THE WELLS OF Salvation OPENED: OR, A TREATISE Discovering The nature, preciousness, usefulness of Gospel-Promises, and Rules for the right application of them. By William Spurstowe, D. D. Pastor of Hackney near London. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Isod. Pel. ep. 1. 141. Imprimatur, Edm. Calamy. London, Printed by T. R. & E. M. for Ralph Smith, at the Bible in Cornhill, near the Royal Exchange. 1655. Dr. SPURSTOWE, on the PROMISES. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE, Edward, Earl of MANCHESTER, Viscount Mandeville, Baron of KIMBOLTON. Right Honorablt, THere are two ranks of men extremely differing in regard of their estate and condition, that use for the most part to go with staves in their hands; but not to the same end, or purpose. The Nobleman carries his as a badge and emblem of his office, and high honour. It being an ancient custom for Princes to give the investiture into places of dignity and eminency, per traditionem baculi, by the delivering of a staff. The common traveller takes up his, the better to support him in the length of his journey, and to ease him in the difficulty and roughness of the way. But these staves of Honour God hath cut asunder, as he did those of beauty, and bands, Zach. 11. 7. having had for these late years a sharp contest with the Cedars of the Land. And which is a lamentation, and shall be for a lamentation; hath dried up the roots from whence they sprang. That which I presume to put into your Honour's hand, is the staff of a traveller, yet not of such an one, as beats the common road and path of the world; but of such who professing themselves strangers and sojourners on earth, both seek, and mind an heavenly country. And to be amongst the number of those (I am persuaded) you do not only count it your duty; but also make it your work, esteeming it a greater glory to be one of Zions' Pilgrims, then of England's Peers. Now how expedient and necessary a staff is in this journey, I would the times themselves did not abundantly speak; the difficulties of which have been such; as that to many Religion itself hath become a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence. Others as dejected, have fainted in their profession, and have cast away their confidence, for want of looking up unto the promises, which in such seasons are the believers only support and assurance, that though the way, of the Lamb, be a way of blood, yet the end is a throne of glory, and a crown of life. That I may therefore strengthen your hands in God, and be serviceable to your faith, I have) made bold to dedicate this small Treatise of the Promises to your Honour, which I wish might prove in your hands as the rod of Myrtle▪ in the hand of the traveller, which as Historians report, doth keep him from growing weary. And that it might so tend to the increase of spiritual strength, as that when the youths shall faint, and the young men urterly fall; you may be as those that wait upon God, that run and are not weary, and walk, and are not faint, Esay 40. 31. However, though I can communicate no virtue unto it; yet I shall not cease to follow it with my prayers, beseeching God, that both it, and all other means which through his grace you may enjoy for the welfare of your soul, may prove so successful by his blessings, as that you may reap the rich fruit of all the Promises in the everlasting fruition of life, and glory; And that your Noble posterity may be heirs also together with yourself, of the same mercies. So I test, Octob. 26. 1654. Your Honours in all Christian Observance WILLIAM SPURSTOWE. Christian Reader. THere is a Vanity with which Prefaces are tainted, not much unlike that predominant folly in these days of wantonness of spotting of faces; For as some do industriously place artificial spots here and there, which by their contrariety may serve as a foil to their beauty, and heighten it to the lust and fancy of others, beyond what it is in truth: So others by a severe observance and calculation of the omissions and failings of such who have treated on the same or like subject with themselves, do by presenting of them to the Readers view, make use of their defects, as so many Beauty spots to enamour him the more with the absolute completeness of their Books. But fare be it from me to make the profitable pains of those who have employed their time, and busied their thoughts on such a Noble subject as the Promises are, to serve as a dark shadow to set off this small Treatise concerning them, which I now put into thy hands. I have reaped both light and profit from them, and therefore cannot but thankfully acknowledge it. Nor do I conceive that I have comprised the great worth of the Promises, in this Manual, as he of old did Homer's Iliads in a Nutshell; or to have done aught that may be a bar to the labours of others whose abilities are greater, and more fit to come under a public view then mine are. The Promises are a large field in which the wise Merchant may find more pearls hidden, then are yet espied: A rich mine in which the diligent labourer may dig forth more fine gold, than any yet have taken from them: They are the Church's store-house, while it is on this side heaven, from whence Believers in all ages may be filled with comfort, as every eye is with new light that beholds the Sun. So rhat there is still a great opportunity for the Ministers of God to put their sickle into this harvest; and an encouragement also to Believers to take hold of all helps and advantages that may be afforded them for the clearing of their knowledge, and the quickening of their affections, in the daily use and application of the Promises. And if to either, or both of these ends, this small Tractate (which is the substance of sundry Sermons preached divers years passed) may in the least conduce, I shall seek no other recompense from thee than that I may have an interest in thy prayers, both for an increase of grace, and of abilities, whereby I may be made more serviceable to the glory of his Name unto whom all aught to live. So I rest, Hackney, Octob. 26. 1654. Thine to serve thee in Christ, William Spurstowe. ERRATA. Courteous Reader. THere are more faults than this Index will punctually discover both in the pointing, and words, yet these that are most obvious thus correct. Page 28. Line 21. for husbands, read husband. p. 83. l. 5. for diminuition, r. diminution. p. 108. l. 4. for such light, r. sweet light. p. 136. l. 23. for stops, r. steps. p. 192. l. ult. for wowne r. swoon. p. 250. l. 4. for styled, r. styles. p. 140. l. ult. add Secondly, p. 141. l. 24. put the comma at see with, p. 154. l. 5. For and flesh, r. his flesh. Scriptures Expounded. Chap. Verse Page Exod. 34 6, 7 91 1 Chron. 25 6 99 Psalm 34 10 95 37 16 134 66 16 273 73 16 147 94 19 42 103 1 266 105 19 136 Esay 1 18 96 7 3 200 25 6, 7, 8 14 38 13, 14 207 43 2 94 44 22 192 Hosea 14 4 97 5, 6, 7 93 Micah 7 19 192 Matth. 11 28 121 15 23, 24, 25 151 Mark 10 17 165 14 72 182 Luke 5 31 122 15 18 183 John 6 37 179 Romans 1 18 55 Hebrews 4 14 5 7 229 9 10 218 11 19 56 1 John 3 2 30 THE Contents. Chap. I. Page 1. IN which the words of the Text are opened, and the chief particulars to be handled, proposed. Chap. II. Page. 8. In which is declared what a Promise is, and how it differeth both from a Precept and a Command. Chap. III. Page 14. In which the excellency and preciousness of the promises is set forth in several particulars. 1. Christ the root of them. 2. The Promises are the root of Faith. 3. The things promised are precious. Chap. iv Page 22. In which is discovered the noble effects of the Promises, and in what sense by them we are made partakers of the divine nature. Chap. V Page 30. The Promises grounds of matchless consolation in four particulars. Comforts from the Promises are 1. Pure. 2. Full. 3. Sure. 4. Universal. Chap. VI Page 43. Containing positive rules directing to the right use of the Promises. 1. Eye God in the Promises. 2. Eye the free grace of God in making them. 3. God's power in performing them. 4. The unchangeableness of his purpose to effect them. 5. His wisdom to fulfil them in the best time. Chap. VII. page 65. Containeth the 2, 3, 4, 5. positive Rules for the right application of the Promises. Rule. 2. How the Promises are in their performance conditional. p. 66 Rule. 3. There is a dependency of one promise on another, which must not be broken nor inverted. p. 73 Rule. 4. A serious and frequent meditation on the Promises. p. 77 Rule. 5. To be much in the application of the Promises. p. 81 Chap. VIII. Containing five other positive Rules. Rule 6. Continue in holy waiting upon God. p. 86 Rule 7. Make choice of some special Promise to resort unto in extremity. p. 90 Rule 8. To eye such examples to whom promises have been fulfilled. p. 96 Kule 9 To preserve our communion with the holy Spirit entire, who is the great applier of promises. p. 101 Rule 10. Be truly thankful for the least dawnings of mercy. p. 105 Chap. IX. Page 111. Cautionary Rules for the application of the Promises Rule 1. Rest not in general faith. Rule 2. Poor not on the measure of humiliation, which is in some more, in some less. p. 121 Chap. X. Containeth the 3, 4, 5. cautionary Rules. Rule 3. Take heed of looking to Providence more than Promises, which are more clear, more certain. p. 129 Rule 4. Take heed of affectation and curiosity in selecting Promises. p. 138 Rule 5. Take heed of carnal reasoning, which is dangerous, as may appear in several particulars. p. 143. Chap. XI. Containing seven cautionary Rules. Rule 6. Take heed of groundless fancies concerning the manner of receiving comfort from the promises. p. 153 Rule 7. Let not the heart out after worldly objects, the danger shown in several particulars. p. 162 Chap. XII. In which divers Queries are resolved. Sect. 1. Faith is not Assurance proved by sundry demonstrations. p. 170 Chap. XIII. What use a Believer may make of the Promises of pardon after relapses. p. 18 Sect. 1. How fare a Believer may charge upon himself Atrocious sins. p. 181 Sect. 2. How fare a Believer ought not to charge upon himself Atrocious sins and backslidings. p. 188 Chap. XIV. Page 196. Showing what use may be made of such Promises as we cannot expect to see the performance of. 1. They are useful to support under present troubles of the Church. p. 168 2. They are useful as a firm rock to bottom prayer upon. 3. They are useful to try the sincerity of a Believers affection and love to God's glory. p. 202 4. They are useful to comfort Believers in regard of their posterity. p. 204 Chap. XV. Page 205. Whether a Believer always enjoys the comfort of assurance in death; who is diligent in making use of the Promises. In answer four conclusions set down. 1. A Believer may meet with many conflicts in his death. p. 206 2. That our diligence to clear up our interest in the Promises is the ordinary and regular way to obtain comfort. p. 207 3. That the improvement of Promises doth usually procure comfort in death; unless in four cases. First, When sickness and distempers are violent. Secondly, When temptations and assaults of Satan are vehement. Thirdly, When Christians have intermitted their wanted care and circumspection. Fourthly, When their graces and comforts have been manifested to themselves and others in their life, God may withdraw: 1. To manifest the strength of their Faith. 2. To show that comfort in death is not so necessary as Grace. 3. In judgement to others, who getting no good by their life, shall not be gainers by their death. Chap. XVI. Page 216. Showing what use is to be made of temporal Promises. Sect. 1. Why God hath made such various Promimises of temporal mercies to his people under the Law. p. 218 Sect. 2. Four benefits come to Believers by looking to temporal promises. p. 220 Sect. 3. Five Assertions directing to the right understanding of temporal promises. p. 226 1. God's Declaration of giving temporal blessings, is not absolute. 2. The fulfilling of temporal promises is disjunctive. 3. Temporal promises are to be expounded with the reservation of the Cross. 4. Temporal mercies in the Promises are only to be obtained by well regulated prayer. 5. The blessing of temporary promises are to be sought secondarily, and not primarily. Chap. XVI Page 235. Sheweth it is a horrible sin to neglect or abuse the Promises: aggravated in five particulars. Sect. 1. From the universality of the sin. p. 237 Sect. 2. From the vanity and emptiness of those things which most men set their hearts upon. p. 239 Sect. 3. From the mutability and uncertainty of those things which do take off most men from valuing the Promises. p. 242 Sect. 4. From the facility of being made partaker of the Promises. p. 245 Sect. 5. From the command of God and Christ. Chap. XVIII. Page 246. Four differences betwixt the Promises of God and Satan. 1. Difference is betwixt the persons that made them. p. 248 2. Difference is in the matter of the Promises. p. 249 3. Difference is in the ground of the Promises. p. 251 4. Difference is in the accomplishment. Chap XIX. Page 255. Sheweth that the worst estate of a Believer is better than the best estate of an unbeliever. Chap. 20. Page 265. Grounds of thankfulness to God for precious Promises to his people. 1. The end of God's goodness to his is his glory. p. 267 2. It is all the return we can make. p. 268 3. It is the work of the Saints in heaven. p. 269 Thankfulness is to be expressed in three particulars. 1. When it makes us more holy. p. 271 2. When we proclaim and make known God's mercy unto others. p. 272 3. In affectionate blessing of God for Christ, by whom all that is wrapped in them, is given unto us. 4. In a vehement desire after a plenary possession of that felicity, of which they are pledges. Chap. XXI. Page 277. Motives to act Faith in the Promises. 1. Life of Faith, is that life that God would have Believers to live. 2. It is the most contented life, and fullest of real sweetness. First, The Promises are the matter of the purchase of the blood of Christ. Secondly, They are the matter of the intercession of Christ. FINIS. THE WELLS OF Salvation OPENED. 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby [or by whom] are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises▪ that by these you might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust. CHAP. 1. In which the words of the Text are opened, and the Principal particulars to be handled, proposed. THE natural life of man is usually divided into the three states of Childhood, Youth and Old age: unto which St John aptly alluding, makes the same distinction of the spiritual life of believers; whom he ranks into Children, Young men, and Fathers. Into Children for their tenderness and weakness, into Young men for their strength and confidence, into Fathers for their knowledge and experience in the high mysteries of the Gospel. All which though differing in regard of their condition, do yet agree in the principle from whence their life is derived, and in the means by which it is carried on and preserved. The principle of every believers life is Christ, and the means of its preservation are the promises; whose virtue and efficacy is such, as happily suits itself with the several age and condition of believers. The promises are the babes milk by which they are nourished, the full breasts from whence they suck both grace and comfort: they are the young men's evidences, by which they are animated to combat with the wicked one, and assured of being crowned with victory over him: they are the old men's staff, upon the top of which like aged Jacob they may safely lean, and worship God; it being a staff for power like Moses rod, and for flourishing like Aaron's, budding, blossoming, and yielding precious fruit. So that it is of more than ordinary concernment unto every one of them that look upon themselves as believers (whatsoever pitch and stature they have arrived unto) not to be supine and careless in the frequent use, and due application of the promises; which from their implantation into Christ to their full enjoyment of him, are the chief aides and support, both of life and growth. Nor to be like unskilful Lapidaries little valuing the worth of such oriental pearls, which are the only riches and treasure of every heir of glory on this side heaven. Concerning which this verse holds forth sundry weighty particulars; branching itself out into as many parts, as that river which went out of Eden to water the garden, from whence it was parted and became into four heads, Gen. 2. 10. The first is the fountain from whence the promises flow; to which (if we read the words per quem, by whom) the relative particle fairly guideth us; as a standing Mercury doth the doubtful traveller. Expositors about the reading of the words do somewhat differ, but n● jar, which the variety of lections both in the Greek and Latin copies hath chief occasioned. Some read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whereby; and so connecting this verse with the former, would have the sense to run thus: Through the knowledge of him that hath called us by glory and virtue, whereby are given unto us, etc. Prosper, as also Bede read per quam, by which, viz. knowledge of God are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: from whence he makes this collection, Quò quis perfectiùs Deum cognoscit, tantò altius promissorum ejus magnitudinem sentiat: The more perfectly any man knows God, the more fully sensible he is of the transcendent worth of his promises Others again conceive the most genuine lection of the verse (though haply the less frequent) to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by whom, rather then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whereby. And that because as Estius observes, praebet sensum maximè Evangelicum, it renders the sense most Evangelical and Gospellike; in regard it points out Christ unto us, who is the Alpha, and Omega of all the promises, the only Original from whence they spring, and the centre in which they meet. To him they were all first made, and ratified on our behalf; in him they are all fulfilled and accomplished unto us. As the rivers have their efflux from the sea, and their reflux into the sea; so have the promises their emanation from Christ, their revolution into Christ; they flow freely from him, they lead sweetly to him. The second branch is the tenure, and manner of interest that believers have in the promises: They are given unto us. In propriety of language, promises are rather made then given; but by a Metonymy usual in Scripture they are put for the things promised, the blessings both of grace and glory. All which though purchased by Christ with the price of his blood; are yet conferred, and freely bestowed upon believers by his mercy. The hidden Manna, a type of our heavenly consolations, the White stone, the emblem of our perfect justification, the New name, the earnest of our adoption in glory, they are favours not set to sale, but given, Rev. 2. 17. Out of the full heap Christ invites not to buy, but to take, and the penniless are the most welcome, Isa. 55. 1. Gratia gratis datur, etiam cùm emitur, gratis emitur: Grace (saith Bernard) is freely given, yea when it is bought, it is bought freely and without price. The third is the goodness, and worth of the promises, set forth by a double character: Exceeding great, and precious. Greatness and goodness are then most refulgent when they meet in the same subject, and are joined by natural couples and connexion's; like to the curtains of the Tabernacle, that were looped one to another; but such a conjunction as it is glorious, so it is rare, and seldom found either in persons, or in things, in persons they are so dissociated, as if they were of lineages altogether distinct, and had small or no affinity. Rarely are great men good, or good men great. And as in persons, so in things they are not often linked, and chained together. Pebbles are great, but not precious; Pearls are precious, but not great; water in the sea is abundant, but not pure; in the brook pure, but not abundant. But in the promises there is a full and happy concurrence of both, they are made up of things wherein greatness and worth do vie with each other▪ everlasting life is as sweet, as long; heaven is as glorious in its beauty, as vast in its dimensions; the crown of righteousness that is laid up is as rich as weighty. There is no one promise of the Gospel, but is of that extent for its latitude, and of that value for its preciousness, that he deserves to be eternally poor, who having that for his subsistence, looks upon any man who hath an interest in none, greater or richer than himself though the gravel of the river were turned into pearls, and every shower of rain from the clouds into a shower of silver and gold for to supply his wants. The fourth particular is, The high and noble end of the donation of the promises. That by them we might be partakers of the divine nature, etc. Painter's when they picture Angels, do not intent similitude, but beauty: Nor doth the Apostle in this expression aim at any essential change, and conversion of our substance into the nature of God, and Christ; but only at the elevation and dignifying of our nature by Christ. Our near union with him doth restore us to an higher similitude and likeness of God, then ever we attained in our primitive perfection; but it doth not introduce any real transmutation either of our bodies or souls into the divine nature. For if that stupendious union of the two natures in one person the Lord Christ, doth not effect an essential change in either; but that both natures do conserve, and retain their distinct properties without mixture, or confusion: much less can the Union between Christ and believers, which is not a personal Union, but an Union of persons, made by the Spirit, and by faith, cause any such alteration; as that our nature losing its own subsistence, should wholly pass into the divine, and be swallowed up in the Abyss of it; as a drop when it falls into the wide Ocean. Pithily doth Cyprian express this truth, when he affirms, Nostra & ipsius conjunctio nec miscet personas, nec unit substantias; sed affectus consociat, & confoedérat voluntates: Our and Christ's conjunction doth neither mingle persons, nor unite substances; but doth conjoin our affections, and bring into a league of amity our wills. Suitable to that of the Apostle, 1 Cor. 6. 17. They that are joined to the Lord, are made one spirit. CHAP. II. In which is declared what a promise is. IT is not designed by me as the subject of my present task to undertake a distinct and full prosecution of all these four particulars in the text, every one of which like gold in the beating, would easily diffuse and spread themselves into a large compass; but occasionally to glance at them, as they conduce to the illustration of that head, and branch which I shall single and cull out from the rest, as the present subject upon which I shall pitch and fix my thoughts, and that is the matchless worth and goodness of the promises of the Gospel. A truth it is of much weight, and sweetness to every believer; but yet as it lies contracted in a proposition, discovers not so much of it; as when drawn forth into a full explication: like to colours that are less beautiful and pleasing, while they lie on the palate of the painter, then when placed and spread on the picture by the pencil of the artificer. I shall therefore in the unfolding of it endeavour these five things. First, to show what a promise is. Secondly, in what respects they are great and precious Thirdly, give rules about the due application of them. Fourthly, resolve some useful Queries and cases concerning them. Fifthly, close and shut up all with some practical inferences and genuine applications, such as flow from the doctrine of the promises; The honey, which drops from the comb is of all the best▪ and sweetest. First, what a promise is. It is a declaration of God's will, wherein he signifies what particular good things he will freely bestow, and the evils that he will remove. This description like the box of spikenard in the Gospel may be more useful when it is broken, then whole: I shall therefore take it into pieces, and give an account of it in the several parcels. First, a promise is a declaration of Gods will: it being a kind of middle thing between his purpose, and performance, his intendment of good, and the execution of it upon those whom he loveth. And as wicked Jezabel, 1 King. 19 2.▪ could not satisfy her hatred of Elijah the Prophet, in intending evil unto him, and effecting it upon him in time, as she could; but withal she lets fall an heavy threatening against him, strengthened with a bitter imprecation upon herself, as an obliging tie to put in execution the designed evil: So let the gods do to me, and more also; if I make not thy life, as the life of one of them by to morrow about this time. So much less can the love of God satisfy itself in a gracious decree, and purpose of good towards his elect shut up in his own breast, and the actual performance of it in the fullness of time; unless withal he discover it unto them beforehand, both as a ground of present comfort in the knowledge thereof, and of hope and expectation in the certain enjoyment of the good things promised hereafter: God also confirming the word of his truth by an oath; not for any necessity or weakness in its self; but out of superabundant love unto the heirs of promise; That by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, they might have a strong consolation, Heb. 6. 18. Secondly, it is a declaration concerning good. And thereby a promise is differenced from the threaten of God, which in divers respects have a near affinity with his promises. For they, as things of a middle nature do intervene between the decree of his wrath, and the execution of it: they are let fall in the Word as so many discoveries of God's anger against sin, and set as powerful stops to check and bond the lusts of sinners, who are apt to dash themselves against the rock of divine displeasure: they are sealed with the same oath of God, with which the promises are ratified; that so they might be as full of dread to sinners, in the expectation of the fulfilling of them; as the promises are of comfort to Believers. Thirdly, it is concerning good things freely bestowed. And thereby it is distinguished from the commands, which are also significations of Gods will concerning good; but it is of the good of duty enjoined to be done, not of the good of mercy to be received. The precepts of God, and the promises of God, they always go together in the Word, as the veins and the arteries do in the body; wherever there goes a vein that carries blood, there also accompanies it an artery that carries spirits: so wherever there is a precept in the Word that enjoins duty, there also is an answerable promise that assures comfort: the one holding forth the good to be done, the other the good to be received. Fourthly, it is of particular good things. And this may serve to hint, and point out one considerable difference between the Covenant of grace, and the promises. The Covenant, that is as the entire Vintage of the heavenly Canaan; And the promises they are as the several clusters of blessing: that is, as a glorious constellation of many celestial bodies in the firmament of the Scriptures; and they are as so many single stars shining in their proper orbs: that is, as the total sum in the Inventory of a believers estate; and they are as the distinct particulars which make it up. All the sweetness, beauty, worth that are diffused throughout the promises, are collected in the Covenant; as the scattered light in the creation was into the body of the Sun. God's Stipulation of becoming ours, and of making us to be his, Jer. 31. 33. compriseth every thing that is desirable, from the first of goods, to the last: and is both the basis and the spire: the cornerstone and the top-stone of every Christians happiness. Fifthly, and lastly, is added [the evils that he will remove.] And this takes in all the privative mercies and blessings, which the promises of the Gospel do hold forth to believers: which though they be not the resplendent part of their happiness; are yet of so necessary a concurrence unto it; as that without them, it can never be absolute or entire. True happiness consists of a double branch, of an immunity, or freedom from evils, and the enjoyment of good; both which are tacitly couched in every promise; but in many most expressly and fully set down, Psal. 84. 11. to them that walk uprightly, the Lord God is a Sun, and a shield, etc. A Sun to give life, and a shield to preserve life given. A Sun to make fruitful in all good, and a shield to protect from all danger. Isa. 25. 6, 7 8. the felicity of the Church is described by a feast of fat things full of marrow of wines on the lees well refined, that the Lord will make unto his people in mount Zion: but to render these dainties the more pleasing, he promiseth also; To take away the face of the covering, to swallow up death in victory, to wipe away all tears from their eyes. Blindness that may hinder the clear knowledge, death that may interrupt the perpetuity, sorrow that may diminish the sweetness of this blessed estate, shall all by a powerful hand be removed, and done away. CHAP. III. In which the excellency, and preciousness of the promises is demonstrated in three particulars. HAving showed what a promise is, the second thing that falls under consideration is, The great worth and excellency of the promises: which in divers respects will appear to be such, as if compared with the choicest of earthly comforts; the one will be as a sovereign elixir full of spirits; and the other as the unactive and sapless dregs. Or if with the richest treasures of the world, the one will be as so much refined gold; and the other as so much impure dross. What Job saith concerning the power of God, If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong; may truly also be said of the riches of the promises: if ye speak of worth, lo, they are precious indeed. SECT. 1. Christ the root of the promises. First, the promises do derive a preciousness from the root and principle from whence they spring: They are as so many beams of Christ the Sun of righteousness, and do impart a light, which discovers his excellency, evidenceth our propriety, and effecteth in us a blessed purity. They are the desirable fruit of the tree of life; not of that tree of life in the beginning of the Bible, which stood in Adam's Paradise on earth▪ but of that in the end of the Bible, in Saint John's Paradise in heaven; not of that which was guarded with Cherubims, and a flaming sword, that it might not be touched; but of that in the midst of the City of God, free for every believer to put forth the hand of faith, and to take and eat of the fruit of it, both as food and medicine. They are the crystal streams of that▪ river of life which proceeded out of the Throne of God, and the Lamb, Revel 22. 1. Whose waters in time of drought never fail; but with their overflowing plenty satisfy the thirsty, with their cooling virtue allay the heat of the wearied, and with their sweetness cheer, and revive the drooping and dejected spirits. And now methinks, I cannot but make a pause, and stand a while admiring both a believers happiness, and Christ's bounty; each of which are of such transcendency; as that they better suit with an holy wonderment, then with the most lively and full expressions. Oh! how happy is every believer, whose light is the love of Christ shining in the rays of the promises; whose food is the tree of life, that continually yields fruit both new and various! whose cordials are the waters of life, not sparingly given to a bare sustentation, but freely flowing to a delightful satiety! Well might David in a rapture say, Lord! What is man that thou art mindful of him! and the son of man that thou visitest him! for thou hast made him a little lower than the Angels, Psal. 8▪ 4, 5. And well also might Paul as one standing upon the shore, and fathoming the sea of God's mercy cry out, O the depth of the▪ riches of God Rom. 11. 35. And most joyfully may every heir of the promise say, My lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly heritage, Psal. 16. 6. to whom such precious promises are given, as exceed both in glory, and certainty all earthly performances whatever, being in Christ from whom they all come, Yea, and Amen, 2 Cor. 1. 20. SECT. 2. The promises the root of Faith. Secondly, the promises may be said to be great and precious, in respect of that proximity, and peculiar relation which they have to the most excellent and noble grace of faith, above all other graces whatsoever. They are the precious objects of precious faith, as the Apostle styles it, 2 Pet. 1. 1. True it is, that the quickening influence and virtue of the promises doth reach every grace of the Spirit, whereby they are both facilitated and strengthened in their several motions and operations: by them hope is kept alive in its expectation of Good, patience is supported under difficulties, holiness is perfected, love is inflamed, and a blessed fear of God is preserved. But yet all this is not done by the immediate intercourse which these graces have with the promises; but by the intervention of faith, which first feeds upon them as the Manna of the Gospel, and then communicates the sweetness and virtue that it draws and receives from them in a suitable manner to every other grace. As the root first sucks the juice and sap from the earth of which it makes a concoction, and then sends forth a digested nourishment unto the several branches, and fruit that hangs upon the tree: so doth the radical grace of faith distribute to other graces that strength and life, which it is partaker of from Christ and his promises. And as the concoction that faith makes, is more or less perfect; so are the operations of every grace the more or less vigorous. Faith is a kind of mediator between Christ and all our graces, as Christ is between us and God. As we have nothing from God, but we receive by and through Christ: So no grace is partaker of any virtue and influence from Christ, but by the mediation, and intervention of faith. SECT. 3. The things promised precious. Thirdly, the promises are exceeding great and precious, in respect of the remarkable worth and value of those things, in which they interest believers, and give them a right unto by an unquestionable claim and title. It is a full and weighty observation (of which Grotius hath afforded two parts) that there are three things which do clearly demonstrate and highly also commend the doctrine of the Gospel above any other Religion whatever. The certainty of principles of trust, the sanctity of precepts, and the transcendency of rewards. What religion is there amongst that multiplicity which have found entertainment in the world, wherein God is represented to the soul so meet and fit an object of trust, as in the Gospel? Majesty being there made accessible by the condescension of goodness; and God and man who were at a distance, so nearly united together in one, as that it is impossible to be determined whether be the greater wonder, the mystery or the mercy. Where are there in any religion such exact precepts of holiness enjoined, as in the Gospel? which lay a law upon every motion of the soul, and become either a rule to guide it, or a Judge to censure it. Or where by search do we find such ample and full rewards, as may match and parallel the rewards of the Gospel to believers? There we read of the bread of life for food, of the waters of life for pleasure and delight, of a crown of life for honour, of an inheritance in life for riches, of a weight of glory for clothing and beauty. All which are not mentioned in the Word, as in a bare and naked declaratory, which conveys nothing of title or interest, and speaks rather the perfection of heaven, than the happiness of believers; but are set down and specified in the promises, which as they declare a goodness and excellency in things, do also give a right and propriety unto persons in them: they being in the matters of God, as deeds and evidences are in the matters of men; which when they are signed, sealed, witnessed, and delivered, do invest men in a just and legal right of whatever is mentioned, and contained in them. All that a believer hath to plead, or to show for that estate of glory of which he is an heir, is the promise. Eternal life is by promise, 1 John 2. 25. This is the promise that he hath promised us, even eternal life. The crown is by promise, Jam. 1. 12. He shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love him. The kingdom, where for love all shall be sons, for birthright heirs, for dignity Kings, is only by promise, Jam. 2. 5. God hath chosen the poor of this world, rich in faith, and heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him. The bounty laid up, and the bounty laid out, the good that a believer expects, and the good that he enjoys, both flow from the promise, without which no present thing could be sweet, nor no future thing would be certain; which by the stability of the promise are now made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gifts without repentance, Rom. 11. 29. Or as Austin expoundeth it, dona sine mutatione stabiliter fixa, gifts firmly fixed without change: Every promise being ratified by God's oath, than which nothing is more immutable▪ sealed by the blood of Christ, than which, nothing is more precious; testified by the Spirit, than whom nothing is more true; delivered by the hand of mercy, than which nothing is more free; and received by the hand of faith, than which nothing is more sure. CHAP. IU. In which is discovered the noble effect of the Promises. FOurthly, the promises of the Gospel are exceeding great and precious, in regard of that high and noble effect which they work in believers; who by the energy and powerful operation of the promises, are raised to the utmost pitch both of perfection, and blessedness in their being and estate, being by them made partakers of the divine nature, as the Apostle tells us: Not by having a share, and partnership in the substance and essence of God, and thereby to become drops, beams, particles of the Deity, as some have most fond dreamt: But by a participation of divine qualities and excellencies, whereby believers are made conformable unto God; having those perfections which are in the holy nature of God, and Christ by way of eminency, to be formally, or secundùm modum creaturae, imprinted and stamped on their souls, so fare as the image of his infinite holiness is expressible in a limited, and restrained being. As the wax when it doth receive an impression from the seal, doth not participate of the essence of the seal, but only receives a signature and stamp made upon it: so when God leaves a character and print of his holiness or other excellencies upon the soul, he doth not communicate any thing of his substance or essence, but effecteth only a resemblance in the creature of those perfections that are truly in himself, which being originally, and totally derived from him, may in some sort be said to be the divine nature. In the Painter's table that is called a face, or hand, which is only the lively image or representation of such things to the eye: and so those divine lineaments of beauty and holiness which are drawn by the finger of God upon the soul of believers, may be called the divine nature, as they are shadowy representations of his own glorious being: but not as they are any particles or traduction of it. The highest honour that any creature can attain unto, is to be a living picture of God; to show forth as the Apostle saith, 1 Pet. 2. 9 the virtues of God, and Christ: and he that raiseth it any higher, must have swelling and lofty thoughts of the creature, and low and dishonourable thoughts of God. Now this likeness to God, or this Deiformitas, Christiformitas, as the pious Ancients were wont to style it, is wrought by the promises. SECT. 1. The Promises the Word of life. First, as they are the words of Spirit and life, John 6. 63. As they are the immortal seed, 1 Pet. 1. 23. whereby a man is begotten again and made partaker of a second birth, in which he bears the image of the second Adam, the Lord from heaven; as in the other he did bear the similitude of the first Adam who was of the earth earthy, 1 Cor. 15. 47. The promises they have in them a vim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a formative virtue and power to mould and fashion the heart to holiness, and to introduce the Image of Christ into it, in regard of that native purity which dwells in them, and is above gold that hath been seven times tried in the fire, Psal. 12. 6. therefore our Saviour tells his Disciples, that they were clean through the Word that he had spoken unto them, John 15. 3. and when he prayed unto God to sanctify them; his prayer is, Sanctify them through thy truth, thy Word is truth, Joh. 17. 17. Secondly, believers may be said to be partakers of the divine nature by the promises, as they are the Objects of Faith and Hope. Both which are graces that have in them a wonderful aptitude to cleanse and purify the Subjects in which they dwell, and to introduce true holiness in which the lively image and resemblance of God doth chief consist. First, Faith it believes the truth of those things which God hath promised, and apprehends also the worth and excellency of them to be such as that thereby it is made firm and constant in its adherence, vigorous and active in its endeavours to use all means for the obtaining a conformity to God and Christ, and the escaping of the corruption that is in the world through lust. For till a man come to be a believer he is by the temptations of Satan, and the specious promises with which they usually come attended, drawn aside to the commission of the worst of sins, in which though he weary himself to find what first was seemingly promised, yet he meets with nothing but delusions and disappointments of his expectation. Balaam hath an edge set upon his spirit to curse the people of God by a promise of preferment made unto him and he tires himself in going from place to place to effect it▪ but God hinders him from doing of the one, and Balack denies the giving unto him the other. So Judas by a bait that suits his covetousness undertakes to sell his Lord▪ but when he hath accomplished his wickedness, and received his wages, he throws it away, and dares not keep what before he so earnestly thirsted after: the blood of his Master makes every piece of the silver look ghastly, so that now he sees another image upon it then Caesar's, and cries out that he had sinned in betraying innocent blood. Now faith it enables a believer to discern a snare, a defilement under all the gilded aldurements of Satan and the world: And therefore he rejects with scorn those temptations with which others are miserably captivated, & resists with resolution all the court and solicitations of the flesh, to which others yield, beholding only a stability and preciousness in those promises which have the oath of God to make them sure, and his love to make them sweet. And these only have a prevailing power with him, to cause him so to order his conversation in all manner of holiness, that he may walk as it becomes an heir of heaven, and an adopted son of the most high God to walk. Secondly, as Faith by believing the promises doth purify the heart; so also doth hope which expects the performance of what faith believeth, work and produce the same effects. He that hath this hope in him, purifieth himself, even as God is pure, 1 Joh. 3. 3. The expectation which believers have by the promises, is not a supine oscitancy, whereby they look to be possessed of life and glory without any care or endeavours of theirs for to obtain it: like to callow and unfeathered birds, that lie in the nest, and have all their food brought to them, gaping only for to receive it: But it is an expectation accompanied with diligence and industry for the fruition of what they do expect. The grace of God (saith Paul,) teacheth us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts, and to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world, Tit. 2. 11, 12. And the ground of this he subjoineth, Vers. 13. Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ. He that truly expects glory, earnestly pursues grace, Heb. 12. 14. He that hopes to be with God in heaven, useth all means to be like God on earth. An heavenly conversation is the natural fruit of an heavenly expectation, Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ. The Heathen could say that labour was the husband of hope. There is hope the harlot, and hope the wife. Hope the married woman is known from hope the harlot by this, that she always accompanieth with her husband's labour. True hope looks to enjoy nothing but what is gotten by travel and pains, and therefore useth all means to obtain that good which faith apprehendeth in the promise: It seeks glory by grace, it endeavours after communion with God in heaven, by working a conformity to God in a believer while he is on earth. Thirdly, believers are made partakers of the divine nature by the promises as they are the irreversible obsignations and declarations of God, which he hath freely made unto them of his taking them unto himself in an everlasting communion of life and glory. Heaven is (as Prosper calls it,) Regio beatitudinis, the only climate where blessedness dwells in its perfection. While we are here below, we are but as Kings in the cradle: the throne on which we must sit, the robes with which we must be clothed, the crown which must be set upon our heads, are all reserved for heaven. In this life there is only a taste of celestial delights, and in the other there is a perpetual feast. Here we see through a glass darkly; but then face to face, 1 Cor. 13. 12. Grace doth as Cameron expresseth it, adsignificare infirmitatem, connotate a weakness and imperfection; and glory that signifies an abolition, and doing away whatsoever is weak or imperfect. But all this absolute perfection of happiness which is laid up in heaven for believers, is ratified and made sure unto them in the promises; and therefore they are said to be heirs of the promise, Heb. 6. 17. Yea, by the promises, they have the pledges and first-fruits of all that happiness which they shall enjoy in heaven, given unto them in this life. We are now the sons of God, (saith the Apostle) though it doth not yet appear what we shall be, 1 John 3. 2. That is, we now bear his image and likeness, though in a more dark and imperfect character. Our knowledge, our grace, our comforts are all incomplete: But when he shall appear, we shall be like him. That is, when Christ shall come to receive us unto himself, we shall bear upon us his resemblance in a full and absolute manner, being made one with him in an everlasting fellowship of bliss and glory. Deservedly therefore may the promises that seal heaven to believers in the other life, and begin it in this life, be said to make them partakers of the divine nature. CHAP. V The promises grounds of matchless consolations in four particulars. FIfthly, the promises of the Gospel are truly great and precious, in regard of those superlative and matchless consolations which they derive unto believers amidst the changes and vicissitudes that they are subjected unto, while they are in the body, and bear about them both the remainders of sin, and of death: In the sad Winter of desertion when the verdure of all other comforts whither, and drop like leaves that are bitten with the frost; the promises, they are Rosae in hyeme, Roses that blow in the Winter, and do with their beauty delight, and with their fragrancy revive the drooping and dejected soul. Thy Word is my comfort in my affliction, saith David, for it hath quickened me, Psal. 119. 50. In the apprehensions of God's displeasure, with which many times the best of Saints are afflicted, even to the drying up of all their moisture, they are Aestivae nives, the only summersnowes that cool and allay the scorching heat, and make that Christian that was like a parched Wilderness to become like a watered Garden. As cold waters to a thirsty soul, (faith Solomon) so is good news from a far country, Prov. 25. 25. Good tidings from heaven by the Gospel-promises are most welcome in such a condition. In the tempestuous seasons of trouble and affliction, they are the sacrae anchorae, sacred and sure anchors to stay and fix believers amidst all toss, & to make them ride safely without touching upon the sands, so as to be swallowed up in despair; or dashing against the rocks, so as to be shipwrackt by presumption. Therefore the Apostle calls them a sure refuge to such as lay hold upon them, Heb. 6. 18. In the calm and serene times of peace, they are Vela candida, the only white spread sails, which filled with the sweet breathe of the Spirit, do triumphantly carry on believers to the fair havens of everlasting happiness. Therefore Paul as within Ken of the shore after the custom of the Mariners gives a joyful and triumphant celeusma or shout, O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? 1 Cor. 15. 55. And can all or any of these things be affirmed of the best of earthly comforts? Surely if we should compare the one with the other, we might quickly find as vast a difference, as between a noisome laystal, and a precious bed of spices; or between a reviving cordial, and a dangerous poison. Forestus in his Treatise De venenis, concerning poisons, reports of a woman that had accustomed her body to poisons, by making them her usual food, that she had brought herself and her whole constitution, to be of the same power as the poison itself was; but yet retained so much beauty, as that she alured Princes to her embracements, and by that means killed and poisoned them. Not much unlike this harlot is the world; whose delights and pleasures retain so much of a seeming beauty, as to entice many to be enamoured with them; but when they are enjoyed by those that eagerly thirst after them, they do by their deceitful embracements destroy and kill their lovers. There is a poysonful and contagious breath that comes from them, which lays the foundation of a lingering and certain death: And who is there that hath inordinately let out his heart unto them, that hath not experienced the deadly poison which abounds in them? But that we may the better see how fare the comforts of the promises do excel the comforts of the world, let us weigh them in the balance together, and we shall quickly find how greatly they fall short, of yielding such real consolations as freely flow from the promises, by a due consideration of these four particulars. SECT. 1. Comforts of the Promises. 1. Pure. First, the consolations that are derived from the promises do excel in purity the most delightful comforts that are drawn and sucked from the breasts of the world. The promises are Mulctralia Evangelica, the receptacles of the most sincere milk of the Word, 1 Pet. 2. 2. they are coelestes utres, bottles filled with the choicest and most refined wines: they are spirituales aurifodinae, the golden mines that are without dross. The milk, the wine, the gold that the promises do abound with to the nourishing, cheering and enriching of believers, they are most pure, and free from any alloie that might debase them. The commendations that Plutarch gives of the Spartans' short and weighty speaking, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Laconic speech hath no bark; is most true of the seventimes tried and refined words of the Gospel, they have neither skin nor husk, they are all pith and substance. But it is fare otherwise with the best of earthly comforts which when sublimated and clarified to the very utmost that art and skill can reach, are yet accompanied with an unseparable mixture of dregs and lees which do minorate their virtue, and taint their sweetness. What Crates in Laertius affirms of the pomegranate, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In the fairest Pomegranate, there are corrupt and unsavoury kernels; may justly be applied to all sublunary contentments and delights whatever; there are some impurities cleaving unto them, by which they cloy as well as feed; there is a waif and tang in their farewell, that renders them unpleasing, as well as a sweetness that makes them desirable. 2. Full. Secondly, the comforts of the promises as they are pure, so are they full and satisfactory; when the best that the world yields, serve rather to provoke an appetite then to fill it, to inflame the thirst of desires rather than to quench them, to express an indigency in a restless motion, rather than a complacency in a perfect rest. If we could suppose the apple of a man's eye to be as big as the body of the Sun, and as piercing as the beams and heat thereof from which nothing is hid; yet among those innumerable objects that such an eye would behold, it could not spy out anything, which might be an adequate & proportionable good unto the capacity of the soul The good that is satisfactory unto it, must have two properties; it must be bonum optimum, the best and chiefest of goods, that it may sistere appetitum, fix the appetite, there being nothing desirable beyond it: and it must be bonum maximum, the greatest good, that it may implere appetitum, fill the appetite, and so free it from the vexation of hunger and want. Now the top and cream of all worldly comforts are exceeding deficient in satisfying the sensitive faculties, and inferior part of the soul, much less can they fill with a grateful satiety and contentment the mind, which is the noble and supreme part of man, and by its creation fitted for communion with an infinite good. When (saith Plutarch) did Epicurus cry out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I have fed, with so much joy and delight, as Archimedes in his Mathematical contemplations did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I have found? And when did both they or the whole sect of Epicures and Philosophers in the enjoyment of their sensual and intellectual pleasures, cry out with such strong ravishments of soul, they had either fed or found, as a believer doth when he hath tasted and found the goodness of God in one promise? Listen but a little, and you shall hear in how loud and pathetical a tone David expresseth himself, when he had but tasted these divine consolations: Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee. My flesh and my heart faileth; but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever, Psal. 73. 25, 26. And Bellarmine tells of a pious old man that was wont to rise from prayer with these words always in his mouth, Claudimini oculi mei, claudimini; nihil enim pulchrius jam videbitis, Be shut, be shut O mine eyes; for now ye shall never see any thing more desirable. 3. Sure. Thirdly, the comforts of the promises are abiding and sure mercies, Act. 13. 34. such which are the crystal streams of a living fountain, and not the impure overflowings of an unruly torrent, which sometimes with its swell puts the traveller in fear of his life, and at other times shames his expectations of being refreshed by it, Job 6. 15. Geographers in their description of America report, that in Peru, there is a river called the Diurnal or day-river, because it runs with a great current in the day, but is wholly dry at night; which is occasioned, as they say, by the heat of the sun, that in the daytime melts the snow that lies on the mountains thereabouts: but when the Sun goes down, and the cold night approacheth, the snow congealeth, which only fed it, and the channel is quite dried up: Not much unlike this river, are all worldly contentments, which are only day-comforts, but not night-comforts: In the sunshine of peace and prosperity, they flow with some pleasing streams; but in the night season of affliction they vanish and come to nothing: Then the rich man, as Cyprian saith, vigilat in plumâ, suspirat licèt bibat gemmas, lies restless upon a bed of down, and fetcheth deep groans though he drink pearls, and Saphires: But it is fare otherwise with the promises, whose streams of comfort in the time of trouble do usually run most plentifully, and refresh most powerfully the weary and afflicted soul; so as to preserve it from dying and fainting away under the pressure of any evil. This was it which made Hezekiah under a sentence of death to revive, and to cry out, O Lord, by these things men live, and in all these things is the life of my spirit, Isa. 38. 16. But if at any time these divine consolations do run in a more shallow and spare channel, and vary from their wont fullness; yet do they never prove like waters that fail, or streams that are quite dried up. A believer may at sometime be drawn low, but he can never be drawn dry: while Christ is a full fountain, faith will never be an empty conduit-pipe. His comforts may be like the Widow's oil in the cruse, where only a little remains, 1 King. 17. 12. but never like the water in Hagars' bottle that was quite spent, Gen. 21. 15. The widow thought her store of meal and oil to be brought to so low an ebb, as that it would serve but for one cake, which two sticks would be fuel enough to bake, and then both she and her son must expect to die; but then the Lord did put forth his power, though not in making the oil and meal to overflow to the feeding of others therewith; but in keeping it from wasting, so as to be a constant supply unto her, and the Prophet's necessities in the extremity of the famine. The like apprehensions have the dear and beloved ones of God frequently in their afflictions, and temptations which befall them; they think they have scarce faith enough to last one day more, scarce strength enough for one prayer more, scarce courage enough for one conflict more, and then▪ they and their hopes must die, and give up the ghost for ever: But in the midst of all these fears and misgivings which arise from their hearts, there issueth out such a measure of comfort from the promises, which if it gives not deliverance from their temptations, doth effect their preservation in them; if it overflow not to make them glad, it fails not to make them patiented, and to wait, till God send forth judgement unto victory, Mat. 12. 20. 4. Universal. Fourthly, the comforts of the promises are universal, such as agree with every estate, and suit every malady: they are the strong man's meat, and the sick man's cordial, the condemned sinners pardon, and the justified persons evidence; but the best of the world's comforts are only applicable to some particular conditions, and serve as salves for some few sores. Riches are a remedy against the pressing evils of want and poverty, but they cannot purchase ease to the pained. Armour of proof is a defence against the sword and bullet, but can no way serve to keep off the stings of piercing cares; oils and balsams are useful for bruises and broken bones, but they are needless to an hungry man that seeks not after medicines but food. As the hurting power in creatures is stinted and bounded, fire can burn but not drown, water can drown but not wound, serpents and vipers can put forth a poisonful sting, but cannot like beasts of prey tear and rend in pieces: so the faculty of doing good which is in any creature is confined to a narrow scantling, and reacheth no further than the supply of some particular defect: but the comforts and virtue of the promises are in their operations and efficacy of an unlimited extent; they flow immediately from the▪ Father of mercies, and God of all comfort, 2 Cor. 1. 3. and are therefore meet to revive and establish how disconsolate in any kind whatsoever the condition of a believer be. In the multitude of my thoughts within me, thy comforts delight my soul, saith holy David, Psal. 94. 19 When disquieting thoughts did swarm within his breast, as thick as motes in the Sunbeams, and did continually ascend like sparks from a flaming furnace, which the Crown upon his head could not charm, which the Sceptre in his hand could not allay, which the delights and pleasures of his Court could not sweeten: then did the comforts of God in his promises, as so many fresh springs in the midst of all his estuations both glad and calm his unquiet and perplexed spirit. One sun, when overcast with thick clouds which threaten to blot it out of its orb, doth then enlighten the earth fare more, than multitudes of stars that shine bright in the clearest night: and so one promise in armies of changes that befall believers, fills their souls with more serenity and peace, than the confluence of all outward contentments can produce under one small and petty cross. A Christian many times walks more cheerfully under sore fiery trials, than others in the sunshine of worldly prosperity. The three children walked to and fro with more joy in the furnace than Nabuchadnezzar in his stately Palace. CHAP. VI Containing positive rules directing to the right use of the promises. HAving showed what a promise is, and the sundry respects wherein the promises of the Gospel are precious by way of eminency and excess: I pass on to the third general head, which is made up of several rules and directions that concern the due application of them; which are by so much the more necessary, by how much the promises above all other parts of the sacred Oracles of God are most apt to be deeply injured by the two sinful extremes of distrust, and presumption. The infirm believer whose jealousies and misgivings are too strong for his faith, puts away from him the consolations of the promises as small, and looks upon them as cordials not strong enough to heal and remove his distempers. The over-secure and self-confident person, placeth his fond presumptions in the room of God's promise; and thereby draws as certain a ruin upon himself, as he who ventures to go over a deep river without any other bridge then what his shadow makes. I shall therefore branch the rules which concern the right use of them, into rules positive and cautionary: the one pointing out several duties which every one must exercise himself in, that would willingly reap any real fruit and advantage from the promises: the other forewarning the many errors and mistakes, which are as stones of stumbling to weak Christians, or as stones that lie upon the mouth of the wells of salvation which must be removed before the water of comfort can be drawn from them. I shall begin with the positive rules, which are many. SECT. 1. Eye God in the promises. First, in the applying of any promise, fix the eye of your faith upon God, and Christ in it. Promises are not the primary object of faith, but the secondary: or they are rather the means by which we believe, than the things on which we are to rest. As in the Sacraments the elements of bread and wine serve as outward signs to bring Christ and a believer together; but that which faith closeth with and feedeth upon, is Christ in the Ordinance, and not the naked elements themselves. So the promises are instrumental in the coming of Christ and the soul together; they are the warrant by which faith is emboldened to come▪ to him, and to take hold of him; but the union which faith makes, is not between a believer and the promise, but between a believer and Christ. And therefore those Divines who in their Catechetical Systems have made the formal object of faith to be the promise, rather than the person of Christ, have failed in their expressions, if not in their intentions, and have spoken rather popularly then accurately. For the object of faith is not ens complexum, an Evangelical maxim or proposition; but ens incomplexum, the person of Christ, as the whole current of Scripture-expressions do abundantly testify, wherein faith is described by receiving of Christ, Joh. 1. 12. by believing on him, Joh. 3. 16. by coming to him, Joh. 6. 36. As we cannot come to Christ without the aid of a promise; so may we not rest in the promise without closing with Christ. The promises they are but as the field, and Christ is the hidden pearl which is to be sought in them; they are as the golden candlesticks, and he is both as the Olive-tree which drops fatness into them, and as the light which shines in them; they are as the Alabaster-box, and he is as the precious spicknard which sends forth the delightful savour; they are as the the golden pot, and he is the Mannah which is treasured and laid up in them; they are as the glass, and he is the beautiful face which is to be seen in them. We all beholding with open face as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, 2 Cor. 3. 18. But in looking unto God and Christ in the promise, let the eye of faith be directed especially to these four attributes and perfections of God, the freeness of his grace in making them, the absoluteness of his power to effect them, the unhangeablenesse of his counsel not to revoke, or disannul the least iota of them, the greatness of his wisdom to perform all which he hath spoken in the best season and joint of time. These are four such pillars upon▪ which faith may safely lean, and which the strength of the most violent temptations can never shake, much less overturn, as Samson did the pillars of the house against which he leaned, Judg. 16. 30. SECT. 2. Eye free grace. First, view with the eye of faith the freeness of God's grace in making so many rich promises: they are all patents of grace, not bills of debt; expressions of love, not rewards of services; gifts, not wages: He that made many out of mercy, might without the least umbrage of injustice have made none. Though his truth do tie him to the performance of them, yet his love and mercy only did move him to the making of them: his promise hath made him a debtor, but free grace made him a promiser. And here the assertion of the School may be judged sound: Divina voluntas, licèt simpiciter libera sit ad extra, ex suppositione tamen unius actus liberi, potest necessitari ad alterum: Though the will of God be most entirely free in all his manifestations towards the creature, yet upon the voluntary and free precedency of one supposed act we may justly conceive him to be necessarily obliged to a second. Thus God was most absolutely free in the making of his promises; but having made them, he is necessitated to the fulfilling of them by his truth. According to that of the Apostle, Tit. 1. 2. God who cannot lie hath promised, before the world began. And that of the Prophet, Thou wilt perform the truth to Jacob, and the mercy to Abraham, Mich. 7. 20. The making of the promise unto Abraham was free mercy, the fulfilling of it to Jacob was justice and truth. This direction touching the freeness of God's grace in the promises is exceeding useful to secure and relieve the perplexing fears of the weak and tempted Christian, who though he have eyes to see the unspeakable worth and excellency of the promises, yet hath not the confidence to put forth the hand of faith and to apply them to his necessities. He wants forgiveness of sins, but doubts the promise of blotting out iniquities belongs not unto him: He is naked, and gladly would that Christ might spread the skirt of his righteousness over him to hid his deformities: But alas! what hath a leper to do with a royal robe? He is sick and diseased, but the Physic that must cure him, the least drop of it is more worth than a world, and he is more vile than the dust; How then can he expect, that he should ever be the patiented of such a Physician, who will be both at the cost to buy the Physic, and at the pains to administer it? If he had an heart to love God as David, if talents to glorify God as Paul, if he were but an Israelite without guile as Nathanael, than he might have hopes together with them, to have his person accepted, his services rewarded, and his imperfections pardoned. But his heart with which he should love God, is carnal, and not spiritual; his talents and abilities with which he should glorify God, are few or none; his sincerity which should be the Evangelical perfection of all his duties, hath more than an ordinary tincture of hypocrisy and self-ends mixed with it. With what confidence therefore can such an one draw near to Christ, or ever expect to be welcomed by him? Now to put to silence these reasonings; and to allay these fears, which unless checked and bounded, do oftentimes terminate in the blackness of despair; there is not a more effectual remedy, than the consideration of the freeness of the grace of God and Christ in the promises, which are not made to such as deserve mercy, but to such as want it; not to righteous persons, but to sinners; not to the whole, but to the sick. And therefore such who through the weakness of faith, or the violence of temptations find it difficult to lay hold on the promises of God touching the pardon of sin, and the obtaining of life and salvation, let them resolve the promises into the first root and principle from whence they spring, which is not from any good within us, but wholly from grace without us; and they will readily find that by eyeing the ground and original of the promise, they will sooner be encouraged and drawn to believe and to lay hold upon it, then by looking only to the promise itself. Of all the ways and experiments to bear up a sinking spirit, there is no consideration like this, that from the beginning to the end of our salvation nothing is primarily active but free grace. This is a firm bottom of comfort against the guilt of the most bloody and crimson sins, because free grace is not tied to any rules, it may do what it pleaseth. Some body that goes to heaven must be the greatest sinner, and what if thou be'st he, whom God will make the everlasting monument of the riches of his love and mercy in Christ? This is an impenetrable shield against the constant accusations of Satan drawn from unworthiness, unprofitableness, backwardness to holy duties, and distractions in them. 'Tis true, may a believer say, I am unworthy, and that which Satan makes the matter of his accusation, is the daily matter of my confessions, and self-judging before God; the sins which he pleads against me with delight, I bemoan with tears of bitterness: And were the way which leads to heaven, a ladder of duties, and not a golden chain of free grace, I could not but fear, that the higher I climb, the greater would my fall prove to be; every service being like a brittle round that can bear no weight; & the whole frame and series of duties at the best, far short of the ladder in jacob's vision, which had its foot standing upon the earth, and its top reaching to heaven. But the whole way of salvation from first to last, is all of mere grace, that the promise might be sure, Rom. 4. 16. Every link of the golden chain is made up of free mercy, Election is free, Eph. 1. 5. Vocation free, 2 Tim. 1. 9 Justification free, Rom. 5. 24. Sanctification free, 1 Cor. 6. 11. Glorification free, Rom. 6. 23. And therefore though I can challenge nothing of right, yet I may ask every thing of mercy; especially being invited by him, who seeds not his people with empty promises; but gives liberally unto every one that asketh, and upbraids not either with former sins, or present failings, Jam. 1. 5. SECT. 3. Eye God's Power. Secondly, in the applying of every promise look with the eye of faith upon the greatness of God's power, which is able to fulfil to the least iota whatever he hath spoken, and to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think, Eph. 3. 20. The confining of God's power according to the narrow apprehensions, and dwarfish thoughts that men naturally have of him in their hearts, the Scripture points out as the chief root of all that unbelief and distrust which is put forth in their lives: Thus the Israelites in the wilderness were seldom in any exigency which they looked upon beyond the possibility of second causes to deliver them from; but they straightways called also into question the power of God, Psalm 78. 19, 20. They spoke against God, they said, Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness? Behold, he smote the rock that the waters gushed out, and the streams overflowed; but can he give bread also? can he provide flesh for his people? So when they were in the long captivity of Babylon, they had many clear and express promises of being restored, and brought back again into their own inheritance; yet measuring the truth of God's Word, not by the strength of his power, but by the improbabilities and impossibilities which did appear to their reason; they look upon themselves not as prisoners of hope, but as free among the dead, and as far from any expectation of deliverance, as dead and dry bones are from reviving. Our bones (say they) are dried up, and our hopes are lost, and we are cut off for our parts, Ezek. 37. 11. Thus the Sadduces denied and divided the great doctrine of the resurrection, as being full of irreconcilable difficulties and inconsistencies. How a body and a soul separated should be reunited; how a body not only separated from the soul, but dissolved into dust should be recompacted; how dust scattered and blown up and down should be recollected, was altogether beyond the line of their reason for to fathom or compass. Our Saviour therefore points out the ground of their error to arise, not only from their ignorance of the Scripture which had foretold it, but also of the power of God which was able to effect it: Ye do err, not knowing the Scrptures, nor the power of God, Mat. 22. 29. Necessary therefore it is in the making use of any promise, that a believer have such conceptions of the power of God, as that whatever lets and impediments do arise between the promise and the fulfilling of it, though as high as mountains, and as strong as the gates of hell, be yet by faith looked upon as difficulties which cannot check the power of God, but only magnify it: For else, if once we come to have jealous thoughts of the divine arm in which we trust, or to fear that it might be encountered by some insuperable opposition; the hopes and expectations that we have of any good from the promise, must needs be weak and uncertain. When God had promised to make Abraham the father of a seed, as numerous as the Stars of heaven, or the dust of the earth, though reason could not but suggest unto him how unlikely he was to be a father and Sarah to be a mother, when age had dried up his body, and deadened the womb of Sarah, yet saith the Apostle, Against hope he believed in hope, that he might become the father of many Nations, Rom. 4. 18. That is, when nature afforded no ground of hope or encouragement to confirm his expectation in the fulfilling of the promise, but suggested many posing arguments to implead and gainsay the truth of it, and to make his faith as feeble as his body; yet than he exercised the fullness of assurance in believing and of hope in expecting the accomplishment of all that God had spoken. He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God, being fully persuaded that what he had promised, he was able also to perform, verse 21, 22. So when afterwards God called him to that signal trial of his faith and obedience in the offering up of his only son, and appointed himself to be the Priest as well as Isaac to be the sacrifice▪ and though the stroke which Abraham's hand was stretched forth to give, would not only have ended the life of his son; but have cut off also the promise at the very root because in Isaac his seed was to be called: yet by the same eye of faith, by which before he looked through a dead womb, he now looks through a bleeding sword unto the power of God, accounting that he was able to raise him up even from the dead, Heb. 11. 19 That is▪ he believed that rather than the promise of God should not be certain, the resurrection of Isaac should be more miraculous than his birth▪ and that God would magnify his power in raising him out of the ashes of a consumed sacrifice to be the heir of the promise▪ rather than let one tittle of his Word fall to the ground unfulfilled. And thus should every believer as a true child of Abraham endeavour to do, in looking from themselves unto the power of God, for the making good of any promise which they in prayer do earnestly seek, in faith do really believe, in hope do patiently wait for and expect. And though difficulties and temptations should arise, which their reason cannot answer, their strength cannot repel; yet not to cast away their confidence, but to cast themselves upon him who is both the strength and wisdom of his people, with whom things that are utterly impossible with men, are not only possible, but easy for him to bring to pass and to effect. Oh the happy peace and serenity that a believer enjoys, in every estate and condition which befalls him, that can thus rest and stay himself, upon the promise and power of God No valley of trouble will be to him without a door of hope, no barren wilderness without Manna, no dry rock without water, no dungeon without light, no fiery trial without comfort, because be hath the same Word and the same God to trust unto, whose power opened the sea as a door to be a passage from Egypt to Canaan, who fed Israel in the desert with bread from heaven, and water from the rock, who filled Peter's prison with a shining light, who made the three children to walk to and fro amidst the fiery furnace with joy and safety. SECT. 4. The unchangeableness of the promiser confirms Faith. Thirdly, to sweeten the application of every promise, exercise your thoughts and faith on the unchangeableness of the purpose and counsel of God, to fulfil whatever his promises do declare. The promises of men, though they be the expressions of an intended and resolved good unto that person to whom they are made, yet they are subject to a deficiency from a double principle: sometimes through a want of power to give a being and existency unto what they have spoken; they prove rather the fruitless wishes of a friend that means well, than the performances of one that hath ability to turn his words into deeds: But that which most frequently makes the promises of men to be as abortive conceptions, and not as full births, is the mutability and inconstancy of their wills, whereby they are not only apt to recall and suspend the fulfilling of what they promised, but also to change their love into hatred, and their promises into menaces. The tree that in the summer is much esteemed and set by for the grateful shade which it affordeth, in the cold winter is oft cut down for fuel: and so the same person, which in the heat of affection is made the object of many favours, in the keen blasts of jealousy becomes the subject of revenge and ruin. But it is far otherwise with the promises of God, whose power no lets or impediments can arise to hinder, whose will no contingencies or emergencies can fall out to alter. All his promises are in Christ not yea and nay, but in him, Yea, and▪ in him Amen, 2 Cor. 1. 20. He is not a man that he should repent, 1 Sam. 15. 29. He is the Lord that changeth not, Mal. 3. 6. The Father of lights with whom there is no variableness or shadow of change, Jam. 1. 17. And that the heirs of promise might yet be more abundantly confirmed in the immutability of God's counsel, he hath added to his Word his oath, wherein he pawns his being, life, righteousness, truth, mercy, power to perform all that he hath spoken, that so by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have strong consolation, Heb. 6. 17. This consideration therefore of looking unto the unchangeableness of God in the constant use and application of his promises; as it serves to point out the wide difference between the promises of God, and the promises of men, the one being as frail and uncertain as bubbles, no sooner made then broken▪ like breath on steel▪ as soon off as on; the other like firm rocks of adamant, which can neither be broken or moved: So also is it exceeding useful to preserve and keep believers from being injurious to their own comforts, or God's honour, who from the frequent changes which they find in themselves, are apt to apprehend the like to be in God: they recedefrom God, and then complain that God departs, and withdraws his presence from them: not unlike to those who in a constant motion upon the waters move from the land▪ and then fancy the land and trees to move from them, when as God still retains the steadfastness of his purpose and will, without any variation, or difference by all the mutations that are in the creature: the failings in our vows, the unevenness in our duties, the waver in our faith, they produce no alterations in him who is the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever, Heb. 13. 8. If we (saith the Apostle) believe not, yet he abideth faithful, and 〈◊〉 den●e himself, 2 Tim. 2. 13. This was all holy David's salvation and desire, all that his heart had to build upon, and to satisfy itself with, that though his house were not so with God, that is, did fail much of that exactness and purity which therein God required, which he had solemnly vowed, and therefore did justly deserve to be cast off; yet God had made with him an everlasting Covenant, ordered in all things and sure, 1 Sam. 23. 5. Oh! how sad would the condition of every believer prove, if the cornerstone of their salvation should be laid upon no other foundation, than their own frail and mutable wills; if as often as they are wanting to themselves, God should be wanting to them; if as oft as they provoke his justice, he should presently revoke his mercy; if as oft as they break their vows with God, he should cancel his Covenant with them▪ Bu● for ever blessed be the God and Father of mercies, who hath not made our life to be in our own keeping, nor founded the bottom of our happiness and comfort upon any strength, ability, freedom, or inherent grace already received, which we are apt to waste, and to betray into the hands of every temptation, but hath wholly fixed it upon an irreversible Covenant of grace transacted between him and Christ, upon promises of mercy ratified and confirmed to us by the broad seal of heaven, the oath of God, unto which we may daily fly for refuge as the only sanctuary, when pursued with the guilt of any sin, upon which we may lay hold with both hands as upon a sure anchor, when assaulted, and buffered with the fury of Satan's temptations. SECT. 5. The consideration of the wisdom of the Promiser establisheth faith. Fourthly, in making use of the promises, direct the eye of your faith to the wisdom of God, by which the various blessings that are held forth in them, are dispensed and given to believers in the fittest and best season; and thereby become both the more remarkable, and the more useful. The works of God's providence have a beauty and lustre set upon them, from the appointed time and season which he hath allotted unto them; the light of the day becomes more by the interposition of the night, the rest and darkness of the night is rendered more grateful by the labours and toils of the day. The former and the latter rain he gives in season, Jer. 5. 24. the one to bring forth and cherish the new sown seed, the other to ripen and make fruitful the harvest. The summer and winter by an inviolable ordinance he hath made to succeed each other, the one to be as a key to open the womb of the earth, that it might discharge itself of its many births; the other as a key to shut it, that so it might not languish and grow barren by an unintermitted travel. Now if the wisdom of God hath to these common mercies wherein his enemies have a share (as well as others,) set such appointed times, as may make them more useful and beneficial to his creatures: certainly he will not fail to perform to his people the promises of his free grace in that season and fullness of time, which may best suit with their welfare and his glory. Promises are not made and fulfilled at the same time, no more than sowing and reaping are on the same day. God hath in his Word recorded them, as so many discoveries of his immutable counsel and purpose, that thereby faith might have a sure ground to rely upon him in all exigencies, and to expect a relief from him; but the season and time of performance, God hath reserved to himself, as best knowing not only what to give, but when to give: so that believers though they may plead to God his promise, must yet be careful not to confine and limit him to times which they judge fittest; but wholly to resign themselves to his wise dispose, to whom every creature looks, and receive their meat in due season, Psal. 145. 15. If he feeds the ravens when they cry, much more will he satisfy his children when they pray; if to the one he opens his hand and gives liberally, to the other he will open his bowels, and give above what they can ask or think. This consideration of the wisdom of God in the timing of his promises to the fittest season, is exceeding useful to correct the hasty and impetuous desires of many Christians, who if their mouths be not filled as soon as they be opened, if God's promises be not fulfilled, as soon as they be pleaded, if they have not when they ask, do straightways like Rachel cry out they die, or like Jonah, That it is better for them to die then to live, Jonah 4. 3. because they do not obtain, not what Gods will, but what their own will suggests to be best. Watches that go fastest do not always go truest; no more are desires that are most hasty, most regular. It is good in prayer to have the desires winged with affection, and to be like an arrow drawn with full strength, but yet there must be a submission exercised unto the holy and wise will of God, that so it may appear that we seek to him in a way of begging, and not by a way of contest; that we make him not the object only of our duties and ourselves the end, but him to be both the object and the end of every service which we give unto him. CHAP. VII. Containing the 2, 3, 4, 5. positive rules for the right application of the promises. THe first direction hath much exceeded the bounds which at first were allotted unto it in my thoughts, who did not intent to make so great a disparity between it and the ensuing directions, as to make the one to have the dimensions of a large building, and the rest to be after the model of a small cottage. I shall therefore so far censure it myself, as to acknowledge that more hath been done, than the laws of a just symmetry and proportion can either defend or excuse, and so leave it: SECT. 1. Rule 2. Promises in their performance conditional. The second direction is, that though the promises be absolutely free in the making of them, having no other cause then Gods will, no other motive than his love and mercy; yet in their performance they are conditional, and have a dependency upon duties in us: they are fulfilled not only in us, but by us. To a clear explication of this rule, I shall propound an ordinary, but yet a necessary distinction concerning the promises, which is this: There are promises of grace, and there are promises which are made to grace. The one are so absolute, as that they do not depend upon any grace in us foregoing, or suppose any good qualifications in us to be partakers of them; such are the promises of conversion and regeneration, in which grace makes way for itself, and works all the initial preparations, without any concurrence or activity on our part, we being as fully passive in our second birth as we are in our first birth, in our regeneration as in our generation. The other promises made to grace are conditonal, not as supposing any thing to be performed by our strength and power, or as if the conditions were causes meriting the grace promised; but they are conditional in regard of a precedent qualification and fitness in the subject that is to partake of them, without which they cannot be fulfilled, grace being made the condition of grace. Thus pardon of sin is promised to him that reputes, justification to them that believes, glory to him that is sanctified, a crown to him that persevereth, and increase in grace to him that improveth grace received. But the absolute promise of conversion, and giving of spiritual life, though it have a kind of opposition unto conditional promises, in not requiring that aptitude and qualification of the subject by grace for the fulfilling of it, as the other do for the performance of them; yet is it not absolute in opposition to the use of external means, which God hath appointed as a necessary way to obtain converting grace. For as the decrees of God, though peremptory and unchangeable, do not exclude the endeavours of the creature, and the working of second causes; no more doth the absoluteness of God's promise in conversion shut out, but rather include the use and exercise of all means that lead to the end. True it is, that to hear savingly, to mingle faith with the Word, men cannot by any natural power or ability in the least measure do; but yet God hath commanded that they should attend upon the Ordinances, and afford their presence to hear the Word, when preached and delivered unto them: And though these be such actions which have no immediate influence to the begetting or working of grace, yet are they so far necessary, as that no man can promise unto himself that ever he shall be converted, who doth either neglect or refuse the using of those means, in which God is pleased to dispense his free and undeserved grace. This Direction is very useful in a double respect, to which it fitly serves, First, to silence the profane cavils of those who make no other use of their naural impotency to good, and of the power of God in conversion, then to exempt themselves from all attendance upon Ordinances, God being able by a powerful voice to bid them arise from the dead, when like Lazarus they lie in the grave of their sins; as well as heal them, when like the Cripple they lie at the pool of the Sanctuary, expecting the moving of the Spirit upon the waters, no impediment being able to cross or frustrate the purpose of the Almighty. But as in other works of God, so in conversion not his power only, but his will which is commensurable to his power, and doth modify it in the working, is to be observed and heeded. Some things he effecteth without means, not because his power is infinite and stands not in need of any other assistance; but because his will is it should so work: other things though as immediately wrought by himself, are accomplished in the use of means; not that either his will or power are unable to give an existence unto them without any secondary helps, but that his pleasure is to have them so wrought and perfected. Such is the work of making a new heart, of infusing spiritual life where it is wanting, which though it be wholly and only from God himself, is yet ordered by him to be effected in the use of means. As Physicians put their physic in certain syrups and liquors, which are vehicula medicinae, not at all of themselves operative, but serviceable to the medicine that works the cure: so doth God by his Ordinances which are canales gratiae, channels and conduit-pipes designed for grace to run in, convey and dispense the precious blessing of a new and spiritual life to those upon whom he is pleased to bestow it. And therefore as the plea of those is both weak and impious, who contemptuously turn their backs upon the preaching of the Word, and other external helps, as needless and unnecessary to conversion, it being Gods sole work: so their expectation in the close will be both sad and fruitless, ending rather in a just turning into hell by God, then in a saving and effectual turning thorough grace unto God. Secondly, it serves to excite and quicken believers to an unwearied diligence in holy duties; as being the ready and expedite way to obtain their desires in the fulfilling of any promise which they stand in need of. The penny was given to the labourer in the vineyard, not to the loiterer in the marketplace, Mat. 20. And the reward in the promise is not to him that sits still, and expects salvation to drop into his lap, but to him that seeks and pursues after it; making Gods promise not a ground for his idleness, but a spur and motive to his diligence. The promises are wells of salvation flowing with the waters of life, but yet the strong Christian that expects to be refreshed by them, must be at pains to draw water out of them, Isa. 12. 3. They are full breasts of consolation; but yet the weak Christian, who is as the newborn babe, or new-yeaned lamb, must suck these breasts, Isa. 66. 11. if he will be satisfied with their aliment. Etsi infirmus, etsi parvulus, (saith Austin) exige à Deo misericordiam. Non vides perbreves agnos, capitibus pulsantes ubera matrum, ut lacte satientur? Though thou be weak and little, yet seek and exact with importunity mercy from God. Do you not see how the young lambs do with their heads force down the milk from their dam, that they may be filled therewith? To wrestle and strive with God like Jacob for the gaining of a blessing, is not superfluous, because God hath promised it, but necessary, because he hath commanded it, Ezek. 36. 37. I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel, to do it for them. So, Jer. 29. 11, 12, I know the thoughts that I think towards you, thoughts of peace▪ and not of evil, yet shall ye call upon me, and ye shall go and pray unto me, and I will hearken unto you. Calling on God is not for his information, but for the exercise of believers obedience and submission. He will have faith as an hand to work, as well as an hand to receive. It was a scandal that Pharaoh brought upon the religion of the Israelites, that it made them idle, Exod. 5. 8. And it is a wrong done to the promises of the Gospel by carnal Libertines, who make use only of them to countenance their sloth, & not to quicken their obedience. None that ever I have heard of have held marriage vain, or unnecessary for the propagation of mankind, who have yet been of opinion that the soul is not generated, but immediately created and infused by God: no more can any man rationally conclude, that, because the promises of God are the declarations of his unchangeable purpose and will, therefore duties and endeavours are superfluous to the effecting of any good which he hath promised to confer upon us. SECT. 2. Rule. 3. There is a dependency of one Promise on another, which must not be broken, nor inverted. The third Rule or Direction is, that there is a sacred concatenation and dependency of one promise to another, which may not be violated, and a fixed order which may not be inverted. First, the mutual tye that is between the promises, in the application of them must not be broken: As the duties of the law are copulative, and may not in the obedience that is yielded unto it, be disjoined, James 2. 20. So are the blessings of the promises, which may not be made use of, as severed from each other, like lose and unstringed pearls; but as collected and made into one entire chain. God hath linked the promises of pardon and repentance together, and no man may presume that God will ever hearken unto him who begs the one, and neglects to seek the other. When he pacifies the conscience, he melts the heart, and works repentance, as well as seals forgiveness: So likewise hath God inseparably knit grace and glory together, as that none can lay a just claim to the one, who is not first made partaker of the other; no man can expect to be an heir of heaven, that is not first a Saint on earth. Holiness leads to happiness, as the rivulet to the sea, as the way to the end: the one is as the foot of the ladder, and the other as the top. Summitas scalae attingitur, non volando, sed ascendendo, saith Bernard: Glory which is the highest round, is not attained by flying, but by an orderly ascending unto it; the intermediate steps must not be skipped, but trodden. Oh! how vain then are those men's hopes, and how sinful are their practices, who stand upon the battlements of hell, and sport themselves with all the sensual delights of the flesh, trampling under their impure feet with scorn the precious promises of holiness, by which they should be moulded unto all obedience! and yet at the same time stretch forth an hand of presumption to lay hold on the promises of life and eternal glory, as if they were the true heirs and proprietaries thereof. But their forlorn condition which they would not see by the light of the Word, they shall read by the flames of hell, being infinitely▪ more pressed down under the weight of God's displeasure, and endless despair, than ever they were lifted up with the transient hopes of happiness, by a carnal and ungrounded presumption. Secondly, in the applying of the promises the order and method of them is not to be inverted, but to be observed. The promises which God hath made, are a full store-house of all kind of blessings; they include in them both the upper and the nether springs, the mercies of this life and of that which is to come: there is no good that can present itself as an object to our desires or thoughts, of which the promises are not a ground for faith to believe and hope to expect the enjoyment of. But yet our use and application of them must be regular, and such as suits both the pattern and precept which Christ hath given us. The pattern we have in that most absolute prayer of his, Mat. 6. 9, 10. wherein he shows what is chief to be desired by us; the Sanctification of his Name in our hearts, the coming of his kingdom into our souls, the doing of his will in our lives, are to be sought for before, and above our daily bread. We may not be more anxious for food, then for grace. The precept we have in his most heavenly Sermon, Mat. 6. 33. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you. Promises are to be improved in prayer and other duties, primarily for holiness, and secondarily for other outward comforts. The soul is more worth than body, as the body is more worth than the raiment, and therefore the principal care of every one ought to be to secure the welfare of his soul, by interesting himself in the promises of life and eternal happiness: but yet even here also a Method must be observed, and the Law of the Scripture must be exactly followed, which tells us that God first gives grace; and then glory, Psal. 84. 11. As it is a sin to divide grace from glory, and to seek the one without the other; so is it also a sin to be preposterous in our seeking, to look first after happiness, and then after holiness: no man can rightly be solicitous about the crown, but he must first be careful about the race; nor can any be truly thoughtful about his interest in the promises of glory, that doth not first make good his title to the promises of grace. Salvation, endless life, fellowship with Angels, and the firstborn of heaven; they (are as Austin calls them) promissum finale, the last things in order that God hath to give, or that we have to ask; and therefore we may not anticipate the order of them, but wait upon God in his own way. What the Apostle saith concerning the resurrection, 1 Cor. 15. 22, 23. That in Christ all shall be made alive, but every man in his own order; may be truly spoken concerning the promises of the Gospel, that in Christ all shall be fulfilled, but every promise in its own order. SECT. 3. Rule. 4. Meditate seriously, frequently on the Promises. The fourth Direction is to meditate throughly and frequently upon the promises, and to deal with them as the Virgin Mary did with the things that were spoken concerning Christ, she kept and pondered them in her heart, Luk. 2. 19 The limbeck doth not put any virtue into the herbs, but it distils and extracts whatever is efficacious and useful from them. The Bee doth not derive any sweetness to the flower, but by its industry it sucks the latent honey from it: so meditation conveyeth nothing of worth unto the promise, but it draws forth the sweetness, and discovers the beauty of it, which else without it would be little tasted or discerned. I have sometimes thought that a believers looking upon a promise, is not unlike a man's beholding of the heavens in a still and serene evening, who when he first casts up his eye, sees haply a star or two only to peep, and with difficulty to put forth a feeble and disappearing light, by and by he looks up again, and then both their number and lustre are increased, a while after he views the heavens again, and then the whole firmament, from every quarter, with a numberless multitude of stars, is richly enameled, as with so many golden studs: So when a Christian first turns his thoughts towards the promises, the appearances of light and comfort which shine from them, do ofttimes seem to be as weak and imperfect rays which neither scatter fears nor darkness; when again he sets himself to ripen and improve his thoughts upon them, than the evidence and comfort which they yield to the soul, is both more clear and distinct: but when the heart and affections are fully fixed in the meditation of a promise, Oh! what a bright mirror is the promise then to the eye of faith? What legions of beauties do then appear from every part of it, which both ravish and fill the soul of a believer with delight? How doth he sometimes admire free grace, whereby God becomes a debtor, not by taking any thing from us, but by promising great things unto us? How doth he triumph in the fullness of mercy which overflows in it, as being enough to fill the widest capacity, and to supply the greatest necessity? How doth he stay himself upon the stability of the promise, it being founded upon strength itself, The strength of Israel, who cannot lie? One promise throughly ruminated and meditated upon, is like to a morsel of meat well chewed and digested, which distributeth more nourishment and strength to the body, then great quantities taken down whole. Samson when he had made a great slaughter of his enemies, and laid them heaps upon heaps, yet he complains that though God had given him so mighty a deliverance, he was ready to die for thirst, Judges 15. 18. So many Christians who make it their work to heap promise upon promise, may yet be sorely distressed for want of comfort, if by meditation they do not dive into the depths of the promise. The water wherewith Samson was refreshed, came forth out of an hollow place which the Lord clavae in the jaw; and the springs of comfort which believers drink of, come out of the cliffs of the promise, which faith and meditation makes in it. Let me therefore persuade such as are desirous and willing to make the utmost of every promise, to put in practice this much neglected duty, without which every Ordinance is of little fruit. The Word as it must have preparation before it, which like the plough fits the ground for the reception of the seed; so must it have meditation to follow after, which is as the harrow to cover and hid the new-sown seed, or else the fowls of the air will pick it up. The Sacrament as it is food to be received with an appetite; so is it to be digested with meditation, else the nourishment will be little. The promises as they must be read in the Scripture with diligence; so must they be called to remembrance by many serious muse and actings of our thoughts upon them; else they will never prove strengthening and reviving cordials. Roses are sweeter in the still then on the stalk; and promises are more fragrant in the heart then in the book. The grapes hanging on the vine, do not make the wine that cheers the heart of man; but the grapes that are squeised and trodden in the winepress; no more do the promises as they stand in the Bible work joy and gladness; but as they are pondered in the mind, and like pressed grapes have their juice and virtue drawn from them, which by a percolation in the thoughts turns into a most sovereign and precious liquor. SECT. 4. Rule 5. Be much in the application of the Promises. The fifth direction is, to be much in the use and application of promises, though we do not find such visible effects either of grace or comfort issuing from them, as we expect or desire. Elijah when he went up to the top of mount Carmel, and fell upon his face before the Lord to pray for rain, he sent his servant seven times to look towards the sea, before he saw so much as the appearance of a cloud of an hand-breadth, yet was he not discouraged, 1. King. 18. 43. So believers though they have been much in musing upon the promises in their thoughts, frequent in pleading and spreading them before the Lord in prayer, and after all their lookings towards heaven, say as the servant of Elijah when he looked towards the sea, non est quicquam, there is nothing; yet must they not cast away their confidence in them; or neglect the daily use of them; because the promise, and the word that goeth forth out of God's mouth, shall not return unto him void, but shall accomplish that which he pleaseth, and it shall prosper in the thing whereunto he sent it, Isa. 55. 11. The manner of the fulfilling of it may be various, but the performance of it is most certain. The blessing of the promise descends sometimes like rain in visible showers, producing the sensible effects of joy, and peace in the soul; sometimes it falls like dew in a silent and imperceptible way; without making any discernible alteration in the heart of a believer: the virtue which it puts forth is real, but yet withal hidden and secret. As gold put and boiled in broth, helps to make it strengthening and cordial, which if weighed afterwards in the scale, is found to lose little or nothing of its former weight, or to suffer any dimiunition of its substance: so the promise when much meditated on, when frequently applied by a believer to his present straits, yields a secret influence and support, though to his apprehension no virtue or quickening doth appear to have issued from it. Then it is as the cork to the net to keep it floating in a sea of difficulties, when every moment we look for nothing else but a dismal and irrecoverable perishing amidst those many rolling waves and billows that pass over us. This direction I propound the rather, because that Christians lying under fears, darkness, and temptations; are not seldom like hasty patients under diseases and infirmities, who if they find not a present benefit in the use of Physic, either in the removal, or in the abatement of their distempers, do straightways conclude, that it were better for them to bear the pain of the disease, then to trouble themselves with the daily applications of fruitless remedies & prescripts; not considering that Physic may be useful to prevent the danger of the disease, when it doth not work the cure; to keep them from growing worse, though it do not make them better: So believers when by the use of promises and other Ordinances they find no sensible alteration for the better in respect of their present condition, are apt to throw off the use of means, as things that stand them in little or no stead. Though they use the precepts of the Word, as a lamp to guide their feet, yet they stumble; though they use the promises as a staff to support them, yet they fall; though they beg and pray for strength, yet they are feeble; to what end therefore should they be much in the use of such helps, as they cannot find either to relieve them, or better them? Such expostulations and complaints I shall only answer, with a suitable story related in the lives of the ancient Fathers, which is this: One of the fraternity came to the old Father; and complained, Father, I do often desire of the ancient Fathers some instructions for the good of my soul, and whatsoever they tell me, I forget all. The old man had two empty vessels, and bid him bring the one, and pour water into it, and wash it clean, and then pour out the water, and set it up clean in its place. Which when the young man had accordingly done, he demanded, Which now of the two vessels is the more clean? The young man answered, That into which I poured water, and washed it. Then replied the old Father, So is the soul which oftentimes heareth God's Word, though it remember not what it hath heard, yet it is more cleansed from sin then that soul that never comes to hear. And so may I say to them that complain, they ruminate often upon the promises in their thoughts, plead them in their prayers, read them in the Word, but yet find no benefit or fruit from them; that in so doing, they are not only more holy and free from lusts then others who neglect them; but far better than otherwise themselves would be, should they not be employed in such spiritual and blessed services. CHAP. VIII. Contains five other positive Rules for the right application of the Promises. SECT. 1. Rule. 6. Continue in a holy waiting upon God. THe sixth Rule or direction is, to abide and continue in a holy waiting upon God, until he who is the maker of the promises, become the fulfiller of them. Our eyes wait upon the Lord our God, (saith the Psalmist) until that he have mercy upon us, Ps. 123. 2. Some promises are like unto the Almond-tree which putteth out upon the first approach of the spring, and bringeth forth an early fruit: they are not long pleaded, ere they be fulfilled; and have their blessings like ripe fruit to drop into the mouth of the eater. Others are like to the Mulberry-tree, which is slow and backward in the imparting of its sap unto the branches: they are long before they bud forth into any appearances which may discover any step and progress to be made in order to their future accomplishment: so that they who are the inheriters of them, though they need not to fear their failing the appointed time, yet they need patience to expect and wait their fulfilling. The great promise which God made to Abraham of multiplying his seed like the stars of heaven▪ Gen. 15. 5. did for two hundred and fifteen years continue its motion like to a slow-paced planet, having in all that tract of time gone little of that course which it was to finish: for Abraham was seventy five years old when the promise was made, and an hundred years old when Isaac who was the first blossom of that promise was born: Isaac was threescore years old before Jacob was borne, Jacob was an hundred and thirty years old when he went into Egypt, and then there were no more than seventy souls that had issued from the loins of Abraham. But yet in the latter two hundred and fifteen years, When the time of the promise drew nigh which God had sworn to Abraham, the people grew and multiplied in Egypt, Act. 7. 17. They that were but seventy at their going into Egypt, were at their coming forth six hundred thousand three thousand five hundred and fifty, the males only being numbered from twenty years old and upward, besides the tribe of Levi which was forbidden to be counted, Num. 1. 46, 47. Seeing therefore that there is ofttimes a long interval between the seedtime and the harvest of the promise, between its making and its fulfilling, it is necessary for believers to wait upon God, who is optimus opportunitatis arbiter, one that can best date and time his own promises; and to expect with patience the appointed time of the promise, which at the end shall speak and not lie: Though it tarry, wait for it, Hab. 2. 3. Now if you ask, what waiting is: It is not any particular grace, as varnish is not a particular colour; but it is the companion well-nigh of all graces, and therefore in Scripture we shall find it to be joined to the chief of graces, so as by its conjunction with them, to add a perfection and lustre to them. It is joined with faith, Isa. 28. 16. He that believeth, shall not make haste. With hope, Lam. 3. 26. It is good that a man should both hope, and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord. With patience, Jam. 5. 7. The husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it. With submission and contentment, Isal. 37. 7. Rest in the Lord, [or be silent to the Lord] and wait patiently for him. With perseverance, Hos. 12. 6. Keep mercy and judgement, and wait on thy God continually. All these graces thus coupled with waiting, is a believer to exercise in his pleading before God the performance of any promise, and to take heed that he let not his faith to end in diffidence, his hope to languish into despair, his submission and patience to turn into murmur, his perseverance to expire in backsliding, and to say as that wicked King, This evil is of the Lord, why should I wait upon him any longer? 2 King. 6. 33. A good heart, though it will not let God wait long, no not at all for its obedience, yet it will wait as long as God sees good for his promise, saying only with David, Remember the word unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope, Psal. 119. 49. SECT. 2. Rule. 7. Make choice of some special promises to resort to in extremity. The seventh direction is, To single and cull out of the many promises which God hath made for pardon, holiness, protection, provision, some one or two of every kind, which we may resort unto with speed in any extremity. Weak and infirm persons, besides the many Physical herbs, distilled waters, magisterial powders, costly electuaries with which their closerts are plentifully furnished, have usually some peculiar cordial which in the day they carry about them, and at night set at their bed's head to prevent and repel fainting fits▪ so should believers besides those promises of all sorts with which they are to store themselves, have in a constant readiness some few special promises, which upon every occasion that may befall them, they may quickly have recourse unto, both for support and comfort. And here though I shall not prescribe and limit any in their choice, but leave them to the free use of such Scriptures and promises, as themselves by experience have found to be full of life and sweetness, yet it will not be amiss to recommend the use of some few eminent promises of divers kinds out of the full store-house of the Word, which may serve as so many meet cordials to revive the spirit of drooping Christians amidst the several kinds of necessities that may afflict them. Are any burdened with the guilt of sin, so as that their soul draweth nigh unto the pit of despair? What more joyful tidings can ever their ears hear, than a proclamation of free mercy made by the Lord himself unto believing and repenting sinners? What more glorious and blessed sight can their eyes ever behold▪ than the Name of God written in sundry of his choice attributes, as in so many golden letters for them to read? 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, Exod. 34. 6, 7. He is the Lord, who only hath jus vitae & necis, the absolute power of life and death in his hands; but he is the Lord God merciful, who far more willingly scattereth his pardons in forgiving, then executeth his justice in condemning; like the Bee that gathers honey with delight, but stings not once unless she be much provoked. He is gracious, not incited to mercy by deserts in the object, but moved by goodness in himself; his love springs not from delight in our beauty, but from pity to our deformity. He is long-suffering, bearing with patience renewed and often repeated injuries, which he might by power revenge upon him who is the doer. He is abundant in goodness; grace overfloweth more in him then sin can do in any. Sin in the creature is but a vicious quality, but goodness in him is his nature. He is abundant in truth; as he is good in making the promises, so is he true in performing them; when men deal unfaithfully with him, he breaks not his Covenant with them; He keeps mercy for thousands; former ages have not exhausted the treasures of his mercy, so as that succeeding generations can find none: there are still fresh reserves of mercy, and that not for a few, but for thousands. He forgives iniquity, transgression and sin; not pence, but talents are forgiven by him; not sins of the least size are only pardoned, but sins of the greatest dimensions▪ And as this promise in which the Name of God is so richly described, doth fully answer the hesitancies, doubts and perplexities of such who fear their iniquities for number to be so many, for aggravation to be so great, as that sometimes they question, Can God pardon? sometimes, Will he ever show mercy to such a wretched Prodigal? So likewise may that blessed promise made unto believers, Hos. 14. 5, 6, 7. exceedingly support such who mourn under their want of holiness, and complain of the weakness of their grace, fearing that the little which they have attained unto, goes rather backwards then forwards: God himself having promised that he will be as a dew unto them which shall make them to put forth in all kinds of growth. They shall grow as the lily, and cast forth their roots as Lebanon, their branches shall spread, and their beauty shall be as the Olive-tree, they shall revive as the corn, and grow as the vine. What more comprehensive summary can there be either of God's goodness, or of a believers desires, than there is in this one promise? wherein he hath promised to make them grow in beauty like the lily, in stability like the Cedar, in usefulness like the Olive, whose fruit serves both for light and nourishment, in spreading like the vine, and in their increase like the corn; God himself being both the planter and waterer of all their graces. To them who are full of fears through the approach of dangers, which they have no hope to avoid, or power to overcome. How full of encouragement and comfort is that promise of protection and safety? When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burnt, neither shall the flame▪ kindle upon thee, Isa. 43. 2. Water and fire are two evils, in which none can be with their nearest friends without perishing with them. Who can save a Jonah when cast into a boisterous sea, but God? And who can walk in the fiery furnace with the three children, and not be consumed, but the Son of God? In the prison one friend may be with another, in banishment he may accompany him in the battle he may stand by him and assist him, but in the swelling waters, and in the devouring flames none can be a relief to any but God: and he hath promised to believers to be with them in the midst of both these, that so in the greatest extremities which can befall them they may fully rest assured, that nothing can separate God from them, but that he will either give them deliverance from troubles, or support them under troubles; Martyrs non ●ripuit, sed nunquid descruit? saith Austin. He did not take the Martyrs out of the flames, but did he forsake them in the flames? Lastly, to them, the meanness of whose condition may seem to expose them above others to hunger, cold, nakedness, evils that make life itself far more bitter than death; how full of divine sweetness is that blessed promise of provision? The young lions do lack and suffer hunger, but they that seek the Lord shall not lack any good thing, Psal. 34. 10. The Septuagint renders it the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the great wealthy men of the earth, who like beasts of prey live upon spoil and rapine, who think that in the hardest times that can come they shall be eaten up last; they shall be bitten with hunger, and perish by famine, when they who fear the Lord shall be in want of nothing. The widows little barrel of meal in the famine yielded a better supply than Ahab his storehouse and granary, her cruse had oil in it, when his Olive-yards had none. Oh! how securely and contentedly then may a believer, who acts his faith in such promises, lay himself down in the bosom of the Almighty in the worst of all his extremities! not much unlike the infant that sleeps in the arms of his tender mother with the breast in his mouth, from which as soon as ever it wakes, it draws a fresh supply that satisfies its hunger, and prevents its unquietness. SECT. 3. Rule. 8. Consider of the examples to whom promises have been fulfilled. The eighth direction is, in the making use of any promise▪ to parallel our condition with such examples which may be unto us as so many clear instances of the goodness and faithfulness of God in his giving unto others the same or the like mercies which we seek and beg for ourselves. As the promises are useful to strengthen faith; so are examples to confirm and assure sense, which is continually apt to implead what faith believes, and to question what God hath spoken. God hath promised, that though our sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be white as wool, Isa. 1. 18. But sense suggesteth, What possibility is there that ever such a change should be? can soap▪ nitre▪ water make scarlet to be as white as undipped wool? no more can it be that the ingrained spots and stains of sins so often reiterated, so long persisted in, should be done away, and the sinner be clothed with the white robe of innocency. God saith, He will heal backslidings, and love freely, Hos. 14. 4. He will love freely without respect of persons, he will pardon freely without respect of sins; but sense that shutteth the door of hope which he hath opened; Sometimes calleth in question his power, Can he work wonders among the dead? Can he raise from the rottenness of the grave such as have lain long putrefying in it; Sometimes disputeth his mercy, Will he ever remember the chief of sinners? Will he be gracious to the rebellious, that have both neglected and refused the tenders of salvation which have been often made? Now when a believer beholds the pregnant examples both of his power and love set forth in the Scriptures, in his converting a stubborn Ma●asseh, in his translating into Paradise a bloody robber, in his casting forth of devils out of Mary Magdalen a notorious harlot, in his changing Paul a persecutor into an Apostle, in his compassionating and healing Peter, that sealed his backsliding with a curse, in his bringing salvation to Zaccheus, a hateful extortioner: then the expostulations of sense and carnal reasonings are put to silence; then he concludes with confidence that the promises are a sanctuary for the penitent, and lifts up his feet with cheerfulness to run unto them; then he pleads the bounty and faithfulness of God in the performance of his promises unto others, as a strong argument to show the like mercy unto him. Thus David in his low condition strengthens his faith and hope in God from this ground, Our Fathers trusted in thee, and were not confounded, Psal. 22. 6, 7. This direction is always of use to believers in the ordinary and daily application which they make of the Promises, because examples, as they are powerful in persuading obedience to every precept which commands it; so are they also, efficacious to strengthen & confirm faith when exercised on any promise. But it is chief useful in extremities, when dangers which are insuperable do at any time environ us. Besides the promises which faith useth as a support, it is good to have in our eye some such example as Daniel, whom God preserved in the lion's den, sealing up their mouths by his power that they should not hurt him, before the King had sealed the mouth of the den with his signet, that he might not come forth. When sad desertions and temptations do afflict us, it is useful to call to our remembrance some such instance as Heman, who complains that he was laid in the lowest pit, that he was afflicted with all God's waves, that he was ready to die from his youth up, that he was distracted while he suffered his terrors, Psal. 88 And yet afterwards he becomes the King's Seer in the words of God, to lift up the horn, 1 Chron. 25. 5. That is, he as a Prophet is especially employed to set forth the mighty acts of God's power, in Psalms and Songs of praise and thanksgiving. When sore afflictions are multiplied upon us, which for their weight are more heavy than lead, for their bitterness more bitter than gall and wormwood, it is good to have in our thoughts some such example as Job, that we be not wearied and faint in our minds. Take, my brethren, the Prophets, who have spoken unto us in the Name of the Lord, as examples of suffering affliction▪ and of patience, saith the Apostle James 5. 10▪ What a map, and spectacle of misery is Job made above others? How various, and how great were the afflictions with which he was exercised? Sabeans Chaldeans destroy his substance, fire from heaven consumes his servants, a great wind smites the four corners of the house, and destroys all his children, ulcers, boyles break forth upon his body▪ keen and unjust censures from his friends vex his soul. And yet the happy close and end that the Lord makes with him, is as famous as his miseries were▪ His riches and substance are doubled, his number in children equalled, his body healed, and his name cleared by God himself. These and such like instances when suited with a believers condition, do contribute much to the suppressing and keeping of that despondency and dejection of mind, which the extremity of trials in any kind is apt to subject the best of Christians unto, and cause them to renew their confidence in the promises, and in hope to expect the performance of them, because that others in the same or not unlike case with themselves have found the faithfulness and goodness of God in his supporting them under their burdens, and giving perfect deliverance from them according to his promise. SECT. 4. Rule. 9 Preserve communion with the holy Spirit entire. The ninth rule or directions is, To keep, and preserve entire our communion with the holy Spirit. The dependency which every believer hath on the Spirit is very great, he being unto the soul, as the soul is unto the body, the original and principle of all spiritual life and motion. What are any until he quicken them, and by his power fashion them unto holiness, but as so many liveless lumps of undigested clay? And what are the best without his continual breathe upon them, but as so many disjointed and weak members, which have neither constancy nor uniformity in their motions or actions? Grace in its vigour and strength abides in the heart, as light in the house, by way of emanation and effusion, rather than by inherency. An instrument when it hath an edge set upon it, doth not at all cut any thing, till it be guided and moved by the hand of an artificer; no more doth a Christian when he hath an habitual aptitude through grace to work, yet do or perform any service without the concurrence and assistance of the Spirit of Christ, quickening, exciting and applying the habitual power unto particular duties. Necessary therefore it is, that believers be circumspect in maintaining their communion with him, and not to provoke him to stand at a distance from them, who is the fountain both of their grace and comfort. But the necessity of it will more particularly appear, if we consider in how much need we daily stand, of the constant assistance and powerful operations of the holy Spirit, to make the applications of all the promises to be effectual unto us both for support and comfort. He alone it is, who is the mighty worker of that noble and divine grace of saving faith, by which believers are enabled to lay hold of the promises, and by them of Christ, in whom they all meet, as so many lines in their common centre. He it is, who opens the eyes of the understanding, and fills the heart with an heavenly light, by which the worth and preciousness of those things which are given of God in the promises, are judged and discerned. He it is, who brings to our remembrance, the faithful say of the Gospel, and makes them to be as words spoken in season to him that is weary. He it is, who teacheth believers to plead the promises in their supplications unto God, and when they know not what to pray for as they ought, maketh request for them with groan that cannot be uttered. He it is, who by way of obsignation doth seal and ratify the promises unto the faithful, and that in a peculiar and transcendent manner. In the assurance and security which is given for outward things, we only have the wax sealed, with the impression and sculpture of the seal, the signet sealing is not at all looked after, if the one be safe, it matters not though the other be lost: But in the confirmation of the promises, believers do possess both; they have the holy Spirit▪ who is as the seal sealing, and the graces of the Spirit, which are as the seal sealed and printed upon their hearts. The Spirit by his special testimony doth assure them of the certainty of their salvation, and seal them up unto it, to that of Paul, Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirits, that we are the children of God, and heirs with Christ. The graces of the Spirit which are his lively image and impress upon their souls, do also evidence and confirm the same thing, according to that of the Apostle, Hereby we know that we are passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren, 1 Joh. 3. 14. It is therefore a direction of great importance unto all, who would gladly reap profit and advantage from the promises, to keep firm and to strengthen their communion with the Spirit, who is the only Counsellor to instruct them how to manage the promises to the best improvement of them, the most powerful Advocate to furnish them with arguments to plead at the throne of grace their right unto them and their interest in them, the most effectual Comforter to support their hearts with confidence, to fill them with joy, while they wait upon God for the performance of his promises unto them. If he be grieved by our careless demeanour towards him, it is not any promise that can make us glad; if he be provoked to withdraw and suspend his light, there are no irradiations from the promises that can free us from the darkness of desertion; if he be made to turn our enemy by voluntary defections from him, none of the promises can speak peace unto us. How vain and ungrounded then are the presumptions of those who build their hopes of heaven and salvation upon the promises of mercy, & yet neglect all communion with the Spirit of holiness? Who rest in the testimony of their own spirit, misguided by false rules, and cheated by Satan's subtleties, & look not at all after the testimony and witness of the Spirit, without whom all the promises of the Gospel, are but as deeds and instruments with Labels hanging at them without seals to confirm them, which do not operate, or convey any thing of right unto those that are possessed of them. SECT. 5. Rule. 10. Be truly thankful for the least dawnings of mercy. The tenth direction in the right use of the promises, no less weighty than any is, To be truly thankful for the least dawnings of mercy for the smallest pledge and earnest of comfort which the promises at any time do afford unto us. The Angel rebuked, and reproached those who despised the day of small things, Zach. 4. 10. who with mournful eyes, with unbelieving and misgiving hearts did look upon the poor and mean beginnings of the rebuilding of the Temple, as such which were altogether unlikely to terminate in a glorious structure, and to have the top-stone thereof laid with shoutings and acclamations of joy. And no less are those Christians to be reproved who esteem any of the consolations of God to be small; who if they be not at first filled with the spiritual suavities of the promises, take little or no notice of the support and sustentation which they receive daily from them; who if they presently enjoy not what they hastily desire, can neither thankfully accept of any pledges of mercy which God hath freely vouchsafed them, nor patiently wait for the sure performance of the promises which he hath made them. It is the usual method of God to fulfil his promises by certain steps and degrees, to make his salvation to break forth like the morning which gins in an imperfect twilight; but ceaseth not till it grow up into a bright day. The first glimmerings of peace and comfort which spring from the promises, are accompanied with great mixtures of darkness, but yet they are of a growing and prevailing nature; and therefore are not to be despised, but to be thankfully acknowledged and rejoiced in, as the happy earnests of an ensuing day, in which the soul is as full of spiritual serenity and joy, as the firmament is of light, when the Sun is in its vertical point. In the bestowing of his favours, God deals with believers as Boaz did with Ruth, he first gave her a liberty to glean in his fields, than invited her to eat bread at his table, and to dip her morsel in the vinegar, and lastly gave himself: So God first in a sparing manner, and at some distance makes a discovery of his love and good will unto them, then in a more familiar and friendly way he encourageth them by his promises to draw near unto him, and to taste how good the Lord is to those that fear him: And then as the compliment of all, he gives his Spirit into their bosoms to assure them of his love, and their interest in whatever might make them perfectly happy. After that ye believed, ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise, saith the Apostle, Ephes. 1. 13. But the ready and speedy way to obtain all this, is to be truly thankful for the least appearance of mercy that shines forth from the promises, and to count it worthy of all acceptation, to receive it with such joy as the morning was wont to be anciently saluted, when the people went out, and cried, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Welcome such light. To such God speaks, as our Saviour did to Nathanael, Joh. 1. 50. Because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the figtree, believest thou? thou shalt see greater things than these. Art thou thankful for a spark, for a beam of light? thou shalt be satisfied and filled with the fountain of light itself. Dost thou bless God▪ for crumbs that fall from his table? thou shalt be feasted with the marrow and fat things of life and salvation. Ingrato nihil augetur, sed quod acceperat vertitur ei in perniciem. Fidelis autem in modico, censetur dignus munere▪ ampliori, saith Bernard: The ungrateful person receives no increase, but what he hath formerly received turns to his ruin. But the grateful person is always thought worthy of more ample rewards. This direction I gladly would that those Christians should often have in their thoughts, who are so much in complaining what they want, as that they never bless God for what they enjoy. When any come into their company, their ears are continually afflicted with their mournful notes, how few their comforts are, how little the benefit is which they reap by the promises, but their hearts are never quickened to bless God on their behalf, by their thankful acknowledgement of the least mercy that God hath vouchsafed them; when as indeed it is a temper most befitting a Christian not to let the smallest of his favours to pass unobserved or unacknowledged. The swine eats the fruit that falls from the tree, but never looks up from whence it comes; but the Dove picks not up a grain without casting up its eye to heaven; it eats and then looks up, then picks again, and then looks up again: And so should a believer lift up an eye of thankfulness unto God for every beam of light and hope which he beholds in his Word, though it shine only through a narrow cranny. I thank God in Christ, saith holy Baines, sustentation I have, but spiritual suavities I taste none. When we do not lie rejoicing in the arms and bosom of God as a Father, it is a mercy worthy of our thankfulness, that we may lodge safely in his house; when we do not behold the smiles of his face, it is a mercy that we may hear his voice in his Word; when we have not the ring put on as an ornament, it is a favour that we have any piece of a broken ring left with us, as a pledge and token that in our extremity he will not forsake us. To increase the number of these positive rules, were a task not in itself difficult, nor yet happily to many weak ones altogether unnecessary; but because it is fare easier for a Physician to write Recipes, then for a Patient to take the many repeated and continued potions: I shall forbear to add more, as fearing I have been already too burdensome and prolix in these; and shall only recommend what hath been spoken to the serious practice of believers without the least infringing of their liberty to use others which either their own or others experience may suggest as profitable. And so I pass on to the second sort of rules which are Cautionary. The end of which chief serves to discover sundry errors and mistakes, which in the application and use of the promises are as dangerous to believers, as unseen rocks and unfounded shallows are to mariners; and therefore are to be carefully heeded, and to be avoided by them. CHAP. IX. Cautionary Rules for the application of the Promises. SECT. 1. Rest not in a general faith. THe first cautionary Rule is, to Take heed of resting in a general faith, which goeth no further then to give a naked assent unto the promises of the Gospel as true; but doth not put forth itself to receive and embrace them as good. True faith is not an act of the understanding only but a work of the heart also, Rom. 10. 10. With the heart man believeth unto righteousness. As it yields an assent unto the truth of the promise; so it exerciseth fiducial application of it unto its self, and thereby drawing near unto Christ, wholly throws and casts itself upon him for life and happiness, not at all looking after any other help. Maldonate is pleased to make himself and his reader merry with that usual distinction of our Divines, by which faith is distinguished into an historical, miraculous, temporary, and saving faith. And playing upon the word Fides; saith, that the Protestants have Tota fides quot in Lyrâ. As many faiths as there be strings upon a fiddle. But it is not his scoff and sarcasme that can elude either the truth or the necessity of the distinction: when as the Scripture tells us of many that believed, and yet did never embrace Christ with their hearts, as their only Saviour, or confidently rely upon the promises of his mercy. Simon Magus is said to be a believer, Act. 8. 13. And yet Saint Peter tells him that he is in the gall of bitterness and the bond of iniquity, ver. 23. The multitude believe in Christ's name, but yet he would not commit himself unto them, for he knew what was in man, John 2. 23. He did not own them as those to whom he would impart the saving mysteries of his Gospel; or join himself unto them in the same bond of love and friendship, as he did with those who with an entire and sincere heart believed on him. The five foolish Virgins went fare in their waiting for the bridegroom; they took lamps with them to meet him, and kept their lights for a season burning; but yet at his coming the door was shut against them, Mat. 25. 11. And shall the faith of God's lect and sanctified ones be of no better alloy, than the faith of hypocrites and other wicked and impenitent sinners? Yea, shall the confession of Peter concerning Christ, Mat. 16. 16. Thou art the Son of the living God, be no whit better than that of the devils? Mat. 8. 29. who with a loud voice cry out, Jesus thou Son of God, etc. Shall it be distinguished from it no more in its worth, than it is in its words? But as the palest Gold doth much exceed the most glittering Alchemy, which though it seem to outvie the gold in its lustre; yet hath it not the least affinity with it in its real virtue and worth: so the smallest grain of saving faith by which a believer closeth with Christ in the promises, is more precious and excellent than a mere assent unto the truth of the Word, which resteth in the understanding, but hath no quickening influence upon the will and desires: the one being only a bare credence, and the other a divine affiance. This was it which put a wide difference between Peter's confession of Christ, and the Devil's acknowledgement of him, as Austin well observes, Hoc dicebat Petrus, ut Christum fide amplecteretur; hoc dicebant Daemons, ut Christus ab cis recederet: This spoke Peter, that he might embrace Christ; this said the devils, that Christ might departed from them. And this fiducial application is the distinguishing character which the Scripture makes between the faith of true believers and others; it being sometimes described by a rolling and staying of its self upon God, Isa. 50. 10. sometimes by a trusting in him, Isa. 26. 4. sometimes by receiving of Christ, Colos. 2. 6. sometimes by a coming unto him, Joh. 6. 36. All which expressions do speak the spiritual motions and affections of the heart towards Christ in cleaving and adhering unto him, which believers only exercise and not hypocrites or castaways. And therefore they are said not to rely on God, or to look towards him, Isa. 31. 1. Not to trust in him, Psal. 78. 22. not to receive Christ, John 1. 11. not to come unto him, John 5. 40. Their faith is a form of faith, but it wants the power and efficacy which accompanies saving faith. This Cautionary Rule is with the more circumspection to be heeded, in regard that multitude of professors do rest themselves contented in that general acknowledgement and assent which they yield to the truths of the Gospel, though haply the chief enducement by which they are led unto it, be no other than custom▪ education, or the authority of the Church. They think that the believing there is a God, that Christ is the Saviour of the world, that he died for sinners, is faith enough to carry them out of the wilderness into Canaan, out of the world into heaven. But alas! this and much more may be believed, and yet no benefit at all accrue unto them who are persuaded of the certainty of these supernatural verities. Here the Logicians rule holds true, Medicina curate Socratem, non hominem; Physic is not given to man's nature, to cure the Species, but to every man in individu●, to heal his person. Christ and his promises are not beneficial unto any, but unto them who make a particular application of both unto themselves. What comfort is it to an insolvent debtor to believe that there are rich mines of gold in that land into which he is fled to shelter himself from his creditors? What relief is it to a thirsty man, that there is a full vintage of cordial and refreshing wines growing not fare from him, if he have no hope that he shall taste the least drop of it? What satisfaction is it to a condemned person to be assured that there is a pardon granted and sealed for many, if there be no ground for him to conceive that his name is included in it? No more can it advantage any man to believe that Christ died to reconcile sinners to God, and that by a glorious resurrection from the grave, he hath ascended the throne of Majesty, and lives for ever to make intercession for them; unless with the belief of these blessed truths, there be conjoined a particular reliance upon Christ for salvation, and a casting of a man's self into the arms of his free mercy for the obtaining of the forgiveness of sins, and the justifying of his person at the tribunal of God. Do not the devils believe a God and tremble? James 1. 19 Do they not acknowledge Christ his Son? Luk. 4. 34. And bow the knee unto him? Phil. 2. 10. Do not they know and believe that Christ died in general for sinners, and that they which fix their confidence in him shall be saved by him? What article of the Creed is it, which they yield not an assent unto? And shall the faith whereby believers are justified, not exceed the faith of these infernal spirits? But if it be said, That the assent which the devils yield is full of force and coaction, and is commanded by the evidence and Majesty of those infallible truths which they do not at all love or affect; but the general belief which Christians have of the revealed truths of the Gospel, is altogether free and voluntary, and is thereby distinguished from the faith of devils. This difference, though it may seem at first blush somewhat specious, yet is it both insufficient and impertinent for that end to which it is assigned; in regard that the distinction which it makes of the one assent from the other, is from what is merely accidental, and not from what is essential to the nature and being of faith. For they who make faith to be an act of the understanding only, and to consist in an assent unto the truth of those things which God hath revealed, cannot properly fetch the essential difference which is between the faith of devils and the faith of Christians, from the voluntariness or involuntarinesse of the assent, from the liking or disliking of the truths which they believe, because those are acts of another faculty in which by them faith is not acknowledged to be seated. Besides the assent which the good Angels give unto the glorious truths of the Gospel, which with diligence they look into, 1 Pet. 1. 12. is both voluntary and delightful, and yet it is most distinct and differing from the credence and assent which believers do give unto the same truths, it not being accompanied with a particular application and reliance for life and salvation, as it always is in believers, who do with a justifying faith embrace and apply the promises of the Gospel unto themselves. A man may be called to be a witness to a Will to aver the truth of it, though he have no legacy given unto him in it: so the Angels as so many heavenly witnesses do affirm and assent unto the truth of those things which Christ hath declared in his Gospel as in his last Will and Testament: But believers are as so many Legatees, which have particular blessings therein bequeathed unto them, & therefore must not rest in a general belief of the truth of the things, but must claim their propriety and interest in them, before they can ever have any benefit or comfort from them. But if it be further objected, that the Scripture doth in many places attribute salvation to a general faith, and that the Centurion's faith which our Saviour so much commended, Mat. 8. 10. seemeth to imply no more than an historical belief of Christ's power and divinity: that Peter's confession of Christ, Mat. 16. 16. was but general: that Martha's faith, John. 11. 27. was of the same stamp: that Saint John's character of the new birth, is set forth by a general faith, Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is borne of God, 1. Joh. 5. To the solving of this doubt a double answer may be given. First, that in those times, the difficulty lay rather upon the assent then upon the affiance, and the question than was more about the person of Christ, than the office of Christ. Now because it was a great matter in the first dawnings of the Gospel to believe him to be the Messiah, whose outward appearance was so mean and contemptible to the eye of the world; therefore doth the Scripture much magnify and heighten this act. Secondly, though the Scripture-expressions do lay much upon this one act of faith, yet do they not exclude, but suppose the other acts of faith to be joined with it. To a true believing there are three acts necessary, Knowledgr, Assent, Fiducial application; but yet the Scripture doth oftentimes describe faith by one of these acts, Joh. 17. 3. This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. In knowledge there are couched and included the other two acts of faith, in which the powerful reception and embracing of Christ for salvation doth chief consist. So when it is set forth by an assent unto the truths of the Gospel, there is employed not only a bare persuasion of the mind, but an affectionate cleaving and adherence of the heart unto the promises of God made in Christ, by which the soul of a believer is fortified against despair, which the historical belief of them doth not in the least measure expel or overcome. And therefore though the Papists do deride this special apprehension and application of Christ, as a mere conceit, and unwarranted fancy; though formal professors do carelessly neglect it, and take all to be well enough with them, as long as they do not question what the Scripture reveals; yet must not any that look after the real enjoyment of comfort and peace from the promises, please themselves in a general assent, which is little worth; but must endeavour to clear and evidence their peculiar interest in Christ and his promises, by a fiducial application of them unto themselves. SECT. 2. Rule. 2. Poor not on the measure of Humiliation. The second Cautionary Rule is to take heed of poring too much upon the measure and degrees of humiliation; as if there were any certain and regular standard by which all humiliation must be measured, before ever we may justly claim an interest in the promises, or so much as put forth an hand to touch the hem of Christ's garment, that our bloody issues may be healed. True it is, that the invitation which Christ makes Mat. 11. 28. is only to them that labour and are heavy-laden, to come unto him, that he may give them rest; because they do best taste the sweetness, and prise the happy enjoyment of an heavenly rest and peace. But yet all whom Christ invites to come to him, are not alike burdened with the weight and pressure of their sins, or do equally labour under the sense of God's wrath and displeasure. Some are not only heavy-laden with their sins, but have their bones broken with the weight of them, so as that they roar by reason of the continual disquietness of their heart. Others though they walk mournfully under their sins, yet are not bowed down under so great a weight, nor express themselves in such loud and passionate complaints. True it is, that Christ as a Physician goes only to the sick, and not to the whole, Luk. 5. 31. But yet all are not afflicted with the same violence, though all be sick of the same disease. Some are so affected as that for a season they seem to lie under the Calenture and rage of despair itself. Others again are sick of their sins▪ after a more mild and gentle manner: like to an overcharged stomach, they loathe what before they loved: the iniquities that before they swallowed down with delight they vomit up in their confession to God, and acknowledge them to be full of nothing but bitterness. But yet wearisome nights through the grinding pains of a guilty and stung conscience, are not appointed unto them: they lie down upon the bed of sorrow, but not upon the rack of horror. Now the ground of this wide difference that is between the children of God in their first conversion and turning unto himself, doth chief arise from the wisdom of God, and the liberty which he is pleased to take unto himself in the effecting of his counsels and purposes. For God being a most voluntary agent, doth not tie himself to a like certain and unaltered constancy in the time, measure and proportion of his working upon his children; but being free and wise, without limit, and above measure, doth much diversify sometimes the duration and continuance of their humiliation and sorrow, by making the darkness in some to be shorter, & in others to be longer. Sometimes he differenceth the measure, making the pangs and throws of the new birth to be in some both few and easy; in others to be many and full of extremity. Sometimes he altars the most usual manner of his working, in proportioning sin and sorrow to each other, and doth not make the terrors and affrightments for sin to be parallel to the heinousness of the rebellions that have been persisted in against himself. Paul a persecutor is from heaven smitten with trembling, and astonishment, so as that for three days he sees neither the light of the sun, nor tastes aught of any food, Act. 9 9 But, Zaccheus a Publican & extortioner, is not stricken from the tree upon which he climbs to behold Christ by any rays of majesty, and dread shining from his face upon him; but is like ripe fruit gathered by the hand, not shaken off by a tempestuous wind. By a soft and mild voice that may allure and not affright, he is called to come down, to entertain him who brought salvation unto his house, Luke. 19 5. But yet both these, though by much differing means, are effectually brought home to Christ, and made partakers of life and happiness by him. This cautionary direction is given, not as an encouragement to any to slight the necessity of humiliation, as if they might without all remorse and brokenness of heart for their sins interest themselves in Christ and his precious promises, and in one moment leap out of the dregs and lees of their natural corruption (on which they have been long settled) into an estate of purity and blessedness; but it is chief for these three ends. First, to direct such as mourn under the sense of their sins that are of a deep and double die, to look more to the quality of their humiliation then to the quantity, and to try it rather by the touchstone then to weigh it by the balance, because it is not the measure, but the truth of it that makes it saving. The Mariner in a calm may sometimes apprehend as certain ruin to befall him, as in a storm: and so a sinner may see himself in a lost and forlorn condition, out of Christ, though he be not broken with the fierce tempest of God's displeasure; but by more gentle, yet powerful convictions of the Spirit made apprehensive of the absolute necessity of a Saviour to free him from the maledictions of the law, and to restore him to an estate of happiness. Humiliation, as it is God's work, so the measure of it is of his ordering and appointing, and in it deals as a wise Physician, who doth not give the like dosis or quantity of Physic to every Patient; but what may best fit the strength and constitution of him that is to receive it; or like the prudent husbandman whom God hath instructed to discretion, who doth not use the same threshing instrument to beat out the more tender grain, which he doth to the hard. The cartwheel is not turned about upon the cummin▪ but the fitches' are beaten out with a staff, and the cummin with a rod, Isay 28. 27. Secondly, to acquaint such whose, former wickedness of life hath been full of notoreity in many reiterated backslidings from God, and rebellions against him; & yet have passed through the pangs of the new birth without those extremities that usually are measured forth to great sinners, to walk humbly with their God, and to make up what hath been wanting in the intention of their sorrow, in the extension and continuance of it; often bringing to remembrance the foulness of those iniquities which might have made far greater rents, and more ghastly wounds in their consciences then ever they sustained, had not God varied his wont way and method in which he walketh towards refractory and obstinate sinners, making their agony and pains to be proportionable to the hainousenesse of their pollutions. They which pay small fines, do commonly sit at the greater rent: And those Christians who obtain their peace & reconciliation with God upon more easy and cheap terms than others do, and must expect that it will cost them more to preserve it, and to keep it from suspicions and doubts about the truth of it, then usually it doth those, the foundations of whose peace have been laid in a through and most deep work of humiliation. Thirdly, to antidote and relieve weak and tempted Christians against their own fears and Satan's wily suggestions, which are oftentimes mingled with those complaints, which they pour forth concerning their unmeetness to take hold of the promises of mercy, and to apply the salvation of Christ unto themselves. Gladly they would that their souls might be refreshed with the least drop of the comforts of the promises, with which others are filled, that they might but touch the garment of Christ, into whose sides and wounds others do put their hands, crying out with confidence, My Lord, and my God But alas! they dare not do it. What is in others a duty, would be in them a presumption for to do. What others are invited to do, they apprehend they are commanded to forbear, in regard they have not yet undergone such shake and batterings by the law, as they have heard, read and known to be in others fare less sinners than themselves. Now the ground of such fears and misgivings, as keep off the soul from closing with Christ and his promises, doth chief arise from their heeding more the measure of their humiliation then the truth of it, and the ascribing of the saving property in it, rather to the quantity then to the quality. But all humiliation for sin is then saving when true; and then true, when it drives a sinner utterly out of himself, and stirs up a vehement thirsting after Christ, and a settled resolution to cleave wholly to him as his Lord and Saviour; as his King, to exercise his just sovereignty over him; as his Priest, to mediate unto God for him. And for all other steps or degrees of humiliation, which troubled souls too often look upon as necessary and due qualifications to fit them for their drawing near unto, and embracing of Christ and his promises; expecting after such a number of throws, such a measure, height, and continuance of sorrow, to find themselves nearer unto him then before. They are herein methinks not much unlike those foolish children, who being deceived with the seeming sloping of the heavens, do strongly fancy that if they were but on the top of such an hill, or such a tree, than they might play with the sun, put out the stars with their sticks, and discover what kind of man he is that dwells in the moon; but when they have throughly▪ tired themselves in running thither, they find the heavens to be at as great a distance from them, and as fare out of their reach as at first. So after all their most bitter lamentations for sin, they will at length find that a precise adequation between sin and sorrow can never be attained unto, it being absolutely impossible sufficiently to mourn for any one sin according to its just merit. Faciliùs invenies eos qui innocentiam servaverunt, quàm qui congruam egerunt poenitentiam: You may sooner (saith Bernard out of Ambrose) find those who have kept their innocency unspotted, than you can find any that have bemoaned their sins with a meet repentance. CHAP. X Containing the 3, 4, 5th. Cautionary, Rules for the application of the Promises. SECT. 1. Cau. 3. Eye not Providences more than Promises. The third Cautionary direction is, To take heed of observing & eyeing the providences of God above his promises; so as to build the foundation of our confidence upon them when successful; or when cross and unpleasing, to weaken the expectation of faith in the fulfilling of any good which the promise as a ground of hope doth hold forth unto us. First, believers are to be cautious of making the most successful providences the ground of their faith or hope, without looking unto the promises which are the only firm pillar upon which every believer may safely found his prayers in the seeking, and his confidence in the obtaining of any good that he asketh at God's hands. This Caution is the more necessary in regard, that in these times, multitudes of professors do highly magnify the providence of God, and use it as the only argument to persuade both themselves and others, that their ways and persons are both most pleasing unto God, who by a succession of many wonderful providences doth effect their untertaking for them in the midst of many intervening difficulties. But they seldom or never make any mention of the promises, either as the light by which their ways are directed, or as the spring from whence their encouragments and comforts flow and arise. Yea, oftentimes when they are at a loss in the Word, and cannot find the least footstep in it which may allow or justify the paths they walk in; they then shelter themselves under the covert of providential successes, as that which gives a fair testimony unto the goodness and justice of their ways. But as the providences of God are not to be neglected or undervalved by Christians being full of deep and unsearchable wisdom; so are they warily to be used as a single light and evidence for the putting of men upon great undertake, or to be the only Cynosure for their direction and guidance in them. The starlight of one single promise is of more use to Christians, than a constellation of many providences, both to assure them in their ways, and to support them under any difficulties that they may meet with, as may appear in these three particulars. First, the light and evidence which ariseth from th● promise, is far more clear than the light of providence; and therefore more meet both to direct and comfort believers that look unto it, and seek an establishment of their ways from it. The promise is written in fair and capital letters, which those that are of the lowest rank in knowledge and wisdom may easily read and discern. It makes wise the simple, and being pure enlighteneth the eyes, Psal. 19 7, 8. But the providences of God are written in dark and unlegible characters, which though they may soon be discerned to be his hand, yet to decipher the sense and meaning of them, is a task that oft times exceedeth the line of humane wisdom. They are like the hand-writing upon the wall, Dan. 5. 5. where part of the hand that wrote it Belshazzar saw, but the meaning of it neither he nor the most learned of his Chaldeans could find out. To interpret the mind of God in his providences requires the skill and wisdom of a Daniel who was filled with an excellent spirit of knowledge and understanding; but to know his will in his promise, it is enough if a man be a Nathanael, an Israelite in whom there is no guile; the path of them is plain, and wayfaring men though fools, shall not err therein, Isa. 35. 8. Providences God useth as his cyphers many times to hid his secret and his counsels from the eyes of men; but the promises are always as his Letters of love, in which he reveals himself unto believers, and acquaints them both of his peculiar love and care to them, and of their duty and obligation unto himself. Secondly, the promises do exceed in certainty the most constant dispensations of providence. ▪ The tenure by which any blessings are given, and to which we are entitled only by providence, is not so firm and sure, as that which is derived unto us by the promise. By the one we are made no better than tenants at will and at the discretion of their Lord, who though he let them enjoy rich possessions and revenues, may yet at his own pleasure resume them, and take all into his own hands; by the other we are made heirs of all the good things that are given unto us, and so may plead the promise of God as our right, they being a part of that portion which he as a Father is pleased to bestow upon us for our more comfortable subsisstance in our present pilgrimage. Oh! how slippery then is the foundation of those men's comforts, which is only built upon the dispensations of providence, and not upon the stability of the promise? How unsound are their evidences which altogether stand in the success of their achievements, & in the prosperity that hath followed them in all their paths, which may in one moment be turned into a sad change, having the same hand of providence which was wide opened in its bounty to them, lifted up in its displeasure against them. 3ly. The promise exceeds providence in the purity and sweetness that it derives and conveys to every external mercy, which without it are not freed from that vexation and vanity which sin hath subjected every creature unto. Providence dispenseth blessings, but the promise only sanctifies them: the one gives the possession of them, & the other the true fruition of them. This is that which makes a wide difference between the temporal mercies which believers enjoy, and those which wicked men do ofttimes partake of in greater abundance from the hand of God. A little that a righteous man hath, is better than the riches of many wicked, Psal. 37. 16. His dry morsels are sweeter than their dainties, his small pittance is more satisfactory than their plenty. For the wicked have all these outward, and inferior things only ex largitate donantis, from the mere▪ general bounty of God, which doth not remove the encumbrances, the vacuity and vexation that are entailed upon them by sin: But the righteous hath the same things given unto him virtute promise, by the right of a promise, which sanctifieth the gifts of common providence, and taketh away from the creature that curse wherein it was wrapped through the sin of the first Adam. While therefore men please themselves in the single interest and right of providence to their earthly comforts, & look not unto the conveyance of them by the promise; it is no wonder if they become snares, toils and thorns unto them▪ and that they complain that the streams of their abundance are like the waters of Marah, Exod. 15. 23. so bitter as that they cannot drink of them, seeing that they want Christ who is the only tree of life for to heal them, and to change their unpleasing bitterness into a delicious sweetness by the power of his Word. Secondly, Believers are to be cautious that they weaken not the expectation of faith in the performance of any good, which the promise doth hold forth unto them, by making the providences of God that seem to cross the fulfilling, of it, to be moving arguments to incline them to doubting or diffidence about the truth of it. When Jacob understood that his brother Esau was coming against him with four hundred men, Gen. 32▪ 6. he doth not distrust the promise that God had made unto him, Gen. 28. 15. but he strongly pleads it as a ground for his deliverance: Thou saidst I will surely do thee good, and make thy seed as the sand of the sea, which cannot be numbered for multitude▪ Gen. 32. 12. When God by a dream that was doubled on purpose to confirm the certainty of the thing, had revealed unto Joseph the future honour and greatness which he would exalt him unto above his brethren, causing their sheaves to bow to his sheaf, and the sun, moon, and the eleven stars to make obeisance unto him, Gen. 37. 7, 9 The means that God useth for the effecting and bringing to pass his decree, not the concurrence of successful and smiling providences; but of such only, which to the eye of reason seem rather to destroy the promise, then to accomplish it. Who could ever have conceived that the casting of him into a dry pit, the selling of him to the Ishmaelite merchants, the putting of him into prison and fetters by Potiphar, as a shameful offendor, should lead to the advancement of Joseph, & not to his ruin? Can light spring out of darkness, glory out of ignomy, liberty out of thraldom? And yet by such stops as these doth God raise up Joseph into the throne of honour: Until the time that his word came, the word of the Lord tried him (saith David) Psal. 105. 19 That is, until the very accomplishment of the promise he was tried in the expectation of it, by many and sore afflictions, in all which he exercised such a measure of faith and patience, as not to murmur or repine at the dispensations of God towards him, or faint in his waiting quietly for the fulfilling of the word which the Lord had spoken unto him. The archers sorely grieved him, and shot at him, and hated him, but his bow abode in strength, and the arms of his hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob. Gen. 49. 23, 24 Therefore when believers do at any time find the dispensations of God to them in his providences, to cross rather than to favour the fulfilling of such promises as he hath made to them in his Word, and which they in their prayers do earnestly seek and expect; yet are they not to cast away their confidence, or to take up any such sad conclusions, as that God hath forgotten his promise and that he bears no respect to them, or their sacrifices; because God doth not limit the accomplishment of his promises, to the serenity and success of his providences, but doth many times use such dispensations, which seem rather to frustrate and make void his purpose, then to establsh and effect it. Jonah is set on shore by a whale, when the mariners arrive at their Port by the ship. The blind man in the Gospel▪ John. 9▪ 6. Christ cures by clay and spittle, and not by balsams. And as they that go to sea▪ do not obtain a firm and unmoved state of body by the steddiness of the vessel in a calm; but by the accustoming and inuring of themselves to the rollings and toss of it in several weathers: So neither do believers gain a settled peace of mind, by the calm equality of God's providences towards them; but by acquaintance with vicissitudes and adverse revolutions, in the midst of which they still find the promise to be as an anchor sure and firm, and therefore are not perplexed or amazed at all other changes that befall them. SECT. 2. Cau. 4. Take heed of curiosity in selecting promises. The fourth cautionary direction to believers is, To take heed of a sinful and affected curiosity, so as to esteem only those promises most precious, which do stand in the Scripture like fruit ungathered and untouched by the hand of common Christians; and are like flowers (as they imagine) not at all smelled and blown upon by any but themselves. As there is a vain affectation in some Ministers to decline and wave those Scriptures that have in them the greatest pregnancy to confirm their doctrines, and to set their wits on work, and the texts many times upon the rack to force them to speak to their purpose; that so their notions and conceptions may be looked upon by their auditors, as neither vulgar nor common: So is there a lust of fancy in many Christians of pleasing and delighting themselves in the picking and selecting out such promises, as have not come under the observation of others; or have been least used by them in the constant daily recourse which they have had unto them. Now this vanity and curiosity which thus prevails in many Christians, doth not only spring from pride, which often begets an affectation of singularity; but it ariseth also from a false conceit and opinion taken up by them, that such promises are more sweet when ruminated upon, and▪ more full when sucked on, being like unto breasts that have had little or none of their milk drawn and taken from them. First, they conceive them to be more sweet, and to affect the soul with a greater of delight. But there is a twofold sweetness and delight: the one ariseth from the goodness of the object; the other from the newness of the object. The newness of the object is that with which fancy is chief delighted, and by which it worketh upon the will to close with it, as a convenient and suitable good. But the understanding propounds the goodness & truth of the object to the will, and thereby draws and wins i●●o a liking and full embracing of it. Now that which should endear the promise unto believers, is not any suggestion from fancy that none but themselves have either observed or used this or that particular promise; & upon that ground to hug it in their bosoms, as Scholars do those notions and books which none are possessed of but themselves. But the high estimation which they have of them, should wholly arise from that transcendent goodness and truth which is in the promises, and makes them deservedly to be of all desired and accepted. Thus Paul commends the Gospel, 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners. They conceive (though fond) them to be more full, as well as more sweet. But this is one of the peculiar excellencies of the promises, that the emanations of comfort which flow from them, are not in the least impaired, or diminished by the common and daily use of them; no more than light is wasted in the Sun by the multitudes of generations that have enjoyed the use and benefit of it. Still it hath as much light in the body of it, as it had in its first creation. And so the promises which Abraham, Isaac, and all the faithful descended from them, have successively used, and lived upon, do still retain the same vigour, and abound with as great plenty of support and comfort unto present believers, as ever they did unto them. As the Bee doth with an innocent theft, as Parisiensis calls it, suck honey from the flowers, without the least prejudice to their beautiful colours which delight the eye, or to the fragrant scent which affects the smell of him that gathers them: So do believers draw from the promises a grateful satiety both of delight and comfort, without the least diminution either of their fullness or sweetness. He that is last in the application of the same promise, may find it as rich in its plenty, as effectual in its vigour, as he that came first unto it. Wells, saith Basil, are the better, and more pure, the oftener they be drawn; and so the promises (which are the wells of salvation) do receive an improvement by the frequent and common use of them. The end of this Caution is no way to forbid any Christians valuing or esteem of one particular promise above others, which God by the powerful workings of his Spirit hath in a special manner made use of for the quieting of their souls in the time of their greatest perplexity, and the filling of them with all joy & peace in believing; as if thereby they did derogate aught from the just worth of other promises. For it being God's manner not to seal and manifest his love unto believers by one and the same promise; but to make use of this promise to one, and of a differing promise to another, who both lie under the same distress. It is their duty to have in a peculiar remembrance that promise and Scripture above others, by which God was pleased first to speak peace to their souls. But the aim of the Caution is to keep believers from putting any disrespect upon the precious promises, by their esteeming of them to be so much the less worth, by how much the more common and ordinary they have been in their use. Did Manna nourish the Israelites the less, because it was their usual food in the Wilderness, or Quails the more, because they were a new kind of meat? The one indeed pleased their appetite and palate more, but the other supplied their necessities as well. And so the promises which are most obvious and common in their use, do yield to Christians as much real and solid comfort when rightly applied; though others which they conceive to have been less observed, or by themselves only taken notice of, may more affect, and please the curiosity of a lustful fancy. SECT. 3. Cau. 5. Take heed of carnal reasonings. The fifth Cautionary direction is to take heed of carnal reasonings, which are restless in their enmity to all matters that appertain to faith, or at the best full of impotency and unable to yield any assistance to believers in them. First, carnal reason is unwearied in its opposing and contradicting of faith, which of all graces hath the most immediate relation unto the promises, and is of greatest use in the application of them. It is an enemy to the first implantation of it, and hinders men from submitting to the righteousness of God, by possessing their minds with unjust prejudices and cavils against his Word. God saith that his words do good to them that walk uprightly, Mich. 2. 7. But the Language of carnal men is: It is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinances? Mal. 3. 14. Christ saith that his yoke is easy, and his burden light, Mat. 11. 30. But his carnal disciples cry out, It is an hard saying, and who can hear it? Joh. 6. 60. God saith, his waves are just and equal: But the carnal Israelites are not afraid to censure his as crooked and their own as straight, Ezek 33. 17. And as by the disguises, and artifices of carnal reason men are kept from an happy change of their natural estate by believing▪ So when faith is wrought, they are by the enmity of the same principle continually disquieted, and interrupted in the comfortable enjoyment of those many blessed privileges which they are interessed in by faith. Sometimes it calls into question their title to what they possess, and suggests unto them, that they are rather presumptuous intruders, then just proprietaries; that the evidences upon which they build their hopes, are the delusions, and self-flatteries of their own hearts and not the unerring testimony of God's Spirit. Sometimes it raiseth jealousies concerning the promises themselves, that they are things as easily revoked, as they are made, which though they yield present comfort, yet do not ascertain any future security; that though God turn not away from them, nor repent him of his love, yet they may turn from him and so nullify the promises, and the Covenant of his mercy unto themselves. It is therefore of great concernment unto believers in the making use of the promises, to be cautious in admitting the pleas and arguments of carnal reason, which being never so often answered, will never be silent. But peremptorily to resolve to believe, notwithstanding all that sense and reason can suggest to the contrary. To wink and believe, to shut their eyes against all difficulties; and when they are so great as to pose their reason, not to let them to pose their faith. Excellent is that saying of Luther: Aperuit nobis in Paradiso oculos Satan, nunc omnis labor in eo nobis est, ut eos iterum claudamus & obturemus. In Paradise Satan first opened our eyes, and now it is our chief labour to shut and fast close them again, that so we may no more be betrayed by them. Sense and reason being in the things of faith, noxiabestia, an harmful beast (as he calls it) to overturn, and destroy whatever faith useth as a prop to rest itself upon. Secondly, as Carnal reason is an enemy unto faith; so at the best it is full of impotency, and unable to give the least assistance to believers in their making use of the promises, or dijudication of spiritual objects, as may appear in three particulars. First, it is dim-sighted, and wants a perceptive faculty. Busy and curious it is in prying & looking into the mysteries of faith; but altogether weak and unskilful in making any true judgement concerning them. Reason is like the Crocodile, which is reported to be of quick-sight on the land, but of dull sight on the water: It is sagacious in earthly things, but hath no insight in spiritual objects. Asaph attempted by the discussions of reason, to have found out the ground of Gods differing administrations towards his people, and the men of the world, whose bellies were filled hid treasure, but he was by his own confession soon at a loss: When I thought to know this, it was too painful for me, Ps. 73. 16. And when he did go that way to satisfy himself, how opposite is the inference and conclusion to that which he makes upon a second view, and looks upon the same things by the light of the lamp of the Sanctuary? When he beholds God's dispensations with the eye of his reason only, what a wild and erroneous conclusion doth he take up▪ Verily, I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands ininnocency, ver. 13. But when he comes to read them over again by the eye of faith, than he draws a right inference from the premises, It is good for me to draw near to God, verse 28. And as reason is blind in discerning spiritual objects, so is it also unskilful in the use of those means by which faith is enabled to make a full & perfect discovery of them. Reason is like unto a man that takes the wrong end of the perspective glass to see, with which lesseneth the magnitude of the object, and increaseth the distance. It looketh upon the promises by unapt mediums, which do not make a just representation of them, and therefore discerns little or nothing of their reality, and existence: but faith that looketh at the right end of the glass, which being more full of light, doth multiply the species, and thereby takes away the remoteness of the objects, and presents them as close unto the eye. Thus Abraham saw Christ's day and rejoiced to see it, Joh. 8. 56. Great was the space of time between the making of that promise, and the fulfilling of it unto Abraham, that in him all the families of the earth should be blessed, Gen. 12. 3. But yet his faith eyeing the power and truth of God that made it, looks upon the long interval of many ages that was between him and his promised seed, as upon a very small and inconsiderable distance. Thus the holy Patriarches did not only see the promises afar off, but they also saluted and embraced them as near: they were in regard of their own existence afar off; but in regard of their faith they were hard at hand, Heb. 11. 13. 2ly. Carnal reason, as it is blind, so is it also full of impatience, and therefore unmeet to be an assistance unto faith. The Apostle tells the believing Hebrews, that they have need of patience that after they have done the will of God, they might receive the promise, Heb. 10. 36. It is so necessary a grace for Christians, as that without patience we can scarce be men, much less Christians. The difficulties that believers are to wrestle with, are neither few nor small; but sharp, long, and numerous; all which must be endured with patience before they can reap the promise. Though the end be a throne of glory, a crown of life, yet the way is a way of blood: though the reward be sure, yet the waiting for it is long. Now carnal reason is full of impatience, it can neither wait the time, nor endure the trials which must be undergone. It likes well of the end, but not of the way; it affects the enjoyment of the promise; but it cannot stay the appointed time. Thus the Israelites gladly embraced the first ridings of their deliverance brought unto them by Moses and Aaron, and with bowed heads worshipped the Lord, who had looked upon their afflictions, Ex. 4. 31 yet could they not with patience for a few days quietly wait the Lord's season. Pharaoh deals more hardly with them then before, and now all their hopes of liberty are at an end; & they complain unto Moses, that they were so fare from deliverance, as that he had made them to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the eyes of his servants, and had put a sword in their hands to slay them, Exod. 5. 21. And though Moses was sent to comfort them a second time, & to assure them that the day of their deliverance was at hand; yet for anguish of spirit they harkened not unto him, Exod. 6. 9 Sense & reason do make deaf the ears of believers to what ever God speaks to support them in their trouble, & makes them as unfit to receive any impression from the promise, as water is to take the similitude and character of the seal, which is as soon lost as made. It looks upon a few days as so many years, and a few years as so many ages: and is therefore most unmeet to deal in any matters that appertain to faith. Thirdly, carnal reason is full of groundless fears and jealousies, apt to be discouraged by denials, ready to faint upon the appearance of the least difficulties; and therefore unable to contribute any assistance unto faith, whose peculiar work & art it is to look from and above those impediments which reason stumbles at. Faith is a most venturous grace, which walketh upon those deep seas with delight, that the line of reason cannot fathom; when it like unto a young swimmer dares go no further, than it can feel the bottom. Faith gathers resolution from denials and repulses; like unto the wheel in the water which being driven from it by the stream, returns upon it with the greater violence. When reason sits down disconsolate, ●nd saith, All plead and strive are in vain. Thus the woman of Canaan, Mat. 15. from the silence of Christ, from the denials of Christ, from his calling of her dog, finds ground to continue her suit. When he is silent, and answers not, then there is hope, because he denies not. When he denies her, than there is more hope, because he speaks, and may quickly be entreated, though at present he deny. When he calls her dog, than her hope ariseth higher, because though the children only must be full fed; yet surely he will not let the dogs to starve. Faith is a grace which in the greatest exigencies & straits that can befall a▪ believer loseth nothing of its courage and magnanimity, but cheerfully bears up in the midst of all. When reason is at a loss through the multiplicity of fears, and distractions with which it is filled; the one is like to the timorous Passenger in a storm at sea, who makes it his only work to tell the waves, and to shriek at the beating of every billow against the ship; the other is like the industrious Pilot▪ who hath manum ad clavum, et oculum ad coelum, his hand to the helm, and his eye to heaven, and minds more his duty, than his danger. Thus Habakkuk, When the figtree blossoms not, nor fruit is found on the vine: when the labour of the olive faileth, and the fields yield no meat: when the flock is cut off from the fold, and there is no herd in the stalls; resolves in the midst of so darn a winter, and season of scarcity, not only to exercise patience, but joy, and to rejoice in the God of his salvation, Habak. 3. 17, 18. Thus Job is in the divine record as famous for his confidence, as for his patience, which in his conflict with God himself he will not let go; Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him, Job. 13. 15. though he breathe out his life, yet shall not his hope expire with it. Oh! therefore let Christians, when they are to act faith in the promises, take heed of the suggestions of carnal reason, and learn to do as they who level at a mark, are used to do, who close one eye, that they may take aim the better with the other: shut fast the eye of deprayed reason, that they may see the more clearly with the eye of faith. CHAP. XI. Containing the sixth and seventh Cautionary Rules for application of the Promises. SECT. 1. Cau. 6. Take heed of groundless fancies concerning the manner of receiving Comfort. The sixth Cautionary direction is, to take heed of groundless and wild fancies concerning the manner of receiving comfort, and establishment from the promises, so as to expect that the consolations which come from them, must be administered rather by the hand of an Angel, then of a Minister, and witnessed by some voice from heaven, then by the clear testimony of the Word: and if they come not attended with such pomp and state, then to look upon them as common, and ordinary comforts; but not as evidences that have a sufficiency of glory and lustre to confirm the soul in the love of God. When Naaman the Assyrian came to the Prophet Elisha to be cured of his leprosy, he only sent out a messenger unto him, who bade him go and wash seven times in Jordan, and flesh should come again unto him, and he should be clean, 2 King. 5. 10. But Naaman thought that the Prophet would have used more likely means to have wrought the cure: that he himself would have come out unto him, that he would strike his hand on the place, and call on the Name of the Lord his God; And therefore departs in anger, as scorning the simplicity of the means which was enjoined him: So many Christians when they lie under deep agonies and perplexities of heart, and are counselled to act faith upon the promises, to attend upon the dispensations of the Gospel in the Word, to wrestle with God in prayer, they are ready to think that these are salves that may do well for common sores; but their maladies are such that unless Christ touch them with his own hand, the virtue that comes from these things, as from his garments, can never heal them, unless God do from heaven confirm his promises by extraordinary signs, and miracles, their breaches and ruptures will never be healed, their comforts and peace will never prevail against their fears and darkness. It is not the Prophet's staff laid upon the face of the dead child, that will bring life again into it, 2 King. 4. 32. he must come and stretch himself upon the child ere the flesh of it will wax warm. This Caution is the more necessary to be heeded, upon a double ground. First, because of the aptness that is in troubled Christians to affect new means above the right, means, and to build their confidence upon something that is without the compass of the Word, rather than upon the Word itself. Secondly, in regard of the great danger and deceit that is in those extraordinary ways, by which many do pretend to have their comfort & assurance to be confirmed unto them, which in the use of all other means they could never find to be fully and satisfyingly evidenced unto them. First, there is a pronity in Christians especially when exercised with fears, and doubts concerning their condition, to grow weary of using such means in which they find not their expectations speedily answered, & through an overhasty desire of comfort to try the gaining of it in a new way, rather than to persevere in the old▪ Being in this not much unlike to many weak and crazy Patients, that are more ready to fancy▪ every new medicine they hear off, and to tamper with it, then to expect a recovery▪ by going through a course of Physic prescribed by the Physician. Gregory tells of a Religious Lady of the Empresses bedchamber, whose name was Gregoria, that being much troubled about her salvation, did write unto him, that she would never cease importuning him, till he had sent her word, that he had received a revelation from heaven that she was saved. To whom he returned this answer: Rem difficilem postulas, & inutilem, etc. That it was an hard, and altogether useless matter which she required of him. It was difficult for him to obtain, as being unworthy to have the secret counsels of God to be imparted unto him; and it was unprofitable for her to know, not only for the reason which he assigns, that such a revelation might make her too secure; but also because it was impossible for him to demonstrate, and make known unto her, or any other the truth and infallibility of the revelation which he had received to be from God; so that had she afterwards called into question the truth of it, as well she might, her troubles and doubtings concerning her salvation would have been as great as they were before. O therefore let believers that would be confirmed▪ in the peace and love of God, take heed of relinquishing that more sure word of Prophecy, which shines as a light in a dark place, 2 Pet. 1. 19 and of flying unto visions, revelations▪ voices from heaven, to assure and evidence unto them their salvation, and to be the seals of the truth of those comforts and joys, which they are filled with. These are ways that have more external glory and pomp in them; but the acting of faith on the promises, and the adhering of the soul unto those truths declared in them, is the unquestionable way of obtaining a full establishment of heart in all sound joy and peace; and therefore Luther (though as he confesseth,) he was often tempted to ask for signs, apparitions, revelations from heaven to confirm him in his way, yet tells how strongly he did withstand them: Pactum feci cum Domino Deo meo, ne mihi mittat vel visiones, vel somnia, vel e●iam Angelos. Contentus enim sum hoc dono, quòd habeo Scripturam sanctam, quae abundè docet ac suppeditat omnia, quae necessaria sunt, tum ad hanc vitam, tum ad futuram: I have (saith he) indented with the Lord my God, that he would never send me dreams, visions, Angels; for I am well content with this gift, that I have the holy Scripture, which doth abundantly teach and supply all necessaries for this life, and that also which is to come. Secondly, as there is an aptness in Christians to affect such extraordinary ways, and means of comfort, so is there also no little danger and deceit in the ways themselves. First, they are dangerous, in regard that they make the Word and promises to be as things of little value and esteem, which should be as the only sacred Oracles of truth for believers to have their recourse unto. Such who cry up revelations, make it their practice to cry down the Word, and look upon those that adhere to the Scriptures, and make them the touchstone to try every spirit by, as Vocalistas, et Literatistas', Vowalists and Letterists, having little or no acquaintance with the deep things of God. Such who affirm assurance to be the immediate voice of the Spirit speaking in them, & saying unto them, that their sins are forgiven them; how disdainfully do they speak of the certainty and persuasion which believers have from the gracious operations of the Spirit, and the blessed fruits of holiness wrought by him in their souls, which by his enlightening they are enabled to discern, & thereby to be confidently persuaded of God's love unto them, and of their interest in all the promises? This they dignify with no better or higher title than an humane faith, than a conjectural knowledge, though the testimony be truly supernatural, both in regard of the efficient cause, and also of the means whereby they come to be thus persuaded. Yea, though it be the only safe way which the Scripture holds out for believers to try their estates by, to look unto the effects and fruits of the Spirit of God in them, and not to any immediate voices or revelations from heaven, as the testimony of God's love unto them; yet do such vilify this kind of evidence as low and carnal, and altogether unmeet for Evangelical Christians to make use of. What should they need to have a rush-light to see by, when they may enjoy the sun which is the light of lights? Secondly, as they are dangerous, so are they full of deceit and illusion. Young Samuel not acquainted with any extraordinary manifestations of the presence & power of God, took the voice of God from heaven to be the voice of old Eli, 1 Sam 3. 5. And so do many take the irregular motions of their own hearts to be the divine breathe, and the powerful impulses of the Spirit of God, whereby they are stirred up to the undertaking of sundry actions which the Word in the least measure countenanceth not. How frequently in these times do fanatic persons baptise the violent workings of their own distempered fancies, with the name of the visions of God, and of the raptures of the Spirit? How often doth Satan by transforming himself into an Angel of light, endeavour the seducement and ruin of many Christians, against whom as an Angel of darkness he could not prevail? being in every thing God's Ape to imitate those extraordinary ways by which God hath sometimes made known himself unto his people. Gerson in his book de probatione spirituum, of the trial of spirits, tells a remarkable story of Satan's appearing to an holy man in a most glorious and beautiful manner, professing himself to be Christ, and because he for his exemplary holiness was worthy to be honoured above others, therefore he appeared unto him; but the old man readily answered him, that he desired not to see his Saviour in this wilderness; it should suffice him to see him hereafter in heaven, and with all added this pithy prayer, Sat in alio seculo, non in hoc, visio tua merces mea O let thy sight be my reward; Lord, in another life, and not in this life. This direction therefore is of no little importance unto believers, that would not lose and wilder themselves in uncertainties both in regard of duty and comfort, to take heed how they leave the precept of the Word, and betake themselves unto revelations for the guidance of their ways, or how they neglect the application of the promises by faith for the establishing of their hearts in the peace and love of God, and expect their assurance to flow from an immediate voice or dictate of the Spirit; as if the Word and promises had no activity and light in them, to evidence and declare the certainty and truth of these things unto their souls. Such ways, though the novelty of them may render them pleasing to many, yet it cannot (as we see) make them safe to any that tread or walk in them. And therefore let that of Austin be every Christians practice and prayer, Sint sacrae Scripturae tu● deliciae meae, in quibus nec possim fallere nec falli: Lord, let thy holy Scriptures be my pure delights, in which I can neither deceive or ever be deceived. SECT. 2. Cau. 7. Let not thy heart out on earthly Objects. The seventh and last Cautionary direction is, To take beed of having the heart let out to earthly objects, either in earnest desires after them, or in long and frequent muse of the mind upon them. The application of the promises is then most powerful and operative, when they lie nearest and closest unto the soul; and the comforts that distil from them are then most sweet, when they are received into the most inward parts of the hidden man. The softest garments men usually wear next their skin, and the best Jewels they lay up in the most inward cells of their Cabinets: And of such a nature are the promises, and invitations of mercy in the Gospel; they are things of the greatest delicacy, and therefore should be applied next unto the heart, which is of all parts the most tender: they are of the highest worth and value, and therefore should highest be lodged in the most retired and inward receptacles of the mind, as their most due and proper seat. All interposition of earthly things doth not only hinder the conveyance both of grace, and comfort from the promises, but doth also according to the measure & predominancy of it make the heart as an unmeet vessel to receive such heavenly treasure in divers respects. First, earthly things do fill the heart, & thereby put it into an incapacity of receiving either divine counsel or comfort from the Word or promises. They fill the heart with crowds of businesses, so that Christ and his Word find no more place in it, than he and his mother did room in the Inn, where the manger was fain to be his cradle, Luk. 2. 7. They fill the heart with diversity of cares and solicitudes; so that it cannot have any freedom to attend heavenly duties. Martha who was troubled about many things, did not with Mary her sister sit at Christ's feet to hear the Word, her cumber about much serving, made her to neglect the one thing that was needful, Luke. 10. 41. They many times fill the heart with pride and scorn, so as that the choicest things of the Gospel are no better than foolishness. The Pharisees heard Christ preach against earthly affections, but they derided him, Luke. 16. 14. The full soul loatheth the honeycomb, Pro. 27. 7. and so doth an earthly mind reject the Word, which is more sweet than the dropping honey. Secondly, earthly things defile the heart with many vile and corrupt affections, which do unqualify it for the reception of holy and precious promises. They slain the heart with an adulterous and impure love, which is enmity unto God James, 4. 4. and make it apt to prefer carnal satisfactions before communion with Christ. They defile the heart with a false and unsound confidence, turning it from God who is the sole object of trust, unto the mutable and unstable creature: and therefore Paul enjoins Timothy to charge them that are rich in this world, that they trust not in uncertain riches, but in the living God, 1 Tim. 6. 17. They pollute the heart with, sensual joys, with unhallowed pleasures and delights, so that the joy of the corn, wine and oil increasing doth extinguish that complacency and tranquillity of mind that flows from the presence and fruition of spiritual objects; as in luxurious persons strange love doth eat out and obliterate, that which is conjugal. How then can any man expect, that the holy Spirit of promise should be both a Counsellor and Comforter unto such an one, whose love, confidence, joys, are adulterate and sinful? Surely he who hath the purity of a dove, will never take up the lodging of a crow: he who dwells in the soul when it is a temple of holiness, will never afford his presence, when it is turned into a cage of unclean birds. Thirdly, earthly objects divide the heart, Hosea. 2. 10. and make it uncertain in its motions towards God. As the balance hath no steadfastness in itself, but doth by every breath and touch fluctuate, sometimes to the one hand, sometimes to the other: so the earthly mind is various and inconstant in its desires to heavenly things; sometimes for a short and sudden fit it seems to affect them, and by and by grows cold and heartless again: Like to the grasshoppers, which (as Gregory observes) give a flirt up, and make a faint essay of flying towards heaven, and then presently fall on the earth again. Thus the young man, Mark 10. 17. comes running to Christ, to show his fervour and zeal; knelt to him, to testify his observance; prays to him to direct him in the way to eternal life, to evidence his care and solicitude about it; but when Christ bids him to sell whatsoever he had, and give to the poor, that so he might have treasure in heaven; how soon doth he who ran, and kneeled, and prayed to Christ, turn his back upon him, & go from him? How quickly are his desires turned into sorrow, and his prayer into a fearful apostasy? Now then, if earthly things do make the heart thus unsteadfast and unfaithful to God, how exceedingly must they needs indispose it for the reception of grace, and comfort from God in all his promises; to the obtaining of which nothing is more requisite than an evenness and constancy of the desires in seeking after them, and an entireness and oneness of heart in laying hold on them? For as all the promises are one in Christ, and cannot be severed or parted, no more than lines in their common centre; so neither must the heart by which they are embraced be divided. Whole Christ and all his promises are given to every believer, and are no otherwise diversified then according to the exigence of men's present conditions, which sometimes requires the application of one promise, and sometimes of another: and therefore must the whole heart be given unto him again, or else we cannot ever expect to have any interest in him or his blessed promises. True it is, that in the best of Christians, there is found an unstedfastness of heart and affections, but it is not an unstedfastness in respect of the object, but only in degrees. It is not such as distracts the heart, and makes it to float between two different objects; but only makes it unequal in its motions towards one and the same thing. As the bowl when it is first thrown out of the hand runs more swiftly towards the mark than it doth afterwards; but yet the tendency of the motion is the same, though the vigour and strength of it be not alike: so believers, when partakers of some fresh gales of the Spirit, do then move towards Christ with more quick and lively affections then at other times; but yet by that inward principle of holiness that is within them, they are always carried towards him in their desires, though not after one equal and uniform manner. This Caution therefore, though it be the last, yet is it not the least, which believers are with much diligence and circumspection to observe, that would gladly be partakers of the spiritual riches and treasures which are in the promises. But the end of it is not, that we should abandon all care and industry in our Callings; or that we should affect a voluntary and Monkish poverty, as if there were an absolute inconsistency between the having the blessings of this life, and the enjoyments of the other life: We may possess earthly comforts; but we must not be possessed by them: We may use them as flowers to smell on; but not as garlands to crown ourselves with them: We may in our pilgrimage walk with them as staves in our hands, seeking a country which is above; but we may not load ourselves with them, and bear them as burdens upon our backs: We may make them our encouragements; but not our confidence: We may mind them as our accessories; but we may not love them, as our principal happiness. As bees, though they live in the midst of their cells of honey and wax; yet have not their wings touched with any viscuous matter, that may hinder their delightful flight abroad, and their nimble passing from one flower to another: So should Christians that live in the abundance of earthly comforts, as in an hive of sweetness, be exceeding careful that nothing of the world do cleave to their affections, which are the wings of the soul, that may hinder the lifting and raising up of their he arts towards heavenly objects or abate the activity of their thoughts in their frequent muse on the promises, and other mysteries of the Gospel, on which the mind above all other things ought to be most exercised, and delighted. I have now done with the third particular, that in the entrance of this task was propounded to be handled, and have insisted longer upon every direction both positue and cautionary, than I first intended; but my end was not to offend any by prolixity, but to render them more useful and necessary unto all, then otherwise they might have been if contracted into a less and narrower compass, and made like unto the description of a pitched field or battle wherein there are many heads and spears painted, but few or no complete and entire bodies. CHAP. XII. In which divers Queries are resolved. I Come now to the fourth particular, which doth consist of divers Queries, together with their resolutions, the clear answering of which will much facilitate the use and application of the promises. And the first Quere is, Whether the essence of saving and justifying faith doth lie in a prevailing Assurance, so as that he who truly believes, doth certainly know himself to have faith, and to believe on Christ? SECT. 1. Faith is not a full assurauce. This question I do the rather choose to speak somewhat unto, in regard that many of our Divines have in their writings not distinguished between Fides, Fiducia, and Certituda, Faith, Affiance, and Assurance; but have promiscuously treated of them, as if they were one and the same thing. Yea, sundry pious and learned men have defined faith to be▪ a full persuasion of the heart grounded on the promises of God, etc. Now that which chief led them to give this definition of faith, was their zeal to maintain the certainty, and evidence of faith against Popish doubtings. But a good intention will no more make a truth, than a fair mark will make a good shoot: For while on the one hand they have endeavoured to vindicate faith from that languor, and uncertainty unto which the Papists have subjected it, they have on the other hand occasioned great fears and perplexities to arise in the hearts of many tender and weak Christians, who are apt to use this as an argument against themselves, that they have no faith at all, because they have no Assurance at all. To keep therefore such bruised reeds from being broken, and the smoking flax from being quenched under the sense of their want of Assurance: I shall by sundry demonstrations clearly show, that the essence of saving faith doth not stand in a prevailing Assurance, that a believer may have the one, and yet want the other. The first shall be taken from that estate, and condition of men whom Christ the great Judge of all the world doth pronounce and declare to be blessed; and they are such as are believers, because all blessedness under the Gospel cometh only by faith: And this blessedness standeth in the forgiveness of sins, Rom. 4. 6, 7. Yet their present condition speaketh nothing less than Assurance: Blessed are the poor in spirit, saith our Saviour, Math. 5. 3. So again, Blessed are they that mourn. ver. 4. And again, Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, ver. 6. But spiritual poverty, mourning, hunger, though they be Gospel-graces which do arise from faith, are all together distinct from assurance, as may appear in their different effects. Assurance is riches, and not poverty. Coloss. 2. 2. joy, and not mournng. 1 John. 1. 4. satisfaction, and not hunger of want and emptiness, Psal. 90. 14. So in that parable of the Pharisee, and the Publican going up into the temple to pray, Luke. 18. 10, 11. our Saviour tells us that the Pharisee was full of presumption and false confidence; but the Publican through a sense of his unworthiness, was almost overwhelmed with fears and misgivings of heart; he stands afar off, and dares not draw near, he is so full of shame as that he would not so much as lift up his eyes to heaven; He smites his breast, as pointing out the fountain from whence all his misery and sin did flow; He accuseth himself in his prayer as a great sinner; In all his actions, gestures, words there is no expression of his assurance of pardon; and yet he went away justified, and not the other, which without faith he could not have been. A second demonstration is from the state of desertion into which a believer may fall. A child of light may walk in darkness, Isa. 50. 10▪ and neither behold the sun-light of God's countenance, nor the starlight of his own graces for many days. He may be as a tree in winter whose sap is wholly retired to the root, and hath neither fruit nor leaves hanging on it to evidence that it is not dead. As in the sufferings of Christ upon the cross, there was for a time subtractio visionis, a withdrawing of the light of God's countenance; but not dissolutio unionis, any breaking, or dissolution of the Union: So in the derelictions that a believer is subject unto, there may be a separation in regard of the comfortable manifestation, and shining forth of the beams of God's love; but no interruption in regard of his Union with Christ Thus it was with David, Psal. 51. 12. who begs the restoration of the joy of God's salvation, and the establishment of his free Spirit. And thus it was with Heman, Psal. 88 who in his own apprehension was as one free among the dead, ver. 5. Thus it was with Jonah, when lying in the belly of the whale, as in a grave, he said, I am cast out of thy sight, Jonah 2. 4. But yet still they were believers, and their faith was alive at the root, neither was there any intercision of their fellowship with Christ. Now if faith, when Assurance is lost do continue as believers Union with Christ, it will also begin his Union with Christ, though it be not accompanied with Assurance. Or if a believer may lose his Assurance, and yet not wholly lose his saith, then may he also have faith before it do grow up into Assurance. A third demonstration is taken from the differing stature and condition of believers. As in the world there are not only aged men whose multitude of years do teach wi●dom, and young men whose bones being moistened with marrow are full of strength; but there are also infants which hang upon the breast of their mother, who though they enjoy life, yet do not know that they have life, or are able to reflect upon any action which they do: So in the Church there are not only Monsons that are old disciples, experienced in the mysteries of the Gospel, and young Timothy's that are trained up in the knowledge of the Scriptures; but there are also new borne babes 1 Pet. 2. 2. who are partakers of a spiritual life, and yet are not able to apprehend that they have eternal life given unto them. There are in the fold of Christ, not only sheep which he leads forth into green pastures, but there are also lambs which he gathers with his arm, and carries in his bosom, a place both of safety, and of warmth, Isa. 40. 11. Now if the essence of faith did lie in Assurance, and that none did believe but they that did know they do believe, this distinction and difference between Christians would be of little, or no use. If all that are believers do exercise the reflex acts of faith, as well as the direct, in what should the babe in Christ differ from the grown man? Where in should the bruised reed be distinguished from the established Cedar? How should the thirsty and wearied soul that dares not deny Christ to be his, and yet cannot say that certainly he is his, be comforted? How should the sinking and well nigh despairing Christian that cries out he hath no saving faith, because no Assurance, have doubts and objections comfortably answered? What use would there be of signs and marks which the Scripture gives as a staff into the hands of weak ones, to support and stay them up, if faith do stand in a full persuasion of God's love to a man's self in particular? St. John's whole epistle which was written for this end that believers might know that they had eternal life, 1. John. 5. 13. would be to no purpose. if faith itself did consist in the knowledge of their having it. A fourth demonstration is taken from the object of saving and justifying faith, which is the person of Christ, and not any Maxim or Proposition which is the object of Assurance. That on which the chief act of justifying faith is exercised, that is the primary object of faith. But the main act of faith is to unite Christ and a believer together, for by being one with him we come to be justified by him and not otherwise. Now that which makes this Union on the believers part, is the adherence and cleaving of the soul unto Christ, as the greatest and chiefest good. As the lustful and evil eye by looking upon a woman doth make such a Union with her in his heart and affections, as that thereby he is judged by our Saviour to be guilty of Adultery, Mat. 5. 28. So the seeing of the fullness of Christ, and the true desire of enjoying him, is such a Marriageglance, as makes a tye and Union between Christ and the soul, that thus looks towards him for life and salvation. But it may be objected, If faith be not Assurance, and a persuasion in particular that Christ is mine; Wherein lies the application of faith which Divines do so much urgeand contend for against the Papists? To answer this Objection. It is granted that the Popish faith which stands in a bare general assent unto the promises, and the truths which are revealed in the Gospel, is wholly insufficient to salvation, and that there is necessarily required to an effectual and saving faith a special and particular application, as hath been formerly showed But there is a twofold Application; the one is axiomatical, and the other is Real. The axiomatical application is that which Assurance makes, whereby a believer is enabled to say, Christ is mine. The Real application faith makes, in which though a believer cannot say that Christ is his; yet he doth by an act of recumbency cast himself upon Christ for salvation, and resolves neither to seek it, nor expect it any other way. Thus the Prodigal, Luke. 15. 18. did cast himself upon his father when he could not tell whether he would own him as his son, or make him so much as an hired servant. But secondly, it may be objected, If faith be not Assurance, wherein doth lie the certainty of faith? To this I answer, that there is a double certainty: The one is a certainty of sense, such as Thomas had, who seeing believed, Joh. 20. 29. And such a certainty Assurance hath, which is rather a kind of sense then faith. The other is a certainty of event, and this faith hath, though it want the former. He that believes shall as certainly not perish as he who is assured though he doth not know it after that manner as the other doth. Christ hath promised, that he who cometh to him, he will in nowise cast out, John 6. 37. The words include more than they express. He will be so fare from casting out any that come to him, as that he will embrace them in the arms of his dearest love, and manifest the most tender compassions of his heart towards them. But the end of all that hath been spoken in answer to this Querie, is not that any should rest in their having of faith without assurance, or lessen their giving of all diligence to make their calling and election sure. Though a malefactor may be pardoned and he not know of it, yet he cannot be so comfortable, as he that carries his pardon sealed in his bosom. He whom God loves, though he know it not, is happy; but he that knows it, knows himself to be happy. And therefore believers though they are not to faint under the want of Assurance, or to conclude against themselves, that they have no faith because they have no Assurance; yet they ought in prayer and all other Ordinances to seek not only the having of eternal life but the knowledge of their having it in Christ. CHAP. XIII. In which the second Query is resolved. THe second Query is, What use a believer may make of the promises of mercy and pardon, after relapses and falling into gross sins, which waste the conscience; and whether he may lay an immediate claim unto his right and interest in them, without his being first humbled, and afflicted for his sins. To this I answer, that though it be not with a believer under the Gospel; as it was with the Nazarite under the Law; who if he were defiled in the time of his consecration, lost all the former days of his separation, and was to begin it wholly anew. Numb. 6. 12. though he do not by his present defilement lose the virtue of his former cleansing and purifying of himself, so as to extinguish his interest in the promises; yet his right may justly be suspended, so as that he cannot actually enjoy the benefit and privilege of them, until he first humble himself, and lay to heart the greatness of his defection and Apostasy from God. But that I may give more distinct and clear satisfaction to this Question, I shall speak to these two heads. First, I shall show how fare a believer may and aught to charge the guilt of atrocious sins that he falls into upon himself. Secondly, I shall show how fare he may not go, or conclude any sentence against himself: there being errors oftentimes committed in the excess, as well as in the defect. SECT. 1. How fare a believer ought to censure himself, after atrocious sins. First, how fare a believer may and aught to judge and sentence himself for sins that are not quotidianae incursionis, of daily incursion, and incident to humane frailty; but are devorat●ria salutis, sins that more immediately hazard and endanger salvation itself, as springing from more mature deliberation, and a more full consent of will; and take it in these particulars. First, a believer ought to acknowledge that such sins which have in them not●rietatem facti, a notoriety of fact, do deserve notorietatem poenae, a notoriety, and exemplariness in their punishment; and he is to be affected as one who hath justly merited death, though it be not inflicted; because the desert of sin is still the same, though the sentence be revoked by a pardon. The mercy of a Prince is richly manifested in giving unto a traitor his life; but yet that doth not disoblige him to confess that his offence▪ deserved death; but lays rather a greater tie upon him to do it; that so he may magnify the clemency of his Sovereign: So though God do keep a believer from coming into the condemnation of sinners, by giving unto him a Royal and full pardon for whatever he hath done against him; yet this aught to be so fare from withholding him to acknowledge what the just wages of his rebellions are; as that it ought the more to provoke him thereunto, that so he may give God the glory of his free pardoning grace. Thus Peter bewailed the foulness of his sin in denying his Lord and Master, Mark 14. 72. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. We translate it, He thought thereon, and wept. But Teophilact, and others with him interpret it, Obvelavit se, he covered his head, and wept. Alluding to the general custom in the Eastern Countries, where the condemned malefactors had their faces covered. And by this ceremony Peter judged his sin to have deserved no less than death, and as a son of death he wailed himself: He wept bitterly, Luk. 22. 62. Secondly, a believer may so fare charge the guilt of gross sins, and defections upon himself, as to acknowledge his utter unworthiness to stand in any relation of love unto God, and that he might be so fare from owning him as a son, as that he might deny to look upon him in the number of his servants. Thus the Prodigal (whom Divines not improbably conceive to be the emblem of a regenerate man falling into scandalous sins) in his return to his father, Luke 15. 19 acknowledgeth himself to be unworthy to be called his son. Though he doth not deny the relation of a son; yet he judgeth himself most unworthy of the title of a son, and thinks it an happiness if he may but be in his house as an hireling. And surely every child of God, who hath through lose and riotous living wasted both his grace and his comforts, and brought sad extremities upon himself by straying from his father's house, aught in those resolutions and purposes of heart, which he hath of returning unto God again, to be deeply apprehensive how unworthy he is of any favourable reception from him, how undeserving he is to lodge in his house as a servant, much more to lie in his bosom as a son, that thereby he may the better prize the mercy of restored love; and for the future, may the more dread the sad effects of a voluntary departure from God, and be more watchful in preserving his communion with him. Thirdly, a believer falling into scandalous and vile pollutions, ought so fare to judge himself, and to charge the guilt of them upon his soul; as not to lay hold immediately upon the promises of forgiveness, until he first renew his repentance, and be throughly ashamed of the evil of his do. When Moses interceded for Miriam whom God had smitten with aleprosie; If her father (saith the Lord) had but spit in her face, should she not have been ashamed seven days? Numb. 12. 44. That is, if her earthly father provoked to anger, had expressed his displeasure by spitting upon her, should she not for a season have been sorrowful and pensive? How much more than when her heavenly Father is displeased by her sin, should she for a time be ashamed, and shut out from the privileges and society of the Congregation? To be guilty of great sins, and at the same time without remorse, and grief of heart to lay hold on the promises of mercy; is not the acting of faith, but of presumption; because faith always proceeds according to God's method in the obtaining of peace, and comfort. Now the way by which God speaks peace, and makes good the promises of forgiveness, is by repentance. And therefore till that be renewed, the comfort of pardon is suspended. First, God heard Ephraim bemoaning himself, Jer. 31. 18. And then he remembered him: then he manifests the bowels of a tender Father, and saith, I will surely have mercy upon him, vers. 20. Fourthly, a believer falling into gross and peace-destroying sins, is so fare to charge the guilt of them upon his soul; as to acknowledge, That all those temporal afflictions and chastisements, which God as a Father provoked to anger, doth lay upon him, are by his sins justly deserved, and by God righteously inflicted. ●hat God doth make his own children to feel the smart of his displeasure in heavy and sore afflictions, occasioned by their iniquities, is a truth which the Scripture holds forth with so much evidence, that he that runs may read it: They rebelled, and vexed his holy Spirit, therefore he was turned to be their enemy, and he fought against them, Isa. 63. 10. So again, For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth, and smote him: I hide me, and was wroth, Isa. 57 17. What pregnant instances also were old Eli, upon whose person and posterity God brings a most severe, and dreadful judgement? I Sam. 2. 31, 32, 33. David, who complains that his sins are a burden too heavy for him, Psal. 38. 4. that his wounds stink, and are corrupted because of his foolishness, ver. 5. that he is feeble and sore broken, v. 8. Jonah, who cries out of the belly of the whale, as out of the belly of hell, that he is forsaken and cast out of God's sight, Jonah 2. 2, 3. How easy were it by an addition of examples in this kind to make the number to swell into a Catalogue? But a taste is enough. Now what their carriage and behaviour towards God is in this condition, see it in their expressions. Old Eli when he heard of the judgement of God denounced against him, saith, It is the Lord, let him do what seemeth him good, 1 Sam. 3. 18. David under all his pressures acknowledgeth, that in faithfulness he had afflicted him, Psal. 119. 75. So Jonah who had fled from the presence of God, in the prayer that he poureth out before him in his extremity, confesseth the sin, and vanity of all other dependencies save on God alone: They that observe lying vanities, forsake their own mercies, Jonah 2. 8. But it may be objected, How can it stand with the justice of God to punish sin in his children, with any such kind of affliction; Christ having made an absolute, and plenary satisfaction for them? To this the answer is easy; that these temporal punishments, though they have displeasure mixed with them, yet they do not slow from the vindictive justice of God, as an irreconciled enemy; but are the corrections of a provoked Father, and do wholly differ in the end from the vindictive which are not medicinal, but destructive. The Judge who sentenceth the hand of a malefactor to be cut off, hath not the same end with the Physician that cuts of an hand when it is incurably festered; the one commands it as a satisfaction due to justice; the other enjoins it, as a means to preserve the safety of the other parts: So when God afflicts the wicked and believers with the same temporal evils; though the smart and pain may be in both alike; yet he doth it not with the same mind, nor to the same end; the one he punisheth in order to the satisfaction of his justice, the other as a Father he corrects in order to their amendment; to the one therefore it is properly a punishment, and to the other truly a medicine. SECT. 2. How fare a believer ought not to charge himself with atrocious sins. The second head that I am to speak unto, is, to show how fare believers are not to charge the guilt of their great and most heinous sins upon themselves: And this also take in the four following particulars, First, believers are not to charge the guilt of such sins upon themselves, as from thence to conclude, that there is an absolute fall from the state of justification, and the grace of Adoption; so as that now they are no longer sons, nor have any right to the heavenly inheritance. The love of God in Christ is an endless, and unchangeable love, John 13. 1. and hath its perpetuity founded not upon any thing in us, but upon the firm rock of his Will, and Counsel. His Covenant is everlasting, ordered in all things, and sure: although we be not so with God, 1 Sam. 23. 5. True it is that the fall, and lapses of a justified person, do so fare make a breach upon his state of justification, and adoption; as that the comforts and privileges of it are thereby withheld and suspended; but his right thereunto is not made thursdays, or extinguished. He is under the power of an interdiction; but not under the power of an ejection. He may not like Absalon see the King's face, 1 Sam. 14. 24. but he is not an exile. And in this condition he doth abide, until he renew his repentance, and thereby recover a fitness and aptitude to enjoy what before he had a right unto; being like a cleansed leper who hath the liberty of returning unto his house, from which his defilement had separated him, and shut him out. Now if any think the effects, and consequences of this spiritual sequestration do import little, and that they are not antidotes strong enough to check the presumption of the flesh which is in believers, and to keep them from playing the wantoness with the grace of God: To such, all that I shall say, is, that to me they seem to be as blind men, that understaud little or nothing the wide difference between the light of the Sun, and the darkness of the night: and to have little experience in themselves, how sad the condition of that soul is, from whom God hides his face, or turns his smiles into frowns: and how happy he is in the overflowings of all joy, peace, and comfort, who hath the shine of God's face to be the health of his countenance, Psal. 42. 11. Secondly, believers are not to charge the guilt of criminal sins into which they fall upon themselves, so as thereby to apprehend or conclude that the pardon of former sins is made void, and of none effect. The forgiveness of sins past may aggravate and accent the iniquities that are afterwards committed, being done against the riches of mercy received; but the commission of new sins doth not revoke the pardon that was before given, or make the guilt of such sins to return again in their full strength and power; no more than subsequent debts do make bonds formerly canceled and vacated to stand in force. For God when he pardons, doth not insert any conditional clauses, that carry a respect to our future conversation, and make the efficacy of his pardon to depend upon our well or ill doing. His gifts and graces are the fruits of his immutable counsel and will, and therefore without all repentance It may not be denied, but that this truth hath divers Adversaries: the Lutherans are vehement in their opposition of it; as also the Papists and the Arminians. And yet I say they who have skill and leisure to consult the Schoolmen who much agitate this Question, An peccata redeant? Whether sins pardoned do ever return, and live again in their guilt, so as to accuse and to condemn? Will find there are more who are for the Negative then for the Affirmative. But it is not my purpose to enter into the lists, and to take up the wasters in this Controversy: It is enough that the Scripture-expressions concerning Gods pardoning of sin, do clearly hold forth his forgiving of them to be full and absolute: I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions, and as a cloud thy sins, Isay. 44. 22. The cloud that is scattered or dissolved by the sun, though others may succeed it, never returns to make a second appearance; but is wholly extinguished, and therefore man's going down into the grave, who never returns unto the land of the living again, is compared unto it, Job. 7. 9 So Jer. 50. 20. The sins of Judah shall not be found, for I will pardon them saith the Lord. So again, Micah. 7. 19 Thou wilt cast all their sins into the depths of the sea. Things that are cast into the bottom of the sea, never come to sight again; but are more surely buried then things that are hid in the grave and in the bowels of the earth, which may possibly be digged out again. What more significant words can be used to declare the absoluteness of Gods pardoning▪ sin then these of the Prophets? Thirdly, beleivers falling into gross and conscience wasting sins, are not to charge the guilt of them upon themselves, so as to conclude thereby, that they have utterly lost all sanctifying and inherent grace. Such sins may make a believer to be as a man in a won who is without all motion; but not as a carcase which is without all life. They may be in his heart, as spiders in an hive, which spoil the honey, but do not kill the bees; they blast and whither the precious fruits of grace and profession, but they do not wholly destroy the root, and principle from whence they flow. Still the seed of God abideth in him, 1 Joh. 3. 9 The Apostasy of Peter in denying out Saviour was great: It was a complicated denial; there was in it Negatio notitiae, a denial of so much as knowing him: and Negatio consortii, a denial of all communion, and converse with him. And yet in this reiterated defection, the faith of Peter did not expire and give up the ghost. For Christ prayed that his faith might not fail, Luke. 22. 32. Now the ground of this indeficiency in grace is not from its own strength, as it is a quality in us; but from the covenant and promise of God, who hath said, that he will put his fear into our hearts, that we shall not departed from him, Jer. 32. 40. Qui custodit nos per fidem, costodit in nobis ipsam fidem: He that keeps us by faith, doth keep faith itself in us. This particular is very necessary for such Christians to think upon, who after a falling into some foul sin: do not only mourn over their folly, as they justly aught; but are apt also to complain that heretofore indeed they had some good in them; a little faith they could by some effects discern in themselves, a spark of love to God was once kindled in their breasts. But now alas, all is utterly extinct. and lost! Now they are in no better condition then in the gall of bitterness, and the bonds of iniquity: a rude and deformed chaos of sin and folly, without any principle of grace or appearance of beauty. And in thus doing, they do not only heighten their present darkness and trouble, but also are injurious unto the promise and faithfulness of God, who hath fixed grace in the heart of a believer more firmly than the soul is seated in the body, which is subject to death and dissolution. Fourthly, believers are not so to charge the guilt of their great sins upon themselves as from thence to infer any such sad conclusions as these: That they never shall enjoy any day or hour of comfort again; but walk in continual darkness, or that they shall never be used any more as instruments of service, or be a vessel unto honour meet for the master's use; but be as the broken shards, that are not fit to take fire from the hearth, or to take water out of the pit, Isay. 30. 14. That they who defile themselves with voluntary and gross sins, if we look unto the just merit of them, deserve to be so dealt with, it cannot be denied. But that God doth retaliate the sins of his children with such deal though they be deeply humbled for their Apostasy, and with strong cries do beg both pardon and acceptance from himself, is contrary not only to the promises of mercy, which he hath made to penitent sinners, Jer. 3. 12. but also to many pregnant instances of such whom he hath both comforted with his love, and highly honoured with his service. With what expressions and demonstrations of affection is the dejected Prodigal received by his father? who peccanti filio dat oscula, non flagella, gives to his straying son kisses, and not blows, saith Chrysologus. No food is too good to satisfy his hunger, no raiment too costly to him with, no ornament too precious to adorn him. The fatted calf, the best robe, the ring of gold are the sure pledges of his father's love, Luke. 15. What a choice vessel of honour and service was Peter after his fall, who was honoured with the dispensation of the Gospel, and had his labours crowned with the conversion of many thousand souls? Let not therefore such who have fallen by their iniquities, but yet return again by sincere repentance, say, that all their days shall end in darkness, that their names shall ever be unsavoury, that themselves shall always be as barren and dry trees; but let them remember that comfortable promise that God made to repenting Israel, Zeph. 3. 19, 20. who tells them, that he will get them praise and fame in every land, where they have been put to shame. CHAP. XIV. In which the third Query is resolved, viz. What use may be made of such promises as we cannot expect to see the performance of? THe third Query which I shall propound, and endeavour to satisfy, is, What use a believer may make of all those glorious and rich promises which he can never expect to see the performance of; such as are the beauty and prosperity of the Church in peace and holiness, when all pricking briers, and grieving thorns shall be removed out of the midst of it: The calling and conversion of the Jews. The downfall and ruin of Antichrist; All which seem to be as blessings reserved for future ages, and not to be hoped for in the present times? To this I answer, that true it is, that the promises of God are as bonds of a different date, and do successively take place in several ages and generations of the Church: being so purposely ordered by the infinite wisdom of God, that though he be continually accomplishing some one or other of his blessed promises unto his people; there might yet be a most plentiful reserve of new mercies unto the last ages of the world; that so it might appear that former generations have not exhausted or diminished the treasure of his love and bounty to the prejudice of those that should succeed them, But yet such promises which future times, and not the present shall see to be fulfilled, are of much use unto present believers, and by the due application of them may yield much satisfaction and comfort unto those who like the Patriarches can see them afar off, and being persuaded of the truth of them, do joyfully embrace them, as Mariners do the desired port at a distance, Heb. 11▪ 13. It was a great comfort and contentment unto Moses, that though God would not let him enter into the land of promise, yet before his death, he would from the top of Pisgah give him a full prospect of its glory and beauty, Deut. 34. 1. And so to a believer it must needs be a matter of much joy and delight, that though he cannot live to partake of the future mercies that God hath reserved for his Church; yet he may by the eye of faith have a distinct view of them in the promises, as in a lively map, and may behold the glory of that portion of blessing and goodness which God will bestow upon his people in the ages that are to come. But more particularly there may be a four fold use made by a believer of all such promises, whose accomplishment do seem to be at a remote distance and period of times. First, they are useful to support and bear up believers under present troubles and sore afflictions, that the Church may be exercised with, that it shall not be ruined and undone by them. Navicula est quae turbari potest, sed mergi non potest: The Church is as a ship, (saith Austin) which may be tossed with tempests, but cannot be sunk and shipwrackt by them. It being the only heir of all the promises that God hath made, it must live to enjoy them; else they must become void and of no effect; or be as Bona adespota, Goods that have no person or Lord to lay claim unto them. And if we consult the Scriptures, we shall find, that in the times which were most dark and overcast, God did most frequently use such promises to confirm to his people their deliverance out of present straits, that were not to take place till many ages after, that from thence they might conclude their condition not to be hopeless and desperate in regard of future blessings which God would perform to their succeeding generations. Thus when Jacob was in Egypt, where his seed were oppressed with a long and heavy bondage, he prophesieth that the sceptre should not departed from Judah, till Shiloh came, Gen. 49. 10. So when Rezin King of Syria, and Pekah King of Israel joined in a confederacy against Judah, and that the hearts of the people through fear were as the trees of the wood, when moved with the wind, Isai. 7. 3. the Lord to assure his people that they should be delivered, and that their attempts against Jerusalem should not come to pass; gives no other sign but this: Behold, a Virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and ye shall call his name Immanuel, verse. 14. It was the land in which the Saviour of the world was to be borne, and they the tribe from which he was to descend; And therefore they might be fully confident, that for that very promise sake, ruin and extirpation should not be fall them. So again in Israel's long captivity of seventy years, though multitudes of them in that long tract of time could expect no other liberty then to be free among the dead; yet the Lord in the beginning of it doth by the Prophecy of Jeremiah, which was to be read unto them, promise deliverance out of it, and comforts them with the assurance of their freedom, and their enemy's ruin, of both which he makes the casting of the Prophet's book into the midst of Euphrates to be a sign unto them, Jer. 51. 63, 64. And why then may not we in these distracted and divided times, both in regard of opinion and practice, yet hope and believe, that those blessed promises of Peace and Union with which God hath promised to beautify his Church, shall at length be performed: and from thence gather so much present comfort, as not to deem our breaches incurable, and past all healing? True it is, that Christians are like bees gone forth into so many swarms, as that to reason it seems beyond possibility, that ever they should by the sound of the Word (as by a golden bell) be brought under one hive. But yet that one promise of Gods giving his people one heart, and one way, that they may fear him for ever for the good of them and their children after them, Jer. 32. 39 is enough to support those that are peacemakers that their labour shall not be in vain, and to comfort those that mourn for the sad rents that are made, that there is hope in Israel concerning this thing. Secondly, such promises are useful to believers, as a firm rock to bottom their prayers upon, which they make on the behalf of the Church. To pray that Christ's Kingdom may come, and that it may spread itself unto the utmost ends of the earth, is the duty of every Christian: But the ground of their making such prayers, and of their confidence in obtaining them, doth wholly arise from the promises that God hath made. He it is who hath promised, that Christ shall reign, till he hath put all his enemies under his feet, 1 Cor. 15. 25. He it is who hath said, that Zion shall suck the milk of the Gentiles, and shall suck the breasts of Kings, Isa. 60. 16. That her Horn shall be iron, and her hoofs brass, to break in pieces many people, Micha 4. 13. And thereby are they encouraged to seek his face, and to put him in mind of his gracious promises unto his people. True it is, that the times and seasons when these things shall be, are unknown unto them, neither are they to be curious and anxious about them: God having put them in his own power, Acts 1. 7. But yet knowing that he who hath promised, is faithful, they do with delight plead them in their prayers, and with faith embrace them in their arms. Thirdly, such promises are useful to try the sincerity of a believers affection and love to God's glory, and to the welfare of the Church. Promises wherein men's present interests a●e concerned, self-love may make them to put a value upon them, and quicken an ardency both in their prayers and desires to beg the performance of them, as judging themselves to be most happy in the enjoyment of those blessings which are held forth in them. And surely from this very principle are many stirred up to plead with much earnestness the promises of protection, when they are under some imminent danger; the promises of provision, when under some pinching want; the promises of comfort, when under some sore affliction. But when a Christian can rejoice in such promises, which speak the future happiness of the Church when he is dead and gone: When it is sweet to him to think, that Christ's throne shall hereafter be more exalted, his Name more known, his Spirit more plentifully poured forth, that the Church shall triumph over its enemies, and be an habitation of peace, of love: It is an argument of a noble frame of heart, and of a spirit that is truly affected with the love of God's glory. When a man can ruminate upon such promises with delight, and can in prayer manifest that it is the desire of his soul, that these things wherein God will be so highly honoured, may be effected; it is a comfortable evidence, that the white at which he levels, and the end which he propounds to himself, do not terminate in his private interest, but in the exaltation of the Name of God, which by faith he is persuaded shall be magnified throughout all ages of the world. Fourthly, such promises are useful to comfort believers in regard of their posterity. It is ofttimes a perplexing thought to tender parents, especially in difficult times, to think what will become of their children if they should be taken from them, and their seed be deprived of the benefit of that care and counsel, which while they live they constantly partake of. And this very thing doth beget as much anxiety in their hearts, as the departure of Christ did in his disciples it being an evil, that though foreseen, they scarce know how satisfactorily to provide against. Now besides those general considerations drawn from those compassions and bowels that are in God, and his faithfulness in providing for the righteous and their seed, according to his promise: All which may help to allay such distrustful thoughts and cares. There may also not a little support and comfort be taken from the exercising of faith on such eminent promises, as declare the riches of God's goodness to the ages and times that are to come: All which God will according to their appointed seasons fulfil, until that grand and last promise of gathering all his elect unto himself in glory be accomplished; So that believers may comfortably hope, that what promises themselves do fall short of, their posterity shall in one kind or other be partakers of. And though through the dark dispensations of present providences, the Church may seem to be in the midst of an howling wilderness, rather than near the borders of a Canaan: yet surely the Land of rest is not afar off, though it may to us be out of sight. CHAP. XV. Wherein the fourth Query is resolved, viz. Whether believers always enjoy the comfort of assurance in death? THe fourth Query is, Whether believers, who are most diligent in the daily application of the promises, and in the use of all means to make their calling and election sure, do always enjoy the comfort of assurance in death Or have, as the Apostle expressed it, an entrance abundantly ministered unto them into the everlasting Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ? 2. Pet. 1. 11. The answer that I shall give unto this Question, will consist of divers branches, which I shall lay down in four Propositions. The first is, that a believer as he meets with many brunts and conflicts in his life, so he may and often doth meet with worse at his death. Christ his agony and sufferings were sharpest towards the close and end of his life. And then, though he complains not of God; yet in a most vehement expostulation he complains to God, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mat. 27. 46. Lamblike and silent deaths are not always the portion of God's dearest Children. The wicked may have no pains and bands in their death, Psal. 73. 4. when the best of Saints may be environed with terrors. The one may be as a man in a sleep, who may have pleasant and golden dreams; and the other as a man awake that is afflicted and disquieted with grievous and sore paroxysms. Thus good Hezekiah in that sickness, in which he was by the Prophet summoned to prepare for death, through the sad apprehensions of God's displeasure, poured forth his soul in bitter complaints, Isay. 38. he saith ver. 13. I reckoned till morning that. as a lion so will he break all my bones, And. ver. 14. Like a Crane or swallow, so did I chatter. Grief and pain had both so filled and wasted him, as that he could only make an indistinct and confused noise; as those birds do when they are deprived of their young ones. And therefore Christians are not to be discouraged as if some new thing had befallen them, if in the close and shutting up of their lives, instead of comfortable gales, and breathe of the Spirit, they find (contrary to their expectation) Satan to assault them, or God to withdraw himself from them who for a moment hides his face, but with everlasting kindness will embrace them Isay. 54. 8. The second Proposition is, that our diligence to clear up our interest in the promises, and the using of all means to make our calling and election sure, is the ordinary and regular way to obtain comfort, and enlargement in death. To expect to die comfortably, and not to live holily, is as vain, as for a man to look for stars on earth, and trees in heaven. To waste the oil of grace, and yet to think to be anointed with the oil of gladness, is the fruit of presumption, and not of faith. When servants idle out the light that their Masters give them to work by, they may well conclude that they must go to bed in the dark. And so when Christians do neglect in the day of their life to work out their salvation with fear and trembling, it is no wonder if in the night of death they want the light of comfort, and have a dark exit out of the world. The third Proposition is, that the improvement of the promises, and the diligent use of all means to make our calling and election sure, is not only the ordinary and regular way, but doth usually procure comfort in death, unless it be in four particular cases. First, when sicknesses and distempers are violent, so as to interrupt and suspend the use of reason; it must needs be that thereby also the comforts of grace be so fare eclipsed, as to be like stars in a cloudy night, which though they be not blotted out of their orb, yet do not shine: Who can expect that an untuned instrument should ever make a melodious harmony? no more can any man rationally conceive, that when the frame of nature is out of order, and the organs of the body wholly indisposed to the acts of reason; that then the comforts of the Spirit should appear in their beauty and lustre? Now that God ofttimes puts a period unto the lives of his dearest children by such diseases cannot be denied: For Solomon tells us; that All things come alike unto all; there is one event to the righteous, and to the wicked; to the good and to the clean, and to the unclean; to him that sacrificeth, and to him that sacrificeth not, Eccles. 9 2. Secondly, when temptations and assaults from Satan are like vehement winds which shake the tree, though they do not overturn it. A man who hath a fair estate of lands, may by vexatious suits be so put to try his title, as that he may take little pleasure in the revenues and profits issuing from them▪ and so a believer in his combating and wrestling with temptations may so far be disquieted, as that though he question not his condition, he may yet enjoy less satisfaction and present delight in his evidences and assurance then formerly he had▪ Thus Paul after his rapture into the third heaven, 1 Cor. 12. 2. was buffeted by a messenger of Satan, whereby he was not only kept from being exalted above measure; but also interrupted in the enjoyment of those choice comforts and contemplations, which such revelations might minister unto him: as may appear by his frequency and importunity in prayer to God, to be delivered from this sad conflict, ver. 8. Thirdly, when Christians have intermitted that wont care and circumspection to preserve their peace and communion with God, which formerly they used. When they have been more forgetful of God, and less delighted with his presence then before they were. When they have suffered the world to steal away their thoughts, and affections from heaven, and through a distempered appetite relish more their daily bread, than the spiritual Manna. When they grow regardless of Christ's voice, and open not their hearts to him, who seeks and entreats an admittance; than it is no wonder if their Sun set in a cloud, and that the horror of a sad darkness do take hold upon them: that then like the Spouse in the Canticles they complain that their Beloved hath withdrawn himself and is gone: that they seek him, but cannot find him; that they call him by all his blessed and gracious names, and yet he answereth not, Cant. 5. 8. Fourthly, When their graces and also their comforts have been already fully manifested, both to themselves and others, in the time of their life; God may in the approaches of death, for sundry reasons best known unto himself, withdraw his comfortable presence, and not fill their souls with those exultations of joy and peace which others might expect to be mingled with their last agonies, and expirations in death: so as that they should be carried up to heaven in the light of a glorious Plerophory; like to the. Angel which ascended in the flame of Man●ahs sacrifice, Judges 13. 20. God may do it, First, to try and manifest the strength of their faith, that though their feelings are not strong, yet their faith is not weak; that though they see not the crown of bliss and immortality hover as it were over them, and ready to fall upon their heads, they yet believe that it is laid up for them, and that they shall ere long see it, and enjoy it together. Such faith highly glorifies God, and in some respects gives more honour unto him then Assurance, which hath a kind of sense joined with it. That, like Thomas sees and believes; but this sees not, and yet believes that what God hath promised he will perform. Secondly, God may do it, that others may learn that comforts and manifestations of love in death are not so necessary as grace, and therefore not to be dismayed and dejected in their thoughts concerning themselves, if they find not such overflowings of joy and prelibations of heaven itself as some: others have had in the time of death. All believers though they are heirs of the same Kingdom, yet have not the same abundant entrance ministered unto them. To some the passage is like the going upon a clear and crystal stream, which hath flowery and aromatical banks on each side of it: to others it is like a calm and quiet sea on which as the fluctuations and toss are few or none; so the gales that carry them to the Port are not strong and quick. As their temptations are not great; so neither are their comforts glorious. Thirdly, God may do it in judgement to others; that such who have known and seen the light of holiness shining in their lives, and yet have not in the least been advantaged by it; should not get the least good by their deaths. As they have not profited by their graces; so neither will he let them be edified by their comforts. Carnal men are ofttimes more ready to observe the dying of holy persons, than their lives; because that then they conceive, it may be seen what reality there is in that profession which they have made of having communion with God, & of enjoying his peculiar presence in a differing manner from the world. Now they think it will appear whether their faith be any thing beyond a fancy; whether their joys be such as death will not cast a damp upon, as well as upon the delights and pleasures of the world. And when their curiosity is unsatisfied in what they expected, than they spare not to censure them as deceivers both of themselves, and others. Little considering that the just ground of Gods causing such bright stars to set in a cloud, may be to hid from them what might benefit them in their death, who have learned nothing from the holy example of their lives. The obstinate Jews opposed the Doctrine which Christ taught; and rejected the salvation which he offered unto them whilst he was among them: And then at his death insultingly ask for miracles that might declare him to be the Son of God, whereby they might believe on him, Mat. 26. 42. But God then made his death a stone of stumbling for them to fall at, who had made his life and converse among them to be the object of scorn both to themselves and others. The fourth Proposition is, that the judgement, and estimate which believers and others make concerning men's spiritual estates and conditions should chief be grounded upon their lives, rather than their deaths. There may many accidents fall out in their death, which as they do not prejudice a believers salvation; so neither should they his Christian reputation. He may through a fever become phrenetical, through melancholy he may be lumpish and heavy, through temptations he may be unsettled, through desertions he may speak uncomfortable speeches, & be afflicted with despairing thoughts: His darkness may be without the least glimmerings of light: His agonies in death without sense of comfort: And yet he may be a dear child of God: Because (as holy Greenham saith) we shall not be judged according to that particular instant of death; but according to the general course of our life; not according to our deeds in that present, but according to the desires of our hearts ever before. And therefore we are not to mistrust God's mercy in death, be it never so uncomfortable, if so be it hath been before sealed in our vocation and sanctification. It is sad indeed when the lives and days of those do in such a manner determine and expire, who have wasted their time and strength in sinful exorbitancies, and have been eaten up with the cares and thoughts of the world, without the least minding of their eternal condition, till arrested by the stroke of death, and summoned to appear at the tribunal of a provoked God. But else, though the close of an holy life be most uncomfortable, and full of darkness, it is no just ground to any, to change their apprehension and persuasion concerning the welfare of their everlasting estate, having beforehand seen and known such unblameableness of conversation, such fruits of grace as might clearly evidence the uprightness and sincerity of their hearts towards God and men. CHAP. XVI. What use is to be made of temporal Promises. THe fifth and last Query that I shall propound, is, What use is to be made of temporal promises; such wherein preservation from outward evils, the free and liberal donation of earthly blessings, the removal of sad and heavy pressures, are in particular promised and undertaken for by God in his Word. After what manner are believers to act and exercise their faith upon them, or to hope for the performance of them; in regard that they ofttimes who may best plead their title and interest in them do most of all want the fruition of such mercies, They (saith the Apostle) of whom the world was not worthy, wandered about in sheepskins, and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, and tormented, Heb. 11. 37, 38. The answer to this Question I do not purpose to make as the cords of a tent stretched out to their utmost length, or unnecessarily to enlarge as the Pharisees did with affectation their phylacteries; but yet for the more full and just solution of it, I conceive it will not be impertinent to speak to three particulars. First, to show why God under the Old Testament did make the tenor of his promises to run so universally of his giving unto them the blessings and enjoyments of this life; when as under the Gospel such kind of promises are more sparingly recorded, and not so distinctly set down. Secondly, to show the various advantage, and profit that believers may reap to their spiritual estate, by looking unto such promises with an eye of faith, and quietly waiting the good pleasure of God for the fulfilling of them. Thirdly, to give rules for the right understanding of the nature of temporal promises, and the manner of due applying them unto our particular exigencies and conditions. SECT. 1. Why God hath made such various promises of temporal mercies to his people under the Law. For the first, viz. Gods making unto his people so many distinct and redoubled promises of temporal mercies, sundry reasons might be assigned, but I shall fix only upon this: that such away of bounty was most suitable to the winning of their observance unto such administrations and forms of worship, as he then gave them in command, and required their obedience unto. For until the time of reformation came (as the Apostle expresseth it, Heb. 9 10. That is, until the time of the New Testament, when both the imperfection of the Law, and Priesthood was to be done away by Christ, who as a more excellent Priest offered up a most perfect sacrifice, all things were transacted after an earthly and external manner. The Sanctuary was worldly, Heb. 9 1. The Ordinances imposed on them were carnal, which stood in meats, and drinks, and divers washings, Heb. 9 10. Now to this pedagogy of the Church, the promises of such outward blessings were most agreeable. As the duties, and exercises of their religion were most conversant about the outward man; so likewise the promises that were the encouragements to move and incite them to an observance of those prescribed rites, were such as did chief hold forth the prosperity and welfare of their outward estate. Not that the goodness of God to his people, or his Covenant with them did extend only to the care of their bodies, or that this was the utmost drift of those many promises which he had made unto them. This had been (as Peter Martyr speaks) to have made God to have had no more regard to his Church then shepherds have to their flock, or Herdsmen to their , who look no further then to their thriving & well liking in their pastures. But as in their sacrifices, and other ceremonies of their worship they were trained up and instructed in the knowledge of spiritual duties towards God, in which their hearts and thoughts were to be employed: So also by the temporal promises were grounds laid of carrying on their faith and hope for the obtaining of more glorious mercies than those which at the present they enjoyed. Their Manna was a kind of Sacramental food, and the water from the rock a Sacramental drink, the land of Canaan a type of the true and heavenly rest, which Christ hath purchased, which by him who was the substance of all shadows they might expect. True it is, that both the precepts of their worship and the promises of their reward, were more dark and obscure, than the rule of our obedience, and the recompense of our service under the Gospel; but yet both did centre & terminate in one and the same end. The State of the Church under the Law was represented (saith Bright-man) by mare aereum, a sea of brass, which is of a more thick and dark substance; but under the Gospel by mare vitreum, a sea of glass, which is most clear and transparent, Rev. 4. 6. SECT. 2. Four benefits come to believers by looking to temporal promises. The second particular is, to show the Several benefits that redound to believers by looking unto temporal promises with an eye of faith. And here many might be insistedon; but I shall insist only on four. First, Faith in the promises of this life doth much help to the mortification of inordinate desires, and of distracting and anxious cares; Both which are the genuine fruits and offspring of unbelief. Every man is conscious unto himself both of his own wants, and of the fading condition of every creature; and thereby he is stirred up to seek in a restless manner a supply of present necessities, and a solicitous provision for all future contingencies. Ask many a man why he toils so uncessantly to the breaking of his head with cares, and his body with labour? And he will quickly tell you, that he hath none to trust unto but himself, that he knows not what hard times and changes may come: Sickness may befall him, and waste what he hath gotten: Age may overtake him, and render him unapt for labour: Charges may multiply in his family, and it is not the air that will feed them. He had need therefore to do what he doth; if not, he and his might starve. But now when a believer can look unto the promise, how soon are all these tempestuous thoughts and fears calmed? how sweetly is the heart quieted by casting all its care upon God, who careth for us? 1 Pet. 5▪ 7. How quickly can be spy in the promises God's obligation for clothing to cover his nakedness, for meat to satisfy his hunger, for Physic to cure his diseases, for armour to safeguard his person, for treasure to provide for his family & posterity? How fully can he rest contented in the things which he hath, because God hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee, Heb. 13. 5. Secondly, Faith exercised on the temporal promises, will much help to strengthen our adherence to the promises of a better life, and cause us to trust more perfectly in God for the salvation of our souls. Our Saviour tells his Disciples, Matth. 6. 26. that if God fed the fowls, and clothed the Lilies, he will much more provide for them which are better than they. And so may a believer argue with himself, If God hath made so many rich promises of provision for the body, he will not be wanting to the happiness of the soul: if he be so careful of the casket, he will not be unmindful of the Jewel: if he give daily bread to the one, he will surely give Manna to the other: if he make our pilgrimage delightful, and make the paths of our feet to drop fatness, he will make our rest and habitation with himself to be glorious. If the feet tread on Roses here, and on the Moon and Stars hereafter, how orient and beautiful will be that crown of life that shall be set upon our heads? Such kind of argumentations are very helpful to a believer, who owns all his outward comforts to arise from God's faithfulness in his promise, though in the mere and naked having of them no man can know love or hatred, Eccl. 9 1. Thirdly, Faith exercised on the promises of this life, sweetens the enjoyment of every blessing, be it little, or much. There are two sources from whence all outward mercies flow, the Providence of God, and the Promise of God: The one is as the Nether-springs, from which every creature receives its preservation and continuance; He openeth his hand, and satisfieth the desire of every living thing, Psal. 145. 16. The other is as the upper-springs, from which after a peculiar manner the goodness and bounty of God is conveyed unto believers. Godliness hath the promise of the life that now is, and that which is to come, 1 Tim. 4. 8. Now the streams that flow from this fountain are more pure, and free from that vexation and vanity which the abundance that the wicked hath is subject unto; because they are sanctified by Christ, in whom all the promises are Yea and Amen. When therefore a believer can look upon all his outward enjoyments as the fruits of Gods especial love, and can say as jacob did, These are the blessings which God hath graciously given his servant, Gen. 33. 5. then they become in their use more delightful, and in their taste more sweet. A small portion of meat given by the hand of a great Personage, is more set by and esteemed, than all the variety of his full table upon which his other guests do feed and carve themselves; because it carries with it a particular character and mark of favour to him on whom it is bestowed: And so a little given by God as a Testimony of his peculiar love, and care towards believers is more desirable and satisfactory, then great revenues that flow only from a common bounty. Fourthly, Faith exercised on the temporal promises, is a powerful antidote to preserve believers from the use of unlawful means, both in the seeking and in the obtaining of all earthly comforts. The inordinacy of the desires puts men ofttimes upon dangerous precipices. He that maketh haste to he rich, shall not be innocent, Prov. 28. 20. So, They that will be rich, fall into temptation, and a snare, and many hurtful lusts, 1 Tim. 6. 9 Now faith, though it do not take off the edge of men's industry, and diligence in the pursuance of all lawful and just means, or make them to expect to be fed as the fowls of the air that neither sow nor reap; or to be clothed as the Lilies of the field, that neither spin nor labour yet it doth so correct and allay the vehemency of all desires towards the things of this world, as that they dare not take any way to gain them, which the Word doth not warrant, or the promise sanctify. Faith suggesteth to them that it is not their labour, and care that makes rich, but God's blessing, who giveth no sorrow with it, Prov. 10. 22. That it is not their wisdom that maketh their endeavours in their calling to be successful; but God's fidelity and truth that crownes them with prosperity: that it is not their sweat that feeds the Lamp of their comforts, and makes it to shine; but the constant droppings and distillations of God's goodness. And thereby they are enabled to depend upon his promise, and to believe that such a dimensum, and portion of outward blessings shall be given unto them, as that they may truly say with the Prophet, Their lines are fallen unto them in pleasant places; yea, they have a goodly heritage, Psal. 16. 6. SECT. 3. Five assertions directing to the right understanding of temporal promises. The third particular is the giving of rules for the right understanding of the nature of temporal promises, and the manner of due applying them unto ourselves, which I shall set down in these five subsequent Assertions. First, that God declaration in his promises of giving temporal blessings, is not absolute; but carries with it a tacit condition, and limitation of expediency. The great and utmost end of all the promises, is one and the same with that which is the chief end of man, the fruition of God and communion with him in everlasting blessedness. Now the means that are subservient to this end, are either such as are of absolute necessity, and do immediately prepare and dispose the soul for the obtaining of it▪ Or else such as are less requisite, and have▪ only a remote and consequential tendency thereunto; and that not of themselves, but as they are overruled by God, who makes Omnia cooperari in bonum, all things to work together for good, to them that love him. And of this kind are all temporal blessings, prosperity, riches, health, freedom, and the like. All which do (as I conceive) come no further under the verge of a promise, then as they conduce to the happiness of the other life; this life being only a way and passage unto it; As the wilderness was to Israel to bring them to Canaan: Because therefore none can know what is that measure of these outward comforts which most tends to the furtherance of their eternal happiness, which in and above all things ought to be eyed by them; It being haply more for their spiritual good, to have many advantages of this life in a less degree rather than in a greater; to want them rather than to enjoy them: They cannot then in their supplications to God seek the absolute performance of his promises in temporal blessings; but must refer themselves to his wisdom and faithfulness so to order and measure out the comforts of this life unto them, as may best stand with the welfare of their everlasting condition, without which all earthly happiness is no other than a splendid misery. But it is much otherwise in the blessings of grace, and holiness, which are things so essential to a believers fruition of God, as that without faith he cannot please God, Heb. 11. 6. without holiness he cannot see God, Heb. 12. 14. without being born of water, and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God, Joh. 3. 3. And being therefore so intrinsically good in themselves, so absolutely also necessary unto salvation, they are in prayer to be most absolutely sought, as considered in their essence; but their degrees are arbitrary: God giving to some a less, to others a greater measure of grace, according to his pleasure. The second Assertion is, that the fulfilling of temporal promises is disjunctive, God either giving the blessing itself, or that which is equivalent unto it. The promises of God are all made in Christ, and derive their certainty and stability from him in whom they are made, not from us to whom they are made: they are all ratified with the same oath, and purchased by the same blood. And though they are not equally precious in regard of the things promised, yet they are equally true in regard of the certainty of their performance; only the manner of their fulfilling is different. In the spiritual promises, God gives the things in kind; for how can they be otherwise made good? What is answerable in worth or excellency to grace, the least drop of which is of more value than the whole creation. In temporals, God gives the things themselves, or makes a compensation some other way; If riches be asked of him in prayer, and yet denied, he makes it up in contentation, which brings that satisfaction with it, that riches cannot yield. If health be prayed for, and not granted; he gives strength to bear the cross, by putting under his everlasting arms. If deliverance in trouble be desired, and not obtained; he gives the divine consolations of Martyrs, which that Noble Landgrave of Hessia said he found in his long and tedious imprisonment. And in thus doing God doth not break his promise, but change it to the better. It is said of our Saviour, Heb. 5. 7. That in the days of his flesh, he offered up prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared. That which Christ prayed for was deliverance: O'Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me, Mat. 26. 39 Was there then any defect in Christ's faith, in that he did not obtain the thing prayed sor? Or how was his prayer heard? did he not die the death of the cross? was he not buried in the grave? Yes; but yet he had from God an answer of supportation, though not of deliverance. He was strengthened in his agony by the appearance of an Angel, Luke 22. 43. He was assured by God's promise of victory over death, though not of freedom from it. He underwent the darkness of the grave, but not the corruption of it, Psal. 16. 10. The third assertion is, that temporal promises are to be expounded with the reservation, and exception of the Cross. God in the Covenant of Grace (which is the adequate measure of his obligation to believers) hath kept to himself this prerogative of chastening the delinquencies of his children with rods, Psal. 89. 33. of withdrawing his favours from them, when they withhold their obedience to him; of exercising the severity of a Father, as well as the indulgency of a Mother. And therefore believers when they want the staff of many outward comforts in their hand, and feel the smart of the rod of affliction upon their back, they are not to suspect God's fidelity in his promise; but to reflect upon themselves, and by a serious disquisition to consider from whence the suspension of any good things that he hath promised doth arise. And if Christians under God's re●ukes did make this their chief task, they would be so fare from charging him with unfaithfulness, as that they would more wonder that God is pleased to vouchsafe them any thing, that are Prodigals that justly deserve nothing. In the midst of their deepest trials they would say as the Church did in her extremities, It is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed. Great is thy faithfulness, O Lord, Lam. 3. 22, 23. The fourth Assertion is, that temporal mercies in the promises are only to be obtained by a well regulated prayer, in which God is sought after a right manner, and the mercies begged for a right end. First the manner of seeking God must be in faith, James 1. 6. Let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. But the faith here required, is not the faith of a particular persuasion that God will give the very thing itself that we beg of him; but the faith of submission by which we resolve our prayers into his will, and believe that he will do whatever is best for our good and his glory. We then distrust God when either we are jealous of his willingness to perform his Word, or of his power to accomplish his Word. But when we acknowledge the alsufficiency of his power, and resign our desires to his will, we do then pray in faith. And this was the faith that our Lord Christ did put forth in his prayer, when he said, Not my will, but thy will be done, Luk. 22. 42. I do not deny but that God may sometimes assure, and incline the hearts of his children that are importunate wrestlers in prayer, to be confident of granting the temporal blessing that they seek; but this is a confidence, that is rather begotten by the Spirit in the height and vigour of prayer, then brought with us unto the duty. Sometimes (I say) such a confidence may be; but it is neither ordinary nor usual. Secondly, temporal mercies must be asked for a right end, James 4. 3. Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss; that ye may consume it upon your lusts. Carnal lusts may make men eager in prayer, but not successful. Usually wrong ends in prayer are accompanied with disappointments. Sinister Aims turn duties of worship into acts of selfseeking; they change the voice of prayer into a brutish howling, Hos. 7. 14. The execution of justice itself into murder, Hos. 1. 4. Finis in moralibus idem est, quod forma in naturalibus. The end in moral things, is the same that the form is in natural things. The quality and goodness of them is not discerned but by the end. It concerns therefore believers that would in prayer obtain any outward blessing, to look unto their ends in ask of it: though the mercy be earthly, yet their end in ask of it, must be heavenly. God's glory must be in the end of all prayer, as his Name must be in the beginning of it, else it cannot be expected that it should be owned as a sacrifice by him. The fifth Assertion is, that the blessings of temporal promises are to be sought secondarily, and not primarily, Mat. 6. 33. They are neither to be the chief cares of our life, or desires of our prayers: because the soul may do well without the body; but the body cannot do well without the soul. And yet of this disorder the greatest part of men may be found guilty. Their estates they carefully put into their deeds and evidences, and their souls they only put into their wills, the last of instruments that are usually either made or sealed. For the one they think it enough, if with a few gilded expressions of piety, it be given and bequeathed as a legacy unto God. But for the other they conceive no pains or toil too great to increase it; or cost too much for to secure it. The one they make the task of the morning and day of their lives; the other the by-work of the evening, and the approaching night of death. So that it is no wonder if in these preposterous and irregular actings of men, they do not find the blessing of God's promise upon their labours; that they toil as in the fire, and weary themselves for very vanity, Hab. 2. 13. that they sow much, and bring in little, Hag. 1. 6. For what benefit can they justly expect to reap from the promise, who neglect to walk by the guidance of that rule to which the promise is made? CHAP. XVII. It is an horrible sin to neglect or abuse the Promises; Aggravated in five particulars. HAving spoken enough (if not too much) to each of those four heads that in the beginning were propounded, and laid as so many corner-stones for this small structure to stand upon: The last head which now remains to be insisted on, is the handling of such useful applications and inferences as do naturally flow and arise from this Doctrinal truth of the transcendent worth, and preciousness of the promises which are given unto us by Jesus Christ. And the first Application which I shall make, is; A sad and just complaint (which sighs and tears may better express then words,) of the great injury and contempt that is done unto the blessed promises, both by men's careless and overly seeking after them as things of no great worth, and by their sinful perverting of them unto wrong ends and purposes, while they turn grace into wantonness, and sin the more freely because of the redundancy of divine mercy which is manifested in them. God lays it as an heavy charge against Israel, that he had written unto them the great things of his law, but they were counted as a strange thing, Hos. 8. 12. How much more are they blame-worthy who are guilty of despising the Magnalia Evangelii, and of setting light by the most choice and excellent things of the Gospel, as if they were of little or no importance for the obtaining of life and salvation. This complaint if it had no circumstances to aggravate it, but were only laid in the general against men, that they have forsaken the fountain of living water, and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water, Jer. 2. 13. It would quickly prove to be so black an indictment, as could neither admit of an excuse to lessen the sin, nor yet of pity to mitigate the punishment that deserves to be inflicted upon such offenders. But if we shall consider it in the several aggravations which heighten it, we may then at this sin justly cry out, Be astonished, O ye heavens, at this, and be horribly afraid, be ye very desolate. There are five particulars that make the complaint more sad, and the injury which is done unto the promises the more exceeding sinful. SECT. 1. The first Aggravation is taken from the universality of this sin: they who are transgressors in this matter are not a few. Parisiensis speaking of David's Psalms cries out, Eheu! quot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habet sanctus David, vel potiùs Spiritus sanctus ad suam Cytharam! Oh! how many Dullards hath holy David, or rather the holy Spirit to his harp, who are little affected with the heavenly melody that it makes▪ And may it not be as truly said concerning the precious promises of Christ, Oh! how many are there that taste little or nothing of their sweetness? What vast numbers of men are there who see no more worth and beauty in them, then blind persons do in the Sun? How many be there that spend and blaze away the lamp of their time in frothy studies, and curious speculations, but seldom or never look into the Bible to read and understand what their interest or right is to the blessings of heaven by the promises? How ambitious are others to be thought to know much of the mind of God concerning his decrees, which are as a sealed book; but neglect to see and know, both his will and love in the Gospel, and the promises, which are as a book wide open, written in fair and legible characters for all to look into? In the one their travel and labour is fruitless, like that of the Aunts, which often climb high trees to seek for food, but when they are at the top return empty, not being able to bring any thing down with them. But in the other it would prove like that of the Bee, which seeks its aliment among fragrant flowers, and fails not to return to its hive laden with honey. O! that Ministers who seem to converse with the promises more than others▪ were not guilty of this great sin, while they only read and study them as Lawyers do other men's evidences and titles of land▪ without any respects of being proprietaries themselves. Or else are (as Bernard expresseth it) like the teeth, qui toti corpori masticant cibum, & nullum indè saporem habent: Which chew meat for the whole body; but derive no sweetness from it, that may delight or profit them. Oh! that many who look upon themselves as true heirs of the promises, were not injurious to the worth and dignity of them, while they make the success of Providences the warrant of the goodness of their actions, rather than the stability of the Promises, which in all undertake are the surest guides for to direct, and the best comforters for to encourage. It is the observation of Sulpicius concerning the ancient Jews, that Semper in secundis rebus immemores coelestium beneficiorum, idolis supplicabant, in adversis Deo: Always in prosperity being unmindful of heavenly blessings, they did worship idols, and in their adversity the true God. And so it may be said concerning many professors in these present times, that in external successes and prosperous events, they altogether adore and extol providences; but when these frown upon them, or grow cloudy, than they betake themselves to promises. SECT. 2. A second aggravation is from the vanity and emptiness of those things which most men set their hearts upon. The mind of man is the supreme and most noble faculty of the soul, endued by God with such abilities, and graces which do abundantly declare that earthly things can no more satisfy it, or fill it, than the breath of the mariners can fill the sails; And therefore God hath provided for it suitable objects, on which it may exercise both its natural power, and the supernatural habits which by his Spirit he infuseth into it, with fullness of delight and satisfaction. He hath in his Word revealed high mysteries which the glorious Angels do desire to pry into, 1 Pet. 1. 12. in the contemplation of which the mind of believers may be ever fruitfully busied; And he hath also made precious promises both of grace and glory, on which their faith may certainly rest, and from which it may derive more sweetness and contentment in one hour, than the fruition of all earthly perfections will ever be able to yield in a succession of ages. And yet how apt are believers as well as others to let their thoughts to fix and dwell on these empty things that are below; rather then to study and delight themselves in the knowledge of these divine and Angelical objects? How often do they more resemble in their conversation the Israelites that were scattered abroad throughout the land of Egypt to gather straw and stubble, Exod. 5. 12. then the wise Merchant that spent his time in seeking of goodly pearls, Mat. 13. 45. And do they not by such preposterous and irregular actings greatly undervalue, and highly dishonour the precious things of the Gospel? Do they not by thus walking make themselves inhabitants of the world, rather than pilgrims and strangers that seek and desire an heavenly country? Oh! therefore let me prevail with you who believe that God hath provided better things for you then others, to be exceeding circumspect, and cautious, that you let nothing lie nearer your hearts, or take up more of your thoughts, than the promises of life and glory; the expectation of which yields at present the best comfort, and their fruition the most absolute and perfect happiness. SECT. 3. A third aggravation is from the mutability, and uncertainty of all those things which do take off the most men both from seeking after the promises and from valuing of them according to their worth. It is a true position of Lessius in his divine perfections, that Aeternitas efficit bonum infinitè melius, & malum infinitè pejus: Duration and Aeviternity do make a good infinitely better, and an evil infinitely worse. And in this respect the good things which are held forth in the promises, do fare excel all earthly riches or grandeur whatever; which in their greatest ability are both short and mutable. Can any man say that the wild fowl in his grounds are his, which suddenly take their wings and fly away, and for a while make a stay in another man's field, and thereby give a like propriety unto the second, as they did unto the first? No more can any man call riches truly his, which like to winged birds shift their owners, and haste from one to another. Have not the present times furnished us with instances in this kind even to astonishment? Have we not seen the glory of Nobles stained with ignominy? Have not those that dwelled in stately Mansions become as Cottagers, and they that sat in low places been invested in stately Mansions? Have we not beheld the evil that Solomon complains of, Eccles. 10. 7. Servants upon horses, and Princes walking as servants upon the earth? And yet who is there that by all these changes is awakened to get evidences that will not burn, riches that cannot be plundered, an inheritance that cannot be shaken? Oh! how greedily do men still pursue the fleeting vanities, and neglect the true riches that endure for ever? SECT. 4. A fourth aggravation is from the facility of being made partakers of the promises: they are precious, but not difficult, the terms upon which they are tendered serve rather to invite then to deter. We need not say in our heart, Who shall ascend into heaven to bring down Christ from above? Or, who shall descend into the deep, to bring up Christ again from the dead? the word is nigh unto us, Rom. 10. 6, 7. It is no wonder if pearls which lie at the bottom of steep rocks, have but few adventurers for them, because the danger may be more than the gain; if gold in remote countries and deep mines be not traveled for, and digged out of the bowels of the earth: But it may be justly wondered at, and censured as the highest folly, if men coming to a full heap of treasures be invited to throw away the clay & dirt with which their hands are filled, & the superfluities with which they are loaded, and to take of gold and pearl as much as they can carry, should refuse to do the one, that they might thereby be enabled to do the other. What is it else that God and Christ do require of men to the receiving of the promises, but only that they would disburden themselves of earthly encumbrances which hinder the reception of spiritual mercies, that so with hearts emptied of worldly affections and cares they may be qualified for the fullness of heavenly riches? When Joseph invited his father and brethren to come down into Egypt, he bids them not to regard their stuff; for the good of all the land of Egypt is yours, Gen. 45. 20. So the true heavenly Joseph when he invited men to come unto him, he bids them not to set their hearts on things on the earth; because all the riches of his Kingdom, are before them, and by his promises made over to them. How inexcusable then must their neglect be who do not with answerable hearts and desires embrace such precious offers. SECT. 5. A fifth aggravation is taken from the command of God and Christ. We are not only invited to take hold of the promises; but we are commanded to believe the excellency of them. This (saith the Apostle) is his commandment that we should believe on the Name of his Son Jesus Christ, Joh. 3. 23. That is, we ought so to believe his promises, his say, as to count them worthy of all acceptation. As we assent unto them for their truth; so are we to embrace them for their preciousness and worth. Our faith must work by love; it must put forth itself in the strength of all affection by our esteeming and prising of them above the most desirable things of the world. Thus David did when he said, Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever; for they are the rejoicings of my heart, Psalm. 119. 111. God's promises he made as his lands, as his goods, as his all. They were more dear to him then all his temporal things whatsoever. When therefore they are not thus honoured both in the hearts, and in the lives of believers, the great Commandment of the Gospel is violated, the disobedience of which will be recompensed with more heavy and sore judgements, than the breaches of the Law. CHAP. XVIII. Four differences between the promises of God, and Satan. THe second Application from this truth, That the promises of the Gospel are precious▪ shall be to acquaint us with the wide differences that are between the promises of God, and the promises of the Devil, who is the great deceiver of the whole world, Rev. 12. 9 Sin which Satan by all his arts endeavoureth to make men guilty of, that so they may be as miserable as himself; is in itself so full of deformity and ugliness, as that if it were but seen in its true shape, there could not be a more effectual argument to keep men from the commission of it then it's own monstrosity. There are three things say the School that cannot be defined, Dei formositas, materiae primae informitas, & peccati deformitas: The Amiableness and beauty of God, the informity of the first matter, and the deformity of sin. Now to hid and cover this misshapen monster Satan useth not a few devices: Sometimes he makes it to appear in the habit and likeness of a virtue, and thus he tempts men to covetousness under the notion of frugality; to riot and prodigality under the colour of liberality. Sometimes he varnisheth it with the specious shows of profit, and gain, and promiseth large rewards to them that will but comply with his suggestions and counsels. And this is one of the most subtle artifices that he useth to withdraw a man from any good, to entice and win him to any sin. Thus he tempted Balaam to venture upon the cursing of God's people by the promise of honour and preferment, Micha's Levite with a small augmentation of his stipend promised unto him, he tempted both to theft and idolatry; Judas upon the promise of thirty pieces of silver, which the instruments of the devil make unto him, he tempts to sell the life and blood of his blessed Master, yea, by a frank and large promise of all the kingdoms of the world; he tempts our Lord and Saviour to the highest act of idolatry that is imaginable, to fall down and worship him: not despairing by the greatness of the offer to hid the foulness of the sin, though it be with scorn and indignation rejected by Christ, Mat. 4. 10. Because therefore that the most of men are ready to be deceived by the speciousness of the devils promises, and to give more heed to what he speaks, then to the good Word of God. I shall in four particulars set forth the difference between the promises of God, and the promises of Satan. The first is the difference between the persons that make them. Promises are like bonds which depend altogether upon the sufficiency of the surety. If a beggar seal to an instrument for the payment of ten thousand pounds, who esteems it to be any better than a blank? But if a man of estate and ability do bind himself to pay such a sum, it is looked upon as so much real estate, and men dovalue themselves by such bills and bonds as well as by what is in their own possession. God who hath made rich promises to believers, is able to perform what he hath spoken. He is rich in mercy, Eph. 2. 4. Abundant in goodness and truth, Exod. 34. 6. He is the God of truth, Psalm. 31. 5. The Father of mercies, 2 Cor. 1. 3. But the devil is a Beggar, an outcast, one that hath nothing in possession, nothing in disposition. He is a liar, and the father of it, John 8. 44. A deceiver, Revel. 12. 9 A murderer from the beginning, who killed not one, but all in one, Joh. 8. 44. How then can his promises be a foundation of support to any, that have no other word to build upon but his? He hath never kept his promise, and God hath never broke his promise. There hath not failed one word of all his good promise, which he promised by the hand of Moses his servant, 1 Kings 56. A second difference is in the matter of the promises. Let us weigh the promises of the one and of the other in the balance of truth, and we shall find that the promises of God are gold, and the promises of the devil are Alchemy, such which though they glitter much, have no worth or excellency in them. Or, that they are, as Aristotle calls the Rainbow, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an appearance only, and not like the cloud, which he styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a true and real substance. God's, are substantial realities, and his, vanishing and fleeting shadows windy and swollen bladders, which but a little pricked, do quickly fall and grow lank. Stobaeus out of Herodotus tells a story of one Archetimus, who had deposited moneys in the hand of Cydias his friend, who afterwards requiring them again of him; he denied the receiving any. And being thereupon cited before the Judges, for want of other proof, it was resolved that the matter should be determined by a solemn oath: A day for which being appointed, Cydias feigning illness, provides him an hallow staff, into which he put the gold, and while he went to the Altar to swear, he gave his staff into the hand of Archetimus to hold; and then swore that he had received moneys of him, but he had returned them again, Archetimus being much incensed both by his impudence and his own loss, flings down the staff with such violence upon the ground, that it broke into pieces, and the money in it scattered abroad, whereby Cydias his fraud was fully detected. And this the Historian calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, A lie made up of art and subtlety, such are all Satan's promises, they are nothing but well tempered and fine spun lies, gilded impostures, cheats framed on purpose to deceive: The matter of them is false, as well as the end of them is deceitful. A third difference is in the ground of the promises. God's promises do arise from his love and good will to those to whom they are made, and are the powerful motives by which he wins and draws men to the obedience of himself: But Satan's promises do flow from his irreconcilable hatred of God, and his envying of man's happiness which God by Christ hath freely estated upon him: He cannot bear that God should have any to worship him, or to love him, and therefore he useth all ways that malice and envy can prompt unto him to draw and entice men from him. As God useth his promises to oblige and tie men to himself as by so many strong cords and bands of love: So Satan on the contrary makes use of his promises to alienate men's hearts and affections from God, and to bring them into bondage to himself: His great end by all these specious artifices of promising honour, riches, pleasure, or whatsoever may be a bait to carnal hearts, is at once to deprive God of his glory, and man of his happiness. His promises are as the meat which fowlers set before birds, which is not to feed them, but to take them. A fourth difference is in the accomplishment, God's promises are always like unto a rich and seasonable harvest, which fully answers the hopes and expectation of the husbandman: they who wait upon him have never their faces covered with shame, nor their hearts dejected with disappointments. He is as Bernard expresseth it, Verax in promissione, potens in exhibitione: Faithful in promising, powerful in performing. God who cannot lie hath promised, Tit. 1. 2. But as God is always righteous in keeping his word; so Satan is always false in breaking his word: If he promise bread, he gives a stone; if fish, a serpent; if riches, poverty. Remigius who was a Judge in Florence, and had many witches under his examination, reports that divers of them have confessed that the seeming gold and money which they received of him, when it came to be used, proved either leaves or sand; not above the value of three stivers, was ever found to be currant money; And indeed how can it otherwise be expected? When such is his hatred unto all man kind, as that he continually seeks their ruin, and not their welfare? Can any man rationally conceive that he should deal better with him, then with our first Parents? In propounding the temptation he makes a show of friendship; but in the close he proves a bloody liar. What other thing did they behold by his opening of their eyes, but their own shame, and folly in harkening unto his deceitful words? What other knowledge did they gain; but only the sad experience of the transitoriness of sinful pleasures, which vanish as soon as they are tasted, and prove to be not food, but poison. Seeing then that in all these respects there is so wide a difference between God's promises, and the Devils: Oh! then how inexcusable is their sin who by the enchantments and effascinations of Satan are drawn aside to give more credit unto his bare word, then to the promises of God that are ratified with his oath, and Christ's blood. What higher contumely and scorn can any put upon God, then by their unbelief to make him a liar; and that in such a manner, as to have more regard to what Satan the father of lies speaks, then to what God who is the Father of mercies swears? And yet in this kind God suffers dishonour from more than a few. How great is the number of those who upon the appearance of the least difficulty are apt to be jealous of his faithfulness, and through distrust to wave the waiting upon him in his promise, for the obtaining of some particular blessing, and betake themselves unto such ways as Satan secretly suggests to them, to be both more compendious, and certain? And what is this less than to be interpretatively guilty, if not formally of so foul a sin, as the making of the most holy and righteous God a liar? Let me therefore in a few words prevail with all those that profess to the world to have their dependence upon God, and to derive their comforts from his promises, to be circumspect how they comply with any way or means for the effecting of their desires, that may be dishonourable to God and to those most sure promises which he hath made of giving them whatsoever they ask of him according to his will. To speak well (saith Isiodorus Pelutiota) is to sound like a Cymbal; but to do well is to act like an Angel. It is not a believers work only to speak well of the promises, but to act faith in them; and when through diffidence he steps aside into any unwarrantable path, he than gives occasion unto worldly and carnal men to think and speak as slightly of God's promises, as he at other times hath spoken unto the world of the deceitfulness and inconstancy of the promises of Satan. CHAP. XIX. The worst estate of a believer is better than the best estate of unbelievers. A Third application may be this: If the promises which are by Christ are so exceeding great and precious: Then the lowest estate that can be fall a believer who hath an interest and right unto them, is fare better than the highest and most glorious condition of any person, that can lay no claim or title to them. So that Luther might well say, he had rather be Christianus rusticus quàm Alexander ethnicus: a poor Rustic, and a Christian, then to be great Alexander, and an heathen. This corollary though it be a truth which all contradiction can no more shake, than the violence of tempestuous waves can stir the rocks against which they dash and break; yet it hath so much of a Paradox in it, that from the most part of men it may find no better entertainment than Paul's doctrine of the resurrection did at Athens, where he hath no better title given to him by the grand Sophies of the Epicureans and Stoics, than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a sour of words, a babbler, Act. 17. 18. Would it not seem a strange opinion, if one should assert that he who lackeys it before the chariot is a better man than he that rides in it; that he who lives in a Wilderness meanly clad and faring hardly, is more happy than they that are in King's houses, and wear soft raiment; that he who is poor and is bid to sit at the footstool, is more worthy than he that hath the chiefest place given unto him in the Assembly? And can it sound less strange in the ears of the world that the most despicable condition of a believer is far above the happiness of him that hath all the honours and delights that the earth can yield flowing in upon him, and meeting in him, as so many lines in one point? I shall therefore endeavour to clear the truth of this inference so fully, as that it may serve to support and comfort afflicted Christians under all their pressures so as not to complain, because they are in their extremities more happy than the best worlding in his delights. And that it may likewise provoke those who have made it their design to be rather great then good, to bethink themselves of their folly, and to acknowledge that there is no tenure like an interest in the Covenant and promises, and that there is no happiness like to the happiness of a believer, which hath its foundation laid in grace, and not in greatness. To this end let us in a few particulars compare, or weigh as in a balance, the worst of a believers estate with the best of a worldly, but yet a wicked man's estate, and we shall quickly see that the advantage will lie on that part of the scale in which the believer stands, and not on the other. SECT. 1. First, a believer haply is in the world in no better condition than a stranger that hath little or no interest in its enfranchisements, privileges and immunities which others daily find the sweet of, in the many benefits that they enjoy: He is frowned upon when others are courted and smiled upon by those that have honour▪ s and preferments in their power to bestow. He lives like Israel in Egypt, under hard pressures, when others rule and reign as Lords. He is friendless, and finds none either to pity his wrongs, or to do him the least right. To his words, to his sighs he finds a deaf and regardless ear continually turned, when others have the Law open, where they may implead their adversaries, and have friends that are willing to countenance them, and ready to help them. Can he then that wants all these things, be more happy than he who enjoys them? Yes, for though a believer be a stranger here below▪ yet he is a Citizen of the new Jerusalem which is above, to which every worldly man is a foreigner, Ephes. 2. 12. And from thence, he that bends his brow upon the wicked beholds him with love, Ps. 11. 7. Though he be the world's bondman, yet he is the Lords freeman, 1 Cor. 7. 22. Though here he be friendless, yet what near and familiar relations have the whole blessed Trinity been pleased to take upon them, and to make known themselves by unto him? God as a Father, Christ as a Brother, and the holy Spirit as a Comforter; All whom the men of the world can call by no such titles. Though here his supplications and his tears avail not; yet in heaven his prayers are registered, and his tears are bottled. SECT. 2. Secondly, a Believer, as he is a stranger, so also may he be afflicted with want, having little or nothing in possession to relieve his necessities. He may want clothing for his back, and food for his belly. He may have only torum itr amineum, & cibos graminoes, straw for his bed, grass and herbs for his meat when others sleep upon soft down, and ●are doliciously every day. He haply hath scarce water to quench his thirst, when others have variety of choice wines to please and delight their palates. All this and much more is acknowledged to be the lot and portion of many Christians, such of whom the world is not worthy. But yet let us view their condition, so as to compare it with the men of the world, whose bellies are filled with hid treasure, and we shall quickly see that a true judgement and estimate being made of both; that the thorns of the one will smell sweeter, than the roses of the other: his necessities will be more desirable, than their fullness, because wants sanctified are better than unsanctified enjoyments. All their morsels are rolled up in the filth of their sin, and in the bitterness of God's malediction: and all his wants are both sweetened and supplied with the comforts of God's promises. Though he hath nothing for the present, yet he is rich in hopes. Though he have nothing in possession, yet he hath an inheritance, a Kingdom, a Crown in reversion. They have all their good things in this life, and he hath his reserved for the other. Though he have no food for his body, yet he hath Manna for his soul. He hath an hungry body, and they a starved soul. Though he have here scarce a place to lay his head on, yet is there room reserved for him in Abraham's bosom, where he shall for ever dwell in joy, when others lie down in sorrow, Isa. 50. 10. Though his body be as a parched wilderness for thirst, yet his soul is as a watered garden, Out of his belly flow rivers of living water, John. 7. 38. We may truly say of a believer what Paul speaks of himself; though he was poor, yet he had enough to make many rich; though he had nothing, yet he possessed all things. Fideli homini totus mundus divitiarum est, infideli autem nec obolus: To a Christian all the world is his riches, to an unbeliever not a doit of it, saith Prosper. There is no creature which doth not owe an homage unto him, and shall certainly pay it, if his necessities do require it. The heavens shall hear the earth, and the earth shall hear the corn and the wine and the oil in answer to Jezreel ' s prayers, Hos. 2. 21, 22. What is at further distance than the heavens, and so more unlikely to hear then heavens? What creature more dull than earth, and so more unmeet to be affected and moved with a cry? And yet both the heavens and the earth shall not be deaf to Jezreel's prayers, but shall fulfil their desires, and supply their wants. SECT. 3. Thirdly, a believer is not only exercised with the pressing evils of want & poverty; but he oftentimes lies under the sore burden of reproach and obloquy, which to an ingenuous spirit is more bitter than death itself. He is the common mark to which all the sharp arrows of men's tongues are directed. He is the only person that is taken up in the lips of talkers, and is the infamy of the people, Ezek. 36. 3. When others are in their name as beautiful as Absalon, who from the sole of his foot to the crown of his head, had no blemish in him; he is as Job on the dunghill overspread with defamations that are as so many putrid ulcers. When others are cried up as the glory of their times, he is decried as the filth, and offscouring of the world, 1 Cor. 4. 13. When the actions of others are blazoned as their virtues, his that are in themselves commendable are censured as full of pride, hypocrisy, affectation and singularity. Where is then the blessedness of his condition that you spoke of? How can his estate that is overcast with a more pitchy darkness then that of the night, be better than the best of theirs that hath not the least shadow of any such evil stretching out itself upon it? True it is that none are more evil spoken of, and blasted in their names then believers; but the ground of it springs not from their just deservings; but from the world's malice and enmity to God, which is derived to them for his sake. Let Nehemiah and the Jews set upon the rebuilding of the Temple, and the repairing of the waste place of Jerusalem, and Sanbullat upbraids them with intentions of rebellion, Neh. 6. 6. Let Paul make known the Gospel of Christ, and the Jews that believe not, cry out, that he is one of them that turn the world upsidedown, Act. 17. 6. Let the primitive Christians that cannot safely meet in the day, take the opportunity of the night to worship God, and the Heathens asperse their Assemblies to be full of uncleanness and cruelty, and that they have suppers not much unlike that of Thyestes', as Tertullian shows in his Apology. Now in these sufferings for God, there are such promises from God made and fulfilled to them, as that there is more sweetness to be found in the reproaches that they undergo for him from the world, than there can be contentment in its smiles or favour. And therefore Moses chose rather to suffer reproaches with Israel then to enjoy treasures in Egypt, Heb. 11. 26. The contumelies & slanders which they undergo on Christ's behalf, serve both to make the present comforts more sweet, and their reward hereafter more glorious. Blessed are ye (saith our Saviour) when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall speak all manner of evil against you falsely for my Names sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in heaven, Mat. 10. 11. And now speak, O ye worldlings, that judge happiness by as false a rule, as they do that measure their height by their shadow. Who is in a true estimate the better man, Elijah that runs before the chariot, or Ahab that sits in it? John the Baptist that is clothed with camels hair, or Herod & his Courtiers that are arrayed with robes and costly garments? the poor whom God hath chosen to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom, James 2. 5. or the man that hath the gold ring, and hath the chief place in Assemblies given unto him? Which condition is now more desirable, to be a stranger to the world, and to be the Lords freeman▪ or to be an Alien to God, and the Covenant of promise, and to be a Denizon only of the world? To be rich to God, and poor to men, or to be rich to men, and poor to God. To be the favourite of heaven, and to be contemned on earth, or to be the darling of earth, and the enemy of heaven? O therefore learn to judge of happiness not by the light of sense, but by the lamp of the Sanctuary: and in time bethink yourselves, that nothing can be a foundation of happiness unto you, that hath not its stability from the promise of God. CHAP. XX. Grounds of thankfulness for precious promises. A Fourth application is to exhort believers that are made partakers of such great and precious promises, to abound in all thankfulness to God and Christ, who are the sole fountain from whence these streams of living waters do flow. When old Isaac had eaten of his son's venison, he blessed him that had prepared it for him: how much more should they that have tasted how good God is, have their mouths filled with the blessing and praising of his Name, that hath poured forth his love and mercy in such rich promises, as are to the soul more sweet than marrow and fatness? To this duty holy David doth quicken and stir up himself, Psal. 103. when he summons all the faculties of his soul to praise the Lord; Let all that is within me bless his holy Name, Vers. 1. And that he may make the deeper impressions of God's goodness upon his own heart, he frames a short, but yet a pithy compendium of his love towards him, in his pardoning and healing grace, Vers. 3. He forgiveth all thine iniquities, and healeth all thy diseases. In his redeeming and saving grace, Vers. 4. He redeemeth thy life from destruction, and crowneth thee with loving kindness, and tender mercies. In his supporting and renewing mercies, Vers. 5. He satisfieth thy mouth with good things: thy youth is renewed as the eagles. And of all these blessings are believers made partakers in the promises; it therefore becomes them to pay unto God a tribute of thankfulness, and that upon these grounds. First, the end of God's goodness to his creatures is his glory, and that which he chief delights in. Trumpeters love to sound where there is an echo; and God loves to bestow his mercies where he may hear of them again. For man to make the end of his actions in any kind to be his own praise, doth not only taint and flieblow his services with hypocrisy, and pride, so as to mar the beauty of them, but also transforms them into vices that are hateful unto God and man: For it is not meet that he who derives his being from another, should have his actions to terminate in himself. He that gives the being, giveth also the rule and end of its working, by both which the goodness of its actions are denominated. The rule of its working is the law and will of him who gave it a being, and the end of all its actions is his glory. But God who is the fountain of his own being, can have in all his works no other end then his own praise and glory. This is his end in all his works of creation, Prov. 16. 4. The Lord made all things for himself. And this is the great end of all his works of grace in Christ, Ephes. 1. 6. That we should be to the praise of the glory of his grace. All the eternal purposes of God concerning man's salvation from the first to the last, do ultimately resolve themselves into his glory. Secondly, to give unto God praise, and thankful acknowledgements for his great and precious promises, is all the return that we can make. David as a man truly sensible of his many, and deep obligations unto God, hath a great consultation with himself, which way he should express his thankfulness unto him; What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits towards me? Psalm. 116. 12. But after all muse and studyings with himself he can find no other way but this: I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the Name of the Lord, Verse. 13. An Eucharistical sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving is all that David, though a King, can find to give unto God: And this kind of payment the poor may make as well as the rich, the young as well as the old. The children in the Gospel can cry Hosanna, and say, Blessed is he that cometh in the Name of the Lord, Mat. 21. 15. as well as others. It is a good observation of Nazianzen, that God hath equalised all men in that ability which most recommends or discommends them unto him, and that is the ability of the will, to love him and to give him praise. This is that which all may do who have tasted how good God is, and this is all that the best can do, who have been most filled with the riches of his mercy. Seeing therefore that a thankful recognition of God's love and bounty in his promises, is the only recompense that we can make; it is most meet that we should abound in it, and make it not only the duty of our lips, but of our hearts, breathing forth our very souls in the continual praises of him, who hath manifested the gracious purposes of his heart unto us in many rich promises of life and salvation. More than this, God in his mercy doth not desire: and less than this in all reason we cannot give. Thirdly, the giving of God praise and glory in endless songs of thanksgiving, is the only work of the Saints in heaven; when fully made partakers of all the blessings that the promises do hold forth▪ It is now the continual blessed exercise of all the inhabitants of those everlasting Mansions in the highest heavens; and it shall be ours, when we shall be translated thither, and have our faith turned into vision, and our hope into enjoyment. Requisite therefore it is that what we know must be our eternal exercise in heaven, to make that our frequent practice on earth. Those persons that intent to travel into remote and foreign countries with an advantage unto themselves, do beforehand acquaint themselves with the customs, manners, and fashions of the place to which they go, and from others whose experience may give the best light, do inquire what is the ingeny and disposition of the natives, that so they may the better comply with their forms and civilities, yea, they endeavour to get some smattering of the language, that they may not be altogether strangers to what is done and spoken there: So should Christians, who expect to dwell with the Lord for ever, with all diligence inure themselves to the work and services of that innumerable company of Angels, and spirits of just men made perfect, and to get some rudiments of their heavenly language while they are below; that so they may the better bear a part in that celestial choir, singing with a loud voice, Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honour, and power, and might be unto our God for ever and ever, Rev. 7. 12. Now that this duty of thankfulness may run in a right channel, I shall in some few particulars show how it may, and aught to be expressed. First, let thankfulness appear in the fulfilling of that exhortation of the Apostle, 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having these promises, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God. The promises as they are causes working holiness, so also are they Arguments inciting to it, being for the most part propounded as rewards unto the obedience of faith, which is a purifying and cleansing grace, Acts 15. 9 In what more genuine fruits therefore can thankfulness manifest itself, then in holiness? Or how can a believer better evidence his high esteem of the promises, then by his continual pressing forward to the perfection of sanctity? Now as Aristotle tells us in the first book of his Rhetorics, that there are two ways by which men grow rich; either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by adding to their present store; or else 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by substracting and taking away from their expenses. So also holiness is perfected by a double means, either by the addition of one grace unto another, which is the duty that Saint Peter calls for, 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness, etc. Or else by not making provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof, which is the counsel that Saint Paul gives to believers, Rom. 13. 14. And he that doth not both these ways endeavour the increase of holiness, starving the boundless desires of the flesh, and strengthening the graces of the Spirit by renewing acts of godliness, can never be rich either in grace or comfort. Secondly, let thankfulness for the promises be expressed, in proclaiming that mercy, salvation and assured peace which you have received from them. If so be you have tasted that God is good, do as the birds, which when they come to a full heap chirp, and invite their fellows. Tell the hungry soul what satisfying and blessed food the promises are: the dejected, what reviving cordials: the poor, what enduring riches: the broken, and wounded, what healing balsams they are; that so they may be encouraged to take hold of these promises by an hand of faith. Cripples that return with health from the , hang up their crutches on the trees, and their rags on the hedges that are near, that thereby they may win credit and esteem to the waters. And so to honour the Wells of salvation should Christians make known the great things that God hath done for them, and leave in every place where they come some testimony of their thankfulness, and God's goodness. Come (saith David) all ye that fear the Lord, and I will tell you what he hath done for my soul, Psal. 66. 16. He doth not call them (as Austin observes) to acquaint them with speculations how wide the earth is, how fare the heavens are stretched out, what the number of the stars is, or what is the course of the Sun; but come and I will tell you the wonders of his grace, the faithfulness of his promises, the riches of his mercy to my soul. Oh! that Believers would be persuaded to declare thus the experiences that they have any time had of God's truth and power in his Word, and in a way of gratitude to communicate them unto others. How instrumental might they thereby become in the comforting and establishing of others? Experiences are like milk in the breast of the Nurse, that hath received a concoction, and is thereby made a more facile and pure nourishment to the child that partakes of it. Thirdly, let thankfulness for the precious promises be expressed, in a most affectionate blessing of God, for the Lord Jesus Christ, by whom all that is wrapped up in them is given unto us. He is the first matter as it were, out of which God hath framed all our good. He is the receptacle in which all blessings are laid up, and the Wellhead from whence they all flow. By his blood the promises are purchased for us, and by his most powerful intercession they are made good unto us. Alas! how little efficacy would all our prayers have, if they were not presented to God the Father by his hand? How small acceptance would our persons find, if God did not look upon us in him? How uncertain would all our comforts be, if the root of them were not in him, if he were not as the tree of life upon which they grow? Yea, how quickly should we spy an hell that might amaze us, between heaven, and any other ground of confidence that could possibly be imagined by us out of Christ▪ When therefore we do at any time make a thankful recognition of God's goodness to us in the particular mercies of the promises of the Gospel, let us be sure to put the Name of Christ to all: When we bless God for blotting out our iniquities, for pardoning freely all our sins, let us set this crown upon the head of the mercy, that he hath done it in Christ. When we bless him for sanctifying of us, let us ever add for his sanctifying us in Christ. When we praise him for our Adoption and Sonship, let us bless him for doing of it in Christ. When we honour him for the assured hopes of life and glory in heaven, let us say as the Apostle doth, Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ, Ephes. 1. 3. Fourthly, Let thankfulness for the promises appear in strong desires, and vehement pant after the plenary possession, and perfect enjoyment of all that felicity, of which they are the earnests and pledges given us by God. In this life we are but as Kings in the Cradle, the setting of the crown upon our heads is reserved till we come to heaven. Here we are but as espoused persons, and not as the Bride in her best clothes; in the other life we put on the robes of glory, which shall make our bodies shine ten thousand times brighter than the Sun, and our souls ten thousand times brighter than our bodies. Here we are but as invited guests to the feast, and supper of the great King; we sit not down at his table till we come to heaven, and then Christ bids us eat, O friends, and drink abundantly O beloved. While therefore we are absent from the Lord, and do by the eye of faith only peep into the things that are within the veil, and enjoy a few foretastes of glory and immortality; we should show how highly we prise the promises, by longing after, and wishing for the final accomplishment of all. Oh! when will it be that I shall see him in whose blood I was washed, by whose stripes I was healed, by whose Spirit I was sanctified, by whose merits such great things are prepared for me? How long, Lord, holy and true, will it be ere death shall be swallowed up in victory, and mortality put on immortality? Thus Bernard upon those words of our Saviour (John 16. 16. A little while and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while and ye shall see me,) passionately expresseth himself, Pie Domine, modicum illud vocas in quo te non videam? O modicum, modicum longum! Good Lord, dost thou call that a little while, in which I shall not see thee? O long, long little! Such desires as these are true evidences of a thankful heart. CHAP. XXI. Motives to act faith in the Promises. THE fifth and last application is, to stir up Believers to act precious faith (as the Apostle calls it, 2 Pet. 1. 1.) upon the precious promises: without which, what are the promises in the Word, but as sugar in the wine, that lying unstired, doth not sweeten; but as full breasts undrawn, that do not nourish; but as beds of spices, that being unblown upon, do not lend forth their fragrant and delightful odours? It is the exercise and skill of faith that fetcheth out the virtue and sweetness which lies h●d in them▪ as it is the industry of the Bee that extracts the honey from the flowers. The Bee would starve notwithstanding all the flowery meadows, if it did not labour: and so would a Christian languish and pine away notwithstanding all the precious promises, if faith should be idle and unactive. O then that I might prevail with Believers to cast aside every weight that hindereth, and to set on work this noble and divine grace of faith, whose glory and worth is not to be seen in the habit; but in the acts of it. What doth Samson differ from another man while he sleeps in the lap of Dalilah? But when he awakes out of his sleep, and breaks the with'hs and cords that bond him, as a thread of tow when it toucheth the fire, and carries away the beam and the web in which his locks are fastened; then his strength appears in its greatness to be matchless. And so in what is a Believer distinguished from another man, while the habit of faith lies asleep in his bosom, and is not actuated on the promises? But when it stirs, and rouseth up itself to take hold of God and Christ in his Word, how apparent is the strength of the one, and the weakness of the other made to every eye? What burdens doth the one stand under and carry away upon his shoulders under which the other sinks? what temptations doth the one overcome, unto which the other without resistance yields? What viper doth the one shake off his hand into the fire without the least hurt, which fasten upon the other, and sting him unto death? It is faith which makes us to rejoice in tribulations, Rom. 5. 3. It is faith which maketh us to possess our souls in patience infiery trials, Heb. 10. 36. It is faith which makes us resolute in desertions, jonah 2. 4. It is faith which makes every condition of life comfortable, Hab. 2. 4. But that I may yet more fully prosecute this exhortation which hitherto is as a vessel upon the wheel of the Potter that hath not received it perfect shape: I shall propound some particular arguments and considerations that may animat Believers to live the life of faith, which stands chief in two things. First, in a knowledge of, and a familiar acquaintance with the Word, so as to have it in readiness for direction. Secondly, in a right improvement and exercise of faith on the Word and promises of God. For as faith is truly the life and guide of the soul; so the Word is the ground, life and guide of our faith. Now the Arguments that I shall set down, are briefly three. First, The life of faith is that life which above all others, God would have Believers to live: And this appears by the distance that God hath put between his promises and his performances, making their whole life to be rather a life of hopes, then of enjoyments, and the good things that he gives to relate more to the future, then to the present time. God was graciously pleased to open a door of hope to fallen man in that first Gospel-promise which he himself proclaimed, Gen. 3. 15. that the seed of the woman should break the Serpent's head. But how many generations passed away, before the fullness of time came, in which he sent forth his Son made of a woman? He hath promised to Believers that they shall tread down the wicked, and that they shall be ashes under the soles of their feet. Mal. 4. 3. But yet he hath made their warfare to be as long as their life. He hath promised a glorious resurrection of their bodies out of the grave: And yet for how many thousand years have his Saints lain dissolved in their dust, as if they did seem to be altogether forgotten by him? Now to what end hath God set such long periods of time between the making and the accomplishing of his promises? but only that he would have the heirs of them to live by faith, yea, and to die in faith by resting on the truth of his Word for the fulfilling of every mercy which he hath undertaken for in his promises. And indeed this glory which Believers give to God in the exercise of their faith upon his Word, is fare greater, and more noble than all that glory which the whole universe of creatures do yield unto him. They give him the glory of his goodness in their being, and in the comforts of it derived unto them by him. But who gives him the glory of his faithfulness in his promises but a Believer? Who is it that rejoiceth in hope of the glory of God, Rom. 5. 2. but a Believer? Who glories in tribulations but a Believer? Who is it that lets not his confidence die when his life expires, but a Believer? My flesh and my heart faileth, (saith David) but God is the rock of my heart and my portion for ever, Psal. 73. 26. Secondly, The life of faith is of all estates the most contented, and of all lives the fullest of real sweetness and delight. First, It is the most contented life▪ True contentment is the inseparable companion of true faith, 1 Tim. 6. 6. A Believer is the only person that is instructed in this sacred mystery, Phil. 4. 13. The things that others want, he desires not: Riches which others covet with the straining of their consciences, he throws away as snares: Pleasures which others drink down with a thirst unsatisfied, he out of choice sparingly sips of, or else refuseth so much as to taste: Honours that others value themselves by, he looks upon as fancies, and not realities. As Plato told the Musicians, that a Philosopher could dine and eat his meat without them: So a Believer can live happily without the having of any of these things. And the ground of all this is, because by faith he lives above them, and enjoys more high and noble delights in the very expectation and hope of that blessedness which God hath promised, than any other can have from the fruition of an earthly Paradise, or of the whole world itself, if turned and changed into an Eden. Secondly, Of all lives, the life of faith is the sweetest. The delicacies that faith feeds upon doth not arise from any stagnant and impure pits or cisterns, but from the fountain and well of life: It sucks the breasts of consolation, Isay 66. 11. It lives upon the free favour of God, which is better than life itself, Psal. 63. 3. It hath Christ himself for nutriment, whose flesh is meat indeed, whose blood is drink indeed, John 6. 55. All which are food the world knows not of: it never understood their preciousness, or tasted their sweetness. There is a greater difference between the repasts of faith, and the refreshments of the world, than there is between the Physic of the Galenists & Paracelsians, the one giving it in the drug, and the other (as they boast) in the quintessence, and spirits extracted from that phlegm and earthymatter that deads' & alleys their efficacy. All the comforts of faith have in them a native purity and spiritualness, and need not the help of Artists to refine them: Such they are, as that Angels themselves have neither better nor higher to live upon. How injurious then are Believers to their own happiness, while they neglect the living by faith, and gaze rather upon these dainties with their eyes, then feed upon them with their mouths? How greatly do they live below themselves, while they take up with the things of this world, and put not forth this divine grace of faith, which can fetch every good thing out of heaven? What dishonour do they cast on the precious promises while like the lustful Israelites, they slight this Manna of the Gospel as dry food? O therefore if there be any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any excellency in the promises; be persuaded you that are the beloved ones of God, to live the life of faith, and to exercise it in an improvement of the promises, the use of which makes you more rich and blessed then the having of them. Thirdly, to move Believers to act faith upon the promises, I shall add this Argument; that their labour and expectation will not be in vain. Faith in the promise is like the bow of Jonathan, and the sword of Saul, which never returned empty, 2 Sam. 1. 22. It always finds what it seeks, and enjoys what it desires. He that believeth shall never be confounded, 1 Pet. 2. 6. that is, he shall not be disappointed, or broken in his purposes or hopes. If the promise be not good security to rest and build upon, What is? What bond can be so firm as his Word, who cannot lie? Tit. 1. 9 What pledge can be more certain, than the earnest of the Spirit, by which the inheritance of Believers is sealed unto them? Ephes. 1. 14. If these foundations fail, than we may well say with the Prophet, What can the righteous do? But sooner shall the rocks be broken into bits, and thrown as pebbles, and cockleshells upon the shore by the violence of the waves; sooner shall the mountains that God hath set fast by his strength, Psal. 65. 6. be over-turned by the breath of tempestuous winds, than the promises which are founded upon the immutable power of God, and the neverfailing goodness of Christ, be in the least iota made void, and of no effect. For besides the infallibility of God's Word which may abundantly confirm unto Believers the truth of the promises, the goodness also and mercy of Christ, are as another sacred anchor for their faith and confidence to rest upon▪ if in relation to the promises, it be seriously thought on in two particulars. First, That the promises are the real purchase of the precious blood of Christ, and must therefore be certainly made good, or else he must be a loser in all his sufferings. If he like Jonathan, 1 Sam. 18. 4. should strip himself not only of his robes, but of his life, that he might express his love to distressed and undone persons, with whom God is angry and displeased, and yet they receive no advantage or fruit by it; would not all these condescensions of goodness and mercy be in vain? If he should drink of that brook and torrent of curses that was in the way between salvation and sinners, and yet the passage to the heavenly Canaan be no more open than it was before, should not Christ be a greater loser than sinners themselves? They it is true, lose their souls, each of which are of more value than so many worlds; but Christ must lose the revenue of his glory, which is fare more precious than the souls of all the men in the world. How would sin exult and triumph, if it should ever be able to say, there was a pardon covenanted for to be given such a person, but I have hindered the execution of it? How would Satan reproach the death of Christ, if he could be able to say that he hath destroyed one soul for whom Christ died? Yea, how should Paul, or any other believer be able to throw forth their gauntlet, and to challenge all the enemies of salvation to do their worst, Rom. 8. 31. if any of them could make a separation between the love of Christ and them? How quickly would tribulation, persecution, famine, nakedness say, we will make you miserable? How soon would perils, and the sword reply, we will conquer you? How confidently would principalities and powers say, we will pluck you out of Christ's hand? But for ever blessed be his Name, there are none among the whole host of enemies that dare revile the confidence of a believer, or say as that uncircumcised Philistine to David, 1 Sam. 17. 44. I will give thy flesh to the fowls of the air, or to the beasts of the field. There are none that dare presume to say, that they can make void the least mercy which the promise doth hold forth to be the gift of Christ's love, and the purchase of his blood. Let therefore believers lift up the hands which hang down, and put forth the strength of faith in renewed acts of confidence upon the promises, being fully persuaded in themselves of this truth, that they can no more be disappointed of their hopes, than Christ can be disappointed of his purchase. Secondly, That the promises are the matter of the most prevailing intercession of Christ, who now sits on the right hand of God in glory. When he was on earth, he purchased by the price of his blood, all that mass of treasure, and riches both of grace and glory that are inventoried in the promises, and by his last Will and Testament on the cross bequeathed them to believers. But all this which was transacted here below, was only (as Divines usually term it) medium impetrationis, the means of procurement, or obtaining it for believers; the medium applicationis, the means of applying all this unto them, are as his resurrection, and intercession: his resurrection that declares his conquest over death: his intercession that shows his favour and acceptance with God. And they are both as necessary to make his satisfaction of force unto believers; as the image or stamp of the Prince is, to make the coin currant, though it neither add weight or value to the substance. He (saith the Apostle) being made perfect, became the Author of eternal salvation unto all that obey him, Heb. 5. 9 Now the intercession of Christ is set forth in Scripture with all the advantages that may be, that thereby believers may be secured of their interest and title to the things which he hath purchased. We have a great high Priest that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us therefore hold fast our profession, Heb. 4. 14. First, He is a great high Priest, greater than all that were before him, both in power and favour with God. Secondly, He is passed into the heavens, a Sanctuary which no other Priest could ever enter into, or sit down in, all their sacrifices being imperfect, and therefore to be daily renewed by them. Thirdly. He is Jesus the Son of God, more near in alliance unto him, than Angels or men, and therefore most sure to prevail for the obtaining of whatever he asks or requires of him. When he therefore who is the only Favourite of heaven is the Believers Advocate, and doth continually solicit God to fulfil his Covenant made with him, and his people's prayers made unto him; What ground can therebe for jealousies, and distrust in a Believers heart? What rational impediment can there be imagined, to hinder, or weaken the confidence of faith, which the intercession of Christ doth not fully remove and take away? Are your prayers tainted with the corruption and infirmities of the flesh? he perfumes them with the sweet odours of his intercession, Rev. 8. 3. Are your sins multiplied and renewed daily? So are the intercessions of Christ: It is his only work in heaven, to intercede for sinners, Heb. 7. 25. Are your persons vile, and such which you fear God will not accept? Christ who is your high Priest, is holy, harmless, and separate from sinners, Heb. 7. 26. He hath in his person a fullness of all perfections, which may assure every Believer, that the promises which he pleads, that the requests which he makes to God in Christ's Name, shall not be like arrows shot at the Sun, which never reach it, or come near to it; but that they shall pierce the heavens, and be of such power and prevalency with God, as that what they seek, he will grant, and the promises which they plead in faith, he will perform and make good in truth. Wherefore let me again commend unto Believers, the great duty of exercising faith on he promises of Christ, which cannot but fill the heart with strong and inseparable consolations, when by the eye of faith they are looked upon as those great things, which are both the purchase of his most precious blood, and the matter of his most powerful intercession. And now as Mariners, who when they come nigh the port, roll up their sails which were before spread, they being not useful in the harbour, that were before most necessary on the sea: So must I, being arrived at that point which was the utmost boundary of my thoughts and intentions, draw towards a conclusion, and wind up this whole discourse concerning the excellency and the use of the promises of the Gospel, which hath hitherto been dilated and insisted on in the several particulars. And yet methinks I had need to wish new sides, new lungs, and an hour new turned up, that I might begin all again; or else to sit down, and complain with the Prophet, Isay 49 4. I have laboured in vain, I have spent my strength for nought. O where are those affectionate expressions, acclamations and rejoicings of heart, which I expected would have echoed from every mouth, and have appeared in every face, that had heard and been acquainted with such glad tidings of peace and mercy, as the promises do declare, and testify from heaven towards sinners? I had thought, that some as full of heavenly admiration would have stood like the Cherubims with bowed heads, and faces looking towards the mercy-seat, as being desirous to pry and search more into these divine mysteries, which are the delightful study of Angels. That others like Peter in the mount of transfiguration, having had some glimpses of the glory of heaven, would have cried out, It is good being here. Or wish as David, Psal. 27. 4. O that I might all the days of my life behold the beauty of the Lord! I had thought, that others at the opening of these Wells of salvation, and a free invitation to drink of these waters, which whosoever drinketh of, shall never thirst again, would like the woman of Samaria, John 4. 15. have said, Lord, give me this water, that I thirst not, neither come hither to draw: That others, at the gathering of this Manna which hath been plentifully reigned down upon them, and giveth life beyond death, would with most sincere hearts have made that prayer, which the Jews did in hypocrisy, John 6. 34. Lord, evermore give us this bread. But alas! Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? Methinks still men stand altogether unaffected, as if this day salvation had not been brought, either to their houses, or to their hearts; as if nothing had been spoken that concerned their everlasting happiness. They are like Paul's auditory that heard him preach of the resurrection of Christ, Acts 17. Some scorn, others doubt, and few believe. Brethren, from whence is it, (I beseech you) that there is so little change and alteration made either in your countenances or in your affections? Is it because I have showed you the glory, and preciousness of the promises only through a crevice, which you would willingly have beheld with open face? Alas! who is it that can see these things in their lustre and live? You can never understand their worth, till you come to enjoy them in heaven. Or is it because this treasure is brought unto you in an earthen vessel that you set so low a value upon it? God it is, who hath so ordered the dispensation, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us, 2 Cor. 4. 7. Or do you expect that I should heap up more arguments that might farther commend the promises unto you? O how easily, as well as gladly, could I undertake this task, if that I might be but sure to endear the promises to you thereby? Diodorus tells of a City in Sicilia that was called Triocala, because it had springs of water of a superlative sweetness, Vine-yards of the choicest wines, and rocks of most impregnable strength. But how much more truly may the Promises of the Gospel be styled not Triocala, but Pancala, which are not only as overflowing well-springs of living water, nor as pleasant Vineyards that abound with wine that makes glad the heart, nor as insuperable rocks against which the gates of hell are never able to prevail, but are also a celestial Eden, in which (as Bernard pithily) there is totum quod velis, & nihil quod nolis, every thing that you would desire, and nothing that you would dislike. But I may not forget myself, and instead of casting anchor in the haven, spread the canvas, and put forth to sea again. I shall therefore cease from speaking to you, and shall turn all my expostulations with you, into prayers to God for you: Beseeching him who in Paul's planting, and Apollo's watering doth alone give the increase; that he would by the mighty working of his holy Spirit, make what hath been spoken, to be a word of effectual grace unto you that have heard it, that it may build you up, and give you an inheritance among all them that are sanctified: And that he would vouchsafe the same blessing to all those that by his providence may now read, what others have heard: that so his Name to whom alone all is due, may have the whole praise and the glory. FINIS. Books newly printed by Ralph Smith▪ Viz. Mr. dickson's Exposition on the whole Book of the Psalms in three Books. The Christians Charter, showing the privilege of Believers in this life, and in the life to come: by Mr. Watson, Minister of Stephen Walbroke; the third Edition, much enlarged. Also Mr. watson's Art of Divine contentment; the second Edition. Mr. Hutchinsons' Exposition on the six small Prophets, viz. Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah. Second Edition Corrected. Mr. Hutchinsons' Exposition on ●he three last Prophets, viz, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi. An Exposition on the whole Book of Ecclesiastes, by that late learned and pious Divine, Mr. John Cotton, Pastor of Bostock in New-England.