THE SECOND BOOK On MATTH. 11. 29. VIZ. CHRIST THE GREAT TEACHER OF SOULS that come to HIM. Wherein is shewed. 1. What Christs yoke is. 2. That believers must take Christs yoke on them. 3. The more we are under the yoke of Christ, the more REST we have. 4 Christ is the great Teacher of his Church and People. 5. In what manner Christ Teacheth, 1. He is a Meek Teacher. 2. An Humble Teacher. 6. The Learners of Christ must be Meek. 7. The Learners of Christ must be humble. 8. Christ teacheth by his Example. 9. Wherein Christs Example is to be followed. 10. What kind of Pattern Christ is. 11. We must not follow the Example of the World. Also a Treatise of Meekness and Anger. 1. What Meekness is. 2. Learn of Christ to be Meek towards God; And the Reasons thereof. 3. The Dreadful Evil of Anger and frowardness towards God. 4. Meekness towards God Exemplified from Scripture examples. 5. Meekness towards Men which consists in ordering Anger. 1. To the right object. 2. To the right Time. 3. To the right measure. 4 To the right end &c. 6. The sad effects of Anger. 7. The Excellency of Meekness. 8. Promises made to Meekness. 9. Many vain Reasons and Pleas for Anger Answered. 10. Exhortations to Meekness. 11. Means to get and keep Meekness. By JEREMIAH BURROUGHS, Preacher of the Gospel at Stepny and Cripple-Gate, London. London, Printed by Peter coal, Printer and Book-seller, and are to be Sold at the Sign of the Printing-Press in Cornhill, near the royal Exchange. 1659 A Testimony to the Reader WHAT we have by way of Preface set before the several Books already published of this Reverend Author, Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs, may sufficiently serve for all that are come forth: So that we only need now give Letters Testimonial to the World, that these( viz. The Sermons on Matthew, the 11. Chapter. 28, 29, and 30. verses) We avouch likewise to be the painful and profitable labours of the same Author, and published by the best and most authentic Copies. Thomas Goodwin, William Greenhil, William Bridge Sydrach Sympson, Philip nigh, John Yates, William Adderley. Books Printed by Peter coal, Printer Four New Books of Mr. Jer. Burroughs, VIZ. THE FIRST BOOK Christs call to all those that are Weary and Heavy Laden to come to him for Rest▪ Wherein is shewed First. 1 The Burden of Sin. 2 The Burden of the Law. 3 The Burden of Legal performances with the Misery of those that are under them. 4 The Burden of Corruption. 5 The Burden of Outward Affliction. Secondly, Christ Graciously offers to them that come to him REST from all those Burdens. Wherein is shewed. 1 What it is to come to Christ. 2 That Christ requires nothing but to come to him. 3 Several Rules to be Observed in right coming to Christ. 4 means to Draw souls to Christ. 5 That in coming to Christ God would have us have respect to ourselves. 6 That there is No REST for souls out of Christ; And the Reasons therefore; with some conclusions from it. Thirdly, There is shewed. 1 The Rest believers have from sin. 2 The deliverance from the Law by Christ is. 1 Privatively, 2 Positively. 3 The Rest believers have from the Burden of the Law by coming to Christ. 4 How Christ gives Rest from the Burden of Legal performances. 6 How Christ gives Rest from the Burden of Corruption; wherein is shewed how Sanctification and Holiness comes from Christ only. And encouragments to come to Christ for holiness. 6 How Christ gives Rest from outward▪ Affliction. 7 Some Directions how to get Rest from Christ in Spiritual desertions. THE SECOND BOOK Christ the Great Teacher of Souls that come to him. Wherein is shewed 1 What Christs yoke is. 2 That believers must take Christs▪ yoke on them. 3 The more we are under the yoke of Christ the more REST we have. 4 Christ is the great Teacher of his Church and People. 5 In what manner Christ Teacheth, 1 He is a Meek Teacher. 2 An Humble Teacher. 6 The Learners of Christ must be MEEK. 7 The Learners of Christ must be humble. 8 Christ teacheth by his EXAMPLE. 9 Wherein Ch●ists▪ EXAMPLE is to be followed. 10 What kind of Pattern▪ Christ is. 11 We must not follow the Example of the World. We must imitate Christ in meekness. 1 What Meekness is. 2 Learn of Christ to be Meek towards God; And the Reasons thereof. 3▪ The Dreadful Evil of Anger and frowardness towards God. 4 Meekness towards God Exemplified from scripture Examples. 5▪ Meekness towards Men which consists in ordering Anger. 1 To the right Object. 2 To the right Time. 3 To the reight measure. 4 To the right end &c. 6 The sad Effects of Anger. 7 The Excellency of Meekness. 8 Promises made to Meekness. 9 Many vain Reasons and Pleas for Anger Answered. 10 Exhortations to Meekness. 11 Means to get and keep Meekness. THE THIRD BOOK Christ the Humble Teacher of those that come to him. Wherein is shewed. 1 What Humility or Lowliness is Not. 2 What that Lowliness of Heart is that Christ would have us to Learn of him. 3 Arguments from the Lowliness of Christ to work Lowliness of spirit in Us. 4 The properties of an humble heart towards God 5 The Properties of an Humble and Lowly heart in respect of ourselves. 6 The properties of humility in respect of others. 1 It is fearful of giving or taking offence. 2 It gives due honor to all. 3 It is tender to others. 4 It's not needlessly▪ singular from them. 7 The Excellencies of Humility. 8 Humility brings REST unto the Soul. 9 Means to get Humility THE FOURTH BOOK The only easy way to Heaven. Wherein is shewed. 1 The way to Heaven that Iesus Christ Teacheth, is an easy way: six Evidences thereof. 2 The Difference between the EASE a Carnal heart hath, and the EASE a gracious Soul hath in Religion. 3 The Reason why some gracious Souls complain of difficulty in Gods ways. 4 What it is that Makes the ways of God so easy. 5 Consequences from the easiness of Gods ways. 6 Directions how we may make the ways of God easy. New Books of Mr. Sydrach Simpsons. viz. I Of Faith, Or, That believing is receiving Christ; And receiving Christ is Believing. II Of Covetousness. In the First Book is shewed( besides many other things) 1 That Persons that are believers are Receivers. 2 That to Receive is the Principal use of Faith. 3 That nothing should hinder our Receiving. 1 Not our Sins. 2 Nor Gods delays. 3 Nor the smallness of our receipts. 4 Nor the greatness of our Wants. 4 How Faith Receives. 5 That Faith▪ Receives Christ. 1 In the understanding. 2 In the Will. 6 The temper of a man that hath faith. 7 The necessity of Faith. 8 Though Faith be small yet it makes us the Sons of God. 9 The Nature of True Faith. 10 There are but few that Receive Christ. 11 Three sorts that come not to Christ▪ 1 Such as Receive him not as he is. 2 Such as delay their coming to him. 3 Such as give not that place to Christ in their hearts that is fitting for him. In the Treatise of Covetousness is shewed, 1 It is the Duty of all as they would obtain eternal Life to beware of covetousness. 2 The Reasons of the Doctrine, 1 It s a spiritual Sin. 2 It over spreads the whole man. 3 Its opposite to the Nature of Godliness and Religion. 4 It s the Womb and seed of all Sin. 5 It s a base Sin. 3 The Dangerousness of covetousness▪ 1 It is hardly avoided. 2 It s difficultly cured. 4 You shal have all things needful for this life if you will look after Grace. 5 Your Life lies in Grace, not in Riches. 6 There is more to be feared than to be desired in Riches. 7 We should mortify our d●sires after Riches. In Book 1 Of Unbelief: or the want of Readiness &c. is shewed▪ 1 What Unbelief it is that is here spoken of. 2 The best way to deal with Unbelief. 3 That Unbelief is a sin against al the Attributes of God▪ 4 That Christ will not bear with this Sin of Unbelief. 5 That we should be quick and reayd to believe. 6 Motives to endeavour for readiness to believe. 7 Helps to attain readiness in believing. In Book 2 Of Not going to Christ &c. is shewed, 1 That unbelief is a great Sin, and exceeding provoking unto God. 2 Several arguments provoking us to believe the greatness of the Sin of unbelief. 3 Many Objections answered. 4 Several sorts of this Sin of unbelief. 5 Means to convince us that unbelief is so great a Sin. 6 Though the Sin of unbelief be very great, yet it's pardonable. 7 God hath pardonned unbelief, and will pardon it. A Congregational Church is a catholic Visible Church. By Samuel ston in New-England. A Treatise of politic Powers, wherein seven Questions are answered, 1 Whereof Power is made, and for what ordained. 2 Whether Kings and Governors have an Absolute Power over the People. 3 Whether Kings and Governors be subject to the Laws of God, or the Laws of their Country. 4 How far the People are to obey their Governors. Dr. Sibbs on the Philippians. V●x ●acifica, or a persuasive to Peace. Dr. Prestons Saints submission, and Satans Overthrow. Plous Mans practise in Parliament time. Barriffs Military Discipline. The Immortality of Mans Soul. The Anatomist anatomised. The Bishop of Canterbury's Speech▪ Woodwards Sacred balance. Dr. own against Mr. Baxter. Mr. Hookers New Books in three volumes: One in Octavo, and two in Quarto. These Eleven New Books of Mr. Thomas Hooker, made in New-England▪ Are attested in an Epistle by Mr. Thomas Goodwin, and Mr. Philip nigh, To be written with the Authors Own hand: None being written by himself before. One volume being a Comment upon Christ's last Prayer in the Seventeenth of John: wherein is opened, The Union believers have with God and Christ, and the glorious privileges thereof. Besides many other Gospel▪ Truths, there you have shewed. 1 That the end why the Saints receive al glorious Grace, is, That they may and one, as the Father and Christ are one. 2 That God the Father l●veth the Faithful, as he loveth Jesus Christ. 3 That our saviour desireth to have the Faithful in Heaven with himself. 4 That the happiness of our being in Heaven, is to see Christs Glory. 5 That there is▪ much wanting in the knowledge of Gods Love, in the most able Saints. 6 That the Lord Christ▪ lends daily direction, according to the daily need of his Servants. 7 That it is the desire, and endeavour of our saviour, that the dearest of Gods Love, which was bestowed on himself, should be given to his faithful Servants. 8 That our Union, and Communion with God in Christ, is the top of our happiness in Heaven. The first eight Books: of the Application of Redemption, By the effectual Work of the Word, and Spirit of Christ, for the bringing home of lost Sinners to God. In which( besides many other seasonable, and Soul-searching Truths) there is also largely shewed. 1 Christ hath purchased al spiritual good for HIS. 2 Christ puts al HIS into possession of al that good that he hath purchased. 3 The Soul must be fitted for Christ before it can receive him: And a powerful Ministry is the ordinary means to prepare the heart for Christ. 4 The work of God is free: And the day of Salvation, is while this Life lasts, and the Gospel continues. 5 God calls his Elect at any Age, but the most before old Age. 6 The Soul is naturally settled in a sinful security. 7 The heart of a Natural man is wholly unwilling to submit to the Word that would fever him from his sins. 8 God the Father by a holy kind of violence, plucks His out of their corruptions, and draws them to believe in Christ. The Ninth and Tenth Books of the Application of Redemption by the Effectual Work of the Word, and spirit of Christ, for the bringing home of lost sinners to God. Besides many other seasonable, and Soul-searching Truths, there is also largely shewed. 1 The heart must be humble and contrite before the Lord will dwell in it. 2 Stubborn, and bloody sinners may be made broken-hearted. 3 There must be true sight of sin, before the heart can be broken for it. 4 Application of special sins by the Ministry, is a means to bring men to sight of, and sorrow for them. 5 Meditation of sin, a special means to break the heart. 6 The same word is profitable to some, not to another. 7 The Lord sometimes makes the word prevail most, when its most opposed. 8 Sins unrepented of, makes way for piercing Terrors. 9 The Truth terrible to a guilty conscience. 10 Gross and scandalous sinners, God usually exerciseth with heavy breakings of heart, before they and brought to Christ. 11 Sorrow for sin rightly set on, pierceth the heart of the sinner thoroughly▪ 12 They whose hearts are pierced by the Word, are carried with love and respect to the Ministers of it: And are busy to inquire, and ready to submit to the mind of God. 13 Sinners in distress of conscience, are ignorant what they should do. 14 A contrite sinner sees a necessity of coming out of his sinful condition. 15 There is a secret hope wherewith the Lord supports the hearts of contrite sinners. 16 They who are truly pierced for their sins, do prise and covet deliverance from their sins. 17 True contrition is accompanied with confession of sin, when God calls thereunto. 18 The Soul that is pierced for sin, is carried with a restless dislike against it Six Books more of Mr. Hookers in two volumes in Quarto, are printing. Twenty one several Books of Mr. William Bridge, Collected into two volumes. Viz. 1 Scripture Light the most sure Light: compared with, 1. Revelations& Visions. 2. Natural& Supernatural Dreams 3 Impressions with, and without Word. 4. Light and Law within. 5. Divine Providence. 6. Christian Experience. 7. human Reason. 8. Judicial Astrology. Delivered in Sermons, on 2 Pet. 1. 19. 2 Christ in travail: Wherein, 1. The travail of his soul. 2. The first and after effects of his Death, 3. His Assurance of Issue. 4. And his satisfaction therein. Are opened and cleared in Sermons, on Isa. 53. 11. 3 A Lifting up for the Cast-down, in case of, 1. Great sin. 2. Weakness of Grace. 3. Miscarriage of Duties 4. Want of Assurance, 5. Affliction, 6 Temptation. 7. Desertion. 8. Unserviceableness. 9, Discouragements from the Condition itself. Delivered in thirteen Sermons, on Psalm, 42. 11. His Four Sermons concerning, 4 Sin against the Holy Ghost. 5 Sins of infirmity. 6 The false Apostle tried and discovered 7 The good and means of Establishment 8 The great things Faith can do. 9 The great things Faith can suffer. 10 The Great Gospel Mystery of the Saints Comfort and Holiness, opened and applied from Christs Priestly Office. 11 Satans power to Tempt, and Christs Love to, and Care of his People under Temptation 12 Thankfulness required in every Condition. 13 Grace for Grace. 14 The Spiritual Actings of Faith through Natural Impossibilities. 15 Evangelical Repentance 16 The Spiritual Life, &c. 17 The Woman of Canaan. 18 The Saints Hiding place, &c. 19 Christs Coming &c. 20 A Vindication of Gospel Ordinances 22 Grace and Love beyond Gifts Mr. Brightman on the Revelation. Clows chirurgery. Marks of Salvation. Christians Engagement for the Gospel, by John Goodwin. Great Church Ordinance of Baptism Mr. Loves Case, containing his Petitions, Narrative, and Speech. Twelve Books of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs lately published; also the Texts of Scripture upon which they are grounded. 1 Gospel Reconciliation, Or Christs Trumpet of Peace to the World Wherein is Opened Gods exceeding willingness to be Reconciled to Man; And Gods sending his ambassadors to that End From 2 Cor. 5. 19, 20, 21. 2 The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, on Phil. 4. 11. Wherein is shewed, 1 What Contentment is. 2 It is an Holy art and Mystery. 3 The Excellencies of it. 4 The Evil of the contrary sin of Murmuring, and the Aggravations of it. 3 Gospel-Worship, on Levit. 10. 3. Wherein is shewed, 1 The right manner of the Worship of God in General; And particularly, In hearing the Word, Receiving the Lords supper,& prayer. 4 Gospel-Conversation, on Phil. 1 17 Wherein is shewed, 1 That the Conversations of believers must be above what could be by the Light of Nature. 2 Beyond those that lived under the Law. 3. And suitable to what Truths the Gospel holds forth. To which is added, The Misery of those Men that have their Portion in this lice only, on Psal. 17. 14. 5 A Treatise of Earthly-mindedness: Wherein is shewed, 1 What Earthly-mindedness is, 2. The great Evil thereof, on Phil. 3. part of the 19. vers. Also to the same Book is joined, A Treatise of Heavenly-mindedness, and walking with God, on Gen. 5. 24. and on Phil. 3. 20. 6 An Exposition on the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh Chapters of the prophesy of Hosea. 7 An Exposition on the eighth, ninth, and tenth Chapters of Hosea. 8 An Exposition on the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth Chapters of Hosea, being now complete. 9 The Evil of Evils, or the exceeding sinfulness of sin, on Job 16. 21. 10 Precious Faith, on 2 Pet. 1. 1. 11 Of Hope, on 1 John 3. 3. 12 Of Walking by Faith, on 2 Cor. 5. 7. Mr. Burroughs his fifty nine Sermons on Matth. 11. 28, 29, 30. Are Printed. A Godly and Fruitful Exposition, on the first Epistle of Peter. By Mr. John Rogers, Minister of the word of God at Dedham in Essex. Mr Rogers on Naaman the Syrian, his Disease and Cure: Discovering the leprosy of Sin and Self-love; with the Cure, viz. Selfdenial and Faith. Mr. Rogers his Treatise of Marriage. The Wonders of the Loadstone, By Samuel Ward of Ipswich. An Exposition on the Gospel of the Evangelist St. Matthew. By Mr. Ward. The Discipline of the Church in New-England: By the Churches and Synod there. The Wise Virgins Lamp Burning; Or, Gods sweet incomes of Love to a gracious Soul waiting for him. Published by Mr. Thomas wield, late of New-England. Twelve new Books in one volume of Nich. Culpeper, All called the Idea of Practical physic. 1 The art to preserve Health. 2 The pret●rnatural disorder of mans body, and their Signs. 3 Of Medicaments. 4 Of the art of Healing. 5 Of the general Cure of Diseases. 6 Of External Diseases. 7 Of fevers. 8 Of Head Diseases. 9 Of middle Belly Diseases. 10 Of Lower belly Diseases. 11 Of venomous Diseases. 12 Of Childrens Diseases. Thirty four Books of Nich. Culpeper. Gent. Student in physic and astrology, formerly published. The first Twenty four Books. Are all called the practise of physic, Wherein is plainly set forth, The Nature, Cause, Differences, and several sorts of Signs; Together with the Cure of al Diseases in the Body of Man. Being a Translation of the Works of that Learned and Renowned Doctor, Lazarus Riverius, now living; councillor and physician to the present King of France. Above fifteen thousand of the said Books in Latin have been sold in a very few Years, having been eight times printed though al the former Impressions wanted the Nature, Causes, Signs, and Differences of the Diseases▪ and had only the Medicines for the cure for them; as plainly appears by the Authors Epistle. 25. A Sure Guide to physic and chirurgery: That is to say, The Arts of Healing by Medicine, and Manual Operation. Being an Anatomical Description of the whole body of Man and its parts, with their Respective diseases, demonstrated from the fabric and use of the said Parts. In Six Books of Riolanus, translated, and adorned with an hundred eighty four Figures cut in Brass. 26 Veslingus Anatomy of the Body of Man, Wherein is exactly described, the several Parts of the Body of Man, illustrated with very many larger Brass Plates than ever was in English before. 27 A Translation of the New dispensatory, made by the college of Physitians of London. Whereunto is added The Key to Galens Method of physic, 28 The English physician enlarged. being an Astrologo-Physical Discourse of the vulgar Herbs of this Nation; wherein is shewed how to cure a mans self of most Diseases incident to Mans Body, with such things as grow in England, and for three pence charge. Also in the same Book is shewed, 1 The time of gathering al Herbs, both Vulgarly and Astrologically. 2 The way of drying, and keeping them and their juices. 3 The way of making and keeping al manner of useful Compounds, made of those Herbs. The way of mixing the Medicines according to the Cause, and Mixture of the Disease, and the part of the Body afflicted. 29 A Directory for Midwives, or a Guide for Women. Newly enlarged by the Author in every sheet, and illustrated with divers new Plates. 30 Galens Art of physic, with a large Comment. 31 New Method both of studying and practising physic. 32 A Treatise of the Rickets, being A Disease common to Children wherein is shewed, 1 The Essence, 2 The Causes, 3 The Signs 4 The Remedies of the Disease: Published in Latin by Dr. Glisson, Dr. Bates and Dr. Regemorter, translated into English, And corrected by N. Culpeper. 33 Medicaments for the Poor, Or physic for the Common People. 34 Health for the Rich and Poor, by diet without physic. The London Dispensatory in Folio, of a large Character in latin. The London Dispensatory in twelves, a small Pocket Book in latin. Six Sermons preached by Dr. Hill. Viz. 1 The Beauty and Sweetness of an Olive Branch of Peace, and Brotherly Accommodation budding. 2 Truth and Love happily married in the Church of Christ. 3 The Spring of strengthening Grace in the Rock of Ages Christ Iesus. 4 The strength of the Saints to make Iesus Christ their strength. 5 The Best and Worst of Paul. 6 Gods Eternal preparation for his Dying Saints. A Commemoration of King charles his Inauguration. In a Sermon, By William Land, then Bishop of Canterbury. Abrahams Offer, Gods Offering: Being a Sermon by Mr. Herle, before the Lord mayor of London. Mr. Spurstows Sermon, being a Pattern of Repentance. Englands Deliverance from the Northern presbytery, compared with its Deliverance from the Roman Papacy. In a Sermon on the 5 of Nov. 1651. before the Parliament. By Peter Sterry. The Way of God with his People in these Nations. Opened in a Thanksgiving Sermon, preached on the 5 of Novemb. 1656 before the Right honourable, the High Court of Parliament. By Peter Sterry. Mr. Sympsons Sermon at Westminster Mr. Feaks Sermon before the Lord mayor. The Best and Worst Magistrate. By Obadiah Sedgwick. A Sermon. A Sacred panegyric. By Stephen Marshal. A Sermon. The Craft and Cruelty of the Churches Adversaries. By Matthew Newcomen. A Sermon The Magistrates Support and Burden. By Mr. John Cardel. A Sermon. Mr. Owens steadfastness of the Promises. A Sermon. Mr. Phillips Treatise of Hell.— of Christs Genealogy. The Cause of our Divisions discovered, and the Cure propounded. King charles his Case, or an Appear to al Rational men concerning his trial. A Relation of the Barbadoes. A Relation of the Repentance and Conversion of the Indians in New-England: by Mr. Esiot, and Mr. Mayhew. THE CONTENTS OF THE SECOND BOOK, on Matth. 11. 29. CHAP. 52. Sheweth the scope and drift of the words in verse 29. page. 1 Chap. 53. Sheweth what is meant by the Yoke of Christ in four Particulars, 1. The Yoke of Doctrine. 2. Of Obedience. 3. Of Discipline. 4. Of the across. 4 Chap. 54. Containeth, the several Doctrines concerning the yoke of Christ to be handled in the following Chapter. 10 Chap. 55. Containeth this Doctrine that believers must not live without a Yoke, and that of Christ, and that for six Reasons. 1. Christ takes a far heavier yoke upon himself for believers. 2. We are not able to govern ourselves. 3. Christ hath al power in his hands. 4. God hath glorious things to bring to pass by the members of Christ under his yoke. 5. Christ hath redeemed us. 6. The Glory of Christ is much in the obedience of his people. 11 Chap. 56. believers must put on the Yoke of Christ, because all their obedience is required of them in a way of thanksgiving and blessing of God. 17 Chap. 57. The Doctrine of free Grace, tendeth not to disobedience: The Reasons seven. 1. Nothing so much sets forth the Evil of fin. 2. We come to know by it what Christ hath undertaken for them that shal be saved. 3. Nothing doth so much draw the heart to obedience. 4. It is against the nature of sanctification. 5. It is against the end of Christs coming into the world. 6. Christ is the holy one of the Father. 7. It is against the Nature of the Gospel. 20 Chap. 58. Containeth an use of Exhortation not to abuse the free Grace of the Gospel. Seven Reasons of the Point. 1. Its to abuse the best thing. 2. It is the crossing of God in his highest ends. 3. It is 'gainst the ingenuity of a Christians Spirit. 4. It is a most dreadful scandal unto Jesus Christ. 5. It is a dangerous sign of a Reprobate. 6. It is the greatest hardening sin. 7. Nothing lays up more terror for the Conscience. 25 Chap. 59. The more we come under the yoke of Christ, the more rest we shall have. Eight Reasons of the point. 1. By coming under the yoke of Christ, we give up our wils to God. 2. God is the more willing we should have our will. 3. We need not be careful of the success of things. 4. The soul comes under the protection of Christ. 5. We are under his promises. 6. We have the more assurance that Christ belongs to us. 7. Our Lusts are the more tamed. 8. The more we are delivered from the yoke of men and the Devil. 33 Chap. 60. Containeth the Use of the former Doctrine, and the cleared of some Objections. 41 Chap. 61 Sheweth three Doctrines in the words, Learn of me. The first whereof( Viz.) that comers to Christ are Learners., laid open and four Reasons thereof. 1. Because the souls of such know they have to do with an infinite God. 2. They have the fear eternity falling upon the Soul. 3. Because such Souls see that before they came to Christ, they were out of the way. 4. Such a Soul dares not trust his own heart any more. 44 Chap. 62. Containeth an Use of Examination, to try who are Learners of Christ; wherein divers Objections are answered and doubts resolved. 49 Chap. 63. The main Doctrine that Christ is the great teacher of his Church handled and explained, with three Reasons of the Point. 1. He is come from the Fathers Bosom to reveal to his Church, what he hath heard of the Father. 2. He is appointed by the Father to be the teacher of his Church, 3. Al power, Authority and success of other teachers is from him. 57 Chap. 64. Christ teacheth his Church three several ways. 1. By his Word. 2. By his Ministers. 3. By his Spirit. 62 Chap. 65. Eight special Lessons Christ teacheth his Church, that were little known before. 1. The absolute necessity of Regeneration. 2. The insufficiency of our own Righteousness for justification. 3. Self denial. 4. Is for the soul to come to the Father. 5. The Evil of the Sin of Unbelief 6. The spiritualness of the Law. 7. Happiness in persecution. 8. The Glory of another life. 64 Chap. 66. Sheweth what manner of Teacher Christ is in seven Particulars. 1. Christ Teacheth things of a higher Nature than others. 2. Our dullness is no hindrance to his Teaching. 3. He teacheth the heart effectually. 4. He teacheth suddenly. 5. He teacheth without any mixture of error. 6. He leads into all truth. 7. He teacheth everlastingly. 80 Chap. 67. showing that Christ is a meek Teacher in seven Respects. 1. He doth not Teach in a Rigid austere way. 2. He is not provoked with the dullness of his scholars. 3. He is a patient Teacher. 4. He will not upbraid their former Ignorance. 5. He is willing to Teach things over and over again. 6. He Encourageth the least beginnings in his Scholars. 7. He sweetens all his instructions with Love. 84 Chap. 68. Sheweth Christ to be an humble Teacher in Seven Particulars. 1. In that he will Teach at all, such Creatures as we be. 2. He Teacheth the Poor and simplo ones. 3. He suits himself to his scholars. 4. He comes in his own person to Teach. 5. He comes to Teach unsought. 6. He Teacheth us as friends. 7. He Teacheth by his Example. 91 Chap. 69. Containeth the Application of the former Doctrine in four Particulars. 1. We should bless God for such glorious means as we have to know his mind. 2. Hereby are the Saints honoured. 3. It is an horrible thing to continue in ignorance. 4. Think not much to Teach others. 96 Chap. 70. Application five, Honor Christ as our Teacher. 1. Esteeming highly of him. 2. By giving up our Estates to his Service. 3. By Cleaving to him. 4. In his Ministers. 105 Chap. 71. The calling of the Ministers asserted, and Objections Answered. 110 Chap. 72. The honouring of Christ, begun in seven Chapters, here further prosecuted in three Particulars more. 1. By Entertaining his Spirit. 2. By Improving his Truths. 3. By the holiness of our Conversation. 117 Chap. 73. Containeth an Exhortation to Learn of Christ. 122 Chap. 74. Sheweth that the Disciples of Christ in their learning, should resemble Christ in his Teaching. 1. In Meekness. 2. In Humility. 126 Chap. 75. The Point in the former Chapter further prosecuted. And first that they that Learn of Christ must be Meek, before they come to the word. 127 Chap. 76. Learners of Christ must be meek when they come to the word. 1. In not so much as wishing that any truth were not so. 2. Fret not at truth. 3. Cast it not off. 4. Oppose it not. 5. Throw it not away because it suits not your turn. 6. rail not at the word, nor speak Evil of it. 135 Chap. 77. Learners of Christ must be humble, and that humility explained; showing that there is a false humility to be avoided. 144 Chap. 78. Layeth out the true humility of Learners in Nine Particulars. 1. Be sensible of ignorance. 2. Of Unworthyness to Learn. 3. Be sensible of the authority of the word. 4. Take heed of cavilling at it. 5. Be willing to learn of the meanest. 6. Come with a resolution to yield to the Truth. 7. Be sensible of the continual need of Learning. 8. Give Christ all the Glory of thy Learning. 9. Let not thy knowledge puff thee up. 148 Chap. 79. Sheweth out of 1. John, 2. 6. That Christ teacheth us by his example. The text explained and the parts laid open. 154 Chap. 80. Doct. Christians must live as Christ lived making him the pattern of their lives, confirmed, and Reasons of the same. 1. We have union with him. 2. God loves us as he doth his Son. 3. We have the Spirit of Christ. 4. Christians are the Body of Christ. 5. They are part of the fullness of Christ. 6. They are the Spouse of Christ. 160 Chap. 81. Wherein we are not to follow Christ, The particulars laid down, and doubts cleared, and how to follow him in things indifferent. 167 Chap. 82. How Christians are to follow Christ in the General course of their lives, in ten particulars. 1. He came into the world. Viz. 1. To do the will of his Father. 2. To bear witness to the truth. 2. He did the will of his father readily and cheerfully. 3. He was diligent in the works of his Father. 4. He was very spiritual in al his conversation. 5. He walked Unblameably. 6. He was Universal in his Obedience. 7. He was perfect in his way. 8. He was constant in his Obedience. 9. He was faithful in his house as Moses was. 10. He sought the glory of his Father in al he did. 172 Chap. 83. Two Uses of the former Point. 1. Of Humiliation. 2. To be strict in our lives. 183 Chap. 84. Christ our Pattern in Particular. I. In the bowels of mercy. II. In love to his Enemies. 185 Chap. 85. What kind of Pattern Christ is, opened in nine Particulars. 1. The greatness of Christ. 2. The Wisdom of Christ. 3. He is good. 4 Christ is in relation to us. 5. He is Lovely. 6. We depend upon Christ, and expect much from him. 7. Christ is very successful in his words. 8 The example of Christ is propounded to us to follow. 9. Al Christians follow him, which hath certain Limitations. 188 Chap. 86. Further Reasons why we should make Christ our pattern; as. 1. Christ is the best Example. 2. The most honourable example. 3. He is the most safe example. 4. He is the most unerring example. 5. In following of Christ we follow the Father 194 Chap. 87. Use, 1. Christians ought to be an example to others. 2. Look upon the example of Christ above all others. 198 Chap. 88. Use, 3. Follow not the example of the world, considering. 1. That all men naturally are enemies to God. 2. Often go against their own light. 3. They are filthy and ungodly. 4. It is a slighting of Christ. 5. Few walk in the Right way. 6. To follow the world is a sign of a child of wrath. 7. The Mysteries of Godliness are above the Reach of the World. 8. It it is a sign of the want of the Fear of eternity. 9. Of a sleeping conscience. 10. It is an argument against our sins. 11. This were to learn the example of Christ and the Saints. 12. It is against the excellency of a Christian. 13. There is a Necessity that such shall miscarry, 14. It is a crossing of thy prayer, Thy will be done in the Earth, &c. 15. It is a sign of one whose Name is not Written in the Book of Life. 204 Chap. 89. Doct. Meekness is that Evangelical Grace wherein Christians ought to imitate Christ, Meekness explained, the several kinds of it, and the difference between them. 218 Chap. 90. That Christ is Meek proved and explained, with three Reasons of the Point. 1. Because of the holiness of his nature. 2. Because of the infinite satisfaction he had in himself and the Father. 3. He was infinitely wise. 228 Chap. 91. Three Consequences of the former Doctrine. 1. To rejoice in so meek a saviour. 2. It is a grievous sin to provoke so meek a saviour. 3. An excellent brave Spirit and a meek spirit may stand together. 240 Chap. 92. Learn Meekness of Christ, because the Father delights in the Meekness of his Son. 245 Chap. 93. Learn of Christ to be Meek towards God, and the Point opened in seven Particulars: 1. When God shows himself as an enemy. 2. When in the greatest anguish and trouble, we find no help. 3. When we have sought God long, and yet he doth not hear us. 4. When after much means the heart grows worse and worse. 5. When the Lord imploies us in his service, and yet we find no success. 6. Though things grow worse after we have trusted in Gods word. 7. When we have no Encouragement in our dealing with God, about our eternal Estate. 247 Chap. 94. Containeth three Reasons of our Meekness towards God in General. 1. Hereby God is Sanctified. 2. Hereby we are helped in our Duties towards God. 3. Hereby affliction is made more easy. Secondly, when the Soul hath to do with God about its eternal estate, then we are to be Meek. 1. Because now the Lord shows himself more in his Glory. 2. Because now the sinner apprehends its own wretchedness and danger. 3. Because the sinner is now about the greatest work. 4. He is seeking the greatest Mercy from God. 5. It is Gods greatest aim to subdue thy Heart in afflictions. 6. Because now the spirit of God is more mighty in thee, and it is a gentle and tender thing. 253 Chap. 95. Use Of rebuk to those that are of a froward D●sposition towards God, and who they are 1. When in trouble of Conscience, doubt, or despair of mercy. 2. That in trouble of mind have no Heart to do any Duty. 3. They set upon Duties in an angry freting humour. 4. When Duty is cast off in an anger. 5. When we are crossed in one thing then we cast away all mercies we might have. 6. In Crosses that come immediately from God. 7. To be froward against any part of the word. 8. Against the ways of God. 258 Chap. 96. Sheweth the Dreadfulness of this Sin, for 1. It is Boldness against God. 2. It argues much pride. 3. It argues hardness of Heart. 4. It is contrary to faith. 5. It is vain, and nothing got by it. 6. Your souls cannot be healed that are wounded. 7. The Lord will be froward to such. 8. It will at last turn to despair, if not looked to. 264 Chap. 97. Means and helps against the former Sin. 1. Be convinced of this Sin. 2. Consider the goodness of God in that there is a possibility for you to provide for your everlasting Estate. 3. It cost God dear to make way for Mercy. 4. God hath been patient to thee. 5 justify God in all his dealings. 6 Set the example of Christ before you 267 Chap. 98. Meekness towards God further exemplified from Scripture Examples 270 Chap. 99 Doct. All Christians ought to be Meek towards them they converse with, Proved 274 Chap. 100 Wherein this meekness consists opened, as it is the allaying of Anger in Six Particulars. 1 It orders anger to the right Object. 2 In regard of the Time. 3 In regard of the Measure. 4 In regard of the Ground. 5 In respect of the exercise of it. 6 In respect of the End 277 Chap. 101 Of the ordering Anger in respect of the Object. In twelve particulars 281 Chap. 102 Of allaying of Anger in respect of time in divers particulars. 1 It is not sudden. 2 Unseasonable 3 Nor Continual 291 Chap. 103 Of the ordering of Anger in respect of measure. 1 That it go not beyond the cause. 2 That it grow not too bitter. 3 Nor too fierce. 4. Nor unruly. 5 Nor Cruel. 6 Nor so angry in our own, as in the things of God 300 Chap. 104 Of the Moderating Anger in respect of the grounds and end. 1 The ground must not be sinful. 1 Not Pride, the several workings whereof to cause Anger, is set out in Eight Particulars 1 It makes us think we are too great to be crossed. 2 He thinks himself too good. 3 A proud heart makes his will the Rule of his actions. 4 He hath great apprehensions of himself. 5 He thinks all he doth Right. 6 He thinks himself only ought to be satisfied. 7 He cares not what others suffer. 8 He thinks it dishonourable to pass by a wrong 311 Chap. 105 The second Ground of Anger is inordinate lust; in regard whereof, and the several ends of it, it is allayed by meekness 316 Chap. 106 Of the effects of Passionate Anger. 1. It Blinds the reason. 2. It Disquiets the heart. 3. It disturbs al we converse withal. 320. Chap. 107. Of the four Effects of Anger, that it hinders al good. 1. Prayer and the Worship of God 2. By making us Sullen. 327 Chap. 108. Of the fifth and sixth Effect▪ hindering receiving▪ Good. And depriving of the Good we have before. 335 Chap. 109. The seventh Effect of Anger is. That it causeth abundance of Sin; 1. It makes us fly in the Face of God. 2. B●nisheth the fea● of God. 3. It regardeth no relation. 4. It makes d●sperate. 5. It causeth cursing and rail●ng. 6. quarreling and Fighting. 7. It makes a strange difference between a man and himself. 8. It is unskilful. 9. It discovers shane. 338 Chap. 110. Of Meekness as it doth good positively, and the excellency thereof in many particulars. 1. It is the glory of Christ. 2. Of God the Father. 3. Of the Holy Ghost. 4. It is a principal fruit of the Spirit. 5. It is the glory of the Disciples of Christ and of Moses. 6. It is of great price with God. 7. It is a fruit of Election. 359 Chap. 111 Of the excellent promises made to Meekness in Scripture▪ and the Text Explained in divers Particulars, as▪ 1. They are kept from Law suits. 2. They do not Exasperate others. 3. Others are loth to wrong them. 4. They enjoy what they have quietly. 5. Others Love to deal with them. 367 Chap. 112 Further Considerations of the excellency of meekness. 1. Christ was appointed to have a special regard of such. 2 The meek interest God in their cause 376 Chap. 113 The excellency of Meekness continued in Eight Particulars more. 1 It is a convincing Grace. 2 It argues a magnanimous Spirit. 3 Wisdom. 4 It graceth our calling. 5 It giveth advantage against an adversary. 6 There is daily Use of it. 7 It keeps continual peace. 8 It makes eminent in all other graces 380 Chap. 114 The Application of the Doctrine of Meekness in Two Branches. 1 In rebuking them that want it: wherein the impediments of it are removed, the Danger of frowardness laid open, and the vain Reasons for it answered 388 Chap. 115 Divers other Vain Pleas for immoderate Anger taken away and Answered 403 Chap. 116. An Exhortation to Meekness and whom it chiefly concerns. As, 1. Inferiors. 2 Such as are joined together by the bonds of nature. 3 Of Marriage. 4 In public service. 5 Such as have opportunity to do good. 6 Such as are proud. 7 Such as are in affliction. 8 Or troubled in Conscience. 9 That have much weakness in themselves. 10 Those that are of different judgments 424 Chap. 117 Means of Meekness. 1 prise it. 2 Renew the Covenant daily. 3 Be Humbled for what is past. 4 Beware of the beginning of Passion. 5 Make account to meet with Provocations. 6 Consider thy Frailty. 7 Keep peace with God. 8 Remember that nothing can be well done in Anger. 9 Turn thy affections another way. 10 Beware of many businesses. 11. Beware of Curiosity 12 Be convinced it is better to suffer then do wrong. 13 Keep the Heart Spiritual. 14 Multiply not words. 15 Study the Word. 16 Set before thee, the Example of the Saints 441 Chap. 108. Five Rules to meeken the Spirit of others. 1 Observe their temper. 2. Give soft Answers. 3 Withdraw gently from angry men. 4 acknowledge thy own offences. 5 Observe fit seasons. 472 THE SECOND BOOK CHAP. LII. Sheweth the scope and drift of the words in verse, 29. Take my yoke upon you. AND thus we are come to the finishing of this blessed promise of Christ, to give Rest unto his people, to endeavour to help your Souls to have Rest in him in these troublesone times, and yet you must know, when all this is done, though God doth ease you of these several burdens, yet mark what follows, Take my yoke upon you, you may not think to live now as you list, now I am free, and I may take liberty, No, the very next words that follow is, Take my yoke upon you, learn of me for I am meek and lowly in Heart, and you shall find Rest unto your Souls. There is the promise over again, but it is promised upon these terms, that you would take Christs yoke upon you, and for the want of this many people have little Rest in their spirits, you are believers indeed, I but is the yoke of Christ upon your neck, you are believers, I but have you learned of Christ to be meek and humble, As if he should say, though you be come to me, and you have some Rest that you shal be saved in the great day, but as for the Rest of the sweetness and comfort that you have in me, perhaps you have not that. That is the meaning of the second rest. The first is the rest of justification, and sanctification, and so glory hereafter, but the rest that follows now in the 29. verse, that is, the rest of comfort, and therefore he saith, come and take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart, and you shal find rest unto your Souls. believing in Christ, though it brings some rest, yet it brings not all, we must add to our believing in Christ, the taking of his yoke, and learning of him, to be meek and humble as Christ was, and then we shall have added al the rest that was before, the rest of the soul in Christ. Christs invitation of Laden burdened sinners to come to him, with the promise of rest, you have heard opened at large unto you, but now that those that are burdened and have rest promised unto them might not think to live as they list, loosely and negligently, being eased of the burden, therefore Christ adds this exhortation unto his invitation, Take my yoke upon you▪ Indeed, I promise to give you rest, to ease you of your burden, but you must live under a yoke for al this, and you must be willing to it, you must not have the yoke put upon you, but you must take my yoke upon you, but this must be my yoke, I will indeed deliver you from the yoke of man, and you must not bring any upon yourselves, but my yoke, take my yoke upon you. And because the heart of man is very froward and proud, Yea, the hearts of those that are godly have much frowardness and pride yet left in them, therefore Christ exhorts them to learn of him, propounds himself to be the pattern of meekness, and lowliness, I am meek, and lowly in heart. The greatest example for meekness and lowliness that ever was in the world, and if you do this, then the promise is renewed, you shal have rest unto your souls, you shal find the comfort of the rest before promised. But here there is an addition unto what was promised before, it was only: And I will give you Rest, here it is, And you shal find Rest unto your Souls: And that was that they might not think, that when they were come to Christ, they should then be freed from outward troubles, No, Christ intimates in this, that though you be come to me, you may meet with much trouble from the flesh, much outward trouble in the world, therefore that is not the rest that I intended, to deliver your outward man from affliction, you shal indeed have rest unto your soul though under affliction, the rest that I promised before is rest unto your souls, though you should endure never so much trouble to your bodies. And that those that come to Christ might not be discouraged, and say, blessed saviour, what help have we here? We were under a burden, thou didst promise us rest here, but we must come under a yoke now, it seems, and another burden. Therefore saith Christ, to take off that objection, in the last words of the Chapter. My yoke is easy, and my Burden is light, It is true, you must not live without a yoke, but this yoke shal be an easy yoke to you, and though I will give you rest from the burden you were under before, and it is true, you must come under another, I but that burden shal be a light burden to you, and thus you see the scope by this short paraphrase of these two verses, the meaning of the Holy Ghost in these words. CHAP. LIII. Sheweth what is meant by the yoke of Christ in four Particulars, 1. The yoke of Doctrine. 2. Of Obedience. 3. Of Discipline. 4. Of the across. WE come now to the more distinct speaking of them. In the words of this 29. verse, you have a double exhortation, and a promise. The double exhortation is. First, Take my yoke upon you. Secondly, Learn of me. The Lessons are two, Meekness, and Humility: For I am meek and lowly in Heart. Or we may have a further consideration of this Meekness and Humility. Christ propounds himself as to be the doctor of his Church, and that he may encourage his people to learn of him, he propounds himself as meek and lowly in Heart. As if he should say, I am a gentle teacher, lowly in Heart and meek, I will show myself meek and lowly in teaching of you. So that, this meekness and lowliness of Heart, either hath reference unto the qualification of Christ as a teacher, that he is one that will teach thee this meekness and lowliness: or else, they are a specification of what special things we are to learn of Christ, that is, Meekness and Lowliness of Heart, and then the promise is, You shal find Rest unto your Souls. Now for the First, Take my yoke, That is the first Exhortation, we must take the yoke upon us, the yoke of Christ. What is this yoke of Christ that we must take upon us? Interpreters make a four fold yoke of Christ that we must take upon us. First, The yoke of Doctrine, and indeed the Doctrine of the Gospel may be called a yoke in this regard, because it doth curb the unruly lusts of mans heart, which are remaining in part, even in believers, there are many lusts that would be unruly, were it not for that that is revealed even in the Gospel, Christ hath a yoke for the kerbing of them. There are many truths, in the Gospel; not only in the Law, but truths in the Gospel, that are curbers of the lusts in the Hearts of men and of believers. Now we must take up the yoke, that is, if there be any truth in the Gospel, that comes most close unto thy heart, or makes most against thy sin and would kerb thy lust, be sure to yield to that truth be not loathe to receive in that truth, and acknowledge and believe it. There are many truths in the Gospel that are not so directly against the lusts of mens hearts, and do not so curb them, and those truths are received generally of all, there is no opposition of them. As for instance now, the Doctrine of the Trinity, that there is one God, and three persons, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, here's a Doctrine that the papists have all been strong maintainers of against all heretics whatsoever. All Papists and others whatsoever, have maintained this, and yet this is a great and Fundamental Doctrine, the Doctrine of the Trinity. Why should they be found right in this Doctrine, and always to maintain it? And also many other true Doctrines that we have in the scripture? But because this is a Doctrine that doth not cast a yoke upon mens lusts, this Doctrine doth not so directly kerb the lusts of men, but a man may acknowledge this to be a true Doctrine, and yet the lusts of his Heart may stil continue. And so there are many Doctrines in the Gospel, in the word of God revealed, that though a man doth acknowledge the truth of them, yet he cannot see how these Doctrines make against the sinful distempers of his heart. But now there are other Doctrines that make against the sinful distemper of a mans heart, that calls for self denial, mortification, and the like, now these the heart of man is very much opposite unto, for those are yokes, those that are against secret sins, and for the power of godliness. We have many men that are Orthodox, that is, they hold the articles of the creed, that are no Arians, that hold Christ to be the Son of God, that yet are great enemies to many other truths that are in the Gospel, those truths in the Gospel that are Practical Doctrines, that is, that urge the strictness of a mans li●e, such as teacheth us to make conscience of our thoughts, and bring every thought into Captivity to the obedience of Christ, but we are to take in these Doctrines into our Consciences and hearts, and be willing to lay the bonds of Gods Authority upon our Consciences that is revealed in such Doctrines as these are. Take this yoke of Doctrine upon you, that is, when you hear any Doctrine or truth revealed out of the word, that makes against any Particular sin that you live in, and that urgeth to the greatest strictness of godliness, be sure to receive this Doctrine into your Hearts and do not cast it out, and do not say, I acknowledge the Trinity, and the articles of my Faith only, but if you would be true believers, you must take the yoke of Doctrine upon you. Secondly, Another yoke of Christ that we must take upon us is the yoke of obedience. As the scripture saith, Servants are under the yoke, that is, under command, that is a yoke to flesh and blood while we are here, obedience shal never be a yoke in heaven, and here also to a gracious heart it is not a yoke. But a yoke it is, saith Christ, if you would have Rest unto your souls, you must be under my government, you must have the yoke of my authority and government upon your hearts. You must not think to go and live without rule, and without government, but you must walk according to those rules of obedience that are revealed in the Gospel, take this yoke upon you. Thirdly, Another is, the yoke of discipline, we might put these two together, but yet there is a further consideration, obedience is general to the commands of Christ as a law giver, but now in that the discipline hath a more special reference unto the order of the Church, and I make no question but this is partly in this scripture intended, Take my yoke. That is, when you come to me, and profess to be a Christian, then you must join with other believers, you must join yourselves together into a body, and there you must set up that order of mine that I appoint you in my word, you must there live in a spiritual society one with another, and take heed that you do not give any offence by a scandalous life, and if you do give offence one to another, you must give satisfaction one to another, satisfaction in any offensive way. You must not think it much to give satisfaction to any brother that is offended by your loose Conversation; and likewise you must be willing to bear admonition by another privately, and if that do not do it, you must bear it publicly, Yea, you must acknowledge my authority in the assembly, the spiritual society that you come to join withal, that they have power in my name to cast you out of that society. And if you be cast out there, to be cast out from the partaking of mine ordinances, and this you must acknowledge to do as an ordinance of mine, as that that must yoke your Corruption, and you must be willing to take this yoke upon you. Christians must not think to live at liberty, and loosely, and not to be accountable to any for their lives, but they are to join in such a society, that they may so set up all the ordinances, brotherly admonition and authority and the ordinance of casting out those that are unruly, and the ordinances of the word, and of the sacraments. Now this is a great yoke and it doth mightily yoke the Corrupt Hearts of men, and because it is such a yoke to keep them within bounds, therefore it is that the Hearts of men are so opposite unto it. And howsoever there hath been a great deal of abuse in this order of Christ, yet do not think that I speak now to you any new opinion, but it is that, for ought I know, that all the godly ministers, and godly people in the Nation, that understand the way of Christ hold, the same thing that I now do. This will be made apparent, however in the managing of it there may be some difference, that this all Christians are bound to, to live in a spiritual society and corporation, and not to think that every one must look to himself, and no brother hath any thing to do with him, but to live in such a spiritual society, wherein they are to set up al the ordinances of Christ, wherein they are to be accountable one to another for any scandalous offence, and to be willing to receive admonition private and public, Yea, and to acknowledge the authority of Christ, and to acknowledge, that if they walk offensively, and do not reform, that they are under the censure of the society, to be cast out from the ordinances of Christ, and to acknowledge it to be the power of Jesus Christ, and to fear it as the ordinance of Jesus Christ, and so to walk watchfully over all their ways. This is a yoke that all carnal Hearts cannot endure, but yet it is such a yoke, as all that are godly do desire, many will acknowledge the yoke of Doctrine, to receive al doctrines in the word, and to receive, in general, the commandements of God and of Christ, but to come under such a discipline of Christ as is revealed in the word, that they think to be extreme hard, but this is required here. Fourthly: And Lastly, Another yoke is, The yoke of the across, and that seems to be as hard to flesh and Blood as any other, Take my yoke, the yoke of the across, as if Christ should tel them, true, when you come to me, you shal have rest to your Souls, you shal have deliverance from the rigour of the Law, from the guilt of your sin, and the like, but you must expect with this, much persecution in the world, therefore you must deny yourselves, and take up my across, you must expect that the more you are for me, the more the world will persecute you, and you may suffer exceeding hard things here in this world for my name sake, and if you expect rest to your souls, you must be willing to bear the yoke of the across, and endure any persecution whatsoever. It may be, if you come to me, your dearest friends may hate you, you shal be hated by your Father, Mother, Kinsmen, Neighbours, you may be brought before rulers for my names sake, you may be rejected, and counted the off scouring of the world, well, you must be willing to be under this yoke. You will say, These are very hard things. Now were but the other Lesson learned that comes after, Learn of me for I am Meek and Humble, These would not be hard. It is the frowardness, and pride of mens Hearts that makes any of these seem hard, Christ professes that his yoke is easy, and his burden light. And so, God willing, when we come to the last verse, we shal show unto you, that al these yokes of Christ are easy yokes, and though they seem to be a burden, yet they are light burdens to a gracious heart. And thus you have these words opened. CHAP. LIV. Containeth the several Doctrines concerning the yoke of Christ to be handled in the following Chapter. NOW to handle them largely would take up a great deal of time, therefore I will not handle them in Particular, but generally, Take my yoke, we shal go no further then the general at present and we shal handle it thus. First, Consider it in itself or else. Secondly, In relation unto those two promises that is on each side of this yoke; it is very observable, here's a yoke it is true, I but it is between two very gracious promises, I will give you Rest, In the end of the 28. verse. And you shal find Rest to your Souls, in the end of the 29 verse. Therefore first if we shal speak of it as it is in itself, then there is these two Doctrinal points. First, That those that come to Jesus Christ, they must be under the yoke, they may not live without the yoke. Secondly, They must not only be under the yoke, but they must take it upon them, they must be willing to it. Then if we consider this as in reference unto the two promises that are on both sides of it, then you have these two useful observations likewise. First, That the free Grace of God in the Gospel, the free Grace of Christ in the Gospel doth no way tend to looseness, I will give you rest, take my yoke and you shal have Rest to your Souls, here on both sides is Rest, and Rest to your Souls, and yet a yoke in the middle, So that the Doctrine of Grace in Christ, it doth no way tend to looseness, but rather to further obedience. Secondly, The more any Christian, any believer comes under the yoke of Christ, the more Rest such a one shal have in his Soul. I will give you rest, take my yoke, and you shal find rest to your Souls. So that you have these four Doctrinal Points in these words thus Considered in themselves, and in reference unto the promises on each side. CHAP. LV. Containeth this Doctrine that believers must not live without a yoke, and that of Christ, and that for six Reasons. 1. Christ takes a far heavier yoke upon himself for believers. 2. We are not able to govern ourselves. 3. Christ hath all power in his hands. 4. God hath glorious things to bring to pass by the members of Christ under his yoke. 5. Christ hath redeemed us. 6. The Glory of Christ is much in the obedience of his people. THE First is, That Christians, believers that come to Christ, must not live without a yoke, they must live under the yoke of Christ. Surely then no believer must be a Child of Belial, you hear in Scripture many times speaking of the Children of Belial, such a one is a Child of Belial, such are the Children of Belial, Now the meaning of that is this, to be a Child of Belial, it is, to be one that will not endure a yoke, for so the Hebrew word from whence it is taken signifies, without a yoke. So that those that are unruly Children, that are disobedient to parents, and will live as they list, and Servants that will live as they list, that will be under no command, and no rule, they may be called Children of Belial, that is, men without a yoke. But now believers are far from this, certainly, there must be a mighty distance between a Child of Belial and a believer, a believer must be a Child of obedience. In 2 of Ephes. 2. They were charged to be Children of disobedience, saith he, In times past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the power of the Prince of the Air, the Spirit that now worketh in the Children of disobedience. It was in time past that you were Children of disobedience, that is all one, this Greek here is al one with that in the old Testament, Children of Belial, Children of disobedience, that would not be brought under the yoke, and the Devil wrought it. There's many Children that will not obey parents, nor Servants their Masters, they are very wilful, and they will do thus and thus, and they think it is the work of their own Hearts, but it is the Devil speaks in them when they speak such proud and presumptuous words as they do, when they say, they will not do thus and thus, it is the Devil that works effectually in these Children of disobedience. So that if believers, when they were in their natural estate were Children of disobedience, but now are changed, then certainly they are not those that are without yoke, but are now Children of obedience, they are come under the yoke of Jesus Christ. All those Scriptures that call for obedience to the Gospel, are the proof of this point. Now that believers are to be under Christs yoke, not to live without a yoke, without bonds of obedience and order, as Christ requires of them, know, that there's infinite equity for it, that believers of al Men and Women in the world should live under the yoke. First, Because Christ was content to take a yoke upon him far heavier then he lays upon you, and for your sakes Christ took a yoke upon him that was a thousand times heavier then is upon you, and it was for your sakes. In phil▪ 2. 6. Who being in the form of God, thought it no Robbery to be equal with God, but made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant; That shows he was under the yoke, for the scripture saith, a servant is under the yoke. And he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the across. That is, he put his neck under a most heavy yoke. Indeed, saith Christ, My Yoke is easy and my burden is Light, he doth not mean the yoke that he bore, for that was a heavy yoke, for he became obedient to death, even the death of the across, though he was equal with the father, yet he was content to put himself under the obedience of the yoke, the death of the across. Secondly, We are not able to govern ourselves, and therefore it is fit we should be under the yoke, though we have received some grace to come to Christ, yet certainly, we cannot come of ourselves, and if Christ should let us go where we would, and not put the yoke upon us, certainly we should undo ourselves. As it is with many unruly, wild creatures, they are loathe to be under the yoke, but now take the yoke from them, the bridle from them, and they will run and undo themselves So, we think it hard to be under such yokes, as are in the word, we would fain be at liberty, but we do not know our own Spirits, If the Lord should let us be at liberty, we should certainly undo ourselves. It is one of the greatest judgments in the word of God, that God should let us alone, Ephraim is joined to idols, let him alone, will he not be under the yoke? let him alone. You think it a great ease, to have the yoke taken from you, but if God should sand such a man quick down to hel, he could not bring a greater judgement upon him then this to say, let him have his will and his liberty. Thirdly, God the father hath set up Jesus Christ, the great King and Governor of the world, and especially of his Saints, God the Father hath said himself, he hath given al power into his hand for so in the latter end of matthew Christ saith; Al power is given unto me. And in the 2. Psalm. I have set my king on my holy Hil. God the father hath set his son upon his holy hil, and especially in his Church, and al power is given unto him, as in the forenamed place in the Phil. Therefore God hath advanced him above al names, that every knee should bow unto him, Christ is advanced and set up by the Father as a fruit of his obedience, and therefore God expects that al should come in and subject to him, especially believers, those that have enjoyed so much benefit from him. Fourthly, As God the Father hath brought to pass most glorious things by the obedience of his son, so God the father hath most glorious things to bring to pass through the obedience of the members of his son. The greatest things that ever God did bring to pass, it was through the obedience of Jesus Christ, glorious things that we understand but little of now, but shal understand further of hereafter, the greatest things that the father shal be glorified in to al eternity, hath been brought to pass by the obedience of Christ; and next to that shal be, that which he will bring to pass through those that are the members of his son, their godliness, and holy lives, shal fetch about the glory of God, more then any thing that ever did, next to the obedience of Jesus Christ. Therefore God doth not only require that you should walk holily, and be under the yoke of obedience, merely that you might testify your respect unto God, and do that which befits a Creature to do; but because he hath glorious things to bring about by your obedience, such things as shal be the matter of the Glory of God to al Eternity; the obedience of the Saints even in this World, shal be a great part of the matter of Gods Glory to al Eternity, and from thence the Lord will make it appear, how he raises a foundation of Glory to be magnified in everlastingly. Fiftly, Christ hath redeemed us, we are not our own, and therefore there is cause that we should be willing to be under the Yoke. Indeed when men and women come to their own hands, as they speak, then they think they are freed from yokes, and now they may have their liberty, and live as they list: I but, there is no believers that are of their own hands, they are the purchased possession of Jesus Christ. You think it argument enough to your Servants, to tel them, your time is not your own, nor your work your own, nor your strength your own, you are in the state of a Servant: but much more may Christ say, your time is not your own, your strength not your own, nor your parts your own, I have bought them all, I have laid down my life to buy thy time, and buy thy parts, and buy thy strength, and therefore you may not squander away your time as you list; it may be you squander away your parts, and time, and strength, and abilities as you list; I but, Christ hath laid down his life, his blood to purchase them, and therefore certainly, you must not live as you list, but must be content to be under the yoke of Christ. sixthly, The Glory of Jesus Christ is as much seen in the obedience of his People under him, and in the bringing of their hearts under obedience to him, as in any thing. It is that that Christ hath undertaken from Eternity, to bring thee under subjection, and it is that wherein much of the Glory of Christ appears, that he by his power shal bring thy Soul under subjection, under rule. In Acts 5. 31. Him hath God exalted with his right hand, to be a Prince, and a saviour, for to give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins. God the Father hath lifted up Christ to a high dignity, to what? To be a Prince, a high priest, and to give repentance, and remission of sins. Mark, This is the exaltation of Christ, not only to be a saviour to save us, but to be a Prince to rule us, and to give us repentance, to take off the Heart from the ways of sin, and to bring the Heart into the ways of obedience, and Christ shows how he is exalted by God the Father, when he rules us as a Prince, and brings our Hearts into the ways of obedience and repentance. And therefore, those that profess themselves to be Christians, and yet will not live under the yoke, they do what they can to make Christ a dishonourable Christ, they take away the honor of Christ, whereas those that are Christians, that walk as becomes Christians, as under the yoke of Christ, they honor Christ, and Christ shal glory in them to all eternity, therefore Christians must live under the yoke of Jesus Christ, and therefore such as will live unrulily in their ways, and walk as they list, and will pled free Grace for it, saying, Christ hath done al, and the like, these are strangers to the ways of Jesus Christ, and the way of the Gospel, but I shal meet with them in the next point, and therefore I shal pass unto it, and that is this. CHAP. LVI. believers must put on the yoke of Christ, because all their obedience is required of them in a way of thanksgiving and blessing of God. DOCT. II. WE must not only be under the yoke of Christ, but take the yoke of Christ upon us; That is, not only be under the yoke, and winch, and be troubled, and the like, because the ways of God are so strict, and conscience pu●s so much upon us, we must not be discontent I say, and Winch, and Spurne, and Kick; as unruly Heifers, when the yoke is put upon them, they Kick and Winch, and they think it a great ease when the yoke is off them, Oh no, this must not be. Many Christians whom their conscience tells them they cannot be saved except they come under the yoke of Christ, they openly and secretly do what Christ commands of them, I but they lye groaning under this yoke; but Christians must take the Law upon them, they should be a Law to themselves, they should rejoice in this Law, and Love this Law, and bless God for this Law, and count it their Glory and happiness to take this yoke upon them. So in the 110. psalm, The people of God are called, a willing people. Christ indeed by his power doth bring their hearts to him, but he doth not only by his power bring them to do what he would have them to do, but by his power he subdues their wills, he brings them to be a willing people, so that they take the yoke of Christ upon them, and indeed, there is all the Reason in the world for this, that we should not only be under the yoke but take it upon us, there are many Reasons for it, but I will give you but this one special Reason, and that is this. That all the obedience that is required of believers, it is required of them in a way of thanksgiving, of gratulation, and blessing of God. Now there is nothing more reasonable, then that we should be willing to those duties, praise and thanksgiving cannot be performed, but we must do it, joyfully and willingly, a murmuring Heart can never be a thankful Heart. Now there is no duty of obedience that thou art set about, but thou art to do it in way of thanksgiving for the great mercy of God in sending Jesus Christ into the world, and therefore thou must not do duties because thou must go to Hell, and God will damn thee else, but the great argument for believers to do duties is this, that the Lord hath magnified the riches of his Grace, in sending his Son into the world to save our Souls and he hath done such great and wonderful things for the Children of men. Now if our duties must be carried after this manner, surely, we must be willing to them, we must take the yoke freely and willingly upon us. So that a Christian in ways of obedience, he doth not look upon the yoke of Christ as an Iron yoke, but as a Golden chain, as that wherein he glories, he being a Servant of Jesus Christ, And for this, that is very observable, in the first of James and the first, where James writing of his Epistle he saith, James a Servant of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve Tribes which are scattered abroad greeting. James a Servant of Jesus Christ, he was the brother of Jesus Christ,( for so he is called in the Galathians) James, was the Brother of Jesus Christ, near to him by the flesh, and yet here, when he would speak of himself, before his Epistle, to make way to the Hearts of those that he did writ unto, he doth not set forth this style of dignity. to say, I was the brother of Jesus Christ, and so an Apostle, but James a Servant of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ, as if so be, that James did glory more to be a Servant of Jesus Christ, then to be the brother of Jesus Christ. And indeed, it was a greater glory to be a Servant of Jesus Christ, then to be the brother of Jesus Christ. James might have been the brother of Jesus Christ in the flesh, and have perished for al that, but being the Servant of Jesus Christ, he knew he should ever live with him, As it is a greater glory for one to obey the word of Christ, then to bear Christ in the womb, for so you know the word in the Gospel, when they came and told Christ, here are thy Mother, and brethren, seeking for thee, he embraceth his disciples, and said, here are my Mother, and Brethren: And indeed, it was a greater honor to bear the word of God in her Heart, then to bear him in her Womb, to be under the command of Jesus Christ you that are Women, you would think it a great Honor, if you had been appointed by God, and that you had conceived Jesus Christ in the Womb, and born him; but if you be brought under the obedience of Jesus Christ, it is a greater honor. And so, you would have thought it( any of you) a great honor to have been a brother to Jesus Christ, If any should say, here is a man that is brother to Jesus Christ, I but, to be a Servant to Jesus Christ is a greater honor. Oh, labour to charge this point upon your Hearts, when you look upon the yoke of Jesus Christ as a hard thing, remember, that believers must readily, freely, and willingly come and take it upon them. CHAP. LVII. The Doctrine of free Grace, tendeth not to disobedience: The Reasons seven. 1. Nothing so much sets forth the Evil of sin. 2. We come to know by it what Christ hath undertaken for them that shall be saved. 3. Nothing doth so much draw the Heart to obedience. 4. It is against the Nature of Sanctification. 5. It is against the end of Christs coming into the world. 6. Christ is the Holy one of the Father. 7. It is against the Nature of the Gospel. BUT the main points that I intended is, the two latter, and especially the first of those two, the reference that these two have to the two promises, Come to me and you shal have Rest, take my yoke upon you, and you shal find Rest to your Souls. Now the next point, the main point is this. DOCT. III. That the Doctrine of the free Grace of Christ in the Gospel, doth no way tend to any disobedience, but to further obedience. And I hope when we were opening of that in so many Particulars you came to understand somewhat of the free Grace of God in the Gospel. Well, but now that this may not be abused, learn this point. That none of that free Grace, although it had been opened a hundred times more, take it in all the glory and excellency of it, yet it tends no way to looseness, there is no liberty at all unto the flesh by the free Grace of Christ, but there is stil rather a furtherance in it, to bring the Heart under the yoke of Jesus Christ. And for that, I need not give you many Scriptures, that one place in the second of Titus and the 11. May serve instead of al. For the Grace of God that bringeth Salvation, hath appeared to al men, What doth this teach us? It doth not teach us to live as we list, No, verse the 12. Teaching us, that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godlily in this present world, looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our saviour Jesus Christ, who gave himself that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, Zealous of good works; these things teach and exhort, and rebuk with al authority, let no man despise thee. It is a Text, as if it had aimed Particularly against the wanton generation of our times. So many expressions, Teaching to deny ungodliness, That is the general. Worldly lusts, We must not grow more worldly, and satisfy our lusts more then before, not take more liberty to go into company, and drink, and say, I but Christ hath paid for al, and satisfied al. And righteously. Not think that we may run into debt, and cousin, and Cheat, and do any thing, and then think that all is satisfied in Christ, this is a horrible thing. But live soberly, Righteously, and Godlily in this present world, not to think, we cannot live godlily here, but yet we shal be saints in heaven; Mark therefore, even in this world, those that will be Saints in heaven, must live soberly, Righteously, and Godlily in this present world. I but this will make us Legal perhaps; No, Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God, and our saviour Jesus Christ. Those who take liberty unto the flesh upon the Doctrine of Gods free Grace, abusing of it, with what Face can they look for the appearing of the glorious God, and our saviour Jesus Christ? Howsoever many think to honor Jesus Christ, by setting up the free Grace of Jesus Christ more then other● do, but when Jesus Christ shal appear in his Glory, certainly they shal not be able to look in the Face of Jesus Christ. And mark further, Who gave himself for us, that he might Redeem us from all iniquity. Many loose spirits draw this argument, Christ gave himself for us to Redeem us and therefore sin as much as you will or sin as much as you can yet Christ hath paid enough for all, such kind of expressions, come from those that are loose spirited. Bu● here it is, Christ hath given himself for us, that he might Redeem us from al iniquity, not only, that he might Redeem us from the Law, but from iniquity, and Redeem us from al iniquity. Further, And purify unto himself, not only save, not only pardon, but purify unto himself, and that A peculiar people unto himself, in a peculiar manner, that they should live in a peculiar manner from men of the world. And Zealous of good works. What! Do not think to live peculiarly, to live in that kind of way as none others do, new kind of strains, such as the Church of God hath not been acquainted withal, No, But Zealous of good works, And These things teach, and Exhort, and rebuk, Those that shal make any other use of the Grace of Christ then this. And that with all authority. Perhaps these men will go away and jeer, and despise, and Scorn, and tel you it is merely Legal, I but, saith the Apostle, do you go on and do it withal authority, be not afraid of their Scorns, and contempt, Let no Man despise thee. And thus you see the Doctrine of the free Grace of Christ, is no way a cloak to liberty. I will give you the main strength of the point, wherein it consists, and so enlarge it afterwards, that it cannot tend to liberty, For. First, There is nothing in the world that sets forth the evil of sin, more then the Doctrine of the Gospel: al the terror of the Law, and threatening in the Law, doth not set forth so much the evil of sin, as the Doctrine of the Gospel doth. Secondly, We come there to understand, what Christ hath undertaken for those that ever shal be saved. If thou understandest the Gospel aright, thou dost not only understand Christ as the great argument against sin, but thou comest to understand what Christ hath undertaken for thee( as heretofore it hath been opened) it was part of the Covenant that Christ did enter into with God the Father, not only to pay a price for the sins that shal be committed by the Saints, but he did undertake to sanctify their Hearts and lives, and this we come to understand more by the Gospel then by the Law. Thirdly, There is nothing that will gain more upon the Heart of a sinner that understands the Gospel aright, to be as a cord of love, or as so many cords of Love to draw to obedience. Now the cords of Love are as strong, ●ully to draw from sin unto obedience, as the cords of fear can be. Some are drawn from sin to obedience by the cords of fear, but those that understand the mystery of the Gospel, they come to be drawn by the cords of Love, which are as strong as any cords of fear, and therefore the Gospel must needs tend to holiness. Fourthly, It is against the very Nature of Sanctification, if thou understandest the Rest of Christ, you know it was opened to be the Rest of Sanctification, what is this? But to bring the Heart under the yoke of Christ, therefore it is impossible the Grace of God should tend to liberty. Fifthly, It is against the very end why Christ came into the world, and against the very purchase of Christ. The Scripture tells us, that Christ came to dissolve the works of the Devil, and not to twist them fast, the truth is, these men that will preach so much against the Law of God,( for it is the same Law stil as to him) and that under the argument of Christs free Grace and Christs Redemption, they are so far from dissolving the works of the Devil, as they twist them together by a stronger cord then ever was from the beginning of the world. I mean, the abuse of the free Grace of Christ in delivering us from the Law, as it is delivered and handled by many, it is the most subtle twisting of them together that ever was in the world. The Devil in al his wisdom and subtlety, though he was the subtle Serpent in paradise, yet he never had such a subtle way to twist his ways together as this abuse of the Grace of Christ in the Gospel. And it is against the purchase of Christ, for so you had it before, Christ hath purchased a peculiar people unto himself to be Zealous of good works. Sixthly, Christ is the holy one of the Father, he is the very glass of the holiness of the Father, he is the Character and engraven form of the Father, the holiness of God, it is the lustre of al his other glory, the lustre of al his atributes, now Christ is the glory of the Father, in regard of holiness, and therefore there is nothing in him can tend to any looseness. In Hebrews, 7. 26. For such a high priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners and made higher then the Heavens. Mark what a high priest we have, such a high priest became us. First, Holy. Secondly, Harmless. Thirdly, undefiled. Fourthly, Separate from sinners. Certainly, if we should have ●uch a high priest, and it became us to have such a one, Holy, Harmless, undefiled, Separate from sinners, then it becomes likewise those that profess to have part in the sacrifice of this high priest, to be likewise holy, harmless, undefiled and separate from sinners, and therefore the Grace of Christ will teach thee to be separate from sinners, as do not you see apparently that these men begin to acompany with sinners, more then ordinarily they did, and more then Christians do. Seventhly, It is against the very Nature of the Gospel. In 1 Peter, 1. 22. Seeing ye have purified your Souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit. The truth, that is, the truth of the Gospel. So that the obedience to the truth, it purifies the Heart, and therefore those men that think they have the truth of the Gospel, and open that more then before, except the truth purifies the Soul to obedience as well as Faith, certainly, they know not the mystery of the Gospel. CHAP. LVIII. Containeth an use of Exhortation not to abuse the free Grace of the Gospel. Seven Reasons of the Point. 1. Its to abuse the best thing. 2. It is the crossing of God in his highest ends. 3. It is against the ingenuity of a Christians Spirit. 4. It is a most dreadful scandal unto Jesus Christ. 5. It is a dangerous sign of a Reprobate. 6. It is the greatest hardening sin. 7. Nothing lays up more terror for the Conscience. AND if this be so, Oh! Let men take heed of expressing any thing that tends to looseness, and take the rise from the Grace of God in the Gospel, though it is true, when you come and examine it, Oh they say, God forbid that they should speak any thing against the Grace of God in the Gospel. Now it is true, it is impossible that they should dare to be open and plain, though some have spoken so plainly and openly such things as tend to looseness, such things as one would think never should come from any mans mouth, but the truth is, if the Devil should come to men, and intend to bring men to looseness, he would not say in plain terms, I intend to bring you to looseness, but would do it under some other colour and therefore we should take heed, not only of expressions that way, but take heed of any thing that tends that way. As I suppose many of you cannot but red of abundance of expressions in many books that tend that way, which may take the Heart of many that way. As a man may by striking of fire near Gunpowder set the house on fire, possibly he may say, I did not intend to set the House on fire, I but is that enough when they strike the fire near it. Let men take heed both in regard of their expressions, and more especially in regard of their lives and Conversations, that they do not abuse the free Grace of God in Christ. There are a great many things that I might mention, to show the great Evil that there is in this, to make the promise of the Gospel, and the free Grace of God, to be but as an accidental means towards looseness. As, First, This is the abusing of the most blessed thing in the world, to draw any thing that might further looseness in our lives, I say it is the abuse of the most blessed thing that ever was in Heaven or Earth, it is the abuse of the Son of God, being made man, and dying for mans sin, which is the blessedest thing that ever was. Take all the Glory of Heaven and Earth, it is al but as a dark, black shadow, in comparison of the Glory that there is in the Son of God, being made man, and dying for mans sin. Now to abuse that wherein the Glory of God is most, and that that is the most blessed thing that ever was or ever shal be, must needs be a most heinous thing against God. It is a great evil for a man to abuse meat, and drink, a drunkard goes to an ale-house, and he abuses drink, Malt, and water, but what a difference is there between the abusing of Water and Malt, and abusing the second person in trinity, the blessed Lord Jesus Christ, he that was the blessed Son of God, the Holy one of God, to be an instrument of my sin, here is a most horrible offence. And so in Gluttony, if it be so much a sin to abuse the flesh of a sheep, or any creature, what is it then to abuse the grace of God in Christ, the Son of God, and the mysteries of the Gospel, and to sin a 'gainst God by that, that is another matter. And those that are professors of religion come to be guilty of greater sins then others do, because your wicked ones, they abuse but meat and drink, and clothes, and such like things, but professors, they make the ordinances of God to be but as bawds to their lusts, that is, they will go and pray, and be long in prayer, and al to colour some notorious sin. And so they will hear, and receive the sacrament and al but to colour some notorious wickedness. If God shal judge whoremasters, and drunkards, and such as abuse some creatures to the dishonour of his name, how shal he judge thee, that shalt make the ordinance of prayer, the ordinance of the word, the ordinance of the sacrament, the very flesh and blood of Jesus Christ, to be subservient to thy lusts, yea, the blessed Son of God; and therefore thy sin is far greater then the sins of the profane ones, the sins of hypocrites is greater, but the sin of those men that shal turn the grace of God in Christ into wantonness, this is the greatest sin of al next unto the sin against the Holy Ghost, and that is but a degree of this, but next unto that this is the greatest sin that ever was committed in the world. Secondly, It is the crossing of God in the highest end that ever God did aim at, to have from al his works. I say, it is a direct opposing and crossing of God in his highest aim that ever God did aim at in al his works The greatest end that ever God did aim at in al his works is this, that he might have glory from the great works of his in Jesus Christ, in his son, God hath pleased himself from al eternity to think this with himself, well, here is a world made, and there is a great deal of sin committed, and I have little glory, little glory, I have from my works of providence, and creation, well, but I have a work to do, to sand my son into the world to die for man, and I shal have glory from that more then from al my other works. Now when God thought of this, that this should make amends for al his other works, that now there should a generation of men rise up that should bring as great a dishonour to this work as ever was; the world by their wickedness hath turned the work of Gods creation and providence to Gods dishonour, but now, here is a generation of men, that will turn this mighty work of God, that work that God glories in before angels and men, will cast dirt against this, and so cast dirt against Gods holiness,( for indeed the Law is nothing but the gla●s of Gods holiness whatever men say, that it is abolished and the like) here are a generation of men that will take the glorious work of God in his son, and will cast that dirt in the glass of Gods holiness, so that they across God in his highest ends, and frustrate them quiter against Gods intention. It is something to be frustrated of what he intends, but for God to be frustrate of the highest ends that he intends, this is that which is the greatest sin, next unto the sin against the Holy Ghost. Thirdly, This is against the ingenuity of a Christians spirit, a christians spirit is an ingenious spirit, that will melt at every thing of God, but this shows, that though Christ be in their mouths, yet there is little of the spirit of God in their hearts. Fourthly, This is a most dreadful scandal unto Jesus Christ, and the ways of Christ. and unto the Gospel, according to the way that these men either teach or live Woe to them that do offend any of these little ones( saith Christ) it is a woeful thing to scandalise but the weakest and poorest believer that lives in the world. And Christ tells us, that it is better that a millstone were hung about such a ones neck, and he were cast into the bottom of the sea, but these do not offend these little ones only, but the Lord Jesus Christ, the blessed Son of God, and bring a scandal upon his name and Gospel. It is a dreadful thing to count the blood of Christ as a common thing, its spoken of in the scripture as a dreadful thing, and this belongs to those that come to the sacrament, and break the bread and wine, and do it for fashion sake, they commit a desperate wickedness against Christ, but to count the blood of Christ as a vild thing, an unclean polluted thing, how much worse is that? Now this is to make the blood of Christ as an unclean thing, what a scandal would this be against the heathen, and al that should come in, the Jews that should come in? Such as we call Antinomians, that little they have,( for so far we are al against it, that the Law is not a covenant of life) but not against the obedience of it. I say, what would Jews, heathens, and pagans think of that saviour that we should trust in, that he should come into the world to dissolve the Law of God, and give liberty to men, that they shal not be tied to obedience, or at least they might take more liberty then others, this would be a scandal unto Jesus Christ. Fifthly, It is one of the most danderous signs of a reprobate of any in the world, to turn the grace of God into wantonness, truly though the word may seem to sound harshly, yet God knows I speak it in weakness and tenderness only, the argument itself leads to it, but what I speak is nothing but the word of Christ I say this, that the turning of this grace of God into wantonness( as if this be not I know not what is in the world) it is one of the most dangerous signs of a reprobate in al the book of God. And for that we have a clear scripture( because this is one of the hardest things of al, I had need bring you clear scripture for it) and that is in the epistle of judas verse the 4. There are certain men crept in unawares. Mark. crept in, they did not come at first in a public way, they would come and meet with young converts, and women, as soon as ever the word began to work upon them, they came and crept upon them, and that under a great deal of pretence of Love. There are certain men crept in unawares who were before of old ordained to this condemnation. Though they are now but of a new opinion, they were before of old ordained to this condemnation. God did so far appoint, that it should be permitted, he did foresee it, that in such a year, in such a kingdom, at such a time, when a parliament should sit, before things could be brought into order, when things were for the present in a kind of confusion, God did see men would arise and turn al his grace into wantonness. They were before of old ordained to this condemnation, ungodly men turning the grace of God into Lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God and our Lord Jesus Christ. They did not deny our Lord Jesus Christ, that is, that he was not the saviour of the world, but in this, in that they did abuse the grace of Jesus Christ, and turn it into wantonness. For the word translated Lasciviousness, may be red wantonness, and indeed, they do deny the Lord Jesus Christ by it, they deny Christ to be the holy one of God, they deny Christ to come into the world to dissolve the works of the Devil. And the text tells us, that they were before of old ordained to this condemnation, a most dreadful scripture against such as these are. Therefore saith the Apostle in the next verse. I will put you in remembrance though you know this, how that the Lord having saved the people out of the Land of Egypt, afterward destroyed them that believed not, and so goes on in way of exhortation to take heed of such men as these are. There are yet many other things that do discover the evil of it, as there is no evil that is a greater hardening evil then this. Sixthly, And further, There is nothing that lays up more matter for terror of conscience then this, though these men think that they are above terror of conscience, and they wonder that men should be troubled for their sins, but I say, nothing treasures up horror of conscience more then this. Oh that God would work upon some, for I cannot but be confident that there be many hundreds that were wont to come to the congregation, and began to be wrought upon, and they take the advantage to take them off from the good ways of God, and so to give them more liberty then otherwise they did, and so are scandalous to their profession. I will give you one text more, that methinks is as fully against the way of this abuse of the grace of God, even against the Law, It is in 1. Cor. 9. 21. To them that are without Law as without Law, being not without Law to God, but under the Law to Christ, being not {αβγδ}, but {αβγδ}; and from thence they have the word {αβγδ}, against the Law. But saith the Apostle I dare not be so much as an {αβγδ}, without Law, much less against the Law, but under the Law. What doth he mean, when he saith, he was without Law, to them that were without Law? that is thus, to those that were heathens and pagans. What say you to the Jews? were not they under a Law? and you teach al men that there is no way to be saved but by keeping the Law, nay saith Paul, I am without Law thus, but I teach there is salvation to them that do not keep the Law, that is, he taught them that there was a way to salvation, though it were not by keeping of the Law. And for the one part the ceremonial law they were not bound to it at al, the Gentiles, but though I teach them thus, and teach them that they were not bound to the ceremonial Law, yet saith he, when I come to God, I am not without Law unto God, I acknowledge the Law of God and of Christ. For mark, these men will say, they are bound to the Law of Christ, but says he, I did acknowledge God to be the creator of heaven, and did acknowledge the Law of God, and was under the Law of Christ, though in some regards he was without Law, in point of justification, as we acknowledge that we are justified by Christ without the works of the Law, and so we teach men, and yet so as to keep ourselves under the Law of God and of Christ. Let us not make the rest we have under the free grace of God in Christ, to be a means to make us shake off the yoke of Christ, but to take so much the more the yoke of Christ upon us, And thus we have finished the first doctrine from these words, That the grace of God in Christ, that gives rest unto the soul, doth not at al give liberty to looseness. CHAP. LIX. The more we come under the yoke of Christ, the more rest we shal have. Eight reasons of the point. 1. By coming under the yoke of Christ, we give up our wils to God. 2. God is the more willing we should have our will. 3. We need not be careful of the success of things. 4. The soul comes under the protection of Christ. 5. We are under his promises. 6. We have the more assurance that Christ belongs to us. 7. Our Lusts are the more tamed. 8. The more we are delivered from the yoke of men and the Devil. THe Second follows, and that is this: DOCTRINE, II. Doct. 2. That the more we do come under the yoke of Christ, the more rest we shal have. That is the second point, from the relation it hath to the promises, I will give you rest, So that the point is clear from hence, that the more we do come under the yoke of Christ, the more rest we shal have. I might give you many scriptures for it, but I will name but one that may serve instead of al. In Isa. 9. 6. For unto us a Child is born, a clear prophesy of Christ, unto us a son is given, and the government shal be upon his shoulder▪ and his name shal▪ be called wonderful, counsellor, the mighty God, the everlasting father, the prince of peace. Then in the 7, verse. Of the increase of this government and peace there shal be no end, He is the prince to govern, the more he is thy prince to govern thee, the more peace he brings thee and then, of the increase of his government& peace there shal be no end. So the government of Christ, and the peace of Christ, you see are put together, and as one doth increase, so the other doth increase, as the government of Christ increaseth, so the peace of Christ increaseth. Would you have Christs peace? come under his government, would you have more of Christs peace? then come more under his government, ●he more you come under his government, the more peace& rest you shal have to your souls. So that it is clear from the scripture, and reason may make it likewise clear, That the more we do come under the yoke of Christ, the more rest we shal have unto our souls. First, Because the coming under the government of Christ, doth give up our will unto God, gives up, I say, our will unto the will of God, for indeed, that is to come under the government of Christ, when the soul gives up the will of it unto the will of God, so that Gods will and thy will is al one, in a sense even al one. Now we know al things are ordained and disposed by the will of God, and if thy will be given up to his, then there is nothing done, but indeed it is according to thy will, for Gods will is thine, and al that doth concern thee, it is done by the will of God. Now certainly that soul must needs have a great deal of rest, that there is nothing befalls it, but it is some way or other according to its own will. Object. You will say, But many things are done against the mind and will of the people of God. Answ. But to that I will answer, They have this principle in them that they are fully convinced of this, that things are done so, as did they but know al, then they would not wish that it were otherwise, they know this, that though things be against their particular will at present, as they apprehended things, but then when they come to consider how all things are ordered by the will of the infinite, Wise, and gracious God, then they captivated their understanding, and then they acknowledge, that the Reason why my will is against such a thing, it is because I do not understand the full compass of it, I do not understand one thing with another. But did I understand all, what an issue there would be of this, and what good God would work out of this, and what end God hath in this, then it would be no otherwise done, but so as my will would be his. The giving up of our will to the government of Christ, it is the giving up our will to the will of God, to make Gods will our own, and then there must needs be Rest, and indeed, there can never be Rest to the Soul till then. For when we have one will, and God another will, and these stand one against another, and are struggling whose will shal overcome, there must needs be no Rest, but now, when thou canst give up thy will to his will, then thou mais● have Rest. Secondly, The more we come under the government of Christ, and give up our will to God, the more willing is God that we should have our will. As Christ said unto the Woman, O Woman, great is thy Faith, be it as thou wilt, The way to have our will, it is to have much Faith, Men and Women would have their will, this is the only way to get our own wills, O Woman, great is thy Faith be it as thou wilt; So it may be as truly said, O Woman, or O Man, great is thy Obedience, be it as thou wilt. The more ready thou art to give up thy will to God, the more thou shalt have thy will! the way to have thy will, is not to be struggling and striving with God, but to yield up thyself to God, and then the Lord is more ready and willing that thou shouldst▪ have thy mind and will granted to thee. As we know it is with the Father and the Child, the way for the Child to have his will, it is to give up itself to his Father. So long as he stands out against his Father, he must not think to have his will, but let him lye down before his Father, and that is the way to have his will. And certainly, the way for us to have what we would have, it is to bring out selves unto a willing submission to the will of God. Thirdly, The more the Soul comes under the yoke of Christ the more Rest it must needs have, because coming under the yoke of Christ, you need never be Solicitous about the success of any thing in the world: what will befall it hereafter, or what shal become of this or the other thing, it needs take care for nothing. Now you will say, that Soul that is in such a condition, as needs take care for nothing, needs not at al to be troubled, about success of any thing, whatsoever becomes of the world or of itself, yet it is sure of this, that al shal work for good to itself, that there shal come good by all that befalls it, this Soul must needs have a great deal of Rest; now the Soul that is under the government of Christ, needs take care for nothing in the world. The Apostle in that known place in Phili. 4. 6. says thus. Be careful for nothing, but in every thing, by Prayer and Supplication, with Thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God, and the Peace of God which passeth understanding shal keep your Hearts and minds through Jesus Christ. But how shal they come to have the fruit of this promise? In verse 8. Finally Brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely; whatsoever things are of good report, if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. Think, that is to follow. Those things which ye have both heard, and received and seen in me do. And then further, And the God of Peace shal be with you, That is God, as the God of Peace shal be with you. Here now as in my Text there is the taking of the yoke of Christ upon you, between two promises, so it is here. Here are two excellent promises on each side of taking Christs yoke upon them, As thus. What greater yoke can there be then is in the 8. verse? Whatsoever things are true, Whatsoever things are honest, Whatsoever things are Just, pure, Lovely, of good report, if there be any virtue, any praise, think on these things, That is, think to do them, think to practise them. Here's a Text requires as much striving as possibly may be, as many of you will say, is this necessary; Must we need do thus and thus? Cannot Men be saved but they must do thus and thus? Many will Reason against the ways of God, as if they would do nothing but those things that they think a man cannot possibly go to Heaven without, but this one Text will convince them, of the sluggishness, and baseness of their Hearts that suggest such kind of Reasons as these are. For this Text doth not only suggest to you those things that will bring you of necessity to Heaven, but whatsoever things are true, honest, Just, Pure, Lovely, of good report, &c. Not only to do one thing and neglect another, and say, we are all sinners, and fail all in something, but though we do fail, yet the scope of a Christian is at universal obedience. Here is six things that the Apostle mentions as to this Particular. First, Whatsoever things are true. Secondly, Whatsoever things are honest. Thirdly, Whatsoever things are Just. Fourthly, Whatsoever things are pure. Fifthly, Whatsoever things are Lovely. And sixthly, Whatsoever things are of good report, if it be but a Lovely thing, if it be but a thing of good report, if it be but a thing that is praise worthy, a Christian must aim at it. I but you will say, If it be so strict to come under the yoke of Christ, as not only to do those things that are required of necessity to bring us to Heaven, but if there be any thing in the world that hath any goodness in it, that is worthy of praise, any virtue or excellency whatsoever, we are bound to obey in that Particular, as we may instance in that one Particular, people praying in their Families. Many will say, must we of necessity do this? We need no other Scripture but this, I appeal to every mans conscience, is it not a Lovely thing, for the Master of a family, to call together his family, and bless God for his preservation? And for his blessing upon his labour; and so close the day with Prayer, is not this a Lovely thing? Now mark, here is the coming under the yoke of Christ. Quest. I, But you will say, To be so strict, will be mighty troublesone, the course of a Christian then will be mighty troublesone and Burdensome. Answ. No, Mark the next works, These things which ye have heard and received, do, and the God of peace shal be with you, this is the promise. Such as follow the directions of the eight verse, have the promise of the seventh and ninth verse, as here, he that takes the yoke of Christ upon him in the twenty ninth verse, hath the promise in the twenty eight verse and the end of the twenty ninth verse, So that we need never be solicitous for any success of any thing in the world. As thus now, many a man or Woman that is at their own hand, they perhaps, if so be they be sick, they do not know how they shal be provided for, or if they come to want. Many young people, though they think it is a fine thing to be at their own hand when things are cheap, and they love to be at their own hand,& think it a better life then to be in service, but now when things come to be dear, and they want work, and they come to be sick, then they know not what will become of them. But now, if they get into a good Service, then they need take care for nothing but to do their work, they need not care for meat or drink, or who shal provide for them. So it is here, while we are at our own hand, and though we may think to live pretty well while we are in prosperity, but the truth is, the time will come, that if we will be at our own hand, God will leave us to provide for ourselves and shift for ourselves. But now, come once under Christs government, and into his family, and you need not take care for any thing in this world, Yea, unto eternity, go you on and do your Duty, and the care of Christ is for you to eternity, now is not here a great deal of Rest and quiet? Fourthly, By coming under Christs yoke, you will come to have more Rest, for by this means the Soul comes under the protection of Christ, As now, any master is bound to protect his Servant, while his Servant is at his work, and conscience and Reason requires it. Now certainly, when we are under Christs yoke, we are under his protection, and therefore we may lye down and sleep quietly in this respect. Fifthly, When we are under the yoke of Christ, we are under the promises, we are under those promises in the Philippians, And that Famous Scripture in Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect, he became the Author of eternal Salvation unto al them that obey him. If so be some minister should but have spoken this, and were it not in this very Scripture, he would have been accounted a Legal Preacher, to say, that Christ is the Author of Salvation to all that obey him, and you must obey the Lord, else you can never have comfort, the Lord is the author of your Salvation, you must do Duty, if you perform Duty and do Duty, then he is the Author of eternal Salvation. Sixthly, From thence there may be another argument for the Rest of the Soul by coming under the yoke of Christ, for by this means the Soul comes to have the more evidence and assurance that Christ belongs to him. Howsoever there is another generation of people, that will have no evidence from Sanctification, that is nothing at all, they say, it is a coldness of Spirit, when God in his word shal be pleased to give us evidence for Sanctification, and marks to know what our condition is, yet they will take it merely to justification, when God is pleased to grant it to Sanctification likewise. Being made perfect he became the Author of eternal Salvation to those that obey him; Those that are Sanctified by him, and obey him in their lives. And so that Text in the first Epistle of John, 3. 14. Is most clear, Hereby we know we are Translated from Death to Life if we Love the Brethren. He puts an if upon it, As if he should say, would you have a sign, would you have a mark that you are Translated from Death to Life, This is an evidence if you Love the Brethren. So that the more we come under the yoke of Christ, the more Rest we shal have. Seventhly, The more Christs government is upon us, and we are under that, the more are the unruly lusts of our own Hearts tamed, which breed a disturbance in Christians, nothing doth breed greater disturbance then the unruliness of our own Hearts, but now coming under the government, the yoke of Christ, the unruly lusts of our own Hearts are thereby tamed. Eightly, The more we are under the yoke of Christ, the more we are delivered from the yokes of men, and the sinful yoke of the Devil: for those that are not under Christs yoke, are under the yoke of men or Devils, for I mean by the yokes of men, those impositions of men that are sinful, which indeed are but the yokes of Satan, now by coming under the government of Christ, the Soul casts off other yokes, as we shal come to show hereafter, in the easiness of Christs yoke, and the difference between the yoke of Christ, and the yoke of sin. CHAP. LX. Containeth the Use of the former Doctrine, and the cleared of some Objections. APPLICATION. WHerefore a word for the Use, Hence we may see one Reason, why many people are so unquier in their Spirits as they are, yea why many professors of Religion are so unquiet, it is this, They do not thoroughly come under the yoke of Christ, Come under his yoke more, and thou shalt have more Quiet, more Peace. Th●u ar● striving and struggling, and givest way to some distemper, and passion of thy Heart, and when thou dost give way to any secret distemper or passion of thy Heart, or unruly lust, no marvel if thou have no Peace. And likewise, This Answers that Objection, that many have against the ways of God. If you will be so strict, and so much troubled for your sins, then you will never have any quiet in your Life. Now how directly opposite is this to what you have here in this Scripture, Christ tells you, He will give you Rest, He will give you Rest( twice together) the more under his yoke, the more Rest. Object. I,( But you will say) Many People while they lived as their neighbors did, and lived fairly, Civilly, and harmlessly, as their neighbors did, they lived cheerfully, but since they begun to go a degree higher, then they were wont to do, they are ever troubled. Answ. Now to that I Answer, That the quiet that they had then, it was most cursed quiet, and they would not have that quiet for ten thousand worlds. And for the trouble that they have, it is in order to further quiet; as when things are out of order, it is impossible they should be at full quiet at an instant. As now, it is true, times are troublesone, I but, if God would give Hearts to people to join together, these times may bring forth a more better and glorious Peace to the Nation then ever we had before▪ and so the troubles of others that you look upon, they ●end to more Rest. But now would you know the Reason why they are so troubled, it is not because they are so precise and so Religious, but it is because they are no more precise, and no more Religious, were they more under the yoke of Christ, they would have more Peace, and more comfort. Object. You will say, They are more under the Government of Christ then they were besore. Answ. It is true, They have sometimes that Peace that may la●t but a quarter of an hour, that they would not give for a Thousand worlds, God sometimes giving them but one half quarter of an hours hope of his Love, that they are in the way of eternal Life, the very thought of that gives them so much Rest, that they would not give it for all the quiet in the world, so that it is better peace then ever they had before. But now they being but beginning to come under the yoke of Christ, they are not accustomend and acquainted with the yoke of Christ, and the Reason of al their trouble it is, because they are not accustomend to the yoke of Christ, were they more accustomend to the yoke of Christ they would have more comfort. As you know Bullocks, and other Creatures, that are first brought to the yoke, they struggle and strive and it is a great deal of trouble to them: but when they come to be accustomend to put their Necks under the yoke they are not so troubled: So Christians, when they first come to take the yoke of Christ, upon them, they struggle, and strive, because they are not accustomend to the yoke of Christ, and their lusts strive: But when once they are accustomend to the yoke of Christ, then peace, peace, double Peace and Rest to them according to that Scripture in Isaiah, 26. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect Peace, whose mind is stayed on thee. The words in the original are, Peace, Peace, thou wilt keep them in Peace, Peace, there will come ease and Rest unto the Soul that is stayed on God, and is fully come off from itself, and is under the yoke of Jesus Christ. And thus now for the taking up of Christs yoke, Take my yoke upon you. CHAP. LXI. Sheweth three Doctrines in the words, Learn of me. The first whereof ( Viz.) that comers to Christ are Learners, laid open and four Reasons thereof. 1. Because the Souls of such know they have to do with an infinite God. 2. They have the fear of eternity falling upon the Soul. 3. Because such Souls see that before they came to Christ, they were out of the way. 4. Such a Soul dares not trust his own Heart any more. THe next Exhortation here to those that come to Christ is to Learn of him, to Learn of Christ, Learn of me for I am Meek and Lowly in Heart, From thence we have these Notes. First, That comers to Christ are Learners. Secondly, When young converts are coming in to Christ, they must take heed of whom they Learn, they must be sure that they Learn of Christ. And then Thirdly, That it is our only safety for Rest unto our Souls, to Learn of Jesus Christ. First then, That which is here implied, when Christ speaks to such as are comers to him, Laden sinners, Come to me and Learn of me, It doth note thus much to us. That comers to Christ they are Learners; They are such as are fit to Learn, in a disposition to Learn, they are such as are very Solicitous to Learn the mind of God. And that is the meaning of a Disciple, a Disciple is only one, That Learns one that comes to Learn, That is a Disciple. So go and Preach, saith Christ, when he gives commission to the Apostles to go forth and Preach, the Commission is, Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, the word is, go and make Disciples, so that those that are comers to Christ, they are the Disciples of Christ, they are Learners, such as are very Solicitous to Learn the mind of God, Oh! It is in their Hearts to Learn that they might know what the mind of God is, Oh, That we might know what the mind and will of God is, concerning our Souls, and eternal estates. This is the very frame and disposition of every Soul that is a comer to Christ. I appeal to those that ever knew what it was to come to Jesus Christ. Was not this the frame and the disposition God did then work into thy heart? O, that I knew what the mind and will of God were concerning my Soul, concerning my eternal estate. Whereas before, thou didst slight and disregard knowledge, didst despise the knowledge of God, wentest up and down in the world, and tookest no care at al to know what the mind of God was concerning thy Soul, this is the ordinary disposition and temper of the Hearts of men and Women in the world, they go up and down in the world, and God knows, never take care to know what the mind of God is concerning their Souls, or what the terms are between God and them, or what the Counsels of God are concerning their eternal Life, they live at six and seavens, and take no care at all to understand the mind and will of God concerning their Souls. They think it is for Learned men, and scholars, to come to understand the Scriptures, and the mind of God, but as for them, to be solicitous, they think, Lord, how shal I come to know the mind of God concerning my Soul? This is not their care. At the very naming of this Point, you may have one note of trial whether you be comers to Jesus Christ or no. Hath the Lord caused this to be in your Hearts, that now you are solicitous above al things in the world to know what the mind of God is concerning your Souls? That it is the great desire of your Soul above al things else, that you search for Wisdom as for Silver, For so the wise Man Solomon speaks of those that are beginners in godliness, in the 2 of proverbs, 2. verse, So that thou incline thine Ear unto Wisdom, and apply thy Heart to understanding, Yea, if thou Criest after knowledge and liftest up thy voice for understanding, if thou seekest her as Silver, and searchest for her as for hidden Treasures then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God. Here is the disposition of a Heart that is coming to God through Christ, that first he Inclines his Ear to Wisdom, And Secondly, That he applies his Heart to understanding. His Ear is listening after the Counsel of God, and not only to please his Ear, he comes not to a Sermon to please his Ear, and Tickle his ear, but he applies his Heart to it: When he comes to the word, as he listens with his Ear, so his Heart, the strength of his Spirit works after it, Oh, that I might this day understand something concerning my Soul; and eternal estate. And then further, If thou Criest after knowledge. Never did a Poor Child cry after the Dug to have the breast, more then the Soul that prizeth knowledge, cries after the sincere Milk of the word. And liftest up thy Voice for understanding, What words are here! Never did he pray in all his Life for any thing more then now he praies for understanding, that God would give him understanding of his mind concerning his Soul. I suppose many of you that have been in danger at Sea, you have been crying and lifting up your Voice for deliverance, but have you been crying for knowledge, and lifting up your Voice for understanding? have you lifted up your Voice and said? Oh, That God would give me to know his mind concerning my Soul and my eternal estate. And further, If thou seekest her as Silver, Many of you are very forward to get great estates, to get Silver, but now the Heart that is coming to Christ, such a Heart seeks after knowledge, as much as ever any seeks after Silver, Yea, and he will not be satisfied with that. It is true, I have a little knowledge, and I come to the word, but I cannot yet find more, but he searcheth for it as for hide treasures, you must not only come for knowledge, but you must search for it, dig for it, you must search for the word, and take pains to get knowledge, and although you have taken pains a great while, and have got nothing, yet be not discouraged, for one that will search for hide treasures, he may not think, that as soon as he sets his Spade in the ground, that he shall presently find it, what pains do men take to dig a Coalepit? How much more should Christians be willing to take pains, and that for a long while together to get Christ? Here is the disposition of one that learns of Christ, and such a one is a true Christian. And the Reasons are these. First, Because, That upon the very beginning of Gods work upon his Soul, the Lord doth not only reveal some of his excellencies, but besides, he doth cause the fear of his great name to be upon him. Such a soul at the very first begins to understand so much, that it hath to deal with an infinite God, Oh! I have to deal with an infinite God, I lived before without a God in the world, but now I come to see, that in all my actions I have to deal with an infinite God. Most people seek not after knowledge, because they do not understand what an infinite Deity they have to deal withal in al their ways, but as soon as ever the soul comes to understand, that it hath an infinite Deity to deal withal in all its actions, now it strives to know the mind and will of God. Secondly, Such a Soul hath the fear of eternity falling upon him, it comes now to understand so much at first, that God hath appointed it for an eternal estate one way or other, that it is eternity that concerns it, I was made for eternity, and this Soul and body of mine must certainly live in eternal happiness or eternal torment, and therefore I had need to be a learner, to know what shal become of this Soul and Body of mine when the Lord shal cause the fear of his great name, and the fear of eternity to fall upon any mans Hear●, such a one should be a learner, and desire the great things of God to be revealed to them. Thirdly, Such a Soul as is coming to Christ will be a Learner, because such a one comes plainly to see, that it hath been out of the way all this while, that it hath all this while gone upon fals Rules, I was made indeed for eternity, but I have gone al this while in fals ways, Oh, That I might Learn the right way, such a Soul will be willing to Learn. Fourthly, Such a one as is coming to Christ dares not trust his own Heart any more, I have gone according to mine own Heart all this while, and it hath lead me aside from God and his ways, and God forbid I should trust my own Heart any more, No, I must come to have another Rule to guide me, and other directions then what comes out of mine own Heart. And such a Soul dares not trust men neither, it dare not venture upon mens thoughts, and mens opinions, but he must come to Christ, and Learn of Christ, And that brings in the next point, only I intended this to bring in the other Point. Only examine your Hearts whether you be Learners, whether there be such a disposition in you that you are Learners, that you are Disciples of Jesus Christ. CHAP. LXII. Containeth an Use of Examination, to try who are Learners of Christ; wherein divers Objections are Answered and doubts resolved. NOw if the Lord have done this work upon you, then you will not satisfy your Souls in Learning of any but only of Christ. The Soul that the Lord is drawing to Jesus Christ, must not satisfy itself in Learning of any but only of Jesus Christ. It must not satisfy itself in Learning of wicked men. Though I do not understand what the mind of God is fully, and the mysteries of the Gospel are such high things as I understand not, yet I know so much, though I know but little, that they are out of the way, although they be learned men, great men, rich men in the parish that live thus and thus, I know their ways are wrong, and therefore I will not go to learn of such men. No nor dares such a Soul venture itself not always upon good men, nay though they be fair, and honest in their Conversation. Nay though they be godly men, it dares not venture wholly upon them, though never so godly and Learned, Yea, though they be ancient men, it dares not venture upon antiquity. I remember a speech of Ignatius, Christ is my antiquity, it dares not venture because such a Father saith thus, and such a Learned man is of such an opinion. I confess, my Brethren, there is much to be attributed to men that are godly, if they be able and godly, you are to give much respect to them, and if any know the mind of God, rather they then others. There is a notable Scripture in Ezra, 10 3. Now therefore let us make a Covenant with our God, to put away all the wives and such as are born of them, according to the Counsel of my Lord, and of those that tremble at the Commandement of my God. Do I see a man trembling at the commandement of God, I will Learn of him before any men in the world. Certainly, this rule hath done a great deal of hurt, because men are learned and godly, therefore whatsoever they shal teach it must go upon their authority, and many think there is a great deal of Reason for it. Are you wiser then such? And more Learned then such? Take this for your direction, a man may be a great deal more Learned, and Wise, and yet in some one Particular, this man may fail very fowlely. Now how do I know, but that very Particular that I venture upon, may be that thing wherein he may fail? Indeed, if it be for matter of my body, it is no great matter, but if I come for my Soul, I must not venture upon any man whatsoever. They may fail in some Particular, though never such Learned men in other Particulars, and the going upon this rule hath been the ground of a thousand Errors in the world. It hath been always the Error of the Papists, what will you take upon you to teach your teachers? And did any of the rulers follow him, but the multitude? I will warrant you none of the rulers did. And Christ saith in the Scripture where my Text is, verse the 25. I thank thee, O Father, Lord of Heaven and Earth, because thou hast hide these things from the Wise and Prudent, and hast Revealed them unto Babes. You see in matters of godliness, in the mysteries of the Gospel, God doth not observe that proportion, that those that have the most natural understanding, shall have the insight into all the matters of godliness, that is not the way of God, No, We see it apparently that God doth not observe that proportion of mens Hearts in point of Religion, but saith Christ, I thank thee, O Father, that thou hast hide these things from the Wise and Prudent, and hast Revealed them to Babes, Therefore that must not be our rule. And another reason why it must not be a rule is this, because Whatsoever is not of faith is sin, saith the scripture. well, let a man do what he can though never so good▪ yet if this man have no ground for what he doth, but because such a man saith it is so, such a man sins. Suppose a man hold a truth, and doth that which is his duty to do, yet if the ground that he holds, and the rule that he doth it by, is only the judgement of such and such men, this man sins, It is apparent from the scripture, whatsoever is not of faith is sin, whatever he doth though the things be good, if they be not of faith though they be good to one, they are sin to another, and therefore if I be of an opinion, I must have saith for it, and faith is no where to be had but in the word. Faith you will say, Such learned men, and godly men, they do so, and is not here ground enough? Certainly, here is not ground enough for faith, for then thou must needs sin against God in al things that thou dost upon that ground, if that be the only ground. It may be indeed a good help, and a good encouragement, when I search into the scripture and find, that such godly men and learned men, were of the same opinion, but it can be no ground of my faith. Object. You will say, What must we do then? You must learn of Christ. I but one saith, here is Christ, and another saith, this is the voice of Christ, how can we that are poor ignorant people know what is the voice of Christ? Answ. To that I answer. I confess that we should give a great deal of respect unto those that are learned and godly, and suspect ourselves first, and not to follow our own opinions without diligent search. If I see another learned godly man that is different from me, that man must not be a rule for me, yet it must make me examine things very thoroughly, and with a very humble heart to examine things again and again. You may not slight men, and say what do I care for men. I must go to the voice of Christ only, and not look after men. No( as I shal afterwards show you) Christ doth teach by men, by the ministry of the word, and it is a very ill sign for any one to neglect that way of understanding Christs voice, As on one side, those that shal ground their faith upon any thing what man saith, they sin, so on the other side, those that shal neglect to make use of the godliness and learning of men, and the ministry of the word, they certainly sin, and it is not likely they shal understand the voice of Christ, for Christ speaks in them, we must expect to hear Christs voice through them. And for that there is a notable instance amongst the Corinthians, there seemed to be such a disposition amongst them, that as there were some that restend too much upon men, and made them the ground of their faith, so there were others again that rejected, and regarded them too little, they would learn of Christ, and not at al make use of the gifts of men that God had given them▪. One said I am of Paul, another said I am of Apollos, another I am of Cephas, and another I am of Christ, There were some that said they were for Paul, he is an admirable Learned man, and an Apostle, and I will follow him, Another, Apollo he is an eminent man, and I will follow him, And another of Cephas, he is an excellent man and I will follow him. The Apostle rebukes them for resting upon Paul and Apollo, and Cephas. And therefore you know how noble the Bereans were, they were noble, because after the preaching of Paul, they preached whether those things were so or noe, and beloved! we will never be angry at people for searching whether the things we preach be so or no. well, there were some that rest too much upon Paul, and Apollos: and Cephas, but now there were others, that would be far enough from resting upon Paul, Apollos or Cephas, but we will look to Christ say they, now is this to be blamed? Truly, the Apostle blames such, they are al blamed there How is it possible that men should be blamed for that, when you say they must learn of Christ. The text saith you must Learn of Christ. The meaning is this, as if they should say thus, talk of Paul, or Apollo, or Cephas, or who you will, we will look after none but Christ, and as for the ministers of the word, or gifts of men, because we may not make it the ground of our faith, we will never regard it at al, Let them say, what they will, we will look not at men or the ministry of men but we will look only at Christ. Now this was a sin for any men to say so, we will so learn of Christ, as to neglect the ministry of the word, and the gifts and graces of Gods people. I say, these sin against Jesus Christ, for though it is true, that Christ is the great prophet of his Church, and what we learn we must learn of him, yet Christ doth not always teach immediately, the way of Christs teaching sinners is not immediately, but it is oftentimes by man, yea, ordinarily it is so. So that as you must learn of Christ so you must harken after the voice of Christ in mans voice. Object. I but you will say, How shal we know whether it be the voice of Christ or the voice of men? A minister comes and says, it is the voice of Christ, and brings such a scripture, but how shall we know it. Answ. Now for that the answer is this. Christs sheep hear Christs voice, Christs sheep will hear the voice of Christ, In John. 10. 3. To him the porter openeth, that is him that had a right call of the shepherd and the sheep will hear his voice, and he calls his own sheep by name, and leadeth them out. And then a● the 4, verse, And when he putteth forth his own sheep he goeth before them, and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice. And then at the 11. verse I am the good shepherd, the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep and at the 14▪ verse I am the good shepherd and know my sheep and am known of mine. And then at the 16. verse, Other sheep I have which are not of this fold, them also I will bring, and they shal hear my voice. Object. You will say, How shal I know the voice of Christ, from the voice of man? Answ. Truly, They that are Christs sheep, they will distinguish between the voice of Christ, and the voice of strangers, for they know not the voice of strangers verse the 15. Quest. But you will say, what do you mean by that, that the sheep of Christ know Christs voice? Answ. The meaning is this, that those that are truly turned to Christ, and follow Christ, there is a secret instinct of the spirit of God in them, to enable them to distinguish between the voice of a stranger and the voice of Jesus Christ, as you shal find by experience, Let a minister come and preach false doctrine, though those that have not learning cannot dispute against it, as the martyr said. Though I cannot dispute for the truth, yet I can die for the truth: So will they say, though I cannot dispute against it, yet it is not savoury to me. Quest. You will say, But may they not be Deceived. Answ. I Answer, It is true, that they may in things that are not fundamental, sometimes they may be deceived, and perhaps not understand the voice of Christ, but certainly, know this for the comfort of al that are godly, that the weakest godly Soul that is, Christ takes such care, that no fals teacher in the world shal ever deceive them in any Fundamental point. And it is especially to be understood in that, my sheep hear my voice, and not the voice of a stranger. Let a stranger come and speak a voice that is not the voice of Christ, and though Christ may hid his voice from them for humbling of them, and trying of them, yet for any point that is fundamental, it is not possible for to deceive them, It it were possible they should deceive the elect, but it is not possible. And therefore though in matters that are not Fundamental, those that are godly may be at a loss, yet I say, in matters that are Fundamental there will be a secret instinct to know the voice of Christ. It is a mighty thing, when you come to a flock of Sheep, where there are thousands together, and the Lamb is playing with others, let but the Dam bleat, and the Lamb will presently run through all the Rest until it come at the Dam, it is a mighty work of God. And so a Bee, Bees that are flying two or three miles from their hives, yet let there come but a Storm, and every one will come and fly to its own Hive, though forty Hives stand together: So there is such a secret instinct upon the Hearts of those that are Christs, that as soon as ever the voice of Christ is but sounded, such a Sheep will come running to Christ, though there be many about Christ, and seem to be like Christ, and therefore that is the main satisfactory answer to this. And then further, if you would know the voice of Christ, examine the word, Search the Scriptures for in them you think to have eternal life. Object. I but you will say, We may be deceived, and miss of the sense of Scripture. Answ. Well, but if thou hast a desire to know all truth, then here is a promise for thee in John, 7. 17. If any man will do his will, he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of myself. Here is a promise I say, that will help any Soul, here is a Scripture, that any minister that comes to preach hath cause to make use of. No question but many times the best minister preacheth something of himself, now how shal we know whether the Doctrine that he preacheth be of God, or of himself? Here is a promise, if any man will do his will, if any mans Heart be set to do the will of God, Lord I come to the Ministry of thy word as thine own ordinance, and thou knowest my Heart is to do thy will, and my Heart is willing to do thy will, Now if thou do so, Christ says, if any man will do his will, he shal know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself. One Text more we will add for this and so go on, and that is the 25. Psalm, A most famous promise to Christians in this case, the 12. verse, What man is he that feareth the Lord, him will he teach the way that he shal choose. You say, that you are poor and weak, and you do not know the way that you shal choose, one Learned man saith this is the way, and another the other is the way, How shall we that are poor ignorant people know the way? Here's the promise, What man is he that feareth the Lord, labour to have much fear of God in your Hearts, and then God hath engaged himself to teach you the way you shal choose, and the more thou dost fear God, the more thou shalt be taught in all other ways that thou shalt choose, and be kept more from Error, do but observe, those that grow to Error, you shal in a little time observe looseness in their Conversations and the truth is, when men begin to be lead aside to Error there was such things, at first, though you could not perceive it, but within a little while you will see, that there is less of the fear of God upon their Hearts, for when the fear of God doth keep the Heart that the Soul walks all the day long in the fear of God, then such a one is under this promise that the Lord will teach him in the way that he shal choose. CHAP. LXIII. The main Doctrine that Christ is the great teacher of his Church handled and explained, with three Reasons of the Point. 1. He is come from the Fathers Bosom to reveal to his Church, what he hath heard of the Father. 2. He is appointed by the Father to be the teacher of his Church. 3. All power, Authority and success of other teachers is from him. BUt now we are come to the main point, wherein the very marrow and pith of all lies, Learn of me( saith Christ) All those that come to Christ must learn of him. There are four or five Particulars in the Explication of the Point. First, That Christ is the teacher of his Church. Secondly, We must inquire the means whereby Christ doth teach his Church. Thirdly, What are the main and principal Lessons that Christ doth teach his people, and that we are specially to Learn from Christ, Fourthly, What a kind of teacher Jesus Christ is, what manner of teacher, so we shal proceed then to the Application of it. First then, Christ is the teacher of his Church, we must Learn of Christ, he is come from the Fathers Bosom to reveal unto all those that his Father hath given him what he hath heard from the Father from all eternity, and therefore he is a fit teacher, he must needs be the only teacher that hath been with the Father from all eternity, in his Bosom, in his very Heart, and there hath heard glorious things from the Father to reveal to his people. We red of the Apostle Paul, that he was wrapped up into the third Heaven, and heard words that were unutterable, I but Christ he was in the highest Heavens, and above the Heavens from all eternity, and he hath heard those things from the Father, which though man could not utter, yet he is able to utter, and to teach those that the Father doth give unto him. Secondly, There are most excellent sweet Texts to show what a teacher Christ is, that he is a fit teacher for his Church because he hath been with the Father, and he doth undertake to reveal to us, and promiseth that he will reveal to us those things that he hath heard from the Father, take for that these Scriptures, John, 8. 38. I speak that which I have seen with my Father, Whatsoever Christ speaks to his people it is no other but that which he had with his Father from all eternity. And then again, in John, 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not Servants, for the Servant knoweth not what his Lord doth, but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you. Here is a Scripture worth a world for the encouragement of believers, and for the right informing of us in the preciousness of the Gospel, and the excellency of those things that Jesus Christ hath revealed to us in the Gospel( saith he) all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known to you. Why, Had he but said, as in the former Text, What I have seen of the Father, that I have spoken, but here, not only what I have seen, something that I have seen of the Father, but all things that I have heard of my Father, I have made known unto you, here is a mercy indeed; we have God revealing himself in his works, the glory of Gods goodness manifested there, we may see the footsteps of God in his works, I but to come to know all things that Christ hath heard of the Father, there are mysteries, other manner of the glory of God is revealed there, then the works of God can reveal unto us; and mark, Christ saith, that he hath told this to his disciples as friends. You know it is a special note of friendship to reveal secrets one to another as sometimes I have told you, let there be never so many offices of friendship, if there be a concealing of secrets, there is never any entire friendship except they do unbosom themselves one to another, they may be acquainted, and live lovingly, and never fall out, I but there is never any entire friendship but where there is an opening of the Heart one to another. The Servant doth not know his masters will, the master doth provide for his Servant, and protect him from danger, but he doth not open his Heart and secrets to his Servant, I but one friend doth to another, saith Christ here in this Text, I am not only your master and Lord, and will not deal with you as a master to a Servant, but look as a friend doth open his secrets to his entire friend, so will I do to you. I have many things that the world knows not of, things that I have heard from my Father from all eternity, I have heard precious things from my Father, and whatsoever I have heard from my Father, that have I made known to you, and I will tel you more and more. Christ surely is a fit teacher, that hath been with the Father, and what he teacheth is what he hath known with the Father. In John, 16. 28. I came forth from the Father, &c. That shows him to be a fit Teacher, because he came forth from the Father into the world, and upon this ground Christ is called the light, or that light that enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world. John, 1. 9. That was the true light, John( saith he) did but testify of the light, but that was the true light, that was Christ, that enlightens every man that cometh into the world. That is either thus, Look what light any man that is in the world hath, he hath it from Christ, though it be a common light, yet as the Scripture saith all things are committed to Christ, and so the enlightening with any common light, it is from him, but rather thus, he enlightens every man that comes into the world, that is, every man in the world that is enlightened in saving things, he hath it from him, as if one should say, such a man teacheth all the Children of the town, it may be some are not sent to School, but all that are taught are taught by him; so every man that hath any light in any saving truth he hath it from Christ, he is the great prophet of his Church, the great Prophet that is sent by God to reveal his mind and will to his people, And therefore in the 18. of Deuter. 15. There is a prophesy of Christ that the Lord will sand a Prophet, The Lord thy God will raise up to thee a Prophet, from the midst of thee, of thy Brethren &c. To him ye shal harken, And then in the 18. verse, And it shal come to pass that whosoever will not harken to my word which he shal speak in my Name, I will require it of him, Christ is the great Prophet of his Church, and we cannot understand Christ aright, except we understand him as held out in his Natures, if we would understand Christ aright, we must know Christ in his Natures God and man in one person; and so we must know him in his offices, King, Priest, and Prophet, and that is the meaning of the word, Christ, the word, Christ, signifies anointed, the word, Jesus, signifies saviour, Christ is the King to rule his Church, a Priest to offer up sacrifice, a Prophet to teach and instruct his Church, he is the great Prophet of his Church, and therefore the fit teacher of his Church. Yea, Further, it is by him that any man hath either ability to teach, or success in teaching, it is from Jesus Christ any man hath any ability to teach, it is he that giveth ability, it is he that gives gifts to men to instruct the Church, so that if you see any man that hath more ability then others, Christ is to have the glory of it, it is but a beam of light from Jesus Christ, and it is he that gives abilities, it is he that gives gifts to men, and especially upon his ascension, then he gave gifts to men for the building up of his Church and to this very day hath continued gifts unto men, therefore Christ is to be honoured in those gifts, And again, All the authority that any hath to come and teach, it is from Christ, it is he that sends any officers into the Church, and it is in his Name that they must come and teach. And then likewise, all the success that any hath, it is from him, he that hath the weakest gifts, if he pleaseth, he can make them more effectual then a man that hath greater gifts, and the success of teaching, it is not according to gifts, but according to the operation of Jesus Christ. And therefore these three things considered, First, That Christ is come from the Father. Secondly, That he is appointed by the Father to be the great Prophet of his Church. Thirdly, That all power and authority, and success of all others teaching is from him, therefore he is a fit teacher, and there is the Reason of this Exhortation, that we should Learn of him. CHAP. LXIV. Christ teacheth his Church three several ways. 1. By his Word. 2. By his Ministers. 3. By his Spirit. WE must Learn of Christ, why Christ is in Heaven, how should we Learn of him? Let none say who shall ascend up to Heaven, there to Learn of Christ, and know his mind, No, There are ways to Learn of Christ, though we are on Earth. Quest. You will say, By what means doth he Teach. Answ. These three ways. First, By his word written, in his word there we have the mind of Christ, the word is nigh to us, you may have it in your hands, in your Houses, and Christ expects you should have it likewise in your Hearts. Look to the word, you find in the latter end of the Revelations, there's a profession, that he that adds to the word, or detracts from the word, God will add to his plagues, and and he will take away his name from the Book of Life, therefore the word reveals the full mind of Christ, that's the great standard by which we are to Try every thing. Secondly, Christ teacheth by his Ministers, that's another way, by the ordinance of his Ministry, for he gives gifts to men for that end, and teacheth now by his word. I will be with you saith Christ, Go therefore and Teach all Nations, and lo I am with you to the end of the World, I will Teach by you, and he that hears you, hears me, saith Christ therefore when you come to the ministry of the word you come to Learn of Jesus Christ. Christ doth profess, that whosoever doth hear a Minister of the word, doth hear him, that it is his voice that is there. When a Minister doth speak according to the word written, you are to take what you Learn of him as Learned of Jesus Christ, it is Christ that speaks in them, as we opened at large in another Point, we in Christs stead beseech you to be Reconciled to God. And Thirdly, Christ teacheth by his Spirit, though Christ be personally in Heaven, yet he sends his Spirit to teach and instruct, as in John, 16. To convince the world of sin, of Righteousness, and of judgement, And here in this Scripture you shal see some special Lessons that Christ doth teach, this Scripture will help us in some, and we shal see others, that's the third that Christ doth teach and instruct by his Spirit. The light that you have sometimes darted into your minds beyond your former apprehension, it is no other, many times, but the spirits coming to instruct your Souls, only do not mistake the Spirit of Christ for a fals Spirit, for you must try whatsoever is taught you, you must try it by the standard of the word, whether it be the Spirit of Christ or no, it must be tried by that, But the main thing further, that I may come fully to show you the Point, what are the special Lessons that Christ doth teach his People. CHAP. LXV. Eight special Lessons Christ teacheth his Church, that were little known before. 1. The absolute necessity of Regeneration. 2. The insufficiency of our own Righteousness for justification. 3. Self denial. 4. Is for the Soul to come to the Father. 5. The Evil of the Sin of▪ Unbelief. 6. The Spiritualness of ●he Law. 7. Happiness in persecution. 8. The Glory of another Life. LEarn of me, Blessed saviour, what is it that thou wouldest have us to Learn of thee? The truth is, the whole Counsel of God is taught by Christ, God that did reveal his mind heretofore by other means, now in this latter Age, hath opened his Heart, and all his Counsels by his Son. In Heb. 1. The beginning. There is a notable Scripture that doth much concern this Point that now I am upon. God who at sundry times, and in divers manners, spake in times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets, hath in these last daies spoken to us by his Son. Here is the privilege of those that live under the Gospel, heretofore God spake in divers manners to others, as he spake sometimes by Dreams, and Visions, by Extraordinary prophesy and Revelation, but now instead of all those ways that he did reveal himself to our Fathers in, he hath in these latter times spoken by his Son, that is, what God had to reveal of his mind, he hath revealed by his Son. But for the Particulars, There are several, Particular, special things that Christ would have us to Learn of him. Those things that in a more special manner have been revealed by the Son of God, that were very little known before the Son of God came into the World, though God did speak to our forefathers by divers manners, after divers ways, yet he hath reserved the Revelation of the special mysteries of Godliness for the great Prophet that was to come into the world, he was to come to tel us all things, The Poor Woman of Samaria, as Christ was conferring with her in John▪ 4. 6. Could say thus, That when the messiah comes, he will tell us all things. And indeed, the Lord did reserve the manifestation of himself to the coming of the messiah; And this is the Reason why the World was in so much darkness before Christs time. For the generality of the world( except the Land of Canaan, that was a Poor little Country, nothing near so Big as England) was in darkness, and knew little or nothing of the mind of God; and for the Jews, what poor little knowledge had they of Christ, weak apprehensions had they of the great mysteries of Salvation▪ Those that were the most eminent among the Jews, yet what little understanding had they of the great things of eternal Life, and the Reason why there was so little knowledge in former times was, because the Lord had reserved the manifestation of himself to the coming of the great Prophet the messiah, that till he was come into the World, there should but a little light come into the world. And therefore by the way, we have cause to bless God that we live after the coming of Jesus Christ, for now light is spread abroad, had we lived in former times, we should have lived like bruit Beasts, and have known little of the mind and Counsel of God, but I say, this was reserved to the coming of the messiah, and this messiah hath told us all things, as the Woman said he would do. Now for the particulars, there are these lessons that we are to learn of Christ, that Christ hath revealed, that were little known before. The first is this, The absolute necessity of Regeneration, the miserable condition( I will wrap up these two together) that man is in by nature, and the absolute necessity of Regeneration; little have we of this in al the old Testament. How little was this known to the world before Christs coming, therefore Nicodemus, though he were a doctor of the Law in John 3. In the conference between Christ and him, it is said of him, that he was a man of the Pharisees, a ruler of the Jews, yea, and he was a great doctor, but Christ saith to him afterwards, art thou a teacher, he was a teacher among the Jews, as in the 10. verse, And Jesus answered and said to him, art thou a master in Israel, or a doctor in Israell, and knowest not these things? Christ told Nicodemus, verily, verily I say unto you, that except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God. This is the great lesson that Christ taught, and there was never so much of regeneration taught from the beginning of the world, as is here taught in these words of Jesus Christ, that every man is in such a condition by nature, as that there must not only be some change in him, he must live better then he hath done, but he must be born again, or he must be damned to al eternity, here is a great lesson that Jesus Christ hath taught his people, and we must learn of him, that would never be known but by Jesus Christ, this was one of those things that Christ had from the father, that none by his fall was in such an estate, that unless he had a second birth, as well as the first, he must perish to al eternity. Now when Christ taught this, Nicodemus did stand amazed, though he was a learned man who taught the Law, yet saith he, How can a man be born when he is old? can he enter the second time into his mothers momb, and be born? So that you may see by this, that if one that was a great man, a learned man among the Jews, and a teacher of the Law, if he was so ignorant in the point of regeneration, certainly it was little known in those times, and this is a main lesson that we are to learn from Jesus Christ, to know what the state that al men are in by nature, and the necessity of regeneration, which we can never understand by all the learning in the world, therefore be sure to learn that of Christ, there be many people( as we shal show afterwards) that will seem to learn some nice questions, and things that neither they nor their teachers do understand, that are mere matters of dispute and controversy, that take up their spirits, which is the subtlety of satan to draw them away from the great things of the Gospel, and the understanding of the great mysteries of salvation, though its true, I shal show afterwards how we are to seek to learn every truth, but to learn it of Christ according to his teaching; Are you instructed well in the great matter of regeneration Its true, we must acknowledge that every truth is worthy of learning, I but, you must first be instructed in the main truths, before God will have you spend the strength of your understanding and time about the other. Secondly, The great truth that Christ teacheth is, the insufficiency of our own righteousness for justification, of any righteousness that is in us, and that lesson you have in Matth. 5. 20. For I say unto you, that except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, you shal in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. This certainly was a very strange lesson unto the Jews at that time, the Scribes and Pharisees, they were the only righteous men that seemed to live upon the face of the earth, and lived so strictly in their conversation, but saith Christ I that am the great teacher of the Church, the great prophet, I say unto you, except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, you can never enter into the kingdom of heaven This we are to learn of Christ, that al the righteousness of man is insufficient to bring him to the kingdom of Heaven, Let a man live never so civilly, never so morally, never so strictly, it cannot bring him into the kingdom of Heaven. And Christ teacheth afterwards, that not only civility, and moral righteousness, but even the Saints best righteousness, is not that wherein they are justified. And therefore in John. 16. 10. It is said, Christ will sand the spirit, to convince the world of righteousness why so? because I go to my Father. You will say, what is the meaning of that, that the spirit of Christ will convince the world of righteousness, because Christ doth go to the Father,& he shal be seen no more? where lies the strength of the reasons? is that a reason of righteousness? can I know what is the true righteousness, because Christ goes to the father, and is seen no more? yes, thus, I will sand my spirit and that shal convince the world of this great thing, of the insufficiency of al righteousness in themselves whatsoever it is, either civil or moral, or sanctifying, though it be wrought in them by the spirit of God, yet is not their righteousness, the righteousness of their justification before the great God, but it is in me, they shal be convinced by my spirit, that it is in me, Why? Because I go to the father, this shal be the argument, that righteousness is in me, that I am come into the world, and fully satisfied Gods justice, I have taken upon me to satisfy the justice of God for mans offence, and God is well pleased with that which I have done, for I go to the father, I must never have seen the face of the father again, if I had not wrought out full righteousness, for my father sent me into the world to work out a full righteousness for the children of men, that they may have that righteousness that may make them to stand before the father, and had not I accomplished this work I must never have seen the face of the father, but that I go to the father, that is an argument that I have wrought a full righteousness for the children of men, here is a lesson that we must learn of Christ. You will hear something of Christ, and you will say, that you desire to learn of Christ, but have you learned this lesson, that al righteousness it is not in man, but it is without us, the righteousness of our justification it is in Christ, God and man, and we never learn Christ till we learn this of Christ and therfore there is no civil man in the world that knows Christ, they learn to keep from gross notorious sins, being drunk and unclean,& from swearing& to lying, but this we may learn by the light of nature,& it is true, Christ doth enlighten this, but the main thing of the Gospel, if we would come to learn of Christ as the mediator of the second Covenant, it is to learn this lesson, that there is an insufficiency of righteousness in al mankind, even in the best men in the world, wo to Abraham, isaac and Jacob, if they had no other righteousness but their own, then that was wrought in them, there is a righteousness beyond al righteousness that is in ourselves, yea, then al righteousness that God doth work in us. Ther's many will acknowledge this, that there must be a righteousness beyond ourselves, that by the grace of God we must come to do that that shal be accepted of God, but this Christ hath taught, that there must be a righteousness beyond any righteousness that the grace of God doth work in ourselves, a righteousness in Christ that is gone to the father, and there presents himself with his full righteousness for a believer, by that he stands before the father. It's true by the righteousness of our sanctification we here honor God the father, and the Lord accepts of it as acknowledging that wherein he is honoured and takes delight in it as it is said, The prayers of the righteous is Gods delight, but that that doth make us stand as righteous before the father, that must be somewhat above us, that must be the righteousness of the son of God, and this Christ teacheth, learn of me this great lesson. Thirdly, A third Lesson is this, The Lesson of self denial, as you may turn to that scripture. One of the first things that Christ teacheth his disciples is this, He that will follow me, let him deny himself, this is a Lesson that no teacher will teach so as Christ doth at the very first to teach a man to deny himself, to deny his own excellency, his own will, his own reason, his own ways, his own soul, his own mind, self denial is the great lesson, and this especially must be the Lesson that men must learn to help them to learn any thing else of Christ, except they Learn this lesson, they will learn but very little of any other Lesson. Fourthly, The fourth thing that Christ teacheth, it is for the soul to come to the father, you know the scripture that no man comes to the father but by me, no man can come to the father but by Jesus Christ. Thomas answered him, Lord, we know not whither thou goest, and how can we know the way? Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life, no man comes to the father but by me. Now this is a great mystery of Godliness, there is no means for the soul to go to the father but by Jesus Christ, by Christ as his mediator, though God the father be a God of infinite mercy in himself, and the creature be very miserable, yet there is no way for the creature to go to this merciful God, but by Christ the mediator, this Christ teacheth, and I appeal to you as I go along, have you learned these things of Christ. For me to preach in general, that al must learn of Christ, this will be a point that would not I fear have any great effect upon your heart, except I come to instance in particulars. Learn of Christ, that you will al acknowledge, I but the main things that were taught by Christ, were never taught so before Christs time as in that way that now they are, have you learned these things? then you have learned of Christ. It may be you go to God in prayer, and do not understand the necessity of a mediator between God& you, you pray to God to help you, I but how do you come? By my prayers you will say, I but here is another way to come to God by Jesus Christ, here you are taught, that prayer or coming to God is a mystery, the other is not a mystery, the Heathens do that, but the Heathens do not know how to come to God through Christ, and we have never learned Christ till we have learned this lesson, the right way of coming to the father by him. Fifthly, The fifth thing that Christ teacheth is, the great evil of the sin of unbelief, and this is never known by any natural reason, for so I am now speaking of those lessons that are beyond the strength of any natural reason, and are most proper, Evangelical lessons, and by these things you shal know whether you understand the Gospel aright, now the fifth lesson is the great evil of the sin of unbelief. Many people they think there is a great evil in the sin of murder, and theft, but for the evil of unbelief, they never understand the evil of that, now that this is one special thing that Christ teacheth, you may find in John, 16. Christ tells his disciples, that he will sand his spirit to convince the world of sin, and why? because they believe not in him, to convince them, that not believing in me they do remain in a most sinful, wretched condition, whatsoever other sins they have reformed and amended, yet the not believing in me, doth hold them in condemnation, now for a man to come to know so much of Christ, as to see that the sin of unbelief is as great a sin as blasphemy, as whoredom, as drunkenness, as theft, as any other sin whatsoever, and indeed it is the special damning sin of al sins. This is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, when the soul comes to see this, it is an argument that it hath learned of Christ, and this only can be learned of Jesus Christ give me a soul that trembleth at the sin of unbelief, as well as any other sin, and laments and bemoans that before the Lord, as well as any other sin, this is a Soul that hath Learned of Christ. Sixthly, A Sixth lesson is this, the spiritualness of the Law, Christ speaks very much in teaching the Law, and I make no question but many things that Christ doth speak were he alive at this time, and they did not know who he were, he would be accounted by many a legal preacher, he doth teach it very much, only this, he teacheth it spiritually, he is so far from abolishing of it that he raiseth it beyond the letter of i●, and for any thing further, men extremely trouble themselves with questions that do not tend to godliness, when they make a distinction between the Law that Moses gave, and that Christ gives, and yet will acknowledge that the same thing is taught by both, but we are free from it as Moses taught it, let this be granted, but we are not freed from the Law of God no one thing of the moral Law, let it come in the hand of whom it will, of any minister of God, we are bound to yield unto it, but especially if it come in the hand of Jesus Christ, therefore let that thing be granted that we are tied and bound unto those things that the Law of God requires though it be as Christ gives it us, for we will be willing to take it from Christ rather than any, but stil there is no abolishing of any particular duty that was not ceremonial, that indeed we are freed from, but yet we are bound to the same things that Moses delivered to us, though now it comes in another hand, in the hand of Christ. The truth is, we are( as I have told you) not bound to it if you understand it as coming by Moses, that is, to look upon it as he was a minister of the Law, but we are bound to it as any minister that brings the law of God, that doth reveal any part of the mind of God, people are not only bound to it at that time when he speaks, 〈◇〉 to 〈◇〉 for ever, but here lies al the controversy, that 〈◇〉 〈◇〉 ●●at Moses gave the Law as a Covenant of life and so they think we are not bound to it, This I know, no Divine in England, that ever was accounted of for any soundness that ever taught this, and therefore for men to think that now they come to teach otherwise, to think that we are not bound to the law as a Covenant of life, and of our righteousness before God for our justification, now here is the controversy whether Moses did give it so, yea or no. The Law was given by Moses, and yet in the hand of a mediator, and the Law was a true schoolmaster to bring to Christ then as now, and it was given for a Covenant of eternal Life no more, then it is now, but it was for the rule of our lives in this world, but not, that any of our forefathers could come to eternal life that way, I say, here is al the controversy, whether Moses gave it for a Covenant of eternal life, Now what need we trouble ourselves about this controversy, what if he did? or what if he did not? this al of our Orthodox Divines do teach, that Moses did give them the Law to bring them to Christ, for a rule to order their lives by in this world, and so we are bound to it, and it is impossible but any that will search the scripture, but will acknowledge that we are so bound to the Law, to that which is moral, so far as to know our misery, and see the necessity of Christ, and to conform our lives unto it, to live to the honor of God, and the good of our neighbours, and if they would raise it higher, that it is a Covenant of eternal life, that we al disavow. It is true, sometimes some expressions may fall from men that others may by consequences, say, we strain scripture, for the scripture hath such expressions, as well may strain such consequences, it puts us upon many works that are to be done, and many promises are made to them in such a way, as if we take the letter of the scripture, it may seem to tend that way, but this is that which is taught in the Gospel, though we are bound to the same things that the law requires, yet we are bound to them in another way, so that now the Law is not a Covenant of eternal life, this is taught by Jesus Christ, they had some knowledge of this in the time of the Law, certainly, they that were saved, were saved by Christ as well as we, and they did understand that, but it was not so clear understood as now, and therefore we are to Learn the Law by Christ, that is, in a Spiritual way, Christ doth raise the Law higher then ever it was before, that is, for the Spiritual Part of it, he Teacheth that we are not to Rest in the letter of the Law. red over the 5. of Matthew, Christ saith unto them, It was said unto them of old time, that thou shalt not commit Adultery, but I say, whosoever doth but look after a Woman, As if he should say, what do you think, that I come to destroy the Law? My Doctrine doth make the Law stricter then it was, in the 27. verse, What shall the seventh commandment be disannulled? Do you not think it is a Rule? But now I am so far from disannulling it to be a Rule, that I will raise it higher then it was before, known at least. And then in the 31. verse. It hath been said, whosoever will put away his Wife, let him give her a Bill of Divorcement. As if he should say thus to them, there was a time, for the hardness of your Hearts, some kind of liberty given as for the less Evil, that is, if you will do thus and thus, you must do it after this manner, but know, that I will give no such liberty, that if you put away your Wife and mary another, you commit Adultery. And then in the 33. verse, Again, ye have heard, that it hath been said by them of Old time, that thou shalt not swear thyself, but shalt perform unto the Lord thy Oaths, But I say unto you, swear not at all, neither by Heaven for it is Gods Throne, nor by the Earth for it is Gods Footstool, &c. I will keep you stricter then ever you were kept before, so that Christ doth reveal it to be more spiritual, that is, to have a more spiritual sense, and then reveals it not to be the Covenant of Life, that indeed was revealed more clearly by Christ then ever it was before. So that you must take the Law thus, first more spiritually then ever it was before, and that it is not to be the Covenant of Life, though kept in the most strictest and highest way that a Creature can do, it is apparent by this Scripture, it is expected that believers should keep that that the Law requires in a more higher and strict way then ever they did before, not to be more loose then you were before, but to be more strict in your observance to the Law of God then ever you were before but then when you have kept it in the highest strictness, you must not keep it as a Covenant of eternal Life, Indeed it was so to Adam, so that we may well say, that we are not bound to the Law in that sense, as it was given to Adam in paradise, but not so as it was given by Moses, for it was given to Adam as a Covenant of eternal Life, but as a Rule of our Life, to which we are bound, and more strictly then our forefathers were, because we have it by Christ raised to a higher pitch, and revealed more clearly then ever it was to Moses, this is the Lesson that we are to Learn from Christ, if we Learn Christ aright, the spiritualness of the Law of God. Seventhly, Another Lesson that is Proper to the Gospel, is this, That Christ Teacheth more then ever was taught before, as that there is a great deal of happiness to the Saints in suffering Persecution, this was a strange Doctrine before, for in the time of the Law, then the way of God was to encourage his Poor Servants by outward blessings by prospering them outwardly, but we never red so much in those times of the happiness that there is in Persecution, that's more proper to the Gospel, though no Question they were happy that were persecuted for Christs sake, and they had some sight of it, as Moses did see greater Riches in suffering for the Name of Christ then in Pharoahs Court, I but there was never so much seen in it as in the Sermon of Christ in Matthew, 5. 11. 12. Blessed are ye, when men shal Revile you, and Persecute you, and shal say all manner of Evil against you falsely for my sake; rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your Reward in Heaven: For so Persecuted they the Prophets which were before you. Here is a Text more clear for the happiness of Persecution than ever was before, now if you have Learned of Christ, you must Learn this Lesson, the happiness of Persecution. Another Lesson that we must Learn of Christ is this, the right way of the worship of God, and that is a special thing that Christ doth Teach People, and that you have in John, 4. 20. Our Fathers worshipped in this mountain, and ye say, that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship, Jesus saith unto her, Woman, believe me, the hour cometh when ye shal neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem worship the Father. Ye Worship ye know not what, we know what we Worship, for Salvation is of the Jews: but the hour cometh, and now is, when the true Worshippers shal Worship the Father in Spirit and in Truth, for the Father seeketh such to Worship him, God is a Spirit, and they that Worship him, must Worship him in Spirit and in Truth. Thus you see Christ instructs the poor Woman in the right way of worshipping of God, and takes her off from external Performances, that she must not Rest in external Performances in the Worship of God and satisfy her Conscience that way. And so when we red of Christs instructing in the things of the Kingdom of God, and when we red of him, to be faithful in his House as Moses was, these things doth show unto us that we must have the Worship of God taught us by Jesus Christ, and not by the Traditions of men, for so Christ complains of men that they did Worship, not according to the way of God, but according to mens Traditions, Matthew, 5. There's one thing more that we did not observe before about the Law, that of Anger, that Christ by Anger makes a man guilty of the same punishment that they thought Murder did deserve, In vers. 21, 22. Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not Kill: and Whosoever shall Kill, shall be in danger of the judgement; But I say unto you, That whosoever is Angry with his Brother without a cause, shall be in danger of the judgement: and whosoever shall say to his Brother, Racha, shall be in danger of the Counsel: but whosoever shal say, Thou Fool, shall be in danger of Hell Fire. You think if a man Murder, he shall be in danger of the judgement, but saith Christ, if a man be but Angry with his Brother without a Cause he shall be in danger of the judgement. And so afterwards you shall find, when they wondered that he did not wash his Hands, he did rebuk them for making the Commandements of God of none effect by their Traditions, and they taught for Doctrine the precepts of men, but Christ would bring them to the true Worship of God; and not to Worship God in a formal way according to mens Traditions. In little things in Gods Worship, then let people be first instructed in regeneration, the necessity of that, and in the mysteries of the Gospel, that are of absolute necessity to Salvation, then they are to be instructed in the Worship of God, and labour to inquire how Christ hath shewed the pattern of his House in the way that he would be worshipped; for as on the one side, there are some men that so stick upon things that are Fundamental, that they slight smaller things, so on the other side, some stick so upon smaller things, as they reject Fundamental things, First let us be instructed in the main Points of the Gospel, and then we shal Learn the pattern of his House in the way that he would be worshipped. And especially though we cannot be instructed in every Particular presently yet this the weakest believer comes to Learn of Christ, that he must not Worship God after the Traditions of his Fathers, any more; I say, as soon as ever a Soul comes to Christ, this is one of the first things, that he Learn● upon the understanding of the mysteries of Salvation, that he is to be justified by Christ, that he is now not to serve God by the Traditions of men, but &c. but that by the precious blood of Christ he is delivered from the vain conversation that was received by the Traditions of his Father. Eighthly, One thing more we are to Learn of Christ, and that is, the Glory of another life, both the day of Gods calling al to judgement,& the state of good and bad in the life that is to come, this was little known of in the time of the Law. The spirit shal convince the world of judgement, I know some make it to stand in Sanctification, and others that God hath a great day of bringing all to judgement, for the Prince of this world is judged, the Devil is cast out of your Hearts, but the letter seems to carry it more fully the other way, shall convince the world of another life, of the great account that must be given, that all flesh shal stand before the great God, for the Prince of the world is judged, the Lord hath judged the Prince of this world already and cast him into Chains of darkness, and that is an evidence of the great day that God will judge the world by Jesus Christ. Now this was known somewhat of it in the times of the Law, but especially the state after judgement there was less known of that, and therefore that place is very observable, the 2 Tim. 1. 10. But is now made manifest by the appearing of our saviour Jesus Christ, who hath abolished Death and brought Life and immortality to light by the Gospel. Was not life and immortality brought to light before? Truly very little, give me almost one Scripture,( except one or two) in all the old Testament that speaks of eternal Life, but now Life and immortality is brought to light through the Gospel, Oh, This is that that Christ hath heard from the Father, he hath heard from the Father that it is the purpose of God the Father to bring some poor Souls to eternal Life, to live in eternal Life with him in the highest Heavens, and this Christ makes known by the Gospel, this we are to Learn of Christ, life and immortality, the glorious happiness of believers hereafter, after this world is at an end, those that are believers, though they be poor and contemptible here, mean in parts and abilities, yet the Lord hath such blessed thoughts of mercy towards them, as within a while, these poor lumps of day, shal be raised up above the starry Heavens, to live to all eternity with the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and the blessed Angels, in singing praises and Hallelujahs to him that sitteth upon the throne, and to the Lamb for evermore. It is Christ that hath Revealed, that this infirm Body of thine that is weak, and matter for Diseases, shal be made like the glorious Body of Jesus Christ, shall be like ●he Sun shining in the Firmament, for so the Gospel tells us, even thy Body shal have as great a lustre and shine as the Sun at noon day, when it shines in the brightness of it, this Christ tells us that we shal reign with the Lord and enjoy a Kingdom, even those that are poor, yours is the Kingdom of Heaven, and an immortal and undefiled Crown of Glory is reserved for you, that there are mansions in Heaven which Christ tells us he is gone to prepare, this doth Christ teach for the encouraging of his Disciples, thus saith Christ Learn of me, that is, those principal Doctrines that are most Evangelical, that are now taught more then they were in the times of the Law, or more then ever can be known by any mans understanding that hath but mere natural abilities, be it known that I come from the Father to teach these things unto you, and Learn of me. Thus you see what are the things that Christ doth teach. CHAP. LXVI. Sheweth what manner of Teacher Christ is in Seven Particulars. 1. Christ Teacheth things of a higher Nature then others. 2. Our dullness is no hindrance to his Teaching. 3. He Teacheth the Heart effectually. 4. He Teacheth suddenly. 5. He Teacheth without any Mixture of Error. 6. He Leads into all truth. 7. He Teacheth everlastingly. NOw the next thing is the manner of Christs Teaching, he Teacheth so as none other Teacheth like him. You have a Scripture to that purpose in Job, 36. 22. Behold, God exalteth by his power, who Teacheth like him? That which is said of God here is true of Christ, who is the Son of God, who Teaches like him? Christ Teaches excellent things, who Teaches such things as Christ doth▪ There are six or seven Particulars wherein the teaching of Christ appears to be beyond any teaching whatsoever. First, The things themselves that Christ teacheth, are beyond any others teaching, none can reveal those things that Christ reveals to the Soul, they are things of a higher Nature, those great mysteries of Godliness, such things as Christ himself hath heard and Learned of the Father, he comes to teach▪ therefore none teacheth so as Christ teacheth, in regard of the things themselves. Secondly, None teacheth so as Christ, in that the dullness and incapacity of the Learner, is no hindrance to the teaching of Jesus Christ, dullness and incapacity in others, when any creature undertakes to teach, is a great hindrance, but when Christ undertakes to teach; it is no hindrance at all, the Law of God gives wisdom to the simplo and to Babes. Thirdly, None Teacheth so as Christ Teacheth, because he Teacheth effectually, he Teacheth the Heart, none can Teach the Heart so as the Lord Christ doth, he gives understanding to the Heart. In Job, 38. 36. Who hath put Wisdom in the inward Parts? Or who hath given understanding to the Heart? Who is it, Here is a challenge to show who it is in al the world? What Creature is it that hath put Wisdom in the inward Parts? Or that hath given understanding to the Heart? All the Angels in Heaven, and men in the world, cannot give understanding to the Heart. They may give understanding to the Head, perhaps, but to give it to the Heart, that is to Teach the Heart, no Creature in the world can do it. It is the Property of the great Teacher of the Church to Teach the Hearts of the Saints, who hath given understanding to the Heart? And therefore you are not so much to look at what understanding is in the Head, but what understanding have you in the Heart, hath Christ given you understanding in the Heart, then Christ hath▪ taught you, that is the proper teaching of Christ, and in this he teacheth as none teacheth. Fourthly, Christ teacheth so as none teaches in this, that he teacheth suddenly many times, others Teach by degrees, a little at one time, and a little at another time, but the teaching of Christ, is sometimes on a sudden. One that hath been a very ignorant wretch, comes to have the Fundamental points of Religion, to be let out in a sudden way into his Heart, that he comes to understand sometimes at an instant, more then all the great rabbis in the world did understand, that have been studying all the daies of their lives, I do not say more Particular things, but many things that they do not understand, and things of a higher Nature then they do understand, Yea, and all things that are absolutely necessary to Salvation Christ sometimes teacheth on a sudden, for if a man may be converted on a sudden, then certainly much more al the necessary points of Religion, he must necessary know on a sudden, presently in one Sermon sometimes, the Lord comes into the Soul, and reveals himself through the mysteries of the Gospel, and reveals al the great things that are absolutely necessary to eternal Life. Indeed they come gradually to understand more and more of the mind of God, and so as long as they live they are learners, but they are on a sudden taught the Fundamental truths of eternal life, and therefore none teacheth so as Christ Teacheth. Fifthly, None Teacheth so as Christ Teacheth, because Christ Teacheth without any Mixture of Error. Now we can confided in no man to Teach so, for though men Teach many truths, yet they are but men and may Err, and God forbid that any man should attribute that unto himself, that his Teaching is infallible, and therefore those that Teach and are as they ought, they will many times condemn themselves, and confess that they are as subject to Err, as any others. Sixthly, Christ Teacheth as none other, because Christ leads into al truth. You know the Scripture, when he saith he will sand his Spirit, that is, Christ teaching by his Spirit, And the Spirit shall led you into all Truth. Here is a blessed Teacher, one that is able to Teach all truth. One man Teacheth one thing, and another Teacheth another thing, and one Minister is eminent in one way, and another in another way, but here is a Teacher that Teacheth all truth, that leads into all Truth. Seventhly, Christ Teacheth everlastingly, that is, his Teaching is such as shal abide for ever, that shall never fade, and therefore he writes his word in our Hearts, so that it shal be there. His Lessons that he Teacheth shal be in such a manner, as the knowledge of them shall abide to all eternity. A man may Teach another such and such a skill, but his Teaching may vanish, but now Christ Teacheth so as he writes his Lessons in their Hearts. So as to make them abide for ever. Al flesh is grass, saith the Apostle Peter, that distinguisheth between Flesh and between the word of God. In the first of Peter the first, the two last verses. For all flesh is Grass, and all the Glory of man as the flower of Grass, the Grass Withereth and the flower thereof fadeth away, but the word of the Lord endureth for ever, and this is the word which by the Gospel is Preached unto you▪ Mark the Comparison between the word and the flesh, Al flesh is Grass, but the word of the Lord endureth for ever, the word which by the Gospel is Preached unto you endures for ever. Now the meaning of it is this, that whatsoever comes in a fleshly way, whatsoever you have that is natural, that comes in a Human way, that is al Human excellency, natural excellency whatsoever, it is but as Grass that fades away. Certainly, That is the meaning of flesh here, al Human and natural excellency, but the word of the Lord, that which comes into the Soul by the word of the Lord, by the Gospel, that abides for ever, whenas all natural excellency shal vanish, perhaps Parts shal vanish. Mans natural Wisdom shal vanish, whatsoever men have Learned from men, and by any strength of Nature, or have got from natural abilities, al this shal vanish, it will al come to nothing, for it is but flesh, it is all but as Grass. I say, whatsoever men have got by their natural abilities, or merely by man, it will al vanish as Grass, let them pride themselves in it never so much, and think they are brave men, that have such excellencies, but certainly it will al vanish and come to nothing. But now the word of the Lord abides for ever, look what the Soul drinks in by the word of the Lord, look what a Soul gets by the Teaching of Jesus Christ in his word in the Gospel, this abides for ever in the Soul, So that Christ Teacheth as none Teacheth in regard of the manner of his Teaching. CHAP. LXVII. showing that Christ is a meek Teacher in Seven Respects. 1. He doth not Teach in a Rigid austere way. 2. He is not provoked with the dullness of his scholars. 3. He is a patient Teacher. 4. He Will not upbraid their former Ignorance. 5. He i● willing to Teach things over and over again. 6. He Encourageth the least beginnings in his scholars: 7. He sweetens all his instructions with Love. BUt now, Christ is such a Teacher too, not only in regard of these Particulars, but in regard of what we have in the Text, Learn of me, for I am MEEK and Lowly in Heart, Christ is a Meek Teacher, and a lowly Teacher, and that briefly in these Particulars, to present before your view the Teachings of Christ, Christ is a Meek Teacher in this Respect, Christ doth not Teach in a rigid way, he is Meek in these seven Particulars. First, He doth not desire of the Soul to Learn in that rigid austere way so as other Teachers do, The Law it is called a Schoolmaster, it is indeed many times a very Austere School-master, a rigid School-master, it is sour and very harsh to the scholars of it, but Christ is otherwise, Christ is a Meek and a gentle School-master, he is Meek in his Teaching, he doth draw on the Heart in a sweet and gentle way to come to understand the Gospel, and the mysteries of Salvation, and this you may red of all along in the Gospel, the meekness of Christ in his Teaching, his Teaching in a Loving and a gentle way. He was so Loving and gentle in his Teaching, that the people of the Jews were offended, John, he came austerely, neither Eating nor Drinking, but Christ came Eating and Drinking, in a gentle way, you know the vanity of mens Spirits, whenas some will say, if Ministers would Teach thus and thus, we would hear them, and they would do us good, but they are so extremely austere. So John, they excepted again sthim, he was austere, I but Christ, he did not come in an Austere way, he came in a familiar way, and in a Loving way, he was not so Rigid as John was. And I suppose you know the Scripture that relates the story, it is this very Chapter, In Matthew, 11. 16. and 17. and so on. Whereunto shall I liken this generation, it is like unto Children sitting in the Markets and calling unto their fellows, and saying, we have Piped unto you and ye have not Danced, we have mourned unto you and you have not lamented, For John came neither Eating nor Drinking, and they say, he hath a Devil, the Son of man came Eating and Drinking, and they say, behold a man Gluttonous and a Wine Bibber, a friend of Publicans and sinners, But Wisdom is justified of her Children. Thus we see the way wardness of the Hearts of People, that nothing would satisfy them, John was too Austere, and Christ was too Familiar for them, But this shows that Christ was a Meek Teacher, for he is opposed even to the Austerity of John himself. Secondly, Christ is a Meek Teacher indeed, that he is not provoked by the dullness of his scholars. As it is hard for a Master that hath dull scholars, unless he have a very Meek Spirit, but he will be provoked by the dullness of the Child, and Parents will not be willing to sand their Children especially if they know them dull, and hard to Learn, to such a Master. Now Christ he is a Meek Teacher, and our dullness doth not provoke Christ as others do men, perhaps we are dull, and Ministers are provoked by our dullness, but Christ is not, when thou art willing to Learn thou mayst be encouraged, for thou hast a Meek Teacher, and for this do but red the History of the Evangelists, and there observe the dullness of Christs Disciples, the Apostles themselves extreme dull in Learning, Christ had much a do with them in regard of their dullness, and extreme ignorant they were in things that were of a high nature, but Christ carries himself familiarly toward them in a Meek and a quiet way. Thirdly, Christ is a Meek Teacher, not only that he is not provoked by dullness, but he is Patient notwithstanding perverseness, that is more then dullness. Indeed we may bear something in dullness, but if the Learner be perverse, it is hard for any man in the world to bear that, but so it is with Christ, Christ is Meek notwithstanding the perverseness of any of his Learners, and for that you may see in John, 4. 8. In the fourth Chapter he came to Teach the Woman of Samaria, The Woman of Samaria had jeered him to his very Face. Saith he to her, Give me some Water to Drink, Saith the Woman of Samaria unto him. How is it that thou being a Jew askest water of me who am a woman of Samaria? As if she should say, you Jews are so strict, and so precise, that you think we Samaritans are wicked people, and Superstitious, and what, will you that are a Jew, come to me that am so vile a Samaritan as I am? Certainly those words are very jeering. True, They acknowledged both the true God, but the Samaritans Worshipped God in a fals way, and the Jews Worshipped God in a right way, and therefore they were at a deadly enmity one to another. When people worship God in a fals way, they think that others that Worship God in a true way, they cannot Love them, but hate them, and so the Samaritans thought of the Jews, and accordingly the Woman jeers Christ, and speaks scoffingly to him. But yet mark how meekly Christ answers the Woman, Oh, If thou hadst known the gift of God and who it is that saith to thee, give me to Drink, thou wouldst have asked of him, and he would have given thee waters of Life. He did not speak frowardly again to the Woman, but mark the Woman jeered again, I pray give me that water indeed( saith she) that I sha●● never thirst again, and so scorned him. Christ yet goes in a meek way, and never Leaves till he had taught the woman the great things of eternal Life to her Soul. And so in the 8. of John, there Christ is teaching the Jews, look through the Chapter, they did nothing but cavil and thwart him. It is true, it is a mighty discouragement to a Teacher to have his hearers cavilling at whatsoever he saith, but so they did with Christ, but mark, he d●d not break off therefore in a violent way, but Christ went on in a Meek and a gentle way notwithstanding this. This is the third thing, wherein the meekness of Christ appears in Teaching, I shal afterward God willing open the meekness of Christ in general, but only now of Christs meekness in Teaching. Fourthly, Christ will not upbraid thee for thy former ignorance, and thy former folly, he will not upbraid thee for it, he will not cast it into thy Teeth, how thou hast neglected heretofore teaching, but if thou hast a Heart now to come and Learn, Christ will reject all thy former rejection of the truths of God, and al thy former wicked ways in sinning against the light that is come into the world, that would have enlightened thy Soul, you that have lived under the Ministry of Christ, and under the Teachings of Christ, and you have rejected, slighted, and disregarded him, and now you think if you should come to Learn of Christ, Christ would reject you and say, what, do you come now to me when you are old, I would have taught you before in your younger years, and you would not regard me, but slighted and rejected me, No, Christ will not upbraid thee. Let an old man, or old Woman that have disregarded Christ all their life long, and would not come to Christ, Christ will Teach them, only take heed that you do not reject Christ, for Christ very seldom gives them a Heart to come and Learn of him, who have been rejecters of Christ and his word, and opposers of him, thou that hast been a rejecter of Christ and his Teaching, Oh it is just with God to give thee up to the blindness and hardness of thy Heart, that thou that didst neglect to Learn of Christ in the time of thy youth, thou shouldst never have a Heart to Learn of Christ. And therefore by the way look to it, you that are young, if you neglect Christ in your younger time, it is just with God to give you up, that you should never have a Heart to Learn of Christ, but if there be any of you, any old man or Woman, that hath neglected the time of their youth, and have not made conscience to labour to be instructed in the ways of God, I say, if you have done thus, though it is wonderful if the Lord should be willing to Teach thee, yet if God give thee a Heart to be willing to Learn, that thy Heart is come down so low, know, that Jesus Christ is willing to Teach thee, and he will not upbraid thee and say, what, thou an old, ignorant, sottish fool, what wilt thou come to Learn? Perhaps, man would upbraid so, but Christ will not, if thou hast now a heart to come unto him. That Text is very famous for this, in the first of James and 5. verse, If any man lack Wisdom let him ask it of God, that gives liberally to all men and upbraideth not. Here is a Text worth Gold, for the encouragement of those that have neglected in the time of their youth, and yet now have a Heart to come in and Learn, it is only for their encouragement. If thou dost lack Wisdom, whatever thou art, if any of you, I do not say, if young ones, but any of you, though you have neglected the time of your youth, if any of you lack Wisdom, let him ask it of God, that giveth to al men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be given him, there's the fourth thing, wherein the meekness of Christ appears in teaching, that he doth upbraid none. Fifthly, Christ is a meek Teacher in that he is willing to Teach things over and over again, and that will require Meekness and Patience. It is a Tedious thing for a man to be fo troubled as he must Teach the same things over and over again. You see it in the Apostle in the third of the Phil. and the first verse. Finally Brethren rejoice in the Lord, to writ the same things to you, to me indeed it is not grievous but for you it is safe. The Apostle was fain to satisfy them in this, that it was not grievous to him, for the truth is, it is ordinarily grievous, to be writing and speaking the same things again and again, to be Teaching things over again and again, but the Lord is pleased so to Teach, line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little, though I know many carry it otherwise, yet the generality of interpreters carry it so, that the Lord is willing to have line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there and a little, again and again, to be dropping the same things into poor Souls, if Christ should not do so, there would be very few that would Learn of him, And we find Christ doing it to his Disciples, and in this Christ shows a great deal of Meekness, as a School-master Teaching things over and over again to his scholars. Sixthly, Christ is a Meek Teacher in this, that he doth encourage the least beginnings, any beginnings, if he doth but see a willing Heart, if he lights on one that begins to Learn a little, Christ will not daunt and discourage him. He doth not quench the smoking Flax, nor bruise the bruised Reed, But he encourageth all beginnings, in those that are Learning; and those that do come to Learn of Christ, they find this by experience, that when they have but a very little Jesus Christ doth encourage them. And this is the Reason, why your young converts, that are but in a way of Conversion, yet they have abundance of joy, flashes of joy, and encouragement. The entrance into thy word giveth light, saith the Prophet, the very beginning gives a great deal of comfort, and brings much sweetness, Christ doth encourage young beginners. seventhly, Christ Teacheth so, as he sweetens all instructions with Love, so as he makes the Soul in Love with what he Teacheth. A man may Teach excellent things indeed, but he may Teach them so, with such a Spirit, that there will appear little Love in what he says, that he will not draw his scholars to Love what he speaks, perhaps he may speak convincingly, but yet not draw them into Love with what he speaks. A Master Teacheth well, when he draweth the Child, and makes the scholar to Love his Master, and Love the things that he Teacheth, and no scholars thrive so much in Learning, as those that are taught in such a way, as they are drawn to Love their Master, and Love their Books. Now Christ doth so Teach, he never Teacheth any but he makes them in Love with him, and in Love with their Books. You may see an excellent Scripture for this in David, the 119. Psalm. the 102. verse. I have not departed from thy judgments, for thou hast taught me. But that that I bring it for now is, the dependence that it hath with the next words. What then follows? How sweet are thy words unto my taste, Yea, sweeter then Honey unto my Mouth. Those that come to Learn by the Teachings of Christ, they have the word of Christ sweet unto their taste, sweeter then Honey to their, Mouth, Oh the truth of God is sweet unto them. And this,( by the way) may be a trial, whether you be taught by Jesus Christ, Yea or No. Men may have excellent Parts, and knowledge, and abilities, and express themselves to admiration, but in a constant way, they find no sweetness in those things they do Teach. Whereas now many people, that have not so excellent natural abilities, yet in those things that they know, their Souls have admirable satisfaction, Oh, it doth them good at the very Heart: when they come to the word, and hear Christ, and Christ being there and Teacheth their Souls. Oh never was Honey so sweet to their taste, as such a word, such a promise, such a Scripture, being opened, is sweet unto their Souls, surely, if you do find conviction to your Souls. and sweetness, Christ hath been there, and Christ doth so Teach. There was never any scholar of Jesus Christ, but was in Love with what he taught, and though the Truth may seem to be hard, even the Lessons of self denial, as you heard before, those Lessons are sweet to the scholars of Jesus Christ. CHAP. LXVIII. Sheweth Christ to be an humble Teacher in Seven Particulars. 1. In that he will Teach at all such Creatures as we be. 2. He Teacheth the Poor and simplo ones. 3. He suits himself to his scholars. 4. He comes in his own person to Teach. 5. He comes to Teach unsought. 6. He Teacheth us as friends. 7. He Teacheth by his Example. NOw in the next place as Christ is a Meek Teacher, so he is an Humble Teacher too, Learn of me, for I am an HUMBLE Teacher. Pride in a Teacher is exceeding bad, but Christ that is the great Teachet so his Church, he is an humble Lowly teacher, and that in these several regards. In these six or seven partickulars likewise the humility of Christ in teaching appears: As for his humility otherwise, that we shal afterwards open to you. First, It is humility, that he will vouchsafe to teach at al, such Creatures as we are In Psalm. 113. 6. The Lord humbles himself, to behold the things that are in heaven and in the earth. Surely, he doth humble himself, not only to behold things done in earth, but to be the teacher, the scholmaster of such poor creatures as we are. If Christ were the teacher of Angels it were an humbling of himself, but for Christ to be a teacher to such poor, unworthy creatures as we are, this shows his humility. Secondly, Christ should show himself humble, if he did but teach the Kings, and Princes, and great ones of the earth, but if we consider, that the scholars that Christ delights to teach ordinarily, are the poor, weak ones, the simplo ones, despised ones in the world, and babes, he will teach them, he teacheth the poor, the Gospel is preached to the Poor, and this is set amongst the miracles of Christ. When John's disciples went to him, and asked him, whether he was the messiah, or whether they should look for another? He made this answer. Go and tell John what things ye hear and see, the blind receive their sight, and the deaf hear, and the poor receive the Gospel; Is this an arguement that he was the messiah, that the blind see, and the deaf hear, and the Lame walk, and the poor receive the Gospel? How is this an argument that he was the messiah, that the poor receive the Gospel? Christ takes this way to prove that he was the messiah, that the poor receive the Gospel. It is a great miracle, but it is an argument of the messiah, because it is an argument of his Humility. For John knew that the messiah was not to come in with pomp and Glory, but in Humility. And Christ in giving an argument of his Humility, gives an argument that he was the messiah, in that the Gospel was preached to the poor. For a man to be willing to be a teacher of princes Children, that every one will be willing to do, but to teach poor alms people, the poorest Children in the place where they live, this argues Humility, Jesus Christ, that is the brightness of the father, and hath al the treasures of wisdom and knowledge in him, he is willing to teach the alms Children, the poorest, weakest, the meanest, those that are contemned in the world. Perhaps thou thinkest thyself too good to teach a poor Child in the family, a poor boy in the shop, but lettest him go on ignorantly, and perish in darkness because thou wouldest not instruct him, there is too great a distance between thee and ●im, thou thinkest. well, but if Christ should stand so upon his distance, what would become of thee? Christ is willing to teach the poor boyes& the poor boyes shal be taught by Christ, and thou shalt be refused, he doth refuse them that are the rich ones,& great ones of the world,& he takes poor children, alms people, and teacheth them before others, and in that he shows himself to be lowly in heart. Thirdly, He shows himself to be humble in teaching in this regard, in that he suits himself to al, he speaks lispingly with them, he is willing to begin with them in their A, B, C. To have a scholar to teach high notions, though to mean people, that he will like, but now to be set to teach the A, B, C. and to begin with that, it argues a great deal of humility. Now Christ he is willing to begin with people in their A, B, C. And to speak according to their capa●ity, according to their understanding; So we find when he taught the disciples, he would teach them in similitudes, and parables, how they might understand them, and be made more sensible of what he spake. He would as it were take a feskue in his hand, and teach them by degrees, for that is the only teaching, not to teach with high strains, as many do, that go away with their rhetoric, and high strains, which poor people understand not, and indeed many people they would rather have it thus, they would rather hear such a one, that shows his rhetoric, and learning and high strains, then hear a mean plain teacher. Now for one to manifest parts and abilities only in his teaching, it is intolerable pride, and such with infinite confusion of face will stand before Christ another day, but Christ he doth not so, though he have al learning, yet he suits himself to the meanest capacity of al. Fourthly, Christ shows himself humble in this, that he will not only sand others to teach, but he will come himself to them in his own person. If Christ had sent only some servant, it were humility enough, but Christ is not only content to sand others, to sand Angels to teach you, but comes himself, he comes and takes our nature upon him, comes to be in the form of a fervant, because we were not so capable of him till he was God-Man, therefore he comes in the form of a servant into the world, that he might be a prophet to his Church in his own person. And that that we have here in the book of God( a great part of it) it is that that Christ in his own person, in his own nature taught us, now that we should have Christ the son of God to come and teach us in his own person, this is a great matter. And besides, though he sand his ministers, and we have not his bodily presence as before, yet there is the spiritual presence of Christ himself when his ministers preach, in another manner, then when one man sends another. Perhaps a schoolmaster may sand his usher, but the presence of the schoolmaster is not there, but when Christ sends his messengers he comes himself then, yea, and he is not only willing to sand Angels and men, but he sends the holy Ghost too, and this shows, his humility. Fifthly, Christ he will come and Teach, though he be not sought. Men that have skill in any thing that is of worth, they look to be sought after to Teach any one, But now Christ Teacheth though he be never sought. As many of you, when you never thought of Christ, did not Christ come and Teach you, and open unto you the great mysteries of eternal life? I am found of those that sought me not. If Christ should not come to Teach Souls before they seek to him, how many Souls would perish? al the world would perish, they would never be taught. Now here is the Humility of Christ in this respect. Sixthly, Christ teacheth in this Humble way, in that he doth not despise us, because of the distance between him and us, but he Teacheth us as friends. He takes such Poor creatures when he is Teaching of them, and Teacheth them as friends, though there be an infinite distance between them and him, yet Christ doth not look at that distance, but takes all his scholars, and Teacheth them as friends, As he saith, I call you not Servants but friends, and I Reveal to you that that I have Learned and heard of my Father. This shows his Humility▪ Seventhly and Lastly, Christ is willing, not only to tel us what is the mind of the Father, but that he might Teach us indeed to purpose, to come and make himself to be an example of what he tells us, that is yet a further degree. A Teacher may Teach another such a thing, but when he hath done, he thinks it enough that he doth but tel them his Rules, I but, that he might show them what a desire he hath that they might Learn, he comes and doth the same things by them, that he hath taught them by Rule. So Christ, by his example hath come into the world, and shewed us the things that he would have us Learn, as we shall show hereafter, Learn of me in a Doctrinal, and an exemplary way. And thus we have now opened this point of Christ being the Teacher of his Church. CHAP. LXIX. Containeth the Application of the former Doctrine in four Particulars. 1. We should bless God for such glorious means as we have to know his mind. 2. Hereby are the Saints honoured. 3. It is an horrible thing to continue in ignorance. 4. Think not much to Teach others. NOw there are many things for Application of this Point. Application, 1. As First, Hence we see infinite cause to bless God, that we have such means to come to know his mind, that we have the Son of God come from his Bosom, that knows all that is in the Heart of the Father, and that hath been from all eternity by the Father, to hear and Learn of him, that he should be appointed by God the Father to be the great Teacher of his Church. bless God that we have such a way to come to understand the mind of God, and the things of eternal Life. What a poor way had the Heathen to know the mind of God, and of their Gods, they would search into the dials of Beasts, their priests must go and kill Beasts, and there rak into their dials, and see what colour they were, and such and such signs, and by that to know the mind of God, and of their Gods. Or they would observe the flying of the fowls, this way or that way, and so we might name abundance of such pitiful ways that the Heathens had to know the mind of their Gods by. Now we may see by this, a great deal of difference between their way of knowing the mind of their Gods, and we knowing the mind of God. They did know the mind of their Gods, but how? By the dials of Beasts, the flying of Birds, the ascending of smoke; But now, we have the eternal, infinite, wise God to be our God, and that we might come to know the mind of God, we have Jesus Christ, God blessed for ever, equal with the Father, and he is appointed by the Father to be the Teacher, the great Prophet of his Church, to Teach every Soul that belongs unto him. It is the excellent condition that we are in above the Heathen, that we may come to know the hidden things, that were hidden from eternity, Oh bless God for this! And since Christ came to take our natures upon him, since that time, there hath been glorious revelation of Truths, and indeed they were kept to that time, and it was one special Reason why there was so little of God made known, because the Lord would reserve the manifestation of those great things, to the coming of the great Prophet, we are to bless God that we have the spirit of Christ shed abroad, that he hath sent his Spirit, whereby we come to know so much of God, as to speak in your own language, you that are Mariners, what poor ways have you had to Learn the art of Navigation, to go from place to place, and you durst not go to the shore, you know it was dangerous to go to the shore, and yet that was all the way they had to sail by, to sail by sight of Land, this was before the knowledge of the compass, the point of the Needle, before you had the knowledge of the compass what poor ways had Mariners to Learn their Art, but now after God had revealed this skill to men to know the uses of the compass, what abundance of knowledge have men in the Art of Navigation since that time? And how have they been raised since that time? And what great things have been done by Mariners since that time? They can now go up and down into the world, from the East to the West-Indies, and though they see no Land a twelve-month together, they can go by that. Now we may Reason thus, that if the Lord Teaching men in such a Poor thing as that, to know but the use of the Needle of the compass, doth so raise the Art of Navigation, and is so mighty advantageous to mankind, for so it is, and you have so much cause to bless God for that help of your compass, then say I, what infinite cause have you to bless God for Jesus Christ, the Son of God, that comes to Teach you the art of Divinity, the Art of eternal Life, the way to come to know the Father, and all the deep Counsels of the Father? If the compass be such a blessing to mankind, what a blessing then is Jesus Christ! For my Brethren, before you come to understand Christ, I appeal to your consciences, what poor thoughts you had of Jesus Christ. Any of you that Christ hath undertaken to Teach, I appeal to your own consciences, before such time as you felt yourselves taught of Christ, what Poor thoughts had you of the ways of God? what poor thoughts had you of God himself? What poor thoughts had you of Religion? What strange conceits had you of the things of Religion? What Poor imaginations had you of the way to come to be reconciled to God after you had sinned, to come to make your peace? All the thoughts you had of him, you thought God was a good man, you think him to be an old man in Heaven. And others though not so grossly, they think if they have sinned they must go and pray, and so make God amends, and there is al. I but now thou comest to understand a way, to make Peace with God by the satisfaction of infinite justice, and canst tel how by the hand of Faith to tender up to God the price for thy Soul, and that that will stand before the infinite burning wrath of God, and is able to keep it from thee, thou comest to know this now by Christ. And there is a hundred times more difference between the knowledge that a man or Woman hath of God, and of the things of eternal Life before Christ Teacheth them, and that that they have after Christ Teacheth them. That as the difference is in the Art of Navigation, before you had the compass, and the use of that; one that had not the knowledge of that Art, he was fain to creep along the shore, but now he is able to go over the whole world. Such a difference there is, between the knowledge that a man hath of God before Christ Teacheth him, and after Christ comes to Teach him. Now Jesus Christ comes to Teach the Soul, and raiseth thy Soul infinitely higher then the mariners, or the poor boat-man on the Thames. Certainly the difference between the knowledge we have of the mysteries of Salvation when we come to be taught of Christ, is above the knowledge of any natural man in the world that is not taught of Christ, therefore bless God for Jesus Christ. Application. 2. Secondly, Here we may Learn this, what an Honor God puts upon Religion, and upon his Saints. What an Honor,( you will say) is put upon them? Thus, they have God the Father and God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, to be their Teacher. God the Father: He that hath heard, and Learned of the Father, comes to me, The Father he Teacheth. And then the Son: Learn of me, He is the great Prophet of his Church. And then the Holy Ghost: I will sand my Spirit to led you into all Truth. So that such as are Godly, as mean as ever they are, they have the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, sent to be their Teacher, and in this they are honoured. Application. 3. Thirdly, What a horrible thing then is it for People, especially living under the light of the Gospel, to continue in gross ignorance, when Jesus Christ is appointed by God the Father to be the Teacher of his Church, and yet thou an ignorant sot, yet not understanding the things of God, yet continuest in darkness, and lovest darkness? Oh thou art a wicked wretch, it is an argument surely, that either thou dost not belong to Jesus Christ, or Christ must be unfaithful in his teaching, one of these two it must be, Put a third and there is a full enumeration. Either Christ is unfaithful in his office, or I am not one that is given to Christ by the father, Or I must have knowledge by his teaching. Now if thou remainest ignorant, first, to say, that Christ were unfaithful in his office, that were blasphemy. And that Christ is appointed by God the father to instruct and teach every one that shal be saved, that is certain. Then here is al the touch, whether I be given to him by the father yea or no. You will say, I hope to be saved by Jesus Christ. Now take this with you, whomsoever shal be saved by Jesus Christ, shal be taught by him, and thou canst not believe in him as a priest to offer unto his father his life to save thee, to redeem thee, but thou must believe in him likewise, as a prophet to instruct and teach thee. Hath Christ brought thee into his school? Art thou a scholar in the school of Christ? And hast thou learned there the mysteries of the Gospel, such things as thou canst say, thou wouldest not for al the world but have learned, then that is a good argument that thou shalt be saved. But certainly, though thou beest not book learned, do not pled that, you say, had I been brought up as others have been and had been book learned and the like, do not make that thy plea. It is true if thou hadst none to reach thee but man, I but Jesus Christ he is the word of God, and he was appointed by the father to instruct and teach, and therefore remember this point, that Christ is the teacher of his Church, and al that come to him, must come and learn of him. Either be a learner of Christ, or else thou canst not be saved by Christ. Ignorance of God in the time of the Gospel, is as great an argument of Gods rejection of thee, as the Heathen had in the way of Idolatry. I will give you but one scripture for that, in the 2. Cor. 4. 3. But if our Gospel be hide; it is hide to them that are lost. It is one of the terriblest places you that are ignorant people you had need look to it, for here the spirit of Christ tells you what you are, If our Gospel be hide it is hide to them that are lost. It is true, there are many that the Gospel is hide unto, but what are they? They are lost people, that is a dreadful sentence, to say to any man or woman, you are a lost man, or a lost woman. Oh, you will say, it hath been Hidden from me, I but you do not know it may continue, if it do so continue, certainly thou art a lost creature. Application. 4. Fourthly, Is Christ the teacher of his Church? Let us never think much to endeavour what we can to teach others, and to learn others as much as we are able, to learn those that are under us. Shal Christ undertake to be a teacher of his people, and to be your teacher? Have you learned of Christ, and hath he taught you? surely, this cannot but be a mighty argument to prevail with people, to be willing to teach al those that they have any opportunity to teach. As it should be a mighty argument for ministers, to teach those that they are set over to teach, to be meek and lowly, to be humble, and so to svit themselves to the meanest, and especially, in that one thing of teaching the principles of Religion, of that that they call catechism. Oh! It is that that I am persuaded many that have taken the charge of souls, will answer for one day before the Lord, that they will not take the pains to instruct young ones. Surely, if they had learned of Christ, to know how willing Christ was to condescend to them, they would be willing to condescend to others. And it is a principal cause of al the profaneness in the world, and the cause of the evil in this place, little instruction that way, by way of catechizing, and yet no place in the world that hath more need, none more need then mariners, because they carry little youths to sea, and perhaps traffic years, and there is nothing but reading the book of common prayer, and I confess, I have had sometimes many thoughts( though I hope that much good hath been done by these exercises) whether this might not have been as good, if there had been such an exercise, never will religion thrive till there be some such way thought of, to bring up young ones in Catachisme. It were good to be striving and endeavouring such a way, if you would endeavour to bring your children and servants to it, I make no question, but they might be drawn to love and delight in it; but in the mean time, you that have the charge, particularly of servans, and children, do not you think much to catechize them in your family, teaching them that which you have learned of Jesus Christ, to your wives, Children, servants, friends and acquaintance, for Christ doth therefore teach thee, that thou mayest teach others. If thou beest converted, strengthen thy brethren, So if thou beest taught learn others. And for that end, I shal give you a notable pattern, next to Christ, and that is that of Abraham, In Genes. 14. 14. When Abraham heard that his brother was taken captive, be armed his trained servants born in his own house, three hundred and eighteen: Now this that is translated in your books, trained servants, the truth is, it may be translated, catechized servants, so the propriety of the word signifies, Abraham took three hundred and eighteen catechized servants that were born in his house, Abrahams servants were catechized servants, trained up in Religion. And that it hath this sense in it, makes me think, because God gives this testimony of Abraham; Abraham will teach his Children; In Genesis, 18. 19. when he came to commune with him, to tel him about the destruction of Sodom, I know Abraham saith he, will do it. So that Abraham, who was a great Prince in his country, and had a family of three hundred and eighteen that were born in his house, yet did teach them. Many of you will say, Oh you have so great a family, that you do not know what to do. The greater family you have, the more you should teach them to take account of what they have heard and learned, and to instruct them, and teach them to know God, and the mysteries of salvation. If you will show your respect to Christ for teaching you or show your selvs the children of Abraham, you should teach those about you. Can you have such knowledge of those precious truths and mysteries of salvation revealed to you, and not reveal it to others. Therefore saith the scripture, a husband should dwell with his wife according to knowledge. And therefore the scripture bids women keep silence in the Churches, but saith the Apostle, If any woman have any question to ask, let her ask her husband at home, noting, that every husband that professeth himself to be a Christian, should be able to answer any question of his wife, that concerns the good of her soul. But this is an argument that husbands are not taught of Christ, because they are not able to answer their wives, if they ask them, what is the meaning of such a point of the minister, or if children should ask them, what is the meaning of this or that,( as it was appointed by the Law) the father could not do it. Do not think it much to teach the poorest servant or boy that you have, Christ counts it an honor to teach you, and as you have learned of Christ, so let others learn of you, that as you have cause to bless Christ for teaching you, So others may have cause to bless Jesus Christ for you. A child may bless God and Jesus Christ for you, if Jesus Christ had not taught my father, I had not been taught, and women must be teachers too. You will say but you would not have them preachers. Yet the scripture would have the aged women to be instructors of the young women, in Titus, 2. 3. The aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false accusers, not given to much Wine, Teachers of good things. The Aged Women should not go tattling from one House to another, and telling this story of this Body, and the other of that Body, for Women to be given to juncketing, to go from this Tavern and that Tavern, but to be Teachers of good things. Verse, 4. That they may Teach the young Women to be sober, to Love their Husbands, to Love their Children, to be discreet, They must Teach Young Women to be discreet. You Women that have Learned of Christ, you are bound to Teach young Women, your maid Servants, as Hester taught her Maid Servants, so should you drop those things that are good into their Souls. And then one Scripture more, that the Master and Mistris, and Parents in a Family are to instruct and Teach those that are under them, that is, that you have in Rom. 16. 3. There Priscilla, and Aquila is saluted, his fellow helpers, his fellow labourers. We do not red that they were officers in the Church, that they were helpers of the Apostle. So it should be said of every Master in a Family, Husband and Wife to be a helper of the Ministry. Were this so, that in every Family we had men and their wives to be helpers of the Ministers in their Teaching, Oh what a blessed thing would that be amongst us, how would the knowledge of God prevail amongst us. CHAP. LXX. Application five, Honor Christ as our Teacher. 1. Esteeming highly of him. 2. By giving up our Estates to his Service. 3. By Cleaving to him. 4. In his Ministers. Application. 5. FIftly, Hence we are taught to Honor Jesus Christ as our Teacher, to Honor him. First, By a high esteem of him as our Teacher. We require a great deal of Honor to be put upon men that are Teachers, from whom we Learn any thing, especially from whom we Learn any thing of the divine mysteries of Religion. In that known place, the 1 Tim. 5. 17. Let the Elders that Rule well be counted worthy of double Honor, especially they who labour in the word and Doctrine. There's required double Honor to those that labour in the word and Doctrine, especially to them. It is a Text, That I wonder how it was possible heretofore, for the Prelates to evade, and to blind the mindes of people, that they should not see by this Text, that every faithful Minister that Teacheth the people constionably, is worthy of more Honor then they were in all their Pomp of Ruling, for they did put themselves altogether upon Ruling, and troubled themselves not at all about Teaching, and so thought that to be the most honourable work to govern. Indeed it is very honourable in the Eyes of flesh, in the Eyes of the world and so he that called himself the great pastor, the universal Bishop, the Pope, it is observed, that for these Nine hundred Years, There was never seen a Pope in a Pulpit, and yet counts himself the universal Bishop of all Churches and yet never Preached for Nine hundred years. And so heretofore, the Rulers they had Honor, but this Text is clear to show, that those that labour in the word and Doctrine, are more to be honoured in the Church, then those that Rule in the Church. The ruling and governing in the Church, is not so honourable a work, as labouring in the word, and Doctrine, as the Teaching of mens souls; The teaching of mens Souls, is a more honourable work then Ruling, then governing of them▪ and God requires that those people that are taught, should give double honor unto those that teach them. Now then, I argue from this Scripture, if we are to have them in double Honor that labours in the word and Doctrine, Oh! What high, what honourable esteem are we to have of the Lord Jesus Christ, who Teache●h us in the great mysteries of Salvation, and indeed if man Teacheth us any thing it is Christ that Teacheth. Secondly, Again we are to Honor Christ as our Teacher, by being willing to give up our estates to him, to his Service for so it is required, in Galath. 6. 6. Let him that is taught in the word, communicate unto him that Teacheth in all good things. Here is an injunction from God, that whosoever is taught in Gods word, he should communicate unto him that Teacheth in all good things, if he have any thing that is good, he is to communicate it to him that Teacheth him in all good things. And indeed, whereas Ministers heretofore would be mightily pleading with people for maintenance, T●ths, and the Like, and little regarded to Teach them, the Truth is they that complained so much of that, had they been conscionable in Teaching the People, and God had gone along with their Ministry, they need never have feared, but that God would have then provided means and maintenance enough for them. It is impossible for a Minister to live among his people where he Teacheth them, if people be once taught, and God makes him instrumental to reveal his mind, and the blessed things of his Gospel to a people, but that those people should be willing to communicate of al good things to that minister, They find so much good in being acquainted with the mysteries of the Gospel, that it is impossible but their hearts should be enlarged towards them, I but now I bring this scripture, how shal we communicate our estates to Christ as he is our teacher? for what are our carnal things to those spiritual things that are communicated to us? how are we to communicate al our good things to Jesus Christ? Thus, we must give them up to the cause of Christ. Doth the cause of Christ call for your estates, do you communicate of al your good things unto Christ by maintaining his cause with your estates. And let this be an argument, Jesus Christ hath revealed that unto my soul that I would not but have known for ten thousand worlds. Christ hath come from the father,& made known the glorious things of the father to me, and let me be willing to communicate al good things to him, that which he hath communicated to me is infinitely more then al the good things I have. And again, to communicate to help the sai●ts in the name of Christ. He that giveth a cup of could water to a disciple in the name of a disciple, shal not lose his reward. And in as much as ye have done it to these little ones, ye have done it to me. When Christ saith, when they saw him in prison they visited him, naked they clothed him, hungry they fed him, when did we these things say they? In as much( saith he) as ye have done it to these little ones ye have done it to me. And so to communicate to his cause, and his Saints, this is an acknowledgement that they are taught of Christ, and i● were a vild thing, to see the children of any faithful minister, that hath instructed them in the mysteries of salvation, if they should see his children, or any belonging to him to want maintenance. Now Jesus Christ hath instructed you in things in which your souls had been eternally lost, if you had not been instructed in them. If you had but a schoolmaster, you would be loth that he should want in regard of your Children, Now Jesus Christ hath taught you in those things that concern your eternal lives, never let his cause nor children to want, if you can help them. Thirdly, And then, we are to honor Christ as our teacher, by cleaving to him, never to depart from him, O! I have had such blessed things revealed to me since I knew Jesus Christ that I never knew before, and my soul shal cleave unto him. Fourthly, again, Yea, and honor him in his instruments that he makes use of to teach, in his ministers, it is a vile thing for men to despise those that God hath made use of to teach them. I remember there is a great complaint, Plato complains of Aristotle, he was his master and Aristotle getting knowledge by him, he despiseth and contemneth him, a great complaint there is for that ingratitude of Aristotle. Certainly, it would be a great ingratitude for any to despise those that God hath used to teach them in the matters of religion, especially to despise Christ, or to depart from Christ. How many are there, that cannot but acknowledge, that the first enlightening that they have had, hath been by such and such a ministry, and the Lord that way hath revealed unto their souls those things of the kingdom that they never understood before, and they would not for a thousand worlds but they had known al those things, and yet how quickly are they Laid aside. It were no matter if it were but to despise his person, but to despise his ministry, and to be drawn away by the suggestion of others, and so to vanish altogether, and to loose a great part( if not al) that they have learned from the ministry of the word, it is that that certainly this day the Devil prevails mightily in, because he sees now that the corruptions in the ministers of the word must be now purged out, and the Lord is come to deliver his People from many Corruptions that was before, Now the Devil cannot prevail to keep in the corruption in the Ministry, he seeks on the other hand to prevail to make the people to make such use of the Corruptions of the Ministers, as to reject all the good of them. Heretofore the way that the Devil prevailed with, was, by keeping the people from understanding the ways of God by corrupting the Ministers, but now, because he cannot prevail that way, he will prevail the other way, by persuading the people, that because there was so much Corruption in the Ministry before, that therefore now all is nought; And, my Brethren, give me leave to speak it, for it is in the trouble of my Heart, it is not many daies since, that I had a poor Child, of some twelve years old, brought to me in extreme trouble of conscience, crying and weeping, and this was the trouble of her conscience, one part of it, that there was a company that persuaded her, that if she should hear the Ministers that Preach here in England publicly, she should be damned, This is the vileness of mens Hearts, and that that the Devil seeks more to prevail upon people by, he could not prevail the other way, but the corruptions of the Ministers must be purged, therefore now he labours to prevail this way, by telling of them, their calling was not right at first, and therefore you must not hear them, and so they would deprive people of all the good that we Hope they get every day by the Ministry of the word. Truly, Were it not for the hurt of their own Souls, we could spare such an Auditory. It is that that the Lord is exceedingly displeased withal, and at this day is one of the sore afflictions that is upon the Kingdom, that people grow so wanton and wild, when they have but a little liberty granted unto them. CHAP. LXXI. The calling of the Ministers asserted, and Objections Answered. NOw to speak a word or two of that, for the staying and stablishing of the Hearts of others, because it fals in the way to clear it fully. This they will tel you, the Ministers have no true call, and therefore you must not hear them. Now to that I would Answer. First, For the calling, I make no Question, but that there are many Ministers in England, as they were, and as they are, that are the true Ministers of Jesus Christ and have a true calling from Christ. Object. You will say, How can that be? They hold their standing by the Bishops, and so from Antichrist. Answ. To that I answer, Take it for granted, that their Authority from the Bishops was wholly nought, and sinful, take that for granted, that it was sinful to go to them, and to have any thing from them, yet that doth not follow, but that many Ministers that had their ordination from them are true Ministers of Christ. Why? Not because of what they have had from them, but they had their calling likewise from the people of God, as well as in a seeming way from them. For we will take that for granted, that that they had from them, there was such Corruption in it, that they sinned against God, but yet mark, that doth not nullify their call, because they had somewhat superadded wherein they sinned against God. Object. You will say, But they stand by their calling. Answ. Suppose a Minister that hath a calling from the People of God, and yet should be of the mind, that he had part of his calling from the Bishop too, yet this doth not nullify his calling, because an Error in judgement cannot nullify that that hath a Truth in it. As thus now: Suppose that a man have a true evidence unto such Land, and he hath another evidence that he thinks to be as true as that. Yea, That he thinks to be a true evidence, though he be deceived in that one that he thinks to be his chief evidence, yet though he have the other that he doth not understand the strength of, certainly this man hath a right to the Land, So say I, though some Ministers should think that they had their calling from the Bishops, yet if they have their calling from the People of God too, their thought and their Error in that one doth not nullify the Truth of the other, therefore they have that that hath a Truth in it, though they have that superadded wherein they sinned against God, and therefore their personal sin, and their calling may remain for the essence of it, So as they should be Ministers of God truly, notwithstanding there was somewhat superadded that they sinned in, and they have cause to repent of, Object. I, You will say, If they should renounce it, then it were somewhat. Answ. Nay, Though they should not be convinced of it, and not repent of it, yet it is their own personal sin, and doth not nullify their Ministry. But the main thing that I would speak for the establishing of the Hearts of people is this, Suppose there be not a lawful calling, that there was none at all, yet certainly they may be heard, and Christ may be taught by them, and we ought to attend upon their ordinance though they should not have any lawful calling to the Ministry, and that I will show you thus. Though they should not have any lawful calling to the Ministry, yet they exercising what gifts God hath given to them, and being but allowed by those that have to do in those places where they are to exercise the gifts that God hath given to them, that is enough to at end unto them, and to be partaker of what gift God hath given to them for our Edification. Object. I, But you will say, We justify them by coming to hear them. Answ. Certainly this Objection lies beyond my Reason that this should follow, that if I should come to hear a man I should warrant his entry into the ministry that was twenty or thirty years ago. Certainly, be it good or Evil I may leave it to him, and it is his sin let him look to it, he enters not as he ought, but my presence of hearing is no justification of the Truth of his Ministry or the falseness of his Ministry, I only justify his present action in dispensing the gift that God hath given him, but I justify no more at all. As now I will give you an instance, suppose a man should be of a conceit, that he is the Kings Almoner, he is not so, but presumes he is, well he gives his alms to the Poor, he gives it as the Kings alms, we suppose he gives here wrongfully, Perhaps the King hath given him something, and he gives that in way of alms unto the Poor. Doth a poor beggar justify this man as the Kings Almoner, he may take the alms from the Man, not as the Kings Almoner, but as a gift from him though he hath no Office to do it, and yet the thing being no more but what he may do, the poor beggar may take the alms, and go away with it. So here, suppose a man that is but merely gifted thinks that he is in office, and he is not, and he exerciseth his gift, shal not the poor people partake of his gift. Therefore shal not those that are weak and ignorant hear any thing dispensed from him? any good gift? shal not they take it because he presumes himself to be in an office and is not? Certainly, it is a mere deceit, when any come and suggest this in your ears, and say, that when any come and hear these ministers they do justify them in their office. And therefore if we should grant, that they were not true ministers in office, yet for al that, it were lawful and good, and we ought to come and learn of them, to partake of the gift that God hath given to them for edification. As now suppose a Jew or a a turk should come into a true Church of God amongst any people, doth this Jew or Turk by hearing of them, therefore justify this minister to be rightly called by Jesus Christ, no? he comes only to hear there, but this is no justification at al of the right calling of such a one, whether he preacheth Christ by office or not by office. So, when people come in their persons to hear a minister, they do not justify a minister by their persons, what his calling is, good or bad, let it be to him, but if he have gifts, thou oughtest to receive the good that comes from his gifts, and go away and bless God for them, and therefore be not deprived of the good that ye might have. And when any comes unto you, for so they do, fall upon Children, and women, weak people, and they put into their heads, that the ministers have no true calling from Jesus Christ, he hath preached al this while, and he hath no true calling from Jesus Christ, and he stands by the Bishops; Now though you may not be able to dispute with them whether the minister hath a true call to his office or not, yet you may be able to answer thus. well, let his call be what it will be, I am sure God hath blessed him to open mine eyes, I am sure the gifts that God hath given him is profitable to edification, and when I go to hear him I go not to justify his call whether he be a true minister or not, but so long as God hath given him gifts, I may partake of the good that comes from those gifts, and I may pray for him, that God would open his eyes if he be not in the right, and this I am to be satisfied. If I should undertake to prove the Lawfulness of the call of ministers, that would take up the thoughts of people more. But for this there needs be no dispute, but the weakest may understand it, that I may partake of the gift of another without justification of his call, that is not to me, but to him, and let him look to that. If so be that two come together in way of marriage, suppose they come unlawfully together, without their parents consent, though they do so, may not I be in their family and partake of the good in their family, because they came not together as they ought to do? My being in the family doth not justify every particular of their coming together. So when I come to hear the word, I come to hear the word, to have it applied to me, I do not come to justify the minister, or whether he came rightly i● to the ministry, or not, this certainly is to amaze people, and hurt their souls,& what doth the Devil seek more in this, then to deprive poor souls of the truth of Godliness, and the way of eternal life, and would fain keep them, that they should not come to understand the great counsels of God concerning the good of their souls, and the more good there is to be had by the minister, the more doth the Devil labour to take away that good from people that way, and the devil it may be can prevail with people more this way Perhaps the Devil prevails with some thus, by persuading them not to hear, but the other prevails more, for now, let men be persuaded by some profane men, not to hear such and such men, but now let them by providence be brought to hear them once or twice, their hearts are taken with them, and they resolve, well by Gods grace I will never neglect to hear them more. But now the other way to persuade their consciences that it is not lawful to come to hear them, Oh! this sticks with men and women and prevails extremely. Now because it comes in by that way. I thought it my duty and that which I owe to God and the good of your souls, to mention this, and because there are multitudes that have left this place,( I and I know some) yea hundreds( as some say) and I easily believe and see, how the Devil hath prevailed that way. But I do not know at this day any one in particular that would before hand go unto such ministers that they have got good by, and tel them their scruple they are in, in respect of hearing. It is true, some in respect of baptizing again they will tel it, and but few of them, but now in respect of the calling of the ministers that they will not tel. But suppose that were true now, that the baptizing of infants were not right, what then? therefore not hear, not partake of the gifts of men, this is no consequent, because they have not that which you think they should have, therefore have they nothing? and do they partake of no gifts therefore? And whatever suggestions you may meet withal in this kind, I make no question but upon examination of them, it will appear to be light and vain to you, without any strength at al in the world, that therefore no o● her should be heard. Christ doth teach by those that have gifts, if the Lord Christ doth give gifts unto men to speak to edification, and those men have liberty to be judged by others that are fit to judge, I do not speak of that liberty, that every man that hath gifts may presently go into public without being allowed by those that are fit to judge of such a thing. I say, if God have given unto him gifts to speak to edification, and he be allowed, though he should not have that formal calling unto the place of the ministry, as you think he ought to have, but should he be allowed of by those that are fit to judge, and ought to allow him to have liberty to speak to edification, this is enough to warrant any people to come and to be partakers of his gifts. That one Text is often used, and because it is so often used, there's so little made of it, The Pharisees sate in Moses chair, and therefore Christ saith hear them. Now they sate in Moses Chair, that is, they taught the Law of Moses, and as they taught the Law of Moses they heard them. Object. But you will say, They were truly called. Answ. Truly, That is more then can be warranted, for it is said, they sate in Moses chair and taught the people, it doth not appear that they were the true officers of Christ at that time that they were in their places of Teaching, in a right office and that may appear thus. For divers of your Pharisees were neither Priests nor Levites, those that were by office Teachers, must be either Priests or Levites, but now that the Pharisees were not, I will give that Text. In Phillip. 3. 5. Paul saith of himself, that he was A Pharisee, Circumcised the eight day, of the stock of Israel, of the Tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews, as touching the Law a Pharisee, And yet he was of the Tribe of Benjamin. Now what had the Tribe of Benjamin to do to Teach by way of office unto the people? The tribe of benjamin were neither priests nor Levites, and it appears that the Pharisees might be of any tribe, and yet they Teach Moses Law, and Christ bids them hear them. We red of the Pharisees, that they were of no such office but a sect, and yet they having excellent gifts, as many of them had, they had great understanding of Moses Law, although they did abuse it, and Christ bids them hear them. This may suffice for this, and if there be any thing further to be said, as God may offer opportunity, I may further speak of it, for certainly this is that I cannot but speak of out of conscience, because I see the truths of God, and the ways of God exceedingly wronged in this kind, and many poor people that God hath begun to work upon by the Ministry of his word, Oh how are they wronged! And I make no question but they will another day complain of these, that they have lead them from Jesus Christ and deprived their Souls of abundance of good that otherwise they might be partakers of by that. Thus we are to honor Christ, to have a right esteem of those by whom he doth Teach, and not to forsake them likewise. CHAP. LXXIII. The honouring of Christ, begun in seven Chapters: here further prosecuted in three Particulars more. 1. By Entertaining his Spirit. 2. By Improving his Truths. 3. By the holiness of our Conversation. ANd then further, seeing Christ is our Teacher we are to Honor Christ. First, By Entertaining his Spirit, it is his spirit that Teacheth us, that hath revealed glorious things to us. When the Spirit of God doth come to draw thy Heart to close with any truth of God, and begins to melt thy Heart, when thou art hearing the word or in Prayer, Oh entertain the Spirit of God, and say, this is the Spirit by which Jesus Christ hath taught me, and made the truths of God effectual to me that were taught by men, and let me ever entertain this Spirit, Oh let me not quench this Spirit by which Christ hath taught me. Secondly, And then honor Christ your Teacher, by improving all those truths that Christ hath taught you, for that is an honor to the Teacher, when we can make use of what he hath taught, now Christ hath taught you this way; do not slight them but improve them. Thirdly: Yea, Honor Christ your Teacher, by walking in your Conversations, so as you may manifest to all the world that you are taught by Jesus Christ, that you do not hear the word as others do, and have the sound of it in your ears, but that you are taught by Jesus Christ, by walking so Holily, blamelessly, so Humbly, so constionably, as all may say, Certainly, these people are taught of the Lord Jesus Christ, these are not only taught of man, but taught of God, and of the Spirit of God. To see some that not above( it may be) a Year or two a go, were Poor, weak ones, and were profane, and ungodly, and lived very rudely, and vilely, to see these have the savour of the things of eternal Life, to admire the truths of the Gospel, to see these live holily, constionably before the Lord, and with all that they do converse with, every one may be convinced of these, that certainly, they are taught of Christ, they have been in Christs School. And indeed we should all so live as it may appear that we are all taught of Christ. The Apostle, in Ephesians, 4. Speaking of the wicked ways of the Gentiles, how others walked, but, saith he, in the 20 Verse, Ye have not so Learned Christ, if so be you have heard him, and have been taught by him as the Truth is in Jesus, Whatsoever they did do, walk thus and thus, but you have not so Learned Jesus Christ, if so be you have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus, there is the Emphasis of that that I would note in this, If you have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus. We may be taught by men as the truth is in their Books, or in their notes, or in their ●r●ins, and yet it will not much prevail with our Hearts. But now if we have been taught as the truth is in Jesus, then it will appear in your lives and Conversations; to have the Truths of God got into my Heart as it is in Jesus Christ, I, this is the truth that Sanctifies the Heart. So we should walk in our Conversation as the truth is in Jesus, that we may make it appear that we have so learned Christ, not only learned, so as we may be able to speak something of the Truths of the Gospel, but so learned of Christ, as not to walk as others do. There are many have the truths of Christ as it is in their Books, and as it is in words, and other mens brains, but they have not got the truth as it is in Christ, that is to the honor of the Teacher, that it appears that they are taught. As now, When you sand your Children to a Schoolmaster, and you sand them to be taught, not only to know the Tongues, and to work with the Needle, but you sand them to be taught good manners, and how to carry themselves, and whereas they were Toyish and rude when they were at home, when they come home afterwards, they carry themselves very fairly, and mannerly, to the Parents, and Servants, and all the family. Object. I, You will say, My Money is well bestowed. Answ. Now is not this an Honor to the Disciples of Jesus Christ, that ever since they have made profession to be the Disciples of Christ, and to be taught of Christ, Oh, how is their Conversation altered? They were Servants before, and they were careless in their Service, and stubborn to their Master and Mistris, but now they are humble, and submissive, and they are not stubborn, and they will not answer again ever since they heard the word. And so wives, perhaps they were froward, and stubborn against their Husbands before, but ever since they came to hear Sermons, and to Learn of Christ, now they Learn to perform Duties, now they are meek and humble. And so Children to Parents, stubborn before, but now obedient to Parents, this would make us in Love with the ordinances, if we would profess to be taught of Christ, that when we come to the word, we come to Learn of Jesus Christ, and manifest it in our Conversations. Oh it will be an honor to our Parents and to the Minister. Such a Parish if it can be said, that before they had the word taught amongst them, Oh what rudeness, profaneness, and the like, now since a good Minister came, Oh what humility, what good carriage! Whereas before, nothing but swearing, and drunkenness, now they walk holily, and unblamably amongst men. You know it is said of Christ, before John Baptist came, the Kingdom of Heaven suffered violence, before John Baptist came, the Kingdom of Heaven was not looked after, but now after this time, the Kingdom of Heaven suffered violence, this was an Honor to John Baptist, I but now, if it be such an Honor to John Baptist, what an Honor is it to Jesus Christ? And on the other side, know, it is a dishonour to Christ, you that come to Sermons, and hear more then others, and are reading, and conferring of Scriptures, and your lives not accordingly, you dishonour your Teacher, as you dishonour your Minister, so you dishonour Jesus Christ. I Remember I have red of a Child, that was sent by his Father to a philosopher to be taught, his Father had been at a great deal of charge in his Teaching, and when he came home, he was not allowed, and falls a beating his Child, because he thought he had Learned nothing, the Child answers to his Father, I have Learned this from my Master, I can quietly lye under your anger, bear your anger. So when you have lived under the means and the Ministry of the word, wherein you have had excellent truths, and it should be asked you, what you have learned after all the cost and charges laid out upon you: For indeed, the truths that you hear cost the blood of Jesus Christ, it was by the blood of Jesus Christ that the Church came to have so great a benefit, as to be taught in the mysteries of Salvation. And as it is in Rev. 5. You shall find it, if you red the Chapter, That when none could open the Book, there appears a Lamb that was slain, and he only was worthy to open the Book, none but a Lamb that was slain, thereby nothing, that the opening of the book of the mind and will of God to the people, is a fruit, not only the fruit of the blood of Christ as he was God and man, but a fruit of the blood of Christ as he was slain, it was the purchase of the blood of Jesus Christ, that the Church of God hath those blessed truths of God made known unto them. Oh! that you would consider but of this argument, it would mightily put us on to seek to be taught of God. Thou comest to hear the truths of God and goest away and makest little use of them, yet they are such as cost the blood of Jesus Christ, and God the Father hath been content to purchase thy teaching at a great rate God hath been at great charge for to put thee out to teaching, even the charge of the blood of his son, and for thy teaching( I beseech you consider of this) Christ did not only shed his blood that he might deliver men from hel, that is not al, but Christ did shed his blood that we might have the mind of God opened to us, it is the fruit of the blood of Christ, did people come to hear sermons thus, I am going to hear the word of God, and to be taught of Christ, for so Christ saith. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me. Well now, when I am going to hear any of the ministers of Christ, I am going to hear Christ, and I am going to be so taught, that the truths that I am to hea●, and my teaching, cost the blood of Christ, cost more then ten thousand thousand worlds is worth, I had need then look to it, that I do indeed learn. Would it not be an argument to any Child in the world, if you should come to a Child that his Father hath put out to Learning, and hath laid out a great deal of his estate for the Childs education, and should say, you had need( Child) Learn well, for your learning is dear, certainly our learning is costly and dear. Oh would it not be a shane for a Child that perhaps should spend three or four years at the university, and he hath got nothing. Do not you think it is a trouble to the Spirit of God, whenas you shal live under the Ministry of that word, that is a fruit of the purchase of the blood of Christ, and you in the mean time have got nothing at all? Well, let us honor Christ by our Godly Conversation, and that is for the use, how Christ should be honoured by our Godly Conversation. CHAP. LXXIII. Containeth an Exhortation, to Learn of Christ. Application. 6. NOw the last use that I intend from this is, a Use of Exhortation. If Christ be our Teacher, and we are taught of him, then it is a use of Exhortation, to stir us up again to learn of Jesus Christ, if you would know the mind of God, you must Learn of Jesus Christ. We red in Numbers, 7. 89. verse, That Moses Heard the voice of him that spake from the mercy seat. The mercy-seat was a Type of Jesus Christ. Now if we would hear the voice of God that speaks, it must be from the mercy seat, from Christ, never think that any other means can instruct thee to eternal Life, but only the teaching of Jesus Christ. Therefore let us come to him, and give up ourselves to his Teaching, come all young ones, though never so weak and dull, here is a Schoolmaster that will Teach you, Nay, and come old ones, though you have neglected him. I have red of Cato, that when he was a very old man, he began to Learn the Greek Alphabet. Oh, you that are old, though you have not learned heretofore, though God knows, and your conscience tells you, that the time of your youth till now was a time of ignorance, yet bless God that you are alive at this time, wherein God affords you means to instruct your Souls, do not think yourselves too old to Learn, indeed, if you had men only to Teach you, ye might think so, but you have Jesus Christ to Teach you, and therefore Learn of him, Yea, Though you have been profane, though you have been scorners against Christ and his ordinances, any of you that have been scorners at the word, Hath God brought any of you by a special providence to hear his word this day, then know, that notwithstanding all thy scorning at his word, that Christ is willing to Teach thee. Indeed men would not do so, if a man should be skilful in any art, and one should scorn him, and come afterwards to Learn of him, he would reject him, no friend would he say, you scorned me, but Christ he will not scorn thee and reject thee; though thou hast scorned and rejected Christ, yet Christ will not reject thee. And I will give you one Scripture for that, In Psalm. 68, 18. Thou hast ascended on high, thou hast lead Captivity Captive, thou hast received gifts for men, Yea, For the Rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell amongst them. Here is a prophesy of the ascension of Jesus Christ, that as he had received gifts so he did dispense gifts to men, and for whom? Thou hast received gifts for men, Yea, For the Rebellious also. And in Ephes. 4. It is quoted from Christ for that end, he received gifts, for Whom? for men. I for such and such Men. That never had despised him. Yea, Saith the Text, for the Rebellious also. Though men have been never so Rebellious and scornful, Jesus Christ offers to instruct their Souls in the great mysteries of eternal life, Jesus Christ offers this day to make thy soul wise to salvation. It is a great pleasure to have the Art of Navigation, and other Arts, I but to have the Art of Salvation, that is a great deal better Art, you that have the blessing to be skilled in the Art of Navigation that is a great pleasure, I but what is that to you if you be not skilled in the Art of Salvation? Now the Lord Christ offers to Teach you that Art, and therefore come to him that you may be taught, for the truth is, it is of absolute necessity to be taught by Christ. All your good meaning, and good wishes, and good intentions in serving of God can never save your Souls, except you be taught of Jesus Christ. And therefore you must not look upon the knowledge of the things of Religion as indifferent things, but look upon them as things that are absolutely necessary unto eternal Life, and that will make you to come to Christ. And know, you can never learn of yourselves, nor of no mans learning, except Christ Teach you, and therefore whatever means you use, be sure to look up to Jesus Christ, and this time of thy Life is the only time to Learn. If Christ had cut asunder the thread of thy life before now, what had become of thee? But now thou art alive this day, that thou mayst come to Learn of Christ and be willing to Learn of Christ, for otherwise Christ may Teach thee in that way that may make thy Heart to ache. If thou comest to Learn of Christ willingly, thou mayst be taught of Christ those things that thou shalt be willing unto, and which are for thy good, but if thou shalt refuse to be taught of Christ, Christ may Teach thee in such a way, as Christ may have much glory from, but little good to thee. In the 8 of Judges and the 16. There is a strange kind of Teaching, when Gideon had got his Victory, he comes and takes the Thorns of the Wilderness, and Briars, and with them he taught the men of Succoth. Here was a dreadful teaching: and the truth is, there is many that refuse the teaching of Christ in his ordinances, that Christ is fain to Teach in another way. Thou that wilt not come to the ordinance of Christ to be taught, the Lord may sand some dreadful sickness upon thee, and make thee Roar and cry out with trouble of Spirit, and with that he will Teach thee, and it may be said of such a man, thus hath God taught him what it is to profane God, to sin against the ordinances of God, thus hath God taught them, he hath taught them in a way of judgement, he bath taught them to know what an infinite God they have to do withal. How many upon their sick beds, and Death Beds confess, Oh now I am made to apprehended those things that I never did believe before. Is it not a thousand times better, that God should Teach you by his word, and his Spirit, and his Son, that Christ should come in meekness to instruct your Souls in the great things of Religion, then that you should come thus terribly to be taught of Christ. Oh, The things that Christ hath to Teach your Souls, are glorious things, the Wisdom that Christ hath to Teach you is above pearls and Rubies, and if thou hast a Heart to come in, and to be taught of Christ, thou wouldst not lose those truths again for ten thousand Worlds. How many upon their sick Beds, bless God that ever they knew Jesus Christ, that ever they heard the word of God, that ever they were taught such things from Christ, and reasoning thus, what had become of me, if the Lord had not revealed himself to me at such and such a time, but blessed be God for ever that did thus. How many are there now in Heaven, I make no Question but there are many Souls now in Heaven at this time, that heretofore lived in this Congregation, and are blessing of God for those truths they have heard from Jesus Christ? It is not so much by us, as by Jesus Christ, and therefore be you willing now to come in and Learn of Jesus Christ, that you may join with those that now are blessing of God for the truths that they have heard in his word. And when you come to Learn, be sure to be satisfied with nothing but Learning of Jesus Christ, be not satisfied that man hath taught you, but hath Christ taught me? CHAP. LXXIV. Sheweth that the Disciples of Christ in their learning, should resemble Christ in his Teaching. 1. In Meekness. 2. In Humility. NOw the main thing in this use is to show, that as you heard that Christ was a Meek, and humble Teacher, So you should be Meek Learners, and Humble Learners; if we would be taught of Jesus Christ, as Christ is a Meek Teacher, so we must be Meek Learners, and as Christ is an humble Teacher, so we must be humble Learners, we must be like our Master. It is usual in all scholars to do so, if they can see any thing in their Master, they will suit themselves to that, and so they thrive most; so we must labour to be such as are like to Jesus Christ, in all Meekness, and all humility. There are some that are so desirous to be like to their Master and their superior, that though it be a thing that is the infirmity, weakness, and deformity of their Master or Superior, they think it honor to be like them. As I remember, it is reported of the scholars of Plato, because Plato had somewhat a crooked Back, Huff shouldered, as we call it, therefore his scholars would go in that manner and bow down their heads that they might be like their Master in that, indeed that was their Masters deformity, but they thought it to be a beauty. And so Aristotle, he had a shrill voice, and squeaking voice, and his scholars,( though it was no such comely thing one would think) they would imitate their Master, and speak as their Master, in giving respect to him, and thought it an honor to be like their Master and Teacher in such things as was their deformity. I but now, we can never be like Christ in any thing that is a deformity, but we have that that is our beauty, and glory, and excellency to be like Jesus Christ in, that wherein we shall honor God, and do good to our own Souls by it, and as in other things, so in this Meekness and humility. It is strange that Christ should pick out no other but this, Learn of me, for I am Meek and Lowly. CHAP. LXXV. The Point in the former Chapter further prosecuted. And first that they that Learn of Christ must be Meek, before they come to the word. NOw because these two qualifications, Meekness and Humility, are of such admirable use in learning, therefore I shall a little in large myself in either of them. I shall afterwards open the Doctrine of Meekness and Humility, but that I shall speak to now is, how we should be Meek Learners, and Humble Learners. First, For meekness. You have a place for that in the first of James and the 21. Wherefore lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of Naughtiness and receive with Meekness the engrafted word which is able to save your Souls. You must receive it with Meekness, when you come to hear the word of God you come to Learn of Christ, do you not? You come to Learn of Christ as a Meek Teacher, then you must take heed you do not come to hear in a passion, perhaps just before you come to hear the word there is a wrangling and brawling in your family, the Wife against the Husband, or the Husband against the wife; Now, Are you fit to hear a Sermon. Do you but bethink yourselves when you are in a passion, am I fit now to go to hear a Sermon? Christ is a Meek Teacher, and I am froward, and passionate, and will Christ Teach me now in such a temper as this? As Physitians, they do not give physic in the ●ime of the sit of an Ague or fever, but when the fit is off, then they prescribe their physic: So you may think with yourselves, surely Christ will not Teach me now I am froward and passionate, and especially upon the Lords day, methinks it should be an argument that what ever passion is on other daies, on the Lords day people should keep their Spirits Meek, free from passion, and frowardness, because then in a special manner they come to be taught of Christ. Further, you have a most admirable Text for this, and common, in Psalm. 25. 9. The Meek will he guide in judgement, and the Meek will he Teach his way. Would you be guided in judgement, you must be Meek, of Meek Spirits. I told you before when that you come to hear Sermons be sure you come with meekness. In a family, if the Master, and Mistris, of a family, Husband and Wife, if they be wrangling one with another, or wrangling with Servants and Children when they go to hear Sermons, and come in a passion, they are not like to be taught of God. And therefore at any time, especially on the Lords day morning, if any occasion of passion arise, subdue it with this thought, I am to go to learn of Jesus Christ, I am to go to hear the word, and I must go in meekness. The meek will he guide in judgement, and the meek will he teach his way. Many people when they are in any straight, they are presently in a passion, they are froward with every body when they are in straits, now that is the way to keep thee in straits, if thou keep thyself in passion, for thou art not in a capacity of Gods teaching thee, For the Lord says, he will guide the meek in judgement. If you have any crosses befall you to stir up your passion, if you would know what to do, first quiet your heart, and then God will guide you in judgement, God will then show you what to do, for so he says again, the meek will he teach in his way. There is nothing that a man doth in a passion almost, but it doth miscarry, and he sees afterwards that what he doth and what he speaks, when he is in a passion miscarries, why? because he is not under a promise, God saith, he will teach the meek in his way, the Lord doth not promise to teach the froward, and passionate in his way, but the meek. There is no time wherein men and women are more unjust to resolve upon a thing then when they are in a passion, then is a man fit to resolve when he is guided in judgement, when God guides them, but God doth not ●u●de them till they be meek, therefore if you would resolve what to do, stay till you be meek, because then you are under Gods promise to be guided in judgement, and to be taught in Gods way. If you would have Christ to be your teacher, you must come with meekness of judgement to be taught of him. Therefore in scripture, you know the disciples of Christ were called the sheep of Christ, you must be of the disposition of sheep to hear the voice of Christ. The disciples of Christ are lovely before Christ as they are in that temper, meek as sheep and lambs. Feed my Lambs saith Christ, to Peter, those young ones that are at quiet, and of a Lamb-like disposition, yea we find, that Christ is anointed by God, to teach those that are of meek and quiet spirits. In Isay 61. That famous prophecy The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings, to whom? It is a prophecy of Christ, he hath anointed me, that is, made me as Christ, for so, Christ signifies nothing but anointed, and hath made me as Christ to preach good tidings unto the meek, and hath sent me to bind up the broken hearted. Here you have both together, if you would learn of Christ you must be meek and humble, for Christ is anointed by God the father to preach good tidings to the meek, to bind up the broken hearted. Oh! It is an excellent text, that concerns in a special manner those that are in trouble of Conscience for their sins, and have many fears and horrors upon them, many times even those people are very froward that are under trouble of Conscience, are froward with God, because they have not comfort assoon as they would have, because it doth not come when they would have it, because when they come to the word, they do not profit as they do desire, because when they go to duty, they cannot perform it as they would, their spirits are in a frowardness with God. As many times in a pettish mood when they go to duty, they throw it away. Take heed as much of a passionate, froward distemper as of any thing. No marvel you have no comfort al this while, For Christ is appointed to come and preach good tidings, to whom? not to froward passionate spirits, that are in a disquietness in their hearts but Christ is appointed to preach good tidings to the meek, to the meek spirited ones. If so be you can get your spirits into a meek and quiet temper, to sit at Christs feet, as Mary did, to hear his word, then Christ preacheth good tidings to you. And Certainly, there is no such way to have Christ reveal himself to a soul, as for the soul to sit at his feet with meekness, waiting for his good time when he shal speak a word in due season to him. I have waited so long, and made use of such and such means. I but I will wait longer, for I am attending upon Christ to know his mind, and therefore it is fit for me to wait, and then Christ will preach good tidings to my soul, that is the promise there, Christ is anointed for that very end. And so likewise we have two most excellent scriptures in the Proverbs. One is in Prov. 14. vers. 29. There the scripture shows how meekness helps to understanding, and therefore is a fit qualification for a learner. He that is slow to wrath is of great understanding. He that is slow to wrath. Now what is that? but he that is meek. He is of great understanding, Why? because he learns much, he is of great understanding. There are no men do increase in understanding, and learn so much of Christ as those that are slow to wrath. Passion doth mightily hinder mens understanding. When fumes do arise from the stomach up to the head, it hinders understanding in the head. As those that are drunk, the fume riseth from their stomach up to their brain; and hinders their understanding: So a man may be so drunk with passion, aswell as with drink, that he shal have little use of his understanding. But when we come to learn of Christ, we had need to have al ou● wits about us and therefore to take heed of passion. And the other text is, in Prov. 17. vers. 27. The latter part of the vers. A man of understanding is of an excellent spirit. It is in the Text so, but it is in the original, is of a Cool spirit, a man of understanding is of a cool spirit, your hot spirited men, are not men of such understanding. It may be there are some men( you will say) are passionate men, and yet understanding at sometimes. I but were they less passionate, certainly, though they be passionate and hasty, were they less passionate and hasty, they would be of more understanding, a man of understanding is of a cool spirit, a cool spirit is the best temper for understanding, for one that is a learner. In Psalm. 46. vers. 10. There is the temper of heart that is required for those that should know the mind of God. Be stil and know that I am God( saith the Text) mark how these two are put together, the knowledge of God and being stil. Thy heart perhaps is al in a passion, and a distemper, and thou art froward, Be stil, and labour to quiet and stil thy heart, and then thou shalt know the Lord to be God. Those people that are most stil in their hearts, and quiet in their spirits, they are those that know the Lord to be God. Indeed your froward hearts, do not know God to be God, but your stil and quiet hearts they know God to be God. As if one would weigh Gold aright, the way is not to bring it abroad into the wind, but we must be in a place that is calm and quiet, and then you may weigh it, otherwise, if so be the wind should toss it up and down you could never weigh it aright: so we can never weigh truth aright, except we be in a quiet frame. As we can never see any thing in the water when the wind is up, and maketh the water tempestuous, and drives the waves up and down. But now take water that is stil, and you may see a penny in it. So our spirits, when they are stil and quiet, then they are most clear, and then better for the truths of God to appear in them. As they tel us of the great hil Nymphos, that hath asses upon it, that those that go one time of the year, and come the next year again at the same time, they may see the print of their feet stil abiding, and the reason is, because it is on so great a hil, that it is above the storms, and winds, and tempests, being so high, the impression of their feet doth abide there: So indeed, the heart that is above the storms and tempests of passion hath the impression of Gods truths abiding upon their hearts. Here is the reason, that so many of you are so forgetful as you are, and those truths you hear do not abide upon your spirits, because you are so passionate, your passion puts out al, as ye may find by experience, many times when you have been at a Sermon, and some truth hath possessed you, and have gone home and something hath put you into a passion, I appeal unto you, have you not lost al the impression you had of the word; As those that are in passion, before they go to the word, the word cannot take impression in their souls; So those that go from the word and fall into a passion they loose al the impression of the word that was upon their hearts And so upon a day of a fast, though their hearts be put into a good temper, and Jesus Christ hath taught them many a lesson, yet when they are come home, and their Hearts are put into a passion, they have lost all. And it is the subtlety of the Devil, he watche●h for it. You that are of hasty dispositions remember this note, when you are going to a Sermon, the Devil will watch to put you into a passion, or otherwise, when you have been at a Sermon, and have had some impression of the word upon your Heart; I say the Devil will watch to put you into a passion, that by that means you may lose all the benefit of the word that you have heard. Whereas, if men and Women did but keep themselves in meek and quiet tempers after they have heard the word, it would prevail exceedingly. As you say of Children that are of Fretful dispositions they do not thrive, and as it is with the Body, so with the Soul, those that are of a fretful and passionate disposition, the food of their Souls doth not thrive with them, and it is because of their fretful, froward, and passionate disposition. Moses was a man that God revealed himself as fully to, as ever he did to any man in his time, Yea, or after, before the time of Christ, for the text saith, that God never spake so Face to Face to any man as he did to Moses, and we shall find, that Moses was the meekest man upon the Face of the Earth, of all men that lived upon the Face of the Earth, the holy Ghost gives Moses this commendation, that he was the Meekest man. And as he was the Meekest man, so he was the man that God did reveal himself most unto, more then any man: So would you have Christ Teach you, and reveal himself to you, labour to be Meek, the more Meek you are, the more Christ will Teach you. And indeed, this is one special Reason, why the Lord doth many times sand great afflictions upon his own people, that so he might Meeken their Hearts, and make them fit to be taught, because when they are in health, and prosperity, and lusty, and strong, then their Spirits are not in such a quiet frame, fit to know the mind of God. But now, when Gods hand is upon them, and hath allaied their Heat a little, then their Spirits are more quiet, and more fit to attend to know the mind of God, we see it by common experience, men that are of lusty, stout, Surly, and passionate Spirits, yet let the hand of God be upon them, come to them when they lye upon their sick beds, and with abundance of meekness and humility they will speak to you. There is a great deal of difference, between the temper when they are in strength, and health, and rough in the world, and when God lays his hand upon them. As a notable example we have of this, in Isai. 29. 4. There we have the expression of a layednes of Spirit in those that are passionate. And thou shalt be brought down, and shalt speak out of the ground, and thy speech shal be low out of the dust, and thy voice shal be as of one that hath a familiar Spirit out of the Ground, and thy Speech shall Whisper out of the Dust. When was this? Before, it may be, you may hear them Loud,( as passionate people, when they begin to be in a passion, they will be loud) I but now, they shal be brought down, and shal speak out of the ground, and their speech shal be low out of the Dust, and they shall Whisper as out of the Dust. as we see in sick people, that were very loud before, if you did but speak a word, they would be louder then you, whenever you did but rebuk, and admonish them, and instruct them, I but now, they do speak as out of the ground, and whisper as out of the dust, their spirits are exceeding meek now, and therefore fitter a great deal to learn. CHAP. LXXVI. Learners of Christ must be meek when they come to the word. 1. In not so much as wishing that any truth were not so. 2. Fret not at truth. 3. Cast it not off. 4. Oppose it not. 5. Throw it not away because it suits not your turn. 6. rail not at the word, nor speak Evil of it. QUEST. BUt you will say, Indeed these Texts show that there must be Meekness in Learning, but how shall this be expressed? When we are to come to Learn of Christ we must be Meek, Many more Texts might be spoken, but when I come to speak of that more fully, then we shall mention more Texts, but for this Answ. First, As for preparation to learning, we must be meek, so when we come to the word we must manifest meekness, by watching over our hearts, and taking heed that we do not give way to our Spirits, to rise against any truth that we hear, nay, not so much as to wish that it were otherwise, for that is the first degree of opposition, the rising of the heart against the truth, and the passionate rejecting of the truth of God. I say, when people come to hear the word, and to learn of Christ, if they hear any truth from others that makes against what they have a delight in, or puts them upon duty that they have no mind to. First the heart will so far rise against the truth, as to wish it were not a truth. labour to keep down thy heart in the first degree of opposition to the truth of God, this is the lowest degree of contending against the truth of God, for this meekness that I am speaking of is, in opposition to contention to any thing that Christ would learn us. In Rom. 2. 8. There the Apostle saith. But unto them that are contentious, and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and Wrath. Now I take it, that this contention that is here spoken of, it is not meant so much contention between neighbour and neighbour, contention between man and man, for a man living contentiously amongst his neighbors, that Gods indignation and wrath is against him, though that be true too, the wrath and indignation of God is against them that live contentiously with man, your indignation and wrath is against your neighbour, and Gods wrath and indignation is against you. But I say, I understand this to be of the contention that there is in the heart of man against the truth of God, when they come to hear any truth from Jesus Christ to be taught them, their Hearts are contentious against the truth. And that which makes me to think this to be the meaning of the Holy Ghost, is the words that follow, to those that obey not the truth, so that besides the disobeying the truth, there is contention of Heart. Now the first degree of this contention is, the wishing of such a truth to be otherwise, Oh I would there was not this Truth. As it was the Speech of an unclean wretch. I would there was no seventh Commandement at al, it troumbled his conscience, for he went directly against it. So there is such a distemper usually in the Hearts of men and Women, though they dare not directly go against the truth of God, yet there is such a secret rising of Heart against the Truth of God, that they wish there were no such truth, and they wish it were otherwise. You are therefore to watch over your Hearts, and to labour to subdue your Hearts in the beginning of the rising of them against the truth of God. Secondly, You are not only to labour against wishing any Truth not to be so, but to labour much more against freting against any Truth of God, that is a degree further, contrary unto this Meekness of Spirit that we should bring with us in learning of Christ. It is too much for a Man or Woman to wish that any Truth should not be, you should rather beat down your Hearts and say, this is the Truth of God, and blessed be God that I know this to be the Truth of God; but if there should be any such wish, Yet take heed that your Hearts do not vex at such a Truth. There was such a Truth revealed at such a time, and you vex( perhaps) at the Minister, and at the ordinance itself, and wish you had not been at the Sermon at that time, and perhaps resolve never to hear him more, because there is something spoken against your lust and humour. Thus it is with many men and Women when they come to hear the word of God, if we could but see into their Hearts, we should find a most vild and cursed vexing Spirit that many Truths of God are revealed. Now is this to Learn of Christ with Meekness? Is this Meekness of Spirit, to sit freting and vexing at a Truth, whenas you should bless God for it? Yea, and the nearer any Truth of God comes to you, you should bless God for it, not vexing at the Minister, and saying, that he aimed at me, and some body hath told him of me, that is to vex at the truth, but we are rather to bless God for the Truth. Thirdly, Take heed of letting your passion rise yet a degree higher, take heed of casting it off, never to think on it more, as you know passionate people, when things anger them, they will take things and hurl them away. And so many people, when truths are revealed to them that are against them, they will throw them away, and resolve never to have to do with them any more. Nay, labour to get so much power over your Hearts, that when any truth is revealed to you at any time, to resolve thus, that though I find it to come near to me, and cut me to the quick, and is like to pluck such a comfort from me, and put me upon such and such a trouble, yet I will resolve I will writ, and examine, and consider of it, I will lay it up in my Heart to think of it afterward. When we come in the name of God, and in the name of Christ to Teach you his will, and you hear any thing that is hard, and seems contrary to you, me thinks the ordinance might obtain so much of you, that you might resolve thus, however I will lay it up, and I will consider of it, I will Meditate on it, I will try it, I will examine it, I will see whether it be such a truth as is presented to me at the present. We red of Daniel in the 7. of Dan. and the Last. When he heard of some words that did trouble him, he did not cast them away presently, No, As for me, my Cogitations much troubled me, and my countenance changed in me, but I kept the matter in my Heart. Though my Cogitations troubled me, so as my countenance changed in me, Yet I kept the matter in my Heart. So you come sometimes to hear the word of God, and perhaps you hear those things that trouble you, and your Cogitations trouble you, and your Countenance is changed by those truths, I but do not cast them off presently, but keep them in thy Heart still, and indeed thou hast more cause to keep that in thy Heart that troubles thee then any thing else. If men hear any thing that pleaseth them, they will keep that in their Hearts. but if they hear any thing that troubles them, that they will get out of their Hearts as fast as they can. Oh, Thou shouldst labour to keep that in thy Heart that troubles thee more then the other. If a man take physic, and as soon as ever he finds the physic work, and is a little trouble to his Stomach, he casts it up, this would do him no good; though the physic be against your Stomach and it is troublesone to you, yet you will labour to keep it down for the health of your Body: So should you do with the word that troubles you, it is physic for your Souls, let God have so much respect from you, and the Minister that studies to find out Truths to reveal to you, let them have somuch respect from you, as to examine things; though they go never so across to the grain, yet examine what they are. Fourthly, And then further, Learn with Meekness; when you have examined the truth, if you find it rather to be truth then otherwise, take heed of opposing it, do not cast it off, if there be but a Probability that it is the truth of God after examination, charge it upon thy Heart, Ah, Let me take heed of opposing of that that hath but the inscription of God upon it, that hath the mark of God upon it. Fifthly, And further, Take heed that thou dost not go thus far after Examination, to throw it away, if upon examination you shall find that indeed this is the truth of God though it make against me, against my ends, and my ways, yet it is the truth of God, Oh, take heed of throwing it away because it doth not suite with your Turn. I have heard very credibly of a wicked man, that reading those words in Deut. 29. 19. verse. And it came to pass, when he heareth the words of this curse, that he bless himself in his Heart saying, I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my Heart, to add drunkenness to Thirst, the Lord will not spare him, but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousy shal smoke against that man, and all the curses that are written in this Book shall lye upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his Name from under Heaven, And the Lord shall separate him to evil out of al the Tribes of Israel, according to all the curses of the Covenant that are written in the Book of the Law. This dreadful Scripture one reading, he was so vexed and angry at it, that in his angry fit he took the Leaf in which it was writ, and tore it out of the Bible. And so another, an unclean wretch,( one that I knew myself) that reading some Scriptures that spake against uncleanness and Adultery, took the Bible and threw it away in an anger. We have an example in scripture of Jehojakim, in Jere. 36. 23. And it came to pass, that when Jehudy had red three or four Leaves, he Cut it with the Penknife, and cast it into the Fire that was on the Hearth. There was a role that was written with the mind of God, that was sent by Jeremiah, and was red in the presence of the King Jehojakim, and the words that were there, were words of threatening, and the King knew himself to be guilty, and instead of yielding himself unto the word of God, he rose in an anger, and sitting by the fire, he took the role and cut it in pieces,& threw it into the fire. As a man that reads a letter, because he is vexed with the matter in it, he takes it and throws it into the fire▪ so this Jehojakim, when he heard the role red, in which much of the mind of God was contained▪ he throws it into the fire. Here was a froward spirit. And I speak of it the rather, that this was accounted so great an evil, that I find by those that writ the history of the Jews, that the Jews did afterwards once a year appoint to keep a solem day of fasting and prayer, to mourn for this sin of Jehojakim because it was so horrible a sin, al the people they kept a day of fasting& prayer once a year, to pray that this sin might not be laid to his charge, that when the mind of God was revealed to him that he should cast it away. Oh! It is a most dreadful thing, for any people to cast away any truth of God, though you do not throw the Bible into the fire, I, but perhaps you wish that some truths were in the fire, that you might never hear of them more. Oh! what a different spirit was there between the son and the father? what was this Jehojakim? You shal find in Jere. 36. 9. He was the son of Josiah King of Jerusalem, he was the son of Josiah, and yet what a temper was he in? What was this Josiah? See the different temper between the Father and the Son If you turn to the 2. Kings. 22. 19. You shal see the temper of his Father Josiah, Because thy heart was tender, and thou hast humbled thyself before the Lord, when thou heardest what I spake against this place, and against the inhabitants thereof, that they should become a desolation and a curse, and hast rent thy clothes, and wept before me, I also have heard thee, saith the Lord. Here good Josiah, now, a great King, when there was but a book found by accident, for it was not brought to him on purpose, and sent to him to be red, but by accident there was the book of some part of the Law that through neglect, it seems the people of God had not for a great while; That was found in the temple of the Lord, and this book of the Law being red, some torn pieces being red before the King, and that they saw that much of the mind of God was there, that they had not understood before, and they had not obeied as they ought, mark, this good King Josiah, hearing but a few old papers red wherein was the mind of God, his heart was tender, and( as some of your books hath it) was rent, and he fals a weeping, and weeping so as he rent his cloths, he could not be satisfied, but he sends to Huldi the prophet to hear more of the mind of God, and he labours to put in practise al that was said there. Here is a pattern of a King, that upon hearing of a few papers red. He doth thus, this was Josiah. Now his son, he upon hea●ing the law red, flies into a rage and fury, and cuts the role in pieces, and throws it into the fire. Thus it is many times between father and son, you see grace doth not come by inheritance, the father of a melting tender disposition, and the son of a froward passionate disposition. It may be some of you that are here that are Children, are froward, and turbulent, but your parents are meek, and tender hearted, and willing to know the mind of God, though you kick against it. Oh! it is a happy thing for a King to be thus, you have many, that because they have more in the world then others, they are froward, and proud, and of surly spirits and think themselves too good to converse with others that are below them, but how contrary is this to that meekness that is here required? Sixthly, But yet further, come and learn with meekness, be yet furthese of al from railing at the word and speaking evil of it, though thy passion should prevail so far as to throw it a way in an anger, yet let it not prevail so as to speak evil of the word of God, or rail at the ministers of God, this is a most horrible and cursed estate. Luther( I remember) hath such an expression, what is it in these dayes to preach, but even to draw the very fury of men upon themselves. This is most horrible, when mens hearts go thus far, to go away, and instead of blessing God for any truth they hear, to rail at the truth of God, and the messenger of the truth, and so blaspheming the holy and blessed truth of God, as they did. And so there are many examples in scripture, after the preaching of Paul, they did blaspheme. So there are many that do go away from the word many times, and they kick against the messengers of it, but the truth is, God looks upon it as blasphemy; you that rail at the word perhaps you say it is not the truth, but how if it prove so? thou wilt be found guilty of blasphemy before the Lord at the great day. Oh! my brethren, take heed of these distempers, but contrarily when you come to learn of Christ, come with meek spirits. I am the willinger to be the larger in this, because it will help you to hear many sermons, if this lesson be well learned, when you come to hear at any time, come with meek spirits, and when you see any passion to arise, beat it down presently. It is an evil thing to have a froward, passionate heart against your child, or servant, any poor boy in your family; but to have a froward, passionate heart against the word that must judge your souls, and your eternal estate must be cast by, O! this is a horrible thing: Know( beloved) that the word that we speak is above you, though we be below you, and we will be willing to be accounted so, but know the word that we speak is above you, and therefore it is an infinite evil thing for any one to be froward, and passionate against this word of life. In Isai. 66. The Lord speaks of himself to be the high and lofty one. Thus saith the Lord, Heaven is my Throne, and the Earth is my Footstool, &c. Then in the latter end of the 2. verse, All these things have I made, but to this man will I look, even to him that is Poor, and of a contrite Spirit, and that trembles at my word. The man that trembles at my word, this is the disposition of Heart that the Lord expects from you when you come to hear his word, not to be passionate, and froward at his word. Passion is extreme evil in any, but when it is in the inferior towards the superior, then it is worse. It is Evil for the Husband to be passionate to the Wife, but worse for the Wife to be passionate to the Husband. It is Evil for the Parent to be passionate to the Child, I but it is worse ●o have a Child froward towards his Parents. And so, it is Evil for Masters to be froward towards their Servants, but worse for Servants to be froward towards their Master. So if between Man and Wife, if it be so evil for the inferior to be passionate towards the Superior, how Evil is it for us to be froward and Passionate against God? And therefore you that are passionate, and froward, know that it is enough to be passionate and froward with your boyes at home, but take heed that you be not froward with the great God, for when you come to Learn of Christ, you must bring Meekness. Well, that for Meekness. CHAP. LXXVII. Learners of Christ must be humble, and that humility explained; showing that there is a false humility to be avoided. SEcondly, We are to Learn of Christ with HUMILITY, with a Lowly Heart too, you must be humble in your Learning of Christ, as well as Meek, and for that we have divers expressions in Scripture. In the 33. of Deu. 3. verse, Yea, He Loved the People; all his Saints are in thy Hand: and they sate down at thy Feet; Every one shall receive of thy words. Here is the Humility of the Saints of God, that come to Learn of Jesus Christ; they sit down at the feet of Christ, and there they receive of his Words. As we red( ye know) that Paul before his Conversion, he was brought up at the Feet of Gamaliel. It Seems scholars, in the time of the Jews sate at the Feet of their Masters: and by this you may know the meaning of this place, All his Saints are in thy Hands: And they sate down at thy Feet; Every one shal receive of thy words, So that when we come to Learn of Christ, we must come with humble, and submissive Spirits, and even sit at the Feet of Christ, and hear his word, and be taught by him. And So likewise the word of God is compared to the Rain that is distilled, that falls, In Deut. 32. 2. My Doctrine shall drop as the Rain, my Speech shal distill as the Rain, as the small Rain upon the tender Herb, and as the showers upon the Grass. Now we know, that Rain when it doth distil, if it come upon the Mountaines, the high Mountaines, it doth little good there, for it fals down and leaves them barren, that is the Reason your mighty high hills are very barren, Why? Because Rain falls down and leaves them, but your low valleys that the Rain falls upon, they grow, in your Meadows, there you have full grass, and to fill the sithe, because the Rain descends upon them: So it is with the word of God, the word is as the Rain, Oh, That it might be so upon your Hearts. But now, what is the reason that many remain so barren, notwithstanding so many showers they have had? Oh! They have Mountainous Spirits, high Spirits, and lofty Spirits. But now you shal have some poor Servant in the House, that is of a low Spirit, shal get more truths a hundred fold, then the Master or mistress shal get; or some Child that is of a low Spirit, shall ge● more a great deal then others that are of a high and conceited Spirit. The valleys, that is, the lowly in Heart, they are those that profit by the word, they are those that Jesus Christ takes delight to Teach, and so he saith to the Father. I thank thee, O Father, that thou hast hide these things from the wise and prudent of the world, and hast revealed them unto Babes. Those that are of lowly, Spirits. Children, you know, have not tha● pride in them as others have, so those that are low in their own Eyes, they are fit to Learn. And therefore when John the Baptist was sent to prepare their Hearts for Jesus Christ, what was he to do? He was to cast down every Mountain, and make it a plain, that was one work of John the Baptist, to pull down the hills, and make them as plains, and indeed, we are never fit to learn of Christ, till we have plain Hearts, and Low hearts, and humble hearts before the Lord Jesus Christ, then Christ loves to Teach us, for he knows that then his word will indeed do good. Quest. You will say, We must be humble when we come to Learn of Christ, how is that? What humility must we show in coming to Learn of Jesus Christ? Answ. You must know, that there is a twofold humility, that is a false humility, that we are not to have. I say, there is a double humility in a Learner, that a Learner should rak heed of, as thus. First, There are some that have a kind of humility in them, that they think, that those things that are taught are too high for them, they are for Schollers, and learned men, but they are poor creatures and not Book learned, and they think them too high for them. This is a false humility, to think that though they be high, that they should be too high for thee to learn that hast an immortal Soul. Indeed, it is a sign of a foolish Heart, that says, wisdom is too high; but let the poorest Soul in this congregation know, that the mysteries of the Gospel are not too high for them to learn, those things that the Angels desired to pty into, yet know, that thou art a subject capable of them, though thou beest a poor creature, yet, thou art one whom those things do concern, those high things that the Angels stand and admire at, I say, those are things that do concern thy Soul, and if we did apprehended them so, as things of concernment unto ourselves, it would cause us to Learn them, but many people, when they hear of election, Redemption, Adoption, and Glorification &c. They think they be too high for them. Now know, they concern thy Soul, and therefore they are revealed in Gods word, that thou mayst have a part in them as well as others, Yea, thou mayst know those things, and understand them as well as the highest Monarch, and the greatest Schollers on the Earth, Yea, And thou mayst come to the understanding of those things that the Angels admire. Secondly, And then there is another false humility, and th●● thus, for people to come to Learn, and whatsoever they hear taught them, they think they must not question it at all, but they must believe it because it is taught, receive it with an implicit Faith, this is a humility that is too low, and doth debase the Soul of a man, in the lowest way that possibly his Soul can be debased in. We cannot imagine a greater dishonour to a rational creature, to an immortal Soul then this, that he must subject his very conscience unto the opinions of other men, that is, that if they say so, he must believe it, this is the most abominable bondage that people are in tha● are under Antichrist. It is said of the Whore, She sits upon people, upon Nations, this is a dishonour that the man of sin puts upon men, that whatever he saith, it must not be questioned, though perhaps he is a base filthy adulterer, and guilty of Sodomy, and Buggery, as some of them have been, or a base Drunkard, or Whore-master, yet whatsoever he shal dictate, they must have their Consciences yield unto it, to venture their Souls and eternal estate upon. This is a horrible bondage, that were not great ones besotted and drunk with the Cup of Fornication, we would think it impossible that men would debase their consciences thus far. You shall have many men, that though they have high thoughts of themselves, yet they will debase their Spirits unto the Pope, so as to believe as the Church believes, And so in turkey, We must not so much as question their Religion. Now so to subject ourselves to any thing that is taught us out of the word, this is a false humility, the Lord gives us leave to examine what we Learn. CHAP. LXXVIII. Layeth out the true humility of Learners in Nine Particulars. 1. Be sensible of ignorance. 2. Of Unworthiness to Learn. 3. Be sensible of the authority of the word. 4. Take heed of Cavilling at it. 5. Be willing to Learn of the meanest. 6. Come with a Resolution to yield to the Truth. 7. Be sensible of thy continual need of Learning. 8. Give Christ all the Glory of thy Learning. 9. Let not thy knowledge puff thee up. QUEST. NOw what is the true humility that we must bring with us, to make us fit to be taught of Jesus Christ? Answ. It consists in many things. First, We must come with a sensiblenes of our own ignorance, we must come to be taught of Christ as those that are apprehensive and sensible of our own ignorance, Lord, I am a poor, weak Creature, and cannot understand the things of God, and this every one, not only poor weak people that are not Book Learned, but the highest scholars in the world, they must come in the sense of their own ignorance, The Lord sees the thoughts of man, that they are vain; If any man think he knows any thing, he knows nothing. And now I appeal unto you, when were your Hearts humbled for the sin of ignorance? I speak to those that have the deepest reaches, and the greatest natural parts, can you say as before the Lord, the Lord knows that this is the burden of your hearts, that you are able to understand so little of the things of God, what closet can testify, what place can witness this, that you have been humbling your souls before God, for the want of the knowledge of his will? That you cannot understand his mind and will, this would beseem the wisest man upon the earth, the greatest and qu●ckest partend man upon the earth. If a man have a little quicker wit then others have, he is presently puffed up; perhaps thou dost know more then he that comes to teach thee, what then? shouldst thou not learn of him? Indeed, if he were to come to show his natural parts only, then thou mightest be lifted up above him, and refuse to learn of him, and this is the reason why many will not learn, that there is so much ignorance, because many think that men come ●o show their na●ural parts, ●here wits and their learning, I but you are to know, that they come to dispense the word of Christ, and Jesus Christ teacheth thee by them and Jesus Christ is able to present more truth to thee, he may hint it to thee, and may hid sometimes the depth of the truth from him, and may reveal ●●to thy soul, perhaps more then to him that speaks it to thee, why? because this is the ordinance of Jesus Christ, and therefore though the things thou hearest, thou dost understand in a natural way, yet thou art to come with a sense of thine own ignorance, that thou canst not understand it in a spiritual way. Secondly, Another work of humility when we come to Learn of Jesus Christ is this, we should come with a sense likewise of our own unworthiness, to learn to be taught, we should look upon the truths of God as excellent things, and know, that we are unworthy that ever the Lord should reveal himself to us. Have a high esteem of the excellency of Gods truths, and a low esteem of thyself, as unworthy that ever thou shouldst come to know them, As that Judas( not Iscariot) said unto Christ, Whence is it, Lord, that thou wilt reveal thyself to us and not unto the world? Who are we, that ever we should have the mysteries of God and eternal life, those deep counsels of God that were kept hide from the beginning of the world, who are we, that we should have them revealed to us? I appeal unto you, when were you before the Lord, acknowledging your unworthiness, that ever you should have the rich treasury of Gods word revealed and opened to you, and looking upon yourselves as unworthy of it? Thirdly, You should come apprehensive and sensible of the Authority of Gods word, as that which is above you, we must look upon the word of God as that which is above us. Fourthly, When you come to hear the word, take heed of giving liberty to yourselves to object and cavil at it. It is true, as I told you before, you have liberty to examine the word, Paul commends men for examining things that he taught, as the noble Bereans did, and this liberty we give men, to examine what we teach, I but, though you have liberty to examine it, yet not to cavil at it, but when you search, you must search with an humble and submissive spirit, do not take liberty to manifest your wit upon the word, if you should manifest your wit, how you can object, manifest that some other way. Many think themselves no body, if they cannot object against what they hear, and this is the special wit that many show, they think to show themselves to be men and women of parts, by being able to object against the word of God, and you shal see abundance of pride of spirit in such, they do not object against it to know the mind of God: Such a thing is delivered from the word at such a time, I but methinks this was not so clear, there was this doubt arose in my mind, and the Lord knows there is nothing I desire more then to know the mind of God and I would you could resolve me. No question this is a good way, but in a wanton, proud, objecting way to do thus, this is to be a judge of the word, for so you know it is said, thou comest to be a judge of the Law, it is a vild temper of men, to come to be a judger of the Law, take heed of giving liberty to a proud, and wanton way of cavilling at the word. Fifthly, You should be willing to be taught by the meanest; by the meanest that is as I shewed you before, Christ is an humble teacher, he is willing to teach the meanest, and so your hearts should be humble, to be willing to learn of the meanest, if it be of a poor child, if your Child should come in an humble way,( for that you should be careful of, to manifest a sensible distance) but if the child should come to the father and say, father, I find that this is not the mind of God, you should not take up your children and say, wha●, will you teach us, no, you should not despise the meanest, it is a sign of a proud heart that doth so. Or if a poor neighbour that lives near you, and God hath been pleased to inl●ghten him, though you be greater in the world then he, yet do not despise to learn of him, Certainly, nothing hinders men more from knowing the mind of God, then want of humble hearts. And for this there is a notable place, In, Isaiah, 11. 6. He saith in the former verse that With righteousness he shal judge the poor, and reprove with equity, for the meek of the earth, and then follows the meekness, The Wolf also shal dwell With the Lamb, and the Leopard shal lye down with the Kid, and the Calf and the young lion and the fatling together, and mark for humility, and a little Child shal led them. It is a prophesy of the times of the Gospel, that they shal be so together that a little Child shal led them. Oh! they are glad to hear any truth from God, though it be from the hand of a little child, this the Lord accepts, and such will be taught Gods m●nd, that are thus humble and meek. Sixthly, Come with resolution to yield to whatsoever God shal make known to thee, those men& women that come with such resolutions as we red of in Job. 34. 32. That which I see not, teach thou me, if I have done iniquity, I will do no more. When the heart comes to this disposition, and can make use of this one verse, Ah! Lord, that which I see not, do thou teach me, there are many things that I see not, I am afraid that I live in many sins of ignorance, I am afraid thou hast not that glory from me as thou shouldst, because I know not thy mind, that which I see not, teach thou me, here I am, willing to give up myself to the word, let ●t be never so hard to flesh and blood, Lord, here I yield to whatever truth thou shalt teach me, you that complain for want of knowledge, you cannot understand many things that are taught you, I appeal to you, have you come with such a yeeld●ng spirit? Lord, here I am, what I know no●, teach thou me, and here I give up myself to obey whatsoever thou wilt ●each me. We red of such a resolution as this in David in Psalm 86. 11. Teach me thy way, O Lord, I will walk in thy truth. Those that have such resolutions, they indeed are ●it to be taught by Jesus Christ. And add the Latter clause, Lord unite my heart to fear thy name. It may be some of you may have such a disposition for the present, that you can say, the Lord knows, it is in my heart for the present, that I can say, the Lord teach me, and I am resolved ●o walk in his truth: I but, look to the latter part of the verse, and take heed thou dost not lose this temper, say also, Lord unite my heart to fear thy name, keep my heart in such a disposition, and certainly, then thou shalt learn of Christ. Seventhly, If thou wouldest learn, thou must be humble in learning in this, keep thyself stil sensible of thy continual need of learning when thou hast learned something, do not think I have enough now, but keep thyself stil sensible, that I have need of more. That is a proud speech in many, that they say, they are too old to learn, there is no such pride as in this, in unteacheableness It is true, there is pride in clothes, and the like, but there is no such pride as in unteacheableness, when men think themselves too good to learn, many will be ready to say, they have no pride in their hearts, hast thou an unteacheable heart that is a proud heart. Eighthly, In thy learning of Christ thou must be humble in this? if thou hast got any knowledge, give Christ al the glory, attribute nothing to thyself, not to thy quickness, and parts, not to thy memory, no, but only to the teaching of Jesus Christ. Nay, hadst thou a thousand times more able parts then thou hast, yet if Christ should have left thee, thou wouldest have been a mere sot,& never have understood the way of eternal life. Lastly, The more knowledge thou gettest, labour to be so much the more humble, take heed knowledge doth not puff thee up, here is a Christian worth his weight in gold that shal increase in knowledge, and increase in humility, both at one and the same time. As it is with a three, if it should grow downward, and not proportionable, it would not stand in time of storm and tempest. So many Christians, they grow in knowledge, I, but they do not grow in humility too, but here is a christian, that will stand in time of storms and tempests, that grows in knowledge and in humility too, at the same time knowledge puffs up, and that shows the excellency of knowledge. It is a sign of a poor, weak spirit, to be puffed up with fine and gay clothes, but a man of understanding may be puffed up with knowledge, knowledge puffed up the very Angels themselves, and that was the great argument of the Devil, thou shalt know if thou earest this, thou shalt know, Adam ventures his soul and al his posterity for the love of knowledge. knowledge is excellent, and very dangerous if not sanctified, but now we are to learn of Christ, and to be humble in what Christ teacheth us. Certainly, if our knowledge pufs us up, it is poison to us. As if a man eat his meat, and as soon as he hath eaten or drunk a draft, he swells, he thinks with himself, what hath come unto me? I am poisoned, and if a man be puffed up with his estate, his estate is poison to him, so it is with knowledge, if he be puffed up, it is poison to him; but we that profess to learn of Christ, we must keep our hearts down, be meek and lowly in learning, as Christ is meek and lowly in teaching. Now these directions that I have propounded, I hope may be of singular use to help you to hear many sermons with more profit then hitherto you have done. And thus I have done with the teaching of Christ doctrinally. CHAP. LXXIX. Sheweth out of 1. John, 2. 6. That Christ teacheth us by his example. The text explained, and the parts laid open. NOw the next thing is the exemplary teaching of Christ Christ doth not only teach doctrinally, but exemplarily, we must look on Christ, and see how he teacheth exemplarily, that is that which is held forth in this scripture though name more fully in another scripture. And because I would follow that fully, as a great and useful argument, I have for the present pitched upon another text, that doth somewhat more particularly and fully hold forth this truth unto us, That we should learn by Christs example, and learn according unto the example of Christ, and that is in the. 1. John, 2. 6. He that saith, he abides in him( that is, in Christ) ought himself also to walk, even as he walked. That is, he is to take Jesus Christ to be an example to him in al his ways, and to learn of him in way of example. There is a great deal of mischief done in the world by wicked examples, we are ready to learn almost of any one, but of Jesus Christ. Now my brethren, the Lord hath sent his Son into the world, as for other great ends, so for this among the Rest for to out example all other examples, that is, to be the greatest example to all the the world that ever he shall be made known unto, and to take away from people the great evil of following other examples. There is no such way to cure this great evil that is in the world, that men get so much hurt by evil example as in this, for God to propound another example that shal outbid all examples whatsoever, Oh, It would be a very profitable work for us to take off your hearts from getting hurt by other examples, if I could obtain but this at least, for to weaken the power that there is in the examples of the world to get hurt by, to do hurt and so as for time to come you may be able to say, well, though I have got hurt by wicked example heretofore, yet I hope for time to come, I shal never get so much hurt as I have done. Certainly, there are thousand thousands in hel, that are gone thither upon the evil examples that they have seen before them, and they have been lead on thereby into the ways of death. Now therefore this shal be my endeavour, to propound as fully as I am able, the example of Jesus Christ, for to learn of him exemplarily, so as if it be possible to take away al those evil examples that are in the world: what can be better, then to come with an example beyond al examples? it I can be enabled through Gods Grace to set this example livelily before your faces, I hope it shal have that power upon you, that this example shal go beyond al examples, and your hearts shal not so much be taken with other things, but you shal follow Jesus Christ ●n the example that he hath gone before you. And to this end I have choose this Text, to follow the Point propounded, and then( God willing) I shall return again to the other Text. We ought to walk as he walked. That blessed Apostle Saint John, whose words they are, was the Apostle in whose bosom Christ did lean, in whose bosom Christ lay, and he likewise lay in Christs bosom, for he was most dear unto him, the most beloved of al the disciples, of al the Apostles and he knew indeed much of Christs mind, and was full of love. In the beginning of this chapter, he doth comfort the hearts of the Saints, and gives them as strong a prop for their faith as any we have in al the book of God. If any man sin, we have an advocate with the father, Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sins, but mark, before ever he would speak such a word that we have an advocate with the father if we sin, saith he, My little children, these things writ I unto you, that you sin not, these things, even this among others, that we have an advocace with the father that is the propitiation for our sins, I writ this very thing, that ye sin not, that ye may not sin, take heed that you do not take advantage by this to sin, this I writ unto you, that you sin not, and it is very observable; what abundance of cantion the Apostle gives unto believers, that they do not mistake the free grace of God to abuse it, and therfore though he doth reveal the free grace of God in Christ to the full, that if any man doth sin, we have an advocate with the father to pled for him, he is the propitiation for our sins to the father, yet I writ this that ye sin not. Then again, in the 3. verse, as soon as ever he had spoken of this blessed Doctrine so full of comfort, Hereby, saith he, We do know that we know him, if we keep his Commandements. At the first verse he tells them, he writes unto them that they may not sin, and assoon as ever he had spoken of the free Grace of God in his Son, saith he, Hereby we know that we know him, if we keep his Commandements, the truth is, we do not understand the free Grace of God in Christ, except we keep his Commandements. Men may talk of free Grace, but they do not know Jesus Christ, and free Grace, if so be they take liberty thereby to looseness, except they keep his Commandements, and then, as if he had not said enough to keep men from abusing free Grace. In verse, 4. he saith, He that saith he knows him, and keeps not his Commandements, is a Liar, He g●ves them the L●e to their Face▪ he that saith he knows him, knows him, what is that? He that knows Christ the Advocate, at the right hand of the Father, pleading for those that sin against him, he that saith he knows he is the Propitiation for our sins, and keeps not his Commandements, is a Liar, But he that keepeth his word, the Love of God is perfected in him, That is, he declares that he hath a true Love of God, for true Love, Love that comes up indeed to sincerity, it is in the language of ●he Holy Ghost in the Gospel called perfection, And hereby we know that we are in him, I do wonder how this Scripture can be red, and yet the free Grace of God abused. And again, I wonder how this Scripture can be red, and yet that we should not make use of our Sanctification, to prove our justification, and to know that we are in Christ, and to know that Christ is our advocate, and the propitiation for our sins. I say, I wonder how it is possible, were not mens Spirits extremely wanton, how they should red such a Scripture as this, and yet think that they may not take signs of their Sanctification, to prove their justification. Hereby we know that we know him, if we keep his Commandements, and he that saith I know him, and keepeth not his Commandements is a Liar, whosoever keepeth his word, the Love of God is perfected in him. Hereby we know again that we are in him, by our Sanctification, we come to know it. And now comes in the words of my Text. He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked, Stil urging the free Grace of God, making Christ an Advocate for us, and a propitiation for our sins, he makes that stil an argument for our Sanctification. He that saith he abides in him, If he makes but profession that he abides in Christ, Is there any man that speaks of Gods free Grace in Christ, and saith, he is a believer, and that Christ is his, if he make profession that Christ is his, and he abides in Christ, what then? He ought himself also to walk, even as he walked, Ought to walk as Christ walked, as if the Holy Ghost should say, let no man make any profession, that they have interest in Jesus Christ, that Christ is theirs, that they are members of Jesus Christ, but let them together with their profession, make conscience to walk as Christ did walk, to live as Jesus Christ did live, let his life be like unto the Life of Jesus Christ, this is a very seasonable and useful Scripture for us to consider of, that whosoever shal but say, that he abides in Christ, that he hath a part in Christ, that he is a member of Christ, this is that that Christ expects from such a one, that he should live as Christ himself lived, he must walk as Christ walked, not only do some actions that Christ did, but he must walk as Christ walked, his Conversation, the tract of his way and Conversation, it must be like the life and Conversation of Jesus Christ. Certainly, If this be expected from every one that professeth any part in Christ, that they must live as Jesus Christ lived, it may put many to a stand, as we shall hear afterwards, by that time we have opened the Point, and come to Application. We have in the words these two things First, An Example, or pattern of holiness. And Secondly An Obligation to walk according to that Pattern. The Pattern is Jesus Christ himself, his walking, it is Christ and his Life, his Conversation. And the Obligation it is in these words, Ought himself to walk as he walked, For I will not meddle with that part of the verse at al, He that saith he abideth in him, Because I choose only these words to follow the argument that was name out of the other Scripture before, because in these words it is more fully and Particularly set down. I will put both together, because I would unite things as close as I can, and all that I therefore intend to say shal be in this one point of Doctrine. CHAP. LXXX. Doct. Christians must live as Christ lived, making him the pattern of their lives, confirmed, and Reasons of the same. 1. We have union with him. 2. God loves us as he doth his S●n. 3. We have the Spirit of Christ. 4. Christians are the Body of Christ. 5. They are part of the fullness of Christ. 6. They are the Spouse of Christ. DOCT. THat Christians that profess themselves to be in Christ, they must live as Christ lived, they must make Jesus Christ to be the Pattern of their lives. That is the Point, They must not only believe in Christ as a saviour, but they must make him their Pattern. Whosoever would expect to have Jesus Christ to be his saviour, such a one must know that God expects from him that Jesus Christ should be his Pattern too. Every one of us desires Jesus Christ to be a saviour to save our Souls, but now, how do you like Jesus Christ to be your pattern? You like to hear of Christ as the saviour of the world, as the propitiation for your sins, and dying for your sins, and forgiving of your sins, you like well to hear of this argument: but now, how do you like to hear of Christ to be the Pattern of your lives, the example for you to walk by, and live by? That is the point that now we are about to speak unto. And as in this Scripture, so in many other Scriptures we find Christ to be as a Pattern for us. In John, 13. 12. verse, and so on. As here in this Epistle, so in that Gospel, he relates of Christ himself, propounding himself as a Pattern. So after he had washed their Feet, and had taken his Garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, know ye what I have done to you, ye call me Master, and Lord, and ye say well, for so I am, If I then your Lord and Master, have washed your Feet, ye also ought to wash one anothers Feet, At the 15. verse, For I have given you an Example, that we should do as I have done to you, You must follow my Example. Now I shal not instance the Particulars to you here, because those two things of Meekness and humility, I shal reserve to the other Text that we are to go to again, though I shall instance here in divers Particulars, how we are to walk as Christ walked, only here in the general I mention this, that Christ propounds himself as an Example, for I have given you an Example that you should do as I have done to you. That that Christ saith of this Particular action of his, may be said of al the actions of his Life that are imitable( as we shal in the opening show, what is imitable, and what not) that Christ hath given us an Example in the holiness of his Life, to walk as he walked. And so in this very Epistle the first of John, 3. 3. And every man that hath this Hope in him, purifieth himself even as he is pure. Every man that hath the Hope, that he shal hereafter be partaker of the Glory to appear with Christ, and to know as he shal be known, and to be like Christ, and see him as he is, every man that hath the Hope of the Glory of Heaven, of eternal Life, for so it is spoken of, he doth purify himself, How? As Christ is pure, he makes Jesus Christ to be his Pattern, he looks upon him, upon the holiness and purity of Jesus Christ, and looks how he was pure, he labours to purge himself as Christ was pure. Thus you see, how the Scripture makes Christ to be a Pattern. And then again, the Apostle Saint Peter, I will give you one or two places in him. There is a great many Scriptures that we might mention, but take two places from him, the first is in 1 Pet. 2. 21. For even hereunto were ye called, because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example that we should follow his steps. I cannot now make use at all of the particular things, but only of the general, that Christ hath left us an example to follow his steps, so that this Scripture and my Text, you see how parallel they are one unto another. We must walk as Christ walked, so saith the Apostle Peter, Christ hath left us an example that we should follow his steps, that we might go step by step with Jesus Christ; so that from this expression of following Christs steps, we may note thus much from this word, that we must follow Christs steps. First: That all the actions of our lives are steps, that is, every action that we do is a step to Hell or Heaven, one of them, I say every action that any of you doth, it is a step towards Hel, or a step towards Heaven, you go on in a course of your ways towards Hell or Heaven, now if you follow Christs steps you will certainly go to Heaven. And Secondly: we must follow Christs steps, we must not only do some one action, but follow him step by step. And Thirdly: It notes thus much, That the way of our life here, it is a way that is very narrow, and we need be very careful how we walk in it, we must look to our steps, and be sure we tread in the very steps that Christ trode in, as you know if a man be going a way that is very dangerous, that if he go awry never so little, he is in danger to miscarry, if there be any mark in his way, he will be sure to keep to that. And if any have gone before hand to show him his way, he will be sure not to go amiss, and saith he that goes before him, be sure you tread in my steps, that I go before you in, for if you go out but one step, you may fall and miscarry. So saith the Holy Ghost here, your way to life is exceeding narrow, and you may easily go awry, and therefore you have not only some rules to direct you in your way, but you have the example of Christ going before you, and his steps, and therefore look to his steps, do you go in his steps, follow his steps. And the other place is in 1 Pet. 4, 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind. We are to have the same mind with Jesus Christ, to do the same things( So fat as we are able) with Jesus Christ. Quest. But you will say, Lord, what shall become of us then? What, must we walk as Christ walked, and go in Christs steps, and purify ourselves as Christ is pure? How is this possible for us poor Creatures to do? we who are flesh and blood, how can we possibly do this, to walk as Christ walked? Christ is the holy one of God, Christ is the Son of God blessed for ever, Christ had the fullness of the God-head dwelling bodily in him, and had no sin at all, no evil, when the Tempter came, he could find nothing in him, and can we be able to walk as Jesus Christ himself, that was so holy as he was? How is it possible? Answ. Now for the answer to that, know, that you may make Christ your pattern and example, though you be not able to attain to the perfection of Christ; as a Scholar may writ after his Master, though he be not able to writ as well as his Master, but he looks at the copy and writes after the copy, because he cannot writ so well as his Masters copy, he doth not turn his eyes to some of his fellow scholars and say, it is well if I could writ so well as others do, no, but he still hath an eye to the copy. So Jesus Christ is our copy, and we are to have our eyes upon him, and to make him to be as our example, though we be not able to do as he did, and be as perfect as he was. A Child may walk with his Father, though he cannot go so fast as his Father, he may go after his Father at least: And indeed, this is one special work of Grace, an argument of a gracious heart, that though it doth feel the weaknesses that it hath, yet stil it sets before itself the most exact rule that can be, and the highest example that can be. I say, a gracious heart though never so weak in Grace, yet manifests the truths of Grace in this thing, that though it be able to do but little, yet it will set the highest rule and the highest example continually before it, and it would not bring the rule to itself, and the example to itself, but labours to get itself unto the rule, and unto the example. whereas on the other side, you shall find that a carnal heart, though not profane and ungodly, perhaps, one that lives fairly and civilly in the world, such a one thinks he doth well enough: if he doth as well as others that he lives among, he thinks, I do as well as such and such do, I do as much as they do. Some will propound mean examples, and look upon those that are under him, and so blesseth himself that he hath got as much as they, merely that he may bless himself in his security: whereas one that hath true Grace, though never so little, will look to the example that is above him, and the rule that is above him, that is the first, that though we be weak and cannot reach them, yet we must walk as Christ walked, we must make Jesus Christ to be our pattern and example. First: Why should we think it too much to make Christ our pattern and example? Why should we not walk as Christ walked? If we be believers, we are in Jesus Christ, we have union with him, I need go no further than this Text. He that saith he abides in him, if you be a believer and know that you shall be saved by Jesus Christ, you are in him, you are like to Jesus Christ, you are made one with Jesus Christ, you are made a member of Jesus Christ, and shall you think it much that are in Jesus Christ, and made one with Jesus Christ, and members of Jesus Christ, that you should not walk as Christ walked? True, if there were such a distance between Christ and you, as there is between you and other men, it were another matter, but know, if you be a believer, you are made one with Christ, you do abide in him; yea, and you are so made one with Christ, as God the Father, you should be one, or at least shall be so, and therefore you must not think too much to walk as Christ walked. In that place in John 17. 21. That we may be all one, as thou Father art in me, and I in thee. Dost thou think it too much to walk as Christ walked, whenas Jesus Christ praies that thou maiest be one as he is one with the Father? Secondly: Yea further, Why shouldst thou think it too much to have the pattern of Jesus Christ propounded as thy pattern, whenas God loves thee as he loves the Son, if thou be a believer? In John 16. 27. For the Father loveth you, because he loved me. Shal God love thee as he loves the Son, and shalt not thou love his Son, and make him thy pattern? Thirdly: Yea further, if thou beest in Christ, thou hast the spirit of Jesus Christ in thee, as that in Rom. 8. 9. it is said. If any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of his. Thou hast Christs spirit to guide thee, to act thee, and therefore canst thou think it much to have Jesus Christ to be made an example and pattern to walk by? Fourthly: Yea, Yet further than this. The Saints of God, as they are considered in a body, to make the Church, they are called by the very name of Christ himself, I say, considered as a body, to make the Church, they are called Christ himself. In 1. Cor. 12. 12. For as the body is one, and hath many members, and al the members of that one body, being many are one body; so also is Christ. Christ is as a body that hath many members, Christ, What is that? that is the Church, the Church, take Christ as the head of it, and the Saints together as the body, as the Church that makes up a body, it is called Christ, for it cannot be said of Christ himself, of his own person, that he is a body and many members, not mystically, though it is true, that he was a body and had many members, as he was a man, but he speaks it of a mystical body, and yet it is said here, that Christ is a body with many members, that is the church, that Christ is the head and the Saints the members, so that the Saints, take them collectively together, they are so joined together, as they are al called Christ: Now do you think it much to walk as Christ walked, whenas you joined together make up but one Christ? Fiftly, Nay further than this. If you be a believer, you are part of the fullness of Jesus Christ, yea, and the glory of Jesus Christ, In Ephes. 1. 23. And hath put al things under his feet, and gave him to be the head over al things to the Church which is his body, the fullness of him that filleth al in al. mark, here Christ is said to be the head of the Church, is it much for us to walk after our head? And then the Church is the fullness of him that filleth al in al, it is the fullness of Christ. And then it is the glory of Christ. In 2. Corinth. 8. 23. Whether any do inquire of Titus, he is my partner and fellow helper concerning you, or our brethren be enquired of they are the messengers of the Churches, and the glory of Christ. Surely, if we be the glory of Jesus Christ, then our lives must be like the life of Jesus Christ, we must set forth the glory of Christ in our lives, every believer ought to be such a one, as his life may set out the glory of Jesus Christ, that is, in beholding of his life the beauty and glory of Jesus Christ, must walk as he walked. sixthly, believers are the spouse of Jesus Christ, if they be the spouses of Jesus Christ, they must labour to comform themselves unto Jesus Christ. Many such arguments might be fetched out of scripture, to show unto you, that it is no strange thing to have Christ in al his holiness to be propounded as a pattern to you. I mention this in the beginning of this point, to take off the hardness of it, for some will say, it is a hard thing, that we must walk as Christ walked, but this will alleviate, and mollify the hardness of it, and show you that there is reason that we should walk as he walked. CHAP. LXXXI. Wherein we are not to follow Christ. The particulars laid down, and doubts cleared, and how to follow him in things indifferent. QUEST. YOU will say, Must we do every thing that Christ did? Answ. To that I Answer, That there are three things that we are not bound to do as Christ did. First, We are not bound to follow Christ in the work of his omnipotency, in his miracles, that is not meant that we should do as he did there. Nor Secondly, we are not bound to do the work of a mediator, the work of his office, those things that Christ did merely as a mediator, and that were proper unto the work of his mediatorship, we are not bound to do that which is proper to his office. Nor Thirdly, Are we tied( not at al times) to do the same individual acts that he did, that were as matters of indifferency, not at al times, but we walk as Christ, if so be we do make use of the liberty God gives us as Christ did make use of his, that is, to walk as Christ walked, not to do the same individual actions. As we might name some. When Christ taught the people, he sate, he went down into the ship and sate,( the scripture saith) and so taught the people, and preached to them, Now this doth not follow, that every minister when he preacheth must sit, it was an indifferent gesture, so we walk as Christ walked, when we do make use of the liberty in such things as Christ did. Object. But it may be said then( by the way) This shows then the weakness of that argument that many bring against their kneeling at the sacrament, they say, that Christ sate, for so it is plain in scripture however many by their wits would fain evade it, but the action of Christ and his gesture at Sacrament was a table gesture, such a gesture that they used at meat, that is clear, and so they went on in that way, now you say, Christ sate in preaching, you are not bound to that, why are you bound to the gesture at Christs table. Answ. Now to that I Answer. I confess, that this argument, if you take it merely from the example of Christ, as a table gesture, to prove it absolutely unlawful to use any other, I would count it a very weak argument, if there were no other thing in it, only thus far it hath strength in it, that it is not unlawful to use any gesture at the Lords supper, and it quiter enervates that kind of reason that many have. Can we use too great reverence when we come to the Lords table? It shows that there is a great deal of danger in that argument, for shal any dare to reason thus, that because we have an example in scripture, that Christ at the Lords supper did use an ordinary, common gesture, we should think we are bound to use a more reverend gesture then Christ and his disciples did, as if we should think that we have a heart to reverence God more then Christ had, and more then his disciples had, I say, the reasoning after this manner, is the worst kind of reasoning that can be, there is danger in reasoning thus, Why? Because there is a secret implicit accusation of Christ and his disciples for want of reverence, that we must take heed of; let us be reverend in the way that God would have us to be reverend in, and when we have the example of Christ for a thing, this is enough to prove that a common ordinary table gesture is lawful at the receiving of the sacrament. Object. You will say, But it binds us. Answ. Every indifferent action doth not bind us. Indeed if it were a binding action, I should think something of it, but certainly, this action of Christs sitting at the sacrament, had somewhat sacramental in it, and it was a gesture that Christ did choose rather then another, for to signify some spiritual thing, and in that regard we are bound to follow it so far as it had any thing in it sacramental, to signify any spiritual thing in it, for now it is not indifferent: That it had so, appears to me from that scripture. In Luke, 22. it is said, when they were at the supper of the Lord, there was a division amongst them who should be greatest, there was an inquiry among themselves who should do this thing, that is, Christ told them at table one should betray him, and they began to inquire who should be the man, and then there was an inquiry among them, who should be greatest, and he said unto them, The Kings of the Gentiles exercise Lordship over them, and they that exercise authority upon them are called benefactors, but ye shal not be so, but he that is greatest among you let him be as the younger, and he that is chief as he that doth serve, for whether is greater, he that sitteth at meat, or he that serveth, is not he that sitteth at meat? But I am a among you as he that serveth, And then again he saith, I appoint unto you a Kingdom, as my father hath appointed unto me, that ye may eat and drink at my table in my Kingdom, and sit on thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel. The 30. verse hath the weight upon it, that ye may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and sit on thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel. As if Christ should say, by my admitting of you to my table, sitting with me, this is as a type to you, or a signification to you, of the great mercy of mine towards you, the great happiness that you shal have in my kingdom, and that there you shal sit upon thrones. You now sit with me here at my table, and eat and drink with me here, and this is to be a sign and seal to you, that hereafter you shal sit upon thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel. So that when we come to the Lords table, we must do such things as are suitable to that action, we would be ducking down, and reverencing God that we might pray at that instant when the bread is given into our hands, whereas Christ would have us at that time to be meditating on the great mercy of God towards us, that the Lord hereafter will grant to us to sit at Christs table in his Kingdom, and sit upon thrones judging the world, for so the Saints shal sit upon the throne with Christ judging the world, and when you are at the table, you are to use that gesture that should put you in mind of that, So that if it were a mere indifferent thing, that were no more but significative, then it might be otherwise. But this by the way, to show how far we are not bound to imitate Christ, not in the works of his omnipotency, not in the work of his office and mediatorship, nor in al things that are merely indifferent. Quest, You will say, How shal we imitate him in things that are merely indifferent? would it be indifferent and I not know them? Answ. Now there are these three rules, to know how to imitate Christ in actions that may seem to be indifferent. First, If it be such an action that Christ did, and we have an example in Scripture that he did it, and precepts in some Scriptures too for it, then it is clear, though you may think it to be indifferent, then certainly you must imitate Christ; For the ordinary actions of the life of Christ, if you have any where a rule for them in Scripture, you must be sure to do them, and then take his practise for a seal for the precept. Or, Secondly, If so be at any time the action that he doth, though it may seem to you indifferent, yet if his example be propounded to you, if Christ shall propound his example to you, then you are bound to follow him, and though you do know no other rule, yet where you have his example propounded as a rule it is rule enough. Or, Thirdly, Though the thing should be never so indifferent, yet at any time, if you be in the same case that he was in, that is, if there be the same reason, al things considered; why you should do it aswell as he should do it, then you are bound; let the thing be what it will be that Christ did, and if the equity of the thing be the same, there is the same reason why you should do it as well as why he should do it, then certainly you must do it. So, as it may be said, there is no reason why you should not do thus, as that which he hath done. And this is but only for the opening in the general of following the example of Jesus Christ, to make Christ to be our pattern, to walk as Jesus Christ walked. CHAP. LXXXII. How Christians are to follow Christ in the General course of their lives, in ten particulars. 1. He came into the world. Viz. 1. To do the will of his father. 2. To bear witness to the truth. 2. He did the will of his father readily and cheerfully. 3. He was diligent in the works▪ of his father. 4. He was very spiritual in al his conversation. 5. He walked Unblameably. 6. He was Universal in his Obedience. 7. He was perfect in his way. 8. He was constant in his Obedience. 9. He was faithful in his house as Moses was. 10. He sought the glory of his father in al he did. BUT now the main thing in the point is yet behind. QUEST. You will say, How should we walk as Christ walked, what did Christ? what was the life of Jesus Christ that we are to imitate? Answ. Now the example of Christ to set it out fully to you, it is a great work, red over the scripture and there you have the life of Christ set out, and what you see of Christ which you are capable of, that you ought to do. As for the general course of Christs life, you must walk as Christ did walk in the general course of your lives, look what kind of life Christ's was, that life must be yours, and I shal instance in some particulars. For the general course of life that Christ walked you must walk, and that may be presented to you in these things. First: Christ did account that the end why he was born, why he came into the World, was, That he might do the Will of his Father, and that he might witness unto the Truth. These the Scripture tells us are the two great ends that Christ did account his Life, for which he came into the World. I will show the Scriptures for these: In John 6. 38. saith he, I came down from Heaven, not to do my own Will, but the Will of him that sent me. Here is a pattern for you; Christ professeth, that he came down from Heaven, he came into the World; To what End? Not to do mine own Will, but that I might do the Will of him that sent me. Now do you▪ walk as Christ did? that is, Let every one possess his soul with this. Christ( you may say) cannot come down into the World, I but he came hither into the world that he might do the will of him that sent him: So God hath sent you into the world, to what end? Do you think it was only that you might do your own will, and make provision for the flesh, and to sport, and play, and get estates? Is this the End why God hath sent you into the world? Was it not that you might do the will of him that sent you into the world? Christ considered that the end why he came into the world, it was, that he might do the will of him that sent him. So it should be all your care, you should often think, Why came I hither? It was not long since I came into the world; for what End is it that God sent me into the world? If Christ saith, it was not to do his will, much less have you cause to think that it was to do your will. When at any time you have a temptation rising, of passion, frowardness, wilfulness, and stubbornness, Oh! that you would consider, Is this to walk as Christ walked? I am wilful now, and set upon my will; I but Christ professes he came into the world, not to do his own will, but to do the will of him that sent him: and is not this the end why God did sand me into the world, that I should do his will, and not mine own? And yet God knows, for the course of my life hitherto, I have lived as if God sent me into the world to do mine own will. Most people live as though they came into the world for no other end, but only that they might do their own will. I appeal unto you, What have you done almost all your lives but your own wils? if you hear any thing that is said, if you have not a will to it, it prevails with no body at al, Men and Women pray indeed sometimes, that the will of God may be done in earth as it is in Heaven, but they take Gods name in vain, for the truth is, they must have their wils done, Oh, consider this you that are of wilful Spirits, you do not walk as Christ walked, for he professes he was born to that end, to do the will of him that sent him. And then another end that he was born to, was to bear witness unto the truth, the Scripture for this you have in John 18. 37. To this end was I born, and for this Cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. When Christ was in danger of his life, he witnessed unto the truth, he professes, that when he was in the greatest danger, when he was before Pilate, then saith he, To this end was I born,& for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Thus we should walk as Christ walked, we should account it the end of our lives, that we should bear witness unto the truth. Doth God call us at any time, to witness to his truth? it may be we are like to suffer in it, what if it be so? we must walk as Christ walked. Shall we for fear of danger betray the truth of God, or deny the truth of God? Thou must walk as Christ walked, if thou be called forth in any dangerous times, and not only then, but in the whole course of thy life, when thou comest amongst wicked Company, if so be you have there some among you who will be railing at the ways of God, and the Saints of God, and the Ordinances of God, what will you be ashamed of Christ at such a time as this? Think on this Text, I must walk as Christ walked, and Christ professes that the end why he came into the world was, that he might bear witness unto the truth: So thou shouldst think at any time when thou art in any company where the truth of God is spoken against, Why should I be ashamed, I was born for this end to bear witness unto the truth. And so thou shouldst do in thine actions, al the actions of thy life should hold forth a bearing witness unto the truth of God, thou shouldst bear witness unto every way of God in the whole course of thy life. Where are the Men and Women that led such lives, as their lives are a bearing witness unto the truths of Christ? That is the first thing, we should consider the end why we were born as Christ did. Secondly: We must walk as Christ walked( I will speak but only of the general course of the life of Christ) we must do the will of our Father readily and cheerfully, do the will of God, I say, readily, and with cheerfulness, for so Christ did in Psalm 40. which is a clear prophesy of Christ, and applied to him in the new Testament, verse 7. and 8. Then said I, Lo, I come, in the volume of thy Book it is written of me, I delight to do thy will O my God, yea, thy Law is within my heart. Lo, I come, I come readily as soon as ever God did but intimate his will to him, Lo, I come, and I delight to do thy will, O! my God. Thus it should be with Christians, he that saith he abideth in him ought himself also to walk as he walked, that is, as soon as ever they have the will of God revealed to them, presently to answer, Lo, I come, there should not be a great deal of stir, to hale and pull Men and Women on to the ways of obedience to do them, because they dare not do otherwise, there is a great deal a do first to convince them, and then to get up to their conviction, but lo, saith Christ, I come, and I delight to do thy will, O! my God, yea, thy Law is within my▪ heart. Thus it should be concerning us: And ye know what is said concerning Christ, In John. 4. 34. Jesus saith, my meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work. It is my meat and drink, never did any man take more pleasure in his meat when he is a hungry, then I do to do the will of my father, he wanted meat at that time, and yet was not hungry, and he told them he had meat to eat that they knew not of What was his meate? it was to seek the conversion of a poor woman, that was the meate that they knew not of. Now is it so with you? Examine as you go along, do you walk as Christ walked? are al the duties of obedience the delight of your soul, the joy of your heart? is it your meat and drink? set Christ before you, and never think you do as Christ did, till you come up to this. Thirdly▪ Christ was in his whole course, very diligent in the work that the Lord set him about. You know the scripture saith, that he went up and down doing good. In Math. 9. 35. There Christ went about into villages, several cities and villages, preaching the Gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness, and every disease among the people, he went up and down, as in Luk, 2. vers. 19. When the mother of Christ and his friends sought for him, and he had been in the Temple disputing with the Doctors, what saith he to them? do not you know that I must be about my fathers business? and he was but twelve yeares old. Here is an example for young ones, he dedicated his young years to the service ●f God when he was but twelve years old. What saith he? do you not know that I must be about my Fathers business? he was diligent from his youth, when he was but twelve yeares old and therefore you young ones, you must not look what your play fellows, do, but you must look at the example of Jesus Christ if you go to heaven, you must be saved by Jesus Christ, now Jesus Christ when he was but twelve yeares old, he was questioning and asking the meaning of scripture, yea, and the scripture saith, he grew up into favour with God and man, So that you must be diligent in the work of the Lord, take heed of stuggishness at any such time, set the example of Christ before you, you must walk as Christ walked. Fourthly, Christ, you know how spiritual he was in al his conversation, how heavenly and spiritual he was. If you red the story of his life, you shal find, that he would take every advantage, when he spake of outward things, to raise them to spiritual meditations; made use of the seed of the ground, compared it to the word of God that was sown, and the mustard seed to the kingdom of Heaven, and when he looked upon the Sky, the redness of that in the night, made use of that in the spiritual way. And indeed his teachings were by way of parable, raising spiritual meditations from outward things. And in Luke 14. 15. When he was bidden to meat, he was in spiritual communication then, he had not such vile communication as you have at meales, at feasts, when you are at a feast, what talk is there amongst you? nothing at al but either of the good meat you have, the good cheer, or else some vile and wicked communication; but you should have this thought when you are at table, I must walk as Christ walked, how did Christ behave himself when he was at meat? he was then in spiritual communication, So should I. Fiftly we must walk as Christ walked, that is, unblamably, we must be unblameable in our convers●●on, for so Christ was, In John 8. 46. Which of you can convince me of sin? You will say▪ we cannot say so, it is impossible we should say so, I but you must set him before you by way of example, and it is not so difficult as you think: indeed, to walk so before your neighbors, as to convince them of sin, that may be; But it is not not so impossible a thing for men to walk so as no man can charge them of sin, perhaps one that lives in a family with them may charge them with something, but those that live at a distance to charge them, a man, I say, may walk as no man can charge him with sin. Zachary, and Elizabeth walked so that none could accuse them of sin. Indeed none of the Saints can walk so, but the wicked may accuse them of sin, but who can convince them of sin? we should walk so as we may be able to challenge al that are about us; It is true, there are such and such slanders, you may hear such and such reproaches but let that man or woman come before me, that can convince me of sin, the Saints should walk so, that none should convince them of sin. It is a shane for one that saith he hath part in Christ, to walk so, as if you converse with him an hour in a day, you may see the distemper of his heart break out. Oh, this is a shane, Christ walked unblamably, this is a beautiful life indeed when Christians walk before those with whom they have to do unblamably, and make the ways of religion to be so lovely as none shal be able to find fault with them, as they could not with Daniel( you know) they did prie into Daniel, to see what fault they could find in him, but they could find no other fault but that he was too strict: so that fault let them find with us, but we should walk so as they should not charge us with evil. Oh! there is a great deal of power in such a conversation to convince others, the lives of Christians ought to be convincing lives, to convince them that sin, such as that they should not convince us of any sin at al. Indeed, ●● Christians could have walked so as that men could not have convinced them of sin, religion had been more honoured then it is at this day. sixthly. We must walk as Christ walked, make him our pattern and example in universality of obedience. In Math. 3. 5. It becomes us to fulfil al righteousness. Christ did fulful al righteousness, there was no part of the law that Christ did not fulful, he was obedient in every thing. Object. You will say, we cannot do so, it is not possible for us to fulfil al righteousness. I but we must make Christ our pattern in that, thereis not the weakest Christian that is, but aims at universal obedience, and it is a greater argument of truth of grace, though there be many weaknesses, to aim at universal obedience then to be able to do great things for God, and yet take liberty in any one thing. If thou wast able to do a thousand times more then ever thou didst, and yet didst allow thyself in any one sin, I say, thou hast no such argument of the sincerity of thy heart, as the weakest Christian in the world, that faileth more then thou failest, and yet hath an aim at universal obedience, and gives not way to himself in any one sin. It is true, we are al sinners, I but mark, a Godly man though never so weak, yet he allows himself in no sin, but his scope and aim is at universal obedience, and this is to walk as Christ walked, to do al righteous acts, I do such and such a righteous act, I, but is there any righteous act that I have not done? I must do that too. Seventhly, Christ was perfect in his way, So should we. In 1 Pet. 1. 15. Be ye holy in al manner of conversation, because it is written, be ye holy, For I am holy, speaking of Christ, we must be holy as Christ was holy, in al manner of Conversation, that is, labour for a perfection of holiness. He is called the holy one of God, and according to the scripture forenamed, he that hath this hope, purgeth himself even as he is pure, even as Jesus Christ is pure. For this perfection, you may take that one scripture more to it, because it seems hard. In 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved; Let us cleanse ourselves from al filthiness of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God. We must aim at perfection in degrees, as well as parts, look to the top of holiness. Eightly, We must be constant in obedience, he was constant in obedience, though there was many difficulties in his way, he went through them al constantly. And for that you have a most excellent place, that indeed holds forth the pattern of Christ to us in his constancy of obedience, and that is, In Heb. 12. 1. Wherefore, seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us. Mark, what an example is here, that we must lay aside every weight, any thing that hinders us in our Christian race, and the sin that doth so easily beset us, labour against the inb●ed corruption of our hearts, and run the race that is set before us. Our life must be as a race, and we must run in it, and though we meet with many difficulties, and it be a hard race, yet we must run and hold out, why so? what means is to be used to strengthen our hearts? at vers. 2. Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith, who for the Joy that was set before him, endured the across, despising the shane, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God. As if he should say, you Christians are in your Christian conversation now walking in the ways of holiness, and you are running the race that leads to eternal life, but you meet with many difficulties, many troubles, many hard things in the way, But yet be not faint, go on, run and never leave till you come to the end of the race, Why? Looking unto Jesus the Author and Finisher of your Faith, who for the joy that was set before him, endured the across, despising the shane. As if he should say, Christ had a harder work to go through than ever you had, Christ met with more difficulties than ever you did, and yet he went through and continued to the end, and now is set down at the Throne of the Majesty of God in Glory. And so do you, when you meet with any discouragement, consider of the joy that is set before you, and pass through the trouble and difficulties that you meet withall, pass through them all. And then in John 17. when Christ was to go out of the world, a little before he went out of the world verse 4. saith he there, Father, I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do. Oh, this is a blessed comfort that will be to al the people of God, if they shal be able to say when they are going out of the world, Father I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do. Now thou mayst count thy end comfortable indeed, thou maiest look upon the face of death with joy, when thou feelest thy body grow weaker and weaker, and the physician tells thee there is little hope of thee, and thou lookest death in the face, then if thou canst say, Father I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do; thou didst sand me into the world for such and such a work, and in thy strength I set about such and such things, and though there was many weaknesses and failings in my doing of them, yet through thy mercy I have finished that work which thou gavest me to do. And here is another note by the way, it is a gift, Gods work is a Gift; so that we are to look upon Gods work, not as a thing we are bound to only, but as a Gift, as a privilege, and so to apply ourselves to the work, as that we may say, Lord, I have finished the work thou gavest me to do. I would appeal unto many of you, that through the providence of God are before the Lord, suppose now were the end of your time, let every man and woman take this Scripture, and lay it upon his and her own heart. Suppose I were to die, and the end of my time was come, could I be able to say, Father, I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do in this world, the work is finished through thy mercy, through thy Grace, I have finished the work as Paul did, so, I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the Faith, henceforth is laid up for me a Crown of life; truly, if the end of many of your times should come, I fear least many of your consciences, if God should be pleased to awaken them, would tel you, that you are to begin the work that God called you into the world to do. Many of you it may be have lived twenty, forty, fifty years, and you have done your own works, and finished them, but as for the work that God gave you to do, I fear it may be said, that you are to begin that work. Oh, remember this likewise, you that are beginning in the ways of profession, God is beginning to set your hearts towards Christ and blessed be God for these beginnings, I but go on, go on in these good ways, that you may in the end be able to say, as Christ, I have finished the work thou gavest me to do. Ninthly: Christ was faithful in his house as Moses was, he was THE Faithful High Priest. So should we walk as he walked, in being faithful to God, and faithful to men. Tenthly: Christ sought the Glory of his Father in all that he did, in John 17. 4. says Christ to his Father, I have Glorified thee on the Earth. So should we walk as he walked in this also, aiming at the Glory of God in every thing that we do. CHAP. LXXXIII Two Uses of the former Point. 1. Of Humiliation. 2. to be strict in our lives. APPLICATION NOW from hence then we may learn these two particular Uses. First: That there is a great deal of cause of humility in the best Christians al the daies of their lives, let Men and Women walk as well as they can, yet they have cause to be humbled, Why? Because they come so short of their pattern, the best of Saints, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and al the Saints, Martyrs, Apostles, and al the Godly that ever were, I say they have cause to be humbled as long as they live, because they come not only short of the rule, but short of their pattern. When many shal think they have gotten to some good degree of Godliness, and now they may stand at a stay, Oh, they never knew( it is to be feared) what Godliness was, thou must walk as Christ did, Hast thou got to thy pattern? to thy example? if not, thou hast cause of humility as long as thou livest, thou shouldst be humble for thy sin, Oh, it is a vile Doctrine to take off people from being humbled for their sins, thou shouldst be humbled al the daies of thy life to think of this, that thou comest so short of thy pattern. APPLICATION II. Secondly: Another Use that we should learn is this, that then certainly we cannot be too strict in our lives; if these things be so, What shal become of those Men and Women that we may think be too strict, and too precise What needs there be such a stir, cannot people be content to live quietly like their Neighbors, and do as their Neighbors and other men do? Oh, thou carnal man, the Scripture requires of thee that thou shouldst walk as Christ walked, thou shouldst labour to get up to the example of Jesus Christ, and to purge thyself, even as Christ is pure, thou must make him to be thy pattern, and dost thou cry out of preciseness and strictness, surely, thou knowest not the way of God, it is a sign God, hath not revealed himself to thee, that thou hast no lot nor portion in the ways of Godliness, or the privilege of the Saints, that thou shouldst have such a thought in thy heart, especially, if thou shouldst express it with thy mouth, that there can be too much strictness. Methinks this point may help against that temptation, what need we be so strict, and cannot we be content to do as others do, and as our Neighbors do? and know afterwards thou wilt have no excuse, if God shal call thee to account, and ask thee, Why didst thou do no more? if thou shouldst answer, Lord, I did as many others did, as my Neighbors did, yea, and I did more than some others, Would not Christ stop thy mouth with this? Did not you live in such a place, where you had such a Sermon preached to you, that you ought to walk as Christ walked, to set the example of Christ before you? Did not you hear, that my Son was to be your pattern? Oh! how will Men and Womens mouths be stopped another day? and therefore I beseech you, let this Text sink into your hearts, and make Christ the pattern of your lives, when you are about any thing in the world or at home, think, Would Jesus Christ do thus as I do? would Jesus Christ behave himself in my Family as I do? amongst my Neighbors as I do? if Jesus Christ was to be in trading, would he walk as I do? This would be a mighty help, when I am about any thing, let me consider, Do I think in my Conscience Jesus Christ would do thus? It may be many of you are weak in parts, and not able to find out a scripture for every thing, that should be the rule of al your actions, well but here is a rule that will help you, you that are weakest, you are weak, and cannot red the scripture, and understand things as you desire, yet make use of this one ●ule in your conversation, when you are in a straight, and do not know what to do, think with yourselves, what would Jesus Christ do in such a case if he were alive upon the earth? how would Christ demean himself? Many a man will cry out, doth the scripture require such and such things of us? and will cavil against it, but this will answer such: perhaps we could show you scripture, but I put this to you and let your conscience answer, what would Jesus Christ do if he was about such an action as you are? ask your consciences what he did, and then remember this text that I have been upon and remember that Christ saith that he that abideth in him must walk as he walked. And thus I have done with the General course of the life of Christ. CHAP. LXXXIV. Christ our Pattern in Particular. I. In the bowels of mercy, II. In love to his Enemies. NOw for the particulars of Christs walking, that we should walk as he walked, if I should give liberty to enter upon particulars, as the scripture holds it forth I may almost say of them as I remember John saith in another case, If al the things that Jesus Christ said and did were written, the whole world were not able to contain the books: and so if we should name every particular that Christ hath done for our pattern, it would not be whole days, nor nights, nor weeks, nor yeares, that would serve to name them al. I will name only two or three things. I. As first, The bowels of Christs mercy should be our imitation as God is set forth to be our pattern, we must be merciful as our Father is merciful, So Christ should be our pattern. In Math. 15. 32. There is the bowels of mercy in Jesus Christ set forth as a pattern. Then Jesus calls his disciples unto him, and saith, I have compassion on the multitude, because they have continued with me now three days and have nothing to eat, and I will not sand them away fasting least they faint in the way. He saw a multitude, and I have compassion on them, saith he. And in Luke 19. 41. There he had compassion upon their bodies, although Christ was poor enough in the world, and they had little enough to eat of themselves, yet Christ had compassion on their bodies, for when Christ came near to Jerusalem, he fel a weeping, he wept out of compassion for the miseries that were like to come upon Jerusalem. But especially consider the love that Christ had to souls, and in that we should imitate Christ, I will give you but one notable and famous scripture, that shows the abundance of Compassion that Christ hath to souls, and that is, in Luke, 6. 12. There you shal have the story about Christs sending forth his Apostles to preach. It came to pass in those dayes, that he went out into a mountain to pray and continued al night in prayer to God. What is the matter that Christ went out to pray and continued al night in prayer to God? What is the occasion? what was to do the next day that Christ would continue al night together in prayer? mark the next words that follow in vers. 13. And when it was day, he called to him his disciples, and of them he choose twelve whom also he name Apostles. The work that he was to do the next day was to choose Apostles, to provide ministers for his Church to go and preach the Gospel unto poor people for the saving of their souls, that was the work that he was to do the next day; and as a preparation to this work, for the choice of his disciples, to sand them to preach for the conversion of souls, Jesus Christ Spent al the night in prayer. We are taught by this example, to have a high esteem of the ministers of God, howsoever many people little regard the preaching of the Gospel, and the ministry of the word, esteeming of it as a matter that might be spared, but you see by the example of Christ, what a high esteem there is to be had o the ministry of the word; for when Christ was to appoint ministers to preach,& those that are ministers of the gospel succeed them in the work, though they do not succeed them in matter of Apostleship, yet in matter of dispensation of the word and sacraments they succeed them. Now Christ looks upon it as a matter of great concernment, insomuch, that he spent al the night in prayer before he choose his Apostles to go to preach the word. And indeed never should any minister be choose, but there should be much prayer before, never should a people choose a minister, but they should meet together and pray much, and those ministers do most good, that come with much prayer, we are taught by Christ thus to do. And this likewise is an example for us that upon extraordinary occasion, we should be long in prayer. Whereas some will instance the shortness of the prayer that Christ teacheth, whenas that is but a pattern, the several heads of prayer; the ten commandements are but short but they contain many hundreds of duties, and so that which we call the Lords prayer, contains abundance of other things, and when we pray that which is contained in that prayer, and enlarge it, then we do pray according to Christs direction in that. But now here you have the example of Christ praying a whole night together, so that upon extraordinary occasions, and especially, when it concerns the good of souls, we are commanded to continue long in prayer, al night and day in prayer. Secondly, In that notable example of Christ, we must walk as he walked in love unto our enemies, Christ is propounded as a notable example of that, and that is, in Math. 5. 44. Christ there loves his enemies, and it is the doctrine that Christ teacheth to love our enemies. And his example is set forth especially in Luke, 23. 34. For there when they crucified him, he prays, Lord, forgive them, for they know not what they do. CHAP. LXXXV. What kind of Pattern Christ is, opened in nine particulars. 1. The greatness of Christ. 2. The wisdom of Christ. 3. He is good. 4. Christ is in relation to us. 5. He is Lovely. 6. We depend upon Christ, and expect much from him. 7. Christ is very successful in his words. 8. The example of Christ is propounded to us to follow. 9. All Christians follow him, which hath certain Limitations. BUt now to come to the next particular, What kind of pattern Christ is, to show, what a kind of pattern Christ is that we should follow, and the reason of it, and so to set Christs pattern against al other patterns whatsoever, Christ is the pattern for our walking. There are several considerations in the examples that men follow, that makes example to be every powerful to draw people after it, there are nine sorts of examples, that are the most strong and potent examples in the world. Now what consideration there is in either of those, we shal find it fully in Christ, to follow him, and make him to be our example. First, The example of great men, is a very powerful example, Regum Exemplum, according to the example of the King, men go according to the example of Rich men, and noble men, every one suit themselves according to the example of great ones, as I told you before of the example of Alexander, holding his neck somewhat aside; and so great ones, though their example be never so ill, yet people will follow them. Now will the example of great ones so prevail, what then should the example of Jesus Christ that is God blessed for ever, who thought it no robbery to be equal with the father, who is the great King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, the great King of his Church, yea, the King of nations too, Jesus Christ that is above al? if we would took at greatness take the example of Jesus Christ. Secondly, The example of wise men, that useth to be followed, if men be learned men, and wise men, we think it good to follow their example, doth not such a one do so, that is an understanding man, and a wise man, and he knows what he doth? surely if the examples of wise men, are to be followed, then the example of Jesus Christ who is the wisdom of the father. And it is said in Colo. 2. 3. In him dwells the fullness of the God-head bodily, And in whom are hide al the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. Surely, if he have the treasures of al wisdom and knowledge, and the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily in him, then surely his example is to be followed. Thirdly, The example of Good men, that useth to be followed much, there is a great deal of power in the example of those that we account to be good men. In Prov, 2. 20. That thou mayest walk in the ways of good men, and keep the path of the righteous. Their example is very prevalent and powerful with men. Now is their example good? then what should the example of Jesus Christ be? for he is the righteous one of God, the holy one of God, Jesus Christ in his beginning was holy indeed he was holy from the very womb, and in his life holy, and therefore his example is to be mighty prevalent. Fourthly, The examples of such as have relation to us, doth mightily prevail, as the example of parents to their Children, the example of one brother to another, the example of kindred, a child will be ready to follow the example of his Father, my father did so, will he say, if a child hear his father swear, he will learn to swear, if he hear his father scorn at good people, he will do so, if he sees his father grow profane, he will do so too. The examples of such as have relation to us are very prevalent, now Jesus Christ is in relation to us, for he is called, The everlasting Father, he is our father, and he is our brother, and we are brethren together with Christ, he is our elder brother, he is our kinsman, we are in the nearest relation to Jesus Christ, and therefore we are to follow his pattern and example. Fifthly, The example of those that we love, doth use to prevail much, if there be any man that we love much, we shal be ready to do as he doth, and follow his example, love is a mighty drawing argument, the example of such as are our dearest friends we will follow, we will not follow the example of our enemies. Now who do we profess more love unto then unto Jesus Christ? it is he that should be more lovely to us then al the world, more then ten thousand, so the scripture saith, in Cant. 5. 16. He is altogether Lovely, and therefore his example is to be followed. Sixthly, The examples of such as we depend much upon, and expect to receive much good from, doth much prevail if we have dependence upon any men, we will svit ourselves much to them, because we expect much from them. Now upon whom do we depend so much, from whom do we expect so much as from Jesus Christ? It is he that is to be our judge, to cast our eternal estates, it is he to whom al things in the world is committed by the father, it is he that is our Saviour, our Redeemer, and it is he that procures the pardon of our sins, and therefore his example should prevail more then any example whatsoever. Seventhly, Such kind of men as are successful in their ways, we use to follow their example much, when they prosper much in what they undertake, their example is made commonly as a pattern: Now the good pleasure of the Lord did prosper in the hand of Christ. In Esay. 50. and the last. Christ hath gone through the greatest works that ever was, and is now set down at the right hand of the father in glory, and therefore his example is to be followed above al others. Eightly, The example of such as are propounded to us by others, that we are taught to follow, that are,( I say) propounded to us as examples by others, that we are taught from our child-hood to follow; if it be an example that we see ourselves, we are ready to follow that but an example that we are taught to follow that is propounded to us as a rule to our lives, that we will follow much more. If the Father saith to the Child, look to such a one, and see what he doth, and follow his Example, this prevails much; Now the Example of Iesus Christ is propounded to us by God, take in that these considerations. First That it was one special end why God did sand his Son into the world, that he might be the pattern of holiness unto the world, and it was such an end, that those that are Socinians it is one of their tenants, they say, Christ did not die to ransom us, to redeem us, but to be an example to us, and Christ did not die to fulfil the law for us, but to be an example to us, but now they wrong us and Christ too to affirm that he was only so, but surely it was one end why God did sand his Son into the World, that he might be a pattern to al the world of holiness, the Lord saw that his word was not enough, mans heart was so wicked, that it was not enough for him to command men to be holy, and give them rules of holiness, but saith he, together with my word, and my Command, I will sand my Son into the world, and he shal be the great pattern to men to walk by, now this is the end that God sent him into the world. Yea, and Secondly: It is the special reason why the Holy Ghost did so inspire the Pen-men of Scripture, to indite by them the life of Jesus Christ, Why is it that we find the life of Jesus Christ, so punctually set forth in Holy Scripture▪ by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, in making use of the Pen-men of Scripture to indite his life? it is that it might be a pattern and example to us. Ninthly: The examples of those that we find others do follow, is very prevalent, when we see an example and we see a great many to follow that example, when the most men go in a way, the way that most men do follow, that is an example that is mighty prevalent with us. Object. I but you will say, This seems to fail here, the example of Christ, most men do not follow, that hinders many from following it. Answ. Therefore for that. If not most, yet multitudes do follow that, a great many do follow the example of Jesus Christ, all the patriarches before Christ, did follow what was revealed should be of Christ; and the Prophets, and the Apostles, and Martyrs, all that were after Christ, did set the very life of Christ before them as a pattern, the Apostles, and Martyrs, and al the Saints, they followed the example of Jesus Christ, and therefore, Is it not prevalent? I but you will say; the multitude, and the most people of the world do not. Truly we might almost venture upon this, Are you willing to follow, to do that that most people do, such an example that most people in the world do follow? I, you will say, that we should think were well and safe, now it might be made out, that according to this rule, you are bound to follow Jesus Christ, only taking it with such a limitation, as any wise man in the world would grant, as thus, I would put it upon the most people in the world, to do as most do that knows Christ. Remember, First: We will not take those that never knew him, but the most that knew Christ. But you will say, we will take them. well then take those that are the most understanding, that are enlightened and that know Jesus Christ. And take it, Secondly, with this limitation, that any wise man would grant, and that is this, that look what they do when they are in their best mood, when they are best to judge, as now upon their sick beds, and upon their death beds, when they are most fit to judge what is best to be done, and then we may venture, do but put in these two ingredients, these two considerations, and then we may venture to do as the most do. That is, take men that are but understanding, and enlightened, though they be not Godly, you will not take the rout of people that know not what they do, take but the men that have but understanding. You will say, if you take the learnedst men, we know what they do, I but then take the other ingredient, take these understanding men when they are best able to judge, that is upon their sick beds,& death beds, when they judge impartially, when they are in the best mood, and then you will follow the mo●t. For I verily believe, the best understanding men, though they have not Grace, yet upon their sick beds, and death beds, when they are in their best mood, and fittest to judge, they do approve of the ways of Godliness, and they do wish that they had gone in those ways. Now will not any wise man, that would make this a rule to follow, he would choose the most understanding men, and then he would choose them out when they are in their best fit, and best mood, I say, choose but out the most understanding men, and take them upon their sick beds, and death beds, and the most men do approve of the ways of Jesus Christ, and therefore his example is to be followed. Thus you have the several considerations, of what there is in any Example that may make it prevalent, and we find it to be in Jesus Christ, now then let us make him to be our Pattern. CHAP. LXXXVI. Further Reasons why we should mak● Christ our Pattern; as. 1. Christ is the best Example. 2. The most honourable Example. 3. He is the most safe Example. 4. He is the most unerring Example. 5. In following of Christ we follow the Father. FUrther Reasons that will follow from this, that Christ should be our Pattern are. First Christ is the best Example to follow, and it is our wisdom not to look at examples that are below us, but at examples that are above us. It is that that nourisheth many people in security, and makes them go on in such a dull and dead way in the profession of Religion, because they look at the examples that are below, whereas we ought to look at examples that are above us, not to please ourselves in this, that we do more than others do that are beneath us. But to think, Are there not some that do more than we, that are above us? we are to set before us the highest example, Jesus Christ did so. Secondly: Jesus Christ is the most honourable example, it is an honourable thing to follow the example of Jesus Christ. Thirdly, His example is the most safe example, there is no such safety in following any example, as to follow Jesus Christ, he is the authentic example, he is the primary Example, he is the first copy after which our copies are to be drawn. Follow me( saith Paul) as I follow Christ, in 1. Cor. 11. 1. He is the first copy, the authentic copy, and after his copy al other copies are to be drawn, so we are to follow his ex●mple. Fourthly, He is the most Unerring example, his example is without error; in the following of men there may be danger, yea, of good men, in following the example of men that come near to the truth( sometimes) there is the greatest danger in following their example, and indeed, those that are Godly are in the most danger by their Example, your Godly men, they are not in such danger by the example of the profane men of the world they do not at al move them, but make them loathe their ways, to see what their lives are, but the danger of Example, it is in men that come nearest to that that is right. As now, if a man be traveling, and there be divers ways there are some ways that are opposite to the place where he goes, there is no danger that he should mistake there, but there are other ways that he very near the way that he is to go, there is the danger that he should mistake there. Or if we were going in a way, and look at a dial, and we guess at the time, and perhaps the dial goes some what near, within half an hour of the time, suppose it were seven or eight a clock, and the dial were somewhat false, we might mistake, bu● now if a man be going along& sees a dial two or three hours from the time of the day, that would not deceive him, a dial that is but a little out of the way, may deceive him, but no dial would deceive him that were two or three hours out of the way, that should at eight a clock stand at twelve, that would not deceive him. So a man that makes profession of religion, if he see a man very profane, and ungodly, and very wicked, he cares not what he doth, he knows he is out of the way, but if he sees one that makes a profession as he doth, and walks very near the rule, this mans example may be very dangerous. As it is a notable example that we have in the 1. Kings 13. You may red the story at your leisure, where therewas a prophet that God did sand, to prophesy against the altar that Jeroboam set up, now the Lord commanded this prophet he should not eat bread at the place, nor stay at the place, and the King and his Courtiers came to him, and would have him to stay, and eat bread, but he looks upon them as russians and never cared what they said; but now there comes an old prophet, and professeth himself to be a prophet as well as he; and he comes to draw him out of the way,& he persuades the prophet to go and eat bead, but it cost him his life though, for a lion met him and slay him by the way as he went, because he was deceived. I quote it for this purpose, to show, that the example& council of profane ones are not very dangerous to those that make any profession of religion, but those that come near them, you must take heed of them, least they do deceive you, by drawing you out of the way, but now the example of Christ is unerring, you shal be sure that you cannot be deceived in walking as he walked. Fifthly, In following of him, we follow the father likewise, we follow the example of the father, for what work he hath seen the father do, that he hath done likewise, and we know, it will be our happiness in heaven to be like Jesus Christ: Surely then it must be our happiness here in this world to be as like Jesus Christ as possibly we can. In this 1. John, 3 2. There the Apostle sets out the happy estate of the Saints as they shal be in heaven, and makes it to be this, That we shal be like him, and see him as he is. Beloved now we are the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shal be, but we know when he shal appear, we shal be like him, for we shal see him as he is. That is our happiness in heaven, that we shal be like to Jesus Christ, now mark what he saith upon this, vers. 3. And every man that hath this hope in him, purifieth himself, How? Even as he is pure. Every one that hath this hope, that he shal be like his Jesus Christ, and that his happiness in heaven shal be to be like Jesus Christ, he doth now make Jesus Christ his pattern, to be pure as he is pure. Would you have an evidence to your souls that you shal hereafter in heaven be like to Jesus Christ? that your bodies shal be like his glorious body? and your souls shal be like to him? and that you shal in heaven follow the Lamb whither soever he goes? this is an evidence, if you have this hope, you shal purify yourselves even as he is pure, you shal make him to be your example. And indeed, that is the very reason why the holy Ghost doth draw the image of Jesus Christ in your hearts, it is, that you may have the Image of the li●e of Christ in your minds. What is the work of Grace in the Saints, but the work of the Holy Ghost drawing the image of Jesus Christ in their hearts. As the Limner draws the image of a man upon the table, So when the Holy Ghost Sanctifies your hearts, he comes to draw ●he image of Christ upon your hearts, that is the work of Sanctification. If you would know what Sanctification is, it is for the Holy Ghost to come and draw the image of Christ upon your hearts, as the p●●ter doth draw the image of a man, so the Holy Ghost sanctifying the heart, draws the image of Jesus Christ upon the heart, that look what grace is in Christ, there is the same grace answerable in you. Of his fullness we receive Grace for Grace, Grace answerable to Grace, that i●, as p●●nt to print, and as in a seal, or in a picture, there is limb for limb, so Sanctification is the drawing of the image of Christ in our hearts. Now if this be drawn in our hearts, what is it, but that we should show forth the life of Jesus Christ in our lives? And herein indeed, is the Glory of a Christian, a Christian should so live, as he may hold forth the image of Jesus Christ, that al that behold him may behold Jesus Christ in him, They may see that Jesus Christ lives in him. Thus we see we are to follow the example of Jesus Christ, and what a kind of example it is that Christ doth present unto us, to the end that we may walk as he walked. CHAP. LXXXVII. Use, 1. Christians ought to be an example to others. 2. Look upon the example of Christ above al others. NOw then, many Uses there might be made of this point, As that then those that are Godly, as Christ is an example to them, so they should be as an underexample( as it were) to others, Christ teacheth by his example, and so should the servants of Christ, teach by their example as an under-example. You see by what hath been said, that we cannot be too strict, if we make Christ an example, but I shal not meddle any more with that, only take in by way of use this. First, As Christ teacheth by example, and we must walk as he walked, so al that profess themselves to be Christs, they must walk so, as those under them may look upon them as an example for them to walk by. The truth is, al the world is lead by example, and therefore as Christ propounds himself as an example, so al the Saints should walk so, as they may be an example to al that they live by. It is true, they cannot be an authentic example as Christ was, but they are to be an under-example, at the second hand, they are to be examples. and above al, those that are teachers ought to be examples, those that are sent by Christ to Teach ought to be Examples, and this would let us into a great point, how al ministers, and such as would teach others, should labour to be examples of what they do teach. 1. Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth, but be thou an example of the believers, in word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity. Though a young man a young man must be an example to others. And so Titus, he is to be likewise an example, the Apostle doth propound Titus to be an example in Titus, 2. 7. In al things showing thyself a pattern of good works, in doctrine showing uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity. Thus teachers ought to be examples unto others. Yea, aged women, in Titus, 2. 3. are Propounded for examples. The aged women, likewise, that they be in behaviour as becomes holiness, not false accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things, that they may teach the young women to be sober. &c. That they may teach them in their lives as well as in any other way, they are to be examples to young ones. And so al Christians indeed, in 1. Thess. 1. 7. There the Thessalonians are propounded as an example. So that you were an example to al that believed in Macedonia and Achaia, in receiving of the word. The Thessalonians were an example, by their ready receiving the word, to al that believed in Macedonia, and Achaia, and this is an excellent example for towns and parishes, to be examples to al parishes round about them for their ready embracing the word, their ready embracing the word may be propounded as an example to al that live near them, yea, and to those that live far off too. It is said of the Romans, In Rom. 1. 8. that they were patterns to others. I thank God through Jesus Christ for you al, that your faith is spoken of through the whole world, Your faith is spoken of, thus you see the Thessalonians& Romans, are made an example to others to receive the word, Oh, it is a blessed thing, when it shal be said among others, that in the towns about and far off, what a mighty power hath the word in such a place? how hath it been embraced and respected, and how is Jesus Christ set up among them? What an honor is this to Jesus Christ and what an honor to them, when they shal be examples to al others of receiving the word? And so you have in Heb. 6. 12. There the Scripture sets forth the example of other Godly men, stil as far as they follow Christ. Be ye not slothful, but followers of them, who through faith and patience inherit the promises, it is a very notable text he se●s them before them to follow them. I, but you will say, they went in such ways as they suffered much, they were persecuted, and lost their estates, and may be were put in prison for those ways that they walked in, and shal we follow them that perhaps lost al their goods, and Lives and Liberties, and were so misused in the world? Shal we do as they did? Nay we will be wiser. Yes, saith the Apostle take them for an example that through faith and patience inherited the promises, they suffered much in the world, but what is the end of al? they inherit the promises, now they are in glory, you would be glad hereafter to be as they are, and to be where they are, now( saith he) do you follow them, but it is through faith and patience, you must be content to suffer somewhat, before you can inherit the promises. This point would require a large handling, how far the saints should be examples of others to hold forth the word of truth, indeed there is much good to be done by this, many times there may be much good done by this, when the preaching of the word hath not done them good, you may be a means to convert men and women by your example when they are not converted by the word. As the Apostle says concerning the believing wife, How dost thou know, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband? or how dost thou know, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife? A woman perhaps cannot get her husband to come to the preaching of the word to convert him that way, let her labour by her gracious and holy example to convince his conscience. Many men that have raged at the professors of Religion, yet when they have seen a constant, holy, sober, grave carriage of their wives, and loving and obedient to them, notwithstanding al their untowardness, at length they have been convinced in their consciences, surely they have been in the right way. And so children for the conversion of their parents, and servants of their masters, and brother of brother, and sister of sister; and therefore as Christ is propounded to us as an example, so we should be an example to al that we live by that they may bless God that ever they knew us. As there is no question, but there are many in heaven, that bless God that ever they saw the holy life of such a man or such a woman. And it concerns Ministers in a more eminent manner, they are to hold forth in their Lives what they preach in their doctrine, that so they may be a full witness: now you know a full witness must be two, so a Minister must witness by his doctrine and by his Life, that the Witnesses may both agree. You know when they brought witnesses against Christ they could not agree, when one saith one thing, and another saith another thing, and when the judge saith, what do you say? he saith quiter contrary to what the other said; this witness is not full: So when the Minister he preacheth one thing in the pulpit, well, but what doth his Life say? They do not agree, and so it never doth good, But then good is done in a place, when the witnesses agree, that is, when the doctrine in the pulpit, and their Lives and conversations agree And therefore the Devil labours what possibly he can, if he cannot prevail for Ministers to preach false doctrine, he will labour to prevail by their Lives, he will Libor to raise slanders, and present them to people, that they should think that he doth not Live according to his Doctrine. This is a great policy of the Devil, that when there are those among people that preach the word, and their Doctrine and their Lives is answerable, to raise aspersions that they do not live accordingly, but we will pass that. Only do you follow them as they follow Christ. Secondly, But now the main thing that I intended for this, and I will cut off al other things, and follow that a little, and conclude this Point with it, and that is, That if Christ be set as a Pattern and Example for us to follow, to walk as he walked, Hence then let us Learn to look upon the Example of Christ above al others, and let this out bid al other Examples whatsoever. You will say, you tel us that we must follow the Example of good men, we must not slight their Example; Yes, but still as in imitating Christ: it is a dangerous thing altogether to slight the Example of other men, let none abuse this Point and say, we must walk as Christ walked, and never do as men do. You know that place, In Proverbs, 2. 20. verse, You must walk in the path of good men, It is a mighty encouragement and strengthening of one, if you find that they do as Christ did, but especially when things are not clear, then certainly the example of Godly, Holy men should be of very great power, except you be sure that things be clear otherwise, then it should be nothing with you, but only a matter of grief, that other men that are so Godly should go another way, but if it be a matter of controversy, not so clear, you should suspect yourselves and be afraid lest you should mistake, you should call in question your confidence in matters of opinion and controversy, I say, if it be matter of controversy, do not run away with it presently, but if the example of others be otherwise, that are Godly, and holy men, you ought to go over things again and again, and be Jealous of your own Heart, and I will give you a Scripture for it. You know what the Apostle saith, in 1 Corinth. 11. There is a controversy about mens being covered or uncovered, but he makes this Conclusion. If any man seem to be contentious, and will stand wrangling at it, We have no such custom neither the Churches of God, Al the Churches of God go another way generally, and if men will wrangle, and be froward, and contentious, who can help it, but, as if he should say, you should have such reverence unto the Churches of God, that if the things be of mere controversy, and not clear to you, you should take heed what you do. And therefore, it is a mighty boldness for any to run presently away with a thing, and never so much as to make trial whether the Objection can be answered. Well, Certainly, this hath not been the way of Gods people, we have no such custom, neither the Church of God. Therefore this by way of caution in matters that are not clear, that are controversal, men should give so much to the examples of men, that they should be jealous of themselves. CHAP. LXXXVIII. Use 3. Follow not the Example of the world, considering. 1. That all men naturally are Enemies to God. 2. Often go against their own light. 3. They are filthy and ungodly. 4. It is a slighting of Christ. 5. Few walk in the right way. 6. To Follow the world is a sign of a Child of wrath. 7. The Mysteries of Godliness are above the reach of the World. 8. It is a sign of the want of the Fear of eternity. 9. Of a sleeping Conscience. 10. It is an argument against our Sins. 11. This Were to Learn the Example of Christ and the Saints. 12. It is against the excellency of a Christian. 13. There is a Necessity that such shall miscarry. 14. It is a crossing of thy prayer, Thy will be done in the Earth, &c. 15. It is a Sign of one whose Name is not Written in the Book of Life. THe next thing that I would follow, is, That if Christ be propounded as an Example to walk by, Oh then, how vile is it for men to walk after the Examples of the world and wicked men, whenas God hath propounded such a blessed Example to walk by, for men to Leave the Example of Jesus Christ, and to follow the Examples of wicked men. This very point doth manifest the extraordinary and dreadful guilt that you will bring upon yourselves by following the Example of any that are wicked: and know, that this Point and this Text that I have been upon, will certainly rise up in judgement against any that shal follow the example of any wicked men in the world against the Example of Jesus Christ. What a dishonour is this to God, when he shal sand his own Son to be a Pattern and example of holiness for us to walk by, that we should Leave that Pattern, and go to the Pattern of those wicked ones that you live among? Now then, to the end that you may make use of this Example of Christ, so as for ever to take away the strength of their Examples, do but take these Considerations: I have many to propound to you, to this end, that ye should not follow the Example of men, so as to draw you from the Example of Christ. Consideration, 1. First, Thou seest others do so, thou sayest thou seest others do so and so, now let this Consideration help thee. The Scripture tells us, That al men naturally, are most vile, Sinful, enemies to God both in their minds and in their Hearts, this the Scripture tells us, that al men in the world, in their natural estates, are enemies to God both in their minds and in their Hearts, surely, if al men be so naturally, we had need take heed of the Examples of men. What shal such a kind of men that are fallen from God, and are enemies to God, shal these be set up as an Example for our lives? This may be an answer to that temptation, that we should follow the Examples of the multitude, the generality of men to be an Example, the Scripture saith, that al men naturally are vile, Sinful, and enemies to God. Consideration▪ 2. Secondly, As al men are thus Naturally, so such is the wickedness of mans Heart, as very many, Yea, Most men that have parts, and understanding, and yet not converted, they go against their own light, I say men of understanding before their Conversion, do ordinarily go against their own light, here is an answer now to this temptation, shal I not do as others that are wise, and understanding, that are scholars, and Learned men? do not they know more then such and such? Grant they do so, but are you sure they think it so in their consciences? You will say, surely if they knew otherwise they would do otherwise, Oh! thou maiest mistake, didst thou see into the Bosoms and Consciences of Learned men, thou wouldest find in the night season, what flashes is in their consciences, that they go against their Light. You will say, why do they not return then? because there is that desperateness in the hearts of men, that though they be enlightened, and know in their consciences they ought to do otherwise, yet they will go on stil. Now wilt thou go on after their example? You will say, how is it possible that men should be so vild? Truly, if we knew the power of corruption we would not so much wonder at them, but I will give you one scripture for this. In Rom. 5. and the last. Who knowing the judgement of God, that they that commit such things are worthy of death, not only do the same but have pleasure in them that do them. They know the judgement of God, saith the text, and that they that do such things are worthy of death, and yet they do them, and have pleasure in them that do them, and can be merry when they come among their companions, and yet their consciences tel them that those that do such things are worthy of death. Surely thou hadst need to be careful of following their example, and answer that temptation when it comes, surely if they knew otherwise they would do otherwise, but how do I know, but that their consciences tells them that they ought to do otherwise? you see here, that they know the judgement of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death, and yet they not only do such things but have pleasure in them that do them. Consideration, 3. 3. What a vile and abominable thing is it for men to forsake the Holy Rule of the word that the Holy God hath set, And instead of the Holy Rule that God hath set up, to set up the Example of a vild wicked wretch, of one that is an enemy to God, of one whose Heart is unclean and filthy, to follow him, and neglect the Example of Jesus Christ. Oh, What horrible wickedness is this? What hast thou been guilty of that hast forsaken the Holy Rule of God, and the very Glass of Gods Holiness, and hast set up instead of, that the base Life of a wicked, Unclean, Filthy, ungodly man? Consideration, 4. 4. What slighting is it of the dreadful authority likewise, that there is in Gods word, at which thou shouldst tremble; that notwithstanding thou canst not but be convinced that such and such ways are against the word, yet thou shouldst rather follow what men do, then fear and tremble before the authority of the word of God, that word by which thy Soul and eternal estate must be cast, God must needs look with indignation upon Men and Women for such wickedness. What! Saith God, is there no more authority in my word at which you should tremble, that when the Example of a wicked Wretch comes, that he should have more power to prevail with you, then al the authority in my word? This is a slighting of the authority of Gods word. Consideration, 5. 5. Consider how the Scripture tells you clearly, That, there are but very few that find the way to eternal Life, and bids you, Strive to enter into the straite Gate, for straite is the Gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to Life and few there be that find it. Now then what impudence is this in mens Hearts, when the Holy Ghost shal tel us in such express words, that there are but very few that go in the way of eternal Life, and that most people go on in the broad way, and yet we shal venture to go in the way that most do? When this shal come to be pleaded to you at the day of judgement, Why did you go on in such and such ways? And you shal say, Lord, the most went that way, and the Lord shal answer, Did you never hear in my word, that the most went in the way of eternal Death, and that few went in the way of eternal Life, and yet would you go on? Oh! What strength is there in the Corruptions of mens Hearts, that they dare so boldly go against the express word of God? And for the Example of the multitude, that place is very remarkable that we should never follow the Example of the multitude, In Exodus, 23. 2. Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do Evil. Thou talkest of people going this way, and multitudes going this way, saith the Lord, thou shalt not follow a multitude to do Evil. Consideration, 6. 6. Another consideration that may help against the Example of men is this, That it is made in Scripture the sign of a man that is the Child of Wrath, In his Natural estate, and one in whom the Prince of the world( that is the Devil) doth reign, that goes according to the common course of the World, And that you have a clear Text for, In the 2 of Ephes. 2. In the first verse it is said, We were dead in trespasses and sins, wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the Prince of the power of the Air, the Spirit that worketh in the Children of disobedience. Among whom we had al our Conversation in time past, in the lusts of our Flesh, fulfilling the desires of the Flesh and of the mind, and were by Nature Children of Wrath even as others. Now here is an argument of one that is dead in sins, of one that walks according to the Prince of the power of the Air, the spirit that now worketh in the Children of disobedience, of one that is a Child of wrath, that doth walk according to the common course of the world. Thou dost( thou sayest) according as others do, thou goest according to the Example of others; thou dost hereby judge thyself to be a Child of wrath, for it is made a sign of one that is Dead in sins to do so. As you know the fish, when the Fishes are Dead, they are carried down with the stream, but while they have Life, they can swim this way or that way, so if indeed God did give thee a principle of Life, though the stream of the times, and the Examples of men go one way, yet thou art able to go another way, but being dead and having no Life, now thou goest according to the stream of the world. Consideration, 7. 7. Another Consideration against it is this, That the things of Godliness, and the way of eternal Life, they are Mysteries, and supernatural things, they are things that are above the reach of any man by Nature, and therefore men may not be made Examples in these things, because they are the deep and high things of God, they are mysteries, and supernatural, and above the reach of any man. As now, do you make a man the Example of the art of Navigation that was never instructed in the Ar●? You know it is a mystery, no man will follow the Example of other men in their Trade, that are not acquainted with the Mystery of their Trade, Trade is a Mystery; and so the way of Godliness is a Mystery, the way of eternal Life is supernatural, and therefore we must not follow the Example of men. I but you will say, though they be a Mystery, and supernatural, is it not likely that God will reveal them to such as are men of Parts, and abilities, and great scholars, rather then to such an ignorant poor Creature as I am. I Answer, No, The Scripture saith, that God will reveal them to those that are Babes. And God hath chosen the Foolish things of the World, to confounded the Wise, and the Weak things of the World to confounded the things that are mighty. And I beseech you consider this one Rule; as the things of eternal Life are supernatural, so the Lord doth not observe that proportion in revealing these things to men according to their parts, that is, that those that have most Parts, they shal have most of Christ revealed to them, and those that have less Parts, they shal have less of Christ revealed to them, but God is pleased to deny the revealing of himself to wise men, and reveals himself to Babes, and al to this end that we should follow the Example of God, and not of Men. Consideration, 8. 8. If thou followest the Example of other men, and Leavest the Example of Jesus Christ, surely, thou never hadst the fear of eternity falling upon thy Heart, darest thou venture thy eternal estate upon the ways and the Examples of any men upon the Earth? Though you would venture far upon some men, perhaps you dare venture your lives upon some men, I but, dare you venture your Souls? No, Except you see the Pattern of Christ together with their Pattern, though they be the best men in the world, if thou knewest the consequence of eternal Life, what it is, thou wouldst never venture thy eternal Life upon it. Now wilt thou venture thy everlasting estate upon any in the world? What! Art thou so much beholding to any in the parish, to any friend, or acquaintance, as to venture thy eternal estate upon them? Take heed of that. Consideration, 9. 9. Certainly, those that do such things, because they see others do the same things before them, they never had their Consciences Awakened, it is impossible for one that hath an Awakened Conscience to put off Conscience with such a flam as that is, if thy Conscience be Awakened, and tells thee thou hast the Infinite God to deal withal in al thy ways, what! Canst thou put off Conscience with the Example of such and such? no, Conscience tells thee thou hast to deal with the infinite and Eternal God, and therefore thou that art ready to put off thy Conscience with such things as that, I dare boldly say thy Conscience is a sleepy Conscience, thy Conscience is not enlightened. Consideration, 10. 10. That that should be the strongest argument against thy sins, thou makest the strongest argument for thy sins, thou sayest thou seest others before thee, and why should I be wiser then they? This is a mighty argument against thy sins that thou seest others do so: It is a mighty argument against sin upon these three considerations mainly. There are three Considerations that show, that the sight of others going on in sin, should be so far from encouraging of us, as to make us out of Love with sin the more. As thus, First The more he goes on in an Evil way, the worse is his way: as in foul ways, what is it that makes the high way to London so miry and dirty? It is because so many travail in that way: So it is in the way of sin, every way of sin is a miry way, now such and such go on in it, and thou wilt go on too, now the more there are that travail in a way, the more Miry and Dirty it is. If you come to a place near the city, and see it Miry and Dirty, you say, what is the reason this way is so Dirty? it is because so many have gone in the way. Now apply that to the way of sin, many go on in the way of sin, that is a Miry and filthy way, and wilt thou go on too? that can be no argument for thee to go on. Secondly, Thou sayest others go on in sin, they provoke God, and what! Wilt thou add to the provocation of God? Thou shouldst rather reason thus, what! Is God ●o much dishonoured by such, and shal I dishonour God too? It is just as it there were a common enemy that should come among you, I suppose if some of you should meet with some of the common enemy, that go up and down, and spoil, and plunder, and slaughter what they can, to destroy al that they come near, and one of them should be seen in the streets, and one comes and lays on him, and then another comes and he saith, let me have a stroke at him too: thus doth every one going on in the way of sin, they strike at God, and then there comes another and saith, let me have my blow, that is, let me do as he doth, the example of others sinning against God should make thee out of love with sin. Thirdly, The Examples of others in evil, should keep thee against it the rather upon this consideration, for if thou followest their Example, thou dost continue the succession of sin, in the world. There is one commits sin and thou followest him, now thou canst nor but think there is another that follows thee, and wouldst thou be the man and woman that should carry on the succession of sin in the world? Now these Considerations should forever prevail with us not to follow the Examples of Men, but to follow the Example of Jesus Christ. If thou wert to pled at the Day of judgement, wouldst thou pled the Examples of wicked men? What good would it do thee, to have such as thou hast followed to be set at the left hand, and the Lord to say, depart from me ye cursed into everlasting torment into hel? What good would it do thee to think I followed this mans Example? You dare not pled him as an Example at that day, and certainly it cannot be ease to you, but you willbe cursing of others that you have followed their example, and you will curse others for following your Example, I say, you will not only be cursing of others whose Example you have followed, but also cursing of those that have followed your Example, that you have been such Examples to, for that is certain, every man is in some measure guilty of al the sins that are committed by their Example, and therefore it should make us take heed how we give Example to others to sin, those whom thou wert Example to will curse thee, because they come to have their sins the greater, and what good will it be to thee then, when thou shalt be cursing of another in the place of torment for being example to thee? Consideration, 11. 11. How vild is this, that when thou hast such a cloud of witnesses, not only the Example of Christ, but of so many Saints, that thou wilt leave them. You will say, is their Example so much above others? I remember what one saith, as one pearl is worth ten thousand pebble stones so one godly man is worth more then ten thousand wicked men. So if thou hast but the example of one Godly man or Woman walking with God before thee, it is more then the Example of ten thousand others walking before thee, and they will be brought in to thy condemnation at the great day, and God will say, here is one that walked holily, why did not you walk after him, and therefore it is said in the Scripture, that the Saints shal judge the World. Consideration, 12. 12. It is the most against the true excellency of the Spirit of a Christian, almost of any thing that can be, there is scarce any thing can be said so much against the excellency of the Spirit of a Christian, as to be lead by the example of the Spirit of other men, if thou beest a Christian, thou hast the Spirit of Christ, the Holy Ghost Leads thee into al truth, and he is thy teacher, and for thee to debase thyself not to follow the Instruction of Christ, but to follow the Example of those wicked men before thee, what a vild thing is this, it is the part of a beast to follow those that go on before them in the herd, beasts will do so, but now a Christian should manifest that he hath the Spirit of Christ, and the Holy Ghost to be his teacher, to led him into al truth, and thereby he shal show the Generousness of his Spirit. Consideration, 13. 13. Besides, there is a necessity that men should miscarry that make mens Examples to be their rule, you will say, no, it may be we shal hit, yet if it should prove true that the thing that thou dost imitate in another man, should be good, yet if thou makest his Example a rule, thou mayest miscarry, thou mayest perish etternally, though thou shouldst follow the thing that is good, if thou hast no other rule but him, now it is a hundred to one but thou shalt miscarry in that Example. well, these considerations, with many others that might be name, if the Lord would be pleased to bring them into your remembrance, I hope they may help you against that great temptation of doing as others do. Oh! That it may prevail with you al, and make you to resolve against following other examples without Christ. Wherefore then, remember the text itself, and if you cannot remember other things, the very words of the Text will help you against the Temptation, of following others Example. He that abideth in him, ought himself also to walk, even as he walked, I must not walk as I see other men walk, nor do as they do, they do thus and thus, but did Jesus Christ do thus and thus? Let me study his Life therefore, and so hold forth the Life of Christ, and live so, as while I Live Christ may never die, As sometimes it is said of Children, that imitate their Parents, and are very like their Parents, we say, Well, this Child as long as he lives, his Parents will never be dead: So Christians following the Example of Christ, of them it may be said, truly, as long as they Live, Jesus Christ lives, and therefore red over the History of Jesus Christ, and set the Pattern of Jesus Christ before you, and as I remember I said, when I opened the things about Sanctification, the very Example of Jesus Christ is that which is a mighty thing to sanctify the Heart, when you red the History of Christ, red it not as a story, but as a Pattern, and examine your Hearts thereby, say to thy Soul, I red there examples of Christ, but what is there in my Heart of al this, and what have I expressed in al my Life of al this? Those Christians will be embraced of Christ another day, that have held forth his Example, Oh! How will Christ embrace them, that made it the care of their lives to hold forth the example of Christ. Consideration, 14. 14. Thou dost as others do, as the most do, as thou seest thy neighbors do, thou learnest of them rather than of Christ. Know further, that here in thou dost across thy Prayer, for thou prayedst often, that the will of God may be done in Earth, as it is done in Heaven, and in that Petition thou dost profess to God, that thou dost desire more to comform thy life to that that is the Life of Heaven, then to that that is the Life of the world. Now what a contradiction is there in that Petition? When a Man or Woman comes and prays to God, Oh Lord, that I were able to do thy will in Earth as it is done in Heaven, as the Angels do it in Heaven, yea, To do thy will as well as flesh and Blood is able, or as Christ himself did, and when thou hast done praying so, then thou dost labour to comform thy Life unto the lives of wicked and ungodly men that thou seest in this world, and thinkest that thou hast plea enough, that thou livest as the men of this world live who are wicked and ungodly, thou thinkest, if thou canst say, I do as such and such men do, as my Neighbors do, I do well enough, but remember, thou prayedst, that the will of God might be done on Earth, as it is done in Heaven, not as it is done by the ordinary and common sort of the world. Consideration, 15. 15. Again further, This also is as worthy our Consideration as any thing hath been delivered, to show the Evil that there is in following the example of others, but especially the Example of the multitude, That it is a sign of one whose name is not written in the Lamb's Book, in the Book of Life, that shal follow the example of the most, and ●●in other things so especially in a way of superstitious worshipping of God, those men that shal plead the examples of other men, either of Learned men, or great men, or the multitude, or their fore-Fathers, or Neighbors, or whosoever they be, for to worship God in a superstitious manner, I say, it argues, that such a one hath not his name written in the Book of Life. I will give you one Scripture for it, that may make you for ever following the examples of men, in Revel. 13. it is a clear Description of Antichrist, at verse, 1. I saw a Beast rising out of the Sea, having seven Heads, and ten Horns, That is clearly the Description of Antichrist. I shal not stand to open how it is the description of Antichrist, but I know no Orthodox divine that denies it is so. But now saith he, at verse, 7. It was given him to make War with the Saints, and to overcome them, and power was given him over all kindreds, and Tongues, and Nations. It is no Argument( you see by the way) that Papists have the right of it, if they should overcome in war, it was given to him to make war with the Saints. You will say, surely he shal be overthrown then. Nay, It is said, it was given unto him to make war with the Saints, and to overcome them, and power was given him, over al kindreds, and Tongues, and Nations. And here upon Papists make Universality to be the mark of the Church, because they have overcome so much in the world as they have done. Whereas the Scripture saith, that power was given unto him to make war with the Saints, and mark it, at verse, 8. And all that dwell upon the Earth shal Worship him, That is, the generality of al shal worship him, shal obey him, they shal be given unto superstition in their worship, but mark, al that dwell upon the Earth shal worship him, Whose Names are not written in the Book of Life, of the Lamb slain from the Foundation of the World. Al those, because he hath power over kindreds, and Nations, and al people. Then the generality o 〈…〉 l will worship him, those that have not their Names w●●tten in the Book of the Lamb, the Lambs Book that was slain from the Foundation of the world, they shal follow the generality of the multitude, and think they must serve God and worship God as they do. And saith the Text, In verse, 9. If any man have an Ear to hear, let him hear, If men will have an Ear to hear any thing in the world, let them hear this thing, let them know this, that God hath his time( from the infinite Wisdom that he hath to bring ends about that we know not of) to suffer Antichrist to prevail in the world, and when he doth prevail, the generality of the People will go their way, and then it will be a great plea, What! will not you do as others do? And as the most do? So that none shal be delivered from him, but such as are written in the Lambs Book; Therefore it is a sign that their Names are not written in the Lambs Book, that do as others do. We must therefore take heed of those Examples, and Learn of Christ and follow him. This is in the General. CHAP. LXXXIX. Doct. Meekness is that Evangelical Grace, wherein Christians ought to imitate Christ▪ Meekness explained, the several kinds of it, and the difference between them. Matth. 11. 29. For I am Meek, and Lowly in Heart. BUt now more Particularly. What things are we espec 〈…〉 to Learn of Christ? Here are two things propounded, MEEKNESS and LOWLINESS, now these two,( as I told you before) have reference unto Christ as a Teacher, and in that sense I have handled them, we must Learn to be Meek and Lowly as Christ was; So that now we are to come indeed to that which is a principal part of the Text, and doth nearly concern us. For the first, I am Meek, whence our Point is. DOCT. That Christians, according to the Example of Jesus Christ, ought to he Meek ones. Or thus, Meekness is that excellent virtue, that Evangelical Grace, that Christians ought to Imitate Jesus Christ in. That is our Point. First, we shal a little labour to open what this meekness is. Secondly, show that Christ was meek, open the meekness of Christ. Thirdly, To show how we should Learn this Meekness of Christ, to be Meek as Christ was. These be the three things in this Point. First, then for MEEKNESS, the word Meek, it is thought by the learned to come of the Hebrew word {αβγδ} and so the short Abr●viation, is {αβγδ} that signifies Attenuare, Humiliare, Deprimere▪ as it were to be humble, and because there is such a near agreement between humility and meekness, as it is joined together therefore the Hebrew word that signifies to be humble is to be made poor, the poor speak by entreaties, men that are rich are many times more surly, and passionate, but when men are brought to poverty, they are more meek and quiet: you are to be attenuated, or to be made lean, so the Hebrew word signifies, because men that are of lusty constitutions, whose veins are full of blood, and bones full of marrow, many times they have greater spirits, and are more passionate, then men that are more sickly and weak, and thence our Hebrew word Meek comes, to be humble, or poor, or attenuated, or made thin, or lean. And the other English word seems to be the same with {αβγδ}, and that signifies( coming of the word, Mellifluous) to be sweet as hony, So that a meek one, is one whose spirit is as sweet as Honey, and whose conversation is as sweet before men as Honey, from thence the word {αβγδ} comes. And the Latin hath two words that express it, the one is Mitis a meek man and that is thought to be taken from one, that though he be wronged, yet he is silent, and dumb, and though he suffers much, he makes little noise, he is quiet, and dumb, and saith nothing. The other latin word is, Mansuetus, to come to ones hand, to be accustomend to ones hand, as some kind of beasts, you know are unruly, and ready to strike you if so be you meddle with them, but other beasts, they will come to your hands; So a meek man, is not one that is of a boisterous and violent spirit against God, and against men, against their governors, against their neighbours, but those that come to ones hand, that God and man can bring to their hand, that is a meek man, a meek man is such a one. And the greek word that is here in the text {αβγδ}, it is Quasi {αβγδ}, as the Learned do interpret the words, that is, one that is a facile man Quasi facilem ac Placidum reddet. Such a one as doth render himself facile and pleasing to al that he doth converse with, that is the Propriety of the Greek word that is translated meek. I am meek, that is, I am one that is facile, that renders myself facile and pleasing to every one that I do converse withal, and such a one is a meek and an humble man or woman, the next Hebrew word that is used for meekness( as in Numb. 12. 3. where it is said of Moses, he was the meekest man upon the earth. 〈◇〉 It is, one that was afflicted, that doth depress himself& is willing to be low, that is a meek man, as contrary to pride, for stil the Hebrew takes the same word that signifies Humility, to signify Meekness, because in time of affliction, the heart is more down& low, less passionate and Unquiet. The french hath a word for this meekness, and it is a very eloquent expression, and signifieth one that comes from a generous family, as a fowl that is, debonair De Bono nido, as the eagle, and other generous fowles, so they make a meek man to be one that comes from a good family, noting that men that are well born, are of more gentle and quiet spirits, or at least should be so, more then of the common sort more then those that are of the dregs of the people, they are of more perverse spirits then men of good breeding. The french expresseth meekness by the word that signifies well bread, and indeed in that he is a true gentleman, that is, one that is a meek and gentle man, and it gives a little light into the thing, to show how several languages express this word and I am the more willing to open it thus, because I intend more largely to insist upon it in its contrary, of passion and Anger, and show what abundance of mischief comes for want of meekness. Thus for the word meekness. But then for the thing itself what meekness is, the Philosopher in his ethics, Book 4. Chapter 5. doth there describe meekness to be {αβγδ}; In ira Mediocritas the mean of Anger, it is this, the right and due allaying of the heat of the passion of anger, the bridle of Anger, that is meekness. Now the Philosopher in that place saith( for many of the Heathen would speak much of this virtue and commend it much) that the mean of anger wants a name and we rather( saith he) therefore refer the mean of Anger unto that that doth tend rather to the defect then otherwise, for so meekness is the allaying of and tends rather to the defect of anger then the exuberancy of anger, and the reason of this is, because men by nature are not so much given to the defect of Anger, as to the exuberancy and therefore the virtue doth rather consist in bringing men to the defect, to the lessening of anger then the exuberancy, whereas in other things virtue is between both the virtue is between the exuberancy and the defect, but this of meekness is rather inclined to the defect, because mans narure is more forward to the excess, and therefore he had need have a bridle to bring him a little towards the defect, and therefore the mean of anger in which the virtue lies, is rather upon the defect than the exuberancy. But now we are to know, that there is a two fold meekness, there is a natural meekness, and a spiritual meekness, only this text speaks of the second. Now the natural meekness that is two fold, either that which comes from the constitution of a mans body, from a mans complexion, some men are of such a complexion, that they are of more meek and quiet spirits than others, and others are more passionate and of froward spirits from their complexion, some are of flegmatick complexions, and others of choleric complexions. I shal show you presently the difference, between the meekness that comes from natural complexion, and that that comes from grace. But then the second natural meekness, is the meekness that comes from moral virtue▪ and that comes from the strength of reason, a man, what ever his complexion is, if he be a wise man, and hath the strength of reason, he is able in a great measure to subdue his passion, and bridle his anger, by the strength of reason, though his nature be inclined to it. But then there is a spiritual meekness, and that comes from the sanctifying Grace of the spirit of God, that is a spirit of meekness. But now that we may discern the difference▪ between this spiritual meekness, and that of nature, As now for the constitution of the body, there are many men and Women think they are of meek spirits, because they are not passionate as others, and they think they have this grace when it may come from the mere temper of their bodies, for the philosopher could say, Homo est Animal mansue●um, man is naturally a quiet creature of his body, though it is true, some men by the constitution of their bodies are more froward and passionate then others, yet the constitution of mens bodies in respect of the constitution of other creatures, is of a meeker temper, and mans body in respect of the constitution of it, is not so froward, nor given to that excess of passion, as other creatures are, as a dog by the constitution of his body is more forward to anger, and the Hare to fear, and the Lion to boldness, by the constitution of their bodies. But now mans body is not so much prove to excess of passion as other creatures, and therefore though it may be in some more then others, yet for the most part, the frowardness and passionateness of men and women, doth come rather from the distemper of their spirits, from the wickedness of their hearts, then the constitution of their bodies. Object. But you will say, It is different, some more some less, how shal we know that the meekness of spirit comes rather from the grace of God, then the constitution of the body? Answ. I Answer thus. When it comes from the constitution of their bodies. First, Then such a one is not more angry, Whether God is offended or himself, he is not more moved at one then the other, but this is not where the grace of meekness is, though such a man or woman is not moved much when himself is offended, yet let God be offended, then he shows his anger, he accounts it his duty to be angry when he sees God is offended. Moses, though he was the meekest man upon the earth, yet( though it was not according to the constitution of his body) when he saw God offended, when he saw the golden calf, he took the tables of ston, and threw them down upon the ground and broke them and he commands them to take their swords by their sides, and to slay every man his brother. Thus he was zealous for the Lord though he was the meekest man upon the earth; when meekness is right, it will show zeal for God. And so I might show you a great many examples of men that were very meek yet have shewed their zeal for God this way. I shal meet with examples in this kind hereafter and show the meekness and zealousness of Paul and of David, I shal go no further now, then Christ himself, and two of his disciples: Christ himself is said here to be meek, but there was a generation of men that he had always an aching tooth against, and his spirit rose continually against them when he saw them, and that was the scribes and Pharisees. And therefore you shal find in mat. 23. some eight feveral times, he there cries out, Wo to you Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, and in the 33. verse of that Chapter, when he is speaking unto them, he saith, O ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of Hell? Here was this meek man, now never any was so meek as Jesus Christ was, no not Moses himself, and yet saith he, wo to you, eight times in one Chapter. And ye serpents, and generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation of Hell? for indeed there was never such serpents, and such a generation of vipers, as they were, and Christs spirit was ever against that generation of people, the Scribes and Pharisees, they were the corrupt Superstitious Clergy of that age, I say, they were the superstitious clergy of that age, that were the greatest enemies to godliness, the greatest enemies to Christ, and the gospel, that any were, and therefore Christ spirit did ever more▪ rise against them, and indeed, there are no such men, of such vile spirits, as a corrupt clergy, no such enemies to the power of godliness, And thus Christ you see, he was of a meek spirit, and yet for al that in the cause of God, he was of a very zealous spirit. And so for John I will speak but of one more, of John, you know he was made up of love, and of sweetness, red his Epistles, red the Gospel, you shal find him made up of love, and of sweetness, and yet John was one that was called the Son of thunder, he was called the Boanerges, or Sonu of Thunder, Why? Because he was zealous for God and God reserved him a long time, therefore he lived as Jerom saith, Some sixty eight years after Christ, though he was the disciple of Christ, he lived sixty eight years after Christ, so that he could not be less then one hundred years old, that he might of purpose set himself against the hypocrisy of the times, and the enemies of Christ▪ he was one that had a mighty spirit for Jesus Christ, a Boanerges, a Son of thunder, and yet of the most sweet loving spirit in his own cause of any in the world; that is the first. Secondly, A second difference lies in this, one that is meek merely from his natural temper, though he be ordinarily of a quiet disposition, yet there is some lust or other that he hath, some haunt of evil and some lust in him, as every wicked man hath some or other, that if he be crossed, you shal find his heart rise in passion. So spiritual lust, take a man that is of a meek spirit naturally, yet if he be crossed but in something that his mind is set upon, some lust that his heart is set upon, you shal find him very froward, and very passionate. As in that of Rehoboam, in 2. Chron. 10. 11. Rehoboam was young, and tender hearted, he was a man of a very softly Spirit, a softly man, as we use to speak, such a man, or such a woman, is of a very softly disposition, Rehoboam was naturally of a very softly disposition, it seems his natural constitution was to be so, but when it comes to be tried concerning his government, when his heart was to be lifted up in authority, and his wicked counsellors, they come& show him his authority,& power, there you see what he saith to them that come to have their yoke to be made easier. My father chastised you w th whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions, and though Rehoboam was of a soft temper naturally, yet in that wherein his lust was to be satisfied, that he might not be crossed in his lust, he could quickly be persuaded to be very cruel. And so Saul, Saul seems to be of a very gentle temper, and so he shows himself at the beginning of his reign, when the children of Belial said, How shal this man save us? the text saith, Saul held his peace, but now, when his lust prevailed, in keeping his kingdom, when he saw that David was likely to come to the Kingdom, how did his heart rise against him? but of that we shal have occasion to speak hereafter, but only now to show you, that the heart that is by nature soft and meek, yet wherein it is crossed in any lust, there it is very froward. Thirdly,( and that is a principal one) one that is naturally of a softly temper, and not graciously meek, you shal see such a one easily discouraged in any good thing; if he take upon him any thing that is good, and meet with any thing that is difficult, with opposition, he yields presently. But now where meekness is from the grace of Gods Spirit, such a one, though he do meet with a great deal of opposition, yet he is able to go through it, meekness doth not hinder the courage, and fortitude, of the spirit of a man and woman, to go through opposition in a good cause; and for that I will give you this notable text, it is the example of Christ himself, in Isa. 42. there the Spirit of Christ is described verse 2. He shal not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street. It is applied in the new Testament to Christ, clearly Christ was of a very quiet meek temper he shal not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street, As a great many in their passion, you cannot go by their door but you shal hear their voice lift up in the street, the street sounds of their railing and brabbling together; it was not so with Christ, his voice was not heard in the street, and so he goes on. A Bruised Reed shal he not break, and the smoking Flax shal he not quench, but( Mark) he will bring forth judgement unto truth, he shal not fail nor be discouraged, till he have set judgement in the Earth. He was one of a Meek and quiet disposition, and very gentle, but mark, he will bring forth judgement unto truth, he will go through with his work, and he shal not fail and be discouraged till he have set judgement in the Earth. So it should be with one that is of a Meek Spirit, he must be Meek and gentle, but when he is in a good cause, he must not fail nor be discouraged, notwithstanding al opposition, till he have set judgement in the Earth, that is, till he hath gone through the work that he hath begun, he should not fail nor be discouraged, that is the difference between the softness of Spirit that comes from Nature, and the true work of Grace. But then, is there not an other meekness, then that of Grace? How will you distinguish that? A meekness that comes from the strength of reason, and indeed many men that have naturally passionate Spirits, choleric constitutions, yet by understanding, and reason, they are able to overcome it. And this is the meekness that the Heathen speak so much of, the moral virtues that they speak so much of in their books, how shal we distinguish between this moral virtue, and that of Grace I will distinguish it thus. When it comes from the strength of reason, it may be, when the will is not subdued to the will of God, a man may see reason to forbear such or such a thing, I, but it comes not from the principle of the work of Gods Spirit, in subduing his will to the authority of the will of God. And further, it is not nourished by spiritual arguments, but merely by natural reason, where it is Spiritual, from a work of Gods Spirit, there it is nourished by arguments that are Spiritual, by Spiritual reasons, by arguments taken from Jesus Christ, from the promise, from our own vileness in our natural condition, from the desert of our sins, such kind of Arguments as these are the Arguments that do prevail with a Heart that is Meek in a Spiritual way. And again, where the Meekness is natural, it hath but a Natural end, it aims always at his own quiet, and at his own honor, and thinks it to be a dishonour and disgrace to let out his passion, and that it will breed a great deal of disquiet and trouble. But where Meekness is a Sanctifying Grace of Gods Spirit, it hath a high end, it hath the Glory of God, it hath the setting forth the honor of God, and the honor of his profession, and this is above the strength of Natural Reason. Some other differences might be shown, but this for the present to open the Nature of Meekness what it is, and the difference between Spiritual and Natural Meekness. CHAP. LXXXX. That Christ is Meek proved and explained, with three Reasons of the Point. 1. Because of the holiness of his Nature. 2. Because of the infinite Satisfaction he had in himself and the Father. 3. He was infinitely wise. NOw the next thing is, to show, That Jesus Christ was Meek, Learn of me for I am Meek. Now we are to show that Christ was thus Meek, Christ was Meek in his Conversation, to set forth before you the Meekness of Jesus Christ. This I shal show you in Scripture, The 45. Psalm. is a notable Text for the Meekness of Christ, the 4. verse,( it is a plain prophesy of Christ) And in thy majesty ride prosperously, because of truth, and Meekness, and Righteousness and yet( Mark) it follows, and thy right Hand shal Teach thee terrible things. Here this Scripture shows, that Meekness in ones own cause, may stand with a great deal of terribleness in the cause of Christ. And then, that other Text that we have, in Matth. 12. 17. A place that quotes the forenamed place, the 42. of Isai. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the Prophet, saying. Behold my Servant, whom I have chosen, my beloved, in whom my Soul is well pleased, I will put my spirit upon him, and he shal show judgement to the Gentiles. He shal not strive nor cry, neither shal any man hear his voice in the streets, Here is that added further to the place quoted out of Isaiah, 42. There it is only, He shal not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street, But here it is, He shal not strive nor cry, neither shal any man hear his voice in the streets, No man shal hear the voice of Christ in the streets, in a striving way, in a railing way, in a passionate way, Christ was no striver. Men think it a credit to be striving with their neighbors, but this is the Glory of Jesus Christ, that he was no striver, you may think What you will of it, and therefore the Holy Ghost quotes that prophesy, he will not let slip that quotation. But to open and clear the quotation, he adds, he shal not strive. And then in Matth. 21. 5. Tel ye the Daughter of Zion, behold, thy King cometh unto thee, Meek, and sitting upon an Ass, and a Colt, the fool of an Ass, Christ, the King, though a King, yet he is Meek, men of great Spirits, of great estates, and great authority, they think it a dishonour to be Meek, they are ordinarily of a boisterous Spirit, but behold, thy King cometh Meek. And so that in 2 Cor. 10. 1. Now I Paul myself, beseech you, by the Meekness and gentleness of Christ. These are principal Scriptures, that hold forth the Meekness of Christ, though others might be name. But now for the opening of this Meekness of Christ, He was Meek to God and man, take both together in his sufferings, Christ, I say, in his sufferings, both from God and from man he was exceeding Meek. In Isai. 53. 7. He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his Mouth, he is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter, and as a Sheep before the shearers, is dumb, so he openeth not his Mouth, So he opened not his Mouth, As a Lamb and a Sheep when he comes to the Shearers, Yea, When they come to th● Slaughter. Other Creatures will struggle when you meddle with them, and be ready to spoil you, and make a hideous noise when you offer any violence to them, but the Lamb and Sheep are Meek, and dumb, and so was Christ, when he suffered both from God; and from man, from man wrongfully. As you shal see by and by, and suffered from God though not wrongfully, yet suffering from his Father he did not open his Mouth, and therefore he is set out in Scripture by that Title, the immaculate Lamb, Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins of the World. And in Matth. 3. the latter end. When the Spirit of God came upon him, he came in the form of a Dove, that is, without gull, without bitterness. The Spirit of Christ was like that of a Dove, very Meek and gentle, of a gentle and a quiet Spirit, when he was to suffer, and saw that the Hand of God was in it, saith he, in Matth. 18. 11. Shal not I Drink the Cup which my Father hath given me to Drink? He takes the bitter Cup that there was, and drinks it only with these words, Shal not I Drink the Cup which my Father hath given me to Drink? And then meek towards men exceedingly, in Isa. 40. 11 It is prophetical clearly of Christ, saith the text. He shal feed his flock like a shepherd, he shal gather the Lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom and shal gently led those that are with young. What an expression is this? He is a shepherd, not like a butcher when he is driving sheep and cattle if they go not which way he would, flings at them, breaks their legs, and bruises their bodies, but he shal carry the Lambs in his arms and gently led those that are with young. If there be a Lamb that is weary, and begins to be lame, and goes limping, he will take them up in his arms; this is spoken to the comfort of poor weak Christians, that are Lame that are poor, weak ones, like Lambs, that are fainting and cannot go, Christ will gather the Lambs in his arms and carry them in his bosom; if they faint and want warmth, he will carry them in his bosom; and he will gently led those that are with young, that is, Christ will consider the place that we are able to go. It was noted of rough Esaw, he will drive on a place, I but saith Jacob, let us not drive on so fast, my Lord, least the sheep die by the way: So Christ will not drive on so fast, but gently led those that are with young. And a notable expression we have in Isa. 57. 15. This prophesy of Christ is principally Evangelical, and aims at Christ almost in every thing; Thus saith the Lord, the high and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is holy, I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble Spirit. But the 16. vers. is that which I aim at. For I will not contend for ever, neither will I be always wrath for the spirit should fail before me, and the souls which I have made. Saith Christ, I look upon the spirits of my servants, and if I should contend for ever with them, they would fail before me, the souls that I have made would fail before me, and therefore I will deal gently, I will gently led those that are with young. And this is discovered in the carriage of Christ towards his disciples, though they were men of mean rank and condition, poor fishermen, and of dull capacity, yet how doth Christ carry himself towards them, and calls them his brethren, and Children, though they were so poor, and weak, and dull in their parts as they were, yea, and when Christ saw the spirit of his disciples begin to be but a little too hot, though it was for him, Christ out of the meekness of his Spirit doth alloy their spirits, as you have it in Luke. 9. 53. There you may see the Spirit of Christs Meekness, when there was two whose spirits was so hot, James and John, that John that I spake of before, that was of so loving a Spirit, yet there he was a little too hot, though it was in a good cause, for it is not enough that the cause be good, but we must keep in a right temper in a good cause. The text saith, when Christ was going among the Samaritans in Luke 9. 51. It came to pass, when the time was come that he should be received up, he steadfastly set his face to go to Jerusalem, and sent messengers before his face. And vers. 53. But they did not receive him, he went into a village of the Samaritans, and they did not receive him, Why? Because his face was as if he would go to Jerusalem. Why would they not receive him because he seemed to go to Jerusalem? The Samaritans they worshipped God in a more superstitious way then at Jerusalem, at Jerusalem there was the Temple, now the Samaritans hated the Jews that were more strict in their worship, indeed among the Samaritans they were counted the puritanical people,( as heretofore among us) now the text saith, because his face was as though he went towards Jerusalem, he looked,( as it were) like a Puritan, or like a Roundhead( as now) because he was one that looked like such a one, and because he looked as if he would go to Jerusalem, to the Temple, to worship there, they would not receive him. Now mark, this mightily exasperated James and John, what, say they, shal these wicked wretches reject Jesus Christ, and for nothing else, but because he seemed to go to Jerusalem, to the Temple of God, merely because he seemed to be a lover of Gods Temple he did but seem so, for so the text doth not say plainly that he would go, but because he seemed to be a lover of the Temple, and they would not so much as give him any lodging in it, and therefore saith James and John Wilt thou that we command fire to come down from heaven and consume them? What, shal they not only reject God, but such a one as Christ, that seems to be a lover of the Temple, shal they reject him, and not receive him? shal we command fire to come down from heaven& consume them? Now mark the meekness of Christs Spirit, in vers. 55. He turned and Rebuked them, and said, Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of, for the Son of man is not come to destroy mens lives, but to save them. What a meek speech is this! that though he was never so much rejected? well, though they deal thus with me, yet the son of man is come to save them. And then meek he was towards his adversaries, this one text shows enough how meek he was towards those that did so coarsely use him, and likewise towards al others in his conversing with them, red over John 4. and John 8. see the cavilling of the Woman of Samaria, and the cavilling of the Jews, and see the meek and quiet temper of Christ towards his enemies, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. When they brought him unto the across, those that took away his life, yet he saith, father, forgive them, for they know not what they do, he pities them notwithstanding. And in Luke, 24. 46. 47. he said unto them Thus it is written, and thus it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day, and that repentance, and remission of sins should be preached in his name, among al nations beginning at Jerusalem. Christ here, he instructed those that he went withal unto Emaus, and tells them, that it behoved Christ thus to suffer, and that remission of sins should be preached in his name among al nations, beginning at Jerusalem. Why so? It was a strange thing that Christ should give order, not only to go and preach the glad tidings of salvation to al the world but where they should begin, as if Christ should say, above al places preach the doctrine of remission of sins, and pardon of sin, and preach the glad tidings of the Gospel at Jerusalem, begin there was Christ so much beholden to Jerusalem, at Jerusalem it was that he was mocked, and scorned, and crwoned with Thorns, it was there that he was Crucified, Jerusalem was a bloody city, that put Christ to death, and yet when Christ rose again, he orders that they should go and preach the glad tidings of the Gospel first at Jerusalem. One would have thought he should have said to his disciples, above al places come not near Jerusalem, one would have thought he should have said to them above al places, preach not the glad tidings of the Gospel to Jerusalem, no, but saith he, go and preach the glad tidings of the Gospel, remission of sins, and pardon of sins, at Jerusalem, begin there, here is the meekness of Christs Spirit, the very hearing of these things hath a mighty efficacy on the Spirits of those that have any interest in Jesus Christ. But now, that I may set forth the meekness of Jesus Christ further, I have shewed you, how he was meek towards his father, and towards men, but now the meekness of Christ will appear very glorious, if we take in these considerations. First, There was never any so wronged as Jesus Christ, you thus complain and say, who can bear such wrongs? I am wronged thus and thus, I, you thus complain, but never any one was so wronged as Jesus Christ, and yet he was Meek. You think it a plea sufficient for your passion, when you say, you are wronged, but Christ was more wronged, he suffered the contradiction of sinners, and yet he was Meek. You say, Perhaps, you are scorned, Christ, he was Mocked and scorned, and yet he was Meek. Perhaps you will say, they take away your right, take take away your estate, and leave you a beggar. Though Christ was the heir of al the world, yet he had not a hole to hid his head, and yet he was meek. Yea, suppose any should touch your life, then you would think you might be angry indeed. None was so wronged for life as as Jesus Christ, and yet he was meek. Yea, and he was wronged by his inferiors too, when a man is wronged by his superiors, it is best that you say nothing, but if it be an inferior that wrongs you, then your Spirits rise, what shal I be wronged by such a base fellow as this? Suppose you be wronged by your servant in your house by one under you, then your spirit riseth. Now Jesus Christ was wronged by those that were inferior, those that were under him, those that were his servants. Yea▪ as he was wronged by his inferiors, so he was wronged undeservedly. You sometimes will say, I have not deserved it at his hands, I did not much care if I had deserved it, but such a one to do me that wrong that I have done so much good for, and I deserve better usage from him, this is that that provokes your passion, I but Christ he was wronged and never did any hurt to any. You think you may be lawfully passi●nate when you do not such a one any wrong, and yet he wrongs you, so was Jesus Christ. Yea, he was wronged by his own, if you should be wronged by your own Children, your own Servants, you would think you might Lawfully be angry, thus was Christ. Suppose you should be wronged by one you had done much for, suppose you should take one from the dunghill, and do much for him, set him up to live in the world, and he should wrong you, would you not take it i●? Thus was Christ; those that ●ate at his Table, eat Bread with him, he was wronged by them. You know it was but little that Christ said to Judas, he that I give the sop unto, he did not say, what thou wicked vile wretch, wilt thou betray me? wilt thou Betray thy saviour? no, but only so, he that I give the Sop unto. Yea, Christ was wronged openly, if you be wronged by your neighbours in the sight of your dearest Friends, you will be angry, if you should be wronged in a strange place, where none knows you, you would not be much troubled, but to be wronged in the presence of your friends, and Neighbours, and Acquaintance, this raiseth your Spirits, now Jesus Christ was wronged at Jerusalem, before his Mother, and friends all his friends about him, and yet he was not passionate, though never a man so wronged as he, yet he was not passionate. Secondly: Yea, Further know, that this did not come from stupidness, Christ knew and was sensible of them, and yet his Heart did not rise in passion, one may be wronged, and be senseless, and stupid, but Christ was not so, and yet stil he was Meek and quiet. Thirdly, Christ was infinitely wise, a wise man cannot endure to be wronged by Fools, men that are of understanding are ready to rise many times in passion against those that are ignorant, and sottish, they cannot bear with sottishness, and with weakness and folly, though it is true wisdom( as you shal hear afterwards) but Christ was wise, and quick of understanding, and yet conversed with ignorant, foolish and sottish people. Fourthly, Christ was honourable, he was a great Noble man, a Rich man, an heir of al the world, he might have had the possession of al the world if he would, though he had not a hole to put his Head in. Rich men, their Hearts will rise, if their poor neighbour wrongs them, and they will give them such looks as will pierce them through and through if they wrong them, Christ was the great King; he was honourable, he was Noble, and yet he was Meek, Men that are great in place, they cannot endure to be wronged, they cannot bear it, have you not heard many of them, if they be a little angered, fall a Cursing and Swearing, because they think that it is too much for them, who are so high, and above others, that they should, be spoken against; and yet Christ was this, he was of a gentle Spirit. Fifthly, And besides, Christ had al of you at an advantage, if a man have his enemy at advantage then he will manifest his displeasure, Christ had power enough to avenge himself when he would. There are many that fret inwardly, and do not manifest their passion, because they have not power to vent themselves, Christ had al power, yet how Meek and gentle was be? Sixthly: Further, Christ had as much work to do as any men in the world, many men and Women are passionate and froward, because they are very busy, come to any men in their Families, when they are busy, they are touchy, and froward, and are not quiet in their Spirits when they are full of business, come to some Servants, when they are full of business, and across them, and they are very froward, now if any had great business, it was Jesus Christ, and yet he was Meek and quiet. Seventhly: Further, The very Meekness of Christ was abused much, You will say, I did so and so to such, and yet they oftentimes abuse me, Jesus Christ was abused as much as ever the Meekness of any was abused, It was said of Moses, that he was the Meekest man upon the Earth, for a mere man, I but Jesus Christ, he went beyond Moses in his Meekness, his Meekness was beyond the Meekness of Moses, as may appear in two or three things. First, The Meekness of Moses was not perfect, so was Christs, there was a mixture of Passion together with the Meekness of Moses, for Moses broke out in passion, for which he never came to the Land of Canaan, but so was not Christ. Secondly, Moses was not always Meek, there was a time when his Spirit was provoked, but so was not Christ. Thirdly, Yea, The Meekness of Moses, or any other man, is the Grace that subdues the contrary to Meekness, doth bridle passion, but the Meekness of Christ came from the temper of his Heart that he had naturally, there was a natural Meekness, and there was nothing in him to subdue the contrary unto that Meekness. Eightly: And then, It is from the Meekness of Jesus Christ that the Saints ever after have received their Meekness, it is from the fullness of his Grace( his Meekness) that the Saints receive answerable Meekness, we receive Meekness from Jesus Christ, we do not receive it from Moses, We have Moses indeed a Good pattern, but there is an influence in Christ to make his Saints Meek, whosoever is a good Christian, hath the impression of Jesus Christ upon his heart. Quest. You will say, What is that that makes the Spirit of Jesus Christ to be of such a Meek Temper? Answ. There are these three things that make it so. First, Because of the Infinite holiness of his nature, he was infinitely holy, and therefore so Meek, perfectly holy,& therfore perfectly Meek, that is certainly true according to the degree of holiness is the degree of Meekness, for it is sin in the heart, that doth sour the heart,& ●mbitter the heart, nothing embitters the heart of a man or woman but sin, and therefore the more foul the heart of a man is, the more froward and passionate is that man, and the more Holy, the more Meek and quire. As you know, when the stomach is foul, there will come bitterness into the mouth, so when mens hearts are foul and filthy, then comes up such bitterness into their mouths, what is the reason that there comes such Bitterness and Passion out of the mouths of men and women, but because their hearts are foul. Secondly, The meekness of Jesus Christ, it came from the infinite Satisfaction that Jesus Christ had in the Father, and in himself, he had so much satisfaction in God and in himself, that made him to be of a very meek and gentle disposition towards others and so it will be with us the more satisfaction any soul finds in God, the more meek, sweet, and gentle he will be towards others, as it is said in Prov. 14. 14. A good Man shall be satisfied from himself. That is, he finds in his own heart much peace of conscience, and that satisfies his Soul, the more satisfaction in his Conscience towards God, and in himself, the more meek he is towards others. You are passionate and froward, and nothing will please you in the family, and those about you, Oh! It is to be feared, that you are not satisfied with God, and you have not that in your own heart that satisfies your Spirits. Thirdly, Another thing that made Christ to be of such a meek Spirit, it was the Infinite Wisdom of Jesus Christ as afterward you shal hear. Anger rests in the Bosom of Fools, Though sometimes they take occasion through their wisdom to be Angry, yet when they come to be examined, it is through Folly that they come to be Passionate, and therefore Christ was not of a Passionate temper because he was Infinite wise, from these three( especially) proceeded the meekness of Jesus Christ, And thus now I have done with these two things, First to open the Nature of Meekness, and so to present to you the Meekness of Jesus Christ, I hope the presenting of this to your view thus, hath a great deal of efficacy in it, for certainly there is a great deal of Efficacy in the example of Jesus Christ, to prevail upon the Heart of a Christian. Therefore it beseems Christians to be meek, if Christ be so, it is fit that the Disciple, the scholar, should be like to their Master, you see Christ presents it to you as a Principal and Evangelical Grace to Imitate him in. There are other Graces that Christ would have you follow him in, but this is a principal one, Oh Learn of Jesus Christ for he was Meek. CHAP. XCI. Three Consequences of the former Doctrine. 1. To rejoice in so meek a saviour. 2. It is a grievous sin to provoke so meek a saviour. 3. An excellent brave Spirit, and a meek Spirit, may stand together. Application, 1. FIrst, From hence follows, That we have cause to rejoice that we have so meek a saviour, it is matter of great joy to hear of the meekness of Jesus Christ. In Zach. 9. 9. rejoice greatly O Daughter of Zion, Shout O Daughter of Jerusalem, behold, thy King cometh unto thee, he is Just, and having Salvation, Lowly, and Riding upon an Ass, and upon a Colt, the fool of an Ass. But mark how this is quoted in mat. 21. 5. There you have it, Tel ye the Daughter of Zion, behold, thy King cometh unto thee, meek and sitting upon an Ass rejoice greatly because the King cometh, and he cometh Meek and sits upon an Ass. To show meekness when he comes unto them, and therefore rejoice greatly because thy King cometh, he is a meek saviour, To have him upon whom our eternal Salvation lies to be so meek it is matter of great Joy. It is a great Comfort to one, to have to deal with men that are of meek dispositions, especially when much of our good depends upon them, if much of our wel-fare should depend upon a man that hath a Rugged, Untoward, Harsh Disposition, it would be a great grief to us, but when those that any of our good depends upon, are of Meek, and Gentle dispositions, it is matter of great Comfort, now our souls and our eternal Estates, depends upon Jesus Christ, who is of this Meek and quiet Disposition, it is Christ that is our advocate with the Father, that is of this Meek and quiet Disposition it is Christ to whom, the ordering and disposing of al things is committed, who is of this Meek and quiet disposition, Oh, to have a Governor to be of a Meek and quiet Disposition, for a Servant to have a Master of a Meek and quiet Disposition, as now, what a difference do some Servants think to be between some Masters that are of Froward, and Crabbed Dispositions: perhaps his Brother or Friend dwells in a place and hath a Master and Mistris of a quiet and Meek Disposition, Oh! He thinks, happy are those Servants that have such Governors. Now we have Jesus Christ the great Governor of al the world, to whom al things are counted, that is of a Meek and quiet Disposition, Jesus Christ that is to be our judge, to pass the sentence of our eternal Doom, it is he that is of this meek and quiet disposition, Christ that is so near related to us, Christ that is our Husband Christ that is our Lord, Christ that is our Father, it is he that is of this Meek and quiet Disposition. It is a great Discomfort, when we meet with any frowardness in another, if the Husband meet with frowardness in the Wife, or the Servant frowardness in the Master and Mistris, but Jesus Christ is gentle and Meek towards you, perhaps one Brother with another, and one Friend with another, meet with frowardness and Passion, I but Jesus Christ is al meek, so that the consideration of Christs meekness, hath a great deal of comfort in it. Application, 2. Secondly, From hence follows, in that Christ is so Meek, Oh then! What a wretched condition are they in and how miserable is the condition of those that do so provoke this meek saviour, this meek Christ, they shal find him to be most dreadful and terrible to them, certainly, their sin is wicked and vile indeed, and the condition of those men and women is most miserable, and wretched, that do so provoke him that is so Meek, to be so terrible and dreadful to them. Object. You will say, If that you see a Father, that you know to be of a Meek and gentle disposition, to be exceedingly provoked by a Child, and al in a heat against this Child, or if you see a Master or Mistris, that you know to be of an exceeding gentle Meek disposition, I but they are exceedingly enraged against the Servant, you will conclude, surely, this Child hath done some great thing, surely this Servant hath committed some great wickedness, that one that is of so gentle a Disposition, should be so provoked. Answ. Now there are a People, that Christ will manifest himself exceedingly provoked against, I will give you but two Scriptures for that. The first is that which upon divers occasions I have mentioned, they are those that little think that they shal find Christ so provoked against them? In 2. Thes. 1. 7. And to you who are troubled, Rest with us, when the Lord Jesus Christ shal be Revealed from heaven, with his mighty Angels, in Flaming fire, taking Vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Even Jesus Christ, this meek one, will one day come with his holy Angels, in flaming fire to take vengeance; Upon whom? upon those that Know not God, those that have lived under the means of the knowledge of God, and yet have not known God, have not regarded the knowledge of God, to come to learn to know him, and have not obeied the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. You have the Gospel of Jesus Christ preached to you now if you obey not this Gospel of Christ, there will be a day, when this meek saviour shal come, in flaming fire to take vengeance upon you. And the other place is in Rev. 6. 15. It is said that the Kings of the Earth, and the great men and rich men, and the chief Captaines, and the mighty men, and every bond man, and every freeman, shal hid themselves in the Dens. and the Rocks of the Mountaines, and say to the Rocks and the Mountaines, fall on us, and hid us from the Face of him that sitteth upon the Throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb, Though he be but as a Lamb, yet you see his wrath it is dreadful, in so much, that they call to the Mountaines to hid them, and to fall upon them, that they may be hide from the wrath of the Lamb, For the great day of his wrath is come, and who shal be able to stand, Oh! Who shal be able to stand, this Meek saviour will be thus provoked one day against wicked and ungodly men, and their misery will be aggravated by this, that he that is in himself so Meek, yet is thus dreadfully provoked against them. Application, 3. Thirdly, Hence we may Learn, That a meek Spirit, and an excellent brave Spirit, may stand both together, a meek Spirit, and a magnanimous Spirit, a meek spirit, and heroical Spirit, a meek Spirit, and a Spirit full of courage, and fortitude, and of valor, may stand both together. A meek Spirit, is not a meek Spirit in the other sense, that is, a Sheep like Spirit, a poor low Spirit, that hath no valor and fortitude, but a meek spirit and a Spirit of the greatest magnanimity that possibly can be, may stand both together; so is Christ, the same place that we quoted for Christs meekness, In Psalm. 45. 4. There you have both set forth together. In thy majesty ride prosperously because of truth and meekness and Righteousness, thine Arrows are sharp in the Heart of the Kings enemies whereby the people fall under thee. Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever, the sceptre of thy Kingdom is a right sceptre, and yet truth and meekness, because of truth and meekness ride prosperously in thy majesty, Majesty and meekness may stand both together, these three consequences now follow from Christs meekness. But now that which follows in the Text is this, That therefore we should be meek, Jesus Christ he was meek, and he calls upon us to Learn of him to be meek as he was, It is that the Disciple should be like the master, of the like disposition, and indeed, it is the excellency of Christians to be of meek Spirits, I remember Justin Martyr in his Appology for the Christians, saith he, Why do you so complain of Christians? What is it you have against them but their Name? And are you so offended with their Name? Christians( saith he) What are they but Chrestianoi, And in the word here in the Text, My yoke is easy, It is, {αβγδ}, which signifies facile, and if it be applied to a man, and the word a little, so it is, men of facile and easy Spirits, of gentle Spirits, so Justin Martyr alludes to the very word Christians, calling them Chrestianoi, because they are Christians, saith he, they are of easy and gentle Spirits, they should be Chrestianoi, as well as Christiani, of meek and quiet Spirits, if they be Christians, Learn of me for I am meek. CHAP. XCII. Learn Meekness of Christ, because the Father delights in the Meekness of his Son. JEsus Christ would have us to Learn Meekness of him, the rather, because God the Father is so well pleased in him for his Meekness, and therefore Christ would have his Disciples Learn Meekness of him, Christ knows how well God the Father is pleased with him, because he is so Meek, and humble. In Isai. 42. That likewise was name for the showing how meek Christ was, but consider of it again how God the Father is so well pleased with Christ that is thus meek: verse, 1. Behold, my Servant, whom I uphold, mine Elect, in whom my Soul delighteth, I have put my Spirit upon him, he shal bring forth judgement to the Gentiles, he shal not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street. Mark, Behold my Servant in whom my Soul delights, Why doth Gods Soul delight in Christ,( among other things) but because he is of a Meek Spirit, saith the Text, He shal not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street, He shal be of a quiet and gentle disposition, and therefore it is that God did delight in him. I beseech you consider it, the Soul of God the Father, doth delight in Jesus Christ, because of his meekness, because He doth not lift up his voice and Cry, Is not of a Turbulent and troublesone disposition, Surely, here is one Reason why Christ would have us so meek, as if Christ should say, I find that the Soul of my Father delights in me, because of my meekness, and I would fain have the Soul of my Father delight in you too, and therefore I would have you have the disposition of meekness, that you may have the delight of my Father, as I have the delight of my Father. So our saviour in John, 17. He prays, that God the Father would Love his Disciples With the same Love that he did Love him. Now if you would have God the Father Love you with the same Love that he did Love the Son with, you must be as he was, that is, meek as he was, not of Turbulent Dispositions, but of quiet and meek dispositions, as he was. And so you red, in Matth. 3. When the voice was heard from Heaven, saying, This is my well beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; When was it? It was, when The Spirit of God did descend upon Christ like a Dove; At that time when the Spirit did descend upon Christ as a Dove, then comes there a voice from Heaven, saying, This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. And that is certain, when the Spirit of Christ comes most upon any men or Womens Souls like a Dove, that is the time that God will give this Testimony unto them, this is my well beloved Son, or this is my well beloved Daughter in whom my Soul is well pleased. God is never better pleased with you, than when you have Spirits like a Dove, meek and gentle Spirits, but we shal afterwards say more of that, for the excellency of this Grace of meekness, now we are to speak of it, how we are to be meek as Jesus Christ was. CHAP. LXXXXIII. Learn of Christ to be Meek towards God, and the Point opened in seven Particulars. 1. When God shows himself as an enemy. 2. When in the greatest Anguish and trouble, we find no help. 3. When we have sought God long, and yet he doth not hear us. 4. When after much means the Heart grows worse and worse. 5. When the Lord imploies us in his service, and yet we find no success. 6. Though things grow worse after we have trusted in Gods word. 7. When we have no Encouragement in our dealing with God, about our eternal Estate. THerefore for the opening of that, how we are to be meek as Christ was, ye know, that in the opening of Christs meekness, I shewed you, That he was 〈◇〉 towards God, Shal I not Drink of the Cup wh 〈…〉 Father hath given me to Drink, Not mine own out Thy will be done; Christ he suffered hard things from his Father, and yet he was meek in his carriage towards his Father. And he was meek towards men, And accordingly I shal labour to draw your Hearts to the Love of meekness, that you may be of meek dispositions, First, towards God, and Secondly towards men, we must Learn of Christ to carry ourselves meekly towards God. Truly one would think that there needs not much be said concerning this, of the meekness of our Hearts towards God, one would think, that it should not be possible, that there should be such wickedness in the Hearts of the Creature, to be froward towards God, it is too much to be froward towards men, towards our Brethren, but to be froward toward God, one would think, this were an horrible wickedness, one would think none were guilty of this, well, but before we have done with the point you shal see a great deal of necessity, and much usefulness in this point to teach you Meekness towards God. First, Therefore I shal set before you the Meekness of spirit towards God, as I have done from the example of Christ, so from the Example of other Saints, I shal show you what meek dispositions they have had towards God, as that Example is notable of that old Good man Ely in 1. Sam. 3. and the middle when God saith, He would do such a thing in Israel, at which both the ears of every one that heard it should tingle, when he heard a dreadful noise by Samuel, when Samuel told him of that that might make both the ears of al that heard it tingle, now saith the text, when Ely had heard al, he said, at the 18. vers. It is the Lord let him do whatsoever seemeth him Good, here was a Meek disposition towards God. And another Example is David, a notable Example when he fled from Absalom, in 2. Sam. 15. 25. 26. If I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord, he will bring me again, and show me both 〈◇〉 that is the Ark) and his Habitation, but if he thus say, I have no delight in thee, behold, here am I, let him do to me as seemeth Good unto him, and those other texts that you have in Psalm. 39. 9. I opened not my mouth because the Lord had done it, because thou hast done it, there is the meekness of Davids Spirit towards God. We are to be Meek towards God. First, In this case, when God appears against a Man or Woman as an Enemy, yet then to be Meek, and to behave ourselves Gently and Meekly, when God seems to come against us as an Enemy, it is one of the three hard things that Luther said was exceeding Difficult indeed, one was to believe in God when he appears as an Enemy, then to have a Meek Spirit and to keep the Heart in a gentle and quiet frame. I do not speak of quiet in opposition to seeking of Gods favour, but in opposition to disturbance, to keep the heart in a quiet and meek submissive frame towards God, even at that time, when he seems to come against the soul as an Enemy, this is a great matter, this was Christs meekness, though God appeared dreadfully towards him, and prepared a most bitter cup for him to drink, yet he continues meek, and so when God seems to forsake him, yet he cries out, My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me? My God, though he had forsaken him. Secondly, When we are in the greatest Anguish, trouble, and affliction, and yet find no help, when the Lord puts his creature into the greatest trouble and affliction, pain in your bodies, Anguish in your spirits, sore afflictions without, and sore afflictions within, and there you lye and find no help, yet now to be of a quiet disposition, this is that that is acceptable to God, God did seem to forsake Christ, that you may apply to this, Christ seemed to be forsaken upon the across and his enemies came and gave him Gal and Vinegar to drink, and yet My God, my God, His Spirit was not distempered with any frowardness and disturbance at al, but he keeps his spirit Meek and quiet then, And so David in Psalm, 40. I have waited patiently upon the Lord, I but, what condition was he in? It may be his affliction was not great, saith the text, vers. 2. He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry day, Saith he, I was in the horrible pit, and the miry day, and yet the Lord brought me out, and my soul waited patiently upon the Lord in this condition, when I was in an horrible pit, and in the miry day, my soul waited patiently upon the Lord. Thirdly, Yea, though we have sought God long, and yet he seems not to hear, even then to keep the heart in a meek disposition towards God, when we have been seeking God long, and God seems, as it were, to shut his ear against us. Thus it was with David,( and hath been so with many of Gods servants) in Psalm, 38. I am troubled, I am bowed down greatly, I go mourning all the Day long, for my loins are filled with a loathsome Disease, there is no soundness in my flesh, I am feeble and sore broken, I have Roared by reason of the disquietness of my Heart. He was it seems, for a while Disquieted in his heart, sometimes through his weakness, but yet for al that, he recovers himself so Far, as not to loose the sweetness, and right temper of his spirit. Saith he vers. 14. Thus was I as a man that heareth not, and in whose mouth are no reproofs, for in thee, Oh Lord, do I hope thou wilt hear, Oh Lord, my God. Wicked men railed on him, and added to his affliction, but saith he, I was as a Dumb man that opened not his Mouth, I was as a man that heareth not, and in whose mouth are no reproofs, For in thee, Oh Lord do I hope, thou wilt hear, Oh Lord, my God. Thus he did keep in his spirit, and he was brought into a meek temper of heart unto God, even at that time, when the Lord had seemed to shut out his prayer from him. And so many other texts might be given of this, of the Prophet David, and other of the Saints, When God did seem to shut out their prayers from him, yet they kept their Hearts in a meek and quiet disposition towards God, though flesh and blood did work a little against them, yet they brought their hearts to a calm, quiet, and Meek disposition. Yea Fourthly, When after much means used, your hearts grow worse and worse, then your heart haply will be disquieted, no, but even then your heart is to be meek though your condition grows worse and worse, though you should sink lower and lower into the pit, though you should be as the Children of Israel, and your burdens should grow more and more; Thus many complain, that since they have been seeking God they find their condition worse and worse, and this many times causeth much disturbance in their hearts, and takes away the quietness of their Spirit, which certainly ought not to be. Yea Fifthly, If the Lord should employ us in his service, and we should have no success, that is a hard case, and would stir up the passion of a mans heart, that when God should employ him in his own work, and he should find no success, yea, and he should find that the Enemies of God should have better success in their own work, then he in Gods work, yet for al that you must keep Meekness and Quietness in your heart. In Psal. 37. There is a charge laid upon us, that we should not fret and vex, we should not loose the quiet of our Spirits, though we see wicked men prosper in their way. Cease from anger, forsake wrath, fret not thyself in any wise to do evil, for evil doers shal be cut off, but those that wait upon the Lord shal inherit the Earth. It is indeed the case of Gods servants, though they are in Gods way they find no good success, and wicked men that are Enemies to God, they find success in their way, upon that they are ready to be in a passion, no, saith the Holy Ghost here, Cease from anger, and forsake wrath, fret not thyself in any wise, though thou seest things go never so untowardly on in the world, and Gods people in their way suffer hard things, and wicked men in their ungodly ways seem to prosper, and have success, yet cease from anger, and forsake wrath, let there be no risings in thy heart, no frowardness in thy Spirit against God, no not because of this, but keep thy Heart in a meek frame, and quietly and patiently wait upon God notwithstanding al this, thus we must be meek towards God. Sixthly, Yea, though we should trust in Gods word too, and yet things should seem to grow worse and worse, though we have trusted in the word of God, God seems to go quiter contrary to his word, he seems so, when God gives out a promise, and the souls of his people do trust in his word, and love him, yea, and cleave to his word, yet, I say, it is the way of God many times to go quiter contrary to that that the word seems to speak, we come to the word, and to be encouraged by it, and yet our case goes quiter contrary to what we hear, Oh, this troubles us many times, I but yet we must go on, and continue meek in our spirits notwithstanding this. In Psalm. 119. 81. My soul fainteth for thy salvation, but I hope in thy word, mine Eyes fail for thy word, saying when wilt thou comfort me? Thou hast indeed spoken thy word, but I do not see it fulfilled, the thing seems to go quiter across. Mine eyes fail for thy word, For I am become like a Bottle in the smoke; A Bottle hung up in a smoky Chimney, never regarded. I am like a Bottle in the smoke not regarded, Yet do I not forget thy Statutes, Yet he kept the word in his mouth, though he did not find the word made good. Seventhly, Above al, when we have to deal with God about our eternal estates and find little or no encouragement, there is nothing more likely to put the Spirits of men into a disturbance, into a froward and passionate temper then this, whenas a man deals with God about his everlasting estate, and he finds little encouragement from the Lord, but stil it continues with him as hazardable as ever it did, Yea, He apprehends himself rather in more danger then when he began at first, now upon this the Hearts of men are ready to be disturbed, but we are Now to be meek and quiet in our spirits when this comes, and though we are stil followed with fears lest we should miscarry everlastingly, and God doth not come in to answer our desires, yet the Heart is to continue Meek stil, take heed of any frowardness of Heart and freting of Heart in this condition. CHAP. XCIV. Containeth three Reasons of our Meekness towards God in General. 1. Hereby God is Sanctified. 2. Hereby we are helped in our Duties towards God. 3. Hereby affliction is made more easy. Secondly when the Soul hath to do with God about its eternal estate, then we are to be Meek. 1. Because now the Lord shows himself more in his Glory. 2. Because, now the sinner apprehends its own wretchedness and danger. 3. Because the sinner is now about the greatest work. 4. He is seeking the greatest Mercy from God. 5. It is Gods greatest aim to subdue thy Heart In afflictions. 6. Because now the spirit of God is more mighty in thee, and it is a gentle and tender thing. THe Reasons in General of our Meekness with God, why we should be meek, They are especially these three. First, Because herein we sanctify the name of God, the Heart of a sinner in nothing Sanctifies Gods name more, then in behaving itself meekly, when God puts it to such a condition as I have name in those several Particulars, and yet the Heart continues meek, this Sanctifies the name of God, and his Love, and his greatness, and his majesty in the Dominion he hath over it; in his power, and in his Wisdom, and in al his attributes, such a Heart doth sanctify Gods Name. Secondly, This meek disposition, it is that that doth much help us in the performance of any Duty towards God, it is that that helps us to attend upon God in any thing that he doth require of us, so long as the Heart keeps itself in a meek temper, so long the Heart is fit to attend upon God in any service that God calls for, but if once you have lost the meekness and quietness of your disposition you are fit for nothing, you are no way fit to attend upon God in the word that he speaks to you, you are no way fit to attend upon any service that he calls you into. You red in Exodus, 6 9. When God sent Moses to deliver the Children of Israel out of bondage, the Text saith, They harkened not unto Moses, for anguish of spirit, and for cruel bondage, So many when their spirits are in a dsturbance, and in a passion, they are not fit to harken to God, nor to his word, they come to hear his word, but it doth them no good. Why are there many that are in great trouble of spirit, in trouble of conscience, they come to hear the word, and they hear many excellent things that is for the good of their souls, but they get no good by it, Why? Because they come not with Meekness to hear the word of God, therefore it is that they cannot hear what God saith to them, and cannot attend upon any Duty, it doth unfit them for any service that God calls them unto, they cannot pray, and they cannot meditate; many of you complain that you cannot pray, and Meditate, and hear the word with profit, whence comes this? But because you have not your Hearts in a Meek temper towards God. Thirdly, Because by Meekness, we shal come to have our afflictions a great deal more easy, the Heart of God will be tender towards us, if we be Meek and tender towards God, but( as we shal see afterwards) if we be froward towards God, we must expect to have the like for like, but if we be Meek and quiet hearted towards God, of melting Hearts towards God, we may expect that Gods Heart will melt towards us. As now, what makes your Heart melt towards a Child, if you should be angry with a Child, if the Child should fret, and vex against you, shal the Child get any thing by this? No, but if you be displeased, and the Child as soon as it apprehends you displeased, you find the Heart of the Child to Melt, and yield, and you find it in a quiet, and melting temper, this now breaks the Heart of any Father or Mother in the world, when the Child shal come and lye down before you in a melting frame, whereas, if the Child shal go away frumping, and vexing, and freting, there is no good got this way. We are to be meek towards God, because there is no such way to have the Heart of God broken towards us, as our carrying our Hearts Meek towards him, whatever his ways are towards us. But above al, as we are to be Meek in those cases, so when the Soul hath to deal with God in the matter of its eternal estate although for the present it finds no encouragement, yet be sure to keep your hearts Meek. And there are a great many Reasons for that, why above all, the Heart of a sinner should be kept in a meek disposition towards God, when it seeks to provide for its eternal estate, when it deals with God for eternity: it is fit that the sinner should be in a meek temper towards God, when the Lord doth afflict it in the Body, or outward estate, or in any way whatsoever, but when the Soul apprehends it hath to deal with God for eternity, and apprehends itself in danger to miscarry for eternity, above al times, then the Heart must be of a meek and quiet disposition, and temper of spirit, and that upon these grounds. First, Because, That now God himself shows himself to the sinner, in his glory, and greatness, in another manner then formerly he did, and the more a sinner shal behold God in his Glory, and Honor, the more God expects that the sinner should be in a meek and quiet temper. Secondly, Because, The sinner now apprehends its own wretchedness, and danger, and is it not meet then he should be of a meek and temperate Disposition? What! To be froward at the pit of Hel, at the pits brink? That is mighty across to that that God expects from the Soul, when it apprehends its danger so much as thou dost, when thou art dealing with God about thy eternal estate. Thirdly,( and especially) because now as thou art under Gods feet, so thou art now about the greatest work that ever mere creature was about; when thou art about dealing with God for thy everlasting estate, I say, thou art about the greatest work that ever creature was about, and thou hadst need then have al thy wits about thee, when he is working about the greatest business that ever sinner was working about in this world, in seeking to provide for his eternal condition, now if thou put thyself into a passion, or givest way to the frowardness of thy heart, thou wilt be extremely hindered, when a man is about a business of great consequence, nothing hinders him more then passion, The counsel of the froward carries him headlong, saith Eliphaz Job, 5. 13. It carries him on to very unadvised, and indiscreet courses when once a man is froward, so the councils of froward Spirits that are froward towards God, must needs carry them headlong, and hinder them mightily in this great business that now they are about, they had need keep their hearts in a quiet temper at this time. Fourthly, Again, Thou art seeking the greatest mercy from God that ever creature was seeking from God, and wilt thou be froward now? shal a beggar be froward when he seeks alms, and the greatest almres? when the beggars seek alms, then he is in the most quiet, and gentle disposition that can be, now thou art seeking to God for thy everlasting estate, and therefore thou hadst need keep thy heart in a meek and quiet temper towards God. Fifthy, And the greatest thing God aims at, it is, to subdue thy heart in al the afflictions that are upon thee, and al the troubles of conscience that thou liest under, the greatest thing that God aims at, it is to pluck thy heart from thy beloved lust, and subdue they heart unto him, and therefore thou hadst need be of a quiet disposition then, thou art now in Gods hand to be wrought The Lord hath wrought us for the self same thing. 2 Cor. 5. 5. The Heart of a man now is in Gods hand to be wrought, now when a man is working about a thing, and hath a tool in his hand, he holds his hand steady and quiet. If so be you be working any thing upon your Children, doing any thing about them for the curing of them, laying any salue upon the sore place, if the Child do nothing but riggle up and down, and will not be quiet, it hinders you in the work, but you labour to keep the Child as quiet as you can; So thou art in Gods hand a working, the Lord is working thy soul for his kingdom at this time, and if thy soul be in a disturbance, and distemper, thou art not fit for Gods work, therefore keep thy soul in a quiet temper when thou art a working in the Hand of God. Sixthly, Further, Now the Spirit of God is more mighty in thee, and more strong in thee, and working for thee then before, now the spirit of God is a tender thing, it is gentle, and tender, like a Dove, now thou must labour to have thy Spirit something suitable to Gods Spirit, the spirit of God is of a quiet disposition like a Dove, thou must labour to have thy spirit like the spirit of God, now there is no such way for thee to grieve his spirit, and cause him to leave thee as for thee to be of an unquiet disposition, the spirit of God is like a Dove, but thou art like a bide of prey, of a wrangling disposition, rending, tearing, Disposition, how shal the Spirit of Christ, that is like a Dove, rest in thee that art so froward towards God? Therefore Christians, when ever you find your Hearts working towards God about your eternal estates, be sure to keep your Hearts meek then, For it is the Exhortation of God, when you are to deal with your Child, with your Servant, with any Creature, you are to keep a meek Disposition, but when you are to deal with God, and in matters of your eternal condition, then above all keep your Hearts in a meek temper and disposition, certainly, the cause why many poor Souls have continued so long a time in trouble of conscience, it is, because their Hearts have not kept before God in a meek disposition, but they have been in a froward disposition, even towards God himself. Thus now I have endeavoured to open the frowardness of disposition that is in us towards God. CHAP. XCV. Use Of rebuk to those that are of a froward Disposition towards God, and who they are. 1. When in trouble of Conscience, doubt, or despair of mercy. 2. That in trouble of mind have no Heart to do any Duty. 3. They set upon Duties in an angry freting humour. 4. When Duty is cast off in an anger. 5. When we are crossed in one thing, then we cast away all mercies we might have. 6. In Crosses that come immediately from God. 7. To be froward against any part of the word. 8. Against the ways of God. Application, 1. WHerefore then,( for Application.) Hence is rebuked the frowardness of our Disposition towards God, many are froward towards God himself. Quest. You will say, Are there any such. Answ. In Isai. 57. There the Lord complains of those that walk on frowardly towards him, verse, 17. For the iniquity of his covetousness I was wrath, and smote him, I hide my face, and was wrath, and he went on frowardly in the way of his own heart. I hide me and was wrath and he went on frowardly in the way of his own heart. It was for his sin that I hide my face, and yet for al that, he goes on frowardly in the way of his heart. Wicked men, they first sin against God, and when they have sinned against him, if the Lord do but seem any way to be hard unto them, they go on frowardly, they are froward in their way, So you find, that the Lord complains of his people in the Book of Deut. 32. 5. That they were A perverse and Crooked Generation, He speaks much of their provoking of him by their sin; And likewise he saith, They have corrupted themselves, their spot is not the spot of his Children, they are a perverse and crooked Generation. There's in effect the same thing that we are speaking against, the Lord had much to do with this people. And in ver. 20. there you have the words And he said, I will hid my face from them, I will see what their end shal be, for they are a very froward generation Children in whom is no Faith, They were froward to God himself, he doth not speak of frowardness towards one another, but they were perverse towards God, Saith the Lord, in Isa. 7. Is it not enough that ye tempt men, but will ye tempt the Lord also? Such an expression you have there. So may I say here, is it not enough that you are froward one towards another, and froward towards the Creatures, but will you be froward towards God also? It is too much for men to be froward to their beasts, you may see a mighty frowardness of Spirit in some men to the poor dumb Creatures, the beasts they ride, they show themselves like mad men, froward towards them, I but; what is it to be froward towards God? Concerning the frowardness toward the creature we shal speak of afterwards, but now of the frowardness towards God himself. Quest. You will say, Who are they that are of a froward disposition towards God? Answ. I beseech you consider this, and you shal find there are many Guilty of this that little thought of it. As First, This is frowardness towards God, when you are in trouble of conscience any of you,( for I shal speak especially to those that have most to deal with God, for there are a great many of men that little take notice of God, and then I shal show the evil of that frowardness and some means against it) I say, you that are in trouble of conscience, when you shal determine against yourselves when you find your trouble stil to continue upon you, or it may be increase, when you shal in the trouble of your Spirit conclude and determine there is no mercy for me, there is no help for me, God will not help me, you do not think now that this comes from frowardness, these determinations against God it is in an angry mood against God, though you take no notice of it. That any man or woman should condemn themselves as worthy that God should leave them, and forsake them, that may come from their weakness, and sense of their sin, but that any should conclude and determine against themselves, that God hath left them, and will not help them, that comes from frowardness, and I will give you Scripture for this, that this determining against yourselves, it is from frowardness of heart. In Psalm, 116. 11. I said in my hast all men are Liars. What is the meaning of this? David when he was Persecuted by Saul, he was under sore affliction then, and he was in danger of his life, I but David had a promise from the Prophet, that he should be King after Saul, that he should come to a glorious condition ere long, and David was anointed by God, but David in affliction, In my hast( saith he) when I was afflicted, I said all men are Liars, I said the Prophet was a Liar, the Prophet told me this and this, that I should come to the kingdom, and so and so, I but I said in my hast all men are Liars, I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul, David made such a conclusion, that he should never have the word of God fulfilled towards him, and he should perish by the hand of Saul, I but, saith David, it was in my hast, I was in a froward, pettish humour then, As it is seldom that men and women can see it, when they are in a froward temper towards their brethren, but they see it afterwards, So saith David, I said in my hast all men are Liars. So when thou art troubled in Conscience, and sensible of thy sin, thou saist, the Lord hath forsaken me, and I shal never come to have any peace or comfort, thou sayest in thy hast, this is in thy hast and frowardness, if thou wert of a meek disposition, thou wouldest never speak thus before the Lord, thou hast no warrant for it, And so again, in Psalm, 31. 22. I said in my hast, I am cut off from before thine eyes, God hath cut me off, and God intends no good to me, and I am a reprobate, I am cut off from before thine eyes, I but know this is thy hast, and this is for want of meekness towards God, that is the first sort of those that are froward towards God. Secondly, Another sort of those that are froward against God, are such as in trouble of mind, have no list nor heart to do any duty that God calls for, but out of a pettish humour, they lay al aside, and have no mind to set upon any duty, as I told you it was with many of your Servants, you anger your Servants, and when they are in a pettish humour, they have no mind to do any thing you set them upon, and so Children, when you Anger them, they go about that which you set them about, as if they had no mind to do any thing you set them about, as if they had no mind to do it, and so any that are in trouble of Conscience, and are so troubled, and find such a disturbance as to take them off from any duty that God calls them unto, I say, this man is of a pettish humour against God. Thirdly, Another sort are those, That when their conscience sets them to duties that they dare not but do them, they set upon them in an angry, freting, chafing humour, as we red of Zipporah, in Exodus 4. 24, 25. and so on, whenas the Lord sent Moses about his work when he came to Moses and would have slain Moses, Then Zipporah took a sharp ston, and cut off the foreskin of her Son, and cast it at his Feet, and said, surely, a bloody Husband art thou to me, What, must the Child needs be circumcised? Her Spirit was very tender towards the Child, What, must it needs be done? And in an anger? She takes a Knife and circumciseth the Child. So many men and Women, in the trouble of their conscience, they go unto Duty, must it be done? Then it shal be done, they must needs do it, and their conscience puts them upon it, and they do it in an anger, angry with the word of God that puts them upon such Duties, there is some distemper upon the Hearts of men in this regard. Fourthly, And then another discovery of frowardness of spirit with God, is sometimes to cast off duty in an anger, as they set upon duty in an anger, so they cast it off in an anger, why should I wait upon the Lord any Longer? I have come and heard the word, and prayed al this while, and nothing comes on it, and so I will pray no more, and hear no more, and take no more pains, it is al to no purpose, and so in an anger throw off al, and they will hear no more, and pray no more, Oh, this is a froward, peevish disposition; as you shal see some people in a froward disposition; they will throw away al, and they will do no more, there is this froward disposition in the hearts of many against God, that because they cannot have what they would have, they throw off al, and they will do no more. Fifthly, Another is this, that when we are crost in one thing, and have not some one thing that we would have▪ we cast off al the other mercies that we have and we will prise none at al, because we have not some one that we would have. Just as a Child, perhaps you give a Child an apple, or a Cherry, and divers things that pleaseth him, but the Child sees another thing that it would have,& because it cannot have that, it casts al the other away, then you will say this is frowardness in the child, this is a froward Child. Thus froward are you many times with God himself, the Lord bestows many mercies upon you, and because you cannot have some one mercy that you would fain have, that you see somebody else have, therefore you are ready to throw away al, and not regard any mercy that the Lord hath bestowed upon you, this is for want of Meekness towards God. Sixthly, Again, At any time when your heart is in a Disturbance against any thing that befalls you, through some immediate Providence of God, there is such a across befalls you, and you cannot lay it upon any creature, but you see an immediate hand of God in this across and affliction, and yet you are froward for al that, this is against God, for you are convinced that God is in it, the truth is, God is in every affliction that befalls us, but in somethings Gods hand is more in mediate, now to be froward when we see Gods immediate hand is in such an affliction that is upon us, this is to be froward against God. Seventhly, And so when men are froward against any part of Gods word, and to have their hearts rise against it, this is to be froward against God. Eighthly, Again when men are froward against any way of God, against the strict and holy ways of God; think them too strict, and too tedious, and thereupon their hearts rise against them, these are distempers that are in the hearts of people against God. Though many having not considered their own hearts, they have not seen this, yet certainly, this is in the hearts of many, though you perhaps do not find your hearts yet in this temper, yet those things you may find afterwards, but many they know this, and God this day speaks to their hearts, and finds out the plague of their hearts, and therefore calls upon them, to be humbled before the Lord. CHAP. XCVI. Sheweth the Dreadfulness of this Sin, for. 1. It is Boldness against God. 2. It argues much pride. 3. It argues hardness of Heart. 4. It is contrary to faith. 5. It is vain, and nothing got by it. 6. your souls cannot be healed that are wounded. 7. The Lord will be froward to such. 8. It will at last turn to Despair, if not looked to. KNow therefore, That it is a dreadful thing to be froward against God, dreadful it is. For, First, Here is a great deal of boldness against God. Is it not a boldness, for a poor man to come into the presence of a King, and show himself froward and hasty? dost thou know the infinite distance that is between God and thee, that darest thus be froward before God? Secondly, Furthermore, It is an argument of abundance of pride, it is a froward and proud Spirit( that I shal show afterwards in our frowardness towards men, towards our equals and inferiors, it comes from pride) but our frowardness towards God comes from abundance of pride, and what, art thou dealing with God about thy eternal estate, and art thou proud? What, dost thou see thyself a vile creature, and God ready to stamp thee under his feet, and art thou proud. Thirdly, And further, It is an argument that thy heart is hard, that the Lord hath not Mollified thy heart, thou mayest have a troubled heart and a hard heart, many men and women have a trouble of conscience, and yet hard hearts, that is a sign of a hard thing, when any thing that comes against it, it makes a noise, and rebounds against it, as if you strike upon Iron, and brass, it makes a noise, but strike upon wool, and any thing that is soft and it makes no noise. So now, when thou findest God striking against thee, if thy heart were soft, thou wouldest make no noise, but now when God strikes thee, and thou keepest a noise, thou makest a great disturbance, and thou disturbest the family where thou livest, it is a sign thy heart is not humble, if thy heart was as wool, though thou hadst many stroke, thy heart would not make a noise. Fourthly, Again it is the most contrary disposition against the work of faith that can be, that place I name before in Deut. 22. 20. A froward generation that had not faith, frowardness and faith is opposite, He that believes makes not hast, and he that believes hath not an hasty Spirit, it is a quiter contrary Spirit to faith, a froward Spirit is. Fifthly, Yea know, it is a vain thing, thou gettest nothing by this, what dost thou get by it? What, shalt thou compass it the sooner? No, Quietness and confidence shal be thy rest, that is the best way for comfort. In Isai. 30. 7. There the Lord promiseth to his people comfort, but how? Is it not by quietness? For the Egyptians shal help in vain, and to no purpose, therefore have I cried concerning this, Their strength is to sit stil, That is, not to take pains, but to sit stil, and wait on God. And at verse, 15. Thus saith the Lord God, the holy one of Israel, in returning and rest shal ye be saved, in quietness and Confidence shal be your strength, certainly, this is the way for comfort, quietness and confidence, faith and quietness are put together, it is quiter contrary then to saith, and it will keep off from Comfort. Yea, you cannot expect to have your souls healed that are wounded, that have such a malignant humour in your wounds, As you know, if there be a wound in a mans body and there be a salt malignant humour in the would, it will never heal, the Chirurgeon must take away the malignant, salt, freting humour, before it will be healed; So God hath wounded thy Conscience, and thy Conscience will not heal, what is the reason? There is a freting humour in it, and a froward spirit, were it that thy Spirit were Meekened before God, the wound would heal. Thou hast come to the word, and heard many truths applied to thee for the healing of thee, and this sovereign balm and salue hath healed many others, and yet it hath not healed thee, what is the reason? because thou hast a froward, freting humour in thee. Seventhly, And again know, That the Lord will deal with thee, as thou dealest with him, do not think to get any thing by it▪ In 2. Sam. 26. With the froward God will be froward, that is, God will deal with thee according to thy kind, if thou beest of a meek and gentle temper, God will deal with thee so, if of a froward temper, God will deal with thee Accordingly. Eightly, Again, The truth is, if at length you look not to it, you will grow desperate, there is no such means to hasten desperation as this is, and the other disposition of meekness of Spirit will help against this despair, never did any Soul despair in trouble of Conscience, that was of a meek disposition, and would you be sure never to despair, take this rule, keep your heart in a meek disposition, and you will never despair, but those that are of a froward disposition towards God himself in time of their trouble, they are in extreme danger to fall into desperation. CHAP. XCVII. Means and helps against the former Sin. 1. Be convinced of this Sin. 2. Consider the goodness of God in that there is a possibility for you to provide for your everlasting Estate. 3. It cost God dear to make way for Mercy. 4. God hath been patient to thee. 5. justify God in all his dealings. 6. Set the Example of Christ before you. ANd therefore, by way of help to you and Exhortation, Oh! That the Lord would settle this that hath been delivered, to the helping against this distemper, for the getting away of this Malignant humour out of the Spirits of men and Women, that they might learn to sanctify the name of God. You know in the building of the Temple, there was heard no noise, no Hammer in building the Temple, so when God comes to build his Temple, he will have the Spirit quiet, God will quiet thee before he will lay thee as a ston in Christ, into the spiritual building, and bring thee to a sweetness of Spirit to be Meek before him, to be such a one as Christ is; for in thy Conversion thou a●t to be made a member of Jesus Christ, and then certainly thou must be suitable to Jesus Christ, and such a froward, pet●ish Disposition, is not fit to be a member of Jesus Christ, therefore for helping you against this. First, labour to be convinced in your own Heart, that there is this disposition in you, there are a great many people, that have much frowardness in their hearts towards God, and to this day they were never convinced of it, but it may be God will convince you of this and make you confess and say, Indeed, I cannot but say, I have a passionate froward Spirit when any angers me in my family, but, I did not know that I had a Spirit froward against God, I but, I am convinced now that I have a froward, passionate Spirit against God, Oh, This is a sore Evil, be convinced of it, and be humbled for it, there is no such way to be delivered from a sin, as to be convinced of it, and humbled for it. Secondly, Having been humbled for this sin, there are divers considerations that may work upon your Hearts against the frowardness thereof against God, such as these. The goodness of God appears, in that there is a possibility for you to provide for your everlasting estate, that may something sweeten, and soften your heart; that you are not past help; if God should take you at your word, when you say, God hath left you, and he will never come, and there is no Hope, if God should say, Amen, and say, you shal have no help, and you shal have no Hope, your condition would be miserable, well, but God is gentle towards you, and God saith, there is hope, and there is help for you, and there is none of your conditions so, but there is Hope, and there is help, and there is nothing makes it more dangerous then the malignant humour in you, quietly wait for it, and you shal see the Salvation of the Lord. Thirdly, Then labour to work this Meditation upon your Heart, it cost God dear to make way for mercy for you, it cost God the Blood of his Son, to make but way to bestow mercy upon you, and will you not wait for him when you want mercy from God? Are you froward because you cannot have it presently? Thou shouldst wait for that mercy that cost God so dear. Fourthly, Consider, Hath not God waited upon me in the time of my wickedness and vileness, and yet did not stamp me down to Hell, the least act of Gods will, might have stamped me down to eternal misery, and yet al my sins did not so provoke God against me, stil I am preserved, thus people are ready to say, my condition is worse then any, Well, Thou art froward because thy condition is thus, but thou hast dealt vilely and wickedly with God, and yet he is patient towards thee. Fiftly, And never leave till you bring your Hearts( at least) to justify God, that is one degree to get out this ill humour, this Malignant humour out of you, to justify God in all his dealings, though you cannot bring your Spirits so down as you do desire, do but bring them to justify God in all his dealing with you, and you have got some power in some good measure against this distemper of your Heart. sixthly, But above al means, the setting of the Example of Jesus Christ before you, that is the principal means to help you against frowardness, you heard before how Meek he was towards his Father, and the dealing of his Father with him, was other manner of dealing then with you, for God did pour out the fury of his wrath, in making him a curse for our sins, and God bruised his Soul, he felt another manner of Load then you do, and and though Jesus Christ was God equal with the Father, yet he suffered such things from the Father. What art thou before the Father? A Base, Vile Creature, a worm before the Father, that might have been in Hel long a go, and dost thou think much to suffer something, Jesus Christ was the natural Son of God, thou art at the best but a base slave; if he take thee, and adopt thee to be his Child, yet thou art but a bond-slave, when God takes thee and adopts thee for his Child, but Jesus Christ was his natural son, and yet he was thus dealt withal. You that are mariners, if you should go and redeem a poor galley-slave, a poor Captive, come and redeem him, and maintain him as a Child, if your own Child see you angry, his Heart melts before you, and is of a Meek disposition, but this Boy, that you have redeemed, he can bear nothing, what an unseemly sight is this? Now if there were but the least Ingenuity, this Captive when he is redeemed, when he sees the Mans own Son, the Son of his Body, What a Meek disposition he is of, it will be a mighty argument to prevail with him. And besides Christ he never offended his Father from all eternity, and yet he suffered such things, thou dost offend God, and the Reason of Gods dealing with thee is from thyself, The Foolishness of man perverteth his ways, There is such a place in Prov. 19. 3.( man perverts his ways, and he meets with him in his way,) And his Heart frets against the Lord. This is an ill dispotion. Set then the Example of Jesus Christ before you, who was Meek before him. I remember Eukidius in his History, reports of the Elephant, that though it were in a rage and fury, yet the way to take away the rage of it is, to set a Sheep before it, now at any time when we are in a rage, and fury, in a froward, and pettish humour against God, set the Example of Jesus Christ before you, he that was the Meek Lamb, and was dumb as a sheep before the shearers and opened not his mouth, and this will be a mighty means to Meeken and quiet your Spirits. CHAP. XCVIII. Meekness towards God further exemplified from Scripture Examples. NOw further to help and provoke Christians to be Meek towards God, I shal set before them some Scripture Examples. One is the Example of Aaron in Leviticus, 10. It was a sad affliction that was upon him, his Sons were destroyed by fire, verse, 2. There went out fire from the Lord and devoured them, and they died before the Lord. Verse, 3. Then Moses said unto Aaron this is it that the Lord spake, saying, I will be Sanctified in them that come nigh me, and before al the people I will be glorified. It is true, the affliction that is upon you is very sad and grievous, I but, God will be Sanctified, it is fit that God should be glorified whatever becomes of your Sons, and( saith the Text,) Aaron held his Peace, He laid his hand upon his mouth, and his Soul was quiet in Meekness, and yielded unto God, as if he should say, I, indeed it is fit that God should be glorified whatever becomes of my Children, and whatever becomes of me, and Aaron held his peace. Many of you, when affliction comes upon you, in an Husband, or a Wife, or Children, or estate, what disturbance comes upon you, what passion and frowardness comes upon you? It was not so with Aaron, though the affliction was very great upon him, yet he held his peace. And you may remember, as I shewed the Reason of it before, so especially I enlarged myself in this, to show, how those that are to deal with God about their eternal estate, though God doth not come in with present comfort and encouragement to them, yet they are to behave themselves meekly and quietly before the Lord, upon many several grounds, and there I rebuked the frowardness of the Hearts of people, even against God himself, if they be seeking to God, and cannot have what they would have, presently they are froward, and ready to cast off Duty in an anger, and why should they pray any more, and why should they seek any more, and in their hast, ready to turn against God himself, and their Hearts boil up in frowardness against God, and if they be set upon Duty, they go to it in a kind of anger, many several ways I opened, how the Hearts of men might be froward against the Lord, and laboured to show the vileness of it. Now to add a word or two further about it, and so to go on, it is sit that though God should deal never so hardly with us, whatever he doth with us, yet we should take heed that we be not froward, but be meek and gentle towards him, we are under Gods Feet to do with us what he pleaseth. It is a notable Example also that we have of the Virgin Mary, I suppose you know the story, in that. 2. of John, When Water was turned into Wine, whenas Mary said to Christ, They want Wine, saith Christ Woman, what have I to do with thee? Christ seems to spe●k somewhat angrily unto Mary, but we do not red of any anger from her again. But that is observable, she presently goes to the Servants, and saith, Whatsoever he bids you do, do it, Though he did speak angrily unto her, yet she would have the Servants to obey him, and to do whatsoever he should bid them do, then it fellows, he bids them fill the water Pots with Water, and they had no cause to repent them, for it was turned into Wine. I apply it thus, though God seems to speak angrily towards you; and his ways towards you are such as seems to be very hard, and much against you, yet you may not be froward with God for all this, but you must lay this charge upon your Hearts, and say thus, well, though God speak frowardly towards me, yet I am resolved upon this, whatever God bids me do, I will endeavour to do it, I will cast away no Duty, I will go on this way though I perish, I will do whatsoever he bids me do, I will fall upon it and do it as well as I can, and therefore go on in this way, do what thou canst, though perhaps thy froward Heart thinks, why should I do thus? I see no good in it, yet go on and do it, and thy Water may at last be turned into Wine. And likewise the Example of the Woman of Canaan is very remarkable, She is commended for this, that though Christ spake in an angry way to her, and called her a Dog, It is not fit to take the Childrens Bread and cast it to Dogs, Yet she did not cast off her Duty, and say, why should I seek to you any more, you call me a Dog, No, But saith She; The Dogs have Crumbs, She continues her Meekness of Spirit though he calls her a dog. So, Thou art seeking God a great while, ( perhaps) and God seems to be angry with thee, and his Anger riseth more and more, and thou seemest as a Dog, and art ready to say, I am a Reprobate, a Dog, I but keep thy Spirit Meek stil, and say I may have a crumb though I be but a dog before him; you know we account it a very Evil thing for beggars that Beg alms, if so be they will be froward, angry, and railing, when they have not what they would have, but now if any one that is a begging if he can take a repulse, and his Heart melts, and is quiet, and think with himself I deserve nothing, and goes away with quietness, and saith, such and such are merciful indeed, but I see I deserve nothing, and therefore it is just I should have nothing, this breaks ones Heart. So those that are seeking God, and begging alms, because they have not what they would have in a little time, if they shal say, it is in vain, what should we seek God any more for? And be Angry, and resolve never to perform Duty any more, this certainly is an exceeding Evil thing, we account it a good commendation of a Servant, if he should be cast out of Doors for his Evil ways, yet if stil he carries himself Meekly, and submissively unto his Master; whereas now, if Servants be cast off, ordinarily they fall a railing against their Governors, when their Hearts are in a passion with those that they are to deal withal, this is Evil: So though God should cast us off, we should keep our Hearts Meek and quiet towards God? whatever becomes of us, but we shal Leave this. CHAP. XCIX. Doct. All Christians ought to be Meek towards them they Converse with, Proved. NOw to proceed to the Next thing, and that is, Meekness towards Men and all Creatures, Learn of me, for I am Meek and Gentle. The Argument we are now to fall upon is, the Meekness that ought to be in every Christian in his carriage towards al with whom he hath to do. And as this is a great Argument, So I Hope you will see it very useful before I have done, I shal be willing to be somewhat large in it, because it is such a necessary Argument. DOCT. All Christians ought to be Meek towards those they converse with. I shal give you some Scriptures further for confirmation of this, and then we shal proceed to the several things in the Argument for the opening of it. In Coloss. 3. 12. There the Apostle Exhorts, To put on the Bowels of Mercies, Kindness, Humbleness of mind, Meekness, long suffering, and that, As the Elect of God, Holy and beloved, But that we shall make use of afterwards, how it is to be done, As the Elect of God, But now for the Exhortation, Put on therefore Bowels of mercies, Kindness, Humbleness, Meekness, Long-suffering, Al Christians should manifest this Grace of Meekness. And in the Epistle of St. James, 3. 13. who is a wise man, and endued with knowledge amongst you, let him show out of a good conversation his works with meekness of wisdom. It is a very fine, excellent scripture, it is not enough for a man to have a good conversation in other things, except he have Meekness; Meekness( as afterwards we shal show when we come to open the excellency of it) puts a beauty upon al our ways, show out of a good conversation Meekness; and mark, it must be with Meekness of Wisdom, not only noting hereby, that Meekness comes by wisdom as we shal show afterwards, but that the Meekness of a Christian, is to be the Meekness of wisdom, not a foolish kind of stupedness, not to be insensible of any thing that is done, but Meekness that must come from wisdom, Wisdom is to be shewed in Meekness, as there is a great deal of Wisdom shown in Christian Meekness, the Meekness of a Christian it doth consist in the allaying, and right tempering of Anger, not in the taking away of al kind of Anger, that is not the Meekness of a Christian, but in the right and due allaying of the heat of Anger: a Christian, if he had no anger at al upon▪ no occasion, he would be useless, he would be a very drone, as you know a Bee, when the sting is quiter our, the Bee is turned to be a dro●n, So that Meekness is not to take away the sting of Anger altogether, that there should be no such thing in the soul of man, but to alloy the heat of it, that it be not venomous, that it be not too pungent, and too long a sting, that is the grace of Meekness. The meekness of a Christian, should be the Meekness of Wisdom, there be many, that because they will be sure not to be accused of frowardness, and to much Anger, they will do nothing at al, they will not so much as do what their duty is that they ought to do, here is not Meekness with wisdom, though thou thinkest thou dost excuse thyself from being Angry, and passionate, when thou saist, thou wilt neither meddle nor make, when it may be, God calls for thee to meddle and make▪ with it, it may be your duty to do the utmost you can in such a business to rectify it, and order it as you ought to do, now this is a kind of meekness, though you are not so froward and passionate as you would be, as if you did meddle, this is not the Meekness of wisdom, The Meekness of wisdom is not wholly to extirpate, but to alloy in a right manner the inordinate heat and passion of Anger. And then another Scripture we have in the prophesy of Zephany, there's an exhortation unto us, yea, unto those that are of meek dispositions already, there is an Exhortation unto them, that they should seek Meekness, as it is the duty of a Christian to be meek, so it is his duty to seek after Meekness too. It is in the 2. Zephany, 3. he speaks it of meek ones, in the beginning. Seek ye the Lord, al ye meek of the Earth, which have wrought his judgement, seek righteousness, seek meekness. Ye that are Meek, yet seek Meekness, labour to be more Meek, therefore it is a duty for al Christians to be of Meek Spirits. And St. Paul expresseth unto you what a meek Spirit he was of. In 1. Thes. 2. 7. But we were gentle among you, even as a Nurse cherisheth her children. And then again at the 10. vers. Ye are Witnesses, how Holily, and Justly, and unblamably we behaved ourselves among you that believe, As you know how we Exhorted, and Comforted, and charged every one of you as a Father doth his Children. Thus he shows the Meekness of his Spirit. And at the 8. vers. Being affectionately desirous of you, we were willing to have imparted unto you, not the Gospel of God only, but also our own souls, because you were dear unto us. We might enlarge much in several Scriptures, to show, how meekness towards al is required of us from several examples, but I rather hasten to the opening of it. CHAP. C. Wherein this meekness consists opened, as it is the allaying of anger in Six particulars. 1. It orders anger to the right Object. 2. In regard of the Time. 3. In regard of the Measure. 4. In regard of the ground. 5. In respect of the exercise of it. 6. In respect of the End. CHristians ought to be meek, Now for the open●●g of it, in general it hath been shewed already that it consists in the allaying of the heat of the passion of anger, The passion of anger is a very unruly passion, and there is a great deal of need of the right ordering of it, therefore there are two graces that do attend upon passion to order it, because it is so unruly, there is the grace of Zeal, and that improves the heat of anger for God, and then there is the grace of Meekness, and that is to alloy and temper the heat of it, So that you see, God would not have the passion of anger wholly excluded, but have these two graces to attend upon it, one to improve the heat of it for God, and the other to alloy and to temper the heat of it, Now our argument is to speak of the grace that is to alloy and temper the heat of the passion of anger that doth such a deal of mischief with the unruliness of it, as it is said of the tongue, It sets the whole world on fire So this passion of anger, indeed, it sets the whole world on fire, as we shal show afterwards, when we set forth the excellency of this grace of Meekness. Now this grace of Meekness, it consists; partly in that that is negative, allaying the passion of anger, that we be not inordinately passionate lo keep us that we shal not be too much angry. Or in that that is positive, in the gentle and sweet disposition of our Spirits, and the softness of our words and sweetness of our carriages and behaviour towards our brethren. The first is the main, in allaying the passion of anger, that we be not too angry when we are wronged, but that we be able to moderate our anger, able to keep in our passion and subdue it,& not barely Keep it in, though that is somewhat, but not to let it inordinately boil in the heart, when it is in, It is somewhat to keep it in, but more to alloy the heat when it is in, for meekness doth both, it keeps in Anger when it ought to be kept in, and it allawes the heat of it when it is in. Many perhaps m●● keep in their Anger, but their Anger boils within them inordinately, but now meekness is both to keep it in, and to alloy it when it is within the heart; one of these is not sufficient, some men think, that if they keep in their anger al is well, though they suffer it to boil and rankle in their own Spirits, and others think they may let out their anger, they think it is better to let it out I see it is my nature, and therefore it is better to let it out I but, thou shouldst neither let it out, nor keep it in, though it is true, better to let it out, if thy letting it out would lessen it within, but observe this expression of people, that they had better let it out then keep it in. First it is a letting it out in a sinful way and God never puts us to such a strait, that we should choose the less sin, rather then the greater, for if it be sinfully let out there can be no good come of it, this is the first thing. Secondly Thy letting out thine Anger, certainly, it doth not Abate it within( though thou mayest think that it doth) but rather increaseth it, as the letting out the fire in a house, the fire gets within, and burns, when the fire is let out it increaseth the flamme: and the truth is, there is not the less Anger in thy heart, when thou speakest with railing, and passionate speeches, but thy▪ heat boils stil within thee, and this is the reason, certainly one sin doth not lessen another, and therefore thou deceivest thyself in thinking thou hadst better let it out, then keep it in, as if thy anger were like water, that the more is let out, the less is within. No thy Anger is rather as the fire, that when it is let out it burns more within and without too, burns both ways, but meekness is to keep in the heat of anger, and to alloy the heat of Anger being kept in, Anger upon any ground, either in regard of any injury that is done, or in regard of any thing that we are displeased with, that doth not wrong us but that crosseth our will; There may be many things that may f●l out across to our wils that doth not wrong us, many men will be Angry when any thing fals out across to their wils, but now a meek Spirit is quiet, though things fals out that do wrong them or that are across to their wils. Yea and Thirdly, It keeps in and allays the heat of Anger, when others are Angry with them, and do provoke them, for so commonly, our Anger is Raised upon somewhat that wrongs us, by somewhat that crosseth our wils, though it should not be a wrong, or upon the passions of other men, if those that we have to deal withal be angry with us, we think we may be angry with them, if they be provoked, we think we may be provoked too. But now, here is the temper of a meek spirit, though a Meek Spirit be wronged, yet stil it retains the quietness of its own heart, and the carrying of it wi●h quietness, and though things fall out across, and they are contradicted in many things, and their wils crossed, yet they keep their quiet frame of Sp●rit, and their words are soft and gentle, and their actions are quiet; though others are froward and Angry also, yet one that is of a meek spirit, he keeps in his Anger, this shows the meekness of the heart what it ought to be. But now if we would inquire more firmly into the meekness of ones Spirit, in the right tempering of the passion of Anger, Let us consider it in the several things, wherein Meekness doth temper and moderate the passion of Anger as especially in these six regards. First, In regard of the object of Anger, it doth order it to the right object, that one shal not be Angry without being able to give a right account of it, that meekness causeth in a Christian, a Meek one is one( I say) that is never Angry, so far as meekness prevails in his heart, he is not Angry but when he can be able to give a right and good account of his Anger. Secondly, It orders Anger in regard of the time of it; keeps it in order in regard of the time of it. Thirdly, Meekness orders Anger in regard of the measure of it, that is. First, He shal not be Angry but so as he can give an account why he is Angry. And Secondly He is not angry but when he ought to be Angry in regard of time. Thirdly, He is not Angry but in the measure that he ought to be Angry, it doth order Anger in regard of the right measure of it. Fourthly, Meekness doth order Anger in regard of the ground of it, whence it ariseth. Fifthly, Meekness doth order Anger in respect of the Exercise of it, in the way how Anger is to be expressed and and manifested. Sixthly, Meekness doth order a mans Anger in respect of the End of it, what is the aim of it. So that he is a Meek man, that hath his Anger rightly ordered in respect of the Object, in respect of the time, in respect of the measure, in respect of the Ground of his Anger, the expression of his Anger, and the end of his Anger. I shal be willing to speak distinctly to every one of these particulars, and( if it please God to bless this Argument) I hope abundance of sin may be prevented, and the hearts of Christians may be much meekened, so as they may live more quietly then they do, and there will be a great deal of honor come to the profession of religion. CHAP. CI. Of the ordering Anger in respect of the object. In twelve particulars. FOR the first then, the ordering of Anger in respect of the Object, a Meek man is such a one, as never is Angry, but first he can give an account of it, that he hath a right Object for his Anger; many times this passion of Anger failes in respect of the Object of it, in some nine or ten Several ways, and Meekness of Spirit will order Anger in al these several ways. First, sometimes people that are angry are al in a passion, and it is for nothing, they know not wherefore, nor any body else, no body knows what the matter is. A man comes into the house, and fals into passion with his wife, or Children, or Servants, or the wife with the husband, and no body can tel what is the matter, nor he himself, nor shee is not able to give any account in the world what the business is, why it is so, al is in a hubbub and confusion, and a great deal of stir there is, a great deal of cry( as we use to say) and little wool, there can be no reason rendered why it is so, now this is a most vile and abominable thing in Christians, for this passion of Anger to be let out for nothing, and no account to be given for it. In Acts. 19. 32. There was a great deal of stir in the City, and a great many of the people came together, and they knew not why they came together, so there is a great deal of stir many times in the hearts of men in a passion, and no body, nor yet themselves can tel what is the reason why there is so much stir, but after a little time, if so be that reason hath but a little time to work, the answer may be given, as there the Officer gave in ver. 40. Saith he, We are not able to give account of this tumult, So many men and women I make no question but they may find in themselves they have been often in a peevish humour, and passion, and when they have had so much time as to let reason work, to consider what was the matter, al this while I have been out of frame, and out of temper, the truth is, I cannot give an account of this stir that I have made in this family, and in my heart, I can give no account of it; but now meekness, that will order passion that it shal never rise but so as you can give an account of it, you will never be Angry for nothing if you have Meekness. Secondly, Sometimes men and women are Angry for every thing; and that is as il on the other side, as it is a sinful distemper to be angry for nothing, so it is as sinful a distemper to be angry for every thing, every trifle, every toy, any thing in the world that fals out in the least manner against their mind, puts them into an Anger. Now meekness will help one, that he shal not be Angry without a cause, but upon a just cause, as it is said of love love covers many things, so meekness will cover many things, and it will raise mens spirits above these things, as when one is sick, a little thing disturbs them, so it is a sign that the heart of a man and woman is very sick, when a little thing disturbs them. As one that hath been sick and weak, a little push with the hand strikes them down, so it is a sign that thou art very sick, when every trifle puts thee into an Anger, when mens& womens Anger comes to be common upon every thing upon every occasion, it makes their Anger contemptible, their Servants do not care for it, nor their children nor any others care for the Anger of those men and women when they see it is common upon every trifle; those that be under such governors they begin to despise them. As I remember the fable of the fox, that saw the Ass in the Lions skin, and it is said, that the first day it was terrible and he durst not come near it, and the second day he was less fearful, and the third day began to fear it less and at length came to see it every day and never feared it more. So many that appear terrible to their servants and Children, but it is every day, upon every occasion, and upon that their Anger is contemned and despised, and they loose their authority in their family, they think they have more authority, and rule more, and make them that are under them more conformable, but the truth is, it makes them more careless, if we had thundering and lightning always, we would not be afraid of it, in many Families, there is thundering and Lightning, and when it is every day, so common, it is lightly esteemed, and those men and women contemned by their own servants and Children, they care not what they do to displease them, the Servants and Children think let me do what I can, and let my fault be little or much, there is nothing but Anger from morning to night, this makes them that they do not care for it. You know, it were a very foolish part for any man to take physic upon every little ailing of the body, if a man should upon every headache take a vomit, and take physic, this would come to be so natural, that if he should come to any dangerous disease, a vomit or a purge would do him no good, what good would that do him which he takes so commonly and upon every occasion? this leaves him with out means when any dangerous disease comes. So when men and women are angry upon every trifle, they deprive themselves of means to help them when any great thing fals amiss, when any great thing fals, they have no more remedy to help them, then they had upon every trifle. Now a meek spirit will not spend his passion upon every trifle, for the truth is, we should account the workings of our souls, the working of our affections to be precious, and not to lavish them out upon trifles and toys. As it is a sinful thing to lavish out our thoughts upon toys and trifles, so our affections, and the affection of Anger, it is an affection that God might have a great deal of glory and service from, if it were rightly ordered but now if we spend it upon every trifle, and every toy, this shows we do not know what the worth is of the working of our souls, and of our affections, but a meek Spirit will alloy the heat of Anger, when Anger would arise upon any trifle and toy, meekness keeps it down, and saith, this is not enough to cause me to be Angry. You know a man, if he stir never so little, and presently he is in a heat, we say, surely, this man is in a great distemper, or a woman. If you cannot go a foot place, or the length of your house, but presently you are in a heat, you will say, there is some great distemper in your body; so when you cannot bear the least thing when you are crost in your will, that is a sign that you are weak, but when a man can walk up and down strongly, and go a great way and hold it out, this is a sign of health in the body; so when a man or woman can keep his heart in a stayed temper notwithstanding many things distemper him, this is a sign that he is of a meek temper and disposition. Thirdly, When men and women are Angry with the irrational and insensible creatures, That do but work according to their nature, this is sinful, As we red of Balaam, in Numb. 22. 29. he was angry with his beast that he road upon, that did but according to the nature of the beast, and indeed, had more wit in him then his master had, and yet he smote him in an Anger, and so your furious people, in anger if the beast will not go which way they would have them go, they curse them, and beat them about the head, and spoil them, though the beast do but according to the nature of a beast, And sometimes to the very insensible creatures, as you shal have them to be smiting of the creatures, that occasionally it may be hurts them, as if a knife cuts them, though they themselves be in the fault, and cut their own finger, yet they are Angry with the knife and throw away the Knife in an Anger. Or if they hit their Heads against any thing, they are Angry with the thing itself. I Remember it is reported of Zerxes, that because the Seas did over-flow in a place, and bore down a hedge that he had, he sends threatening words against the Seas, was Angry with them; and so many, if the wind be but across, are Angry with the wind, with the Sea. Now this is a most vile and abominable thing, it is just with us, as it is with a Child, if the Child hurt itself against the table, or against the stool, the Nurse quiets the Child, with beating the stool, and beating the table, as that were a naughty stool, or a naughty Table: So Men and Women seek to quiet their Spirits, by striking the Creature, here is al the difference, the Nurse doth it, and thou dost it, and as the Child is something quieted when the Nurse strikes the Table and the Stool, so thy Anger is somewhat pacified when thou strikest the Creature. But now a Meek Spirit is never Angry with those Creatures that are insensible or irrational, that cannot understand what they do, but rather thinks thus, if the Creature be made an instrument of any Evil to me, it is the Lord that is displeased with me, he looks up to God and saith, the Hand of God is in this, the Lord hath commanded such a Creature to be an Executioner of some displeasure of his upon me, and so by looking to God, is not Angry with the Creature, looks beyond the Creature, and so is no● Angry but Meek and quiet. That is a Third. And then the Fourth thing in Anger which is worse then either of the three former, is when men are Angry with the truth itself. As now sometimes, in case of dispute, when men are reasoning one with another, if so be that a man bring such kind of truths that another cannot deny, he grows into a passion; and into an Anger. I remember Jerome hath a speech to one that he saw so, saith he, I know thee to be overcome by the truth, because thou art so soon moved to Evil speeches, art so soon in a passion, As when you reason with any one, and find they grow into a passion, you may have cause to suspect that those are overcome with the truth, and they have nothing to help themselves but their passion, and their anger, it is a sign of a great deal of weakness, and it is a great disadvantage for any that Reasons with others, to fall into a passion, there is nothing that weakens their cause more then this. That is one kind of sinful anger against the truth. But at other times you shal have others, when they hear the word of God and the truth come fully to them, they are Angry at the very things they hear, when it pincheth their Consciences. That is the Fourth. And then, the Fifth Object of Anger that Meekness doth order the affection about, Is when men are Angry with the Excellency that God doth bestow on others more then themselves, and are Angry with the men for it; For I do not speak now of being Angry with God for it, but Angry with men, because the Lord hath bestowed some Excellency upon them more then upon others. So we know Saul, he was Angry with David, because of the goodness of God towards David, and Cain was Angry with Abel, because Abels Sacrifice was accepted and his was not accepted, and it is ordinary for many, when they see their brethren have more respect then themseles, they are Angry with them, now what Hurt have they done to them? But yet if they see any respect them more then themselves, this stirs up Anger, this is a sign of a froward, pettish humour. Whereas a Meek Spirit, will make many gracious uses of the goodness of God towards such a one more then towards ones self, and a Meek Spirit will bless God for any good towards his brethren, this will alloy the passion of Anger in this regard. You know in the Gospel when Lazarus was but raised from the Dead, yet they would seek to kill him, Why? Because there was an Honor put upon Christ, in regard of it, and therefore they would seek to destroy him: So many times when the Lord is pleased any way to put an Honor upon any Creature, a froward Spirit will rise against that respect that the Lord puts upon his Brother. Now a Meek Spirit is far off from this, and when passion ariseth from this false Object, here Meekness comes in, and allays the Spirit in this, and Teacheth the Soul to make a good use of it. Sixthly, And sometimes against Grace itself doth the passion of Anger rise, when they see others have Grace, they are Angry, I have red of tigers, that when they smell the Fragrancy of spices, they are put into a rage and fury. So some when they see Graces of Gods Spirit in others, they are put into a rage and fury, this is horrible, and a Meek Spirit will be far from such a disposition as this, Meekness will temper and alloy the Spirit in this respect. Seventhly, And then another false Object of Anger which is near to this is, when men are angry with others for doing their Duties; as sometimes you shal have the Master Angry with the Servant for doing that which he ought to do, he will be Angry with him because he will not do somewhat that is not lawful, and so the people Angry with the Ministers for doing their Duties towards them. And sometimes you shal have Parents Angry with their Children for keeping the Sabbath, for attending upon the word, hearing, and reading the word, now this is, I will not say a brutish, but a Devilish Anger, now if Meekness be in the Heart, it will quench and alloy this Anger. Eightly, And then sometimes there is Anger( again) for want of success in a business, that is a false Object of Anger, perhaps such a business fals out successesly and thou art Angry▪ with thy Servant though he cannot help it, thou settest him about a work, and this work fals not out successfully, and thou art Angry with him, how can he help it, this is usual with passionate people, any business that they go about, or that they set others about, if it doth not succeed well, they are Angry with those that go about it, whereas the truth is, it is from God, the success is from God, but they are Angry with them, because they cannot bring it about to what they would; but now a Meek man is far from this, and Meekness allays the Heart, and thinks thus, it is enough for these to do their duty, and the success was not in their power, and why should I be displeased with them? They cannot help it. Many Servants would Live a great deal more quietly then they do, if their Governors would not be Angry with them for that which they cannot help in want of success. Ninthly, And then another Object of Sinful Anger is this, when men are Angry with Natural infirmities that cannot be helped; As passionate people they are angry with their Servants or Children for their natural weakness, which they cannot help; they are angry with them for their natural dullness, or slowness, or want of wit, and the like, because they cannot have their mind upon them, therefore they are passionate; Now a Meek Spirit will be otherwise, a Meek Spirit considers, that they are as God hath made them, though they have not that quickness of Spirit as others have, but are naturally dull and slow, they conclude and say, God is the cause rather then themselves, these are the works of God in nature. That is another false Object of anger that Meekness allays. Tenthly, And another is this, when men and women are Angry upon mere surmises, when it is nothing but a surmise, a fancy that they make and propound to themselves, and thereupon let out their Anger like the dog that barks at the shining of the moon, the moon shines in the water, and the Dog barks at it; so many are angry at their own fancy, they create causes of Anger to themselves when there is none, a pettish and froward heart doth so, a froward heart, if there be no cause to stir up Anger, he will make a cause, fancy a cause; And you shal have many froward Spirits, that will be as really Angry for a fancy that they have made to themselves, as if the cause were just, as if they were really provoked, and so a froward man disquiets his own house, and his own soul, by fancying of causes and surmising of causes within himself. Eleventhly, And further when men are Angry upon pretended causes, that is another, when meekness comes it doth alloy this also, I say pretended causes, that is thus, men are Angry, and pretend such and such things to be the cause, but the truth is, there is somewhat else for it, that they are ashamed to confess, you shal have some that perhaps their envy hath raised a spirit of indignation and made them subject to wrath, and passion, and then if they can spy any little thing that may colour their Anger, they will seem to put it upon that, whereas the truth is, God knows there was somewhat else before, the gifts of God in such, or the graces of God in such, or the goodness of God towards such, but now they will pretend somewhat else, they will be Angry upon pretended causes, and have somewhat else in the bottom, this is vile: whereas a meek Spirit will never be ashamed to show his Anger, he will be willing to own the cause for which he is Angry, and meekness will not suffer this passion of anger to break out upon such causes as he is ashamed to own, that he is fain to colour it upon somewhat else. These particulars( I suppose) in the very naming of them, will meet with many of your hearts, and show how guilty you have been many times, and how far you have been from that meekness of spirit that is required of you, certainly, Christ was never Angry upon any of these Objects, that that I have name of his meekness, kept him from any such Anger. Twelfthly, And lastly. Sometimes men are Angry with one for the fault of Another, it is ordinary, some dispositions there are, that if one in the family displease them, they are Angry with al, if one Servant displease them, they are Angry with al the rest, Angry with their Children, Angry with their wife, Angry with al. So when Saul was displeased with Jonathan; he was Angry with those that were about him; now one would think it is enough to have Anger confined to those that have done a fault, that it doth not let it out to any other, a meek Spirit doth this. So that if you sum up al these things together, you may see what the meekness of spirit is in the Saints, that doth alloy the heat of Anger in respect of the Object: such a one is not Angry for nothing, he is not Angry for every thing; he is not Angry with the insensible creatures, he is not Angry with the truth, he is not Angry with Gods goodness towards man, with that excellency that God doth put into man, he is not Angry when men do their duties, he is not Angry for want of success in business, he is not angry with natural infirmities, he is not Angry upon mere surmises, he is not Angry upon pretended causes, and then lastly, he is not Angry with one for the fault of another: This is the frame and temper of a meek Spirit, he carries himself meekly, that is, he doth keep in, and alloy the heat of passion that would arise upon those causes, and that is the First, the opening of meekness in respect of the Object. CHAP. CII. Of allaying of Anger in respect of time in divers particulars. 1. It is not sudden. 2. Unseasonable. 3. Nor Continual. NOW the Second is, The allaying of Anger in respect of the Time, and therein there are three things the First, is, such a one is not Angry too suddenly. Secondly, Not unseasonably. Thirdly, No● constantly, his Anger doth not abide too long, a meek mans Anger appears much in this, the affection of Anger in regard of suddenness, seasonableness, and long continuance a word or two about these. First, For suddenness of Spirit. Many men and women, they have gunpowder spirits, as soon as ever the Spa●ke of fire comes to the gunpowder, you know, al is on a fire presently: So many men& women, as soon as ever any thing displeaseth them, they fly in the faces of those under them, are suddenly angry; these are like dry wood, sapless dry wood, that hath al the sap& juice out of it, as soon as ever the fire comes to it, al is in a flamme, so men and women that have sapless Spirits, voided of true grace, voided of true wisdom as soon as ever there is any occasion, but a little fire, a little occasion, they are al on a fire presently. I say, it is a sign of a graceless disposition, one that is without true grace, without true wisdom, not allowing themselves a minute of time to consider the cause of it. As a dog, presently as soon as one knocks at the door fals a barking▪ but if he would stay a little, may be he might see it is his master, So if men would stay a little, they would see there was no cause of Anger, but it riseth without any cause at al, and this causeth abundance of evil, as we shal see afterwards. In Eccle. 7. 9. Be not hasty in thy Spirit to be Angry, for Anger resteth in the bosom of fools. Be not hasty to be Angry, the reason why we call the passion of Anger hastiness, such a man is a hasty man, or such a woman is a hasty woman, it is, because the passion of Anger is so hasty, but we should be slow to wrath. That you shal find in James 1. 19. for indeed that is to be like to God Wherefore my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak and slow to wrath, it is the commendation of any Christian, to have the passion of Anger to come on slowly, there is little danger in that, we account it an excellency in God, that he is long suffering and slow to wrath, if God should be so hasty as thou art, that is, so suddenly fly in thy face as thou dost upon the face of thy brother, or thy servant, or thy child, where hadst thou been at this day? But now a man that is of a meek Spirit, when there is an occasion to stir up Anger, Oh but( saith he) stay a while, let me consider a while what I do: The master of Augustus Caesar the Emperour, taught him to say over the Alphabet before he did manifest any Anger, he taught his scholar, that before he did express his Anger, when any thing provoked him, to say over the Alphabet, that he might have a little time to consider of it, there is nothing wherein men are more eager in venting themselves then in Anger, whereas there is nothing wherein we ought to be more deliberate, because in that we are most in danger to miscarry, and a meek Spirit will deliberate, and consider what he doth, before it will let Anger break forth. That is for the suddenness. Secondly, The second is, The unseasonableness, and that is either before they are about to perform a Duty, or in the presence of others. The former we have had occasion to speak of in another Chapter before, when we spake of teachableness, we must be meek that we might be taught upon the sabbath day, when we are to come to a sermon, then to be in a passion in the family, or immediately after a holy duty hath been performed, or in the time when we are about it, I say, to be Angry then, this is unseaso●able anger, we ought not so to be Angry, and the Devil usually lays a snare in this way: When we are about any Duty, then the Devil seeks to put us into a passion, though a meek Spirit will lay a charge upon his Soul and keep himself down at that time. So also it will be unseasonable to manifest anger before others, as Husband towards Wife, or Wife towards Husband, or Servants to Children at such a time when others are with them, this may prove to be of very il consequence, and usually it comes from the violence of this passion, they care not what time they vent themselves, at any time, though it be at such a time that they are like to do no good with it; whereas a meek spirit will think thus though it is true, I am provoked, and I have just cause to be angry, yet will it be good to be angry now? if you did but consider before, your meekness would keep you from Anger when many times you let it out. And another unseasonable time is to be angry when we see others angry before us; I spake before, that we are to carry ourselves meekly: though others are in a passion, that is, their passion should not provoke us at al, neither at that time or afterwards, but now, it is the most unseasonable that can be, for the wife when she sees her husband to be angry, then she will be angry at that time, and so the husband angry when he sees his wife angry, at that time, and so neighbors angry when they see their neighbors angry. It was good counsel that one gave to a young married couple; he gave them this rule, be you sure that you be not angry together, for they were of very angry, Passionate, and choleric Spirits, if they could but observe this rule, though two should mary together that were of passionate, choleric Spirits, if they would but consider with themselves, we are both of angry Spirits, but when you are angry, I will forbear, and so when the other is angry, the other to forbear, not to be angry both together, this were a good way to moderate their passion, it is not seasonable to be angry when we see others angry before us, for what good come of it to add heat to fire, now if you keep your Anger to another time there would come perhaps some good of it. I but, you will say, if I keep it to another time, I shal not be angry at al. Then it is a sign there is no cause, if there be a reason why you should be angry to day, unless you receive satisfaction, there is reason why you should be angry to morrow, and if you receive satisfaction it is better then if you were angry to morrow, for that is the reason why you are Angry, that you might receive satisfaction, and therefore if you are angry, it is either for satisfaction, or it is not, if you have satisfaction, then you may not be angry to morrow, but if you have not satisfaction, there is as much reason why you should be angry to morrow, as to day. Thus, if there were wisdom, that would stay mens passion, it would be so, that if you were Angry with a man, you would stay till some time, and not manifest your Anger at that time, As Abiagail, when she saw her Husband nabal drunk, she would not speak to him then, but shee stayed till the morrow while the drunkenness was over, and then she tells him, what a danger he had brought upon himself and his family, and then nabal heard her; So when thou seest thy Husband drunk with passion,( for a man may be drunk with passion as well as beer, and it is as evil) but of that afterwards. But if thou seest thy Husband or Wife in a passion, the Husband is drunk at such a time, and the Wife drunk at such a time with passion, wilt thou show thy passion at that time too? Wilt thou be drunk at that time too? no, stay till their drunkenness be over, and then if there be cause to manifest your displeasure, you may, and show them that they were not sensible of the wrong done unto you. And thus meekness w●ll do, meekness will keep the heart, that it shal not be let out before a duty, when you are going to hear a serm on on the Lords day morning, or when we are at a duty, or after a duty, it will moderate the passion of Anger, that I will not be Angry before others, or when others are in a passion, but stay till their fit be over, and then I may do good. Thirdly, The third is in regard of the Continuance of Anger, meekness will alloy the heat of anger, that it shal not continue too long; as not to rise too suddenly, nor to be unseasonable, so when it is up, it shal not abide too long, it shal not be like the fire of hel, Everlasting, as it is in many, the heat of anger in their hearts, it is like the fire of hel, is unquenchable, if once they be up in a passion, they will never have done, as if the fire of hel were in their hearts, it may be, there may be a yielding to them, and yet nothing will quench them; whereas one that hath anger rising upon just cause, yet he will keep it down. It is with some as with the Devil, the Conjurer may suddenly get him up, but cannot so suddenly get him down, So thou hast no command of thy Spirit, to get down thy spirit when it is once up, as the sea, when it is up once, though the wind be stil, the waves of the Sea are up and down a great while after, so it is with men and women, when there is occasion to stir their hearts to anger, though they have that that satisfies them, yet they cannot be quiet for al that, but they live like Salamanders, in the fire continually: There are many families that have dog dayes continually al the year long, you know we have dog dayes in one time of the year, but they last but a little while, but indeed, many Families, they have dog-days al the year long, there is nothing but frowardness, and ja●gling, and wrangling, al the year long, where as Meeknes● would alloy this continuance of anger, where there i● Meekness there will be a jealousy of keeping anger long▪ for anger will quickly four the heart, and turn to Malice, if it continue long, it will grow to be bitter, and degenerate into Malice and hatred; we count it a great Evil for a man to have a fever long, to have a fit of a fever and not continue long, that is not so great an evil, but now, for one to have a fever that holds long, a month or half a year, its a great while; and so, you have some long fits of fevers, forty houres together: Oh but, how many Men and Women, that are in a burning fit of anger( which is far worse then the burning fit of a fever) forty houres, yea, forty yeares together. Many times the man and Wife in a family is in a burning fit for a whole week together, with Children, and servants, or others; now there is a great evil in this abiding of anger for along time together, indeed the longer anger continues, the more it groweth, as it is with the lines of a triangle, the longer I draw them out, the greater distance they will be one from another; so the longer our anger is drawn out, the greater distance shal we be at, from those that we are angry with, but learn of me, saith Christ, if there be such anger arising, yet with meekness alloy it, with meekness keep it down. Anger rests in the bosom of Fools, anger may be in the bosom of a wise man, but when it rests, it is in the bosom of a Fool, there it rests and abides, I mean resting otherwise▪ then it ought, and whensoever it rests in a mans heart, it is an argument of much folly. In psalm, 103. Surely we should learn of Christ to be meek, though we have cause to chide, yet not al day long to chide, Anger in a meek man doth not continue longer then it should. Further A meek spirit is one that though he may be angry, yet his anger abides not so long, but he doth put an end unto his Anger, when God would have him, and right reason tells him he should do so. In Ephes. 4. 26. Be Angry and sin not, let not the Sun go down upon your Wrath. We must take heed, that though we should be Angry upon a right cause, upon a just ground, yet that the Sun go not down upon our Wrath, take heed of lying down in an Angry fit, it is a dangerous thing for any man or woman to ly down and sleep in an Angry fit, you must make conscience of this, let not the Sun go down upon your wrath. I have red of John a Patriarch of Alexandria, that having contestation with one, there was a meeting to compose the difference between them, and in their meeting, they were so far from composing the difference, that they grew very hot one with another; but now this Patriarch, he sends to the other, and bids the messenger say thus unto him, Sir the Sun is going down, and no more; as to note, that though they were in a heat one with another when they met together, yet they should take heed that the Sun did not go down upon their wrath. Oh! that it would be so with people when they meet to gether, and fall out one with another, especially, when evening draws near, and they see the Sun going down, they would remember this scripture, O let not the Sun go down upon your wrath, and rather sand one unto another and say, the Sun is going down, and yet our anger is not going down, and it is very observable in the next words, neither give place to the Devil, How comes this in? let not the Sun go down upon your wrath, neither give place to the Devil, It is to show thus much, that any man that doth retain his Angry sit longer then he should, he doth give place to the Devil, it is that that the Devil would have, it is that that pleaseth the Devil exceeding well, it is that that the Devil delighteth in, thou canst do nothing more acceptable to the Devil, then to keep thy Anger longer then thou shouldst; Perhaps, thou art angry with thy neighbours, with thy family, and art in hot expressions, and this anger continues, and the Sun goes down, and thou abidest in thy anger, what, must I give way to him? he hath wronged me, and must I give way to him? well, observe; it may be thy proud heart will not give place to thy neighbour, that thou art angry with al, but mark, in the mean time thou dost give place to the Devil, Let not the Sun go down upon thy wrath, neither give place to the Devil; The very reason why men abide in their anger, and will let the Sun go down upon their wrath, it is, because they will not give place unto their brethren, you will not yield to him you say, let him yield to me, well, you will not yield to him, but yet you will yield to the Devil, and were it not better to yield to your brother, though your inferior, then to yield to the Devil. A meek spirit is one that will not let the Sun go down upon his wrath, neither will he yield unto the Devil. There are many people, that live as if they drank of no other waters but of Massah and Meribah, of the Waters of Strife, but the Stil waters of Siloam, that run softly, they are not for their tooth, they are not fit for them, the Church saith concerning God, will he reserve his Anger for ever? In Jerem, 3. 5. God may have cause to abide in his anger long, but I say of thee that art of an angry disposition, what, wilt thou reserve thy anger for ever? wilt thou always continue in such a distemper? Thou art in such an angry fit to day, and to morrow, and the next day, what, wilt thou continue thy anger for ever? There are many people that quickly let go any good thing, if there be any good affection stirred in them, any desire after God, of love, and joy, it's presently gone, but let an il affection be stirred in them, as the affection of passion and anger, Oh, that abides and continues long in them, it is a fire that is in their very bones: as fire in solid matter keeps long, so anger it will keep long in the hearts of men. But indeed, the reason of Anger abiding in the hearts of people many times is this, a man perhaps hath suffered his passion, his anger to arise unjustly and foolishly, and it may be he is convinced that there is not sufficient cause for it in his own conscience; well, but now observe, and examine your own hearts, whether sometimes it hath not been your case, that when your anger hath been up, and perhaps your conscience hath been convinced that there hath not been sufficient cause, yet you will continue in your anger, and abide in it, because you might not seem to others to be angry without a cause: Oh, this is an horrible wickedness, that rather then men will yield thus far, they will hold up an unjust anger without cause, so that God, the truth, and your brother must suffer unjustly, rather then you will lay down an unjust anger, but hold it up that others might think that there was a just cause for your anger at first. I am verily persuaded, that there are many men and women that have their anger up, and are weary of their anger, and would lay it down, but now by this the distemper of their hearts would be discovered, and so they will not lay down their anger: If there be any of you that have this distemper of Spirit, know, the Lord this day hath rebuked you of it, and it is a sign of stoutness, and proudness of Spirit, certainly, a meek Spirit will not do so; a meek Spirit, though it is not perfect in this world, but hath somewhat of nature stil, and may be angry sometimes, yea, and not as it ought to be, but yet, when the unjustness of their anger comes to appear, then they will not abide in it, because they would have others think they had cause, but as soon as they see reason they will let it fall again, a meek Spirit will do so: and thus much for the abiding of anger too long and how meekness doth moderate the passion of anger in regard of Time. CHAP. CIII. Of the ordering of Anger in respect of measure. 1. That it go not beyond the cause. 2. That it grow not too bitter. 3. Nor too fierce. 4. Nor unruly. 5. Nor Cruel. 6. Nor so Angry in our own, as in the things of God. NOW for the third, meekness doth moderate the Passion of anger, in regard of the Measure of it, that is, though meekness doth allow some anger, be angry but sin not, but he will be angry so, as his anger shal not break out too much in regard of the measure of it: no affection is more like to abound in measure, no passion is more like to exceed in measure then the passion of anger, for it is a fiery passion, and fire we know is very ready to exceed, as there is no creature that is so active as fire, it presently grows to a mighty deal, and so doth anger, Oh, how great a fire will one spark kindle sometimes. There is nothing in which we are more ready to exceed then in the passion of anger; fire is good while it is kept in the hearth, but if it get beyond its bounds then it exceeds. And so we love mettle in a horse, but if it be jadishness rather then any true generousness, we do not love that; and so men and women that are immoderately angry and passionate, they have a great deal of mettle, but it is jadishness, it is not generousness that is in their mettle. We al do account it a great disease in the body when the gal doth overflow, the overflowing of the gal, Physitians account it( and so any that have experience of it) a very grievous disease, but how many men and women are sick of this disease continually, always, every day they have a fit of it, there is the overflowing of the Gal in them, Oh, that the Diseases of our hearts, were as grievous to us, as the diseases of our bodies. Object. But you will say, When is the anger immoderate and exceeds in the measure of it, and how doth meekness alloy the heat of it in this Respect? Answ. First, It is immoderate at any time when it is beyond the cause that was given, In Zach. 1. 15. It is said, that God was much Displeased with his Enemies but with his people he was but a little Displeased, God when he sees cause is displeased but a little, and is not Displeased a great deal, when there is but a little cause, but he doth observe a measure and lets out so much Anger, a little displeasure according to the cause. But now when men go beyond the cause, and whether the cause be little or much it is al one, they are displeased, then they are immoderate. It is a note of Gulielmus Parisiensis, for one to be provoked for a little offence, it is all one, as if a man should see a fly upon his his friends Fore-head and he should take a beetle to kill the fly upon his Fore-head and kill his friend. God doth proportion his anger, he is a little displeased when the cause is little, and more when it is more. In Prov. 29 11. A Fool uttereth all his mind, but a wise man keepeth it in till afterwards. The Seventy Translate these words thus, A Fool pours forth al his anger, But a wise man disposeth his Anger, That is, according to the Cause, he disposeth his anger, a Fool uttereth al his anger upon every cause, but a wise man disposeth his anger according to the cause. That is one thing, to let it go beyond the cause; but a meek spirit keeps it in that it shal not go beyond the cause. A wise man will not be too prodigal of his anger, as it is the Wisdom of a man to keep in his affections, and not to be prodigal of his affections, so a meek spirit he will rather let out his anger less then too much. An angry man is very prodigal of his passion, whereas the truth is, if a man had but Wisdom to know, that the working of the Soul is precious, he would be careful not to let it out upon every occasion. It is the Part of every Man and Woman of Wisdom, to poise their thoughts and affections, to let out no more thoughts upon a business then needs must, and no more affections upon a business then needs must. Here is a business that requires indeed the affection of anger to be bestowed, I but, I will not be prodigal of the affections of my Soul, it is a sign that men have low esteem of their affections that will let them out upon an Object more then needs. A man will not give a farthing more then needs for any thing that he goes to market for, so a Wise man will not be prodigal of his affections, he will lay out no more of them then needs must, that is the First. Secondly, Another expression of the immoderatness of anger is this, when anger is too Bitter, a man may be justly offended with another, I but he may quickly grow too bitter in his anger, In Coloss. 3, 13, There is an Exhor●ation unto us to Forbear one another, and forgive one another, if any have any quarrel against any, even as Christ forgave you, even so also do ye. It may be the Wife doth somewhat against the Husband, for which he may be angry, but be not Bitter against her, and so be not bitter against Children, or Bitter against Servants, or Bitter against Neighbors, Though you be angry, yet be not bitter against them, though you have this to lay to the charge of your Wife, that she hath provoked you in neglecting her Duty, I but, you have nothing to lay to her charge to be bittr against her. The Apostle doth not stand to answer this Objection, I but she is thus and thus; Let it be what it will, yet you must not be bitter. A Meek Spirit keeps the sweetness of his Spirit, and saith as the figtree in Judges, 9. 11. When the Trees would have it reign over them. Should I forsake my Sweetness and my good fruit, and go to be promoted over the Trees: So saith a Meek Spirit, when Husband, or Wife, or Children, or Servants, or neighbors have done much amiss, I but shal I go now and loose the sweetness of my Spirit, and give way to the passion of anger; a Meek Spirit finds that sweetness in his Spirit within, that whatsoever comes he will not loose the sweetness of his Spirit, and he will not be bitter to others. This Bitterness consists in this, when one is provoked, and passion is up against another, they care not what provoking speeches they use to others, grating upon their Spirits such things as they know before will provoke them, now this is sinful though they be justly angry, whereas one that is of a Meek Spirit, will be loathe to provoke, and if there be any means to reform them without manifesting the passion of anger, he will do it, I say, though he have offended him, if he can reform him with any sweetness of Carriage, he will do it. As it is said of the Lord, he doth not love to grieve the children of men, and so certainly, one that is of a meek Spirit, is very loth to grieve any in the world, let others do any thing that grieves him, yet it grieves him that he should have occasion to grieve others. Now here I would give you one sign by which you may try the meekness of your spirits; if you be meek in spirit, it doth trouble you to have any occasion to grieve any one living; and what sweet lives might we live if every one were of such a spirit. Carry this along with you, that a mere man or woman is such a one, that is troubled at any occasion that he hath to grieve any one living; I remember I have red of one of the Romans, that was a Great Captain, and had done Great things for his Country, and being sick, some came to his bed side, and name such great exploits and things that he had done for his country, and he lay and heard them, but he said, here was his comfort, that never any one did wear a mourning Garment by reason of him, I never ( saith he) was a cause to make any man mourn. Now can you say so as in the presence of God, I never did give any just cause to any man or woman to mourn for any thing that I did against them. If so be that you rebuk them for a fault, or if you punish them for any just cause, can you in your Conscience say, that you have not given a just cause to make them to mourn and grieve, I do not mean, not to make them mourn for their offence, that is that which you may approve your hearts unto God in, but to make them to mourn, unjustly, to make them mourn when you should not make them mourn. Do but lay your hands upon your hearts in this and consider, have not I made many to mourn in an unjust cause? have not I made them to mourn that I ought not to have made mourn? a heathen did so, you know Christ when he was upon the across, they carry unto him a sponge filled full of gal and vinegar, I but Christ put it away from him. The hearts of many men and women are like a sponge filled with gal and Vinegar it may be if you do not provoke them, you shal not find them bitter. As a sponge that is filled with gal and vinegar, if you do not touch it, nothing will come out, but do but nip it between your fingers, and it will presently come out in abundance. So many mens hearts if you do but nip them between your fingers, as it were, they presently will be angry. As it is with many bodies, a choleric stomach will turn al meats and make them to be bitter to them: and so many men and women have choleric Spirits, and the distempers of their hearts turn every thing into bitterness, and if there be any thing done unto them that doth displease them, they will go and chew upon it, and so embitter their own spirits by thinking what wrong such and such have done them. It were a foolish thing if one should take a bitter pill of physic and chew it in his mouth, when he should swallow it down whole, Indeed, give a Child a pill, and he fals a chewing of it presently, and will not let it go down whole, so it is with many men and women, whenas there is any thing done to them amiss, any wrong, the wrong is indeed as a bitter pill, and you should swallow it down, but you take the pill and chew it, and then it's no marvel that it is so bitter unto you, when you take it and chew it, and lye upon your beds and meditate upon it, whereas one that is of a meek spirit, he takes a bitter pill and swallows it down. Thirdly, Meekness alleys anger in the Measure of it, whenas it is too fierce. In 2. Tim. 3. 3. There the holy ghost speaks of Perilous times in the beginning of the Chapter. In the last dayes there shal be perilous times, and there describes the wickedness of men, what they shal be that make these perilous times. And in the 3. verse, it is said, they shal be Without natural affection, truce breakers, false accusers, fierce, that is one among the rest, fierce men, fiery men, the word in the original is a word that signifies fury, it makes men like Jehu the son of Nimshi that driven on furiously, their hand is ready upon the dagger, if there be but a word Spoken. The Lord speaking concerning himself in respect of his people, in Isay. 27. 4. He saith Fury is not in me, but you have many that you call them Hairbraind Christians, that are furious upon every occasion, and it cannot be said of them as the Lord saith of himself, fury is not in me, in respect of his own people, but fury is in thee, thy heart is filled with fury, in good things thou art not so fierce, thou art cool at such things, but in evil things thou art fierce; now meekness keeps men from fierce dispositions, they may be angry, but they are not so fierce and furious, that presently their blood is in their faces, and they are in a fury, this is another. Fourthly, Another thing in the immoderateness of anger, it is, the Unruliness of anger; a meek man is the Master of his own anger, he can be angry, but he is able to call back his anger when he will, so far as meekness prevails; and in that consists the grace of Meekness as much as in any thing. One that is of a meek Spirit is able to rule his anger, anger indeed is a wild beast in itself, but there are some men that have got the skill, that they can rule Bears and Lions, can carry the Bear by his nose, whenas others cannot do so, so our passion in us naturally is like Bears and tigers, but the Grace of meekness comes in& enables one to rule this Bear and to carry it up and down, this way or that way, according as there is cause. As the Centurion could say to this servant, go and he goes, and to another, come and he comes, and to the third do this and he doth it. So one that is of a meek Spirit, he can say to the passion of anger, go and it goes, and come and it comes, As God saith to the proud sea, Hitherto thou shalt go and no further: So a meek man, he saith to his anger, hitherto thou shalt go and no further. If a man should keep a dog in his house that is fierce, and would fly upon every one, he had need to keep such a dog in chains; many mens passion of anger, is like a furious mad dog, that when it sets upon an object it cannot be called back, you had need to keep such dogs in chains, that when once they are upon a thing you cannot call them off. If a shepherd should have such a Dog, that he cannot call off when he sets him upon the sheep, it would be a great offence to the master, it is not enough to say, I had such a dog to bring in the sheep, but he must keep such a one that he can call off. So if indeed you be of a meek spirit you can let out your anger thus far when you see sufficient cause, and call back your anger again, and this meekness is of great use, In Psalm, 78, 38. But he being full of compassion for gave their iniquity, and destroyed them not, yea, many a time turned he his anger away and did not stir up al his wrath, So it is in the latter translation, but in the other translation it is thus. He called back his anger, and did not stir up al his wrath. The latter clause may be referred to the first thing we spake of, That God doth not stir up al his wrath upon every occasion, but now this is for this particular of calling back his anger, that is a meek man. In Nab. 1. 2. There it is said of God as it is translated in your books, that he is furious, but indeed the word in the original is, that he is the Lord of Anger, he is one that is able to rule his anger as he pleaseth, though sometimes to be the Lord of a thing, notes the abundance of a thing, from the Hebrew root, but we may apply it here, that as God is the Lord of anger, so every Christian should labour to be the Lord of his own anger. We know that when the nerves and sinews of a man are distempered and there is sickness upon him, they will move whether he will or no, as a man that hath a palsy, his hand shakes and moves, when indeed he would not have it move but it moves whether he will or no. Now when it is so in the body, we say there is a great distemper upon the body; so in the Soul, when any passion in the soul shal move, whether the soul will or no, it argues a great distemper in the Soul But now if the Soul be in a right temper, if it would have this affection move, then it shal move, if it will have it stand stil, then it shal stand stil, how unruly are the passions of many men and women, though they are convinced of the Evil of it, and perhaps have been humbled for it, and their consciences have terrified them for the viclence of their passion, and they have covenanted, and vowed, and perhaps fasted and prayed, and yet cannot rule them, this is a sore evil. As who is there almost but you shal hear them upon occasion Speaking of the unruliness of the passion of anger, or if they do not complain of it themselves, yet others do, and when perhaps they go to prayer, they confess it to God, and so they judge themselves for it, and condemn themselves for the unruliness of their passion, and yet notwithstanding continue as passionate and as froward as ever, after they have been at prayer, and it may be condemn themselves for their passion in the day, yet before the Sun goes down they are al in a frowardness and a passion again, Oh, that men would consider, that this is a great distemper upon them. Fifthly, Another thing in the immoderatness of anger is, Cruelty, when a mans passion grows, not only to bitterness, and fierceness, and unruliness, but to Cruelty; when men have passion without compassion, we should have our compassion to be mixed with our passion. Is there any occasion given for you to be passionate? Oh then, if you be of a meek Spirit, you will temper compassion with it, but now, when others offend you, and your Hearts rise against them, and seek to mischief them, and care not what becomes of them, so you may have your anger manifested, Oh, where is your compassion now, certainly, that anger that is without any compassion, that is a sinful anger, the Lord is not so; he in judgement remembers mercy: and so when you are angry with your Children, or Servants, and you would punish them, you must remember mercy in judgement, and this Meekness that is to order anger in regard of punishment it is called, Clemency. We red of Moses his Rod, that when it was cast down, it turned into a Serpent, and then the Text saith, Moses did fly from it, it was time for Moses to fly from it when it was turned into a Serpent. It may be thy anger may be sometimes such, that thou needest not fly from it, but when thy anger turns into a Serpent, then it is time to fly from thy anger. Thus it was with Nabuchadnezar, when he was angry with the three Children, he heat the furnace seven times hotter then usually, and caused them to be thrown into it; and so many, they are so angry with their Children, as they care not if they break their Limbs, or do them any mischief. It is a remarkable place that we have in the 4. of Exodus, You shal find in that Chapter, that Moses made many objections against the work that God did call him to, when God answered one objection, he made another, until the Text saith plainly, in verse, 14. That the anger of God was kindled against Moses. Therefore take that note by the way, that when God would have us to do a Work, and because there is some difficulty in it, if we should make Objections against it, and will not do it, this will make God angry: but now that which I would note out of it is this, when God was angry with Moses, God was not Cruel against him, but he tells him in the Next verse, that he had provided Aaron to come and help him in the business, and he said. Is not Aaron the Levit thy Brother, I know that he can speak well, and also behold, he cometh forth to meet thee, and when he seeth thee, he will be glad in his Heart. See what folfows upon Gods anger, God was angry against Moses, what then? Doth he show himself violent and cruel against him? No, But he saith, Is not Aaron the Levit thy Brother? I know that he can speak well, and behold be cometh forth to meet thee, and when he sees thee, he will be glad in his Heart. God thinks to do good to Moses, even when he was angry with him, and so it should be with you, if your Heart be Meek when you are angry with any, when any provoks you, yet even at that time you will be thinking of doing them good. The Sixth is this. When men are angry as much in the things of their own as in the things of God, I say, if it be but so much, but if it be more, that is stil a greater evil, but if thou beest angry as much in things that concerns thyself, as in things that concern God, that is immoderate. As it is with many parents, if their Children do but offend them in any Particular, Oh, in what a rage are they presently, but if they do any thing against God, they take no notice of it. As now, if you sand your Child or your Servant on an Errand, and he stay longer then you would have him, you are in a rage presently, I but it may be your Child or your Servant swears an Oath, or tells a lye; If it be not to yourself, you can put up this, or if your Servant neglect the word, or neglect Prayer, or speak a sinful word, if it doth not concern yourself, you can put that up well enough: a great deal of disturbance there is in your Family, But I ask you, when was there any disturbance but it was about the things that did concern yourself, not the things that did concern God? Truly, without breach of charity I may say, take one family of a hundred, when is anger in a Family merely for offence against God? There is a thousand times more anger for things against yourself. Now how canst thou think that thy Soul should be precious in Gods Eye, when his honor is not precious in thine Eye? If thy Servant should say unto thee, when thou biddest him do such a thing that he will not, Oh! How wouldst thou fly upon him and be angry with him? But now if he offend God, there thou canst bear with him. And so one Servant against another, wrangle and fall out for offences one against another, but they never fall out for any thing committed against God. Yea, many, they blushy at any time when they speak in Gods cause; I put this to you, when you have been in taverns amongst company, and there you have heard many speeches against the ordinances of God, and the cause of God, and you have not had one word to speak for them, but if in this company there be but a word fall by the by, that seems to disparaged you, you cannot bear that, certainly your anger for yourself is too much, when it is not enough in the cause of God, whereas one that is of a Meek spirit, be is more angry in Gods cause then in his own. And thus now we have gone through these things, how Meekness moderates Anger. First in regard of the Object. Secondly, In regard of the Time, and Thirdly, In regard of the Measure. CHAP. CIV. Of the moderating Anger in respect of the grounds and end. 1. The ground must not be sinful. 1. Not pride; the several workings whereof to cause Anger, is set out in Eight Particulars. 1. It makes us think we are too great to be crossed. 2. He thinks himself too good. 3. A proud Heart makes his will the rule of his actions. 4. He hath great apprehensions of himself. 5. He thinks all he doth, Right. 6. He thinks himself only ought to be satisfied. 7. He cares not what others suffer. 8. He thinks it dishonourable to pass by a wrong. THe other that remaines to be spoken of are the Grounds of Anger whence it ariseth, and the Effects of anger. The Grounds of Anger are these two, Pride, and inordinate lusts in mens Hearts; pride Particularly, and inordinate lust in the Heart more generally. But above all it ariseth from pride, pride is the main cause of Anger. I will give you some Scriptures for i●, in Prov. 21. 24. Proud and Haughty scorns is his Name, who dealeth in proud Wrath, Oh, You that are of passionate Spirits, take this Scripture along with you as a looking Glass, and set it in your windows to look in, you that are proud, and of Haughty Spirits, proud and Haughty scorner is his name, who dealeth in proud wrath. So much inordinate passion, so much pride, pride is as much seen in frowardness and passion as in any thing. That is a certain rule, so far as passion prevails in a sinful Heart, so far pride prevails, and that man or Woman that is of a passionate spirit, is of a proud Spirit, let them seem to be never so humble in other things, yet this is a certain rule; never pled thy Nature, or one thing or other,( for that we shall answer more afterwards) this is a true rule, that there is a porportion between sinful passion and pride in every mans heart, and thou that hatest the one, shouldst hate the other, and this is the Reason that Meekness and humility is joined together in the Text, Learn of me, for I am Meek and Lowly in Heart, Those then that are of froward and passionate Spirits, they are not Lowly in Heart, nor Meek in Heart, but proud in Heart. And so likewise in Prov. 13. 10 Only by pride cometh Contention. Contention cometh only by pride, because it is the chief cause, it seems to be made as if it were the only cause. Indeed there is never any contention in a Family, and in a Town, But there is pride in it, if there be Contention, it is by pride, passionate and hasty Spirits are proud Spirits. We shall afterwards, when we come to speak of Meekness and Humility, in the opening of the excellency of that Grace, show unto you what an Evil thing pride is, but now our main work in this is, to show how pride doth make a man or Woman to be angry, from whence it is, the several workings of pride to cause anger and passion, there are some seven or eight Particulars observable in a proud Spirit, whereby you may see in all of them, how of necessity a proud man or Woman must needs be an angry man and Woman, that those that are angry are proud. First, Pride raiseth those thoughts of a mans self that he thinks he is too great to be crossed, he thinks that he is in too high a condition for any to across his, or across her will; hence those expressions, Shal I bear such a thing? often you shal have a proud Spirit have the particle, I, I will never bear it, and I will be thus▪ and thus, and I will make you know what it is to do such things against me, looking upon themselves as if they were not to be crossed, whosoever were. But I pray, Who art thou? and who are you that must not be crost in any thing? God himself, that is infinitely above you, is crost every day, and you yourselves dare presume to across him, and yet you think much yourself to be c●ost in your mind and will. Secondly, A proud heart thinks himself so good, that he can never deserve any across, that whatsoever he doth, deserves no contradiction at all, whenas he is ready to make misinterpretations of any thing that another doth, but for himself all is well, there is nothing that a proud Man or Woman doth, but he thinks he may maintain it, and thinks that others do him wrong to be offended at it, or to complain of it: and hence it is that a proud Spirit is hard to be convinced of any thing that is amiss in him. Now this causeth a great deal of p●ssion in a Man and Woman, not to be convinced of any evil that they do themselves, and ready to misinterpret every body else in what they do, no marvel they be of proud spirits; whereas now meekness helps both these, a meek heart hath low thoughts of himself, and never thinks himself too big to be crossed, he thinks, What am I, a poor Worm that is crost, and what great ma●ter is this? And a meek Spirit is easily convinced of any thing, yieldable to any thing that any one shal say, and so by this means moder●tes his passion, be easily conceives that it is amiss that is done, and therefore will not be easily angry. Thirdly, A proud heart makes his will to be the rule of his actions, yea, and would have it to be the rule of other mens actions too, and such a one cannot but be of a froward Spirit; and therefore proud people are always wilful people, and so are angry people, and it is from their pride, because pride makes the will to be the rule of action, and in this a proud heart lifteth up itself even to the highest, God himself for it is the property of God to have his will to be the rule of his action. But we shal have occasion to speak somewhat more about the nature and evil of pride afterwards, but only now so far as it hath reference unto passion, pride it makes his will the rule of his actions. Fourthly, The great apprehension that a proud heart hath of himself makes him to think of all things that are done against him to be very great; a little offence that is done against him is great in his eyes, Why? Because he hath such great apprehensions of himself, whereas if he had but low apprehensions of himself then that which is done against him would seem to be little, but according to what apprehensions any Man or Woman hath of themselves, so they will judge of any thing that fals out across unto them, and will be affencted with it. Hence it is that proud hearts if any thing be done against them, they will aggravate the evil abundantly, that is the reason of those expressions in a family, if a servant doth any thing a little amiss, What are you mad? are you drunk? as if the thing were so great, as none but a mad man or a drunken man could do it. What makes it so great? It is because you are so great in your own eyes. Fifthly, A proud heart, whatsoever he doth in himself though never so unreasonable, he thinks it is right, he thinks he doth well, Why? because he is conceited of himself, and he thinks in his pride whatever it be, and whatever others think of it, he thinks he doth well, and this nourisheth his anger more and more. sixthly, A proud heart, he doth so look upon himself as if so be he were the only creature that were to be satisfied in his mind and will, and doth not regard at al the satisfaction of any body else, he doth not consider that others that he hath to deal withal, they must have some satisfaction as well as he, and they have Souls as well as he, and they have comforts to look after as well as he, but a proud heart regards only his own satisfaction, and doth not at al mind the satisfaction of other men, which a meek Spirit will, a meek spirit looks at the satisfaction of other men as well as himself. It is impossible but that man or woman should be angry and froward that only regards to satisfy themselves, and do not so much as take a consideration that others should be satisfied. The truth is, were our hearts truly humbled as they should, the Master or Mistress, though they were never so high, they would think, that the Servant ought to have some satisfaction or other, Job did so, he gave satisfaction to his servant. What! is the world made al for you, that one must have al, and others have nothing? The meanest in the world must have something to content them, and this consideration would mightily meeken the hearts of men and women in their dealing with others, do but think, I am set upon my own will, and I would fain have my will, and have content, and why should not others? No, it is no matter for them, But you are to look to the meanest wretch in the world, the meanest servant, poorest creature, and think that they ought to have somewhat to content and please them, as well as you should have that which should content and please you, so it is where meekness is. Seventhly, A proud heart doth not care what others Suffer neither, but is ready to look upon others rather as Dogs, let others suffer what they will, they take no compassion of them, but a meek Spirit is compassionate, as we opened you know before concerning cruelty, those that are passionate are voided of compassion, passion makes one so cruel, and pride is the cause of cruelty, it is the cause why men are not at al sensible of what others suffer. Eighthly and lastly, A proud heart thinks it to be a dishonour to it to pass by wrong, what! shal I pass by such and such a thing? I would scorn to bear, scorn to suffer such a thing that such a one doth, I would scorn to let them speak so, and do so, Herein he goes quiter contrary to the Scripture, that saith it is an honor to pass by an offence, As afterwards we shal see when we come to show the excellency of this grace of meekness. Thus we see pride is the cause of passion, and meekness, being joined in the text with humility, that moderates pride, and so moderates passion. CHAP. CV. The second Ground of Anger is inordinate lust; in regard whereof, and the several ends of it, it is allayed by meekness. THe Second ground of Anger is inordinate lust in the heart, this lets in passion, That place is remarkable in James, 4. 1. From whence come wars and fightings among you? Come they not hence even of your lusts? Hence come the wars and fightings that war in your members, There are wars, contentions, brabblings in your families, from whence come they? you will say, it comes from this cause, and that cause, that this Servant doth not do what he should, and the husband, what he should, and the wife what shee should, you are ready to attribute it to somewhat without you, but if you would have the cause in scripture, it is from the Lusts within you. Remember this Scripture, when there are contentions in your family, and you are angry, if any should come into your house, and say, what is the matter? from whence comes al this strife, and al this stir, that there is in this, family? you would hardly give the cause of this to be what the Holy Ghost doth in this text, to say, well, I may attribute it to this or that, but the truth is, it is from the lusts in our hearts, let but the lusts of your hearts be kerbed, and al will be well. As we know it is with the body, when it is in a disease, it can bear nothing, come to a man that hath a sore in his body, and if you do but come near him, and touch him with your finger in the least, he cries out, why? because it is sore, the place is distempered: certainly, just so it is in the hearts of men and women that are passionate, they are very sore, they are like raw flesh, that cannot bear a touch, if you lay but silk upon it never so soft, it can scarce bear it, when the flesh is raw, and when there is a disease there in the body; passionate men and women have diseased spirits, and raw spirits and such spirits can bear nothing; whereas meekness is the health of the soul, this grace of meekness doth as it were skin over the raw flesh, and indeed men do gal their own Spirits by their frowardness. First, their spirits are distempered by their proud lusts, and then their Spirits by their frowardness are galled more and more, and grow into passion, this comes from the distempers that are in their hearts. And then al this comes from weakness it is the speech of Seneca, Weak things are complaining, those that are weak are full of complains, as a body, though it be not full of sores, yet if they be weak, they are very touchy, they cannot bear when they are weak; So it is in the hearts of men and women, when they cannot bear things it is a sign they are weak, and that makes them so froward and passionate. The bramble, that is one of the weakest things, yet it is full of pricks, and scratches most a weak bramble, if you come near it, that will scratch most, so a weak spirit, will scratch and tear those that come near to them. It is true, your angry passionate Spirits, they think that it is through the strength of their Spirits that they do thus, What! shal I bear it? Shal I do thus and thus? I remember Seneca that was a Heathen, hath such an expression, It is not the greatness of the Spirit but the swelling. As now, if a mans arm swell, and his leg a sore leg, a gouty leg, we know it is bigger then another mans leg, but yet it is weaker: So a passionate Spirit seems to be bigger, and there is more pr●de in it then before, I but it is a great deal weaker, it is through weakness that it cannot bear any thing that crosseth it. Now meekness strengtheners the heart of a man and woman, and makes it able to bear that that is across without passion. And this for the rise of anger. And then for the end of anger, a word or two of that, now what is it that a Passionate man aims at in his anger? What would he have? First, In the first place, truly he cannot scarcely tell you what he would have but only this, he would satisfy a froward peevish Spit it. Or else Secondly, That they may bring others to be under them, that they aim at, at nothing else but to bring such and such to submit to them, and be under them. Thirdly, That they may seem to be some body in the world, what! If I should put up al, I should be counted a fool, be thought in my family to be a fool, now a a man thinks by his passion to be thought to be some body in the world. And then he thinks by his passion at one time, to get his will more at another time; he thinks that others will be more afraid of him another time, and at another time that he might revenge himself in a spiteful manner, these are the chief ends of a passionate Spirit, I only name them, I shal not show the Evil of them, that may be done more afterwards in the application of the point: But now meekness all aies the Spirit in regard of anger in these regards, that if he be angry, it is not to satisfy himself, but that he may bring things in order, to see that God may not be dishonoured, that they should not be under him, but under God, not that he may appear to be somebody, but that the Glory of God may more appear, not that he may have his will more at another time, but that his Brother, his Wife, his Children and Servants may not sin against God, and offend against the will of God more, not that he may avenge himself, no, but that he may do Good to others, A meek Spirit, though he may be angry sometimes, yet he never aims at more good to the party that he is angry withal, then he doth at that very time that he is angry. And hereby you may know whether your anger be right or no, you are provoked unjustly, that is right, I but can you say as in the presence of God, I am angry at my wife, but God knows I never desire more good to her then at this time, and I could never pray for her more then at this time, and there is good reason, for when you are provoked, you think she doth some evil, now then she never h●h more need of your help then at such a time, and are not you made to be a help unto her? And so the Wife to the Husband, it may be she is angry with her Husband, but can you say as in the presence of God, I never desire more good to him then at this time, and I could never pray for him more then at this time, when have you cause to seek the good of your Husband more then at that time when you see that it is il with him? When doth a loving Wife seek to do good to her Husband more, then when he is sick and il, there never more love appears from the wife then at such a time, now if your husband be in a passion, it is the sickness of his soul, and though you may be troubled at it, yet at such a time seek to do him more good then at another time, And so for a parent, when doth a parent seek ●o do a Child more good, then when it is sick? now thus it is, when you see Husband, Wife, Brother, Parent, Child to be sick, Soul sick, then you should endeavour to do them most good, and so long as you keep this way, you can say as in the presence of God, you can then endeavour to do them good, so long you keep the meekness of your spirits. CHAP. CVI. Of the effects of Passionate Anger. 1. It Blinds the reason. 2. It Disquiets the heart. 3. It disturbs al we converse withal. WELL, But to come to the main thing of al,( for more of this you may meet with in the application) the main thing is the Effects of Anger, meekness alleys Anger in regard of the effect of it, the evil effect, and indeed there are very many, there is no passion that produceth more evil effects then the passion of anger. We red of the Maniches, that they hold two principles, one to be the Principle of al good, the other to be the Principle of al evil, and if there be any thing that is the principle of al evil, it is a froward spirit, the principle of Anger, as God is the Principle of al good, so that of al evil, for there is nothing in a mans soul that is the cause of so much evil as this passion; and in regard it is the cause of so much evil, we must labour to search into the several Effects of a froward and passionate Spirit, to see what a deal of hurt it doth to the Soul, so that by that you may come to see what an excellent grace meekness is, which we are afterward to come to open to you, and the use of meekness in hindering those evil Effects that this passion would produce. There are ten several evil Efects of the Passion of anger, we will reduce them to ten several heads, perhaps there may be more thought of, but I suppose the chief evils that flow from the passion of Anger may be reduced to ten several heads. First, Passion doth mightily Blind a mans judgement, and blind Reason exceeding much, it doth even almost put out a mans eyes, as when you make a great fire there will be a great smoke, that will even blind your eyes, you cannot see things truly. Thus it is for al the world, the heat of passion, the fire of Passion when it is kindled, it causeth a great smoke to come up to the understanding, and judgement, and even puts out your eyes, puts out your reason. Or as it is in the water, when the water is al in a roll and stirring, when there is mud in the water, and al stirred, you can see nothing in the water, whereas before( perhaps) you might see somewhat lie at the bottom, when the water was quiet and not stirred, but in troubled waters you are able to see nothing; So it is with the heart of a man, when a mans Spirit is meek, and al in a quiet, there is a clearness in his understanding, but when once the heart is put into a trouble, into a passion, there is no clearness at al, al is muddy now, and you are able to see nothing, and understand nothing. So you have it in Prov. 14. 29, there it is spoken of meekness, how that helps the understanding. He that is slow to wrath is of great understanding, meekness doth mightily help a mans understanding, by allaying frowardness, it plainly shows us then, that passion hinders the understanding of men, that they are not able to discern of things. Passion, it is a drunkenness, a man may be drunk with passion, as well as with beer or wine, now you know drunkenness takes away a mans understanding, let a man be of never such excellent parts, yet when he is drunk he hath no understanding. Wo to them that are drunk but not with Wine, I remember chrysostom speaking of that scripture, Wo to them that are drunk but not with Wine, saith, how can that be? he answers, that is with passion And so passion it is a tyrant, tyrants they will kill al the counsels of the Land, or any that shal join with them in their government; would it not be( think you) a tyrannical thing to destroy a Parliament, the council of a nation? now reason in the Soul it is as it were the Parliament, the council, the great council of the soul, now passion that comes like a tyrant and would kill and destroy it, it thinks it can never be well till the great Parliament of the soul, reason, be destroyed. I remember I have red of a poor woman, that being to be judged by philip of Macedon, and perceiving that the judge did not go right, upon that( saith she) I appeal; saith the King( laughing at her) appeal, pray thee, to whom wilt thou appeal? saith she, I will appeal from thee unto thyself, I will appeal from thee that art now angry, to thee at such a time that thou art not angry, noting that he would have a better judgement then to judge of her cause: so indeed one may very well appeal to many angry people, those that are Masters, Husbands, or Wives their Children or Servants may appeal from them when they are Angry, to them when they are not Angry; how ordinary is it for men to be Angry, and think themselves right when they are Angry? They think themselves the rightest when they are in a Passion; now you need no body else to be their judge but themselves when they are out of a passion, they wonder how they should be in a passion, they see things so quiter contrary to what they were when they were in a Passion, thy passion took away thy understanding. Indeed take some men and women when they are out of a passion, you shal have them speak as excellent reason, and with such understanding in al their discourse, and be able to give such right judgement concerning things, but when once they are stirred, and are froward, and in an anger, they do things so irrationally that one would wonder and say is this the same man or the same woman, that we discoursed with the other day? one can hardly think them the same men and Women, it doth so take away the Reason of them. In Job, 5. 14. There you have a notable expression, The counsel of the froward is carried headlong, A Man or Woman that is froward, cannot have any Counsel, but he runs headlong, he runs in a rage to such and such things, and knows not what he doth, or what he saith. It is usual for Men and Women in an Anger to run headlong upon business, and know not what they would have done, the Counsel of the froward is carried headlong, there is no time that Men and Women are more resolute what to do, more resolved that they will have this, and will have that, but the truth is, there is no time in the world when we are so unfit to resolve, Why? Because then our counsels are carried headlong, we have no use of our Reason and understanding. It is said of Theodoret, that was the Tutor of Augustus caesar, That when he grew old, he would go from the Court to the Country to take his ease, and when he was going from the Court Augustus Caesar asked this request before he went, Leave some Rules to order myself, it may be I shal not see you again for a long time. and so Theodoret held his peace a while, and at last he gave him this Rule, that he should never do any thing when he was Angry, rather fit stil, do nothing while your passion is over; Because he knew that what he did then, he was like to miscarry in. Men are never so active as when they are Angry, whereas the truth is, a man is never fitter to fit still then when he is Angry. As when a man is in a distemper, in a heat, it is the best for him to go to Bed, So the truth is, when people are Angry, it is best for them to go to Bed, to lye down, and do nothing, That is the first Evil of Anger which Meekness help, For the Scripture tells you that A Man that is slow to wrath is of great understanding. Secondly, another evil effect of anger is this, it is a great enemy to the quiet of a mans own heart, it is a great disturber of a mans or womans own peace, we may say of it as the wise man saith of cruelty, in Prov. 11. 17. He that is cruel, troubleth his own flesh, so those that are of froward spirits, they trouble their flesh, and trouble their spirits too, they prove to be burdens to themselves, and hence it is that your angry people cry out thus. No man so plagued as I am, I know no body so crost as I am, Why? because indeed they are a plague unto themselves, and across themselves, they having no quiet in their own spirits, nothing without quiet to them, they are exceedingly burdensome to themselves, anger carries the punishment of itself with it. Though a froward man or woman would have his will in many things, yet the truth is, he is fain to across himself in many other things, so that to have a mans own will in some one particular, makes him that he is forced to across himself, though they would not have other take notice of it, if we look into their bosoms we shall find, that there is no such discontented spirit as an angry spirit is, you would fain have your will, now you that are of such a disposition, you can never have your will, for there will in spite of your heart be nothing but confusion and trouble in your own spirit. Now meekness keeps down passion, passion raiseth distemper and tempests in a heart, the greatest tempest that ariseth, it is in a man or womans own heart, and it is just that it should be so. But O! a meek spirit finds so much contentment in his heart that he would not lose for a world, he will not he will not lose that sweetness that is in his spirit. What! because such a one crosseth me, shal I lose my contentment? no, I will not lose that sweetness that is within my soul, whereas your passionate people, if any thing across them, they look upon that which crosseth them, and think it is more to be crost in that, than there is good in all the quiet of their heart. The truth is, when others are angry, perhaps you will rise against them in great passion too, and be angry at the same time, but you need not, do not trouble them they have trouble enough in themselves; as one that is not used to drink Wine, it goes down sweetly and readily, but when he hath done, his head acheth, and his body burns, and he goes home, and lies down, and is sick, and vomits, and what a deal of trouble doth he bring to himself, besides what he brings to others ● so being drunk by passion, What abundance of trouble brings such a one to himself and to others? and blessed be they that the Lord shows them the evil of their passion by this, to make them to consider and think, What good do I get by this passion? What! Had it not been better for me to have put up such wrong, than to endure so much vexation to myself? This is now a second evil effect of anger, which meekness doth help. Thirdly, Another evil effect of anger that meekness doth help against, it is disturbance of Families, and all those that we do converse withal. An angry man and woman, is a very troublesone and burdensome creature in the world wheresoever they are, and if they be so to themselves, they will be to others too. As in a Family, if they be froward, Oh how extremely burdensome are they to that family? as if the head of the family be froward, how extreme burdensome are they to that Family? or if a Child or Servant be of a froward spirit, Oh, how an extreme burden is it. And therefore in Prov. 22. 24. see what the Holy Ghost there saith. Make no friendship with an angry man, and with a froward man thou shalt not go: he is not to be a friend. One that is an angry man, although he should be a man of never such excellent parts, you shal get no good by him, the meek spirit is the only good companion, A froward spirit troubles his own house. And mark what is said of such a one in Prov. 11. 29. He that troubleth his own house shal inherit the wind: that is the doom of those that trouble their own houses. Now I appeal to you in the name of God, Have not you( many of you) troubled your own houses? when you have come home to your houses, you have been a trouble to your own houses, it is just with God that you should inherit the Wind, that God should blast you in al your ways, because of the extreme trouble that anger brings in a Family, I remember I have red in the history of the Romans, of Pompey, traveling in a place, he met with a people that had no houses, but only Caves in the mountains, he reports of them, that this was the manner of them, that they had always two Caves, the Man one and the Woman another, and being asked the reason why they had two Caves, the reason was given, in these parts we live but a little while, and we would fain live quietly while we live, and that we might live quietly, we have two Caves; it seems they were much given to passion, and to quarrel somnes, living one with another. And indeed, thus troublesone is passion between man and wife, as they can hardly dwell together under one roof, and they had need to have two Caves, not to spend a great part of your life in troubling one another, and cut off that time of your life now, and not reckon it, for, Is your life worth any thing? take but one day that you have been passionate and froward one with another, May not you well not account that day to be your life? for is that day worth living? and therefore angry people must never account it their life, and then their lives will be very comfortable. And hence it is one house cannot bear Husband and Wife, nor one table bear one another, because their lives are so uncomfortable one to another. And this is the reason the Heathen had that in the Sacrifices they offered to Juno, the Goddess of Marriage, they would be sure to pull out the gull of the Beast that was offered in Sacrifice, thereby holding this truth,( for their Sacrifices hold out many moral truths) in marriages, they should have all gull taken out, Marriage would be extremely troublesone if there were gull in Man or Wife, for passion is an unruly thing, and mighty ●roublesome wherever it comes, trouble to our Families, to our Wives, to our Towns, a troublesone Spirit in a Town, what a deal of time is spent for allaying of his passion? And so in meetings about any business, what a mighty trouble is a froward Spirit in those meetings? Now Meekness doth keep men and Women, that as they are not troublesone to themselves, so not to others, a Meek Spirit, though perhaps he may do something that you would not do, because you are not able to understand all that he doth, yet he will not be troublesone to you, he will live in places so as none shal have cause to complain that he is troublesone to any. CHAP. CVII. Of the four Effects of Anger, that it hinders al good. 1. Prayer and the Worship of God. 2. By making us Sullen. FOurthly, Another Evil Effect of the passion of anger is this, That it is a mighty Hindrance of any good; blinds Reason, disquiets our own Spirits, makes us troublesone where we live and hinders us in the performance of any good whatsoever, and that many ways, take but some General expressions of Scripture. The First is in James, 1. 20. The wrath of man accomplisheth not the righteousness of God, If a man or Woman be once in a froward temper, they can never accomplish the Righteousness of God, they are not fit to be set about Gods work, it is a very excellent Scripture to be taken notice of, not only generally, how it hinders us in any good, but in this, when men will seem to aim at the glory of God, and in things that are very good, yet will show themselves passionate, know that God hath no need of thy wrath, it is true, he hath need of thy zeal, but that is not thy wrath and passion, to break out in outrageous speeches, and ill speeches, God hath no need of the wrath of man; the wrath of man accomplisheth not the righteousness of God. And let a man have never such excellent parts, yet he will not be able to do any good almost, if he be a froward man; he is like unto a Candle that is lighted up, but is all wet with salt brine, wet a Candle with Salt brine, and though it be a great Candle, that might give a great deal of Light in the Room, it can do nothing but spit up and down from one place to another: So it is with many men that have excellent parts, they are of such Rigid Spirits, Censorious Spirits, so froward, that all their Life is but like a Candle wet with Salt brine, they spit up and down, and are very unuseful in the places where they live. Thou mightest be of very good use in the place where thou livest, but being of a froward Spirit thou art of no use, Yea, it hinders thee in all ordinances, there is no ordinance but a froward Spirit hinders. What canst thou do in a passion? What! Wilt thou go to pray? Thou art the most unfit Body in the World to go to pray when thou art in a passion. In 1 Tim. 2. 8. See what the Apostle saith there unto Timothy, I will therefore, that men pray every where, How? Lifting up holy hands, But How? Without wrath, you must be sure when you lift up your hands in prayer, that there be no wrath, hat you do not go to prayer in a passion. When Men and Women are in a passion one with another, and they come to prayer, call for a cushion, Kneel down, Oh! What a kind of prayer is there, certainly, this prayer is not an acceptable prayer. And therefore that place is very remarkable in 1 Pet. 3. 7. There the Apostle doth set Sarah as an Example to other Women, and commends Sarah for the quietness of her Spirit, and so Exhorts the Husband to do this Duty, that is, To dwell with his wife according to knowledge, giving Honor unto the wife, as unto the weaker Vessel, and as being Heires together of the Grace of Life, Now mark the very last words of the 7. verse, That your Prayers be not hindered. Be you daughters of Sarah, of quiet Spirits, let a man live as a man of knowledge, and therefore he must be a man of a quiet Spirit, or else he cannot live as a man of knowledge, and giving honor unto the Wife as unto the weaker Vessel, to what end? That your Prayers be not hindered. As if the Apostle should say, except ye be very careful in this, certainly, your Prayers will be hindered, you will never be fit to pray one with another except ye be very careful in this. Now me thinks, this one argument should be a mighty means to make you all to be watchful over your passion as long as you live, as thus, if I give way to my passion, I know I am of a Passionate Nature, well, and I shal meet with many things that will disturb me, now if I give way to my passion, what then? I shal not be fit to pray in my Family. And hence it is that when there is any passion between a man and his Wife, they go to Bed without Prayers, perhaps no Prayer all that day, perhaps two or three daies together and no Prayer, Oh! Cursed is that anger and that passion, that the worship of God must give way to it, what a horrible wickedness is this in a man or Womans Heart, that they are in such a passion and go on in a passion, that the very worship of God must give way of their passion. Dost thou think thou canst stand before God another day and answer this? O froward Spirit, the worship of God must give way to the frowardness of thy passion! pled what thou wilt, that the Husband do not do his Duty, or the wi●e do not do her Duty, yet take this as a Rule, whatever one hath done, or the other hath done, certainly, if it comes to this pass, that it hinders you that you cannot pray one with another, and that with freedom of spirit, know that you have sinned against God by your passion. O! do you prise prayer at so low a rate, that you cannot lay down your passion for it? O! just were it with God to meet with thee that night that thou goest away from thy wife and family in an anger, and goest frowardly to bed, just were it with God to meet with thee that night; think of this, perhaps you have not had thoughts of it before, but now think of it, and let men and women walk with meekness that your prayers be not hindered, Remember this, that if I be angry and passionate, perhaps it may hinder me in the worship of God, hinder me from praying in my family. Tertullian in his Apology for the Christians, Hath this Expression; We( saith he) When we are at supper do so eat, as to Remember we must pray before we sleep, and therefore eat Moderately: So if thou beest at any time angry, if any thing displease thee, Oh that thou wouldest have this thought to alloy thy passion, this or that displeaseth me, O! but I must not be so displeased, but I must remember that I must go to Prayer, and I must take heed that it do not disenable me to prayer, Oh it is a jarring tune in the ear of God when men and women go to prayer in a passion. If a musician were to come to play with an instrument before the King he would be very careful to have al his strings in tune, the instrument al in tune, no discord nor disagreement, now know that thou art called, not to play but to pray and not before a king, an earthly King, but the King of Heaven and Earth, upon whom thy present and everlasting estate doth●ly, thou must come into his presence and pray before him, and thou hadst need take heed that thy soul be in tune now, I but thy passion puts it out of tune, and there will be many strings that will sound very harsh in thy duty if thou goest to prayer in a passion. And so for other duties, if it be to hear the word, Receive the word with meekness( saith the Apostle) And so for the Sacrament, to come to the Sacrament in a passion, that you are convinced in your own consciences that you ought not to come to the sacrament in a passion, when you are angry one with another, and hence many men and women will rather lose a sacrament then come in a passion. Come to many and say to them, why do not you come to the Sacrament? They answer, my neighbour and I fel out, or my Husband and I fel out, or my wife and I fel out; now what a vile thing is this, when there is a sacrament that thou art otherwise convinced thou oughtest to come unto and now the breaches that are between thee and thy wife hinders thee. Quest. Well, You will say, But would you have us to come then. Answ. No we would have you to lay down your passion, that you would rather yield one unto another, that if she hath been in fault, that you would yield; or if he have been in the fault, that you would yield rather then hinder your coming to the sacrament, but many men and women by their giving way unto their passion and frowardness, are made unfit to hear, and to red, and pray, unfit to admonish, it is but like the spitting of a candle wet with brine( as I told you before) you know there will be a little light when the candle doth thus spit, but doth that light do any good? And so if you come by way of admonition unto any when you are in a passion, doth that do any good? If any brother have fallen, you must restore him, How? With the Spirit of meekness, You cannot admonish and counsel your child at that time when you are in a passion, it hinders you in al duties, what a deal of mischief doth this passion do in the world? now meekness doth so alloy passion, that it shal never hinder us in any duty, though God give me leave to be angry at things justly, I but, saith a meek Spirit, let me take heed that it do not hinder me in any Duty, and indeed, this is a true meek heart, that knows how to be offended, he may be offended, and yet at the same time is fit for any duty, is fit to pray, and as fit to hear,& as fit to receive the sacrament; such a one hath done me wrong, but why may not I receive the sacrament because of that? it is a deceit of the devil to make men leave the ordinances because of their passion, if thou dost not come with leaven in thy heart thou mayest receive the sacrament, now a meek spirit keeps its heart in such a frame of Spirit, that though it be angry in one thing wherein God would have it Angry in, yet it keeps itself fit for any duty. Secondly, To proceed a little further for the enlarging of this, that inordinate passion doth mightily hinder the doing of good, The wrath of man accomplisheth not the righteousness of God, as it hinders in the violency of it, so there is another way of Passion hindering of us in doing good, and that is, by making of people to be sullen, there is a Sullen Anger, as well as a Raging Anger, there is a dampish Anger, as well as a Furious Anger, it is not enough for men and women to say, I said nothing, no, that was perhaps because of an inward freting of your Anger, that you would not Speak, many times in a family, it is between man and wife, they go moping, and in a dampish way, and scarce speak a word from morning to night one to another, perhaps for two or three daies together scarce speak one to another, now it is not enough to say, that I do not Speak, I but here is the evil fruit of anger, to keep them from speaking, and so from that duty that you owe one to another, you take away by this means, the comfort of one anothers duty, for your tongue is not your own, either to speak when you will, or hold your peace when you will, but it is given unto you, that by it you may glorify God, and by it you may be useful in the place that God hath set you, and therefore do not think that in any froward humour you may hold your peace, and go up and down and speak nothing, for God will call you to account as well for your sinful▪ silence, as for your sinful anger. And so Servants, when they are sullen in a family, and speak not a word, or Children, know that this is a sinful anger, this dampish spirit to go up and down, and drail their legs after them, and have no list to do any thing, but sit stil in a hole and never come to meales or to their work, this is very sinful, and therefore saith the Apostle, in the 5. of James and the 9th, grudge not one against another, now the word translated in your Books, grudge not one against another, is, Do not sigh one at another, for there is a great deal of distempered anger in sitting alone sullenly and sighing, whenas if your hearts were meek and quiet, if there is any thing amiss and you have been troubled at it, you would go and pled it in a meek and quiet way with him that hath done you wrong, but especially for the weaker sex: As now for Women that are weaker, or Children or Servants of that Sex, they perhaps when they are angry, some of them are of such dispositions, that they will not speak much, but will get alone, and sit sighing, and be sullen, and so they become unuseful in the places where they live. And the truth is, where there is such a sullen dampish spirit upon any occasion when you are crossed, it is an evil distemper, and it is very hard for a sullen dumb Devil to be cast out, as you shall find in Mark 9. Compare the 17. and the 29. verses together. A● the 17. verse, And one of the multitude answered and said, Master I have brought to thee my Son, which hath a dumb spirit, and wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him, and be foameth and gnasheth with his teeth,& pineth away,& I spake to thy Disciples that they should cast him out, and they could not. He had a dumb spirit that did tear him, and did cause him to gnash with his teeth and to pine away, and he was brought to the Disciples that they should cast this dumb spirit out, but they could not. Then at the 29. verse, he saith unto them( For the Disciples wondered why they could not cast out this dumb Devil, they come to ask Christ privately, Why could not we cast him out?) Christ answers them. This kind can come forth by nothing, but prayer and fasting. Where there is a dumb Devil, a sullen, moping dampish distemper of heart, it is a very hard thing for such a one to be cured, for they be bold in their sullenness, and dumpishness, and it is very hard for any such to be cast out but by Fasting and prayer. You that are sullen or dampish, if your Governors, or Parents across you a little, you will sit all alone pining and be dampish, and so are made unfit for any thing, I say, you had need Fast, and pray for the casting out of this distemper, now meekness in this; let there be any thing done against a meek spirit, any wrong, such a one is able to go and pled it out, and is able to go about his business as before. Indeed he may be grieved there is a miscarriage in such or such, I, but shal not I do my duty therefore? I may go and do my duty by pleading with them, and by speaking to them, I will do my duty. CHAP. CVIII. Of the fifth and sixth Effect, hindering receiving Good. And depriving of the Good we have before. AGain, Another sinful Effect of Anger is this, as it hinders doing good, so it hinders receiving of good, a froward spirit is unfit for to take in any good, as well as to do good, there is no dealing with them when they are in their fit. As there is no physic to be given unto a man when he is in the heat of his fever; Physitians do not use to give physic then, but stay while their fit is over, and so there is no meddling with men when they are in a flamme, you must come to them when they are quiet. And indeed, this is the horrible distemper of this passion, that when it is up, God and men must stay till it is down, How often hast thou made God to wait upon thy lust in thy passion? it is too much that God should wait upon a poor creature upon any terms, though we should be never so pliable: But for the Lord not only to wait upon our person to do us good, but to wait upon our wicked, vile, base lust, that he must stay till that be over, before we are fit to hear him speak to us. We would account it a very ill thing, if a Servant be in the house, and we must not only wait upon him, but wait upon his humour, and his lust, now it is a meaner thing to wait upon a mans humour, than to wait upon the meanest creature in the world, it were much for a King or a Prince to wait upon a Scullion Boy in the kitchen: But Oh for the infinite God to wait upon a lust it is more, that there is nothing can be done till the fit be over with them. As you know it is when a house is on fire, a man( with the noise of the fire and of the people, and the confusion that is there) hears nothing that you say to him, nor minds nothing, is unfit to be spoken unto; and so it is when the fire of anger is up in mens hearts, they are fit to harken to nothing, the Soul is on fire, the House is on fire, and fit to hear nothing, Abigail was fain to stay for Nabal while his fit was over, before she spake to him: And it is Austins similitude, that a Vessel that is soured with vinegar, spoils every thing that you put into it, so it is with a Soul soured with passion. I remember I red of an Emperor, when one told him that there was much wrong and violence done in his country against his Laws, saith he, I cannot hear you for the rattling and sound of war, I cannot hear what you say, nothing that in a country where there is war, there the Laws cannot be kept that are made for peace. It is true, now there may be many complaints of a great deal of injustice in our own Land, but there can be no hearing, because of the noise and rattling of warlike instruments: And so when the heart is up in a passion, speak what you will; Such a Soul cannot hear you, it hinders from receiving good: but now saith the Apostle James, Receive with Meekness the engrafted word, Meekness fits the Soul to receive any good; Such a Soul stands before God and saith, Speak Lord for thy Servant heareth. Let God come at any time to a meek and quiet Spirit, and it is ready, to harken what God saith unto it, and receives any good from any one. Sixthly, And then further, in the next place another evil effect of passion is this, it not only hinders the receiving of good but deprives us of the good that we had before, as they say, some pearls may be dissolved by vinegar, So there are many excellent things in men and women but they are dissolved by the vinegar of passion, many excellent parts and gifts of Gods Spirit that men and women have, but al is dissolved and stained by this vinegar of passion, you know that vinegar will slain and so the vinegar of passion it doth slain the spirits of men and women, and causeth them to lose that beauty that they had before, it doth lose much of the sweetness of the enjoyment of God himself. The Lord doth not love to dwell in babylon, but in Salem, now babylon signifies Confusion, And where is there so much confusion, as there is in a passionate spirit? here is the confusion, Babylon, the Lord loveth not to dwell there, but in Zion and in Salem, he loves to dwell in peace, where there is a peaceable and quiet spirit. The scorching heat of the fire will take away the sense of the heat of the Sun, though the warm beams of the Sun shine upon you, you will not feel the heat of them, if you come to the scorching heat of the fire▪ So the scorching heat of passion takes away the sense of the warm beams of the Son of righteousness, of the shine of the love of God upon the heart; A froward heart hath little sense of Gods love, though possibly he may be a Godly man, or she a Godly woman, yet they can have little sense of the love of God towards them, because of frowardness, your froward Christians have little comfort of the love of God to them, and there remains such a bitterness a long time upon it, that it hinders the sense of the sweetness of Gods love a long time after. But now the heart by Meekness is kept in a constant way of the enjoyment of the light of Gods face, and hath a thousand times more sweetness in denying his passion, than you have in your passion, wherefore is it that you give liberty to your passion, but for comfort and contentment that you would have to yourselves? but you lose a thousand times more contentment, which I shal afterwards show, in opening the Grace of Meekness, but in these things as I go along, the excellency of the Grace of meekness is much discovered. CHAP. CIX. The seventh Effect of Anger is. That it causeth abundance of Sin; 1. It makes us fly in the Face of God. 2. Banisheth the fear of God. 3. It regardeth no relation. 4. It makes desperate. 5. It causeth cursing and railing. 6. quarreling and Fighting. 7. It makes a strange difference between a man and himself. 8. It is revengeful. 9▪ It discovers shane. BUt now the greatest of all is to show how Meekness doth help against the evil effects of Anger, passion doth not only hinder doing good and receiving of good, but it is the cause of abundance of sin and wickedness. Were there no Evil Effects then what hath been name, yet I suppose you cannot but see what a horrible thing this passion is, and how necessary the Grace of Meekness is for a Christian, But I hope in the opening of this thing that I am now about, the showing of the abundance of sin that passion doth cause, that doth set out the excellency of Meekness, and in that you will see what Meekness doth for us, in keeping of us from abundance of sin, you will be in Love with the Grace of Meekness when you see what abundance of sin it keeps us from. Now passion, That causeth abundance of sin in Prov. 29. 22. An Angry man stirreth up strife, and a furious man aboundeth in transgression. Mark what the Holy Ghost saith here, a furious man aboundeth in transgression, have any of you furious spirits, certainly, you abound in transgression, the Holy Ghost tells you that you abound in transgression, your sins are not ordinary, but they have increased abundantly. Oh! sometimes in one quarter of an hour when one is put into a fit of passion what abundance of sin is committed? More sin committed sometimes in one quarter of an Hour, by a Man or Woman in an Anger, then a Meek spirited man commits in a quarter of a year, perhaps in half a year, Nay in a twelve Month, or the greater part of their lives, he abounds in transgression. The Practices of some are commentaries to this Text, and I suppose there is scarce any but have seen it or found it in themselves, or in others, and they can understand and do know what this Text means, they can say, surely a furious man aboundeth in transgression; and can see it in others when they are in an Angry fit, how they abound in transgression. And truly, if you did but examine your own Hearts afterwards, you would find, that you have abounded in transgression very much after a passion. The Hebrew word that is used to signify, passion and Anger, doth signify to transgress too, the word from whence passion comes, signifies to go beyond bounds too, because of all men and Women in the world such will go beyond their bounds. It is hard to keep fire within its bounds, it is much to keep water within its bounds, but fire much more. We red of Moses, when he came down from Mount Sinai, and had the two Tables in his hands, and saw the people what Gods they had made,( he did it in a Holy Anger) he threw them down and broke them, Now what Moses did in Holy Anger, breaking the two Tables of the Law, do passionate and Angry people in a wicked Anger, even break all the ten Commandments. You break the Laws that are Written in Tables, sometimes in one fit of a passion you have broken all Commands of the second Table in pieces, all the ten Commandements have been broken in some fit of passion and Anger. In Levit. 13. 24. We red of the leprosy, the Priest must take the Lamb, If there be any Flesh in the Skin whereof there is a Hot burning, and the quick Flesh that burneth have a white bright Spot, somewhat reddish or white, then the Priest shall look upon it, and behold, if the Hair in the bright spot be turned white, and it be in sight deeper then the Skin, it is a leprosy broken out of the burning, wherefore the Priest shal pronounce him unclean, it is the plague of leprosy. Here there was a leprosy that breaks out of the burning, and it is usual, when there is a hot burning of passion in the Hearts of men and Women, there is a leprosy comes from them, so that they that stand by them, they have cause to pronounce them unclean, and it is very rare for a Man or Woman to break out into passion, but there is a leprosy breaks out from them, sometimes it breaks all over, that your hot people are all over Leprous before they have done their fit of passion. The Philosophers say of the inferior orbs, that if their motion were not stayed somewhat by the first mover, they would set al the world on fire with the quickness of their motion, and so indeed it is here, these unruly passions, that are the inferior orbs of the Soul, if so be that they be not by natural Wisdom, or by Grace, kept back in their motion, but are suffered to run wild, they are ready to set the whole world a fire: So, much Evil is done by passion, it is a fire that warms al the Snakes that lay before as dead in a mans bosom, the lusts of a mans Heart, are like to Snakes in the could time, many men and Women are very fair when you please them, they will live very fairly, and you are not able to find fault with what they do, but let them once be put into a passion, and then you shal find what is in them, As if there were a bed of Snakes, if the weather be could in the Winter they will not stir, but bring them to the fire, and let them be once heat, and then they hiss at you. And so the lives of men and Women are beds of Snakes, that is, mens vile, wicked, and sinful lusts, and when they are pleased, these snakes, as in the winter, in the could stir not, but when once the heat of Anger doth arise, that warms these lusts, and then how do they hiss and spit up●●. those that are about them, and sting every one, when they are warm with heat. As it is with the stream, you know when there is a Landflood, when the brooks get over the banks, and overflow the meadows, they carry with them a great deal of soil, and a great deal of filth, and therefore your husband-men count it a great loss to them, if a little before their mowing a great deal of filth comes in by overflowing of the river: Just thus it is in the overflowing of al Affections, but Especially in the overflowing of the affection of anger, there comes a great deal of soil, of filth a long with it, when at any time it doth overflow. Many times a man or woman sacrifiseth to the Devil, even his soul, when he is in a fit of passion, and that that is dearest to him in 2. Kings, 3. and the two last verses, we red of a strange fit of a King, it is the King of Moab, And when the King of Moab saw that the battle was too sore for him, he took with him 700. men that drew swords to break through, even to the King of Edom, but they could not; Now he was put into a mighty passion, because he could not have his will, Then saith the text he took his eldest son, that should have reigned in his stead, and offered him for a burnt offering upon the wall, and there was a great indignation against Israel. He was in a fuming fit of anger, because he could not have his mind, and he takes his eldest son and offers him to his idol upon the wall in an angry fume. So many people in an angry fit, they offer unto the Devil that which is dearest unto them, any thing in the world they do, and offer their very souls in a sacrifice. It is with their hearts, as it is with a glass that is shaken that hath lees at the bottom, it is al in a mud when it is shaken, so when their hearts are shaken they are al in a mud. But now if you would have the sinful effects that come from this anger I shal present you with some. First, It causeth men and women, even to fly in the very face of God himself when they are angry( for anger I have spoken already in regard of God) but now as to their fellow creatures, you shal have many men when they are angry, what do they? they do swear, and blaspheme, and rage presently, what an evil thing is this? thou art angry with men, and thou fliest in the face of God himself. A man that hath been abroad and is angry, he comes in, and he flies upon al in the house, upon his Servants, upon his children, I appeal unto the consciences of al, whether are there not many, that when they have been provoked to anger, they have fallen a swearing, and blaspheming? and do but think seriously of it, how many oaths thou hast sworn in an angry fit. Oh! That God would bring them to thy mind, if God would set them before thee. They would be as so many daggers at thy heart. Do not say that he provokes you, What? Because he provokes you, must you provoke God? What infinite unreasonableness is this? and what boldness, and presumptuousness is this? he provokes me, and I will right myself upon God, I will swear and take Gods name in vain, because my servant provokes me; there is so much evil in it, that it is impossible for any to uter, it is such▪ an abominable thing, I say, that is the best way to set it out, only to admire how it is possible for any creature to be so wicked, that upon any childs or Servants angering of you, you should presently go and right yourselves upon God, and fly in the face of God himself? Have you not done so many times, some of you, when you have been at sea? perhaps, if a servant do not pull a rope, or do not do any thing you would have him do, what do you? You swear presently, and fly in his face. Now a meek spirit can bare al this, and what an advantage is this? you perhaps, when you have been in a storm, and your servants have not done as you would have them, you have regard, and sworn, and Forty oaths have come from you; another that hath a meek Spirit, he hath been in a storm, and he hath done his work with a great deal more ease, and he hath saved so many hundred Oaths. Secondly, Again in Anger, the fear of the great and dreadful majesty of the infinite God, and the dreadfulness of the Authority of the Fear of God that is al gone, God is nothing with men in time of their Anger, and the word of God is nothing with them. That word by which thou must be saved, that must cast thee for eternity, it is nothing with thee in an Anger. One would not think, to see some men in a passion, one would hardly believe that these men did ever acknowledge that there was such a thing as God, that there were such a thing as a Divine Nature, Indeed the violent heat of passion burns asunder al the bones of the Divine Nature, and lets al loose. We red of the fire that the three Children were cast into, in Daniel, it burnt asunder the bonds, and they walked up and down; but the fire of passion doth burn only asunder the bonds of al unruly lusts. The unruly lusts that are in mens hearts are like to a company of Tigers, and bears, and Lions, and Wolves, and indeed at sometimes they seem to be tied up, and then men are pretty quiet, but when the fire of passion comes, it burns a sunder al the bonds of lusts that tied them up, and al is let loose, you would account it a great evil, if so be all the Lions in the tower were let loose, and al the bears that are kept about the City sometimes, Truly a man and woman in a passion, the lusts of their hearts are like such bears, and Tigers, that are let loose, and running up and down doing mischief, sinning against God, and their brethren, it is a sign that the Fear of God is gone. Thirdly, And then al relation is gone, So that in passion the Child forgets the relation that it stands in to the father or mother; you shal have many children when they are Angry, will speak to their father or mother as if they spake to inferiors, as if they spake to servants, and so servants Speaking to their governors in their passion, forgetting their relation that they stand in, but in time of their passion, know no Governor, or Magistrate, or Minister, or any superior, young ones know not Aged men and women, speak to them as if they regarded them not, al is forgotten, and Wives speaking to their Husbands as if there were no kind of superiority at al, or as if God had not set them over them any way, and so one friend speaking to another, not taking notice of any friendship at al, which is a very sore and a great evil. Fourthly, And further, it is that that causeth men to be desperate in their ways, desperate against themselves, to be ready to mischief themselves, and mischief others about them, care not what they fling at Children, and Servants, and sometimes tearing their own flesh, and their own hair, and running upon such ways and courses that they are in danger to mischieve themselves, and care not for any thing when they are in a passion. Fifthly, And likewise, it causeth this evil, of being desperate against others, Alexander in an Anger, slay Crates that was his dearest Friend, and afterwards was ready to kill himself when he considered it. It causeth sometime cursing as well as before swearing,& flying in the face of God, as cursing those that we are Angry with. How many times do Masters curse their Servants, when they do not come when they would have them, or do not what they would have them, curse them presently with such execrations that are not fit to be described. And so parents cursing their Children,& sometimes Children cursing their parents,& that is more dreadful. In judge. 17. 2. there you have an Example of cursing in time of Anger, it is in the story of Micah, when there was a little money that was lost that had been reserved a while, and afterwards the Child brought it to the Mother, and said, here is the money for which thou cursedst, He said unto his Mother, the Eleven hundred Shekels of Silver that were taken from thee, about which thou cursedst, and spakest of also in mine Eears, behold the Silver is with me, I took it. She had lost her Money, and she was put into an Anger, and she fel a cursing, for which( faith he) thou cursedst, and spakest of also in mine Ears, here it is: How many of you have done so, when you have thought you had lost any thing? You fall a cursing presently, cursing such a Servant, that you thought it was through their Negligence, Oh this cursing thou hadst need to Lament with Tears of blood. Yea, sometimes it is so with Children to Parents, not only Parents their Children, but Children their Parents, as I remember in Levit. 20. 9. There you have a place I hope that may cure or stop this wickedness, it is of Children cursing their Parents, mark what is the doom of such Children, For every one that nurseth his Father or his Mother, shall surely be put to Death, And I do not know why the equity of that Law might not abide to this day, why it should not be as Criminal an offence for a Child now to curse his Father or his Mother, as it was then under the Law, Consider this you Children▪ that cannot bear any thing at your Father or Mother that displeaseth you, but are ready to wish some ill to your Father or Mother, your Father out of whose Loins you came, if there be any such, know, that by the Law of God you are to be put to Death, and thou hast cause of great Humility before the Lord for this sin, and indeed, what evil will not passion do. True; it is a very sinful and ungodly thing for the superior to be Angry or passionate with the inferior, for the Husband to be Angry with the Wife, or the Parent with the Child, or the Master with the Servant, or the magistrate with the subject, this is unbeseeming, but now for the Wife to speak in an unseemly way to the Husband, in an Anger, or Children to speak to their Parents in an anger, or Servants to their Masters, or Subjects to their magistrate, that is a great deal worse, but al is forgotten in time of Anger. And what abundance of Evil i● causeth in railing speeches, as in an Anger, what kind of speeches and railing is there! Whereas the Scripture saith, no such shal enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, in that of the Corinths, naming a bedrole of wicked people, amongst others he brings in railers, that should not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. 1 Cor. 6. 9. Know ye not that the unrighteous shal not inherit the Kingdom of God, be not deceived, neither Fornicators, nor Idolaters, nor Adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor Drunkards, nor Revilers, those that Revile one another, Shal not enter into the Kingdom of God. You know that Christ when he was reviled, he did not revile again, that is his Example, he did not rail upon those that did abuse him, but answered them with a great deal of quietness and Meekness. In John, 18. 22. When one of the Officers Strooke Christ with the palm of his Hand, Jesus Answered him, if I have spoken Evil bear witness of the Evil, But if well, why smitest thou me? He Answers him with Meekness though he was struck in the Face, and that in the Face of an open Court, Why strikest thou me? Though others provoke you, yet you should speak gently. It is said judas, 9. of Michael the Archangel when contending with the Devil, he disputed about the Body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, but said, the Lord rebuk thee, thereis all, Michael the Archangel, though he contended with the Devil, and he had the right cause, he contended for the Body of Moses, it seems the Devil would have had the Body of Moses for to sacrifice to Idolatry, and Michael the Archangel contended with the Devil about this, but yet he gives him no railing speeches, brings no railing accusation against him, but said, the Lord rebuk thee, he durst not rail upon the Devil; though he was a Devil, he did not, Nay he durst not rail upon him, but all he said was, the Lord rebuk thee. Therefore you are not to take up this plea and say such a one rails and behaves himself unworthily towards me, doth he behave himself worse then a Devil? Is there as much difference between thee and him, as between an Arch-Angel and a Devil? Now when an Arch-Angel contended with a Devil, he durst not bring a railing accusation, but said, the Lord rebuk thee. When you are to deal with your superiors you are ready to bring railing accusations, take heed of it, it is a great Evil. Sixthly, And again further, The mischief that it brings is this, quarreling and fighting, and contention by Law, and undoing one another, where Anger is, it is violent, that though a man be of never such a Covetous disposition, and will not spare a penny for a good use, but it comes from him as drops of Blood, yet if he be in an Anger, may be he will spend a hundred pounds to go to Law with one, I say, this is the wickedness of mens Hearts, if they should give forty Shillings, or three or four pound to maintain the Gospel, they would think this a work of supererogation, but to do their neighbour a mischief that hath angered them, they care not if they spend a hundred pounds, Indeed this Passion of Anger sets God in the meanest way, and sets the poor creature even above God himself. One thing should have been mentioned more, about that of cursing in Anger, that hereby thou mainfestest boldness, to call God to put in execution thy lust, that he must come to be subservient to thy lust. If you should call your superior, call a Nobleman, or a Prince, to come and be a Servant to you in some base work, would he not scorn it? Now when thou callest upon the name of God in a way of cursing of those that thou art angry withall, thou sayest, Oh Lord, come and serve my Lust, Oh thou shouldst fear that some kind of Thunderbolt should strike into the head and heart of such a one. You will say Perjury is a great evil, to call upon Gods name to bear witness to a lye, that is the sin of Perjury, now truly cursing is as great, for thou callest upon the name of God to come and execute thy filthy lust, you would count it a great evil for a neighbour to say, thou art a perjured man, and I will prove it, it is as great an evil for one to say, thou art an angry man. Seventhly, And then for the close of this, abundance of evil may be seen in this, the abundance of difference that may be seen in a man, that is in one that was before quiet and is now angry, you shal have some that are sometimes in a melting vein towards God, Oh! their hearts melt to God wards, and are in a yielding disposition, to do any thing that the Lord requires at their hands, and now, Oh, how sweet is their temper to God and men, come at another time and see them in a passion, then stout, then presumptuous, and bold in wickedness, there you shal see them proud, and sometimes perhaps swearing, then you shal see them desperate against themselves, and care not what they do, or what they speak. Is this the same man and the same woman? What, the other day wert not thou at prayer and there melting before God, and profefsing thyself unworthy of any mercy, and wondering that thou art out of Hell? and now thou art a little crossed, thou art all on a fire, and abundance of wickedness comes from thee. Is this the same man and woman? You have one example of this wonderful difference between men when they are in a passion, to what they were at other times, and that is, the example of Asa, in 2. Chron. and Chap. 15. and 2 Chron Chap. 16. Compare the disposition of Asa: At Chap. 15. you shal find that upon the Prophets coming to him, he took courage, and put away all the abominable Idols out of the Land of Judah and Benjamin, and out of the Cities which he had taken from mount Ephraim, and renewed the Altar of the Lord that was before the Porch of the Lord. And he gathered all Judah and Benjamin and the strangers with them out of Epharim and Manasseh and out of Simeon. And at verse 11. They offered unto the Lord the same time of the spoil which they had brought Seven hundred Oxen, and Seven thousand sheep, verse 12. And they entred into a Covenant to seek the Lord God of their Fathers with all their hearts, and with all their souls, that whosoever would not seek the Lord God of Israel should be put to death whether small or great, man or woman, and they swore unto the Lord with a loud voice, and with shouting, and with Trumpets, and with Cornets, and all Judah rejoiced at the Oath, for they had sworn with all their heart. And so he goes on stil in describing what reformation Asa did: A Godly man, and how he entred into Covenant with all his heart to serve the Lord: What a Gracious disposition of heart was this man in at this time? But mark at Chap. 16. When there came another message to him,( he was affencted with this Message the first time) But when there was another Message came to him, at verse 7. At that time came Hanani the Seer, to Asa, King of Judah, and said unto him, Because thou hast relied on the King of Syria, and not relied on the Lord thy God, therefore is the Host of the King of Syria escaped out of thy hand. Were not the Aethiopians and Lubians a huge Host, with very many Chariots and Horsemen, yet because thou didst rely on the Lord he delivered them into thy hand. For the Eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole Earth to show himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him, herein thou hast done foolishly therefore from henceforth thou shalt have Wars. Now mark the tenth verse, then saith the Text, Asa was wrath with the Seer, and put him in a Prison house, for he was in rage with him because of this thing, and Asa oppressed some of the people the same time. This Asa, that in the Chapter before, entred into a solemn Covenant with God, and with so much rejoicing, was so glad at the heart, that both he and the people had bound themselves in Covenant to serve the Lord, yet now being put into a passion, and that by another Prophet of God, speaking some things that were displeasing to him, he was wrath with him, and put him in Prison, and oppressed some of the people. Oh, see what a mad Bedlam Anger is, he is worse then a mad Man that is in an Anger or a Passion, for a mad Man cannot help his madness, though you perhaps say they cannot help it at that time. Eightly, And further it is not a sin for a man to be lunatic and mad, it is an affliction, not a sin, but this is not only a sin but the cause of sin, as he said of original sin, it is a sin and the cause of sin, and therefore worse then madness. And then madness doth but dethrone reason, and put it out of its place, but Anger makes it a slave It is something for a King to be deposed and put out of his place, I but he may live a private life notwithstanding, but for a King to be deposed and put into the kitchen, and be made a slave and to do drudgery this is worse So passion doth not only depose a man, but brings a man to be a slave to a lust, for no men think there is more reason for their Anger then Angry people do, and so I should show you, there is a taking revenge in passion also, and how derogatory that is to Gods honor, for God saith, vengeance is mine; but now meekness that gives way, and keeps the Hearts of men and women from revenge. In Rom. 12. 19. Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves but rather give place unto wrath, for it is written vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord. Avenge not yourselves but rather give place to wrath, what is that? What wrath must we give place to? surely by what follows, it seems to be meant the wrath of God, Avenge not yourselves, but give place to Gods wrath, for it is written, vengeance is mine I will repay, saith the Lord, that is thus, have any wronged you? well, do not you rise in wrath to Avenge yourself, no, but give place to the wrath of God, saith God, let me come in, it is my place to revenge, if this man do deserve revenge, let me come in, I will revenge it, but now an Angry man saith, no, I will do it myself. As a master that stands by his Servant, and sees him do a work not well, he saith, come, let me come in, I will do it myself, I see you do but bungle at it, I will do the work myself. So an Angry man, he saith, I will do it myself, I will revenge it myself, whereas vengeance belongs to God, and therefore the Apostle saith, give place to the wrath of God that will come out against such a one if he do not repent, thus meekness will do. Ninthly, Another Evil effect of passion is, the opening and the discovering of shane; there is nothing that doth more open and discover mens shane then their passion and Anger, and therefore it is observable what abundance of times the Scripture couples passion and folly together, and makes passionate people to be the foolishest people in the world, you can never know men, though you have lived among them a long time, till they be provoked, and then you may know what is in them, if there be any shameful thing in them, they will quickly discover it then, and indeed it is one of the fiery trials the Scripture speaks of, this doth discover what is in a man, it discovers such a shameful carriage in people, that al that are about them are ashamed of them, the Servants ashamed of their Master and Mistris, and Children ashamed of their Parents, their carriage is so foul and vile in their passion, and one would wonder indeed to see the shameful carriage of a Man and Woman in a passion, that it would be a means one would think to help the distempers of men in passion. I remember I have red of the Spartans, when one was drunk, they would call their Children out into the streets to look upon the drunken man, to see how he carried himself like a beast, that they might loathe drunkenness: And so passion, doth make men loathsome, and one would think the very looking upon another in passion, might make a Man or Woman to loathe passion; do you see such a one in a passion? Just so are you when you are in a passion, if a Man or Woman had but a Looking-Glass to see themselves it would make them loathe themselves. As the fable of the Fox that saw the Ass in the Lions Skin,( as I shewed when I spake of the constancy of Anger) he was afraid a little at first, till he saw the Asses Ears come out, and then he could scorn him, and ride on him; so many men and Women they think to be terrible to others in their passion, but they discover so much folly, that they make themselves al their lives contemptible, and there is none so contemptible as your passionate people, because every one can see such folly, such rashness, and distemper in their passion, that al their respect and authority is taken away by Children and Servants, there's nothing deprives them of their Authority more then this constant passion of Anger, though you think to gain your authority hereby, yet you are deprived of it. Thus the Lord doth across you in the very thing wherein you think to gain, and I verily believe that there is nothing that a Man or Woman is more ashamed of afterwards, if he can remember how he carried himself in a passion how he stamped, and swore, and raged, throwing up and down perhaps the stools in the House: And so Children. I remember it was a way that a grave Minister would convince one by, that had been in a passion, he standing at a place that he could see the Wife in a passion, throwing stools up and down in the House, and he the next day comes to the house, and desires to speak with the Woman, and when he comes into the House, sits down, and said nothing, but presently riseth& throws the stools& chairs up and down, and clapped the doors together, and makes a very great disturbance, and then saith to her, do you think this is a comely behaviour? Do you think this is well? This was your carriage the other day, this he did merely to set before her what she did the day before, And indeed, if one would set before you when you are in your right mind, your shameful carriages when you are in a Passion, it would make you ashamed of your Anger. Hence you find in Scripture in so many places, that folly is attributed to Passion, besides those places which were name heretofore to this purpose, As that in Eclesiastes, Anger rests in the bosom of Fools. But to add that in Proverbs, 12. 16. A Fools wrath is presently known, but a prudent Man covers shane, A Fools wrath is presently known, and so he doth discover his shane, but a prudent man, that is, a Meek man,( for so the Scripture doth usually oppose prudence and Wisdom, to wrath and passion) he covers shane. And then in Proverbs, 14. 17. He that is soon Angry dealeth Foolishly, He thinks he deals wisely but he dealeth Foolishly. And at the 29. verse, He that is slow to wrath is of great understanding, but he that is hasty of Spirit Exalteth Folly. And then in Prov. 27. 3. upon other occasions we have made use of that scripture before. A ston is Heavy, and the Sand weighty, but a Fools wrath is heavier then them both. Thus continually the Scripture doth befool Passionate people, and I do not know that in al the Scripture there is any one sin so much befooled as the sin of passion and Anger, annexing Fol●y to it so much the more, and it is to check froward people because there is none think themselves wiser then Angry people do, and especially in the time of their fit, so that it opens their shane. Jerome, in an Epistle, saith of Noah, that in his drunken fit he opened that shane of his that was covered sixteen hundred years, And so in Anger, there is many times the opening that shane that is covered all ones Life, that perhaps for forty years before was covered, and was not known, but then it comes to be known. As now what a shameful behaviour is there in some people in time of their Passion, and Anger? What clamour and cry and what debasing the very Image of God, in their Bodies? In their countenances? We may well come and say to them as Christ said, whose Image and superscription is this? They show Christ a piece of Silver, and he asks Whose Image and Superscription is this? And they say unto him Caesars, and he saith, give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars, and unto God the things that are Gods. So come to a froward passionate Man or Woman, and you shall see them quaver, and their countenance so uncomely, that you may say, whose Image and superscription is this? Surely not Gods, but rather the Devils Image, and then as Christ saith, give unto Caesar the things which are Caesars, and unto God the things that are Gods: So say we, they that have Gods Image let him have them, and they that have the Devils Image let him have them, and there is none do manifest more an Image and superscription of the Devil, then Angry and passionate people. And therefore the Heathen was wont to call the Devils by the Name of Furies, Fury and Devil are all one in their phrase, and so indeed men and Women that are furious, they have very much of the Image of Satan in them, and thus they discover their shane, whereas meekness alleys Anger, and keeps in shane, as we shal see afterwards in opening the excellency of the grace of meekness, it puts a great deal of glory upon the soul but of that by and by. Tenthly, And then another evil effect of Anger is this( which is as evil as any other, and yet proceeds from that hath been said) that it grieves the Spirit of God. You that are of froward, passionate Spirits, you may pleasey ourselves, but you grieve the spirit of God it is il to grieve your friend, as none are more grievous to a friend then froward& passionate people, you grieve your friend, there comes a friend of yours to your family, and he sees you in a froward and passionate temper, O, it grieves him,& thou greivest the heart of thy wife( may be) too, she goes and complains of it to God, and thou greivest thy friend, and he goes and complains of it, Oh, but, thou greivest the Spirit of God, In Ephes. 4. 30. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption How do you grieve the Spirit of God even by your passion and frowardness? therefore mark what follows in the 31. verse, Let all Bitterness, and Wrath, and Anger, and Clamour, and Evil Speaking, be put away from you with al malice if you would not grieve the good Spirit of God, by which you are sealed to the day of redemption, let al bitterness, and wrath, and Anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away, in your passion presently your voice is up with a clamour, and that is one thing which discovers shane, which might have been spoken of before. I remember in Socrates, it was a sign he was very Angry when he began to speak softly, upon this reason, because he found that naturally upon his Anger, his Anger would put him on to loud speaking, and therefore to across himself, he would be sure to speak more softly at that time then before, and it were a good rule when you begin to be Angry, to let there be a more remiss voice, to speak with more remissness then before, it is a most uncomely thing to speak loud before them that you are Angry with, and especially in the female sex, for women to speak loud when they are displeased, the rather, because the Holy Ghost in the Proverbs attributes this to a Whore, that she is loud, In Prov. 7. 11. Shee is loud and stubborn, her Feet abide not in her house, that is one thing among the rest, shee is abroad in the streets, and she is loud and stubborn, therefore al that would show themselves Matron like, and have a Spirit of wisdom, though they be never so much provoked, yet never to be loud, that is a clamour, and evil speaking out-cries, It is said of Christ, Isay. 42. 2. His voice was not heard in the streets, it is a very uncomely thing for to hear loud cries, and their voice to be heard in the street, that as soon as ever their servants offend them, they speak a loud, their voice is heard in the streets. But that which I quote this text for is, the greiving of the Spirit of God, you grieve your friend, I but remember, you grieve the Spirit of God, and remember it is the Spirit of God that did enlighten you, if you be enlightened, that did soften your heart, that did draw your heart to Jesus Christ, the Spirit of God that did comfort your heart, and will you grieve the Spirit of God that hath done you so much good? yea it is the Spirit that is appointed by the Father, and by Jesus Christ to be your Comforter, the Comforter of your Spirit, and will you require it thus to grieve it? Oh, you think it an ill thing, if you be of an ingenious Spirit, to grieve your friend, if you hear that you have done that that hath grieved your near friend, it grieves you, now know, that in every fit of Passion, you do grieve the dearest friend that you have in the world, you grieve the holy Spirit of God, he goes away even to heaven sadly, If a friend should go away with a sad heart out of your house, it would make you think what you have done, now the spirit of God goes away with a sad heart to heaven when you are in a fit of passion, hereby you grieve the Spirit of God. Eleventhly, And then lastly, the last evil effect of the Passion of Anger is this, That sometimes it doth hurt to the Body, and meekness will help against that, for certainly the very body is much affencted with the working of the affections, and the keeping of the affections in a right temper is a very great means to keep the health of a mans body, though a man be of a weakly constitution otherwise yet if he can keep his Passion, his affection in a right temper, it is a marevellous means to keep his body in right temper. I have red of an Emperour that being in a Passionate fit, upon this ground, because the base people of the goths did shake the Empire of Rome, he was thereupon so vexed, and looked upon it with such indignation, that it put him into a fever and killed him, and I make no question but many are put into fits of fever, and endanger their lives by the fit of Passion, and therefore Moses, he was a meek man, as you shal hear more presently, and that is given by some as a reason of the health of his body. In Deut. 34. 7. And Moses was a hundred and twenty years old when he died, his eyes was not dim, nor his natural force abated. And surely this may be very well one reason, even the constant quietness and meekness of the Spirit of Moses, for certainly, as al grace doth help to the health of the body so this especially. In. Prov. 4. 22. Attend to my words, incline thine ear unto my sayings. Let them not depart from thine eyes, keep them in the midst of thy heart. For they are life unto those that find them, and health to all their flesh. They are health to the flesh, and health to the bones, and health to the navel; So it is likewise mentioned in the Proverbs, wisdom is not only health to the soul, but health to the body also. And like to the example of Moses, there is one this day alive, though he be alive I may speak of him, that he is the meekest man upon the earth, and that is that reverend divine Master Dod, that wrote upon the Commandements so many yeares ago, whose books you have in your houses I suppose many of you, the man was lately, and is supposed yet alive, and those that knew him, knew him to be one of the meekest men upon the Earth, nay he is about fourscore and ten yeares old, and lately preached twice every Lords day, and the constant health of his body is such,( not many years a g●e myself was in his company) that he was able to do more then a stronger man could do in continuing heavenly discourse till midnight from day to day, and al the day long preaching till midnight, and his Spirit not failing at al, and I verily persuade myself upon this ground, keeping the constant frame of his spirit, as he was hardly known to be in any distemper of spirit and so he goes on and is serviceable to the Lord and this now helps against the distemper of Passion, and the evil effects of it. Thus much for allaying the Passion of Anger, how meekness doth alloy the Passion of Anger in several things. CHAP. CX. Of Meekness as it doth good positively, and the excellency thereof in many particulars. 1. It is the glory of Christ. 2. Of God the Father. 3. Of the Holy Ghost. 4. It is a principal fruit of the Spirit. 5. It is the glory of the Disciples of Christ and of Moses. 6. It is of great price with God. 7. It is a fruit of Election. NOW the next thing is, to open to you the preciousness of this grace of meekness, what a precious grace it is, learn of me for I am Meek, truly, that that hath been said already, one would think might commend this grace of meekness, the abundance of evil that it doth prevent, some of you( perhaps) after you have had a fit of passion, if you could buy it off, you would give a world that that evil might have been prevented that your Passion hath brought; now meekness would have done it, and will do it for time to come, if there were no more said, it doth mightily commend this grace of Meekness. But meekness is not only a negative good, to keep from evil, but it doth abundance of good positively, we may say of this grace of meekness, as Tertullus the Orator unto the High Priest in Acts. 24. When he comes to make an oration before the High Priest Ananias, the text saith at ver. 1. There was a certain Orator name Tertullus, who informed the governor against Paul, & when he was called forth, Tertullus began to accuse him, saying seeing that by thee we enjoy great quietness, and that very worthy deeds are done unto this nation by thy providence. This was his colloguing Speech, that he might have the more favour with the high priest pleading against Paul; but that which he spake flatteringly, we may say truly of this grace of meekness, we may say of meekness, seeing that by thee we have great quietness, and that many worthy deeds are done in the world through thine excellency, through thy sweetness worthy things are done, and the whole world enjoys, and families, and towns, and churches enjoy a great deal of quietness. There is as much difference between a froward passionate man and woman, as between a stormy, dark, tempestuous night, and a fine, sweet, calm, Sun-shiney summer day: Certainly, a Passionate Spirit is full of darkness at that time, for the light of reason is put out, and it is winter and stormy weather with passionate people, but a meek Spirit is as the summer, sweet, calm day, meekness is a very excellent grace. I will put al together about this grace of meekness, many particulars we have hinted as we have gone along in the opening of it, now I will speak of those, and name them, and put others to them, that I may give you a general view of the grace of meekness. Omitting therefore the preventing of evil, and in general the abundance of good that it doth, that I spake of. The excellency of it will appear further in this of my text, that Christ culs it out, naming but two graces, and one of those that he names is meekness, Meekness and humility, and the first is meekness. Blessed saviour, what wouldest thou have us learn? Saith Christ, the first lesson that I would have you learn is Meekness, Learn of me for I am meek. First, It is that which is the glory of Christ, it is that that hath put a glory upon Jesus Christ himself, and therefore must be very excellent: certainly, if it did not put some glory upon him, he would not profess himself to be meek, when he sets himself as a pattern. In the 45. psalm, a clear prophesy of Christ, the 4. verse, And in thy majesty ride on prosperously, because of truth, and meekness, When the glory of Christ is set forth as riding prosperously, and in majesty, then his meekness comes in, because of truth and meekness, so that Christ hath majesty in him because of truth and meekness. Secondly, It is the glory of God the Father likewise; therefore when he would set forth his glory to Moses, and God said that he would cause his glory to pass by him, the text I suppose is known to al of you, in Exod. 34. God told him that he would cause his Glory to pass by him, his glory what is that? at the 6.& 7. verses, And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, the Lord, the Lord God, merciful, and gracious, long suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity and transgression, and sin, Long suffering, gracious, abundant in goodness. So in other places, slow to Anger; this is the glory of God and therefore meekness is a glorious grace, it is a principal evengelical grace, it is the glory of Christ, and it is the glory of the Father. Thirdly, It is the gl●ry of the Holy Gh●st too, and therefore the Spirit of God is set out appearing in the form ●f ad●ve which is the meek creature, but that likewise we made use of f●rmerly. Fourthly, The excellency of meekness appears in this, that it is reckoned up as a special fruit of the Spirit of God in the hearts of the Saints, where ever the Spirit of God comes and makes any gracious work in the heart, this same of meekness is the principal, and indeed it is so the principal, that it is al, for so in the Epistle to the Galatians there is a place that sets forth the fruits of the Spirit, more distinctly then any place in the book of God: well, having set forth the fruits of the flesh, how vile they are, and among them wrath is one, In Gal. 5. 19. 20. Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these, adultery, fornication, uncleanness, timorousness, Idolatry, Witchcraft, Hatred, Variance, Emulation, Wrath, Strife, heresy. Hatred, variance, emulation, wrath, strife, sedition, al these now belong to passion, and mark how these are environed about, they are joined in the beginning of the verse unto witchcraft, and the latter end of the twentieth verse unto heresy, noting the vile fruits of the flesh, but now he comes then to reckon up the fruits of the Spirit, at the 22. verse, But the fruits of the Spirit are Love, Joy, Peace, long-suffering, Gentleness, Goodness, Faith, Meekness, Temperance. Here seems to be a great many excellent fruits of the Spirit reckoned up; but I appeal unto you, when we come to examine them except it be one, which is Faith, that is the mother of al grace, al the other seems to be the several expressions of this grace of meekness, there is meekness name, love is a meek spirit, a meek spirit is a loving spirit, there is joy, a meek spirit is one that hath continual sweetness in him, and makes his conversation delightful, there is peace, who are they that makes peace where they dwell, but meek Spirits? There is long-suffering, where is there such long-suffering as where meekness is? there is gentleness, what is gentleness but a Synonimy of meekness? and there is goodness, who do good to one another but meek Spirits? and then comes in Faith; and then he names meekness, and temperance, temperance of ones Spirit in allaying this passion of anger, this is meekness too: so that though in scripture we have many fruits of the Spirit, some nine fruits of the Spirit, yet the truth is, almost al these are but the several expressions of meekness, so that there is nothing almost but meekness name, as if so be that were al; and indeed that man that hath true Christian meekness in him, he hath al graces, he hath all the fruits of the spirit, the spirit of God rules very much in the heart of meek Christians, take a Christian that hath true Christian meekness, there the spirit rules and dwells in the heart, and fills the heart; and this text doth manifest it as fully as any Scripture, when the Scripture sets out fully the fruits of the spirit it names almost nothing but meekness. And then Fifthly, It is the description of the Disciples of Christ by being the sheep of Christ, and the Lambs of Christ, but that likewise we mentioned before. For the excellency of this grace, it is that that is recorded of Moses to al posterity, rather then any of his famous acts, that he hath done that is recorded of him, that he was the meekest man upon the earth, God would honor him in that above al other graces, certainly, Moses was honoured in respect of other graces, but that of meekness God will honor him above al other graces. In Numb. 12. 3. Now the man Moses was very meek above all the men which were upon the face of the earth. Now the man Moses; mark here, why is it said here, the man Moses? to note that Moses was a man as well as others, and yet mark, you are ready to say, what would you have us do, we are but men? Now the man Moses, and he is subject to the like passions as other men, and yet the man Moses. I remember Ambrose Speaking of him, saith, he was loved for his meekness, more then admired for all the great works he did, and that is one of the reasons too that Chrysostome gives, why God did so much delight in him that he spake to Moses face to face, it is not said, that he spake to others of the prophets, but to Moses, Why? Because he would honor such a man as was so meek, he would speak face to face to him. And the Jews have a tradition among them, that when Moses died, God appeared in a bodily way, and sucked out the soul of Moses, now we have no warrant in the scripture for that, but to show the high esteem they had of Moses, but thus far we may make use of it, that the Lord delights in a meek spirit, and loves to honor a meek Spirit, and if there be any spirit that the Lord would suck into himself that the Lord would give such an honourable death, to come and suck out his soul to himself, he would do it to a meek man. Secondly, Another particular is this, That the scripture gives this commendation of this grace of meekness more then any one grace, that it is of great price with God: I do not red of such an encomium of any grace as this of meekness, and that you have in 1. Pet. 3. 4. It is spoken there unto women especially, that women should adorn themselves in the hidden man of the heart, in that which is not corrupt, even the ornament of a meek& a quiet spirit, a meek and quiet spirit is commended to women especially, it is an ornament to men too, but to women especially: What then? what follows? which is in the sight of God of great price, give me a text where it is said of any of the other graces though your graces are precious with God, but a meek spirit is in the sight of God of great price, it is worth a great deal, many women love to wear rich ornaments, if they could get money from their Husbands, they would have rich laces of thirty or forty Shillings a yard, and they would have rich Quoyves, Oh! They think this is rare: now here is a thing that is of great price, in the sight of God, many things are of great price in the sight of man, but not in the sight of God, a fool counts a babble to be of much worth, and so we poor weak Spirits think our babbles here to be of much Price, but God counts them worth nothing. But now here is that that is of great Price, and in the sight of God it is of great Price, and it is exceeding pleasing to God, as it is in some of your Books, when God sees a man meek, saith God, here is one that hath a Jewel of great price. Kings, and Princes, and Noble men, they wear Jewels sometimes about them worth a thousand pounds: now every Meek man and Woman that goes up and down, he wears a Pearl worth a world, The world, the Scripture speaks contemptibly of it, Love not the world nor the things of the world, And al the nations of the Earth are less then the drop of the bucket, but saith God, here is a Jewel, a Pearl that is of much worth, and God is a Skilful Lapidary, he knows the worth of them. If we see a ston that is of much worth in the sight of a cunning Lapidary, we think it worth much, you use to say of a friend that comes to see you, Oh! That I knew what you Love, if another sees you put a high price upon such a thing, if he loves you, he will certainly let you have it, now would you know what God Loves, what he prizes? He Loves and prizes a meek Spirit above any thing, O Let him have what he Loves. Seventhly, And a seventh particular is this, That it is a fruit of election, an evidence of an elect Person, of a man or woman that is elected by God, it is not an argument of an elect man or woman because they have so much in the World, so much coming in yearly, so much authority, but the Lord doth manifest to al the World, that he hath separated such from al eternity to honour such, a man that hath a meek Spirit, that when he looks upon a piece of day, that he would make such a man of, he said, well, this will I make a Vessel of honor to all eternity, and that is plain from that Text in Colloss. 3. 12. Put on therefore, as the elect of God, Holy, and Beloved, Bowels of Mercy, Kindness, Humbleness of mind, Meekness, long suffering, forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any, even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye. And above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness. And let the peace of God rule in your Hearts, &c. And do this now as the elect of God, put on as the elect of God, Holy and beloved, as if he should say, you are godly, and how shal it be manifest? How shal you carry yourselves as the elect of God, but only by this, putting on the Bowels of Mercy, Kindness, Humbleness of mind; Meekness, long suffering, forbearing one another? Here is an evidence of one that is the elect of God, and will you lose the comfort of this evidence to satisfy yourselves in a sullen froward fit? No Marvel that you are full of fears and doubts in your frowardness, and passion, and sullen fit: if you would deliver yourselves from doubts and fears and have further evidence of your election, be of meek and quiet Spirits. CHAP. CXI. Of the excellent promises made to Meeknest in Scripture, and the Text Explained in divers Particulars, a●, 1. They are kept from Law suits. 2. They do not Exasperate others. 3. Others are loth to wrong them. 4. They enjoy what they have quietly. 5. Others Love to deal with them. ANd then in the Eight place,( and that is a large one) The excellency of the Grace of Meekness appears in this: In the many promises that is made in Scripture to this Grace, I know no Grace in all the Scripture that so many excellent promises is made unto as to this, and I hope in setting these before you, it will engage your Hearts to a Meek and a quiet spirit, I know you that are Christians would be loth to lose your part in these privileges, what are they? First in psalm, 22. There you have a promise to Meekness, and indeed David was a Meek man, and it is suitable to his Spirit, at the 26. verse. The Meek shal Eat, and be satisfied, they shal praise the Lord that seek him, your heart▪ shal live for ever. The Meek shal eat and be satisfied, you that are poor people, many times among poor people, for want of Education, as well as Grace, there is a great deal of Clamour and Cry, now consider this, the Meek shall eat and be satisfied, and it may be it is one Reason of your poverty, why the Lord cuts you off from these comforts, and you have not that which satisfies you in your Family, the Lord rebukes thy proud and froward spirit, for he promises the me●k shal eat and be satisfied, thou art froward because thou hast not that which thou wouldest have for thy family, now be meek, and thou shalt eat and be satisfied, the meek shall be satisfied, many rich men, they eat more then the poor, I but they are not satisfied because they have not what they would have, may be, they throw away the dish in an Anger, and in sullenness eat nothing, and show a great deal of frowardness, that indeed they make their meat bitter to them by the state of passion, passion is the worst sauce, you will never be satisfied if you have not meek spirits: your rich men, they are not satisfied when they have abundance, whenas a poor man and woman, that hath this Christian meekness, when they sit at table and have but a dish of herbs, or a piece of bread and an onion, and small drink, the man bids the wife, much good may it do her, and so the wife the husband, and there is a great deal of sweetness in the enjoyment of it. The Scripture saith, Better is a Dinner of herbs where Love is, then a stalled Ox and hatred therewith. If there be but a piece of bread, and small drink among servants and children in a house, if there be meekness and quietness, it is sweeter than a stalled ox where is contention, and such shal praise the Lord that seek him. But there is another promise not far from this, that hath abundance of sweetness in it, and that is in psalm, 25. 9. The meek will he guide in judgement, and the meek will he teach his way. mark how it is repeated again and again as if the Holy Ghost delighted to mention it, the meek, the meek, in a short verse he names it twice, the meek he will guide in judgement, and the meek he will teach his way. I, as if the Holy Ghost should say, there is the man and woman that I will guide in judgement, passion will carry a man headlong, but would a man be guided in judgement, let him be of a meek Spirit. This one verse is more worth then all the world to a gracious soul that knows how to prise a promise. Is it not a great privilege for one to be guided in judgement, and that by the infinite wisdom of God, in all ones ways to have the wisdom of God to guide one in judgement, that he shal not miscarry in his outward affairs, and inward affairs, he shal not miscarry in things of this life and the life to come: what is the reason that you that have froward Spirits you come home in a passion? Oh! such a business doth not succeed, and therefore you are froward, had you been of meek spirits the Lord would have guided you in Judgemnt, and you should not have miscarried in your business, yea, and the meek will he teach his way: Christ calls upon us to learn meekness, and if you learn this meekness, then the Lord hath engaged himself to teach you his way, you are many times in a straight, and you come to your acquaintance and friends, and you say, Oh! what shal I do? what shal ye do? let that be the first thing, quiet your own hearts, and then the Lord hath promised to teach you his way, you shal have many come ringing their hands, come clamoring and crying, Oh! what shal I do now? That is the counsel that I would give you, first quiet your heart, and then improve this promise. Lord thou hast promised, that the meek thou wilt teach thy way, I am now in a straight, and I desire to wait upon thee in meekness, Lord te●●ch me thy way, and they that have meek spirits, I make no question but they have found ●his promise made good to them, that is the second promise. And then the third promise is that in the 37. Psalm 11. But the meek shal inherit the earth, and shal delight themselves in the abundance of peace. They shal have peace, abundance of peace, and delight themselves in the abundance of peace, they shal have the earth, and inherit the earth. And this promise is the more remarkable; that it is not only a promise in the old Testament, but there is a renewing of it in the new Testament. Christ in his Sermon upon the Mount, saith that the meek men are blessed men, that is the general, and compriseth indeed al under it, what can a man desire more then to be blessed? Now Christ in the 5. of Matth. there he reckons up several beatitudes, and shows who are blessed, and saith, Blessed are the Meek, and then comes in the promises, and a distinct thing from them, Blessed are the Meek, for they shal inherit the earth, the entail is not ●ut off. So that both under the Law, and under the Gospel, this is the blessing of the meek, they shal inherit the earth. There was indeed in the times of the Law many promises for outward blessings, that was a particular covenant, for so I make no question it was, a Particular Covenant that God made with the people of the Jews, there was not only the covenant of works that God made with Adam in Paradise, and the Covenant of Grace, but there was another Covenant, a special Covenant of works, that God would bless them in the Land of Canaan, upon their obedience, God made that Covenant, and the giving the Law upon Mount Sinai was especially that Covenant, though the duties of the Law, they were bound to them as it was written in their heart by nature, but the Law was renewed upon another ground, upon a special covenant, the Law in Mount Sinai, a special covenant that God made with them concerning the Land of Canaan, and the right understanding of this, I believe would answer a great many of objections of those we call Antinomians, we are delivered from the Law they say, so far we will willingly grant it, the Law given upon Mount Sinai, as it was a covenant given to the people of the Jews as a blessing upon Mount Sinai, so far we are delivered, and the Law is often spoken of as such a covenant that was given to them, and therefore it is said, We have a better covenant, Established upon better promises, yet we have the same covenant too, and they were bound to the same duties at the same time, and though we are bound to the same duties as they were, yet not as it was given to them in the Land of Canaan, so this promise of inheriting the earth was given to the Jews, and do you think that I will abolish this promise? No saith Christ, whatever belongs to them I will renew this promise, they that are meek, they shal inherit the earth in the times of the Gospel. You will say, shall they inherit? the meek of ●l men are the readiest to be injured, if I put up all and be so meek as you speak of, I may quickly be spoiled and lose my estate, and be a beggar, and subject myself to every beggar. Now Christ he foresaw al this, and he saith, not only blessed are the meek, they shall go to heaven, but blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth, as if so be Christ should say, carry yourself meekly, and trust me with al, and you shal lose nothing by your meekness, no not in this world and indeed if you consider it well, God doth make this promise Good. First, Meekness will keep men that they will not be Suing and Lawing as others are, and how many men of contentious spirits that exhaust their estates by Law, and there men spend all their money, and it is a just judgement of God upon froward spirits, that it should cost them dear, the passions of many men and women costs them very dear, as I have said heretofore, many men that are loth to spend five shillings for the maintaining of the Gospel, yet to have their will in a froward passion care not what they spend, usiing these speeches, it shal cost me a hundred pound or five hundred pounds but I will have my will. Secondly, And then, as they do not spend in suing and lawing with others, so they do not exasperate other men against them, many men suffer much in the world, and they cry out, Oh, they are wronged in the world, but such may themselves, why do you provoke them to do you wrong? Now a meek man provokes not others, and so lives more quietly, and doth not suffer as others do. Thirdly, And further, Those that are meek, every one is kept from doing them wrong more then others, if a man see a froward man, he cares not what he doth against him, how he wrongs him, because he is a froward man: but if a man be a meek man, if one hurt him, every one cries out against it, what! wrong such a man, that lives so quietly, and gently amongst those that he hath to deal withal? every one cries out against him. Fourthly, And then this promise is made good in this respect, that they shal inherit the earth, that is, they shal enjoy all they have in quietness, and that shal be better then great possessions, as in a dish of herbs, they shall have more quietness then those that have great tables, and thereby they inherit the earth, whereas other men that are froward, they have not the use of the earth, though they have many things they do not enjoy them; but now a meek man, he hath the use of the earth, your rich men that have most, do not inherit the earth, but those inherit the earth that have the most comfortable use of things here in this world. Fifthly, And then, they shal inherit the earth this way, that others will love to deal with them, as thus, If I go to buy any thing, if I know there is a servant where such a commodity is to be sold that is snappish, or of a froward temper, I will not go there, and therefore your shopkeepers think it very much to have servants snappish, and of currish dispositions, but now if a man have a meek Spirit, it helps him in his trade, in respect to the custom of his shop. And so servants, if a man hear that there is a man servant, or a maid servant, that will be snarlish and froward, and cannot agree with any, they will not be troubled with them, they say, who would be troubled with such a one? But now, if there be one of a meek Spirit, every one will be ready to entertain him, and if he should after go away, they will rather mend his wages then let him go. And so in a match, if one be to choose a wife, one of the first questions he will ask( if he be wise) is whether she be of a meek spirit though little portion, yet he will be sure to match with such a one that is of a meek Spirit and so comes to inherit the earth. If a man be a traveling, if he hears of an Inn, where the people are meek and quiet, he will lodge there, but if he hear that the people at such an Inn are froward and passionate, he will not come there. But yet there are a great many other precious sweet promises that are made to meekness, in psalm, 76. 9. When God arises to judgement to save all the meek of the earth. Here the glory of God is set out, how terrible he appears in rising to judgement, but who doth God aim at to save? al the meek of the earth. Oh! saith God, is there one of a meek spirit, and is he wronged? I will arise to judgement to save such a one that is meek. And therefore surely, saith the next words. The wrath of man shal praise thee, the remainder of wrath shalt thou restrain. What! are there any that rise up in wrath against my meek ones? saith God, I will arise to judgement to save them, and will be terrible in judgement to Princes. And when he will be terrible to them, he will be comfortable to the meek of the earth. And such a kind of promise you have in psalm, 147. 6. The Lord lifteth up the meek, he casteth the wicked down to the ground. A meek body you are ready to say thus, if I be meek, and gentle, and bear wrong that others offer to me, then every one will trample upon me, No, the Lord will cast the wicked down to the ground. If thou have a wicked proud spirit, it is not men so much, as God that casts thee down, but if thou be a meek Spirit, the Lord will lift thee up. And so in psalm, 149. 4. The Lord taketh pleasure in his people, he will beautify the meek with salvation. He will not only save them, but save them so as to beautify them, for saith God, these meek spirits are beautiful in mine eyes, and therefore I cannot but do them right to beautify them with my salvation. And again further, in Isa. 29. 19. There you have another sweet promise for the meek ones, The meek also shall increase their joy in the Lord, and the poor and mean shall rejoice in the holy one of Israel. When you are troubled and vexed, the meek ones shall rejoice, and they shal increase their joy, and increase their joy in the Lord; wouldest thou live a joyful life? Wouldest thou rejoice in the Lord? Wouldest thou increase thy joy in the Lord? then be of a meek spirit. And then the last I will name for the present, is that excellent promise in the time of common calamity in the world, In Zeph. 2. 1. Mark how the Lord hath a special regard to men and women of meek spirits. Gather yourselves together, yea, gather together O nation not desired, before the decree bring forth, before the day pass as the chaff, before the fierce Anger of the Lord come upon you, before the day of the Lords Anger come upon you. As if he should say, take heed the day of the Lords Anger is coming upon you, gather together, and seek the Lord, repent, and seek the Lord: But who must seek the Lord? Al the meek of the earth, which have wrought his judgement, seek righteousness, seek meekness, it may be you shal be hide in the day of the Lords Anger, as if the Holy Ghost should say, if there be any people in the world that shal be hide in the day of the Lords Anger, it shal be the meek of the earth, and therefore do you seek the Lord. You will say, but the Lord is provoked. Oh, but the Lord will be entreated by the meek before any people in the world, the Lord will have regard to them that seek him to deliver a nation. Thou art a froward man or woman, and thou comest to seek him, the Lord will not hear thee nor hid thee, but saith God, if there be any in the world that shall be hide, it shall be the meek ones of the earth. There are a great many other things that I thought on to set out this grace of Meekness, I will give you one or two more. CHAP. CXII. Further considerations of the excellency of meekness. 1. Christ was appointed to have a special regard of such. 2. The meek interest God in their cause. FIrst, Another is this, That Jesus Christ is appointed by God, designed to this office, to have special regard to meek ones, when he comes to preach the gospel, and so are al the Ministers of the Gospel, they are to have a special regard to the meek ones when they come to preach the Gospel. In Isa. 61. That famous place of the prophesy of Christ, verse, 1. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because he hath appointed me( that is Christ) to preach good tidings, to whom? To the meek. As if Christ should say when he came into the world, the father sent me into the world and I am anointed to preach good tidings to the meek, if there be ever a poor meek Spirit, know that the Spirit of the Lord hath sent me, and I am filled with the Spirit of God to this end, that I might preach good tidings to the meek, what an excellent grace is this grace of meekness then? Secondly, And then one more, and that is this; A meek man doth interest God in his cause, he needs not be careful at all in righting himself in any wrong that he hath, but God presently takes his cause into his own hand, and this helps against any objection against meekness. Men say, why should I put up wrong? I say, the Lord, if thou be meek presently makes thy cause his own, he comes in and interests himself in it. I will give you two Texts of Scripture for it, one is in Numbers, 12. miriae and Aaron are Angry against Moses, because of the Ethiopian Woman whom he had married, it was envy that made them speak against Moses, and they said verse, 2. Hath the Lord indeed spoken only by Moses? Hath he not spoken also by us? What Aaron that was Moses his Brother, and miriae his Sister, and both gracious too? And yet come to contest in a bitter manner? And what say they? Hath God spoken by Moses, hath he not spoken also by us? Moses, he hath got all the credit, hath not the Lord spoken by us as well as by Moses? Well, but though Moses was thus spoken against by his Brother and Sister, that were godly, and eminent, and that were in place, yet Moses was very Meek for all this, he was not provoked, but then mark the latter end of the 2. verse, it is said, The Lord heard it, and at the 4. verse, after the commendation of Moses his meekness, it is said the Lord spake suddenly unto Moses and Aaron, and miriae, come out ye three unto the Tabernacle of the congregation, as if God should say, what is this Meek Servant of mine wronged? I will not see him wronged a moment, the Lord spake suddenly. The best way to have our cause vindicated, is to carry it with Meekness, Then the Lord spake suddenly to Moses, Aaron, and miriae, come forth all of you, and we will try the cause, what cause there is for miriae, and Aaron to speak against Moses. Well, saith the Text, and the Lord came down in the cloud, and stood in the door of the Tabernacle, and called Aaron and miriae, and they both came forth, Come ye forth, saith God, and let us see what is against Moses, and saith he, If there be a Prophet in all my House, I the Lord will make myself known unto him in a Vision, and will speak unto him in a dream, My Servant Moses is not so, who is faithful in all mine House, with him will I speak mouth to mouth, even apparently, and not in dark speeches, and the similitude of the Lord shal he behold. Wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses? See how God honoured▪ Moses, Moses that was the meekest man upon the Earth, as soon as he was wronged, presently he calls them out, though they would have disgraced him and hindered him▪ in his work,( that is the policy of Satan to cast aspersions upon men to hinder their work) but now mark, God comes and calls them to account, and he honors Moses the more; saith the Lord, have I spoken to Moses More than to you? I, that I have, saith God, I, and more than to any Prophet▪ for I come to a Prophet, and make known my mind by vision, and by a dream, but my Servant Moses he is faithful in my House, whatever you pled against him, whatever aspersions you cast upon him, yet Moses, he is faithful in my House, unto him will I speak mouth to mouth, and the similitude of the Lord shal he behold, I will not trust any man to behold the similitude of the Lord but only Moses, wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses? Such a Meek man, such a godly man, such an eminent Magistrate? But then much more my Servant Moses, were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses? If he were a Moses, a public man, ye were not to speak against him, but my Servant Moses, wherefore were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses? See how God doth interest himself in the cause of those that are of Meek Spirits. And then the other Text is in psalm, 38. 13. verse, You shall see in the former part of the psalm, how David was wronged by his Lovers, at the 11. verse. My Lovers, and my friends stand a loof from my sore, and my Kinsmen stand a far off, they also that seek after my Life lay snares for me, and they that seek my Hurt speak mischievous things, and imagine deceits all the day long. But I as a deaf man heard not, and I was as a dumb man that openeth not his Mouth. Here is the Meekness of David, mark what Follows, Thus I was as a man that heareth not, and in whose mouth are no reproofs, For in thee O Lord do I Hope, thou wilt hear me, O Lord my God. I heard not when they spoken such mischievous things, I took notice of them, I could not but take notice of them; I could not but complain to thee of them, but I heard not, I gave no reviling speeches again, but I committed al to thee, thou wilt hear, O Lord my God. The less we do hear reproaches and wrongs that are done to us, the more will the Lord hear, and therefore if so be that you think there be any thing in Scripture, if you can lay the weight of your Souls upon Scripture for your Salvation, O meditate upon these Scriptures that I have shewed to you for the commendation of this excellent Grace of Meekness, that you may come to Learn this Grace of Meekness of Christ. CHAP. CXIII. The Excellency of Meekness continued in Eight Particulars more. 1. It is a convincing Grace, 2. It argues a Magnanimous Spirit. 3. Wisdom. 4. It graceth our calling. 5. It giveth advantage against an adversary. 6. There is daily Use of it. 7. It keeps continual peace. 8. It makes eminent in all other Graces. THere are many other commendations of this Grace of Meekness, I will but briefly name them that so we may come to the Application of the Point. First, Another is this, Meekness it is a mighty convincing Grace, there is no Grace that hath more power to convince men than the Grace of Meekness, it hath a convincing power, it is almost impossible to stand before the convincing power of Meekness, for thereby whatever men may speak against one that is of a Meek Spirit, yet certainly their consciences will be convinced and tel them, that they can do what themselves cannot, and that convinceth, whenas Christians do manifest that they are able to do what other men cannot do, then men are convinced that there is some power in Religion, and never till then. Now when they see them since they made profession of Religion, that they are able to put up more wrong than before, this convinceth them that there is a power in Religion, and there is no better way to gain men than by Meekness. We think to gain men by giving them as good as they bring, that will not do it. I have red of one, that railing against Philip of Macedon, one of Philips friends would have had him to have punished him, for he was the Emperour, What! saith he, will you suffer such a one to be railing upon you? But he would not listen to his Friend, to use him harshly and severely, but he sends this man divers gifts that did so rail on him, and useth him very courteously, and within a few daies he comes to his friend, and saith he, I pray tel me, what doth this man say of me? Oh! saith he, speaks the most honourably of you that ever any man did, Well, saith he, you see then I have been a better physician than you, you would have had me to have cured him by punishing of him, by frowardness, but I have done it by Meekness. This was the manner of a Heathen; and indeed, those that are gained this way are gained for ever. Perhaps when others do oppose you, you will be froward, and let forth your wrath against them, and perhaps you may for the present keep them down, yet it may be it will stir up more strife, but suppose you get the victory to keep them down, yet it will not gain them to you, but they will wait another opportunity to do you a mischief, but if you gain them by Meekness you gain them for ever; you may overcome one for a day, but he that you overcome will wait for another opportunity to be as bad as ever he was, but now you have gained for ever it may be the Soul of your Brother by your Meek carriage. So Josephus reports of that Agrippa, though he was a wicked man it is about the nineteenth Book of his upon the Jews Antiquities, the Seventh Chapter, the story of Agrippa, that heard one Simon a Lawyer that spake very ill of him, said, he was a profane man, and he sent for him, and when he came, Come, saith he, I pray thee tel me what Agrippa hath done? This Simon his mouth was stopped, he was able to say nothing then when he come to it, but falls down and desires pardon, and Agrippa pardons him, and bestows many favours upon him, and by this gains the man to be a friend to him afterwards, it is a mighty convincing grace, even so far as Heathens have had it, and their meekness to this Christian meekness was but as a crystal ston to a precious pearl, it was but as the outside, but very convincing among them, much more among us. Secondly, And then it is a grace that argues a Magnanimous and heroic Spirit, you know what the Scripture saith, That he that overcometh himself, is stronger than one that overcomes a City. Now it is a glorious thing for a soldier to overcome a City, but one that can overcome h●s own passion is more valiant, and hath a more excellent Spirit than one that overcomes a great City. And so some creatures that are more heroical, are more meek and gentle than others are, as the Lion is of a more generous Spirit then the wolf is: The greater any one is the more is he of a peaceable disposition,& their anger sooner pacified, for it is enough to fall down before a Lion, a Lion is pacified if you fall before it, but for the Wolf and Tiger, and other base creatures, they will tear those that fall down before them, but meekness argues a more Magnanimous Spirit than frowardness doth. Thirdly, And besides, it argues more wisdom than frowardness doth, in Prov. 17. 27. A man of a cool spirit, as the word is, it is a place that upon some occasion you have had before, A man of understanding is of an excellent Spirit, it is in the original of a cool Spirit: A man of understanding is of a cool Spirit, your hot Spirits are not men of understanding, but more of that was spoken when we opened unto you the folly that is discovered in passion and Anger heretofore. And then again further, this grace of meekness, excellency of it is in this, that in that we do walk worthy of our calling by manifesting meekness in our conversation▪ in the exercise of that grace we walk worthy of the glorious calling that the Lord hath called us to; That place in Ephes. 4. the beginning shows, so much. I therefore Paul, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you, that you walk worthy of the vocation wherewith you are called. Now if the Ephesians should say, wherein Paul should we walk worthy of the vocation wherewith we are called? Mark what follows in vers. 2. Withall lowliness and Meekness, with long suffering, forbearing one another in love, endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace. This is to walk worthy of your vocation. And doth it not become Christ●ans to walk worthy of their vocation? if you would walk worthy of your glorious calling, it must be in lowliness and meekness, and long-suffering, forbearing one another, endeavouring to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, this is to walk worthy of our calling, the calling of a Christian is a glorious calling, and it should be the study of al Christians so to walk as they may walk worthy of their calling, O, it is a glorious mercy of God to call thee to be a Christian, and thou must labour to walk worthy of this calling; without meekness, those that are of froward Spirits, they dishonour their calling. It was a prohibition of Alexander for two Christians that were wrangling one against another, he prohibits them to be called Christians, because they walked so contrary to the example of their master, because they walked so unworthy of their calling, that is another commendation of this grace of meekness. Fifthly, And then in further commendation of this, a meek Spirit it is one that hath the greatest advantage of an adversary that can be, no man hath such advantage against his adversary as a meek spirit, by this means he comes to be above his adversary, we can never be above them by passion. It is an usual speech of passionate people when others anger them, I will be even with them, such and such have done thus and thus, and I will be even with them: truly, there is a way not only to be even with them, but to stand above them, to say I will be even with them, that is no more, but he is evil towards you, and you will be evil towards him, he carries himself sinfully towards you, and you will carry yourself sinfully towards him. But now were it not better to be above them? who would not get his adversary under him? When you come to be meek you get al your adversaries under you. Many men that are of froward Spirits are vexed with nothing more than to see others that they are froward withal, yet will not be provoked, you shall sometimes apparently see, when one is in a pettish mood, if you can but compose your spirit, and keep your Spirit quiet, and not be provoked with their pettishness, this vexeth them more; they are vexed that they cannot vex you, and Angry that they cannot Anger you, you think when they anger you, you will Anger them again, this is but to feed their humour, your anger doth but feed the humour of an Angry body, but if you be patient, quiet, and meek you vex them, and thereby they see themselves to be under you, and you have overcome them. Sixthly, And then, the excellency of this grace appears, in the daily use of the grace of meekness we cannot live among men but we must use this grace of meekness every day, now that which we have so much use of every day hath an excellency in it. As now the Sun hath an excellency in it, not only because of the excellent effects of it, but because of the use that we have of it every day, and so bread and water, and other elements have an excellency in them because of the constant need that we have of them every day. There are some graces that we have not so constant need of the use of them as this of meekness, I know not one grace that we have such a constant need of the daily use of it, as we have of this grace of meekness, only the grace of faith, that must set a work al other graces; you have need of the use of it in respect of God, if you come down into your family, and have to do with your wife, there may be failings there wherein you will need meekness, Come to your children, and you ●ave need of Meekness, come to your servants, and you have need of meekness there, and so among your neighbours, if you go to prayer you have need of meekness there, when you come to hear the word, you have need of meekness there, in every holy duty, in al your bargainings, buying and selling, in every thing, if meekness be not there, every thing will miscarry, except the heart be possessed with meekness, and therefore it is a most excellent grace. Seventhly, It is that grace whereby men and women come to have fair weather all the year long, it is a comfortable thing to have fair weather to continue but two or three weekes together, and you know rainy weather and dropping weather is very tedious and irksome to us, and we say it is pitty fair weather should do any hurt, but now where there is meekness in a family, there is fair weather every day al the week long, and on the other side where there is frowardness and passion; there is rainy weather al the week long, and therfore the scripture sets out frowardness by a continual dropping, The contentions of a woman is as a continual dropping in rainy weather, where the rain comes in and drops upon your bed and tables, and every where as you si●, it is very troublesone, But on the other side, when the Sun comes in at the window, there is a sweet pleasant dwelling, this is comfortable. Many times you know the Sun riseth very fair, but it rains mightily before night; so in many Families, though there is a great deal of quietness in the morning, and there seems to be a great deal of love between Husband and Wife, Parents and Children, Master and Servant, yet what a storm is there before night; but now where there is meekness, there fair weather continues all the week long, yea, all the year long. Eightly, Yea, yet further, by meekness we shal grow to be eminent in al other graces, thus you have it in Prov. 3. 32. The froward is an abomination to the Lord, but his secret is with the righteous. Now the opposition one would think should be thus, the froward is abomination to the Lord, but his secret is with the Meek, and ordinarily in the Proverbs it is thus, one opposite evil to another, the froward is thus, but the righteous is thus, why doth he not say, that the meek is thus, the reason is this, because al righteousness doth thrive in a meek spirit, say of a man or woman that he is truly, christianly meek, and al righteousness gowes in him and therefore here righteousness is put for meekness. And in Prov. 11. 20. They that are of a froward heart( again) are abomination to the Lord, but such as are upright in their way is his delight. Now the opposition again should have been thus, such as are meek in their way, but as if the Holy Ghost should say, it is all one to say, a meek man is an upright man, a meek woman is an upright woman, such as are upright, such as have meekness, and keep but meekness in their hearts, they are Gods delight. It is observable, that when the people of God were in danger, you know that Moses hands were lift up, I suppose al of you that are acquainted with scripture know the story, that when Moses his hands were lift up Israel prevailed, and when Moses his hands were let down, then Amalek prevailed. Now why was not Aarons hands lift up, for Moses was the Magistrate, and Aarons the priest, and one would have thought, that Aaron should have been the praying man, but it seems when the people were in great danger and their deliverance was upon prayer; Moses was the man that must pray, and the reason is because Moses was more eminent with God then Aaron, and especially eminent in the grace of Meekness, for so it is clear. For in Numb. 12. you find, that Aaron was of a peevish froward Spirit towards Moses, but Moses meek, so that Moses he grew to out-strip the High priest his brother in meekness, as many that are eminent godly men, that are tradesman, they may have a minister to their brother, and they may grow more eminent then himself, thus it was with Moses, and certainly those that are more eminent in meekness, they are more eminent in prayer. CHAP. CXIV. The Application of the Doctrine of Meekness in Two Branches. 1. In rebuking them that want it: wherein the Impediments of it are removed, the Danger of frowardness laid open, and the vain reasons for it Answered. WELL, I shal not proceed for the present any further in the commendation of the grace of meekness, what may be further said, may come in afterwards in the application of the Point. Now therefore, having spent much time in opening of the Grace of Meekness, what it is, and the wonderful excellency of it, labouring to set it out and commend it to you, we come to apply the Point, and that in two Branches. First, In rebuking those( especially Christians) that are wanting in this Grace; a use of reprehension and Exhortation, for many things hath been said Applicatory already in the opening of it, now I shall only speak of reprehension. Christ would have us to Learn Meekness, O! How few scholars hath Christ in the world? How few hath he in the Church? How few Proficients( at least) hath he in his School? How few are there that have taken forth this Lesson that Christ would have us Learn of him? Little Meekness there is in the world, Yea, Among Christians, where Christ expecteth most. I suppose by what hath been opened, there is not one but hath seen already, cause to lay his or her hand upon their Hearts, and say, Lord, how far have I come short of that Meekness that hath been opened to me, that Christ would have me to Learn of him? There needs many buckets of tears of Repentance to quench the Fire of our passions. O! That God would cause you to see the Evil of the want of this Grace, I have opened it very largely, in showing, how Meekness moderates Anger in the Evil effects of it, and therefore need not to enlarge it now, but the main thing that now is to be done, is, to take away all the vain pleas of a froward spirit. It is true, you have shewed what Meekness is, and the excellency of this Grace, and the use of it, so as we cannot but be convinced that it is that that we should all labour for: but that that hinders very much this Grace, it is the pleas that carnal Hearts have against it, there is nothing more unreasonable than mens passions, and yet nothing that Men and Women pled for more than for their passion, they are ready to say to Ministers or friends, Yea, to God himself, as Jonah did when God asked him, Jonas, Dost thou well to be Angry? Yea, I do well. Come to any froward spirit and say to them, is it well to be angry? Dost thou well. Yea, After you have heard so much of this Grace of Meekness, if any of your neighbors should come to you when you are in a passion, and say, do you well stil to be in this passion? Perhaps, you will be ready to say, Yea, I do well, as Jonah did, now it would be in vain further to exhort you to Meekness, till I have taken away the lets and impediments of this Grace of Meekness, which are the pleas of mens Hearts. PLEA, I. First, You have many that will satisfy themselves in this; it is true they are passionate, I but, it is in this one thing that they fail, but in other things they make conscience,& they hope they walk close with God, and frequent Gods ordinances, follow the word, and prayer, and fasting, may be, and pray in their Families, and closerts, and other Duties, they are careful and conscionable in the performance of them, and there is nothing that God requires of them that they know of but their consciences tells them they do what the Lord requires of them, only this one thing of passion, that they cannot help, and we are ready to say of men, O! Such a man is a very good man, but he is of a hasty Spirit, a very gracious Woman, but of a hasty spirit, Truly, it is hard to say of any man, Yea, I shal show you by and by, we can hardly say, they are gracious and yet passionate, but for being very gracious, it can be said of no man, or no Woman, that they are very gracious that are in on ordinary way overcome with passion, but because this is the great plea, that it is but in this one thing, they are in other things right and well, but in this one thing of passion. Now to answer this in this one thing, passion is the cause of abundance of evil, anger, it is a complex evil, it hath in the bowels of it abundance of evil, there is pride, and self-Love and stoutness, and stubborness against God, and unbelief, and abundance of evil in the Womb of passion, and therefore you cannot say, it is one. But then, suppose it were but one, yet it is a special fruit of the Flesh that must be mortified, in Galathians, 6. Where the Apostle speaks of the fruits of the flesh, and the spirit, he tells us, That they that are Christs have crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts. You will say, What are the fruits of the flesh? That he hath described before at verse, 20. Idolatry, Witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulation, wrath, strife: Wrath and strife, these are the fruits of the flesh, Now they that are Christs, have crucified the flesh and the fruits thereof, certainly, where there is any fruit of the flesh that is not crucified, where there is I say, but one lust of the flesh that is mortified, there certainly such a soul cannot have any evidence that they are in Christ, they that are in Christ, have mortified the flesh with the affections and lusts, that is, all the affections and lusts are mortified, he doth not say, all removed, but all mortified, where the lusts of the flesh, any one lust of the flesh remaineth unmortified, that soul is not a member of Jesus Christ. You may think it a hard truth, but it is a certain truth, and I suppose no Minister of Christ but holds in the doctrinal part of it to be a truth, and this place in the Galathians doth show it, they have mortified, that is, they have been willing to put the lusts of the flesh, to a shameful death to crucify the lusts of the flesh, that argues a more violence of spirit against the lusts of the flesh, then to say, they had mortified them; as it noted the desperateness of the Pharisees hearts against Christ, that they would not only put him to death, but crucify him, so every one that is in Christ, hath that desperate hatred against the lusts of the flesh, that he puts it to death, by the most cruel, and painful and shameful death that may be, that is another answer. But further, you say, this is but only in one thing, O! this prevails you acknowledge: I shal now show you, what a dangerous thing it is for this one thing to prevail, that it is this one thing that is the most opposite in the heart of a Christian, and I will give you these several demonstrations of it. As First when Grace comes into the heart of a Christian, it shows unto him his own vileness, that is the least thing it can do, it discovers to him what a vile, wretched Creature he is, a fire-brand of Hell in himself, and now deserves for ever to be cast off by the Lord, and to be trampled under Foot, this Grace do him the lowest degree: now there is nothing more opposite to this than a froward heart, a froward heart is a proud heart, it is from pride that thou canst bear no crosses at all. Secondly, The first Lesson that Christ teacheth those that come to him, is to deny himself: now if thou hast not learned that first Lesson, how canst thou say, thou hast Grace? Thirdly, Grace in the meanest work of it, makes us see the infinite need it stands in of mercy, and can this stand with that? Can a froward passionate heart against those that across thee, stand with the deep sense of thy own infinite need of mercy? Certainty, that soul that doth so, must needs be of a meek spirit, and wherever there is any Grace, that soul doth see this, and is sensible of this. But these will likewise come in, in the Means that we shall mention against frowardness of heart afterwards; only I name them now, to show how incompatible the reigning passion in mens hearts is with Grace. Fourthly, Grace subjects the heart to God, the main work of Grace is to bring men to the Will of God; not to make mine own Will the Rule of my Actions: but to subject to God, to make his Will the Rule of my Will, and his Law the Rule of my Actions: This is the genuine Work of Grace; the least work of Grace doth this where ever it is. Now a passionate spirit is the most opposite to this that can be, to the subjection of the soul to God, to make the Will of God the Rule of his own Will: when thou art in thy passion, and froward distemper, there is nothing but, I will, and I will; but where is the will of God, your will you make to be the Rule of your own actions, this is the most opposite to God that can be. Fifthly, Grace wherever it comes, makes the Heart to savour of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, true Grace comes from the spirit of Christ, and therefore such a one must needs savour of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, and nothing more opposite to the Grace of Jesus Christ, than a froward and passionate spirit, I am Meek, saith Christ and what Grace do you see shine in Jesus Christ( if you red the Gospel) more than Meekness? And therefore Meekness makes thee smell savoury of Jesus Christ, thou smellest rank if thou hast not Meekness. 6ly If there be Grace in thee, then it brings light into thy Soul, and gives thee Heavenly Wisdom, though thou beest never so weak& foolish before, it makes thee a Child of light, and gives thee Heavenly Wisdom; but now there is nothing that hath more folly in it than passion; folly appears in none more than in those that are passionate, now where doth thy Grace ly all this while? Truly, one that is gracious, and professeth Religion, one would wonder where their Grace lies. You will say, they hear the word, and go to Duty with Gods people, I but if Gods people Anger them, they are froward, and passionate, and they pray, I but though they pray, yet they are full of passion, and therefore, I say, I wonder where their Grace lies, and therefore if there be any in them, it is like a little spark of Fire in a great deal of ashes, one that comes in the morning to make a Fire, Rakes in a great deal of Ashes, and at last finds a little spark of Fire: it may be so, when we come to a passionate man, though a godly man, we may rak, and rak, and perhaps at last find a little spark of Grace, but under a great deal of Ashes. You will not think that a drunkard hath any Grace, Why should you think that one that is drunk with passion should have Grace? I do not say, but godly men may have some passion in them, but where it doth reign, there it is hard to discover Grace. And further, to show you that it is opposite to Grace, that which is a special Commendation of the Gospel in the Scripture is this, that it shall make the Wolf, and the lion, and the ox to lye down together, that place in Isai. 2. 4. where the times of the promise of the Gospel is spoken of, When Christ shal come, He shal judge among the Nations, they shall beat their Swords into Plowshares, and their spears into pruning Hooks and Nation shall not lift up themselves against Nation. Abundance of peace in the times of the Gospel. And so that other Scripture where it is said, The Wolf and the Lamb shall he down together, and feed one with another, and the lion eat Straw like the Ox, That is, the Gospel shal meeken the Hearts of men, the dispositions of men wherever it comes. Now if thou hast Grace, the Gospel hath prevailed in thy Heart, and where is it? What hath the Gospel done, if it hath not changed thy froward Heart into Meekness? The Gospel hath not had that fruit in thy Heart if thou hast not Meekness, for it is not only because there is some sin in thy Heart, for that indeed men and Women should not do, always call the Foundation into question, because there is some sin, there may be some Grace though some sin abide, but this sin, I say, is the most opposite of any sin, and if there be any thing whereby one may call Grace in question( except sins of purpose and directly against knowledge) I know nothing whereby a man may call Grace more into question, then for a Passionate froward Spirit, and I give you the grounds why it so appears, and therefore it may justly be very suspicious whether there be any grace or no where there is this constant reigning of this passion in those that profess themselves to be Christians. PLEA. II. And further, another plea is this, but I am wronged, and the cause of my Anger, it is just, and would you not have us Angry when the cause is just indeed. Now to that I Answer, that the Scripture indeed in some cases doth bind us to be Angry, yet when we are Angry with our Brother, it would hardly have us Angry with him almost in any case. In Matth. 5. 22. Whosoever is Angry with his Brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgement. I but some passionate people will say, I am not Angry without a cause but upon just cause. I remember, Austin, in his 19. Chapter of Retractations, he mentions this Scripture, and saith he, in Ancient Copies in the Greek Testament, these words, Without Cause, is left out, and he descants upon the Text, saith he, we are not to be Angry with our Brother upon any cause, but, saith he those that are Angry with sin, are not Angry with their Brother. And so Jerom, he saith, that in ancient Greek Copies these words are left out, because indeed people should take heed of being Angry with their Brother in any case, there is so much danger in the passion of Anger. But I answer further, That a just cause is not enough for a just Anger, there may be just cause, and yet my Anger unjust, there must be many things go to make a just Anger, there must be many ingredients, just measure, and just proportion, and a right managing, many things required to a right Anger, as well as a just cause, and therefore it is a great fault, for men and Women to think, that I am justly Angry, because I have a just cause. Therefore in psalm, 78. 50. It is said, he made a way to his Anger. Now Arius Montanus, he saith, that he weighed his Anger, the Lord when he is Angry he weighs his Anger, He weighs a right proportion to his Anger. Indeed, as it is with Apothecaries, when they are to make a compound of physic of some things that are very violent in their operations, very strong, they had need weigh to a dram, they had need to be accurate, that they do not put in one dram more than they should, they may kill a man, if they should; and it is not enough for the Apothecary to say, I put in nothing but what the physician prescribed, I but if he put in more than he prescribed, he may be guilty of murder, he may say, it is but two or three drams, I, in other things it might have passed, but in this it may kill a man; and so in this thou hadst need to weigh thy Anger, to make a proportion between the cause and the Anger. Further, Thou sayest the cause is just, but when dost thou judge it to be just? Dost thou judge it to be just before thou art in thy passion, or when thou art in thy passion? Do you before your passion advice and deliberate about it, and consider, is there cause for me to be Angry? And how far ought I to be Angry? And is there cause from God to be Angry? Were your Judgments informed before your Anger rise? Did you forbear your passion till you were able to judge? Many people, when they are stirred up in a passion, they will therefore think the cause to be just because they are Angry, but indeed, they should be Angry because first before their Anger they Judged it to be just, it is very seldom that our judgement is before our passion, but afterwards, and that is seldom good. And Further, When can a Christian exercise mercy, but when he hath a just cause to be Angry? If the cause were not just, then you had no object for your mercy, now God calls upon you to be merciful, to forgive your Brother, if you will never forgive when the cause is just, when will you then? There is no place for forgiveness, therefore when you apprehended just cause for Anger, think, is there not now a place for mercy, and if you would weigh these two when one hath done you wrong, whether is it better to manifest the Grace of mercy, or the affection of Anger? Which is best either to be angry or passionate? I must be merciful sometimes, and I can never be merciful but when I am wronged, why therefore not merciful now? And further, Dost thou pled thou art Angry, because thou hast just cause? How often hath God just cause to be Angry with thee? And yet he shows mercy, but now though the cause be just, yet thou must look to behave thyself justly in thine Anger upon this just cause, there can be no cause given to make thee so to be Angry, a● to make thee sin against God, there is never any such just cause to provoke thee to swear, never so just cause to make thee so Angry as to hinder thee in thy Duty, in thy prayer, Yea, Though there be never so just cause, as thou c●nst not at the same time go to Prayer, and pray for them thou art Angry with, I say, pray for them, that God would bless the manifestation of thine Anger, then the justness of thy cause will not be sufficient to pled before the Lo●d. PLEA, III. Thirdly, Another Plea is this, O! but, it is my Nature, I am of a hasty Nature, will another say indeed you teach us to be of meek and quiet Spirits, it is good if I could be so, but I am of a hasty Nature, I am willing to do what God would have me, but the Lord knows, my Nature is so hasty that I cannot tel how to help it. This is generally the Plea of al hasty Spirits, and so pled for themselves and their Friends, indeed such a one is hasty of Nature, and so make that a Plea for all the wickedness committed in Passion. To which I answer, what art thou hasty by nature hast thou a froward heart naturally, then thou hast a nature that is abominable to God. I gave you two scriptures before, in Prov. 3. 32. And in Prov. 11. 20. I say, art thou hasty by nature? then know that thou hast a nature that is abominable to God, and therefore do not speak of thy hasty nature by way of excuse, but rather to accuse thyself more for the scripture saith, the froward heart is an abomination to the Lord. And ag●in, Art thou hasty by nature? it is not that nature that God made thee in, God made man upright, God made man after his own image, like himself, and God is slow to wrath, it is the Glory of God to be slow to wrath, full of mercy, and kindness, and gentleness, this is Gods nature, and God made man according to his own image, certainly therefore, this nature thou speakest o●, is not Gods nature, that which thou sayest is thy nature, is nothing but thy original corruption, and therefore the scripture saith, in Jam. 1. 20. The wrath of man accomplisheth not the righteousness of God, and is this any comend●tion of a branch, that it hath a co●rupt root? thou art froward, and thy original corru●t on is in the strength of it, is this any lessening of the evil of the root that it hath a rot●en branch? And so here is a wicked child, and this child hath a wicked parent, d●th this lessen the evil of the child? And so, here is a passion●te man, and he hath a passionate nature, now for thee to say, I am not only occasionally froward, but I have a disposition to be froward again, whensoever any occasion is offered, what a strange plea is this? you would think it a strange ple●, if a thief should come before the judge, and there he is accus●d before the j●dg, and he plead● he must have favour, and shal s●y, I confess my Lord, the thing is done, but I have a nature so disposed to the every, that I know not what to do, would this be a sufficient plea? yet this is the plea before God, thou art froward, and th●u art hasty, and passionate, and it is thy nature so to be. And so for Murder, one murders a man, and when he hath done, he saith, he hath a murderous nature, why, this is thy plea before God, Lord I have done this wickedness, and Lord, I cannot but do it every day more, and more, it is my nature; it is worse to have a nature evil, than to have a thing ●vill accidentally, as a Toad, we hate it because it is naturally po●sonful, So thou being so by nature, it should indeed be thy humiliation, the more thou shouldst go and lay it upon thy heart, and say, Lord, I have been overcome by passion, but thou sayst I have a vile nature, that hath been overc●me again and again, and overcome by this vile distemper. But besides, I ha●e this more to say, that if thou hast nothing more but nature, thou shalt never go to Heaven, Hast thou nothing to overcome thy nature? If thou beest a Godly man or wom●n, thou art born again, made a partaker of the di●ine nature, so the Apostle saith, every man or woman in the world, that hath the least degree of Grace, is made partaker of the divine nature, now the divine nature, that prevails, that reigns, and that rules in the heart, and therefore to pled nature, it is as much as to say, that I am yet the Child of wrath, for by nature we are all the Children of wrath, and heirs of Perdition, and slaves to Satan, if thou hast nothing but nature; and therefore, Oh! that Christians would never make that plea to say it is their nature. PLEA IV. Fourthly, Another Plea is this, That which is Annexed to this, it is extreme difficult, it is extreme hard to pass by wrongs, how can we do it? we are but Flesh and Blood, we are Flesh and Blood, I shall put those together, and how are we able to be of such quiet and meek spirits when we are wronged? For the First, we are but Flesh and Blood, I but yet, you are reasonable creatures, you are not beasts, you have Reason to Rule Flesh and Blood, you are not flesh and Blood, as Tigers,& Bears, and Wolves, and Dogs are, but some have such Flesh and Blood, as if they had only Dogs Flesh, and Blood. Secondly, The Heathen were Flesh and Blood, and yet they moderated their Anger more than you do, and God may bring them against you another day. Thirdly, Are you but Flesh and Blood? you may make this an Argument against all your Anger, What! Shal vile Flesh and Blood take so much upon it, that if it be crost in any thing, fly in the Face of God and their Brethren, and across Gods will, What! Shal Flesh and Blood do this? You should take a consideration, from your being but Flesh and Blood, to be willing to bear any thing, I am but Flesh and Blood, and is it fit for Flesh and Blood to stand so much upon it? It is an Argument of basil, that Godly, Holy, and eminent Divine, in former times, he brings this very Argument, doth any speak ill of You? Consider you are dust, and to dust you must return, and again, doth any speak ill of you, consider you are a Worm and no man. Yea, Further: If you be saved, and come to Heaven, you must be more than Flesh and Blood, Flesh and Blood shal never enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, and therefore when this Plea comes into your mind, when you are passionate, I am but Flesh and Blood, let this Answer you, Oh, but flesh and Blood shal never enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. Further, In that you say, it is so difficult, To that I answer. First, All good things are difficult; it would not be so excellent a grace were it not so difficult. Secondly, Difficult it is, but to whom? To those that have no gracious principles in them, where there is no gracious principles, there it is Difficult. Thirdly, It is Difficult but at first, but not Difficult afterwards, indeed at first when you set upon it, to deny your passion, you will find it Difficult, but do but deny it often, and you will find it not difficult. I remember I have red of the Phrygians; the Spartans they looked upon them as great in number, and thought never to overcome them, but after they had overcome them once and twice, they feared them not: So you think it is Difficult, and mighty hard to overcome your passion, but do but try once and twice, and you will find so much swee●ness in your Spirits, that you will not find it so much Difficult, almost all the ways of godliness are so, as we shal see afterwards the Lord willing, when we come to the verse after, My yoke is easy, and my burden is light Even this yoke of Christ is easy, as well as all other yokes. And further, you say, it is difficult, you endure more Difficulty in your Anger a great deal then you should do in Meekness. It is a notable speech of Seneca, Oh, saith he, it is a heavy thing to suffer and hear, Mentiris, thou liest( saith he) who is there that cannot bear wrongs, that is able to bear wrath? It is a greater burden to bear wrath, then to bear wrong, this a Heathen man could say. And if you examine your own experience you will find it. You say, you cannot bear wrong it is so difficult, saith Seneca, thou liest, whatever difficulty you find in bearing wrong, there is more burden in the distemper then in putting up the wrong, then in bearing of the wrath; and I appeal to you in your experience, you cannot put up such a wrong, after you come to yourselves, ask your consciences this question, supp●se I had put up this wrong, had it not been more easy to me than to distemper my own Heart? I am persuaded you would have found it a great deal more easy then you did in your passion, for though Men and Women will not yield, yet they find their passion troublesone, and another that puts up wrong, doth not find that trouble as he that doth put up wrong, and therefore consider this, the frowardness of my Heart for the wrong, God knows it, I feel a great deal more trouble in the passion of my Heart then I should have had in the very wrong itself. There are many other Pleas. As you would count me a Fool, and it would harden others in wickedness if they should be let alone, for the Heart of man is vile to find out Pleas to satisfy their lusts, I but I Hope you shal find the vanities of these pleas, and if God would but so bless this, that the Fig Leaves may be taken away, I Hope abundance of good may be done, and it will further us to be good scholars in this Lesson, to Learn of Christ to be Meek as he was. CHAP. CXV. Divers other Vain Pleas for immoderate Anger taken away and Answered. TO proceed unto some other Pleas that passionate Spirits make. PLEA, V. Fifthly, Another Plea is this( which is one of the greatest of all, and that passionate Hearts think they have most to say for themselves in) I am provoked, and if he had not provoked me, I should have been well enough I live quietly in my Family, and among my neighbors, except I be provoked; and it is their fault then that do provoke me; I suppose this is the Plea that many of you have made many times, and you have all heard it at some time or o●her. Now I beseech you lay it to heart, what I shall say in way of answer to this, and so of the other, I hope if you will but lay them to heart, and lift up your hearts to God for a blessing upon them, these will be taken away, and if these pleas be taken away the mouth of the froward is stopped, and if so, then the other use that comes after for the conclusion of all, to draw our hearts to meekness, that will be mighty prevalent, consider what I have to answer for this of being provoked. First, There were no need of the Grace of Meekness, if there were nothing to provoke us, we use to say, the Devil is good if so be he be pleased, for you to think you are meek, when you are meek only when you are pleased, that is no meekness, the Devil can be meek when he is pleased, now is the time to exercise meekness when thou art provoked, so that for thee to say, thou art froward only when thou art provoked, this is as much as to say, I am not froward but when God calls me to exercise meekness. For ever when thou art provoked that is the proper time to exercise meekness. A Godly man, in the first psalm, is said to bring forth fruit in due season, that is the excellency of true Grace, to work in due season, and what is the due season of meekness, but only when thou art provoked, that the season of it and every thing is beautiful in its season, and so would this Grace be beautiful in its season. Secondly, It is a sign of a very carnal heart▪ to put off their sin to the temptation, to pled for themselves and think to put off the guilt of their sin, and the evil of it, upon a temptation. It is ever a sign of a carnal heart, as usually we find those that are very carnal, when they have done evil, they cry out, Oh, this wicked devil that tempts them! and such and such that tempt them, so they will ever put it off from themselves, and put it upon another, whereas those that are truly grac●ous, and of tender spirits, they are ever ready to charge themselves to the uttermost with any evil, yea, they will rather charge themselves too much, than too little: and therefore you shall find, those that have tender Consciences, that when they have any dreadful injections to evil, to curse God, they charge their own corruptions with it, and think that all of it ariseth from the wicked corruptions of their hearts, whenas indeed, many times they are no other injections than the Devil did cast into Christ, he had no sin at all, and yet the devil cast in such temptations to sin upon him. And so in the Saints of God, there may be such hideous, monstrous things cast in by the devil, that are the Devils sins and not theirs, and yet they are ready to charge their own sins with it. Mark the difference, some will charge corruption with all, and others will charge temptation withall. A carnal heart, is so far from charging his corruption with that that comes from Satan only, as he will rather free himself, and discharge his corruptions from that that doth arise wholly from corruption, and from no other principle: though there were no temptaion, yet for all that, certainly, his corruption would be enough to cause such and such evils that he doth now charge upon temptation. We had need take heed of this, it is a subtlety of the devil, to hinder the humiliation of our hearts for sin, to make us believe, that it comes from temptation, and not from corruption; if we examine our own hearts we shall find, that it is our corruption rather than the temptation that doth cause this distemper, or passion. I remember Luther in his Comment upon Genesis, he tells a History of one that he was acquainted withall, a Monk, and that was very dear to him in the time that he was a Papist. And saith he, this man, he was mightily overcome with passion, and frowardness, and he was so vexed with himself, he saw the evil of it, yet because he thought those that he lived withal were the causes of it, that they gave him such occasions, and so provoked him to it, he resolved he would leave all Company▪ and go and live in the Wilderness he would be free from all temptation, he thought the chief cause was from the untowardness of such that he lived among, and that he might prevent passion, he would go and live alone. And living alone in the Wilderness, he went to take up some Water in a vessel, and by some accident the vessel did turn aside& spilled the Water, he was in an anger against the vessel& took the vessel& broken it all to pi●ces,& when he had broken it al in pieces, he begi●s to think thus, now I see it is not my temptation, but my corruption that makes me froward, now I see when I am alone I am froward, I thought when I lived among Company, that was the cause of my frowardness, but now I live alone, I see my frowardness breaks out, and therefore I see it is my corruption, and upon that returns again to live where he did, and so fals a studying to mortify the corruptions of his own heart, and acknowledgeth, that the distemper of his passion came from the evil of his own heart. And though it may be many of your thoughts, when you live in such a family, you think, if you lived alone you should be quiet, truly if God do not sanctify your heart, you would be froward with yourselves, and froward with every Creature that you had to deal withall; and therefore labour to put it upon the corruption of your own heart, and were but that cured, though there were more provocations than there are, you would not be so overcome with passion as you are. Thi●dly, Another Answer to the Plea is this, you are not so easily provoked to good works, Why are you so easily provoked to sin, and not to good, you have as strong means where you live to provoke you to good as you have to sin? In Heb. 10. 24. saith the Apostle, Let us consider one another to provoke to love, and to good works. You have such means where you live, to provoke you to love, and to good works, now all the means where you live in the Ministry of the word, cannot provoke you to love and to good works, as some little occasion in the family can provoke you to passion: Now accuse thy heart for this, al those Sermons I hear too, one would have thought might have provoked me to good, they do not provoke me to good, but if I come home, and any Child, or Servant, or neighbour provoke me, I am provoked to evil, accuse your heart for this. Fourthly, Another Answer is this, you say, you are provoked, Is there any thing in the world that should provoke you to mischief yourself? You cannot provoke a Beast to do that, bring a bruit beast to the brink of a pit, your Horse, Are you able with all the blows you give him, to make him leap into it, especial●y if there be a fire in it? And are you so easily provoked to go and mischief yourselves in the fire of passion? Can any man provoke you to leap into fire? certainly the passionate fit may be as great an evil as to fall into fire. If you should see your Child fall into the fire, or your Wife or Husbend fall into the Fire▪ What shrieking would there be in the family? Truly there is as great a Cause to shriek out, when you see them fall into a fiery passion, for a heart fire is worse than a hearth fire a great deal, and if you will not be provoked to that fire, Why are you to the fire of passion. Fifthly, I have one Answer more, and that may be will prevail with you more than the al other, and that is this, we red of Moses, though he was a meek man, yet he was once overcome with passion, and he was overcome with passion by being provoked, and for all that God would not spare him: It would not serve Moses his turn, though such a Holy Man, such an excellent Servant of God, that did the Lord as excellent Service as any man in his age, never any did a more excellent service than he did before him nor in all the time in the old Testament none after he was a man so Holy. did God so much Service, and a man that was so very meek in his constant way, and so seldom overcome with passion, and yet being once overcome and that with a kind of zeal for God, for so it was, when the Children of Israel murmured. Ye Rebels, shall I give you wa●e● out of the Rock? and so smote the Rock, and one would think it was no great matter, God bad him speak to the Rock, and he not only spake to the Rock but smote it, What great matter is this? Many times, when God would have you only▪ speak to your Servants, and Children, you smite them: God would have you instruct them and you fly in their faces: you sin in this as Moses did▪ God bad him speak to the Rock, and he smote the Rock, yea, and they provoked him to this by their stubbornness and rebellion, yea, God himself doth testify that they did provoke him, in Psalm. 106. 33. Because they provoked his spirit, so that he spake unadvisedly with his lips. They provoked him, it was in a passion that he spake, yet now mark, this would not serve Moses his turn. One would think that if any man might have been excused, Moses might have been excused. Moses that was the meekest man upon the earth, that suffered so many wrongs, only at this time being provoked, he spake unadvisedly with his lips, and smote the Rock, and yet( this is that I would bring it to) the Lord would not spare Moses for this, it cost Moses the loss of the Land of Canaan, God would never be entreated by Moses to let him go into the Land of Canaan for this, which was the greatest affliction in this world that could be inflicted upon Moses, there was nothing Moses desired more in this world than to go into the Land of Canaan, and the Lord would not grant this, but denied him, and that because of this one angry fit. At the 32. verse of that psalm it is said, They angered him at the waters of strife, so that it went ill with Moses for their sakes, they did provoke Moses and anger him, You will say, Why do they anger me? they did anger Moses, I but it went ill with Moses for their sakes, so ill that he might not go into the Land of Canaan, and God gives the reason in another Scripture, it is because he did not sanctify him in this. O! consider this, and never pled this Plea of being provoked. They anger you, I but it may go ill with you for a●l that. If the Lord will not spare such a precious Servant of God as Moses was. that was not ordinarily passionate, and thou art ordinnarily passionate, What art thou? Thou art a man of little use in the place where thou livest, Moses was a choice man, of the greatest use of any that lived in his time. Besides you should consider how you provoke God continually, and you should labour to be as God is, he is not upon all your provocations so angry as to fly upon you, he can bear though you provoke him, Why should not you bear when your fellow creatures provoke you? And that is the answer to that Plea of being provoked. PLEA. VI. Sixthly: Another Plea is this: I am abused, and no man like me, saith also many froward passionate people, there is never any so abused as I, certainly, never any such Children as I have, never any one that had such Servants, never any one such a Wife, or such a Husband as I have: And this is the ordinary Plea of all when any thing falls out to across them, they say presently, that their affliction is greater than ever any ones was. Now to that we answer: First of all, That it is the Pride of thy heart that makes thy affliction seem to be greater than others; as a proud heart being great itself, will make great mercies appear but a little, they are nothing; so they make afflictions to be very great, and such a one thinks it a great matter to suffer any little thing, it is a great matter for such a one as he to suffer, it is thy pride, hadst thou an humble heart, thou wouldst not think it a great matter to suffer. Secondly: Thou thinkest never any one so abused as thou art; God is more abused every day than thou art. Thirdly: Thou sayest, Never any meets with such afflictions as thou, and so abused as thou art: May be thou art one of the worst that livest, and if thou hadst an humble heart thou woulst judge so; What! Doth the Lord sand such afflictions upon me more than any? The Lord sees I have a more vile heart than another: that is the way of an humble heart, to judge itself worse than any; and if you do so you will not think your afflictions worse than any. Object. I but you will say, Why should we judge ourselves worse then any? We see others are more vile and wicked then we. Answ. I but a man may know more evil in himself then he can see in another. But you will say, I see others are more wicked, I, but yet I may give a better judgement upon myself then I can upon another, I know what means I have had, I know not what they have had, I know what workings of Gods Spirit hath been upon my Heart, I do not know what hath been upon them. Your profane people it may be would have been drawn, if they had had the means that I have had: I do not know what work of conscience they have had, I know what work of conscience I have had; Now considering what work of conscience I have had, I am to aggravate my sins more then any man living, because I cannot know what work of Conscience hath been upon any, so as I can in myself, and therefore if I meet with more affliction then any do, yet I am to lay my hand upon my mouth, it may be I am viler, and have a viler Heart then others have. Fourthly, Yea, Further, It may be it is because thou art mo●e froward then others are, that thou meetest with so much more evil then others, it is many times a just judgement of God upon many, that they shal meet with stumbling blocks according to their sins, because thou art a froward man the Lord sees thy Heart so vile in thy frowardness▪ and thou tenderest not Gods Glory, therefore he tenders not thy good. There is no people in the world, that meet with so much occasion to vex them as froward people do, therefore when thou hast that Plea for thyself, that none are so abused as I, think, it may be, it is because there is no man hath such a froward; peevish Heart as I have. Fifthly, And further, if thou didst pass a right judgement, thou wouldst find that others suffer as much as thou dost. Nay more, Yea, may be, they suffer as much by thee as thou dost by them; it is ordinary for people to say, there is ●one suffer in the Family as I do, Yes, it may be they suffer more, and that by thee, thou art more afflictive to them than they are to thee. Sixthly, And the last Answer that I give for this is, if thou be godly that thus pleadest, if it were compatible to one that is godly, which is rare I confess, to find one that is godly to pled for such a distemper as this, but if thou beest godly, if God do not lay any sore affliction upon thee for thy sin, then God doth it for thy trial, and then know, that if God intends it only for thy trial, that thou hast sorer temptations then any one, then it is that thou shouldst manifest more Grace thfn any others The Scripture, in 1 Pet. 1. 7. saith, That the trial of our Faith is more precious then Gold, Not only our Faith, but the trial of our Faith, the trial of thy Grace of meekness, may be more worth than Gold, then all thy estate, and the greater thy trial in thy Meekness, if thou overcome, thou wilt find more comfort then in all thy estate, and then all thy comfort in all the world can afford thee, and so thou mayest make this advantage, it may be there is none hath so much trial, I but, what if my heart in this trial continue in the meekness of it, Oh! What comfort then will this be? Do not yield presently to a temptation because it is a great trial, Consider it may be God will help me through this trial, and then what joy and comfort will there be to my Soul? And how acceptable unto God will it be that I should overcome such a great trial as this is? When Alexander was in great trouble, saith he, now there is a danger fit for the spirit of an Alexander; So if there be such a great trial now, here is a trial indeed to manifest abundance of Grace, is it not thy glory to manifest abundance of Grace? By this means thou wilt manifest abundance of Grace, And so much shall serve for that Plea. PLEA, VII. In the Seventh place there is another Plea, that Men and Women have, and that is this, They are froward with me, and why may not I return them as good as they bring? I am not froward first, but they begin with me, and I do but return Anger for Anger, and passion for passion at most. Now many think that it is a very good Plea for themselves, that if they see others to be froward, or angry, that they therefore may be froward and Angry again. Now I beseech you consider what I have to say for this. First, Thou takest a quiter contrary course to God in this, I will give you Gods way in Anger, with angry passionate people, in two Examples, how God deals with them, that we may Learn how to deal with those that are passionate and froward with us. One Example is in Genesis, 4. 5. In Gods dealing with Cain, Cain was a wicked man, and because his offering was not accepted, It is said Cain was very wrath and his countenance fell, He was Angry with God, and Angry with his Brother, even to lay violent hands upon him, and Murder him, well but mark how God deals with Cain, verse, 6. And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art thou wrath? And why is thy Covntenance Fallen? Why art thou Angry Cain? And why doth thy Countenance fall? If thou dost well, shalt thou not be accepted? And if thou dost not Well, sin lies at the Door; And unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him. See in what a gentle manner the Lord speaks unto Cain. Again, when Cain talked with Abel his Brother and slay him, the Lord came again to Cain in verse, 9. and saith to him, Where is Abel thy Brother? See how froward Cain is to God, What know I, am I my Brothers keeper? As a froward Servant saith, what know I? And see how God labo●s to convince him at verse, 10. What hast thou done? The voice of thy Brothers Blood crieth to me from the ground, then indeed at length God comes unto him, Now the ground hath opened her Mouth and thou art cursed from the Earth because of thy Sin, But a gentle way, a mildred way God doth take, why is thy Countenance sō, and so? God Reasons the case thus with Cain. May be when thou art Angry, thou will speak more angrily to thy Father, or Mother or to thy Brother, or Child, or perhaps thy master, or Mistris; God speaks gently to Cain, when Cain is in a fit of passion, to teach us, that when others are in a fit of passion, to speak gently to them, not to be froward with them. The other Example is that of God with the prophet Jonah, Jonah was one of the most froward spirited men that ever we red of, an Angry prophet he was, and Jonah was in a pevish fit when he lost the gourd insomuch that he would have his Life taken away. First he was ●n an Angry fit when God spared the city, and so his credit should be lost, in Jonah 4. 2. Was not this my saying, when I fled from my Country. Was not this my saying? He speaks like an Angry man Well▪ I said so before; many Angry people will have such an expression, I said this before, And y●t at this very time he acknowledgeth God to be Merciful, and slow to Anger, and of great kindness, and yet at that time he is in a fit of Anger, when he acknowledgeth God to be slow to Anger, And now he saith, O Lord take away my Life, for it is better for me to die than to live, He would have God take away his Life, he was in such a fit of Anger. But now mark, the Lord comes to him, and saith, Dost thou well to be Angry? Here is all, God doth not come and fly in his Face, in his wrath presently, but in a gentle manner, dost thou well to be Angry? So one Child with another, or one Servant with another, or one neighbour with another, when you see one another to be hot with a passion, remember these words of God to Jonah, dost thou well to be Angry? neighbour, Friend, dost thou well to be Angry? Well, but for all this, this would not do with Jonah. Afterwards Jonah fel into another fit of Passion, The Lord prepared a gourd for Jonah to be over his Head, but God provided a worm to Eat up that gourd, and God prepared an east Wind that beat upon the Head of Jonah. Now Jonah was in a passion again, and God saith ag●in to Jonah, Dost thou well to be Angry? This is Gods way, dost thou well to be Angry for the gourd? Mark what Jonah saith, Yea, I do well to be Angry even to the very Death. And so you may meet with many that will say so to you, when you say to them, do you well to be Angry? Yea, They will say I do well to be Angry, that is the first Answer. You say they are frow●rd with me, and I return to them but as good as they bring, consider this is a quiter contrary course unto God himself. Secondly, If others be passionate you must not;( I remember I mentioned this when I spake of the unse●sonableness of Anger) this is but to pour oil into the fire, thou seest another kindle a Fire, and thou art bound to quench it, and thou throwest oil into it. Thirdly, The special Answer is this, others are passionate it is their Disease, and thou shouldst pitty them. Wilt thou be Angry with thy Child, or Wife because they are in a burning fever? Thou shouldst rather look upon them and pitty them. I remember Seneca tells Pisystrates, he was a Prince, and when he was wronged very much by one in a Passionate way, his friends wondered he was so Meek towards him: Now saith he, I was no more Angry than if a Blindfold man should come upon me, and run upon me, why should I be Angry? Truly▪ when men are in passion, they are as blindfold men, and they run upon us blindfold, and should we be Angry? No more than as if a Lame man should stumble and fall upon me, should I be Angry? It is their weakness, and therefore thou should rather pray for them, than be Angry with them. And then I remember Basil, in a Treatise he hath about Anger, saith he, Do you dislike it in others, and yet make them that you dislike it in, Examples to you? You cannot but condemn it in them, and yet you follow their Example; to find fault with one that he doth otherwise than he should, and yet to follow his Example, this is a most unreasonable thing. Fourthly, And then further, this is another answer, if you be mildred upon the passion of others, then they are only sinful, al the sin lies upon them, but if you grow to be passionate too, then you come to make their passion to become your sin, and truly, you need none of that, you have no need to contract the guilt of the passion of other men, but that certainly you do, when you are Angry at the Passion of others. One is Angry with you, Well, and upon that you are Angry with him, now the guilt of all the others Anger comes upon your Score and you have brought the guiltiness of your own, and all the other mans Anger upon you too. Fifthly, And then that may be another answer, when will you be friends? They are so because you are so, and you are so because they are so, and at length there will be no end. I remember chrysostom hath such a speech, they are to yield because they have done the wrong, saith he, if they yield first, they get the Glory from you, they ge● the Crown that yield first, it is as much as to say, let them get the Crown, let them yet the Glory; in other things you would not have it so, you would get the Glory, and the Crown, now they that yield first, they get the Crown, the Honor, and the Glory, it is nothing to yield when others have done it before you, they have got the Crown that yield first. PLEA, VIII. Eightly, There is another Plea to be added, and that is this; Who doth otherwise? You see there is no Body but if they be provoked they will be passionate, and therefore why should we be so much charged with this Sin? First, Now to this I Answer, First you see what the Text saith, you must Learn of Christ, and not to Learn of others, Christ was Meek, and lowly in Heart, Learn of Christ, not of others. But Secondly, This is false, God hath a great man to bring( and I will afterwards show it to you when I propound the Exampl●s of Meekness) God hath many others to bring of his people and servants to rebuk you for your passion, Yea, hereafter I shall show you the Examples of many Heathens that did overcome their passion; at the day of judgement a passionate Heart shal have thousands to convince him that they did overcome their passion, those that had as little means and were as passionate by Nature as you. But I Answer Thirdly, If it be so general a sin, such an Epidemical sin, then you had need be more careful of it, when there are Diseases general, then you had need be more careful: when there is the Plague in a few Houses, then they do not care so much, but when it comes to be general, then they will not go out of their Doors fasting, but take something to preserve them, some preservative with them to secure them. And so if the Disease be Epidemical, and general, you should take the more care of yourself, and you should consider, is it not enough that God is dishonoured by others, but must he be dishonoured by me? And consider, you see others Angry and passionate, I but, you know not what it costs them afterwards, what Humiliation, and Heart-melting and breaking afterwards. PLEA, IX. Ninthly, Nay, You will say, if that be so( this is another Plea) I am well enough, God knows it costs me much, the world knows not what a great deal of Heart-smart my fits of passion costs me. First Doth it so? Then I answer, Godly sorrow works Repentance: Repent,( you will say) I do repent, I, it may be repent for the foulness of it, but yet the Holy Ghost saith, that godly sorrow works Repentance, he doth mean Godly sorrow doth work amendment, for when Repentance is in way of distinction from sorrow, it is certainly meant amendment, for to say: I am sorry, that is but the first part, but Godly sorrow works repentance, and therefore wert thou sorrowful for thy passion as thou shouldst, it would work amendment, Godly sorrow is a healing sorrow, the tears of true repentance have a healing virtue in them, they are like the Pool of Bethesda, they heal all that come into them, those waters that come from Godly sorrow, they are of a healing nature, they will quench thy passion: Thou sayest it cost thee dear, know thy passion is so much the more aggravated, if thou be still overcome with it, What! shal God awake thy Conscience, and thou come to confess it before God, and yet thou fall into it in the same manner, and the same degree as much as ever, I say, the confession of thy passion unto God, doth aggravate thy passion so much the more. Secondly, And further, Certainly thy sorrow is not deep and through. Yes, God knows( you will say) it is through. It is not so through as to bring thee down before the Lord, as to make thee vile in thine own eyes, for thou art proud still, so far as thy sorrow prevails it will make thee vile in thine own eyes, and they that are so, will ever after reason thus, What is it for me to suffer crosses that am so vile? Thirdly, And further, If it were true sorrow it would make thee accept of the punishment of thine iniquities, make thee suffer any thing at Gods hand, yea, it would be more bitter to thee, than ever thy passion was contentful to thee, and the thoughts of what it cost th●e, would make thee fearful for to entertain it again. Fourthly, Yea, and it would make thy passion more grievous than the bearing of any thing else in the world, I remember Chrysostome, in a Sermon that he hath about Anger, saith he, some of you will say, you are troubled for your Anger, and yet you cannot overcome it, and the like. But he puts this case, you cannot forgive such a one that hath wronged you, and the like: but suppose you were condemned to be burned in the City, and the fire were a preparing, and the Chain that should tie you to the stake, and you were to be put into it, you were condemned to this by Justice,& you were ready to die? Suppose this we●e offered to you, if you would be reconciled to such a one that hath wronged you, you shal scape this fire. O! how would you run to them and fall upon your knees,& acknowledge yourselves ready to forgive them: Now you would then overcome yourself in another case. O! you say, you cannot overcome, saith he, Are not the threatenings in Gods word as powerful to prevail with you as any death that can be? Is not Hell threatened to punish this fire of passion withal? why should not that prevail with you? So certainly, if we were so troubled with our passion as to make it more grievous than al outward sufferings, we would find cause to overcome our passion? but when we content ourselves only w●th ●●nfessing of it in our prayers; then it prevails not. PLEA X. But yet there are more Pleas, saith another; if I should do nothing, I should be counted a fool, that is another great Plea that some have, they would count me a fool if I should hold my peace. To that I answer: See how your nature doth across Gods: there is nothing more ordinary in Scripture, than to account Anger Folly; and Meekness, W●sdom: the Lord counts anger folly, and thus the worlds Proverbs are c●ost by the Scripture. It is ordinary for men to have their Proverbs across to Gods. As thus; As good be out of the world as out of Fashion. Now saith God: Fashion not yourselves according to the world. And so, What must we be singular? Saith Jesus Christ, What singular thing do you do? And so, to put up wrong I should be counted a Fool: saith the Scripture, Anger rests in the bosom of Fools, and the wisdom that is above is pure and peaceable; the worlds Proverbs are across to the Scriptures. And so, Honesty is good, but if a man use too much he will die a Beggar. Saith God, Godliness hath the Promise of this life and that which is to come. First seek the kingdom of Heaven and the righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added. Thus the worlds Proverbs are the Scriptures contradiction, and in nothing more. I shall be accounted a Fool if I put up wrong. That is the first answer. But Secondly, Thine own Conscience will not tell thee thou art a fool, thy own Conscience will applaud thee to be wise after thou hast put up wrong, yea Godly and wise men will see the Grace of God in thee, and magninfie thy wisdom. PLEA XI. I but I shall harden them in their sin, if I should not show myself angry, they will grow worse and worse, and I shall harden them in their sin. To that I answer: First, Leave that to God, thou may'st punish them for what they have done, and yet without passion, that thou mayest do to morrow, and the next day, and that without passion; if one deserves punishment to day, the guilt remains till to morrow, and if thou wouldest punish them, thou maiest do it to morrow. So the Heathen Plato, he desired his friend rather to punish his Servant than he, because( saith he) I am angry. Secondly: And further; know, that Gods displeasure against his sin, may as well soften his heart as thy anger give place to Gods anger, as you heard before. Leave it to God, and Gods manifesting his displeasure, is as powerful a means to soften his heart as thy displeasure. it is true, thy passion rather hardens them, nothing more hardens than thy passion towards them. PLEA XII. And further, Another Plea that some may have is this: I am soon angry, yet I am soon pleased; and therefore it is not so great a matter, I am soon angry, but I thank God, I am soon pleased again, and we say, good natures do so. Now to that I answer: First: That is a sign thy anger is slight, upon slight grounds, because it is so soon over, because thou art angry for little or nothing. But Secondly: A little time wherein thou art angry, thou may'st do a great evil that may stick by thee all the daies of thy life, yea, to all eternity and therefore let not that be thy Plea, that thou art soon angry, and soon pleased. Thirdly, The evil that thou thinkest thou hast not in the continuance of thy anger, thou hast in the frequency of thy anger, and thy frequent anger may make up as great an evil as of long continuance: As many and frequent distempers of heat, though but short, may make up as great a danger as a continual fever; may be thou hast flashes, and heats, and they are very frequent, and the frequency of them may make them desperate in the conclusion, and therefore make not that thy Plea, that is not enough, to commit a sin, and then undo it again, to commit it again, and undo it again and again, this is dallying with God, as in the other Plea, committing sin and sorrowing for it, and committing it again, and so sorrowing for it again, these are the principles that I thought on for the Pleas. PLEA XIII. Now one more I will name, and that hath been in effect before answered, and so I may leave it too: Such a one is in the wrong, and why should he have the victory? Why should I yield to him when he is in the wrong? That I conceive was answered in the former thing that hath been spoken, I told you that he that puts up the wrong is the conqueror; but only one thing more, I remember a speech that Basil hath for this, saith he, That man that overcomes in a strife, and a contention, he goes away the most miserable, he is the most miserable man and goes away loaden with the most sin, and the Scripture saith, Be not overcome with evil; if thou art overcome with the passion of others, thou art overcome with evil: but if thou overcome evil with Goodness, then thou art the conqueror. Well, thus you have the greatest Pleas of froward and angry spirits: Now, Oh! that God would bring these things that hath been answered to mind seasonably; for that indeed is the use of the word, when the spirit of God shall bring the word of God seasonably to the hearts of men and women, when they shall have most use of them, when such Pleas▪ come into their minds, that then these truths shal come into their mind also. CHAP. CXVI. An Exhortation to Meekness, and whom it chiefly concerns. As, 1. Inferiors. 2. Such as are joined together by the bonds of nature. 3. Of Marriage. 4. In public Service. 5. Such as have opportunity to do good. 6. Such as are proud. 7. Such as are in affliction. 8. Or troubled in Conscience. 9. That have much weakness in themselves. 10. Those that are of different judgments. BUt we proceed now to the use of Exhortation, and that is the main thing in the Application: and indeed I could not come to labour to work this Grace of meekness upon your hearts, till I had taken away the vain Pleas. Now hoping that your Consciences are softened in regard of the Pleas for passion: then what remains but that what Christ doth teach you, you should learn: O! that we could be Proficients now in Christs School in this great lesson of meekness, having such a Master: one that is so meek, and propounds his example so. One would think we should be willing to learn of such a one, and especially you having heard the excellency of this Grace: Therefore that that remains now is to exhort you in the words of the Apostle, As the Elect of God put on Bowels of mercy and loving kindness, and Meekness, and Humbleness, in Collos▪ 3. 12. As the Elect of God let us labour to put on these Graces, and to beautify our holy profession by them. We red in Numb. 6. 3. that the Nazarites, as they must not drink new Wine, so they must drink no vinegar: Now what is a Nazarite, but a Type of one that is separated for God, for so Nazarite signifies, one separated, Christ was a Nazarite, and so all Gods people are Nazarites, and they are those that were typified by the Nazarite in the 6●●, of Numb. that is, All the Saints of God, they are Men and Women separated for God, God hath set them apart for himself: Now God would have you that he hath set apart for himself as it is said of the Godly man, that God hath set him apart for himself; I say, the Lord would have you drink no Vinegar: That is, he would not have you be of four spirits; but of sweet, meek, and gentle spirits: Now as this is a Duty for all sorts, It concerns All; If he or shee would appear to be an Elect of God, they must have Meekness as a Badge of it; So there are some more especially whom this Grace of Meekness doth concern. There are these Two things that I intend in this use of Exhortation. First, To show whom more especially this Grace of Meekness concerns, and should labour for it: And the Arguments to work our hearts unto this Meekness, together with means for it, and then we shall have finished the Point. But in the first Place, every one of us should be of Meek dispositions. But especiallay: First: Th●se that are inferiors unto others, they should learn this lesson of Meekness: It is comely in all▪ but more comely in them▪ Frowardness and Passion is uncomely in all, but it is a great deal more uncomely in one than in another. As thus, It's true, Fathers must not provoke their Children to wrath, and it is an uncomely thing for a Father to be passionate with his Child, but it is more uncomely for the Child to be passionate with the Father or Mother: In Heb. 5. 9. saith the Scripture there, Furthermore we have had Fathers of our flesh which corrected us, and we gave them reverance, Though that Fathers of our Flesh did not only speak angrily to us, but corrected us, we did give them reverence, As a thing imprinted in Nature: now it is not seemly therefore for Children if the Father or Mother speak angrily, Yea, though they do correct them, to speak frowardly and perversely again unto their parents, especially if they come to railing speeches and curses: That you herad before, That God would have that Child to be stoned to Death: But Children should be so far from that, that though their parents should be never so froward, as not only to proceed to Angry words, but to correction, yet they should give them reverence: And you that are Children, that do profess Godliness, you are to manifest your Godliness in this, to carry yourselves with al quietness of Spirit before your parents though they be passionate with you. And so Servants, its true, passion is very uncomely in Governors, yet it is more uncomely in Servants than it is in them. And therefore you may observe what the Apostle saith in Tit. 2. 9, Exhort Servants to be obedient to their own Masters, and to please them well in all things, not answering again: You will say, I but they are hard to be pleased: But is it not a sin against God? If it be not, you are to endeavour to please your Governors in al things, and this is a Command from God, as well as that you should not steal, and Swear: Not Answering again; Here the Holy Ghost meets with the ordinary corruption that there is in the Spirits of Servants; If their Governours do displease them in any thing, they will give them word for word, as good as they bring, either answering in a proud, violent, and Malepart manner, or otherwise in a Grumbling way, when they go out of their presence, they go away Muttering and Grumbling, and so giving word for word when as their Governors do displease them. I do admire how many Servants that are of froward Spirits in their Family and yet profess Godliness, can red such a scripture as this is, that is so clear, That Servants are not to Answer again. Quest. You will say; What shall we say nothing at all, if our Master or mistress shal do that that is unseemly and wrong us? Answ. Know the meaning is, That howsoever you must not answer again in a passion, in a froward and passionate way. Quest. You will say, May we not pled our Cause? Answ. Yes, afterwards you may after the fit of passion is over, both in your Governors, and selves, you may desire in all humility and reverence to those that God hath set over you, to pled the case with them, and it were a sinful thing in any Governor to deny that to a Servant that shall come with meekness, and humility, and reverence to desire to Reason the case, and beseech them that they would consider of such and such Reasons, that they had to do such and such things, and to be informed in such and such ways, I say, no Governor that hath any common Reason can deny that; much less any that profess Godliness. And then another Scripture you have for Servants, is in the 1 Pet. 2. 18.( we are to know that the Scripture doth not only Teath us to serve God in the Immediate Duties of his Worship, but in the Duties of our outward callings too) Servants be subject to your Masters with al Fear. I but you will say, I could be subject to such and such Masters, but they are so froward, what would you have us do? mark the words: Be subject to your masters with al fear, Not only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward: You must be subject to the froward, and that with al fear: not subject with murmuring, and Grumbling, and passionate thoughts, to be froward: you must be subject with al fear: It is not enough for you to say, never any had such a froward Master or mistress as I have, But when God doth call you to that condition, you are to exercise Grace, to be subject to the froward as well as to the good, For saith he, in verse, 19. This is thanks-worthy, If a man for conscience towards God endure grief, suffering wrongfully, For what Glory is it, If when ye be Buffited for your faults ye shall take it patiently? but if when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently, this is acceptable with God. You are often ready to say, it would never trouble me, if I had been guilty, If I had done as I am charged, but I know I am innocent, and what would you have me to do? Yet be meek, though you suffer wrongfully, For so saith the Holy Ghost, it is thankworthy, If a man for Conscience towards God endure grief, suffering wrongfully. Though you are wronged, yet you are not to Answer. Quest. You will say, Should I suffer from my Master or Mistris when they wrong me? Answ. Though not in respect to them, yet to God, you must look beyond your Master or mistress, and in Conscience to God you must be willing to suffer, For saith he, in verse, 20. If your Governours should not only speak passionate to you, but you should be buffited for your faults, that were no great matter▪ The Holy Ghost makes it to be, that Servants should not think it so much to bear patiently, If they should be buffited for their faults: but if you do well and suffer for it, and bear it patiently, This is acceptable with God, For here lies the Emphasis, this thing is acceptable with God, For even hereunto were ye called. It is one spiritual thing that God intended when he did convert your souls, that is the meaning: when God did call you out of the Common Condition of the world, when God did Convert your Souls, It was a special thing that he intended in the conversion of your Souls, to make you of a meek and quiet spirit towards your Governors, to be willing to suffer wrongfully rather than to be froward, and passionate before them. As if God should say, here I see one indeed of a Turbulent and violent spirit, that is not able to bear any thing when he is angered, but I will convert their Souls, and put Grace into them, and it shall be for this one thing among others, that they might show forth the power of Grace, by a meek Spirit towards their Governors: That so they may Convince the very Heathens that they live among that Grace in a Servant, is able to make them bear great things: It was Gods end in calling your Souls to himself, that you should manifest such a Grace, as that of Meekness when as your governors deal harstily with you: so that when you are froward when they are froward with you, you do what in you lies to frustrate the very end of your calling by God when he called you out of your natural Estate. That is the first sort of people, that above all should labour for meekness of Spirit, That are inferior to others. Secondly, Such as are joined together by the bonds of Nature; Frowardness and passion between Strangers it is very uncomely, and very evil: I but wrangling, and frowardness, and passion among Brethren, that is a great deal more uncomely, It's a good and comely thing for Brethren to deal together in unity. As the Psalmest speaks, and commends it so highly by many Similitudes: Psalm. 133. 1. Then the Contrary must needs be a very unseemly thing, for Brethren to dwell together Jarring and snarling, as if they were not Brothers and Sisters, but Dogs and Swine, that were together: In Gen. 13. 8. See there the reasoning of Abraham, And if you would show yourselves to be the Children of Abraham you must follow Abrahams steps in that, there was a Contention between the Servants of Abraham and the Servants of lot, They did not contend themselves; But saith Abraham to lot, Let there be no strife I pray thee between me and thee, and between my Bonds-men and thy herdsmen, For we are Brethren: Here is Argument enough. Many times the Cause of Contention among many it comet from their Servants as much as any thing, the Servants they cannot agree together, and the Servants falling out, it causes the Governors to fall out too, as here, the falling out of the Servants of Abraham and lot, occasioned the breach between them. And therefore we should take heed of that way of provacation, therefore Abraham comes in this mildred and gentle way, Oh saith he, let there be no strife, I pray thee between me and thee, and yet Abraham he was the better and the Elder; And though he calls Lot his Brothers yet Abraham was Lot Uncle indeed, and Lot should have come to him, but he came to Lot and said, I pray thee, let there be no strife between us for we are Brethren, and so in Acts, 7. 26. There we have the story of Moses when he saw the Israelites striving one with another, the Text saith, The next day he shewed himself unto them as they striven, and would have set them at one again, saying sirs, ye are Brethren; why do ye wrong one to another: Now I remember the word is, Men, Brethren: ye are Men, and therefore why do ye strive one with another, it is not human to be striving, It is for Dogs, and cats and Swine to be striving one with another, but ye are Men, that were enough, do but Consider ye are men, but put the other, Men brethren, and yet strive one with another, Oh this is a most unseemly thing; and therefore those that are joined by the bonds of Nature, they should carry themselves meekly and gently one towards another; where wilt thou have an intimate Friend, if thou dost not keep thy Brother that Nature hath united to thee, Oh, thou wilt say, he is of a across disposition, and my heart can rather live with a stranger then with him, I remember Plutarch, in that Treatise that he hath about kerbing of Anger, saith he, this is Just for all the world, as if a man did not care for his Leg, but he would get a wooden Leg, as if that would do better then his own natural Leg; so those that are Brethren, by Nature God hath joined them in a natural way for union and murual help, and the way that others come in to be a help to thee it is but in a kind of Ar●ificial way: indeed a stranger may come in to be helpful, I but, it is but as a wooden Leg, and therefore you that God hath joined together by natural bonds, you should labour to be quiet one with another, and not to wrangle and Jar one with another: And that's the second sort. The Third is, Such as God hath joined by the Holy Ghosts ordinance of Marriage, that indeed is a greater bond then the bond of Nature, which shows a mighty power in that ordinance of Marriage, it is a greater bond then the Child being contained in the womb of a woman, Marriage is a greatet bond then any Natural bond, the strictest Natural bond is but between Mother and Child, but Marriage is nearer then that, for so the Scripture saith, a man must forsake Father and Mother, and cleave unto his Wife: Now though frowardness be very uncomely still among all, and Meekness is lovely; but more uncomely between man and wife, and more lovely is the other between man and wife, they should walk sweetly and lovingly together, when God by such an Ordinance of his, hath united them in such a near way of communion as they are united; and therefore much is said in Scripture about that, Wives, see that ye reverence your Husbands: when as you provoke your Husbands, and speak in a froward way, I appeal to thy conscience, Dost thou reverence thy Husband▪ You will say, He doth not deserve it. Whether he doth deserve it or no, you are to reverence him; you must reverence him in your words, and reverence him in your gestures, and actions, and in your very hearts. And so that place, Husbands be not bitter to your Wives; for by this means you do profane this great Ordinance of God; God hath made Marriage an union, for communion, for love, for help, for peace, for delight; and thou dost what in thee lies, to frustrate the very Ordinance of God. Know, that God will not bear it at thy hands, that thou shouldst frustrate that great Ordinance of his. Moses had a very shrewish woman that was his Wife( Zipporah) and called him bloody Husband; yet we do not red of Moses to give her any provoking speeches again. And so it should be with the Husband, he should consider the Wife as the weaker Vessel, and bear very much: And so the Wife should consider of the Husband, as one that God commands that she should reverence; she may come under the first head of Inferiors: God hath put her in an inferior condition, and therefore frowardness and passion is very uncomely in you; not only because of the hindrance of that sweetness and quietness that you might have in your lives, but because of the evil that comes to the Family. Fourthly: The Fourth sort of those that should especially labour for the grace of Meekness, is, Such as God hath joined together in any public Service: If there be any( I say) that God joins together in public Service, they should take heed that passion comes not between them; they should bear very much one with another, before they should suffer any passion to come between them so as to hinder any public work. If it be in a Town, those that are joined in Office together, take heed that occasions of passion come not in, and make one draw one way, and another draw another way. And so if they be employed still, and rise higher and higher in public Affairs of the State: but above all in public work of the Church; Ministers that are joined together in any public work, they should take heed especially. It is a very great policy of the Devil, to seek to disunite them by stirring up of Agents to cause passion to arise between one another, and therefore they above all should deny themselves, and be willing to bear exceeding much; yea, to bear any thing but sin, rather than to make breaches by any way of passion. As it is a most abominable thing, for any to be Agent for the Devil, to seek to do it: so it is a very abominable thing for any to give way to their passion: it is as much as to say, Let all Gods Work lye aside, rather than I will let go any passion. I remember Themistocles and Aristides, they were cavilling about State Affairs; and being fallen out one with another before, as they were traveling, said, We have had very many breaches between us, but ●et us lay down al our wrongs upon these Mountains, that the thoughts of those may not hinder us in our work. So we should not suffer passion to come in to hinder any public Work. And so it is likewise reported in the History of the council of Trent; there's the example of a Venetian and a Bavarian Ambassador: They began to fall out one with another, who should be first; at length the Venetian Ambassador, though he accounted himself to have the highest place, yet saith he, seeing we are about matters of Religion, I will never contest here, I will rather yield than contest about matters of Religion: So if there be any thing wherein Religion is like to suffer, we should be of yielding dispositions, and never stand upon our own terms, nor never work wrongs upon our own spirits to kindle our hearts by any thing that we apprehended ourselves at any time to be wronged by: Thus in public Service. And then Fifthly: Not only those that are joined together in public Service: But if any of you have any opportunity, though singly, to do any good to any, Oh take heed that your passion come not in to hinder good: I shewed you before, in the opening the evil effects of passion, what a deal of good it hinders: Now you that God doth employ in any Service, Take heed you do not lose an opportunity of doing good by your passion, for in meetings many times, one man may do abundance of good, I but there happens a word in the meeting that he is offended with, and he takes it ill, and upon that, one word happens upon another, and all the opportunity of doing good is hindered, and for that we have a notable example of our saviour Christ in John 4. when the woman of Samaria spoken in a scorning way, I wonder how you should offer to ask water of me that am a Samaritan, you are so strict and precise? What doth Christ say? If thou hadst known the gift of God, and who it is that saith unto thee, give me to drink, thou wouldest have asked of him and he would have given thee living water. If Christ had been as passionate as shee, he might have lost a Soul; he would have said, what a rugged disposition are you of, It's true, you are Samaritans, and wicked Idolaters, and you do deserve that none that have any humanity or Religion should have any thing to do with you; but that would have spoiled all, and therefore Christ rather forgets his water, and her passion, and speaks in a great deal of Gentleness, and so tells the Woman of the water of life, that he was willing( notwithstanding shee denied him a Cup of could water) to have given unto her. One that goes a fishing, or fowling how still he will be, and low, creeping he will go, and lye down if it be upon the very ground, that he may catch the Foul; when he goes to shoot a Fowl he doth not go making a deal of clutter and noise, but goes as softly as ever he can, so as there should not be the least noise made. So when we are about gaining of Souls we should be willing to bow ourselves, and to go with all the quietness and gentleness that possibly we can for the doing good unto others. The sixth sort is: Such as find themselves prove by nature to be passionate, they should above all labour for Meekness, the more we are prove unto any sin, the more we should labour against that sin, I kept me( saith David Psal. 18. 23.) from mine own Iniquity, there are some sins that our natural Constitutions puts us upon more than others, now where there is Grace, there will ever be a labouring against that sin more than other: and this is a special sign of ture Grace, If thou findest this, that thou art careful to examine thy heart and life, What sin is it that I am most prove unto? Some will find Lusts, some Passions, some worldliness, and some sluggishness, and some one, and some another, but where there is true Grace, there is labouring against that sin above al: Therefore if thou beest of a froward nature, then know it is the work that God requires thee to labour against that sin rather than against another, others are not so bound to this Duty as thou art, thou art to go into Christs School to learn that Duty rather than any. If thou beest a man( saith the Holy Ghost Prov. 23. 1, 2, 3.) given to thine appetite, when thou sittest with a Ruler, put thy knife to thy Throat, Another man needs not be so severe that is not so inclined to be overcome with inordinate eating. And so others, that are of weak bodies, that a Cup of Wine will quickly overcome them, they are bound in Conscience to be the more watchful over themselves because of their weakness, and so art thou that art so prove to this sin of passion, as some Men and Women that have Diseases of fainting fits, they will be careful to carry something about them to help them, that if they feel a fit coming upon them, they may be relieved, and so you that have such experience, that you have been so often overcome with passion, above all people you should carry that with you that may help you against that fit when it is ready to come upon you. 7. A Seventh sort of People that should be careful of passion, is, Such as are in in an afflicted Condition, such as are under afflictions any way, And therefore the Hebrews have the same word that signifies Afflicted and Meekness, Meekness and Affliction they express by the same word, noting thereby that when God doth afflict us it is that he may Meeken us, and the truth is, the Lord hath seen that we have had rugged spirits one towards another, and have been ready to be striving one with another, and contending& brabbling one with another. O! what little agreement hath there been in those places where the Lord hath kept the Adversaries from people, there they have been ready to persecute one another: Therefore it is just with the Lord to bring us yet lower, and the truth is, since there hath been lately such Contentions from variety of opinions,& such bitterness of spirit together with the difference of opinion, I confess my heart hath trembled every time I have thought of our Army abroad, as even concluding almost in mine own thoughts, that the Lord would bring us lower than we have been, that he might meeken us, for so God doth expect that when he comes to afflict people, that they should be Meek under his hand of affliction, and if this should be the end of Gods bringing us lower, to make us of more Meek& gentle Spirits one towards another, to be able to bear and forbear one another, then though the affliction be very hard and bitter, we shal have cause to bless God: You know men that are of choleric stomachs, if they eat much Sugar& sweet things, it will turn into choler within them. And so, because we were of such choleric stomachs, the Lord saw us unfit for most of his sweet mercies, therefore the Choler is first to be purged out before Sugared Merceis may come in. No question could we agree one with another, and be of peaceable and quiet spirits one with another, the Lord would do well enough with our Adversaries: When we are in affliction, then the Lord expects that we should be of Meek Spirits, though we find it many times quiter contrary through the pride of mens hearts: many men are very plausible when they are in the Sun-shine of prosperity, but when things go across, when the hand of God comes against them to across them, it makes them mightily froward: and so in time of sickness, many that are of quiet spirits when they are in health, yet if their bodies be distempered with sickness, they are more froward: Oh! charge it upon thy Soul when thou art upon thy sick bed, and art crost in thy estate, Oh! doth God come upon me to afflict me, it is to meeken me. It must not be with us as with the Seas, if a calm is, then they are smooth, but if a Tempest arises, then there is rolling, but when Gods tempest ●s upon us then we must be the more smooth. Eightly, Another sort of people that should be more meek then any is, those as heretofore have known what trouble of Conscience meant, if there be any of you that have ever known what trouble of Conscience hath meant, me thinks you should be meekened all the daies of your lives, For if you have been acquainted with trouble of Conscience, then you have been made sensible of the wonderful guiltiness that is upon your spirits and the wonderful things that God had to charge your Souls withal, then God made you sensible of the infinite need that you did stand in of his mercy, and will you be of froward spirits? That the Lord hath made you sensible of so much need of such infinite mercy as your Souls have, if you have been acquainted with trouble of Conscience, I suppose you could not be often set into Gods presence, giving up your Souls to God, and desire Gods mercy and pardon whatsoever become of you, Lord; do with me what thou wilt in this world, no matter what I suffer, so be it, my sins may be but pardonned, and the Lord may be reconciled to my Soul: hast thou never thus pleaded with God? Art thou thus froward toward thy Brethren: What have you such knowledge of Gods goodness, in forgiving you so many thousand talents, and do you catch your Brothers by the Throat upon any little offence: All of you that ever knew what trouble of Conscience meant, know that God speaks to you and calls aloud to you for ever to be of meek and quiet Spirits. Ninthly, And then another sort are they that have Abundance of Meekness in themselves: there's a great deal of Reason they should be Meek towards others, that are so ready to be offensive unto others: If others should take advantage against thee, and have their passions always up when thou dost manifest thy weakness, thou wouldest live a very uncomfortable Life: But that we shall make use of afterwards as a means for the helping of our Meekness, namely to Consider of our own meekness. Tenthly, And those that are of different Judgments from others, and must have others to bear with them because of the difference of their judgments they had need be of meek and quiet spirits, they had need indeed be willing to be Servants to all men in any thing that is not against conscience, there they must be Servants to no man; But such men as are of different Judgments with others, perhaps different from the generality, the most Ministers, the most Godly; this is thy condition, that thy conscience doth put the upon such and such things wherein( I say) thou dost differ from the generality of the Godly among whom thou li est. And thou art not able to see the Reasons and Grounds why such able and Godly Ministers, and why the state should do such and such things, but th●u goest on in a different way from them but thou art troubled and afflicted because there is such a difference: But now what an infinite unseemly thing were it fo● such a one that must expect to be born withal by Ministers, by Magistrates, by the generality of people, and yet for such a one to have a high, haughty Spirit, for such a one to be of a froward Spirit: that can bear nothing, Certainly, such are not fit to be born withal, that when they know their Brethren must bear so much with them, yet they can bear nothing themselves: Thou shouldst make this use, the Lord hides from me that which my Brethren see, for thou art to think, it may be they see more than I do; I cannot help it for the present, but for the mean time, that I am of a different judgement, I should desire that they would bear with me, therefore I will be sure to g●ve no offence in any thing else to them: I will observe them in all other ways, that they shal be convinced that it is not through stoutness, and stubbornness, but merely out of Conscience. And therefore they shal find me as gentle in all other things as possible may be: they shal not bear with me in other things, but in those I will be serviceable to them, to do them all the good I can, to bear any thing of them. This should be the disposition of all such that should be of different Judgments from others: But we find it quiter Contrary. Now these are the principal sorts that this Exhortation belongs unto, that I am now about for Meekness: but stil I confess the main thing is yet behind. CHAP. CXVII. Means of Meekness. 1. prise it. 2. Renew the Covenant daily. 3. Be Humbled for what is past. 4. Beware of the beginning of Passion. 5. Make account to meet with Provocations. 6. Consider thy Frailty. 7. Keep peace with God. 8. Remember that nothing can be well done in Anger. 9. Turn thy affections another way. 10. Beware of many businesses. 11. Beware of Curiosity. 12. Be convinced it is better to suffer then do wrong. 13. Keep the Heart Spiritual. 14. Multiply not words. 15. Study the Word. 16. Set before thee, the Example of the Saints. NOw you wiI say, what should we do? Many things have been said for the showing the evil of passion, and the excellency of the Grace of Meekness, and the abundance of good it might do, Oh that we had this Grace, what should we do for the obtaining of this Grace of meekness? For indeed, I may spare motives, because all that hath been spoken already are arguments and persuasive motives: The main thing of al, it is the means. MEANS, I. 1. It were a good way for help if you would set a high price upon the quietness of your Spirits, that you would not be easily deprived of the sweetness of it: your froward, passionate people, they do make nothing of the quietness of their Spirits they will loose it for a trifle, little things are enough to get from them the quietness of their Spirits and hereby they show themselves to be of a very Childish disposition,: If a Child have a piece of Gold, bring an Apple to a Child, and you may get away the piece of Gold, so, the quietness of our Spirits we should acco●nt it better then al Riches and shal any one by a word speaking get away the quiet of our Spirits? God forbid we should show ourselves so foolish, you have heard that God sets a high price upon a quiet Spirit, and therefore we should set a high price upon it too, and therefore resolve with thyself, through Gods Mercy, I find myself now that I could bear Crosses, and I find a great deal of comfort in this temper that now I have, Well, it shall be some great matter certainly that shall make me loose this, It shall cost me dear but I will keep it now: If a Friend or a neighbour give a froward word to you, do you prise the quiet of your Spirits so, that you think there is no more good in that, then there is evil in the bearing of a across word: If one should throw Dirt at me, and I had a Golden Ball in my Hand, should I throw that at him, because he threw Dirt at me: others do disquiet you, they do not know the price of a quiet Spirit, and they have nothing but Dirt to throw upon you, as soon as ever they are Angry, they have nothing but reproaches to cast upon me, and froward speeches, and froward words, they have no other weapon to help themselves, they have unquiet Spirits, and they think that you do not prise the quiet of your Spirits any more then they: Some men and Women never knew in all their lives what the sweetness of a quiet Spirit meant, and so there ar● some Families that scarce ever in their li●es kn 〈…〉 what it was to enjoy one quiet week in a Fam 〈…〉 but you that have Families that ●ave known th●●●weetness of it▪ you should not so easily be disqu●e●●d as they are that know no better, and therefore it is not so much wonder that they are so: Oh prise a quiet Spirit at a high rate, and be willing to suffer much for it, seek after peace, and follow after it, it is worth the suffering much for it, because there is so much good in it. MEANS, II. 2. You think it a hard thing to over come passion when you are Angry: Renew your Resolutions and Covenant with God but for one day, and when you have done that, then the next day renew it again, as thus: I find I am naturally overcome with passion, but when you rise in the morning think but thus with yourselves: I may meet with occasions this day to disquiet my Heart: I have had experience, that though the day hath been fair in the morning, yet it hath been foul before night: I see I am weak, and I have promised and Covenanted with God against it, but I have been overcome again, But if I cannot do it for a day, I will Covenant till noon, I will now bind myself in Covenant with God that till Dinner time, whatsoever falls out, through his Grace, I will bear it quietly, and if I be wronged I will pled it at night, or, the next day, Now if you have any thing fall out that hath crost you, and you have born it quietly, ●ou will find a mighty deal of sweetness in it: and if you have born it once, then after Dinner, renew the promise again, that whatsoever fals out I will bear it tel I go to bed, and I will rather pled my Cause next morning, then I will answer in a froward way this night, Now do you think this such a hard matter, to be tied one forenoon, or an afternoon to bear whatsoever any Body should do against you to provoke you, that you w●uld not Answer them in a passionate way? If you have tried it but one day thus, then try it another day, yea, try it until we meet again this day seven-night, one day after another, and so what may be done in your Family,& put one another in mind of it, If you find passion and anger to arise, what have not you Covenanted this day with God: As Christ saith, What can you not watch with me one hour? So I may say to you, Cannot you be Meek one forenoon? If there be any wrong done it will be as well for you to right it afterwards: As Photian said to the Athenians upon Alexanders Death, Oh they began to be all in a hubbub upon his Death, saith he, be still, If he be dead to day, he will be dead to mo●●ow: And so, such a one wrongs me thus and thus, if it be a wrong to day, it will be a wrong to morrow, except he hath repented, and if he hath not, then you will have as much cause to seek to right it to morrow as to day, and therefore there is no necessity that you should be passionate one day, and if this course were but tried, I do verily persuade myself, as the Apostle saith of the Corinthians in another case, That he had Caught them with a Holy Guile. So it would be a secret kind of Guile, to gain upon the heart to overcome passion, and if it were but done a little, it would not be so hard to overcome it afterwards. MEANS III. 3. Take this rule, and it will be of marvellous use in this and other cases, if you would overcome your passion and be Meek, it is not enough for you to set upon resolution, but you must be humbled for what hath been past, and in the strength of humiliation for what hath been past you must set upon the contrary Duty and virtue. There is a great mistake of people in this, they perhaps may be convinced that such a thing ought not to be done; well, they will resolve to do it no more, and so set upon the contrary Duty in the strength of resolution, but not in the strength of humiliation for the sin we have committed, now this is the Reason why resolution doth so little and come● to nothing, because you do not go on in the strength of your humiliation for what hath been amiss heretofore, I do not mean the strength of your humiliation, so as to exclude the strength of Christ and Faith, for it is the strength of Christ when I go on in the strength of that Grace that I have from him stil, as drawing strength from Christ in the exercise of that Grace, for so there is strength drawn from Christ, not only in the exercise of the mediate act of Faith, but in the exercise of the immediate act of Faith, but in the exercise of every Grace of Christ, So the heart must first be humbled: To be humbled for sin in general, would meeken the heart exceeding much, if the Lord did make my Soul sensible of the evil of sin, it would very much meeken my heart. As I remember a speech of Seneca( saith he) If so be Neighbors be wrangling one with another, if there were an out-cry of fire in the next street, or near by, it would make them quickly to leave wrangling one with another, it would take away their railing one at another: So when the heart is on fire with passion, if it could be humbled for sin in general, and be sensible of the wrath of God due to sin, and consider of that fire, it would help against the passion. And so he hath anoteer speech( even a Heathen) to the same effect, saith he. Where a great fear doth appear, there is no leisure to be striving with lesser Evils. So, if the heart were troubled for sin, and possessed with the fear of Gods wrath that sin doth deserve, it would never stand striving and struggling with lesser evils; Humiliation in general is a mighty means to alloy passion, but that I do not aim at so much, but Humiliation for the particular sin, there is no hope that you can be delivered from passion, or can be Meek, till your hears be thoroughly humbled▪ bitter things do purge o●● choler, Physitians do prescribe many bitter things to purge out choler, and so the bitterness of humiliation, may serve to purge out anger. We red of the Israelites, that they were very froward with Moses, and because they had not been humbled for their former frowardness, they fell to it upon every new occasion. So in Exod. 16. 2. They were hungry and wanted Bread, and then they fell to murmuring. And again in Exod. 17. they wanted Drink, and then they fell to frowardness, because they had not been humbled for their murmurings past; Humiliation mortifies it at the root, as that is the time to get up weeds when they are moistened at the very root, and not at another time when the ground ●s dry: So when the heart is humbled for a sin at the root, the bitter tears of repentance, if it pluck it not up, it will mortify it at the root. And this Humiliation must be constant, so humbled, till you find some victory got, it is a way that men use with wild Beasts, to keep them much in the dark, and tame them that way, by taking away their sleep, and keeping them in the dark: and it is the way to tame the heart, the constancy of the work of humiliation, then the heart will be brought to a Meekness. When the Lord hmbled Saul, and cast him off his Horse, and troubled his Spirit, he that was of a boisterous Spirit before, came to be of a meek, and a quiet Spirit afterwards. MEANS IV. 4. Another Help unto Meekness against Passion is this: Take heed of the first beginnings of Passion. As if a man were poisoned, if a man felt poison begin to swell in his Body, the way is not to delay any time, but presently to run and take some Means or other, take salad oil, or somewhat presently: So when thou beginnest to be in a passion, and to swell in it, then thou beginnest to swell with poison, and thou hadst need take somewhat presently, else thou knowest not what dreadful effects may come: a little thing will quench Fire when the Fire is new kindled, but if you stay a while, then Buckets of water will not do it, though a little water cast out of a Porringer may do it at first: So many times, if men did but observe the beginning of passion, they might put it out presently, but when it is continued, it is a mighty hard thing to put it out. As in a fever when it begins, if a wise course be taken, to go to the Physitians presently, it may be helped presently, but if you stay till it hath gotten power over you, then the physician tells you, it will cost you more. In Prov. 17. 14. The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out water, therefore leave off contention before it be meddled with. There are many Neighbors fall out, now if in the beginning there had been some wise men to mediate between them, it would have stayed their strife, but when it is continued, and they go on to Law one with another, they come to be both weary of one another, and know not what to do. These troubles that are among us, one would have thought they might have been easily remedied, and indeed, had there not been a desperate design driven on, otherwise no discontent that was of late on either side, but might have been taken up, but now it is past the wit of man to think of ways of reconciliation with security, and God must come in an extraordinary manner to give us Peace with safety. And it is so with passion between man and man, if it be left alone a little while it grows desperate, A man looks upon his neighbour, and Brother, and thinks his countenance is not so cheerful towards him as it was wont to be, Well, and that makes a little boiling in his Spirit, and upon that perhaps he looks a little lowering upon his Brother, so after continuance, then there begins to arise some surmises one of another, after surmises misinterpretation of one anothers actions, after misinterpretation, when others perceive a strangeness, then there is a carriage of this tale, and the other tale to incense one another, and after they are fallen out that way, then they come to speak some hard words against one another, and afterwards they do some ill turns to one another, and after some few ill turns, even to make such breaches, that all should take notice of it, and their spirits are irreconcilable. Thus it begins merely after some looks, merely that they have not that respect to one another as they were wont to have, from little sparks of fire doth the fire come. You are to take as great care of the beginning of anger, as you would be careful to quench a little spark of fire that is in the midst of a great many Barrels of Gun-powder. I remember Justinian, in his writings tells of two of the Dukes sons of Florence, having been a hunting, there was a contest whose Dog took hold of the Hare first, and one he would have the honor of his Dog, and the other the honor of his Dog,& so they began to be in a heat one with another, for the honor of the Dogs, and from heat grew to words, and from words at length one takes his Sword and runs at his Brother, and runs him into the Thigh, and kills his Brother, and the Servant of him that was killed he seeing his Master killed, draws his Sword and runs at the other and kills him; it began so little, and yet this was the effect at length. And it is repor●ed by Camerarius of two Brothers, walking out in the evening, and seeing so many Stars in the Firmament, one of the Brethren was a grazier, and saith he, would I had as many Oxen as there are Stars in the Firmament, and saith the other, if I had a Pasture as big as the world, Where would you keep your Oxen? he answered, In your Pasture, what saith he, whether I would or no? Yes, and so they fel to words, drew one upon another, and killed one another. Thus you see the fire of contention from a little, riseth to a great deal. As Milk upon the fire, when it begins to boil up, you must take it off, or else you will have it all in the fire: and so when you find Passion begin to rise like Milk, look to it then and take it off the fire. It is a dangerous thing for a Man or Woman to be engaged in an angry fit, it is a hundred to one if ever you come off well, there is scarce one of a hundred that comes off then, and if you will watch your hearts well, you may perceive when it begins, you may perceive confusion and disturbance in your spirits, and you may perceive it by your voice, when there is the elevation of the voice, though you stand near one another, yet you lift up your voice, and speak as if you were at a great distance, and sometimes from thy gesture and alteration of countenance, so you may begin to perceive the risings of Anger. As Socrates, ever when he began to be angry, he would be sure to keep down his voice, that is the fourth. MEANS V. 5. Another Rule for the helping against Anger, and that you may be of Meek and quiet Spirits, is this: You should all make account before hand, that you shall meet with that, that might provoke and anger you. Saith Seneca, in a Treatise of Anger, presume before hand that you must suffer something while you are in the world, if the mind be before hand possessed that there must be suffering, if things fals out across, it will be more fit to bear it, saith he, the mind is strong if it come prepared to a thing, any mans mind will have strength in it, if it come prepared before hand, and therefore saith he, think before hand what you must suffer, that it may be no more to you when it comes than the could in winter; as saith he, will any man be troubled when the Winter comes, and when he goes to Sea, and it is could? No, he made account of it before. As it is said of Anaxerges, he was not troubled when he heard of the death of his Son, because saith he, I begot him mortal: and so when thou ma●riest a Wife, if any thing fall out to trouble thee, think, I know I married a woman that had many infirmties, and so when thou marriest a man, and so when thou hirest a Servant, when things fall out across, if thou didst but reason thus, I made account I hired a poor Creature that had many infirmities, when thou begettest a Child, remember thou begettest a Child that hath many distemp●rs in his heart, and thou art the means of conveying many distempers unto him, and that is a means to make thee to take many gracious ways to reform thy Child, because the evil that is in thy Child, thou wast a means to convey to him, think before hand that things will fall out amiss. When mariners go to Sea, they know what the Sea means, when the tempests and storms arise, they are not presently in a passion, because they made account before they went to Sea they should meet with tempests at Sea. It were a mad thing for a mariner when he comes to Sea, to be up in a passion at every storm; the world is our Sea, and if we have any wisdom at al, it cannot choose but teach us that we must meet with storms and tempests at Sea, and if we would possess ourselves with this, that I must make account of troubles and crosses aforehand, it wo●●d be a marvelous help against passion, and the furtherance of meekness. MEANS, VI. 6. Another help is this: Consider but thine own frailty, and that will meeken thy Spirit towards others: how ready thou art to provoke others, and that will make thee meek when others provoke thee. It is the Argument of the Apostle, in Galat. 6. 2. vers. The second part, we will make use of the first by and by, Bear ye one anothers Burden and so fulfil the Law of Christ; The Burden must be mutual, that is the Argument, one another, that is, you are to bear his burden, and he is to bear your burden. You live in a Family, and there are things that are a Burden to you, you must bear them, because it may be they do bear your Burden, can you live in a Family and not be offensive to others? You must bear with others when they offend. There are many of froward and passionate Spirits, that can bear no offence from others, and yet none so offensive as th●y are. Bear one anothers Burdens. It may be you will say, his Burden is greater than mine, I do not Burden him so much as he doth me, if I must bear his burden, I must bear the greater. I Answer, We are ready to think that the Burdens of others are more then our own, whenas we are partial in our own. But grant it be greater then our own, then it seems he is weaker then I for if he be more offensive then I am, then he is weaker then I am, and then I have more ability to bear then he, if I have more ability to bear offences, then I have more strength then another, and if God give thee more strength, that thou a●t less offensive then thy Brother, then thou art more able to bear then thy Brother, if he be so weak that is so much offended, then he is so weak that he can less bear: you should think thus, such a one offends me, either I have done the same thing before, or I might have done it. Plato when he saw an evil man, he would say, am not I so? Have not I the Root of the matter in my own Heart? And in Gal. 6. 1. There is another Argument, saith the Apostle there, Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are Spiritual restore such a one in the Spirit of Meekness, considering thyself least thou also be tempted, it may be thy case hereafter, as he said in another case, to day it is mine, to Morrow it may be yours, so to day it is his case, to morrow it may be my case, that must be a general rule among us, as we desire pardon so we must give pardon, for we have need of pardon ourselves, and therefore we should pardon the offences of others; my Husband, now he is in a fit, and I see his carriage is not right, may be another time he must bear as much with me; and so the Husband the Wife, may be she is in a fit now, but another time she must bear as much with me. As in the case of sickness in a Family, if one Servant be sick, were it not a sign of a very ill Nature for the other Servants to be Grumbling, because I must tend my fellow Servant that is sick, and I must fetch every thing for him, but he should think, now my fellow is sick, and I will tend him, may be my turn may come ere long, and then he must tend me: And so in passion, I must now bear with him, and may be hereafter, there may be as much cause for him to bear with me. If fellow Servants could think as much of thi●, as in the sickness of the Body, upon that consideration because of their own frailty, it would be of marvelous use. The Apostle Paul Argues from our own frailty and Weakness. Perhaps some will say, Well, I Bless God I have power over my Passion, and there will no● be so much cause for me to bear with them, as they with me, Well, but as I said before, then they are weaker, and you are more able to bear, but consider what power now you have, in the 3. of Titus, 2. 3. There the Apostle would have us, Not to speak Evil of any man, to be no brawlers, but gentle, showing all Meekness unto all men, Speak evil of no man, Though it be of those that may deserve it, yet take heed of speaking evil of any man, such a one hath done evil, you say you speak truth, I but what call have you? Are you called to it at this time, I admire how Christians that profess Religion can red that Scripture so fully against their sinful way, and yet do not Leave it. Speak Evil of no man, be no Brawlers, But gentle, showing all Meekness, unto all men. Well, but how should we come to this? This is a hard Lesson, Mark, the 3. verse, For we ourselves were sometimes foolish, Disobedient, Deceived, Serving divers lusts and Pleasures, Living in Malice, and Envy, hateful and hating one another, But after that the kindness and Love of God our saviour towards man appeared, &c. Then it was otherwise, We sometimes have vile base Hearts, as others, it may be, if thou look into thy Heart, thou hast as vile a Heart now, but suppose thou hast not, yet sometimes may be thou hadst as froward a Heart as others, may be before God opened thine Eyes, and converted thy Soul thou hadst as Malicious, a froward, vile Heart, as others, remembering what thou wert before thy conversion, should make thee Meek towards others that are not converted, Yea, towards those that are converted, God not having given them that power over their Corruptions, as he hath to thee, And so the Argument of Solomon in Eccles. 7. 21. 22. Solomon Reasons after the same manner from the common frailty of men, Also take no heed unto all words that are spoken, least thou hear thy Servant curse thee, for oftentimes also thine own Heart knoweth that thou thyself likewise hast cursed others, saith he, do not take heed to words, for thine own Conscience tells thee that thou hast spoken Evil of others, And this Argument of thine own conscience will tel thee that thou hast spoken evil of others. And this Argument of thine own conscience will tel thee, that thou hast been guilty thyself, and hast done that that will provoke others, should be a mighty means to make thee meek towards others when others provoke thee. If so be that passionate men and women would have so much command over their Spirits when any thing provokes them they could go aside and consider, Oh, but have not I provoked others? Have not I been ready to provoke others upon every occasion, to take pet at every thing? Why should not I then bear with others when they provoke me? MEANS, VII. 7. Another help is this, and that is a great help indeed, that which hath been hinted divers times, and therefore I will not be long upon that: The labouring to keep peace with God, that I spoken of in handling the great Point of Reconciliation with God, keep but the evidences of thy peace with God sound, and it will make thee to be of a quiet Spirit with all the men in the world, if there be not a scolding conscience within, it will keep thee from scolding with others, if God be not Angry, it will keep thee from being Angry. In Philip. 4. 5. Mark what the Apostle saith there, the Argument that he hath, rejoice in the Lord always, and again, I say, rejoice, Mark then what follows, Let your moderation be known to all, This will be the consequence of it, if you can keep your joy with God, if you be able to look upon the Face of God with joy, and all peace between God and your Souls, then this will follow, Your moderation will be known to all men, you will be of moderate and quiet Spirits; the Reason that there is no moderation in the carriages of men and Women towards one another, is, because you have no joy. Saith the Apostle in 1 Corinth. 15. 31. verse. By your rejoicing I die daily, Certainly, If rejoicing in Christ Jesus, will enable one to die daily, then it will enable one to put up wrong. The Example of David is very remarkable for this, in psalm, 57. No man more provoked then he was, and at that time by a wicked instrument, by Doeg, that sought to do him all mischief in his Life, but mark what quiets Davids Spirit, Doeg, he had sought to do mischief to David, David saith at the 2. verse, Thy Tongue deviseth mischief like a sharp razor, working deceitfulness, thou lovest Evil more then good, and Lying rather then to speak Righteousness, Selah, thou lovest all devouring words, Oh, thou deceitful Tongue. See what a provocation David had, But now what quieted his Heart? Verse, 8. But saith he, I am like a green Olive three in the House of God, I trust in the Mercy of God for ever, and ever, I will praise thee for ever, because thou hast done it, and I will waiton thy Name, for it is good before thy Saints. This is that that quieted David, when Doeg did speak so bitterly against him, and so let others speak bitterly against thee, though his words be as a sharp razor, yet if thou be able to make this thine own, in the 8, and 9. verses, But I am like a green Olive three in the House of God, I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever, Blessed be God I enjoy Peace with God, I am as a green Olive three in his House, And I have the mercy of God to trust unto, and therefore let them do what they will. The Argument likewise of the Apostle to this purpose, the assurance of Gods mercy, and Gods Love, in Ephes. 4. 31. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you with all Malice, and be ye kind one to another, tender hearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you. What is the Argument why you should do all this, Even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you, keep but this, and it will make you kind one towards another, And wrath, and clamour, and evil speaking, will quickly be done away. The Example of David is very remarkable, in 2 Sam. 19. 22. And David said, what have I to do with you, ye Sons of Zerujah, that you should this day be adversaries unto me, shall there any man be put to Death this day in Israel, for do not I know that I am this day King over Israel. Shimei, He had railed on him, and now when David was established again in his kingdom, they would have had David to revenge himself upon railing Shimei. Saith David, No, mark how he carries himself voided of all revenge, saith he, Do not I know this day that I am King over Israel? This satisfies him, this is enough, the Lord hath been pleased to restore me again to my Kingdom, this satisfies me, and therefore I can easily put up this wrong. So now if thy Soul keeps it's peace with God, if thou knowest, and art able to say, Well, the Lord hath been merciful to me, pardonned my sins, I am this day a Child of God, and an Heir of the Kingdom of Heaven, why should any thing in the World trouble me? If God hath given me this assurance, that I am an Heir of the Kingdom of Heaven, why should I think of taking revenge for any thing in the World, I am this day an Heir of Heaven, and a Coheir with Jesus Christ, I have enough to satisfy me. MEANS. VIII. 8. Another help is this, Convince thy Heart of this thing, that there is nothing thou canst do in Anger, but thou maiest do it better out of Anger; thou canst have thy mind in nothing in an Anger, but thou mayst have thy mind, and better, out of an Angry fit, and therefore why shouldst thou be Angry? Truly, Considering the great danger there is in Anger, one would think it were ones Wisdom to make use of it never but when there is much need, but now then, if I can convince you that you have no need of it, but you may do the same thing without it, that you would do with it, why should you meddle with it? Consider you have your Anger stirring, what would you do in your Anger? I would reprove such a one that hath done amiss, you may do it without Anger, Restore with the Spirit of Meekness, Your reproof should be as physic, you do not use to give physic scalding hot, you may reprove your Husband, Wife, Child, or Servant without Anger, as well as with Anger. But what would you do with Anger? You would correct them, you may correct them without Anger, as well as with anger. Socrates would not correct Plato in an Anger, it would be thought to be your fury, your Servant would think it to be rather from your fury then from his fault that you correct him. Some will say, except I do it in mine Anger, I cannot do it at all. That is a sign of a foolish Heart, you may do it better when your passion is over, then in your passion. What would you do further in your Anger? Would you do any special Service for God? And you say, anger will quicken me. Saith the Apostle in 1 James, 20. The Wrath of man accomplisheth not the Righteousness of God, God will not be beholding to the wrath of man for any thing, It is the Speech of a Heathen, That fortitude hath no need of wrath, no need of gull and bitterness, and choler, but it will do well enough without choler. Again, What would you do more? I will make him to be sensible of his wrong that he hath done to me. You may do that too without Anger, So saith the Wise man, in Prov. 25. 22. If thine Enemy hunger give him Meat. Not be angry with him, And if he Thirst give him Drink, for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of Fire upon his Head. That is, thou shalt make him sensible of his wrong this way, as well as any way in the World, that it will either melt his heart, as coals of Fire, or trouble his Spirit till he have made thee Restitution, and come and confess his fault; he cannot when he lies in bed sleep, if thou convincest him this way, there is no way in the world to make a man quiet, to acknowledge his fault more then this. I Warrant you he will be troubled enough, if he shall see, that notwithstanding al the wrong he hath done to thee, thou labourest to do him al the good thou canst, this will trouble him. Object. But some may say, I, but Anger is the Whetstone of the heart, and it may help sometimes and be of use. Answ. To that I answer: But never the wrath of man, the Anger of man shal never do good without the dregs of it be first purified, there are many things that are good and Physical, if they be clarified, clarify some things, and take away all the dregs, and they may do some good, but i● you give them unclarified, they may do hurt: So Anger may do good if clarified, but take it in the across, and there is nothing that you do, but you may do it without Anger, that is, clarify it with Prayer; when your Anger ariseth, get to Prayer, and clarify it, but take heed of making use of Passion till you have clarified it, that is, till you have spent some time in meditation between God, and your own heart what is fit to be done, and till you have Prayed to God, this is the clarifying of Anger. Plutarch observes this as the way of the Barbarians, it was more proper for them to make those Instruments in war, they would poison all their weapons, that they might do the more mischief, I, but saith he, this were more proper to the Barbarians, but others that lived more civilly, they scorned to do so, they would carry all on with valor. A Fool may do mischief that way as well as a man of valor▪ by giving them a touch without valor. So when you smite against one that is angry, you will poison your weapons, that is, you cannot do it but in an anger, you cannot oppose those that wrong you and do yourselves right, but you must poison your Arrow with anger. Well, that would be a special help if you could be convinced of this, that there is nothing that we can do in anger, but may be done better out of anger. MEANS IX. 9. labour to turn the course of your affection, turn the channel of your affections another way, as Physitians observe in bleeding, when a man or woman bleeds at the Nose very violently, the way to stench the blood is, to let them blood in another Vein: So those that are passionate, they should labour to turn the channel of their affection another way: As for instance, What! Do I feel my anger to stir, let me stir up fears. Oh! let me have the fear of the great God, and the fear of my sin before me. Doth Anger stir? let me stir up mourning. You are angry because they have done you wrong, mourn for their sin whereby they have provoked God more than you. And so for the affection of love, they are angry with you, labour to stir up the affection of love, we are called upon to love our enemies, if we could have loving hearts one to another, that would cause Meekness, the heat of love would take away the heat of anger. As the shining of the Sun upon the fire deads the fire, and takes away the strength of it. So if we had the beams of love one towards another, of love to God, and love to his Saints, the fire of passion, the base drossy fire of passion would not be very strong. Yea, labour when thou art crossed to rejoice in all the mercies of God towards thee, get alone, and get some scripture, some promise of God that may sweeten thy heart, go to the word, and unto the promise, and chew, and meditate upon the promise to sweeten thy heart, and to rejoice thy soul, and thus by a wile, as it were, thou mayst gain power over thy affection, if thou canst turn it another way. As it is a marvellous help against unclean and basphemous thoughts, if they could have but other thoughts, and turn their thoughts another way, not so much to stand to answer their thoughts, but to turn to some other thing. As with your Children, your Children are froward, the way is not always to go and satisfy them, and give them the thing they would have, but if they are sullen, and in a dogged mood, if you can bring some other thing and make them play, if you can turn the stream of their passion another way, it will be a great deal better than to whip them, it would be a great deal the better, taking them off out of their sullen and dogged fit, to take them up that way, and those that are discreet in bringing up Children, they make use of this rule, when they see Children in a dogged fit, not to beat it out of them, but to turn their spirits another way: As we find by experience in Children. So it is with all out hearts, for we have all Childish hearts, we are many times sullen, and dogged and froward, and it is not opposition that will help▪ but if we could turn our affection another way this would help us. MEANS X▪ 10. Another rule is this: Take heed of too much business, do not put yourselves into too many businesses, those men and women that have too many Irons in the fire, will hardly scape burning their singers, and the ground is this, because there is no business that you can undertake▪ but there is somewhat or other will fall out across in it, you must make account of this. Now if something in every thing will fall across in it, then when we have a great deal of business, then there will be multitude of crosses, it is usual, when Men and Women are very busy, you presently anger them, that is the reason your Cooks are very angry, come and meddle with them and presently they grow angry, therefore do not put yourself into a greater clutter of business than God calls you to. MEANS XI. 11. Take heed of too much curiosity, saith one, Would you not be an angry man, be not curious, I mean curiosity in prying into every little thing. As now in a Family, if the Governor in a Family be curious and dainty, and prying into every little thing in the Servants at every turn, and upon every small trifle, it is impossible but that they must be of very froward tempers, and dispositions. But now if you would not be angry, you must pass over a great many things, you must have a kind of holy negligence of a great many things, and pass over, and see, and not see, and turn away your ears from many things. So it is in that place before quoted, in Eccles. 7. 21. we made use of verse 22. before, There the wise Man would have us not so much as to hear: Take no heed unto words that are spoken, there are many things fall out in a Family, that men and women should take no heed unto, if a husband will be curious, and prying into every thing in his wife, and make as much as he can of every thing she speaks, and so the wife of the husband, and Master of the Servant, there will be occasion to be provoked, but if the things be not of consequence, rather let them know that you do not take notice of them, but if you will be taking notice of every thing, it is impossible but there will be a great deal of disturbance in the Family. MEANS XII. 12. labour to convince thy Soul of this: That it is a great deal better to bear wrong than to do wrong, there is a great deal of excellency in it, and there lies the danger, not when others speak against me, and do me wrong, but when the devil shall come and tempt me by that to be in an angry fit, there lies the danger. And Austin hath a very excellent similitude to express this, saith he, when the Fowler hath set a Net to catch Fowls, then he comes, and throws stones in the Hedges to fright the Birds. So the Devil doth not so much care for this, merely to stir up another to disturb you but he looks beyond your disturbance, the devil sets another to put you into a disturbance, that so he may take you in his temptations, in his net, and you should think this when you are disturbed, take heed of the Net that the devil hath on the other side the hedge, there is no danger in it if I bear the wrong. MEANS XIII. 13. Another Help is this: labour to keep thy heart spiritual, Take heed of carnality, and sensuality, the more spiritual things are, the more unity there is amongst them, they are as the beams of the Sun, that are of a kind of spiritual substance, thousands of them will unite in a punctum, and the more spiritual mens hearts are, the more they will unite in a punctum. You know the Stars, they are in the inferior and middle regions; they are not above, there is no Storms, and Tempests: So the Tempests, and Storms of frowardness and passion arise, when mens hearts are low, when they are but in the middle region, when they have not got up to the upper region. Saith the Apostle in 1 Cor. 3. 3. There are contentions and strifes among you, are you not carnal? you are not spiritual, you are carnal, and ye walk as men: Were ye spiritual, there would be no such thing, Nay, it may be said of some, they do not walk as men only, but as Dogs. and Devils. And so in Galath. 6. 1. Ye that are Spiritual, Restore with the Spirit of Meekness those that are fallen, labour for Spirituality, keep your hearts Spiritual, and then there will not be such dregs of passion in you. MEANS, XIV. 14. Another Rule is this. Take heed of multiplying words, there is a mighty deal in that, in Prov. 26. 21, 22. vers. As coals are to burning coals, and Wood to Fire, so is a Contentious man to kindle strife, The words of a Talebearer are as wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the Belly. Ye say, that words are wind, what wind are they? They are wind to blow up the coals of contention. It is a great deal better to be silent, ●f it be not in a sullen silence, to forbear much in words, it may come from doggedness, and sullenness to be silent so,( but that I have spoken of) but you may speak somewhat, but not in provoking words, there is nothing provokes more then words, wrongs do not provoke, real injuries, do not provoke so much as words do. MEANS, XV. 15. Another help is this, which may be of very great use, because many of you have weak memories, and cannot remember all these, I will give you one that you may remember, and that is, make use and lay up several Scriptures that I shall name unto you, let them be ●n a readiness when passion ariseth, Oh, That ye could but have so much liberty over your own Hearts, as you could get o●e half quarter of an hour alone, and red over these Scriptures that I shall name unto you, and often red them over, it would be a mighty help to you against passion. You know it is said of one, that he would have the Greek Alphabet red over before he would punish an offender. So before thou art in a passion, go and red over these Scriptures, you may turn them down in your Books, or Learn them by Heart. The first Scripture is, in Prov, 3. 32. They were made use of before, but now I put them together, that they may be as a rule to help you against your passion. For the froward is an abomination to the Lord, but his secret is with the Righteous, Thou wouldest fain know the secrets of the Lord, that is not with the froward, but with the Righteous. Oh, the reading of this Scripture may put you into a trembling, least you should fall into a froward fit. The Second Scripture is in Prov. 8. 13. The Fear of the Lord is to hate Evil, Prid●, and arrogancy, and the Evil way, and the froward Heart do I hate. Thou art ready as soon as ever thou art stirred, to have a froward mouth. It is with the Mouths of many in a passion, as it is with the mouths of men in a fever, many men,( especially f●ul bodies) in a fever, the physician comes in the morning, and bids them put out their Tongues, and their Tongues a●e all furred, and that must be scraped all off, or else other things will do them but little good; Truly, When you are in a Passion, you have such a fur upon your Tongue, that had need be scraped off with the Knife of Repentance. Oh, Remember this Scripture, The froward Mouth I hate, I hate, I hate, you are froward many times, and you say, shall I bear? and shall I bear? I but remember what is said in this T●xt, The froward Mouth I Hate. Me thinks the reading of this Text should stop your Mouths, The froward in Heart is an abomination to the Lord, and the froward Mouth do I hate, You think you speak rarely, when you have a froward Mouth, and others will commend you, God saith, I hate it. And the other Scripture is in Prov. 11. 20. They that are of a froward Heart; are abomination to the Lord, but such as are upright in their way, are his delight, God hath no pleasure in those that are froward. It were a sad thing for one to live in a place, in a Family, and that no body should delight in them, Truly, those that are froward, no Body delights in them, no not God. And then in Prov. 16. 32. He that is slow to Anger, is better then the mighty; and he that Ruleth his Spirit, then he that taketh a City. Here are four places in the Proverbs, lay up but these for to meditate upon, you that are of passionate Spirits. And then in Eccles. 7. 9. Be not hasty in thy Spirit to be Angry, for Anger resteth in the bosom of fools. And in Matth. 5. 22. There Christ makes Anger to be murder, He that is Angry with his Brother unadvisedly is guilty of judgement, As he that kills his Brother is guilty of judgement, but if it break out to his height; Thou Fool, he is in danger of Hell Fire. Many more I might Name but these are the principal. MEANS, XVI. 16. Now then, there is one thing remaines, and that is the setting before you the Example of the Saints, and especially the Example of Christ, the setting before you the Example of the Saints. Some will say no Body can deny their passion. Yes, I will give you the Example of the Saints for it. That of Abraham, in Genes. 13. 8, 9, red there what a quiet Spirit Abraham had. And then of David, in 1 Chron. 28. 2. He comes to his subjects, and calls them Brethren, My Brethren, thus, and thus, and speaks in a most gentle manner, even to those that were under him. You cannot give a good word scarce to one that is above you, but those that were under him, he calls them Brethren. And again, in 1 Sam. 17. 29. verse, When his eldest brother Eliab was angry with him, very peevish, I know thy pride, and the naughtiness of thy Heart, for thou art come down that thou mightest see the battle. When David went in the uprightness of his Heart, and did but speak to goliath, that did defy the host of Israel, his eldest Brother, he comes unto him, and saith, I know thy pride and the naughtiness of thine Heart, for to see the battle art thou come down. Mark the 29. verse, What have I done? Is there not a Cause? And he turned to another, he saith no more, Brother, What have I done? Is there not a cause? And so the Example of Steven, in Acts, 7. and the last verse, When they stoned Stephen, he prayed for them, that the Lord would forgive them, and so fell asleep, and said, Lord forgive them. Thou hast about thy ears but hard words, and he had about his ears hard stones, and yet the hard stones did not so much disturb his Spirit, as hard words doth thine. And so Paul, in Galath. 4. 12. Paul was before of a very boisterous Spirit, almost as any man, but of what a meek Spirit afterwards? The Galathians provoked him very much, and were become his enemies because he told them the truth. But saith he, Brethren, be as I am, I am as you are, you have not injured me at all, I am content to pass by any thing, you have spoken hard things against me, and you have joined with false Teachers, and though you asperse me what you can, and take away my good Name, and indeed, they had dealt much with false Teachers, God used him as a great instrument for good unto them, and the Devil had no such way to hinder the good that Paul had to do among the Galathians, as to sand fals Teachers to asperse Paul, and take away Pauls credit among them, and they began to listen to it, though they had got so much good by Paul, and were ready to Pluck out their Eyes, and cried, Oh, the good we have got by this Paul, yet when fals Teachers came into their houses, and scandalised Paul, they had almost gotten the heart of the people from Paul, and begun to speak of him as if he were their enemy, Yet saith Paul; Brethren, I beseech you be as I am, for I am as you are, ye have not injured me at all, You cannot desire my heart to be more to you then it is, I am content to suite myself to you as you can desire, You have not injured me at all; but come, Brethren, be as I am, come let us join together stil, and further the work of the Lord, and I am as your hearts can desire, and whatever injury I have had let it all be butted in Oblivion, I am as you are, you have not injured me at all. And so the Example of God himself, in his dealing with Jonah, Dost thou well to be Angry? So in Exod. 34. Slow to Anger. And in Psal. 103. 8. 9. But especially this of Christ, set the example of Christ before you, and set it before you constantly, till you find it work, for we are to know this, that the Example of Christ, doth not only work morally as an Example, but works efficaciously, by way of efficiency, there is a great efficacy to work upon us. By setting Christ before you, we set him before you as those in the wilderness set the brazen Serpent before them. I have red of a noble Earl Elsiarius, his Wife did wonder at the quietness of his Heart, and asked him what course he took to quiet his Heart, and so his Neighbors likewise, he gives them this Answer, when any body wrongs me, I presently turn my thoughts to the injuries that Jesus Christ hath suffered, saith he, I never leave from ruminating upon▪ and remembering the injuries of Christ until I find my Heart wholly quiet; so you should not only think that Christ was meek, but be meditating and never leave setting Christ before you, and thinking on his Meekness, till you find your Spirits Meek. I might set before you many other Examples besides the Scriptures, I remember it is said of Beza, he was a man without gull. And so Theodosius the Emperor, no man could ever see him Angry. And so likewise Calvin, it is said of him, Luther being somewhat of a hot, Furious Spirit, and speaking somewhat against Calvin, he gives this answer, Well, Let Luther call me a Devil, yet I will acknowledge him to be the Servant of Jesus Christ. And indeed this is a notable Example to Ministers, that are joined in the work of the ministry, though Calvin and Luther was joined together to promote the same work, he saw that Luther was so instrumental in the work, that he resolved he would not fall out with him, because he would not hinder his working. And so I might Name many Examples of Heathen, Anaxagares, he heard one of his Soldiers speak evilly of him behind the Cloath, he comes to him and saith, take heed you do not speak so as the King may hear. And so Plutarch, when one was railing upon him all the day in the market place at might he goes quietly all the way home, though the man stil railed at him, and then he saith to his man, take the lantern and light this man home, this of a Heathen. And many other Examples I might Name it is the Speech of a Heathen, saith he, that can never be too much spoken of, that can never be too much Learned, that is an expression of a Heathen man; So that virtue that can never be enough Learned, we cannot speak too much of it though we have spent much time about it. Therefore to c●nclude all. Now these things ye have heard, if ye know them blessed are ye, you must not use these means that I have prescribed to you, as you use physic in the Body. I remember Plutarch hath this expression when he propounds some means, I but saith he, you must not use these means as physic that must pass quickly through the Body, but make use of them as nourishment, neither must we use them as unsavoury smells are brought to those that have the fits of the Mother, they bring some smells that may perhaps for the present quicken them, you bring Feathers to smell upon when one hath the fits of the Mother, I but that takes not away the distemper, the Body within stil hath the same distemper, So you may not make use of all these h●lps merely as a smell, as a savour to help you out of a present fit but labour to turn them into your Heart, and keep them in your Heart to do you good. Oh, That the Lord would be pleased to bless what hath been said, that so that may be fulfilled that is spoken of in Isai. 60. 18. There is a time a coming that violence shall be no more heard of; Oh, That that time might come but in Families where there hath been such carriages, that violence might be no more heard of, no more violent carriages and words, what an honor would this be to the word? As I hope the Lord hath not carried on the point so, but that he will have it to prevail up on some, what an honor would this be to the word? Perhaps your Husband or Wife comes to ●he word, now if you be changed, and your carriage more meek then heretofore▪ what an effect may this have upon your Husband? He may say, I will go and hear it too, and so your Children and Servants, the Parents that hated the word before, they will be in Love with the word too. As you would honor God, and the word, and yourselves, labour to be of Meek and gentle spirits, Certainly, that meekness that comes by the word is the best meekness, a man may have meekness upon other grounds: Perhaps from strength of argument and reason, he sees the inconvenience of his Passion, but that meekness is not so good, but that meekness which comes from the word, that is the best meekness. As that Sorrow for sin that comes upon men upon their sick Beds, and death Beds, that is not so good as the Sorrow that is wrought by the word: So of meekness, Now the Lord hath presented many things out of his word to meeken your Hearts, and if you be Meek upon the hearing of the word, that will be acceptable meekness, except this word prevail with you: if it do not qualify your Anger, know it will enerease Gods Anger. I have set before you many things about this meekness, but if you be passionate and Angry after all this, God will make these things come against you another day, God will say, Were you not in such a place, and heard so many things of Meekness and frowardness, and yet you were as froward as ever? Oh what is become of those Sermons of meekness? Yea, and put one another in mind of this, not in a scornful way as others, when some are Angry, I this is your going to Sermons, and this is your Conscience, Oh this is a vile way, but speak with Gravity, and Sobriety, Do not speak in a Jeering way in the Nose when you speak of Conscience, but speak with Conscience. And thus the Husband may put the Wife in mind after the passion is over: and take heed of the next temptation to passion, for there is a great deal to be considered of that, this is the way of the Devil, when any Duty is prescribed, he labours to get a man or Woman to make one breach, and then he knows that all that that hath been said about the Duty, is enervate and comes to nothing. When a Sermon is made upon any Duty there remains some strength but when the devil hath prrevailed with thee to sin against the Sermon all is gone, the Devil is afraid of none of those Sermons. I make no question but the Devil may be afraid, that what hath been delivered in the word may prevent sin in the Family, the Wife and Husband may live better, and Neighhors and Neighbors, Servants and Servants, but now if the devil can prevail to put you into a Passion, to sin against these Sermons: Now saith the devil all these Sermons are gone, now I have overcome their Consciences, and the word, now is all gone, there hath been a great deal of pains taken by such a Ministry, but now all is gone concerning such a Soul, and I make no question but he will be as passionate as ever. CHAP. CXVIII. Five Rules to meeken the Spirit of others. 1. Observe their temper. 2. Give soft Answers. 3. Withdraw gently from angry Men. 4. acknowledge thy own offences. 5. Observe fit Seasons▪ NOW before I close up this Point, I would give some directions how to carry yourselves towards others, to take heed of being a Provocation to any other, for so, we must not only desire to be Sani ourselves, but Sanators, Healers of others, that is, if others be passionate, carry ourselves in such a way as may be no offence to them. I will give some rules for that. First: Take away the occasion, observe the temper of Neighbors, or Wife, or Husband, or Brother, and take heed of laying a stumbling block before the blind, Passion makes one blind, thou knowest such things will provoke them, and thou angrest them, this is to lay a stumbling block before them. Secondly: Again, Give soft answers to others that are Passionate, as in 1 Sam. 25. 24. There is a notable story concerning a soft answer, it is in Abigail, how she appeased David, She came and fel at his feet, and said, upon me my Lord, upon me, let this Iniquity be, let thine Handmaid I pray thee, speak in thy audience, and hear the words of thy Handmaid, Let not my Lord I pray thee, regard this man of Belial, even Nabal, for as his name is, so is he, Nabal is his Name, and folly is with him, but I thy Handmaid saw not the young men of my Lord whom thou didst sand, now therefore my Lord, as the Lord liveth, and as thy Soul liveth, seeing the Lord hath witholden thee from coming to shed bloood, and from avenging thyself with thine own hand, now let thine enemies, and they that seek evil to my Lord be as Nabal, And now this blessing which thine Handmaid hath brought unto my Lord, let it even be given unto the young men that follow my Lord, and thus shee goes on with a curious and excellent Speech. A notable example for Women, this Abigail was of a Meek and quiet temper, a gracious, sweet temper, and she had as churlish a Husband as could be, and by this means she allayed and hindered a great deal of blood that would have been spilled▪ And so in Judges 8. 3. that soft answer there quieted the Ephramites. And in Prov. 15. 1. See what is said there concerning a soft answer. A soft answer turneth away wrath, but grievous words stir up anger. There are many, they can die as soon as deny themselves from speaking quick, now saith the Holy Ghost here, A soft answer turneth away wrath. And again in Prov. 25. 15. There saith the Text, By forbearing is a Prince persuaded, and a soft Tongue breaketh the bones, though a man be never so stout a boned strong man, his spirit be never so stout, and strong, yet a soft answer will break the bone. Thirdly: And again another Rule, Let there be a gentle withdrawing from men that are Angry, not a Furious withdrawing, when you see a man Angry, to fly out of his presence, the Wife from the Husband, it is good for ourselves sometimes to withdraw when the fit is beginning: as those that have the fits of the Falling sickness, they have the symptoms of the fit, and when they feel the beginning, they withdraw into some bye room, that others may not see their ghastly visage in such a fit. And so it is good for us when we feel a fit of passion to arise, to withdraw in regard of ourselves, and from others too, not in a violent way to fling out of their company. In 1 Sam. 17. 30. It is the place before quoted, the carriage of David to his Brother, he saith, What have I done? Is there not a cause? And he turned from him towards another, Not in a flinging way, but turning from him in a genle way: So it is go●d, when you see others in a passion, ●o turn from them, and go and mourn for them. Fourthly: And again, As far as you can, acknowledge your own offences; this is a mighty way to convince those that are Angry, in Prov. 31, 32, 33. If thou hast done foolishly in Lifting up thyself, or if thou hast thought evil, lay thy Hand upon thy mouth. Surely, the Churning of Milk bringeth forth Butter, and the wringing of the Nose bringeth forth Blood, so the forcing of wrath bringeth forth strife. We must not force wrath in others, but rather if we have done foolishly, and done evil, Lay our hand upon our Mouth, and be willing to acknowledge, and if they see we are willing to acknowledge in some things, they will think, that if we had done amiss we would acknowledge it now, and it would be very convincing, if you would acknowl●dg that which you have done amiss. You shal have many froward people, that will never acknowledge they have done amiss, those that are Women that have froward husbands, if you always stand to justify yourselves, is there never a time that you can take advantage of your own Hearts to convince you that you have done the wrong, there would more good a thousand times come this way than the other and so the Husband the Wife. Fiftly, And again, Observe fit Seasons one to another, that is, when there is mutual Loving expressions one to another, as Husband to Wife and mutual Love one to another, take that time, when thy Spirit is most gentle, then take that time to pled the cause one with another; say, now, come Wife, and come Husband, let us now Reason the thing, let us see who is in fault, if I am, I will acknowledge; if you are, you ●ust acknowledge it, at this time, it may by this means melt your Hearts for your Passion, and that would be a mighty means to Meekness, if Men and Women that live crossly one to another, if they could but find such a time to break their Hearts this way, and lament for one another, and fall a Weeping over one another, because of the Disturbance that hath been in their Family, because of the untowardness of their Spirits, I say, God would have abundance of Glory, and you would find it to conduce to the peace and comfort of your lives exceedingly. Now then, we must observe these Rules, not only once or twice, but till they have done their work, till you have got somewhat. Do not say, you have shewed many Rules, and I have observed many of these Rules, and he is as dogged stil, no good comes of it; and so the Husband of the Wife, and the Parent of the Child, Well, but then observe them again, and observe them again and again, continually observe them, Sow thy Seed in the Morning, and in the Evening with draw not thy Hand, May be the time is not come, may be the next t●me will do it, thou dost not know, but that still going on in a constant way, there may be that done that thou couldst never have thought possibly could have been done; Yea, go on this way, and certainly, thou shalt not loose by it. Oh! Thou wilt say, if I were sure by going on this way, I could prevail over the Heart of my Husband, Nay, I could be content to loose half my estate to live quietly; Now ●●y yet. But suppose it do not help, yet it will be worth thy labour and pains in this respect, it will keep thy own Spirit in a meek Frame. Yea, And again, know that the Lord will recompense it upon thyself, this I can assure you, either it will do the dead, and recover thy Husband or Wife, that you shal ever hereafter live quietly together, or thou shalt have some other good by it, that shall be as much good to thee as that. Oh, You will say, nothing in the World can be so good if I could but get that: Well, But if God deny thee this mercy, the Lord may have some mercy in store that may be as good to thee, that thou shalt afterwards say, Well, though the Lord denied me the mercy of quietness in my Family, the Lord hath turned it into another mercy that is as good. But Oh, if I could remember these Rules, will some say, I should put them in practise. To that I Answer, make use of what you can of your sel●es to help you, and some Particulars that most nearly concern you, if you would remember them in Prayer to God, and turn them into Petitions, that would help you to remember them. And further, know that if thou hast a heart unfeigned to practise them it is the work of the Spirit to bring them to remembrance, So saith Christ. In John, 14. 26. I will sand the Spirit, and he shal bring them to Remembrance. Go to the Lord in Prayer, and beseech him to bring them to remembrance, and what things shall be brought to remembrance, labour to keep them warm upon your Heart; for physic must be taken warm, I mean by meditation, and Prayer, keep them continually warm upon your hea●●, and what you do remember put into practise, and then though they should slip out of your mind, the effect will rest in your Conversation: As we use to say, show me not the Meat, but show me the Man, in a bruit Beast you desire not to see the meat, but the strength of the beast, so in this, though you be weak in your memory, yet if the effect of this abide upon your Heart, that is, if your heart be Sanctified by this, that there is more Meekness and gentleness in you then before, ye may see this though you do not remember all. Now then we have done with this; O! labour that these things may sink into your Heart, saith Christ, Learn of me to be meek as ever you would do any thing after my Example, do this, Learn of me, for I am meek. And thus lay the charge of all these things upon your Hearts. FINIS.