death  ,  how  dare  proud  rlefh  call  the  jufticeof  God  to  the  barre, 
and  bring  his  righteoufnefle  in  this  tranfa&ion  into  queftion,  for 
whichGodpr  mifed  himfelf  the  higheft  expreffions  of  love  and 
tbankfuneffe  at  his  creatures  hands  ? 

Secondly,  faith  doth  not  only  bear  witnefle  to  the  juftice  of 
G^d  ,  that  he  may  pardon  a  poor  beleeving  finner,  and  yet  be 
juft  •  but  it  (hews  that  he  may  advance  the  honour  of  his  juftice 
by  pardoning  the  believing  foul ,  more  than  in  damning  the 
impenitent  finner.  And  furely  God  had  no  leffe  defigne  in  the 
Gofpel  Covenant  than  this  ^  he  that  would  not  the  death  of  a 
finner,  but  to  vindicate  his  juftice ;  would  not  certainly  have con* 
fented  to  the  death  of  his  only  Son,  but  for  the  higher  advance, 
and  urther  glorying  of  his  juftice  in  the  eye  of  his  creature: 
Chrift  faith,  he  came  not  fitly,  that  we  fir.nersmght  have  life,  but 
that  we  wight  have  it  mo>e  abundantly,  John  1 0.  that  is,  more  a- 
bnndantly  than  we  (hould  have  inherited  it  from  innocent  Adam. 
May  we  not  therefore  fay,  that  «~hrift  did  nor  die  9  that  God 
ma^ht  only  have  his  due  debt,  but  that  he  might  have  it  morea- 
bundantly  payed  by  Chrift,tban  hecouldhave  had  it  at  the  crea- 
tures hands?  but  more  particularly  the  jufticeof  Cod  will  appear 
here  cloathed  with  four  glorious  circumftances,  that  cannot  be 
found  in  the  payment  which  the  finner  by  hi*  own  perfonal  fuf- 
ferings  makes  unto  it, 

Firft  ,  if  we  confider  the  perfon,  at  whofe  hand  divine  juftice 
receives  Ltisfac'bon.  When  the  (inner  is  damned  for  his  own  fins, 
it  is  bit  3  poor-forty  creature  that  is  punifhed  •  !  ur  when  Chrift 
fufFereth.  the  d«-bt  is  paid  by  a  more  honourable  hand  :  (-od  hath 
ft  from  n.terhat  is  near  to  himfelf ,  yea. equal  with  himfelf  A' 
wake  Of^ordagainfi  my  fhepherd ,  andag  inff  the  man  that  is  mj 
fellow JaU hike  Lw-A  of  B (Is Zech,  13.  7,  who  will  not  fay,  a 

Judge 


the  flAeld of  faith.  6^y 


Judge  gives  more  eminent  teftimony  of  his  juftice,  when  he  con- 
demns his  own  Son,  than  when  he  arraigns  a  ftranger  ?  Here  God 
indeed  declared  hi*  utmoft  hatred  to  finnc,  and  inflexible  love  to 
juftice,  in  that  he  fpared  not  his  own  Son ,  but  delivered  him  up 
for  us  all. 

Secondly ,  if  we  confider  the  manner  how  the  debt  is  paid,  2. 
when  the  (inner  is  damned,itisin  a  poor  beggarly  waj  by  retaile^ 
now  a  few  pence ,  and  then  a  few  more^  he  is  ever  paying,  but 
never  comes  to  the  lait  farthing  j  and  therefore  muft  for  ever  lye 
in  prifon  for  non-payment.  But  at  Chrifts  hands  God  receives 
all  the  whole  debt  in  one  lump ,  fo  that  Chrift  could  truely  fay, 
It  isfinijhed,  John  19.  30,  as  much  as  if  he  had  faid,  there  are  but 
a  few  moments ,  and  the  work  of  redemption  will  be  finiihed.  I 
have  the  fummenowin  my  hand  to  pay  God  his  whole  debt,' 
and  as  foon  as  I  have  bowed  my  head,  and  the  breath  is  once  out 
of  my  body,  all  will  be  finifhed.  Yea,  he  hath  his  difcharge  for 
the  receit  of  the  whole  fumme  due  to  Gods  juftice,  from  the 
mouth  of  God  himfcJf,  in  which  we  finde  him  triumphing  ,  Efa. 
<$.  8  •  He  is  near  that  jafiifieth  me,  who  will  contend  with  me  ?  yea, 
ft  ill  more ,  Chrift  hath  not  only  difcharged  the  old  debt,  but  by 
the  fame  blood  hath  made  a  new  purchafe  of  God  for  his  Saints. 
So  that  God ,  who  was  even  now  the  creditor  ,  is  become  the 
debtor  to  his  creature ,  and  that  for  no  lefle  than  eternal  life, 
which  Chrift  hath  paid  for ,  and  given  every  heleever  authority, 
humbly  co  claim  of  God  in  his  name.  See  them  both  in  one  place, 
Heb.  1 0. 1 3 ,  14, 1 5 ,  Bttt  this  mant  after  he  had  offered  one  facri* 
ficefor  ftnnesfor  ever  /ate  down  on  the  right  hand  of  (jod.from  hence- 
forth  exfetting  till  his  enemies  be  made  his  foot- ftoole^  for  by  one  of- 
fering he  hath  perfeEledfor  ever  them  that  are  fanUif>ed.  He  hath 
not  only  croft  the  debt-  book  for  believers,  but  prfeftedthem  for 
ever ;  that  is,  made  as  certaine  provifion  for  their  perfection  in 
glory,  as  for  their  falvation  from  hells  punifhment,  From  which 
he  exhorts  them,  ver.22.  to  draw  near  in  full  ajfarance  of  faith} 
Let  us  not  fear,  but  we  (hall  receive  at  Gods  hands,  what  Chrift 
hath  payed  for. 

Thirdly,when  God  damns  the  finner,his  juftice  indeed  appears.         3  • 
Thofe  condemned  mifcreants  have  not  one  righteous  fyllable  to 
charge  their  Judge  withal  -,  but  mercy  is  not  Teen  to  fit  fo  glori- 
ous on  the  throne  in  this  fentence  pronounced  on  the  finner. 

Oooo  2  But 


£':o  Above  all  taking 

But  when  Chrift  fuffered,  juftice  and  mercy  met-  indeed  jufticc  ap- 
pears never  moie  orient  in  God  or  man,  than  when  it  is  in  con- 
junction with  mercy.  Now  in  the  Lord  Chrifts  death,  they  fhone 
both  in  all  their  glory,  and  did  mutually  fete  ffeach  the  other. 
Heie  the  white  and  the  red,  the  rofes  and  the  lilyes  were  fo  admi- 
rably tempered,  that  it  is  hard  to  fay,  which  prefents  the  face  of 
»  juftice  moft  beautiful  to  our  eye,  Gods  wrath  upon  Chrift  for  us, 
or  his  mercy  to  us  for  his  fake. 
4.  Fourthly,  when  God  damns  the  (Inner,  jufticc  is  glorified  only 

paflively.  God  forceth  his  glory  from  Devils  and  damned  foulsj 
butt!  ey  do  not  willingly  pay  the  debt.  They  acknowledge  God 
Juft,  b^caufe  \  hey  can  do  no  other,  but  at  the  fame  time  hate  him, 
whik  they  feeme  to  vindicate  him  -,  now  in  the  fatisfa&ion  that 
Chrift  gives ;  juftice  is  glorified  actively,  and  that  both  from. 
Chrift,  who  was  not  dragged  to  the  croffe,  or  haled  to  his  fuffcr- 
ings,  as  the  damned  are  to  their  prifon  and  torment.  Tut  gave 
him f elf  for  us,  an  tjfering^  and  a  facrifice  to  God ,  Ephef5  2. 
furtering  as  willingly  for  us,  as  ever  we  finned  againft  him.  And 
alfo  from  believing  fouls ,  who  now  fing  praifes  to  the  mercy  and 
juftice  of  God  that  redeemed  them  ^  and  will  for  ever  in  heaven 
run  divifion  on  the  fame  note ;  now  by  how  much  the  voluntary 
fufferings  of  Chrift  are  betrer  than  the  forced  torments  of  the 
damned  ;  and  the  chearful  praifes  of  Saints  in  heaven  more  me- 
lodious in  Gods  tare  j.  than  the  extorted  acknowledgements  of 
damned  fouls  in  hell ;  by  fo  much  the  juftice  of  God  is  more  glo- 
rified by  Chriftsfufferings,  than  thei;s.  O  what  incomparable 
boldneffc  may  this  fend  the  foul  withal  to  the  throne  of  grace  ? 
who ,  when  he  is  begging  pardon  for  Chrifts  fake ,  may  without 
any  hazard  to  his  eternal  falvaticn,  fay ;  Lord,  if  my  damnation 
will  glorifie  thy  juftice  more ,  or  fo  much  as  the  death  of  Chrift 
for  me  hath  done,  and  the  everlafting  praifes  (which  my  thankful 
heart  (hall  refound  in  heaven  to  the  glory  of  all  thy  Attri- 
butes for  my  falvationj  will  do,  let  me  have  that  rather  than 
this. 
3.  Thirdly /ai'h  doth  not  only  fee  juftice  preferved  yea  advanced 

in  this  ad  of  paidonmg  mercy  ;  but  itv.  illtei;  the  foul  (andean 
make  goodjv,  hat  it  faith;  that  God  (as  things  now  ftand)  cannot 
be  juft,  if  he  do  h  not  pardon  »he  (innes  of  a  repenting  believing 
foul, how  great  ioevtr  they  have  been*    One  great  part  of  juftice 

confifts 


the  Jhield  of  faith. 


conlifts  in  a  faithful  and  punctual  performance  of  promifes :  he  is, 
(we  fay)  a  juft  man,  that  keeps  his  word.  And  can  God  be  a  juft 
God  if  he  doth  not  ?  The  word  is  gone  out  of  his  hk  uth,  that  he 
will  forgive  fuch.  Yea,  he  is  willing  to  be  accounted  juft  or  un- 
juft  by  us,  as  he  makes  performance  thereof.  See  where  he  layes 
this  his  Attribute  to  pawn,  upon  this  very  account,  if  okn  i .  9.  if 
•p?t  eonfeffe  our  finnes,  he  is  juft  and  faithful  to  forgive  m  our  fins ^  and 
tocleanfe  m  from  all  unrighteeufnejfe,  he  doth  not  fay  mercifulybat 
juft  •  as  the  Attribute,  which  we  moft  fear  ihould  vote  againft  us; 
this  he  would  have  us  know,  is  bound  for  the  performance  of  the 
proraife.  It  was  mercy  in  God  to  make  the  promife  ^  but  juftice 
to  performe,  what  mercy  hath  promifed,  Micah  7. 20.  Thou  wilt 
per  forme  the  truth  to  Jacob^  and  the  mercy  to  Abraham  ,  God  was 
not  bound  to  make  a  promife  to  Abraham  and  his  feed-  but  ha- 
ving once  patted  his  Word  to  him  ,  it  was  truth  to  Jacob  ,  who 
was  heire  to  that  bond  to  which  God  had  left  in  his  Fa- 
thers hand. 


66 


CHAP.  XX, 

Faiths fecond  Anfwer  to  Satans  Argnment^taken. 
from  the  greatneffe  ofjlnne^  thereby  to  drive  the 
fovj to  dejpair :  where  faith  oppofeth the  great- 
mjje  of  the  promifes^  agamjt  the  greatneffe  of  the- 
fouls  finnes. 

UEcondly.  faith  quenches  this  temptation  to  defpaire,  drawn 

fromthe  greatneffe  of  finne  ,  by  oppofing  the  greatneffe  of 

the  promifes,  En  finnes  greatneffe-  faith  can  only  fee  God  in  his 

greatneffe ;  and  therefore  none  but  faith  can  iee  the  promifes  in 

O  0  0  0  3  their  . 


65a  Above  all  taking 


their  greatnefie :  bccaufe  the  value  of  promifes.is  according  to  the 
worth  of  him  that  makes  them  :  hence  it  comes  to  paflc,that  pro* 
mifeshavefo  little  efficacy  on  an  unbeleeving  heart,  either  to 
keep  from  fin ,  or  to  comfort  under  terror  for  fin.  Promifes  are 
like  the  cloaths  we  wear ;  which  if  there  be  heat  in  the  body  to 
warme  them,  then  they  will  warme  us :  but,if  they  receive  no  heat 
from  the  body,  they  give  none  to  it  ♦,  where  there  is  faith  to  chafe 
the  promife,  there  the  promife  will  afford  comfort  and  peace  a- 
fmndantly ;  it  will  be  as  a  ftrong  cordial  glowing  with  inward 
joy  in  the  creatures  boforae,  but  on  a  dead  unbelieving  heart,  ic 
lyes  cold  and  ineffectual ;  it  hath  tao  more  effect  on  fuch  a  foul, 
than  a  cordial  that  is  poured  down  a  dead  mans  throat,  hath  on 
him.  The  promifes  have  not  comfort  actually  and  formally  as 
fire  hath  heat :  then  it  were  only  going  to  them,and  we  fhould  be 
warme,  taking  them  up  in  our  thoughts,  and  we  fhould  be  com- 
forted; but  virtually,  as  fire  is  in  the  flint,  which  requires  fome 
labour  and  Art  to  ftrike  it  out  and  draw  it  forth.  Now  none  but 
faith  can  learn  us  this  skill  of  drawing  out  the  fweetnefTe  and  ver- 
tue  of  the  promife}  which  it  doth  thefe  three  wayes  among  ma- 
ny others. 


SECT.I. 

Firft,  faith  leads  the  foul  to  the  fpring.hcad  of  the  promife, 
where  it  may  ftand  with  beft  advantage ,  to  take  a  view  of  their 
greatnefTe  and  precioufnefTe.  Indeed  we  underftand  little  of 
things,till  we  trace  them  to  their  originaIf,and  can  fee  them  lying 
in  their  caufes.  Then  a  foul  will  know  his  fins  to  be  great ,  when 
he  fees  them  in  their  fpring  and  fource,flowingfrom  an  invenom'd 
nature ,  that  tcemes  with  enmity  againft  God.  Then  the  finner 
will  tremble  at  the  threatnings ,  which  roul  like  thunder  over  his 
head,  ready  to  fall  every  moment  in  fome  judgement  or  other 
upon  him  j  when  he  fees  from  whence  they  are  fent,  the  per- 
fect hatred  that  God  bears  to  fin ,  and  infinte  wrath  with  which 
he  is  inflamed  againft  the  finner  for  it.  In  a  word,  then  the  poor 
trembling  foul  will  not  count  the  confolation  of  the  promifes 
imall ,  when  it  fees  from  what  fountaine  it  flows,  the  bofome  of 
Gods  free  mercy.  This  indeed  is  the  Original  fource  of  all  pro- 
mifes 


the  Jhield  of  faith* 


mifcs.    The  Covenant  it  felf,  which  comprehends  them  all,is  cal- 
led Mercy,  becaufe  the  produd  of  mercy ,  Luke  i.  72.  To  per- 
forate the  mercy  promifed  to  our  Fathers  ,  and  to  remember  hu  holy 
Covenant.  Now,  faith  faith,  if  the  promifes  flow  from  this  fea  of 
Gods  free  mercy^then  they  muft  needs  be  infinite  as  that  is,bound- 
lefTe  and  bottomleffe ,  as  that  is  -t  fo  that  to  reject  the  promife, 
orqueftion  the  fufficiency  of  the  provifion  made  in  it  upon  this 
account,  becaufe  thy  fins  are  great  or  many,  calls  a  difhonorablc 
reflection  on  that  mercy ,  in  whofe  womb  the  promife  was  con- 
ceived- and  God  will  certainly  *  bring  his  action  of  defamation 
againft  thee,  for  afperfing  this  his  darling    Attribute,  which  he 
can  lead  endure  to  fee  flandered  and  traduced.    God  makes  ac- 
count you  have  done  your  worft  againft  him,  when  once  you  re* 
port  him  to  be  unmerciful,  or  but  leant  in  his  mercy.  How  great 
a  (in  this  is,  may  be  conceived  by  the  thoughts  which  God  hath 
of  this  difpofition  and  frame  of  fpirit  in  his  creature.  An  unmer- 
ciful heart,  is  (uch  an  abomination  before  the  Lord  ,  'that  it  hath 
few  like  it. .  This  lyes  at  the  bottome  of  the  heathens  charge ,  as 
the  fediment,  and  grofleft  part  of  all  their  horrid  fins,  Rom,  1.3. 
they  were  implacable,  unmerciful,  Now,to  attribute  that  to  God, 
which  he  fo  abhors  in  his  crcature,muft  needs  make  a  heart  tender 
of  the  good  name  of  God  to  tremble  and  exceedingly  feare.  It 
was  a  dreadful  punifhment  God  brought  upon  fehoram  King  of 
fudoth,  Chron.  2. 2 1.  whom  hefmote  in  his  bowels  with  an  incurable 
difeafe^hat  after  two  years  (torment)  his  very  bowels  fell  out.  And 
why  did  this  foare  and  heavy  plague  befall  him  ?  furely  to  let  him 
know  his  want  of  bowels  of  mercy  to  his  brethren  and  Princes8 
whom  he  moft  cruelly  butchered.  He  had  not  bowels  in  his  heart, 
and  he  therefore  (hall  have  none  in  his  body.    Now  dareft  thou 
f  faith  faith)  impute  want  of  bowels  to  God,  that  he  will  not 
fhew  mercy  to  thee *  who  penitently  feeks  it  in  Chrifts  Name, 
when  thou  feeft  what  teftimony  he  gives  of  his  incenfed  wrath 
againft  thofe  men  ,  who  have  hardned  their  bowels  againft  their 
brethren  ^  yea,  their  enemies?  O  have  a  care  of  this-    To  ..hut 
thy  own  bowels  of  companion  from  thy  brother  in  need,isa  grie- 
vous finne,  and  brings  it  into  queftion,  whether  the  love  of  God 
dwdsinthee,  1  John  3. 17.  But,  to  afperfe  the  merciful  heart  of 
God,  as  if  his  bowels  of  companion  were  (hut  againft  a  poor 
foul  in  need,  that  defires  to  repent  and  rcturne,  is  tranfeendantly 

the. 


56±  Above  all  taking 


the  greater  abomination,  and  puts  it  out  of  all  queftion  (where  it 
is  perfifted  inj  that  the  love  oi  God  dwcls  not  in  him.  It  is  im, 
poflible  that  love  toGodftiould  draw  fuch  a  mislhapen  portras- 
ture  of  God  as  this  is. 


SECT.    II. 

i#  Secondly,  faith  attends  to  the  end  of  the  promifes,  which  gives 

a  further  profpect  of  their  greatneflfe.  Now  the  Word,  which  is 
the  light  faith  goes  by,difcovers  a  double  end  of  promifes,  efpeci- 
aily  of  the  promife  of  pardoning  mercy. 

Firft,  the  exalting  and  magnifying  the  riches  of  free-grace, 
which  God  would  have  appear  in  all  its  glory  (To  far  I  meane,  as 
it  is  pofiSble  to  be  expofed  to  the  creatures  view,for  theful  fight  of 
Gods  glory ,is  an  ob je&  adequate  to  his  own  eye,and  noneelfe)fee 
this  counfel  and  myfterious  defigne  fweetly  opened,  Epbef.chap.i. 
ver.6.  p,  ii,  12.  The  fummesofall  which,  will  amount  to  this5 
That  God  in  himfelf  hath  taken  up  a  purpofe  of  pardoning, 
and  faving  a  company  of  poor  loft  finners  for  Chrifts  fake  ^  and 
this  he  hath  proftiulged  in  the  promifes  of  the  Gofpcl;  And  the 
plot  of  all  is,that  he  might  gather  thefe  all  together  at  laft  in  hea- 
ven, fome  of  which  are  already  there,  others  of  them  at  prefent 
on  earth,  and  fome  yet  unborn,  and  when  they  (hall  all  meet  to- 
gether in  one  glorious  quire  there  ,  that  there  they  may  by  their 
.  triumphant  fongs ,  and  Halilujahs,  fill  the  heavens  with  praisful 
acclamations  of  thankfulnefle  to  the  glory  of  that  mercy,  which 
hath  thus  pardoned  and  faved  them.  Now,  faith  obferving  the 
praife  of  Gods  mercy  to  be  the  end  aimed  at  by  him  in  the  pro- 
mife •  comes  with  good  news  to  the  trembling  foul,  and  tells  it ; 
that  if  God  will  be  but  true  to  his  own  thoughts,and  keep  his  eye 
ou  that  mark,  where  at  firft  he  hath  fet  it ;  impoflible  it  is,  that 
he  Ihould  rejeft  any  poor  penitent  finner,  meerly  for  the  great- 
neiTe  of  the  finncs  he  hath  committed.  It  is  the  exaltation  of  his 
mercy  ( faith  faith)  that  God  hath  in  his  eye,  when  he  promifech 
jpardon  to  poor  finners.  Now,which  exalts  this  moft,  to  pardon 
little  or  great  finners  ?  whofe  voyce  will  be  higheft  and  flirilleft 
in  the  fong  of  praife,  thinkeft  thou  }  furely  his,  to  whom  moft  is 
forgiven^  and  therefore  God  cannot,but  be  moft  ready  to  pardon 

the 


the  jhiddof  faith.  6b^ 


the  greateft  finners,  when  trucly  ^enirent.  A  Phyfician  that 
means  to  be  famous,  will  m<t  tend  away  ihofe  that  rroft  need 
his^kill  and  art-,  and  only  pra&jce  upon  fuch  difeafes  as  are  flight 
and  ordinary.  They  are  the  great  curcs,whtch  ring  fat  and  near: 
when  one  given  over  by  himielt  and  others,  as  a  dead  man,  is  by 
the  skill  and  care  of  a  Phyfician,  refcucd  out  of  the  jawes  ot  death, 
that  feem'd  to  have  enclofed  him ,  and  railed  to  health  •  This 
commends  him  to  all  that  hear  of  it,  and  games  him  mure  repu« 
tation,than  a  whole  years  pra&ice  in  ordinar*  cures.  The  great 
revencw  of  praife,  is  payd  into  Gods  Exchequer  from  thofe 
who  have  had  great  fins  pardoned  •  He  that  hath  five  hundred 
pence  forgiven,  will  love  more  than  he  that  hath  but  fifty ,  by  C  hrifls 
own  judgement,Zr«^.7.43 .  and  where  there  is  m  ft  love,  there 
is  like  to  be  moft  praife-,  love  and  praife  being  fyrabolical,  the 
one  foon  refolving  into  the  other.  The  voice  of  a  Manafes,  a 
Magdalen^  and  a  Paul,  will  be  heard  (as  I  may  fo  fay  J  above  all 
the  reft  in  heavens  confort.  The  truth  is,  greatnefs  of  fin,  is  fo 
far  from  putting  a  bar  to  the  pardoning  of  a  penitent  finner  in 
Gods  thoughts  -,  that  he  will  pardon  none  (  how  little  finners 
foever  they  have  been)  except  they  fee  and  acknowledge  their 
fins  to  be  great,  before  they  come  to  him  on  fuch  an  errand.  And 
therefore  he  ufeth  the  Law,  to  make  way  (by  its  convictions  and 
terrours  on  the  confeience)  for  his  pardoning  mercy,  to  afcend 
the  throne  in  the  penitent  finners  heart,  with  the  more  magnifi- 
cence and  honour,  Rom.%10  The  Law entred  (that  is,  it  was 
promulged  at  firft  by  Mofes^nd  is  ftill  preached  )  that  the  '.fence 
might  abound;  (that  is,th  the  confeience,  by  a  deeper  fence  and  re- 
morfej  And  why  fo  ?  but  that,  where  fin  abounded,  grace  might 
much  more  abound.  We  rauft  needs  fhape  our  thoughts  of  the 
mercy  that  pardons  our  fins,  fuitabletorhe  thoughts,  we  frame 
to  our  felves  of  the  fins  we  have  committed  ;  if  we  conceive  thefe 
little,  how  can  we  think  the  other  great  ?  And  if  we  tremble  at 
the  greatnefs  of  our  fins,  we  muft  needs  triumph  and  exult  at  the 
tranfeendency  of  the  mercy,  which  fo  far  exceeds  their  bulk  and 
greatnefs.  He  that  wonders  at  the  height  of  fome  high 
rhountaine,  would  much  more  wonder  at  the  depth  of  thofe  wa- 
ters ,  which  fhould  quite  fwallow  and  cover  it  from  being 
feen. 
The  fecond  end  of  the  promife,  is,  the  believers  comfort.    The 

p  p  p  p  Word, 


C66  Aho<ve  all  taking 

Word  ,efpecially  this  part  ofit,was  on  purpofc  writ,  that  through 
faticr.cc  (wdcewfvrt  of  the  Seizures    they  might  have  hope,  Rom. 
15.4.    God  was  willing  to  givepoore  (inners  all  the  Security  and 
fatisfa&ion  that  might:  be, concerning  the  reality  of  his  intentions 
and  immutability  or  thiscounfel^  which  his  mercy  had  refolved 
upon  from  eternity,  for  the  faving  of  all  thole  who  would   em- 
brace C  hrift,  and  the  termes  offered  through  him  in  the  Gofpel  -y 
which  that  he  might  do,  he  makes  publication  thereof  in   the 
Scripture,  where  he  opens  his  verv  heart,  andtxpofeth  thepur- 
pofes  of  his  love,(  that  from  eveilafting  he  had  taken  up,  for  the 
(alvation  of  poor  finrers)  to  their  own  view,tn  the  many  precious 
promife9  f  that  run  like  veins  throughout  the  whole  body  of  the 
Scriptures)and  thefe  with  all « he  feals  &  ratifications,  which  either' 
his  wifdome  could  find,  or  mans  jealous  unbelieving  heart  defirc. 
And  all  this,  on  a  defign  to  filence  the  querulous  fpirit  of  poor 
tempted  fouls,  and  make  their  life  more  comfortable;   who, 
purfued  by  the  hue  and  cry  of  their  high  climbing  fins,  take  fan- 
&uary  for  their  lives  in  Chrift  Jefus.    As  we  have  it ,  in  tot  idem 
verbis,  Heb.6. 18.  That  by  two  immutable  things,  in  *?  hich  it  was 
impoffible JorGoA  to  lye  >  we  might  have  afirong  confolation,  who 
have  fled  for  refuge  fo  lay  held  on  the  hope  that  isfet  before  us.     And 
becaufe  that  thts.of  the  great nefs  and  multitude  of  the  creatures 
fins,  is  both  the  heavyeft  milflone,  which  the  devil  can  find,  to 
tye  about  the  poor  finners  neck,  in  order  to  the  drowning  him  in 
defpair;  and  that  knife  alfo,  which   is  oftneft  taken  up  by    the 
tempted  finners  own  hands  for  the  murthering  his  faith  •,  there- 
fore the  more  frequent  and  abundant  provision  is  made  by   God 
againft  this,  Or,  read  for  this  purpofe  thefe  choyce  of  Scriptures, 
£*<*}.  34.5.  ]er.  3,  the  whole  chapter,  If*.  1. 18.     Jfn.ch.$$. 
7,8,9.<«w/2i.  Heb.j.  2$.  EpisJ.i  foh.1.9.    Thefe,    and  fuch 
like  places,  are  thellrong  holds  which  faith  retreats  into,  when 
this  battery  is  raifed  agsinft  the  foul.     Canft  thou  for  (hame    be 
graveld  (faith  faith,0  my  foul,)  with  an  argument  drawn  meerly 
from  the  greatnefs  of  thy  fins  ?  which  is  anfwered  in  every   page 
almoft  in  the  B:  Me,  and  r<;  confute  which,  fo  considerable  a  part 
of  Scripture  was  writ  ?  Thus  faith  lifleth  Satan  away  with  this 
his  argument,  (  that  he  counts  fo  formidable  )    as  they  would 
do  a  wrangling  Sophifter  out  of  the  Schcoles,  when  he  boldly 
and  ridiculoufly  denies  fomc  known  principle   acknowledged  by 

all 


tie  fit  Id  of  faith.  6  b 


all  for  a  truth,that  have  not  loft  their  wits.    But,  Iwouldnotbe 
heremiftakcn  ;  God  forbid,  that  while  I  am  curing    defpair,  I 
fhouldcaufe prefumption many.    Thcfetwo  diltempers  of  the 
foul,are  equally  mortal  and  dangerous,  and  fo  contrary,  that  Jike 
the  cold  ft o make,  and  the  hot  liver  in  the  fame  perion  ,  while  the 
Phyfician  thinks  to  help  nature  in  the  one,  to  a  heat,  for  digefting 
its  food,  he  fometimes  unhappily  kindles  a  fire  in  the  other,  thac 
deftroys  nature  it  felf.    Thus,  while  we  labour  to   cheere  the 
drooping  fouls  fpirits,  and  ftrengthen  him  to  retain  and  digeft  the 
promifefor  his  comfort,  we  are  in   danger  of  noui  idling    that 
feaverifh  heat  of  prefumpruous  confidence,  which  is  a  fire,  will 
fooneatoutallcaretopleafe,  andfeare  to  dtfpleafe  God ,  and 
confequently  all  ground  of  true  faith  in  the  f  >ul.    Faith  and  fear, 
being  like  the  natural  heat  and  radical  m<  ifture   in  the  body, 
which  is  never  well,  but  when  both  are  prefer  ved .  The  Lord  takes 
pleafure  in  them  that  fear  e  himy  and  hope  in  his  mercy .      Let    me 
therefore  caution  thee  Chriftian :    Asthoumeaneft  to  find  any 
relief  from  the  mercy  of  God  in  a  day  of  diftrefs :    Take  heed 
thou  doeft  not  think  to  befriend  thy  felf  with  hopes  of  any  fa- 
vour thou  mayft  find  from  it,  though  thou  continued  thy 
friendlhip  with  thy  lufts.    A  defigne  as  infeafible,  as  to  reconcile 
light  and  darknefs,  and  bring  day  to  dwell  with  night.    Thou 
necdeft  not  indeed  fear,  to  believe  the  pardon  of  thy  fins  (if  thou 
repenteft  of  them  )    meerly  becaufe  they  are  great  .  but  tremble 
to  think  of  finning  boldly,  becaufe  the  mercy  of  God  is  great. 
Though  mercy  be  willing  to  be  a  fanduary  to  the  trembling  (in- 
ner, to  flicker  him  from  the  curfe  of  his  fin ;  yet  it  disdains   to 
fpread  her  wing  over  a  bold  (inner,   to  cover  him  while   he  is 
naught  with  his  luft .    What  >  fin  becaufe  there  are  promifes  of 
pardon,and  thefe  promifes  made  by  mercy,  which  as  far  exceeds 
our  fins,as  God  doth  the  creature?  Truely ,  this  is  the  Antipodes  to 
the  meaning,that  Gods  mercy  had  in  making  them,  and  turns  the 
Gofpel  with  its  heels  upwards.    As  if  your  feivant  fhould  get 
to  your  cellar  of  ftrong  waters,  and  with  them  make  himlelf 
drunk,  which  you  keep  for  them,  when  fick  or  faint,  and  then  only 
to  be  ufed.     O  take  heed  of  quaffing  thus  in  the  bowls  of  the 
Sanctuary.    It  is  the  fad  foul,  not  the  finning,  that  this  wine  of 
confolation  belongs  to. 

Pppp  a  SECT, 


£68  Above  all  taking 


SECT.  III. 


Faith  prcfents  the  Chriftian  with  a  cloud  of  witnefles,to  whom 
the  Promife  hath  been  fulfilled,  and  thefe  as  great  tinners  as 
himfelf  is.  Scripture-examples  are  Promifes  verified.  They  are 
book-cafes,  which  faith  may  make  ufe  of  by  way  of  encourage* 
menr,  as  wellasPromifes.  Cod  would  never  have  left  the 
Saints  great  blots  to  ftand  in  the  Scriptures,  to  the  view  of  the 
world  in  all  fucceeding  generations, had  not  it  been  of  fuch  ufe  and 
advantage  to  tempted  ioules,  tochoakthis  temptation,which  of 
all  other  makes  the  moil:  dangerous  breach  in  their  fouls,  fo  wide 
fometimes,  that  defpair it felf  is  ready  to  enter  inat  it.  Blefled 
Paul  gives  this  very  realon,  why  fuch  ads  of  pardoning  mercy  to 
great  tinners  are  recorded  •,  Eph.z  he  ftiews,Firft,whatfoul  filthy 
creatures,  himfelf  and  other  believers  contemporary  with  him, 
were,  before  they  were  made  partakers  of  Gofpel-grace,  ver.  3. 
Among  whom  alfo  we  all  had  our  converfation  in  times  p*ft,  in  the 
fafts  oftheflejb ;  and  then  he  magnifies  the  rich  mercy  of  God, 
that  refcued  and  took  them  out  of  that  damned  defperate  (late, 
v.  4  But,  God  who  wa^  rich  in  mercy ,  for  hit  great  love  where- 
with he  loved  pm,  hath  quickened  us  in  Chrift.  And  why  muft 
the  world  know  all  this?  O,  God  had  a  defign  and  plot  of  mer- 
cy to  more  than  themfelves  in  them ,^.7.  That  in  the  Ages  to  come, 
he  might  fhew  the  exceeding  riches  of  h/s  grace,  in  his  kjndnefs  to- 
wards us,  through  Chrift  1c fa,  ver.  7.  wherever  the  Gofpel 
comes,  this  fhali  be  fpoken  of,  what  great  fins  he  had  forgiven 
Co  them,  that  unbelief  might  have  her  mouth  ftopr  to  the  end  of 
the  vvorld^and  this  arrow,which  is  fo  oft.on  Satan?  ftring,might  be 
made  headlefs  and  harmlefs.  God  commanded  J  fhtut  to  take 
twelve ftcnes  ouj  of  the  midft  of  fcrdanyandfet  them  ;  p  ,  And  ob- 
ferve  the  realon,  ver. 6,7.  That  this  may  he  a  ftgne  anwg  )ouy 
that  whenycur  children  at  k  their  fit  hers  in  time  to  come,  What  mean 
■you  by  thefe  (lines  ?  Thenye  fhall  anfwer  them ,  that  the  waters  ef 
Jordon  were  cut  tjfhfore  the  Arkj'f  the  Covenant  if  the  Zirdyrrhfj 
it  faffed  ove>  Jordan^  the  waters  of  Jordan  were  cutoff  and  thefe 
flcnes  /hall  it  a  memorial  unto  (be  children  of  l-frael  for   ever. 

Thus, 


the  Jhield  of  faith.  669 


Tubs,  God  hath  by  his  pardoning  mercy,  taken  up  fome   great 
notorious  finners  out  of  the  very  depths  of  fin,  who  lay  at  the 
very  bottome,  as  it  were,  of  hell,  fwallowed  up,   and    in- 
gult'c  in  all  manner  of  abomination  ^  and  thefe  he  hach  fet  up  in 
his  Word,  that  when  any  poor  tempced  fouls,  to  the  end   of 
the  world,  (who  are  even  overwhelmed  wich  feares,  from   the 
grcatnels  of  their  fins  )  (hall  fee  and  read,  what   God   hath 
done  for  thefe,  they  may  be  relieved  and  comforted  with    thefe 
examples,  by  God  intended  to  be  as  a  memorial    of  what  he 
hath  done  for  others  intimepaft-,  fo  aligne,  what  he  can  ftill 
do,  yea  will,  for  the  greateft  tinners  (  to  the  worlds  end  )  upon 
theirrepentance   and  faith.    No  fins,  though  as  great  and  ma- 
ny as  the  waters  of  /W^  them fe Ives,   fhall  be  able  to  ftand  be- 
fore the  mercy  of  Gods  gracious  Covenant,  but  fhall  ail  be  cut 
off,  and  everlaftingly  pardoned  to  them.     O  who  can    readc  a 
Cftfanajfeh.  a  (JVfagdalexe,  a  Saul  ^  yea,  an  Adam,  (  who  undid 
bimfelf,and  a  whole  world  with  him  )  in  the  Roll  of  pardoned 
tinners,  and  yet  tu me  away  from  the  promife,  out  of  a  fear  that 
there  is  not  mercy  enough  in  it,  to  ferve  his  turn  >    Thefe   are 
asLand-marks,  that  fhew/ what  large  boundaries  mercy  hath  fet 
toitfelf,  and  how  far  it  hath  gone,  even  to  take  into  its  pardon- 
ing armes,the  greateft  finners,  that  make  not  themfelves  inca> 
pable  thereof  by  final  impenitency.    It  were  a  healthful    walk 
(poor  doubting  Chriftian)  for  thy  foul,  to  go  this  circuit,  and 
oft  to  fee  where  the  utmoft  ftone  is  laid,  and  boundary  fet   by 
Gods  pardoning  mercy/urther  than  which  he  will  not  go.  That 
thou  may  eft  not  turn  in  the  ftone,  to  the  prejudice  of  the  mercy 
ofGod  by  thy  own  unbelief,  nor  fuffer  thy  felf  to  be  abufed  by 
Satans  lyes,  who  will  make  nothing  to  remove  Gods  Land.  mark3 , 
(if  he  may ,by  it,  butencreafethy  trouble  of  fpirit)  though  he 
be  curfed  for  it  himfelf.     But  if  after  all  this,  thy  fins  feem    to 
exceed  the  proportion  of  any  one ,  thoucanft  finde  pardoned  in 
Scripture, (which  were  ftrange)  yet  faith  at  this  plunge  hath  one 
way  left  beyond  all  thefe  examples  for  thyfoules  fuccour,  and 
that  is  to  fix  thy  eye  on  Chrift,  who  though  he  never  had  fin   of 
his  own,  yet  laid  down  his  life  to  procure  and  purchafe  pardon  for 
all  the  elect-,  and  hath  obtained  it,  (they  are  all,  and  (hall   as 
they  come  upon  the  ftage,  be  pardoned)  Now,  faith  faith  ,  fup- 
pofe  thy  fins  were  greater  than  any  one  Saints ;  yet  are  they  as< 

Pppp  3  great = 


6jo 


Above  dll  taking 


great  as  all  the  fins  of  all  the  eleft  together  ?  thou  dareft  not 
furely  fay,  or  think  fo.  And,  cannot  Chrift  procure  thy  par- 
don, who  art  but  a  (ingle  pecion,  that  hath  done  it  for  fo  many 
millions  of  his  elect  ?  yea,  were  thy  fins  as  great  as  all  theirs  are, 
the  fumme  would  be  the  fame  j  and  God  could  forgive  it,  if  it 
lay  in  one  heap,  as  well  as  now,  when  it  is  in  feveral.  Chrift  is 
the  Lamb,  that  takes  away  the  fin  of  the  world,  John  r.  29.  See 
here,  all  the  (ins  of  the  eled  world  trutt  up  in  one  fardel,  and  he 
carries  it  lightly  away  into  the  land  of  forgetful nefs.  Now 
faith  will  tell  thee,  poor  foul,  that  the  whole  virtue  and  merit  or 
Chrifts  blood,  by  which  the  world  was  redeemed,  is  offered  to 
thee,and  ihall  be  communicated  to  thy  foul  in  particular  j  Chrift 
doth  not  retail  and  parcel  out  his  blood,  and  the  purchafe  of  it ; 
fometo  one,and  fome  to  another/ then  thou  raighteft  fay  fome- 
thing  )  but  he  gives  his  whole  felf  to  the  faith  of  every  believer. 
All  is  yours,  you  are  Chrifts.  O,  what  mayeft  thou  not,  poor 
foul,  take  up  from  the  Promife,  upon  the  credit  of  fo  great  a  Re- 
deemer ? 


CHAP.  XXI. 


3. 


Faiths  third  Anfrver  to  Satans  Argument ,  ur- 
ging the  foul  to  defyair.      Where  faith  oppofeth 
the  greatness  of  this  one  fin  ofdejpatryto  the  great- 
nefs  0]  the  reft, 

THirdly,  faith  to  quench  this  fiery  dart,  headed  with  the 
greatnefs  of  (in, and  (hot  by  Satan  to  drive  the  poor  and  pe- 
nitent foul  to  defpair ,  teachethhim  to  oppofe  the  greatnefs  of 
thisonefinofdefpair,  to  the  greatnefle  of  all  his  other  finnes: 
What,  faith  faith  1  would  Satan  perfwadc  thee,  becaufe  thou  haft 

been 


the  jhield  of  faith.  6ji 

been  (6  great  and  prodigious  a  (inner,  therefore  not  to  bcIieve,or 
dare  to  think  the  Promifc  hath  any  good  newes  for  thee  f  retort 
thou,  O  my  foul,  his  Argument  upon  himfelf,  and  tell  him,  That 
very  thing,  by  which  he  would  diffwade  thee  from  believing,  doth 
much  more  deterre  thee  from  defpairing ;  and  that  is  the  great- 
nefleofthis  fin  above  ail  thy  other.  Giant  to  be  true  what  he 
chargeth  thee  withal ,  that  thouartfuch  a  monfter  in  fin  as  he 
fets  thee  forth,  (though  thou  haft  no  reafon  to  think  fo,  upon  his 
bare  report ,  but  yield  him  his  faying,)  dotft  thou  think  to  mend 
the  matter,  or  better  thy  condition  by  defpairing?  Is  this  ail 
thekindneffc  he  will  (hew  thee,  to  make  thee  of  a  great  (inner ,  a 
defperatefinner  like  himfelf?  This  indeed  is  the  only  way  he  can 
think  of ,  to  make  theeworfc  than  thou  art;  and  that  this  is 
true,  faith  is  able  to  prove  by  rhefe  four  confiderations  of  this 
bloody  horrid  finnc ,  which  will  eafiiy  evince  more  malignity 
to  be  in  this  one  finne  of  defpair,  than  in  any  other,  yea,  all  other 
together. 


SECT.I. 

Defpair  oppofeth  God  in  the  greateft  of  all  his  commands. 
The  greateft  command  without  all  compare  in  the  whole  Bible, 
is  to  believe  :  when  thofe  Jewes  asked  our  Lord  Jefus,  fohn 
6. 28-    What  /ball  we.  do ,  that  we  might  workjhe  Works  of  God  ? 
mark  his  anfwer,  v.  29.  This  u  the  fVort^  of  God,  that  ye  beleeve  on 
him,  whom  he  hath  fent.     As  if  he  had  fa  id,  'the  moft  compendious 
way,  that  lam  able  to  give  you,  i*  to  receive  me  into  your  hearts 
by  faith ;  do  this,  and  you  do  all  in  one.    This  is  the  work. ,  that 
is  inflar  omnium  y  all  you  do  is  undone,  and  your  felvesalfo,  till 
this  work  be  done ,  for  which  you  Q.all  have  as  much  thanks  at 
Gods  bans,  as  if  you  conld  keep  the  whole  Law;  indeed  it  is  ac- 
cepted in  lieu  of  it.     Vnto  him  that  worketh  not ,  but  believeth  on- 
him  that  juftifieth  the  ungodly,  his  faith  is  counted  for  righteoufueffe, 
Rom.  4. 5 .  whe^ c,  he  that  worketh  mty  is  not  meant  a  (lothful  lazy 
(inner ,  that  hath  no  lift  to  work  ^  nor  a  rebellious  (inner,  whofe 
heart  rifeth  againft  the  work,,  which  the  holy  Law  of  God 
would  employ  him  in  -9  but  the  bumbled  firmer ,  who  defircs 

and  . 


(*j2  Above  all  taking 


2. 


and  endeavours  to  work,  but  is  no  way  able  to  do  the  task,  the 
Law  ax  a  Covenant  fets  him  ^  and  therefore  is  faid  in  a  U-w- 
fenfet  not  to  rvork^,  becaufe  he  doth  norwork  to  the  Laws  purpofe 
fo  as  to  anfwer  its  demands,  which  will  accept  nothing  fhort  of 
perfed  obedience ;  this  mans  faith  on  Chrift  is  accepted  for 
•rightcoufnefs  •,  that  is, God  reckons  him  fo,  and  fo  he  fhall  pafs 
at  the  great  day  by  the  Judges  fentence,  as  if  he  had  never  trod 
one  ftep  awry  from  the  path  of  the  Law.  Now,  if  faith  be  the 
work  of  God  above  all  other ;  then  unbelief  is  the  work  of  the 
devil,  and  that,  which  he  had  rather  thou  Ihouldeft  do,  than 
drink  or  drab  ^  and  defpair  is  unbelief  at  the  worft^  unbelief  a- 
mong  hns,  is  as  the  plague  among  difeafes,  the  moft  dangerous  • 
but  when  it  rifeth  to  defpair,  then  it  is  as  the  plague  with  the 
tokens  appearing,  that  bring  the  certain  meffage  of  death  with 
them.  Unbelief  is  defpair  in  the  bud,defpair  is  unbelief  at  its  full 
growth. 


SECT.  II. 

Secondly,  defpair  hath  a  way  peculiar  to  it  felf,  of  dishonour- 
ing God  above  other  fins.  Every  fin  wounds  the  Law,  and  the 
Name  of  God  through  the  Lawes  fides.  But  this  wound  is  healed, 
when  the  penitent  finner  by  faith  comes  to  Chrift,and  clofeth  with 
him.  God  makes  account,  reparations  now  arc  fully  made 
(through  Chrift,whom  the  believer  receive?)  for  the  wrong  done 
to  his  Law,  and  hisName  vindicated  from  the  difhonour  caft  up- 
on it  by  the  creatures  former  iniquities  ^  yea,  that  it  appeares 
more  glorious,  becaufe  it  is  illuftnous,  by  the  (hining  forth  of 
one  title  of  honour,  (not  the  leaft  prized  by  God  himklf)  his 
forgiving  mercy,  which  could  not  have  been  fo  well  known  to 
the  creature,  if  not  drawn  forth  into  aft  upon  this  occaiion.  But, 
whar  would  you  fay  of  fuch  a  prodigious  (inner,  that  when  he 
hath  wounded  the  Law,  is  not  willing  to  have  it  healed?  when 
he  hath  difhonoured  God,  and  that  in  an  high  provoking  man- 
ner, is  not  willing  the  dirt  he  hath  caft  on  Gods  face,  fhould  be 
wiped  off?  me  thinks  I  fee  every  one  of  your  cholertorife  at 
the  reading  of  this,  againft  fuch  a  wretch,  and  hear  you  asking, 

as 


the  pjfeld  of  faith.  C72 


as  once  Aha(ht*.:rtu  did  E  ft  her  y  who  it  he \and  where  is  he,  ti:r<r 
dtirjl  yrefame  in  hi*  heart  to  do  fa  ?    Efther.  7.  5.     Would  you 
know?  Truly  the  Adversary  and  enemy  is  this  wicked  deipalr. 
The  defpaiiing  ibul  is  the  perfon  that  wMl  not  let  Chrirt  make  fa- 
tisfa£lion  for  the  wrong,  that  by  his  iins  he  haih  done  God.  Sup- 
pofe  a  man  ihould  wound  another  dangeroufly  in  his  paffion,and 
when  he  hath  done,  will  not  Jec  any  Chyrurgion  come  near  to 
cure  the  woutad  he  hath  made.    Every  one  would  fay,  his  tell  act 
of  cruelty  was  worle  than  his  firft.  O  my  foul  ( faith  faith)  thou 
didlt  ill,  yea,  very  ill,  in  breaking  the  holy  Laws  of  God,  and 
dishonouring  the  Name  of  the  great  God  of  heaven  and  earth 
thereby ;  let  thy  heart  ake  for  this.    But  thou  doft  far  worle  by 
thy  defpairingpf  mercy.    In  this  a£t  thou  rejected  Chrift,  and 
keepeft  him  off  from  fatisfying  the  jotticc  of  the  Law  that  is  in- 
jured by  thee,andfrom  redeeming  the  honour  of  his  Name  from 
the  reproach  thy  fins  have  fcandalized  it  with.  What  language 
fpeaksthy  defpair,but  this?    Let  God  come  by  his  right  and 
honour  as  he  can,  thou  wilt  never  be  an  internment  active  in  the 
helping  of  him  to  it,  by  believing  on  Chrift,  in  whom  he  may 
fully  have  them  with  advantage.   O  whatlhame  would  defpair 
put  the  mercy  of  God  to  in  the  fight  of  Satan  his  worit  enemy  ? 
He  claps  his  hands  at  this,  to  fee  all  the  glorious  Attributes  of 
God  ferved  alike,  and  diverted  of  their  honour.    This  is  meat 
and  drink  to  him.    That  curfed  fpirit  defires  no  better  mufick, 
than  to  hear  the  foul  ring  thepromifes,  like  bells,  backward; 
make  no  other  ufe  of  them,  than  to  confirm  it  in  its  own  defpe- 
rate  thoughts  of  its  damnation,  aid  to  tell  it,hell-fire  is  kindled 
in  its  confidence,  which  no  mercy  in  God,  will  or  can  quench  to 
eternity.    As  the  bloody  Jews  and  Romane  fouldiers,exercifed 
their  crueity  on  every  part  almod  of  Chritts  body,  crowning  his 
head  with  thornes,  goring  his  fide  with  a  fpear,and  fattening  his 
hands  and  feet  with  miles :    So  the  defpairing  finner  deals  with 
the  whole  Name  of  God.    He  doth,  as  it  were,  put  a  mock- 
crown  on  the  head  of  his  wifdomc,  fetting  it  all  to  naught,and 
charging  it  foolifhly,  as  if  the  method  of  faivation  was  not  laid 
with  prudence,  by  the  all-wife  God.     He  nails  the  hands  of  his 
Almighty  powers  while  he  thinks  his  fins  are  of  that  nature,  as 
put  him  out  of  the  reach,  and  beyond  the  power  of  God  tofave 
him.  He  pier ceth  the  tender  bowels  of  God  through  his  mercy, 

Q.  q  q  q  of 


674  Above  all  tafytig 


of  which  he  cannot  fee  enough  in  a  God,(th.it  not  only  h  ath,but 
is  mercy  and  love  it  felf )  to  perfwade  him  to  hope  for  any  fa- 
vour or  forgiveneffe  at  his  hands.    In  a  word,the  defpairin^  foul 
transfixeth  his  very  heart  and  will,  while  he  unworthily  frames 
notions  of  God,as  if  he  were  unwilling  to  the  work  of  mercy, 
and  not  fo  enclined  to  exercife  ads  of  pardon  and  forgivenefle 
on  poor  finners,  as  the  Word  declares  him.    No,  defpair  bafely 
mif- reports  him  to  the  foul,  as  if  he  were  a  lame  God,and  had  no 
feet  (affections  I  mean)  to  carry  him  to  fuch  a  work  as  forgivin» 
fin  is.    Now  what  does  thefumme  of  all  this  amount  to,  (  if 
you  can  without  horrour  and  amazement  ftand  to  caft  it  up,and 
confider  the  weight  of  thofe  circumttances  which  aggravate  the 
flagitioufnefs  of  this  unparallel'd  fa6l)furely  it  rifeth  to  no  lefle 
than  the  higheft  attempt  that  the  creature  can  make  for  the  mur- 
theiing  of  God  himfelf  •,  for  the  infinitude  of  Gods  Wifdome 
power, Mercy,  and  all  his  Attributes,  are  more  intrinfecal  to  the 
efience  and  being  of  God,  than  the  heart-blood  is  to  the  life  of 
a  mortal  man  ?  Shall  he  that  lets  out  the  heart>biood  of  a  man 
yea,  but  attempts  to  do  it,  be  a  murtherer,  fefpecially  if  he  be 
aPrince  or  a  King  the  defign  is  againft  )  and  defervedly  fuffer  as 
fuch  a  one?  and.flhallnot  he  much  more  be  counted  and  pn- 
nifht,as  the  worft  of-  all  murtherers,  that  attempts  to  take  away 
the  life  of  God,(though  his  arme  and  dagger  be  too  fhort  for  the 
purpofe)  by  taking  from  him  in  his  thoughts,  the  infinitude  of 
thofe  Attributes,  which  are  (  as  I  may  fay*)  the  very  life  of  God? 
Surely  God  will  neither  part  with  the-  glory, nor  fufc  the  dif- 
honour  of  his  Name,at  the  hands  of  his  forry  creature;  but  wilt 
engage  all  his  Attributes  for  the  avenging  himfelf  on  the  wretch 
that  attempts  it.     O  tremble  therefore  at  defpair.    Nothing 
makes  thy  face  gather  blackneflfe,  and  thy  foul  haften  fafter  to 
the  complexion  of  damned  fouls,  than  this;  now  thoufinneft 
after  the  fimilitude  of  thofe  that  are  in  hell. 


SECT.  III. 

Thirdly,  defpair  ftrengthens  and  enrageth  all  other  fins  in  the 
foul.  None  fight  fo  fiercely,  as  thofe  who  look  for  no  quarter. 
They  think  the  mfelves  dead  men,  and  therefore  they  will  fell' 

their 


the  Jhield  of  faith.  6y& 


their  Jives  as  dear  as  they  can.    S«m$[on  defpaired  ever  getting 
out  of  the  PhiliSlins  hands/  his  eyes  being  now  loft,and  he  un- 
£t  to  make  an  efcape  )  what  doth  he  meditate,now  his  cafe  is  de- 
fperate,  but  his  enemies  mine,  though  it  coftshim  his  own.? 
He  cares  not,  though  he  pulls  the  houfe  on  his  own  head,  fo  it 
may  but  fall  on  the  Whiiifttms  alfo.    ^4l>fahmywhen  by  the  cur- 
fed  counfel  of  j4cbitophei9  he  had  (  as  he  thought )  made  himfeif 
fo  hateful  to  David,  as  to  put  him  part  all  hope  of  being  treated 
with, then  breaks  out  with  an  high  rage, and  feeks  the  ruine  of  his 
Royal  father  with  fire  and  fword.     So  cruel  a  thing  is  defpair, 
it  teaches  to  /new  no  refped  where  it  looks  for  none.    But  molt 
clearly  it  appears  in  the  Divel  himfeif,  who  knowing  himfeif  to 
be  excepted  from  pardon,  fins  with  a  rage  as  high  as  heaven ;  and 
the  fame  fin  hath  the  fame  effects  in  men  that  it  hath  in  the  divel, 
according  to  the  degrees  of  it  thacare  found  in  them ,  ]er.  is. 
1 1, 1 2.  They  faid  there  is  m  hope,  but  tve  will  vealk^  After  our  own 
devices.    Did  you  never  fee  a  fturdy  beggar,(after  a  while  knock- 
ing at  a  door,  and  concluding  by  the  prefent  filence,  or  denial, 
that  he  (hall  have  nothing  given  him  )  &11  into  a  curling  and  rail- 
ing of  them  that  dwell  there  ?  even  fuch  foule  language  doth  de- 
fpair learn  the  finner  to  belch  out  again!*  the  God  of  heaven  ,•  if 
defpair  enters,  it  is  importable  to  keep  blafphemy  out ;  pray 
therefore,  and  do  thy  utmoft  to  repel  this  dart,left  it  foon  fet 
thy  foul  on  a  flame  with  this  hell-fire  of  blafphemy. Hear  O 
you  fouls  fmitten  for  fin,  that  fpend  your  lives  in  fighs,  fobs  and 
tears,  /or  your  horrid  crimes  paft ;  would  you  again  be  [Qtn  fight- 
ing againft  God  as  fierce  as  ever  ?  as  you  would  not,  take  heed  of 
defpair.  If  thou  once  thinkeft  that  Gods  heart  is  hardened  againft 
thee,  thy  heart  will  not  be  long  hardening  againft  riim.  And  this 
(by  the  way)  may  adminifter  comfort  to  the  thoughts  of  fome 
gracious,  but  troubled  fouls,  who  can  finde  no  faith  that  they 
have ;  yea,  who  are  oft  reckoning  themfelves  among  defpairers. 
Let  me  ask  thee,  who  art  in  this  fad  condition,    this  one  thing; 
Canft  thou  finde  any  love  breathing  in  thy  heart  towards  God, 
though  thou  canft  finde  no  breath  of  love  coming  at  prefent  from 
him  to  thee  ?  And  art  thou  tender  and  fearful  of  finning  againft 
him,even  while  thou  feemeft  to  thrown  thoughts  to  hope  for  no 
mercy  from  him  f  if  fo,beof  good  comfort;  thy  faith  may  be 
weak,but  thou  art  far  from  being  under  the  power  of  defpair;  de- 

Qjjqq  2  fperate 


676  Above  all  tjhjngi&c. 


iperate  fouls  do  nor  ufe  to  referve  any  love  for  God,  or  care  for 
the  pteaiing  of  him.  There  is  fome  faith  furely  in  thy  foul,which 
is  the  caufe  of  thefe  motions,  though(tike  the  fpring  in  a  watch) 
it  be  ic  felf  unfeen ,  when  the  other  graces  moved  by  it  are 
vifibie. 


SECT.  IV. 

The  greatnefie  of  this  fin  of  defpair  appears  in  this,  that  the 
leaft  fin  invenom'd  by  it,  is  unpardonable  ;  and  without  this, 
the  greateft  is  pardonable.  That  mult  needs  of  all  fins  be  moit 
abominable,  which  makes  the  creature  uncapable  of  mercy.^- 
das  was  not  damn'd  meerly  for  his  treafon  and  murder ;  for  o- 
thers,  that  had  their  hands  deep  in  the  fame  horrid  fa&>  obtained 
a  pardon,  by  faith  in  that  blood  which  through  cruelty  they  fhed ; 
but  they  were  thefe,  heightned  into  the  greateft  malignity 
poflible,  from  the  putrid  rtuffe  of  defpair  and  final  impenitericy, 
with  which  his  wretched  heart  was  filled,that  he  died  fo  miferably 
of,  and  now  is  infinitely  more  miferably  damned  for. 


FINIS. 





AN 


ALPHABETICAL 

Table. 


ABundance  gives  not  content.  Pag. 
dil. 

7s(c  account  required  for  what  is  not  our 
work.  I}. 

Affections  helftby  afteadyhead.    35. 

Affliction  nofignof  hypocrifie.  VI 7. 
They  are  the  Saints  portion  in  this 
life,  189.  Theyjpeak  well  of  God  in 
them,  1 90.  and  ex$ett good  from  God 
by  them.  \q\. 

Not  affliction  but  hypocrijie  to  be  fear- 
^,102.  afflictions  promote  holineffe, 
2  2 1,  they  are  to  be  endured  patiently , 
375.  God  will  be  avenged  on  Apo- 
ftates,  6%.  Saints  priviledge  from 
Apoftacy,  and  why.  2oo. 

The  Christians  ftnne  aggravated  from 
the  Armour  he  hath  to  defend  him.q. 

Artnes  muft  be  laid  downer  no  treating 
for  peace  with  Cjod,  and  why.     ^66. 

Aflurance  attainable.  390. 


Aflurance  of  pardon ,mak$s  all  other  pro- 
mi  fes  to  be  believed.  47^.  afllirance 
of  Gods  love  makes  the  foul  patient  in 
aH  [offerings.  480. 

Of  Atheifme.628.fta  Dive  I  no  Atheiih 
6  2  9.  how  faith  quencheth  temptation 
to  Atheifme.  630,.  why  fume  great 
Scholars  Atheifts.  631. 


B 


Chrifrian  boldneffe,  whence  it  proceeds. 

113. 

A  broken  heart  befl  to  hold  Goffel-om- 
fort.  4c  I* 

The  Chrifiians  burthen  is  fitted  to  his 
back.  I  .44*- 

The  troubled  fouls  ob;eB'ion  agalnfl  be- 
lieving anfw  red.  ,6iO,  Of  tempta- 
tions to  blajpkemy.  633.  Satans  dou- 
ble defgn  in  them.  ^  3  4* 

Ho:v  Satans  bL'.ifhemoHS  inutlions  may 
be  knvwnfrem  the  motions  ofth«  Chri~ 

fiians 


The  Table. 


ftians  own  heart.  639.  Blaffhemous 
thoughts  pardonable.  643.  fuch 
con(fftent  with  the  ft  ate  of  grace  jbid. 
commonly  in  a  Saint  not  fo great  finsy 
as  proud)  unclean  thoughts ,  and  fitch 
//£?,  and  why  not.  644.  (jod  hath 
gracious  ends  infuffering  them  to  mo- 
le ft  his  Saints.  645. 


A  great  affliction  to  want  fucccfi  in  a 
calling.  1 92.  Diligence  in  our  parti" 
cular  calling  a  duty,  2  50.  and  that 
for  confeience  fake.  ibid,   our  b  lifting 


company  to  be  obferv'd.  275 

Communion  to  be  preferv'd  ycith  God 
in  our  worldly  trade,  252. 

Confefllon  of  fin  a  Saints  duty.     82. 

Conlcience  muft  have  a  right  rule.i  2  3. 
The  Word  is  that  rule.  124.  It  may 
go  by  the  right  ruley  and  yet  not  go 
right  by  that  rule.  1 25. 

Teaceof  confeience  a  tfofpel  bleftingm 
379.  what  argument  the  G off  el  ufeth 
to  pacifie  confeience.  380.-^  good 
confeience  the  bottome  faith  fails  in. 

Saints  confolacions   oft  greateft ,  in 

greatest  afflictions.  446. 

in  it  to  be  expelled  from  heaven.  J  Contentation  a  dutyyand  that  on  noble 

251 


fcaremuft  be  had  it  incro  acheth  not  on 

our  general  calling.  2^2. 

A  carnal  heart  cannot  likefome  truths. 

Children  of  God  are  aU  like  their  Fa- 
ther. 

Chrift  the  be  ft  Vhyfitian.  145. 

Chrift  the  be  ft  pattern.  272. 

Chrift  1  arries  the  Chri ftians  treafure 
for  him.  279. 

Chrift  revealed  the  beft  news.         316. 

Chrift  the  foundation  of  the  Saints  fa- 
miliarity with  God.  348. 

Ch rifts  admirable  care  over  afufermg 
Saint.  445* 

Chriftians  number  why  fo  little.  455. 

"J  he  Spirit  the  only  Comforter.  3  %%JJe 
comforcs  on  a  Goffel  account,  ibid. 
Hisfitnejfeto  be  a  Comforter.  387. 

The  Chrift ian  is  to  be  holy  in  all  com- 
pany. 139. 

Company  draws  the  hypocrite,  ijj.our 


principles.  2?  2.  end  again.  57$.  to 

uneven  converfation  is  rt qui fit v  an 

eft abli jb' 't  judgment.  3  ?. 

A  new  convert,  a  great  rarity  in  our 

dayesy  a#d  what  a  fad  omen  it  is. 

327. 

207.   The  Gofpel-Covenant  favourable  yand 

how  it  comes  to  be  fa.  89. 

The  Christian  can  tafte  more  fweetnefi 

in  the  creature  than  the  wicked.  2 84. 

The  creature  comes  refined  to  him. 

28^.  Curiofity  to  be  ef chewed.  42. 

A  covetous  profeffor  no  faft  friend  to 

God    and  his  truth.  4<{8..  and  the 

conceited    profejfor    is    m  better. 

ibid. 

7  he  Churches  outward ft  ate  variakie  in 

this  worldy  att({  why  ft.  460. 


D 


Death  fweetned  by  faith.  580. 

Thoughts  of  death  helps  toholjncfLijy. 

The 


The  Table. 


The  decrees  of  God  an  argument  to  ho- 

Tmeffe.  IT?. 

Delkht  in  the  commands  commanded. 

D'lftruft  °f  Gods  providence  a  great  Jin, 

374- 

Differences  in  opinion  muft  not  preju- 
dice us  again ft  the  truth.  44. 

DlvifiOflS  fadprognoftickers.  2.28. 

Heart-  divifion  /»  the  fervice  of  God. 

120. 

Of  doublings  that  are  confident  with 
faith.  583.  foure  characters  of  fitch 
doublings.  5:84,  ?8?,  586. 

Partiality  in  duty  naught.         ,    243. 

A  double  end  of  duties  ofworfhip.iq^. 
to  give  homage  to  ^jod^  and  receive 
fupplies  from  God.  246,247. 

The  Dive  Is  temptations  darts.  601.  as\ 
they  are  fwift.  t  ibid,  file  fecretly  , 
and  without  noife.  602.  and  have  a 
wounding  nature,  ibid.  They  are 
fiery  darts,  and  that  in  a  threefold 
reffeB.  60  3. 

Of  defpair.  646.  of/*™  y/W*  <MJ«i/if 
to  this,  ibid  /ft*/?  j^w  enough  to 
caufe  it.  647. 

Defpair  the  greateft  finne.  670.  It 
oppofeth  the  greateft  command.  6  71. 
/f  6rff/>  4  way  of  dishonouring  ?j  od  pe- 
culiar to  it  f  elf.  672.  Itftreng- 
thent  other  fins.  6*74. '  It  makes  the 
leaft  fn  unpardonable.  6j6. 


Englands  engagement  to  hoHne($,  254. 

The  Chriftians  ends  in  duty.  245.  hu 

ends  in  holy  walking  muft  be  right. 


2  j  I.  right  ends  to  be  propounded  in 
defiring     reconciliation    with    God. 

:6?. 

Caufes  of  enmity  among  men  taken  a~ 
way  by  the  G  off  el.  415.  what  they 
be.  ibid. 

Some  (ludy  to  maintain  errors,  fuel? 
reproved.  36.  Error  the  heret-cks 
God.  ibid. 

Wanton  witt  often  fall  into  Errors.  39. 
Errors  how  avoided.  40.  Errors 
marre    union.  41 9. 

Eftablifliment  in  judgment  needful  to 
aQhriftian.  30.  and  why.  52. 

Self-examination  afign  offincerity.l  1 1 

Of  lufts  of  the  eye,  610.  why  called foy 
and  how  overcome.  6rr. 

Exploits  of  former  Saints  improved  by 
faith.  ,     61^. 

The  expecting  att  of  faith.         62?.. 

The  expectation  of  a  b  aint  after  prayer 

encouraged^and  diftinguifh't  from  the 

Jinners  prefumption.  623,624. 

Endeavour  muft  follow  prayer ,  or  we 
pray  trno  purpofe.  6i?,. 


Faith  excites  to  prayer.  557.  and  how, 
ibid,  it  ajjifts  in  prayer.  5^9.  and 
how.  ibid,  fupports  after  pray  errand 
how.       1  ^ . 

Faith  is  uniform.  543. 

Sxhortation  to  faith.  5^6.  Means, 
548.  fenfe  of  unbelief  aftep  to  faith. 

...  .  549 

Obligations  to  believe,   '^62 <■  prefer -vr 

faith.  564.  How.  %6 7.  £f/>  faith. 

<?»^  //><zf  W//  he  p  thee.  <6a.  E.rer^ 

cife  faith.  569.  encreafe   it.    572, 


The  Table. 


S  g»s  of  a  itrong  and  weak  faith.  | 
573.  own  thy  faith.  581.  Faith  and 
doubting  not  inconfijtrnt.  583.  Faith 
difimguifb:d  from  pr  fumption.f&j, 
What  justifying  faith  ii  not,  486. 
No:  a  bare  ajfent.  ib.  not  ajfurance. 
4S7.  Chrif:  the  prim*  object  of  faith, 
;  and  under  what  notion.  490. 

hy  faith  compared  to  a  fhi.  Id.  494. 

What  to  take  faith  above  all.        497. 

Faiths  precedency  above  other  gracs. 

499' 
The  great  enquiry  God  makes  after  faith 

500. th: commendations  (jodg'iv  s  it 

above  others.  fol.Its  high  office  in 

the  all:  of  j unification.  503.   Theu- 

niverfal  influence  it  hath  into  the  0- 

ther.    506.    Faith  findes  all  graces 

with  jrofkjSoj.lt  fetcheth  ftrength 

to  aEi  them.    508.     It  defends  the 

C'hrifiian  in  th:  exercife  of  them. 

5 10.    //  brings  fuccour  wh  n   they 

fade.  fli. 

Arguments  to  mahem  feriom  in  the  tri- 
al of  our  faith.  $21.  As  our  faith  *V, 
fo  are  all  our  graces.  522.  The  more 
excellent  true  faith  isy  the  more-odious 
is  a  falfe.  523.  T>{enc  fiands  fur- 
ther from  getting  a  true  faith,  than 
thofe  that  flmter  themf elves  with  a 
falfe.  524. 

Faith  the greatefl  workjf  the  Spirit  that 
paffeth  on  the  foul.  52$.  The  man- 
ner of  the  Spirit  in  working  faith  in 
many  particulars.  526.  Faith  is  0- 
bediential3  with  two  charaUers  of  its 
.  obedience.  531.  The  fiery  nature  of 
Satans  darts  of  temptations.  £05 . 
cur  care  to  be  great ,  they  en  flame  us 
slut,  ibid. 


Of  lufis  of  the  flcfti.  ,607.  How  faith 
quencheth  th  m.  608.  and  this  it  doth 
three  ways. 60 9.^10.  Lufis  of  the  eye 
quench' 't  by  faith  thhe  ways.  6i\ 

612. 
Faiths  threefold  all s.6l\. A  prayerful 
-all.  622.  expetting  aft.  6 1 3.      ^An 
endeavouring  aEl.  62  c, 

How  faith  qu:ncheth  temptation  to  blaf- 
phemy.  633.  Fir  ft,  as  it  walks  in 
the  eye  of  God.  634.  Secondly ',  as  it 
fhapes  its  thoughts  of  God  by  the 
Word. 6 3  5; .Thirdly ,as  it  ispraifefu'. 
67,6.  Lafilyy  as  it  fills  the  foul  with 
love  to  God.  67,%.  Faith  produceth 
examples  of  great  finners  pardoned. 

662. 
G 

XJnrightems  gain  brings  a  curfe.tgz. 

God  omnifcient  to  be  remembr,d.\Ap. 
G  ods  lo  vefincere.  1 5 6 .Saints  good  is 
Gods  aime.  15^.  Gods  heart  open 
to  his  people.  1^6.  Gods  love  immo- 
vable, not  to  be  corrupted.  158.  not 
to  be  conquered.  T59. 

Gods  holinfimay  humble  the  holiel} 
Saint.  3 1  Z.ai  alflo  meditation  on  mans 
primitive  holineffe.  21 3.  Glory  not 
in  viEtory  over  fin.  242. 

The  Gofpel,  good  ty dings.  319.  as 
oreat  as  good.  ib.  of  p-reat  concern- 
ment.  ibid,  unlool^t  for.$  20.  certain- 
ly true.  ibid. 

Thofe  that  want  the  Gofpel,  ob jells  of 
P'ty.  321. 

Gofpel  con.empt  a  fad  pre f age.  324, 
325.  fad  figns  of  the  Gofyels  depart- 
ing. 3  2d. 

The 


The  Table. 


The  Gofpel  kindly  to  be  entertained. 

328 

Go/pel  glad  tydings,  And  fad  hearts  a- 

gree  not.  339 

Goipel    joy     excludes'  carnal    Joy. 

331 
All  peace  a  Gofpd-bleJJing.  335 
peace  with  God  the  ground  of.aH 
peace,  ibid,  this aGofyzl-blejpng. 
ibid.  The  Gofpel  Gods  inurnment 
to  effetl  peace.  339.  and  why.i  40. 
Gods  hatred  againft  fmne  discover- 
ed in  a  Gofpel  reconciliation  of  fm- 
ners.  342.  Gofpel  balme  to  be 
rightly  applied.  399.  The  Gofpel 
fuits  Chriftian  heartu  I X  0.  how  and 
why.  412 

The  Gofpel  not  to  be  abufed  to  ftrife. 

418 
Grace  may  be,  and  yet  not  at  prefent 
feene.  165.  grow  in  grace.  170. 
240.  Beware  of  glorying  in 
grace  received.  20 t.  Grace  kin- 
dred by  contention.  Gofpel- grace 
foone  preacht  to  fallen  man ,  and 
why.  356 

He  that  will  not  part  with  his  luftfor  1 
the  Gofpel,  will  much  lejfepart  with^ 
his  life  for  it.  457  \ 

Greatneffe  of  fmne  Satans  Argument 
to  dejpaire.  647.  how  faith  anfwers 
it.  648 

A  great  God  to  be  oppofed  to  great  fmne  s. 

649 

What  required  to  have  a  true  notion   of 

God.   '  648 

Great  promifes  to  be  oppofed  by  our  fai.h 

to  great  ftnnes.     66 1 .    Promifes  are 

great   in  their  fpring-head.      662. 


In  their  end. 


H 


66, 


hatred 


<JMore  mercy  in  wicked  mens 
\      thanlzve.  295 

1  God  Commands  handt  tongne  and  heart. 

i  .  ,  395 

,  Hcreticks  dangerous.  30.    andfub.il, 

3* 


31 

ib. 
16S 


Herefie  damnable. 
Hcreticks  have  not  God. 
Hereticks  witches. 
Hcreticks  to  be  pt-nifhed. 
Hereticks/^  kjo  deceive. 
Be  jealous  over  thy  heart. 
Naughty  hearts  and  unfound  judge- 
ments produce  each  other.    40.     A 
good  heart   better  than    a  nimble 
head.  80.     Heaven  worth having% 
though  with  poverty.  290 

Hoiinefle  operative.  208 

Hoiinefle    in     this     life    imperfecta 

208 
Hoiinefle  a   breast-plate,   and  how. 

209 
Hoiinefle  muft    be     the    Chriftian: 
endeavour,  and  why,  214.    Hoii- 
nefle in  the  Saints ,     CJods  great  de- 
ft gne ,     and     hew     it     appeares. 

214 

Holinefles    excellencies.     226.     *TU 

the  rational  creatures  peculiar  exceU 

lency.  226 

Heavens  evidence.     226.  Capacitates 

for  communion  with  God.  22J.  necef- 

fary  to  true  peace.    228.    flops  the 

mouths  of  the  ungodly 230.*  meanes 

for  finners  converfton.  230.     *Tu 

Rrrr  the 


The  Table. 


the  pillar  of  Kingdomes  and  Nati-  1  Hypocrites  chimes  no  [mall priviled- 
ens.  232.  Holinefs  whtrein  to 
be  expreft.  2}6.  in  cant  eft  with 
fxnne.  236.  in  duties  of  Gods 
worfl)'-p*  243.  in  particular  cal- 
ling>    249.   in  carriage  to  others. 

9S9 

Fortifie  thy  felfe  againfi  difcourJge- 

mentto  holinefTc.    280.    A  holy 

life  no  melancholy  life.     2  go.   a  life 

from  God.  286.     But  a   life   with 


ges-   .  106 

Hypocrites  advantage  to  do  mif chief  ^ 

r  I07 

Hypocrites  [candalotu  to  Gods  wayes. 

108 
Hypocrific  lies   clofe  in  the     heart. 

I  IQ 

One  Hypocrite  may  not  love  another. 

111 

Hypocrites'yWrf /wf s  bold.  ibid1. 

God.     287.     The    life     of   God.  IFalfe  grounds, whence fine  ere  fouls  prove 


288 
Heavens  hope  a  ground,  of  comfort. 

Ho.linefle  with  a  little  wealth  contents, 

290 
To  part  with  holinefs  for  riches,  a  dear 
bargain.  291 

Hohntfft  attainable .  298.  to  be  pre- 
fer ved.  309,  and why,  3 10 
The  humble  finner  pardoned.  95 
holy  ends  mujl  be  humble.  311 
humility  ,W  kept ,  312.  Perfenal 
mifcarriages  in  .  unregenerac]  , 
Arguments      for     Humilitie    , 

314 
Holinefle  to  be  eyed  in  chuofing  relations. 

257 
Hypocrifie    layes  the  foule     naked. 

96 

Hypocrifie  a  God  provoking  fnne.  98, 

andrrhy.,  99 

Hyp:  crifie  offers  violence  to  the  light  of 

nature.  1 OO' 

Hypocrifie    the     fnfulnefs    of  finite. 

lOr 
Hy  pocrifie  a  mocking  of  god.  1 03 

Hypocrites  endj,  law.  294 


themfelves  hypocrites,  x  7 

Hypocrites  do  the  devil  doubt*  fervice. 

Hypocrites  of  theferpents  brood.  130 
Hypocrifie  how  cured.  242.  fharp  re- 
proof es  the  befl  befiowed  on  hypocrites. 
142.  conclude  not  jour  f elves  hy- 
pocrites for  want  of  prefent  evi- 
dence of  fmcerity.  165.  when  the 
hypoctit&yieldto/inne,  177.  Fear 
not  ajftitticn,  but  hyhocrifie.  -202 
Hypocrites  peace  not  lafling.  407 
how   it    differs  from  Saints   peace. 

ibid. 

Lufiing    after    the  worlds    honour 

qnencht  by  faith.  612.     and  how. 

.  ,        .„  614,615. 

Faiths  victory  reacheth  to  heart-  lufts. 

617 

7^?  bolineffe  of  God  no  difcouragement 

to  a  repenting  finner,    60      Gods 

hvlinejfe  inclines  him  to  mercy,  ibid. 

It  binds  him  to  be  faithful  in  promt fe. 

6$  1 


The  Tabic. 


i. 

Idleneffe  carries  a  man  out  of  his  cal- 
ling. J  5 
Ignorance    an     enemy      to     Peace. 

302 

Senfe  of  /<?/f-infufficiency  neceffary  to 
Jinnes  cure.  144 

A  Saints  ]oymtk*ownto  the  ftorti. 
393.     In    all    forrowes    befeevers 
have  joy,  ancl  how.     \g\.      The 
price    of  a   Beleevers  joy  ,    what. v 

ibid. 

fchrifkians  mufi  get  an  eftablifht  judge- 
ment.    30.    .An  efiablijbt  judge-; 
ment  in  the  truth  influential  'on   the  ' 
whole  tnan.    $$.Fic\tenejJ?  in  Pro- 
feffeurs  judgements  chaflifed.     3  8 . 
To  get  an  eftablifhed  judgement,  hoyv. 

40 

A  naughty  heart  and  unfound  judge- 
ment refohe  each  into  other!  40. 
5V//- judging  a  fine  ere  Chrifhians 
duty,  133 

Some  are  the  Devils  inftruments  to 
draw  others  to(intandthe  danger  of  it. 

606 

•Infinitude  to  be  afcribed  to  God  alone. 
649.  Bow  unbelief  tak.es  it  from 
Cod ,     and  afcribes  this   to  finne, 

ibid. 

Gods  juftice  no  enemy  to  pardoning  mer- 
cy ^and  why,  652 

God  juft  in  taking  mans  debt  at  Chrifls 
hands.  657.  The)ufcce  of  Ged ex- 
alted in  pardoning  the  ^Believer  high- 
er y  than  in  damning  the  unbeliever. 

658 


Bow  by  faith  Saints  overcome  King* 
domes.  61$ 


^Legal  right  eoufnejfe  no  ground  of  peace. 

398 

Love  sir ong.     53.     Bow  to  get  love 

to    truth,      58.     Love   maintahes 

;  Jincerity.     1 5 : .    The  fincerity  cf 

Gods  love,  how  it    appear es.     1 56 

'  I  Gods  love  unchangeable  tat  cor- 
rupted. 158.  Not  to  be  conquer  d. 
159.  Love  not  the  -war Id.  162. 
Love  to   £hrijiians   a  Gcfpel-fruit. 

¥  410.  principles  of  love  laid  by 
theGefpel.  4*15.  the  love  of  the 
■wicked,  What.  417.  The  tea- 
fons,  -why  no  more  love  among 
Saints.  419.  Chrifls  heart  firong' 
ly  fet  to  promote  love  among 
Saints.  423.  and  how  it  appears. 
424.  Love  Chrifts  legacy,  ibid. 
Bis  prayer.  426.  The  pur  chafe  of 
his  death.  ^2J.  Saints  relations  to 
one  another    calls  for   love.     428 

Luft  like  an  ague.  115.  Lufts  of- 
ten Jpoiles  each  others  market.     116. 

Luft  divides  the  heart.  128.  Lufts 
t  he  caufe  tfftrife.  420 

When  God  ufeth  to  manifeft  his  love 
rmft  eminently    to    his    Children  , 

472,473 


Rrrrz 


M 


The  Tabic. 


M  (  N 

Godlinejfc  to  be  enquired  for  in  the  choice]  A    fincere    heart     a     new     heart, 

of  a  Matter.  225  \  1.27 

Memory  helptby^aneftablijht judgment   No     ncwes     ill     to     4     'Beleever. 

35  317 

M*  Merits  no  pardon.  82,   Newsdefirable,  when.  3 1% 

Gods  mercy    larger  than  the    Saints.    Be  holy  in  thj  neighbourhood. 

84    Cb'ifts   number  to  Jbe   comparative- 
RejeUing     mercy    a    difmal .  fmne.  |      Ij   little   in    the   worid^    proved. 


3  59 

Mercy  to  be  begg'd  only  through  Chrift. 

369 

The  Miniftcrs   worl^  -not  every  mam 


455 
O 

worf^  ij  Obedience univerfal.  136 

Minifters  appointed  for  Ghrifiiansfsla- '  Want  of  opportunity   to  ferve   God , 
b lifh went.  41       *f°re  *ffi*ft*ott  t0  ■*  iraciom  foul.. 

Chrifiians muH  be  Monitors  eachto\  195 

other.  276  (  Abels  offering  accepted  before  Caines, 

tA  Gofjiel  Miniftry  eretted   to    treat ,      and  why.  246 

vnthftnners  about  their  peace.    ,357,  Order  to  be  obferved  in  .the   Chrifiians 
how  it  appears.  ibid,  j     particular  place.  8 

Moral  upright nefe   not   accepted     of  When  doth  a  Chriflidn  flanal  orderly 
Gody  and  why.     68.     Moral    *p*\      in  his  place  ?  9 

rigbtnejfe  may  be  without  a  renewed   Reafonsfor  orderly  walking.  1 1 

heart.     68.     Moral     uprightmjfe ,  What     carries  men  out  of    Order. 
jails   fhort    of  the    chief  end.,    69  f  15, 1 6 

>Mra!    up  ightnejfe   a  great  fnare.    Original  fin  why  denied.  45 

72.    Saints  mufi   beware  of  being    Ordinances   to  be  attended  to     know 
out f  rip  i  b)  Moralifts.  70        ourftneeritj.  174 

Mortifka  ion   of  fmne    to  be   endea-\R  jetting  of  Ordinances  grieves  the  Spi- 
voured.     219.     Thj    daily  work,.  \     rit.  552 

240    Ordinances  effettual    for    preferving 


All  Saints  not    Martyrs,  yet     nwft 
have    a    jpirit     of    Martjrdme. 

461 


faith.  567 

Attive  obedience  how  influential  into 
pajfive.  463 

V 


The  Table. 


Partiality   practice     to  be    fbunned* 

2  JO 

The  perfect  pattern  to  he    imitated. 

272 

Pardoning  mercy  the  ground  ef    all 
mercy.  3 1 7 

Christians  not  perfect  m    this     life. 

2O8 

Peace  a  qoftel  bleffing.  3  35-  7he 
Articles  of  peace  with  God  there- 
in tendered.  337.  Peace  with 
Cod  worth  the  having.  351. 
ihdifrenfablc.  352.  That  God 
Jhould  offer  it ,  a  great  wonder. 
354.  How  God  offers  it.  355. 
The  fenfe  of  enmity  in  order  to 
peace.  361.  Peace  with  God, 
makes  no  peace  with  Jinne.  372. 
Why  all  that  profejfe  the  Go/pel 
have  not  peace  from  it.  391. 
Peace  to  believer/  in  deepefi  for- 
row/i  and  how.  39-}.  a  dou- 
ble ciflern  whence  men  vainly 
feele^  to  draw  peace.  396.  Car- 
nal fhifts ,  ncr  legal  righteouf- 
neffe  any  grounds  of  peace.    396, 

39« 
Peace    with  a    Gojpel-flamp ,   what. 

401 
True  Peace  fometimes  where  no  joy. 

582 

Faith  where  no  pe&ce:  fometimes.      582 

The  way    of    peace  what.    405. 

GojpeL peace  comforts  alone.    405. 

Peace  <W  /</tv  amongfl  men,    a 


Go  (pel  fruit.  41  o.  Peace  <rw?oȣ 
Chriflians  is  to  be  cherifbed.  422. 
and  why.  423.  Peace  w>&  fta 
creatures  a  fruit  of  the  Gofpel. 
435.  Peace  of  conscience  a  Go/pel 
blejfing.  3  79 .  Whence  it  appears. 
380.  Preparation  of  the  GofpeJ 
of  peacc,T*>W .  437.  and  whyfo  cal- 
led. 439 

Chriflians  plain-dealers.  130.  Chrifli- 
ans holy  in  all  places.  139 

Sinful  pleafures  to  be  avoided.  281. 
in  pleafures  lawful  ,  time  and 
meafureto  beobferved.  282.  The 
pleafures  of  a  holy  life  hid  from  the 
world.  285 

Poverty  a  difcouragemtnt  from  htlinefs, 
and  why.  290 

Expect  protection  in  thy  proper 
place  and  catling.  1  z 

Pride  carries  men    cut  of  their  places. 

i3>  16 

Pride  and  Errour  g*  hand    in    hand. 

43 

Prayer  for  faith  required.  557 

Prayer  procures  an  eflablijht     judge* 

ment.  43 1 

Prayer  fmcere  ,     when.    134.     God 

net  anfwering   prayers,    afflicts  the 

Chriftian.      134.     Pray    and     ufe 

meanes.     134.     Wait  for  an  anfwer 

°f  *hy  prayers  576 

Profeflours/>fr/?o*/tt/.  47 

Profe/fion*  duty,  and  why.  48 . 

Profeffours    firms    mofl   fcandahtts. 

232 

Profeffion  ofgoMinefe  hard  to  fie [b  and 

blood.  50.  Open  pro feffion  of  truth 

but   reafonable.    51.     Prifcillianifts 

made. 


The  Table. 


madi  iu  tie  of  tut  ward   profeflion. 

57 
Directions  to  be  eftablfht   in  profefli- 
on. 53 
Progreftionrfttwr^o/  <*  Christian* 
Providence,  walk*  w  the  view  of  ht 

150 
Providence  vigilant \univerfal,  and  ef- 
ficacious. 151.  Providences  tenden- 
cy, to  wake  us  holy.  220 
Prelumption  and  faith  dlftinguijhed. 

s87 

Prelum  ptuous  finnu  great  eft  wounds 
tonprightneffe  >\  60.  Rely  on  the  Pro- 
mife.  573 

Promifes  encourage  to  holineffe.       2 19 
Profit  bribe/  afalfe  heart.  1 7  8 

Pfalmes  fi*gingy  why  cafh  off  by  fome. 

45 
A  publick  fpirit  againfi  the  ftnnes  of  0- 

thers.  241 

The  termes  of  the  prcmife  muft  well  be 
ebferved.  493.  We  are  not  to  fi ay 
for  more  encouragement  than  the  pro- 
wife     gives     before    we     believe. 

499 
1 he  Politique  TrofejJ our   leaves  truth 
in  danger.  4j8 

Afoul  flood  with  Cjofpel peace, /*f  for  aS 
•wtyes  and  weather.  47 2.  The  fea- 
fon  in  which  Godufeth  more  efpecially 
to  give  in  word  peace  to  his    Saints , 

473 

Peace  with  God  fills  the  heart  full  of  love 

to  God.  4-?  7 

The  more  inward  peace,  the  more  felf- 

denial.  478.  and  the  more  patience. 

479 


JL 

The  quarrel  great    betwixt  God   and 
man.  335 

The  quarrel  taken  up  by  the  Gofpel. 

-337 
Qu  akers  and  Tapift  s  compared.     3  47 


R 


Reafon  no  competent  judge  of  Gofyel 

truths,  6$  j 

Reafon  not  enough  to  quench  temptation 

to  Atheifme.  6  2 1 

What  ufe  there  may  be  o/Reafon  infnch 

to  prove  a  God.  63  j 

Relying  faiths proper  aB.  ,491 

Renovation  univerfal.  j 3  7 

Reproaches  no petty  trials .  187 

Reproach  a  difcouragement  from  holt- 

neffe.     294.     Removed.     295.  the 

more  reproacht  of  man ,     the  mere 

blefi  of  God.  2  96 

Saints  repel  fn.  19S 

RighteoufnefTe  legal  or  Evangelical. 

204 
Imputed  righteoufnefle,r*//f^f  righ- 
teoufnejfe  of  god, and  why.  2  o  > 

Regeneration  in  order  to  hlinefe.  2 1 7 
Relational  holinefs  expelled  of  a  C  hri- 
ftian.  254 

httreftGcdint hy  relations.  258.  Be- 
ware Relations  prove  not  fares. 
z$9.  improve  the  holinejfe  of  thy 
relations.  260.  Terfwade  relati- 
ons into  peace  with  God.  377.  To 
r  efigne  our  fe Ives  to  God,  a  Jure  way 
to  engage  Gods  care  for  us.  454 

The 


The  Table. 


Themcksd,  though  they  love  not ,  yet 
Reverence  the  Saints.  296 

Propound  right  ends  in  Reconciliation 
with  God. 363  .and  when  it  is  done.  364 

«ft>//-refignation  Chrifis  injuntlion.^6 

Chrifls  rcadinefs  to  fujfer  for  m  obli- 
geth  tu  to  the  fame  for  him.  144. 
a  ready  heart  tofuffer  an  excellent  e- 
vidence  of  grace.  448.  it  refiores 
man  to  his  liberty ,  it  enables  for  fer- 
vice./±$  1  it  gives  the  Chrijiian  the 
true  enjoyment  of  his  life.  45  2 

Noneeeffity  ofbein^  rich  in  the  world. 
29O.T0  part  with  holinefs  for  riches , 
4  dear  bargaine.291  .To  thoofe  riches 
rather  than  holinejfc,  a  great  and  f 00. 
lififin.  292 

S 

Satan  an  enemy  to  holinejfe.  222.  Why  of 
all  creatures   Satan  delimits  efpeci-  j 
allytopojfeffemen.  222.  Why  Satan.1 
would   not  corporally    peffeffe    Job,  | 
223.     Satan  fit  led  the  wicked  one9 
and  why.  59O.    Satan  contemptible. 
592.  Satan  to  be  r  eft  fie  d,  and  why  2. 
Satan,  what  an  enemy  he  is.  5.  Satafti 
a  coward,  5.  Satan  an  encroacker.6. 
SiXzxxanaccufer.  7.     When   Satan 
comes  as  a  ferpent,  what  to  do,  to  de- 
fend. 29.     When  Satan  comes  as  a 
Lion,  what  to  do,  to  defend.  29.  Satan 
come s  firfi    with  a  Jpirit  of  errour, 
then  ofperfecution .  5 .     Satan  an  ene- 
my to  the  (fhriflians  confidence.      1 67 

SanAification  defcribed.  206.     a  prin- 
ciple of  new  life.  206 

Scorners  reproved.  3  03 

7hree  datallers  offttch  as  are  ordinari- 


21 

41 
242 
342 
256 
179 

66 


/yfeduced*  34 

Security  expofes  to  Satan.  lO.The  evil  of 
fecurity. 

Spiritual  furetifhip  to  be  avoided, 

Self-denyal. 

Senfe  of  finne  in  order  to  cure. 

Godly  fervants  to  bechofen. 

Secrefie  the  hypocrites  cover. 

Sincerity  likj  a  Girdle. 

Sincerity  covers  the  C  hrifiians  mcome- 
lineffe.  6j 

Sincerity  moral  cr  Evangtlkal.       68. 

Evangelical  Sincerity  called  godly  fin- 
cerity, and  why.  74.Sincerity  .enables, 
7 9.     what  uncomelineffe   fincerity 
covers,  78.  fincerity  beautifies,  ibid. 
fincerity  enriches. 79  fincerity  covers 
finne.So.  and  how.  81.   The  fincere 
foul  the  pardoned  foul.  83.  fincerity 
approves  a  perfon  to  God.  8  3 .  fincerity 
tiot  firength  of  grace  keeps  fouls  cre- 
dit up  at  the  Throne  of  grace.     S6. 
Whence  it  is,  fincerity  covers  failings 
in  the  Saintst8y.  fincerity  the  condi- 
tion of  the  Cjofpel-  covenant. ,88,  fince- 
rity aGod-pleafing  difpofition.     90, 
fincere  fouls  honoured,  lb.  why  fince- 
rity  f@  pleafing  to  God.  92.  The  fin- 
cere  foul  willing,  ib.  fincerity  makes 
the  foul  free    to  God.  93.     Try  thy 
fincerity,  and  why.    109.     All  de- 
pen  is  on  fincerity.  ibid.  'Tis  pojfible 
to  know  whether  a  foule  be  fincere  or 
not.  no.  falfe  grounds  for  fincerity. 
III.  ftcret  performances   no  in  fal- 
lible ground s  of  fincerity.    114.    ths 
fincere  foul  grows  in  grace,  and  how, 
1  /  9.  'Difference  between  the  decay  of 
aimcczefculanda  hypocrite.     119. 

char 


The  Table. 


charatlers  of  fmcerity.  127.     A  fin- 
cere  heart  a  new  heart.  1 27.     a  fin- 
cere  heart  a  plain  heart.  130.    a  fin- 
cere  heart  deals  plainly  with  it  [elf. 
131.  and  with  God.  133.  with  men . 
135.  fincerity  the  Saints  daily  exer- 
cife.igS.  how  to  maintained.  149. 
fincerity  Strengthens    the  foul,  and 
■what  ftrength  it  yields,   1 76.    and 
atwhatfeafons.  177.  fincerity  pre- 
ferves  from  ftn.  182.  and  why.  183. 
fincerity  comforts,  and  when,  187. 
fincerity  a  bleffing  invaluable.  199. 
fincerity  makes  us  willing,  9  2, . fing- 
ing  of  T>falmes  why  caftoffby  ma- 
ny. <.  45 
Cod  allows  not  fin  in  his  Saints,     8 1 . 
fin  is  in  the  be  ft  of  Saints  .81.      (jod 
takes  notice  of  (in  in  the  be  ft  of  Saints. 
8 1,  fin  is  uncomely.  80.     The  fin  of 
a  Saint  aggravated.  218.    fins   ap- 
pearance to  be  fhunned.  236.  ail  tin 
to  be  avoided,  237.    <*W  that  on  no- 
ble principles.  238.  fin  to  be  mortifi- 
ed. 2  3  9.  fin  *"»  of  &£T.r  f  0  be  fupprefed. 
241.  iV<? proportion  between  the  num- 
ber of  finners  W  Saints.  326.    *// 
finsmuftbeferfaken.  368.   no  peace 
to  be  made  with  fin.     372-    fin  f&<? 
grfdf  make-bate  among  Chriftians. 
AfZO,  fome  finners  /«/*  at  devils.$g\. 
Strife  among  Saints  unfeafonable .  429. 
the  conferences  fad.  430.  si  rife  ft  ops 
grace .ib.  $o»7.r  fftfcfc  w'fA     heaven. 
431.  and  one  with  another,  ib.  »o«- 
rijhesfin.  43  ?.  a  Prognoftic^of judge- 
ment. 432.  fcandalout  to  thofe  with- 
out. 439 
Succefle  &  calling  to  be  expected  from 


God.  25 1 .  Nofuccejfe  afore  afflitti- 

on.  ip2 

Chriftians  muft  be  ready  to  fuffer.  446: 

and  why.  441 

Chrifts  fuccoar  alwayes    feafonable. 

jj    •    447 

He     fW  #  »of  willing  to  iufter,    « 

#of    *£/*  f*    <fo  4/yr   of&fr      «l#f/. 

45 1 

Foure  forts  of  Pr§fe fours    that     will 

never  faffer    deep  for  the     Truptt. 

457,  4^8 
Arguments   to   prepare  for  fuffenng. 

459,469 

He  that  refu[eth  to  fujfer  for  Chrift, 
refufeth      to     reigne    with     him. 

461 

What  the  putting  off  the  Shooe  imports 
in  Scripture.  460 

Six  Diretlions  how  to  get  a  fuffering 
jpirit.  462 

Care     in      our     affive       obedience. 

1  463 

^Prayer.     464.     Meditation folemn  of 

it  before     hand.  465.     Resignation 

of    our    /elves     to     God    dayly. 

466.     To   make  this  all    of    re* 

(ignation,     and     denying     of     our 

f elves     appear  e     rational    to     our 

foules.     467.     and    how    that    is 

donex     468.     advancing  the    work 

of    Mortification  dayly  469 

T^one  can    fit    the     Gojpel    Shooc 

to  the   creatures    foot    but     God. 

471 


I  Second    Table     duties    carefully    to 

be 


The  Table. 


be    obferved.     262.  .  Vniverfafly. 

264.  Vpon  an  Evangelical  motive. 

265.  Repel     temptations.    578. 
fchriftians  to  be  holy  at  all    Times- 

138 
Third     for     €hrift    ,     and      how. 

146 

Qhrifiians  have  Thornes  in  the  flc(h, 

and  why.  12 1 

Weigh     the    Truth.     41.    Truthes, 

fome fundamental \others  fuperfimclo- 

ry.  39 

Admiring   perfons  betray  the  Truth. 

42 
Labour  to  feel    the  efficacy  of  Truth. 

44 
Truth  a  great  Trufi.  49.  Truth 
to  be  openly  profeffed.  4  8.  and  why. 
49.  Truth  not  alwayes  to  be  had 
at  the  f ami  rate.  52.  Love  to 
the    Truth    a    meanes    to    \eep 


Worldly  minded  men  love  Tru  th  onlyfor 
gain,  55 

U 

Unftable  fouls  [educe  d.  3  4 

Unbelief  carries  a  man  tut  of  his  cal- 
ling. 16.  The  true  hearted  Chrifiian 
it  uniform.  136 

the  holy    man ,    the    valiant  man. 

210 

The  reconciled  (inner s  untort  with 
Ved  nearer  than  .  Adams.  347. 
and  fironger.  ibid.  Union  of 
hearts  the .  bleffing  of  the  Go- 
(pel.     410.     Union  of    the  primi- 

•  live  C  hrifiians.  411.  Gtjpel 
arguments  mvft  powerful  to  U- 
nity.  412.  The  reafon  why 
no     more     union     ameng     Saints. 

419 


it.     53.     Three  forts  of pretenders  .Unbelief a  gnat  finne  ,    though  not  in 


to  Truth,  part  with  it.  55.  Truth 
mufi  dwell  in  us-  55.  How  to 
get  love  to  Truth.  58.  Truth 
is  pure,  62 

Truth  is  free.    63.    Truth    is  vitlo- 
riom.  63.  God  highly  prizes  Truth. 

60 
When-  God  gives  Truth,  he  gives  | 
a  g'eat  mercy.  60.  God  care- 
ful to  freferve  Truth.  60.  God 
an  enemy  to  Truths  enemies, 
60.  Truth  what  it  is.  61. 
Truth,  meditate  on  it.  61 

Truth /are.  62.  Truth  of  heart  what. 

66 

The  .  different    iffue    of    a    Saints 

and  a  hypocrites  TrouMe.  408 


mans  power  to  believe.  550. 
Unbelief  to  be  the  Saints  bur- 
den daily.  $JQ.  the  evils  of  it, 
571.  The  precedency  of  unbe- 
lief above  other  finne  {hewn  from 
faith  above  other  graces.  $17. 
It  is  afinne-maktngfinne.  ibid,  a 
fwne  the  creature  is  lafi  convinced  of. 
518.  Damnation  chiefly  attribu- 
ted to   it    as  falvation    to    faith. 

5T9 

W 

Be  more   watchful ,     where   weakejr. 

2$c 

Watchfulnefle  needful  for  a  Chrifiian 
Sfff        foul-  - 


The  Tabic. 


fouldier.  2  8.  why  20,  21.  Chrift  the 
watchful  fouls  jriend  and  companion. 
21.  Haw  the  Chriflian  must 
ft  and  upon  hu  watch  in  three  particu- 
lars. 22 

Loofe       walking      hinders       Peace. 

392 

Holy   walking    the     way   of    peace. 

406 

Wanton  wits  often fatt  into    Errour. 

Cjod  counts  he  gives  a  great  mercy  in 
giving  bis  Word.  60.  (Jod gives  his 
Wore*  to  make  us  holy.  219.  'tis  the 
rule  of  holinejfe.  209.  the  world 
to   be  neither  loved,    nor    feared. 

i6z 

The  Chriftlan  mufl  be  holy  in  the  du- 
ties of  Gods  worfhip.  243 

Worldly  bufinejfe  muft  not  eat  up  time 

1  for  communion  with  God.  252.  no, 
turne  the  edge  of  our  affettions   in  it 


253.      worldlings  peace  not  laflirg. 

p.  406 

Holinejfe  promoted  by  every  part  cf  the 
Word.  1 1 9.  the  precept  enjoy nes  and 
guides,  ibid,  the  promife  encoura- 
geth ,    and  threatmng  awes   to    it. 

1-20 

Why  the  Devil  called  the  wic ked     590 

What  ufe  the  Saints  may   make  thereof 

591,592 

Faiths  projects  higher  than  the    world. 

610 

Faith  on  Godt  care  cures  worldli- 
mindedncfle.  611 

The  whole-  world  a  hard  bargaine  with 
finne.  614 

The  difference  betwixt  faiths  conqueft 
over  the  world  ,  and  the  Heathen 
Pb'slofcphers,  6 16 ,  617 

Faith  ufeth  the  world ,  againft  the 
Prince  of  the  world,  (  6 1 8 


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