Circumspect walking describing the seuerall rules, as so many seuerall steps in the way of wisedome. Gathered into this short manuell, by Tho. Taylor, preacher of Gods word at Aldermanbury Church in London. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1631 Approx. 237 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 189 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2004-11 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A13534 STC 23824 ESTC S100151 99836003 99836003 242 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A13534) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 242) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 1294:06) Circumspect walking describing the seuerall rules, as so many seuerall steps in the way of wisedome. Gathered into this short manuell, by Tho. Taylor, preacher of Gods word at Aldermanbury Church in London. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. [16], 319, [1] p. Printed [by J. Beale?] for Iames Boler, dwelling in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Marigold, London : 1631. Pages 74-5, 78-9, 100-01, 190-91 and 196-97 misnumbered 73-4, 77-8, 101-100, 191-90 and 197-96. Another edition of STC 23823.5, first published in 1619. Pages 3-9 tightly bound, with some loss of print; some print faded and show-through; beginning-page 15 from Cambridge University Library copy spliced at end. Reproduction of the original in the British Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. 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Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Christian life -- Early works to 1800. 2004-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2004-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2004-09 Judith Siefring Sampled and proofread 2004-09 Judith Siefring Text and markup reviewed and edited 2004-10 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Circumspect WALKING : Describing the seuerall Rules , as so many seuerall Steps in the way of Wisedome . Gathered into this short manuell , by THO. TAYLOR , Preacher of Gods word at Aldermanbury Church in London . GAL. 6. 16. As many as walke according to this rule , peace shall be vpon them , and mercy , and vpon the Israel of God. LONDON , Printed for Iames Boler , dwelling in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Marigold . 1631. TO THE RIGHT Honorable and learned Knight , Sir ROBERT NANTON , one of the principall Secretaries vnto his Excellent Maiestie , and of his Maiesties Honorable Priuie Counsell ; All the blessings of this life , and a better . SIR , THat which Salomon teacheth in that one Aphorisme often repeated ; wanted not apparent weight and moments of reason : saying , that in the prosperity of the righteous , the Citie reioyceth : for God being in couenant with them , for their sakes doth good to such , as are ioyned in the same society with them : for one Ioseph all Potiphers house was blessed ; and for one Paul , all that are in the ship with him are saued : yea , good and vertuous men by their presence , as Lot in Sodome ; by their prayers , as Moses in the breach ; and by their prudent Counsell , as that poore wise man , withstand the iudgments of God , and saue the Citie : for had there beene found one good man , all Ierusalem had beene spared for his sake . Againe , vertuous men aduanced , will conferre all their honour and grace to the publike good : they liue not to themselues and theirs , but take in the Church and Common-wealth , as fellow-Commoners of all their goodnesse . Mordecaies authority wrought publike deliuerance to the whole Church , and Iosephs aduancement sustained the whole land , by opening the garners in time of famine . The honour of one good man shall be the grace of all good men ; his power the strength of many ; his greatnesse the raising of many : as when one Mordecai is raised , light , and ioy , and gladnesse , and honour , came to all the Iewes . Further , good men honoured by God , will honour God againe , and withstand his dishonour : they will ( to their power ) prouide that Gods worship be erected , that his Sabbaths be sanctified , that true religion be maintained , that falsehood and errors be suppressed , that publike peace be not disturbed , that common iustice be not peruerted , least Gods fauour be discontinued , and his iudgements let in . Whence they are to be esteemed the strongest towers , the thickest wals , the most impregnable forts , the surest muniments , and the stoutest horsemen and Chariots of their Countrey : yea , the Wise man in one word saith much more , that the Righteous is a sure foundation , vpholding the whole world . But why write I this , or to your Honour ? surely as one who euer reuerenced your worthy parts . I could not but craue leaue to expresse my selfe one of the Citie , reioysing and praising God in your honours prosperity and aduancement : and the rather , because my selfe was an eye-witnesse how God led you through some of your yonger yeeres , which were so studiously and commendably passed , as this your latter time fitly answereth that expectation which was then conceiued of you . You were then deare to our common mother that famous Vniuersity of Cambridge ; which for your eloquence and grace of speech and perswasion , appointed you her Orator : for your wisdome and grauity in gouernment , chose you her Procter : for your soundnesse in all kinde of fruitfull and commendable litterature , tendred you all her honors and degrees : and for your sober , studious , and vertuous conuersation worthily held now her great Ornament . And now as riper for greater emploiments , the same God ( whose priuiledge it is to dispense promotions , for he pulleth downe one and setteth vp another ) hath moued his Maiestie not onely to set your seat among the honouroble , but to admit you ( as it were ) into his breast , and betrust you with the secrets of this great state and Kingdome : an office not more ancient then honourable , befitting onely men of rarest wisdome , fidelity , and fitnesse to stand before so great , so wise a King. This was a most honourable office among the most ancient Kings of Israel : for King Dauid had his two principall Secretaries , Seraiah and Iehonatham , whom the text commendeth for a man of counsell and vnderstanding : and King Salomon his sonne had other two , Elihoreph aud Ahiah , who were in chiefe place neere the King. Wee read also of Shebna , principall Secretary to King Hezekiah , of whom Iunius saith ; he was fecundus à rege . Now your place being a seruice of such honour vnder his Maiestie , cannot be without an answerable waight and charge . Your Honour easily conceiueth that the Lord chargeth you with a chiefe care of honouring him , who hath honoured you : that you stand charged to his Maiesty with great trust and fidelity : that the Church expecteth that by your authority , you should promote her causes , and stand in the maintenance of pure religion : that the Common-wealth claimeth her part in you , for the preseruation of peace within her wals , and prosperity within her palaces : that the Vniuersity looketh you should aduance her iust causes , promote learning , and encourage her students , by helping them into the roomes of the ignorant and vnlearned Ministers : in a word , that the whole City hopeth to be exalted by the prosperity of the righteous . And now if your Honours thankefull heart shall call vpon you , and say , Quid retribuam domino ? you will easily fal into frequent thoughts and desires , of discharging all this expectation . This shall be happily done , if you shall chuse about you the wisest Counsellors , for the happy and prudent carriage of your great affaires , imitating herein that peerelesse patterne of wisdome , Salomon himselfe , who notwithstanding his extraordinary measure of wisedome , chose vnto himselfe , selectissimum sena●um , a bench of most wise and graue Couns●llours , whose counsell Rehoboam after despised . The best counseller is that great Counsellour , who is daily to be consulted by feruent praier . The next is the word of God , which as it giueth no lesse certaine direction in difficult cases , than the Oracle did vnto Israel , or then did the pillar of the cloud , and of fire by day and night for their motion or station , while they passed through the wildernesse : so the daily consulling with Gods statutes , by reading and meditation ( as with so many learned counsellours ) made holy Dauid wiser than the aged , than the learned , than the Princes , than his aduersaries . And if Ioshuah would prosper and haue good successe in his high enterprises , he must keepe him to the Booke of the Law , and not depart from it . The feare of God is wisedome , and the next wisedome to that , is to conuerse and consult with such as doe feare God , whose lips speake iust and good things : wherby a man shal become both wiser and better . This is the high way to attaine and retaine grace and reputation with God and good men ; for this is an inheritance not gotten with greatnesse , but with goodnesse : the former cannot force or compell affections , the latter sweetly drawes and allures them : the former may procure flattery and applause , the latter onely yeeldeth true honour and sound comfort . Might I adde but one grain to your godly care , by this olittle direction , with which If ●●fer my most inward affections , I haue my expeation . I know well your Honours sufficiency , euen in this kind , aboue many of my profession , to furnish your selfe with diuine directions , if your leisure or weighty affaires would permit you to set them downe : yet I assure my selfe , your Honour will not refuse the helpe of such , as are at more leisure to gather them , and humbly offer them vnto your hand . I was also more presumptuous to offer these lines vnto your view , because I conceiued that the rules of Christian prudence and circumspection , could not bee more sitly directed , nor bee better welcome , than to so prudent and circumspect a parsonage . In which assurance I rest , commending your Honours further happinesse and prosperity to him , who is an exceeding great reward , abundantly able to fill your heart with grace , to crowne your dayes with blessing , and finish them with comfort , life and immortality . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Your Honours , to be commanded , THO. TAYLOR . EPHES. 5. 15. Take heed therfore that ye walke circumspectly , not as fooles , but as wise . CHAP. I. The ground of the ensuing Treatise . THE APOSTLE in the former words , had vnder a comparison of light and darkenesse , excited the Ephesians to holy conuersation , and to hate such obscene and filthy courses , as were found with the workers of darknesse . Now he speaks in plaine termes , that which before hee infolded in comparisons : Seeing yee are light , and in the light , wherein all things are manifest , see yee walke circumspectly , &c. In which words are , First , a duty propounded , Circumspect walking , which in the first word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , is straightly charged vpon euery Christian . Secondly , the expounding of that duty , not as fooles , but as wise . And the words run , as if the holy Apostle had in other termes said thus ; You that are beleeuers , sonnes of the light , ought as by your light , to checke and ●ontroule , yea , and disco●er other mens sinnes and ●orruptions : so also to be ●s vnblameable , yea , and ●ightsome in your selues , ●s possibly may bee : and ●herfore take heed of your ●wne walking , and see it be ●ircumspect . Briefly thus ; Euery Christian man must walke warily , and circumspectly : or , The course of Christianity must be a circumspect walking . For so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies , an accurate , and a strict walking ; or an exquisite course . So it is vsed , Luk. 1. 3. It seemed good to me , when I had accurately searched all things : and , Mat. 2. 8. Herod charged the wise men thus , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 search exquisitiuely and most diligently of the babe : and , Act. 22. v. 3. Paul professeth he was brought vp , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , according to the exact manner of the Law. CHAP. II. What circumspect walking is , and wherein it consisteth . OVt of which so substantiall a ground , it shall be worth our labour to enquire what this circumspect walking is : for we may not conceiue it as any carnall craft and policie , by which a man is wary to saue his goods , and outward estate : as many crafty heads and worldlings ●ast about , and continualy contriue with all wari●esse to saue themselues , ●nd their profits : and hee ●ust rise early that can get he better of them in any ●argaine . Neither is this ●●rcumspection any such po●cie and warinesse in maters of religion , as relin●uisheth any good duty to which it hath calling ; or a●y practice of holinesse , or outward profits and ●ommodity ; or to preserue ●utward peace and plea●ures ; as many crafty and ●eceitfull Protestants , that ●re so circumspect , as they will professe a religion which shall cost them no●hing . Neither is this circumspection in any thing ● contrary , or crosse to tha● done-like simplicity , and Christian innocencie ● which is the ornament o● holy profession . But is ● carefull and exact proceeding in the wayes of God , according to the rules of God : euen a● a worke-man most exactly fitteth his worke by the l●uell and rule , and depart not from it . Now to this circumspection , are foure things required : 1. A knowledge of th● right way , which is as th● light , guiding him to set euery foot safely . For let ●man bee neuer so circumspect and wary , if he be 〈◊〉 the night without a light● and without a guide , hee can neuer walke securely and safe . The word is the lanthorne : and , the Commandement is the light . And , when wisdome enters into the heart , and knowledge delighteth the soule , then shall counsell preserue thee , and vnderstanding shall keepe thee , and deliuer thee from the euill way , Prou. 2. 11 , 12. 2. A diligent watch and care to keep from all extremities , to turne neither to the right hand , nor to the left . For it is hard to keepe a meane , wee being very propense to extremes . Satan cares not so hee can conquer vs , whether it be by curiosity , or by carelesnesse : whether he can keep vs out of the Church , or cast vs out by our owne conceits : whether he can keep vs so cold , as no good thing greatly affects vs , or whether hee can make vs boyle ouer with vnbridled zeale , that because we cannot haue all the good wee would , wee will refuse a great deale of good wee might haue . A circumspect Christian will distinguish good from euill , and not refuse good for euill ; for that is an extremity . 3. An holy iealousie and suspition , lest the heart bee deceiued through the deceitfulnesse of sinne . The most simple-hearted Christian is a most wary man , that is , of his owne hearts slipperinesse , suspecting himselfe in all things , fearing in all things lest hee may not offend God. Hee knoweth sinne lies in ambush , and suspects the insinuations of it . As hee that is very circumspect for the world , is most suspitious of others , lest they ouer-reach and beguile him : so one that is most circumspect for heauen , doth more suspect himselfe than any other . 4. A prouident walking , by which a man is able to foresee future danger and euils , to preuent them , and prouide for such things as may best bestead him in the way . Thus Salomon speakes of the circumspect and prudent Christian , that hee foresees the plague and hides himselfe : and learnes of the emmet to prouide in summer for winter . This property of circumspection we see in the wise Virgins , that prepared oile in time . All these are inseparable properties of a prouident and circumspect walking . Which is inioyned vs in sundry other places of Scripture : as , Prov. 4. 26. Ponder the path of thy feet , and let all thy wayes be ordered aright . Matth. 10. 16. Be wise as serpents . This serpentine wisdome is nothing else but Christian circumspection . Heb. 12. 13. Make right steps vnto your feet , as good runners , who not only speed themselues in the way , but are wary to keepe the right way , which they know is the shortest , and so carefully obserue euery step and euery aduantage . CHAP. III. Of the next words of the Apostle , further explaining circumspect walking . Not as vnwise , but as wise . ] THe Apostle here expoundeth what hee meaneth by circumspect walking ; namely , a wise ordring of a mans selfe according to the rules of Christian prudence . For wisdome is two-fold ; either worldly and carnal , or else heauenly and spirituall . This distinction is the holy Ghosts owne , in Iam. 3. 15. 17. where both of them are at large described . Our text speaketh of spirituall and heauenly wisdome : which is such a gift of God , as both directeth and effecteth , or causeth a man to doe that which is acceptable and pleasing vnto God. Wherin it is much distinguished from humane wisdome , which is meerely contemplatiue knowledge ; but this is an actiue knowledge , giuing rules and guidance in practice and action : Eccl. 10. 10. The excellency to direct a thing is wisdome . As a Coachman in a coach , so spirituall wisdome in the heart , orders the whole motion of a Christian in al his waies . The connexion implies , that Those bee the wisest men , that walke most exactly . Prou. 14. 8. The wisdome of the prudent is to vnderstand his way . Deut. 4. 6. Keepe them , and doe them : for this is your wisdome , and your vnderstanding in the sight of the people : — Onely this is a wise people , and vnderstanding . Pro. 23. 19. O thou my sonne , heare and bee wise , and guide thy heart in the way . CHAP. IIII. Prouing strict walking to be the wisest walking . 1. HE that is but a little acquainted with the Scriptures , shall easily obserue that he who walks most strictly according to Gods word , is led by Gods wisedome , which makes him discerne betweene good and euill , and so walketh at a certain , by a most right and constant rule and direction : so as you shall finde him square and stable of good iudgement , and sound resolution in the things hee is about . Hee is the wisest man that followes the wisest guide : But what man is hee that feareth the Lord ? that is , walketh exactly : Him will the Lord teach the way that hee shall chuse , Psal. 25. 12. Whereas it is a iust punishment of carelesnesse , to wander as vagrants and vnsetled persons in the way of religion , and grounds of Christianity ; and to bee tossed and tumbled euery way with the waues of inconstancie , and doubtfulnesse in euery thing , for want of sound information and iudgement in the wayes of God : & needs must such be as wauering in their practice , as in their iudgment . 2. He is the wisest man , that being to iourny takes the safest , shortest , cleanest , and most lightsome way : But so doth he that walkes most strictly , and circumspectly ; he only walkes safely , because he walkes sincerely ; whereas in declining Gods wayes but a little , there can bee nothing but feares without , and terrors within , and danger on euery side , which nothing but vprightnesse can fence out . So who can deny but God himselfe hath described the rightest , and so the shortest way to heauen , which is the way ouer which hee holds his owne light ? And howsoeuer many aspersions and foule things be cast vpon it , yet this is the only cleane way of holinesse and innocencie , that leadeth to the Holy of Holies , into which no vncleane person or thing can enter . 3. He is the wisest man , whose words and actions being scanned most narrowly will abide the triall : But thus must needs his words and actions bee found , that is most exact , and stands most strictly the word . So Dauid saith , Then shall ●not be confounded when I haue respect to all thy Commandements , Psal. 119. 6. and Iob 31. 35. the Almighty will witnesse for me , though mine enemies write a booke against me . Let the enemies of grace , slander , reproach , and traduce for a time the wayes of Gods righteous seruants , hee will make their righteousnesse breake out as the light , and time shall shew they were not so ouershot as the world deemed . For , standing straitly to the word , they may truly say with Ieremy , Lord , if I bee deceiued , thou and thy Word hath deceiued mee . 4. He is the wisest man that best acquits himselfe in all estates : But he that walks precisely according to the directions of the Word , shall most handsomely demeane himselfe in all estates . If God giue prosperity to a wicked man , it drownes him : Ease slayeth the foolish : But this man vseth it warily , without pride or insolency ; he is taught to vse the world weanedly , as not vsing it . If he be in aduersity , which sinkes the sinner , this man beares it without impatience or murmuring , yea , he makes himselfe a great gainer by it . Gods word fits him for euery estate : he can want , and abound ; he is for peace or warre , for sicknesse or health , for life or death : no euill tidings can make him afraid . As a wise man he hath rule and power ouer his affections , and is free from vnruly passions . 5. He is the wisest man that taketh the best course for his own prefermēt : But so doth hee that walketh most exactly : Godlinesse is the greatest gaine . This man is euer in the way of preferment , hee stands still in the presence of God , liues continually in his eye ; by constant honoring of him , hee is comming into place of great honour , and great honour is comming vpon him . Hee hath wealth and riches , and is still storing vp as one couetous for heauen , is euer increasing in grace and glory . 6. He is the wisest man that can giue others the best and wisest counsell : But who is so well able to giue aduice , as hee that is best acquainted with the wayes of God ? If experienced counsell be the best , who so fit as hee , who hath tasted how good God is : Who so able as hee , whom God hath stored with wisdome , such as hath winded him out of many troubles , such as brought into his hands so rich a stocke , and reuenue of grace , and made him a patterne and example of piety and vertue to many other ? Which if it be so , then we might take occasion to reproue such as charge Gods people with simplicity and foolishnesse , and condemne them of much madnesse , in that they goe in a way vnknowne , vncouth , and contrary to the world . They cannot walke in the dirty path of sinfull pleasures , nor by the crooked rule of carnall policie , nor make the fashion of the world the measure of their conformity : but are content to walke in the straight way vnto eternall life ; which the foolish world counts foolishnesse , and a simple sillinesse : but with greater folly : For God and his word approue them as the wisest men in the world , and so denominateth them , wise Virgins , wise seruants , wise marchants , &c. And our text cals them fooles that walke not circumspectly . CHAP. V. Describing some meanes to attaine this wisedome . NOw before wee passe this point , it shall not bee amisse to direct the Reader by the way to some meanes to attaine this wisdome , to walk exactly : as , 1. A diligent and frequent vse & acquaintance in the word of God , as men become wise Politicians by often vsing the booke of statutes . This law of God , hath Gods wisedome contained in it , and makes vs truly wise for the matter and measure , as God would haue vs. Hence the holy Ghost euery where cals foolish men , to giue eare to vnderstanding , and to heare the words of wisedome , Prou. 8. 5 , 6. and v. 33. Heare instruction , and be wise . Neither must we heare till we get a smattering knowledge of some generall grounds of religion , in which most rest themselues ; but to vnderstand the whole will of God , which is our rule : and not onely to vnderstand it , but to apply it to our seuerall occasions , that it may not only be light in it selfe , but a lanthorne to our feet , and that in all our steps . This is the high priuiledge of the Scripture aboue all writings , that these alone are able to make men wise to saluation , 2 Tim. 3. 15. Most men reade humane histories , mens sayings and writings , politike essayes , and obseruations of prudent men : and this furnisheth them with some modell of humane and earthly wisedome : But onely the wisdome of Gods word , can make vs truly wise to saluation ; without which all the wisest Gentiles , professing wisdom , and abounding mortalities , proued starke fools , Rom. 1. 22. Cast Gods booke of wisdome aside , thou shalt proue a foole in the end . 2. Meditation of that a man heares and reads : for , to bee wise , wee must not onely receiue the ingrahted word , Iam. 1. 21. but keepe it , Luk. 11. 28. Blessed are they that heare the word of God , and keepe it . Now an especiall way to keepe the word , is meditation , which digests it into the seuerall parts . Mary heard the sayings of Christ , and pondered them in her heart . And Dauid vsed this meanes to become wise : yea , by constant meditation in the testimonies of God , he professeth how hee became wiser than the prudent , than his teachers , than his ancients , than his enemies , Psal. 119. 97 , 98 , 99 , 100. And the reason why many heare a long time , and are neuer the wiser , is because they neuer care to fasten it by meditation , and make it their owne : but wise men will lay vp knowledge , Prou. 10. 14. 3. A louing and thankfull embracing of admonition and rebuke . Prou. 9. 8 , 9. Rebuke a wise man , and hee will loue thee : Giue admonion to the wise , and he will bee the wiser : Teach a righteous man , and hee will increase in learning : but rebuke a scorner , and hee will hate thee : and , fooles scorne admonition . And therfore we are commanded not to speake in the eares of a foole : for hee despiseth the wisdome of our words , Pro. 23. 9. The way for a man to grow wise , is , daily to discouer his owne folly , and make vse of their words , who would helpe him in this businesse . Thus Dauid grew sensibly wiser by the reproofe of Nathan , when hee made him confesse he had done very foolishly . This is Christian teachablenesse , when a man is apt to receiue a reproofe . 4. Frequent the company of godly and wise men : for hee that walkes with the wise , shall be wise , Prou. 13. 20. and 9. 6. Forsake the foolish , and walke in the way of wisdome . In the company of the wise a man may bee sure to doe good , or take good : the lips of the righteous feed many : he will speak out of a good store-house ; he wil deale faithfully with his brother , to helpe his soule out of sinne ; his name from infamie , his person from scandall . Besides , he shal be resolued in doubts , encouraged in well-doing , and directed by such both by good instruction and good example . 5. Be feruent in prayer : It is a spirituall wisedome , and a gift of the Spirit ; therefore if any man lacke wisdome , let him aske it of God , Iam , 1. 5. It is wisedome from aboue , Iam. 3. 17. This wisedome is not the birth and issue of great wits , and quicke conceits , ●ut is seated in the heart ●hat is humble , and in sanctified soules , that are familiar with God , and frequent in prayer . For as Moses when he was long in the mount with God , his face shined when he came downe : so those that continue in the mount of diuine meditations and petitions , shall shine in wisedome & knowledge . How or whence got Salomon all that measure of wisedome ( in which hee was an eminent type of Iesus Christ , in whom were hid treasures of wisdome ) but because he asked it of God as his chiefe choice ? And Dauid in the 119. Psalme , makes no end of begging wisedome , vnderstanding , good iudgement from God ; because hee knew there was the fountaine . These are the meanes that are set apart by God , for the attaining of wisedome . If we faile in them , let vs blame our selues , if folly eat vs vp . CHAP. VI. Leading into the particular rules of Christian wisedome , with the generall distribution of them . BEcause this wisedome is not a contemplatiue , but an actiue knowledge , wee must acquaint our selues with the precepts of it , to guide vs to this exact walking , that the whole man may bee led by the rules of Christian prudence in all things . This is that which the Apostle prayeth for the Colossians , cap. 1. v. 9. that they might be fulfilled with the knowledge of his will , and all wisedome in all things , to walke worthy of the Lord , and please him in all things . And because knowledge is of generals , and wisedome of particulars , therefore for our better direction , let vs here consider some particular rules of spiritual wisdome grounded in Gods word ; which hee must be carefull of , that would walke not as vnwise , but as wise ; according to this Apostolicall counsell . Rules of wisdome , concerne 1 God , and the things of God. Man himselfe ; in his Inner man ; 1 Minde . 2 Thoughts . 3 Will. 4 Conscience . 5 Affections . Outward man , in his 1 Calling . 2 Estate , of Prosperity . Aduersitie . 3 Speeches . 4 Actions , in Generall , for Triall . Vndertaking . Speciall , of 1 Mercy . Iustice. Necessity . 2 Indifferēcy , in Generall . Speciall , for Meat● . Sports . Apparell . Others in 1 Generall , toward all . 2 Special ; 〈◊〉 1 Good men . 2 Euillmen ▪ in , 1 Generall . 2 Specia●l 1 Scorners . 2 Haters of our selues . CHAP. VII . RVles of wisdome concerning God , and the things of God , are foure . 1. That God is to be loued aboue all , and that for himselfe , being the chiefe good . This is the scope of the whole first table , the first and the great commandement , Mark. 12. 33. To loue God witb all the heart , all the vnderstanding , all the soule , and all the strength , is more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices , as the Scribe confessed ; whereupon the text inferres hee answered ( 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , cordaté , ) discreetly , wisely , and that in Christs iudgement . This is wisedome , to giue God the first place , first thoughts , first seruice , chiefe prayse and precedency : for , of him , and through him , and from him are all things . 2. Another chiefe point of spirituall wisedome in the things of God , is , to purchase Christ and remission of sinnes aboue all things in the world . The sound Christian is that wise marchant , that sels all to buy the pearle , that is , Christ and his righteousnesse : that wise builder , that layes Christ a sure foundation in his heart : Hee is of the number of those wise Virgins , that will be sure ( what euer they lacke ) to furnish themselues of oyle in their lamps to meet their bridegroome . Wisedome will procure the best commodities , and chiefe gaine , which is Christ both in life and death . Paul was a wise marchant , who esteemed all things drosse and dung in comparison of Christ. So were the Disciples , saying , Master wee haue lest all and followed thee . So were the Martyrs , whom the world accounted simple fooles , in following Christ with the losse of life and all . Happy is that soule , and filled with found and sauing wisedome , that comes to Christ with this resolution , Master , thou hast the words of eternall life , and whither shall I go ? 3. Let vs preferre in our election and choice things of higher nature , before things of inferiour : for wisdome keeps a method , by which it euer subordinateth lower things to higher . This rule our Sauiour prescribeth , Mat. 6. 33. First seeke the Kingdome of God , and his righteousnesse , and then the things of this life ▪ first prouide for hea●en , and then for earth . By which rule of wisedome , 1. all profits and pleasures must giue place to piety : for all is but pidling gaine to godlinesse . 2. By this rule of wisedome , the speciall calling and trade of life must giue place to the generall calling , which is the trade of Christianity . 3. By this rule a Christian must chuse to bee rich in God and good workes , rather than in the world : which because the rich man in the Gospell neglected , hee is called foole for his labour . 4. By this rule wee must with Dauid , more affect one glimpse of Gods fauour and countenance , than all corne , wine , and oyle , that is , the most necessary and delightful profits in the world . 5. By this rule wee must make more account of pardon of sinnes locked vp in our breasts , than of the whole treasury of a Kingdome in our chests . 6. By this rule wee must esteeme a graine of grace aboue a million of gold : and 7. a poore godly man aboue a wicked Prince : Eccles. 4. 13. Better is a wise childe than an old foolish King ; which will not be admonished . 4. Feare ●od , and keepe his Commandements : for this is the whole man , Eccles. 12. 13. This is to apply our hearts to wisedome , to set our hearts to keepe Gods Commandements , and do them : this is our wisedome , Deut. 4. 5. Who is a wise man among you , endued with knowledge ? let him by good conuersation shew his works in meeknesse of wisdome , Iam. 5. 13. A wise man will attend the mouth of the King , and will feare the danger of the law : so a wise Christian will walke in the law of the Lord , Psa. 119. 1. and will be sure to keepe him to this rule and warrant contained in the word of God , Gal. 6. 16. And as a wise man is carefull to keepe his assurances and euidences for the certainty of his lands and earthly liuelihoods , and is loth to forfeit any of them by failing in any of the conditions : So it is the wisedome of a godly man to keepe the Word safely in his heart , which assureth him of his estate in heauen , and which hee is loth to forfeit by failing in the conditions and clauses of it CHAP. VIII . Containing rules of wisedome concerning the innner man ; and first of the minde , thoughts , and will. BEing to entreat of the rules of wisdome concerning man & the things of man , good order requireth that wee begin with such as concerne 1. ones selfe , and 2. others . They which concerne a mans selfe , respect either the inner man , or the outward . The inner man in fiue particulars : 1. in his minde , 2. thoughts , 3. will , 4. conscience , and 5. affections . For the minde , these rules of wisedome are necessary to be remembred . 1. To furnish it with necessary , profitable , and humble knoledge : The mans eies are in his head , Ecl. 2. 13. This is a wisedome to sobriety , Rom. 12. 13. where also the Apostle condemneth curiosity and conceitednesse , which wastes out time , aud brings infinite idle questions , wherein men presume aboue that which is meet . The Prophet Dauid professed hee medled not with things too high for him . And the Apostle Paul desired after his conuersion to know nothing but Iesus Christ , and him crucified . As for humblenesse in knowledge , Salomon saith , The way of a foole is right in his owne eyes , Pro. 12. 15. and , A wise man in his owne conceit is more hopelesse than a foole , Pro. 26. 12. 16. Our rule therfore must be to grow vp in wisdome , and as wee grow in knowledge , so to grow in humility : for the more sound knowledge a man attains , the more shall hee see in himselfe to humble him . 2. To decke and adorne the minde with humility , holinesse , modesty , shamefastnesse , &c. 1 Pet. 3. 4 , 5. and , Col. 3. 12. As the elect of God , put on tender mercy , kindnesse , humblenesse , and meeknesse ▪ but aboue all things put on loue , v. 14. The second sort of rules concerns a mans thoughts . The generall is in Pro. 4. 23. Keepe thy heart with all diligence : for it is slippery and deceitfull ; more than necessary to watch and suspect it , and to set time apart to check and reclaime it . But for the better keeping of thy thoughts in order , thinke on these particulars : 1. Giue God thy first thoughts , that he may hold the chiefe part in thy heart : and this will sweetly relish the heart , and by estranging it from worldly impediments , fit it , and keepe it in preparednesse for all good occasions ▪ Psa. 108. 1 , 2 , 3. Dauid prepares his heart , and will awake early to praise the Lord : the way to walke safely and comfortably all the day , is first to reforme that which is within . 2. Examine thy thoughts whence they come , and whither they go , and what they doe in thee : By which meanes thou shalt banish a number of idle and wandeing thoughts , which like roauing vagrants , being worth nothing , come euer to steale something , either time or grace : and so shalt thou make and keepe roome for better . And doe this betime , because the first motions of sinnefull thoughts defile a man. This rule is in 2 Cor. 10. 5. to draw weapons against euery strong imagination , that is exalted against the knowledge of Christ. 3. If thy thoughts concerne the world , pull them backe , keepe them from the world , saue as much as needs must for the moderate maintaining of thy selfe and thine , lest heauenly thoughts bee drowned and hindred , 1 Tim. 6. 9. The reason is , because our hearts being earthly , doe presently conceiue a sweetnesse in earthly things , and are presently distracted from the loue of the Creator , to the loue of the creature . Now spirituall wisedome requireth , that wee diminish the loue of the creature , that we may in crease our loue of the Creator . But , if they will run vpon the world , then turne the course of them a little , to consider the va●ity and misery of this euill world , the painted vizor of the pleasures of it , the vncertainty of life , the deceitfulnesse of riches , how they be not ours , what euils and incumbrances we haue receiued from the world , what fools they haue made vs in treasuring on earth , whose home and expectation is in heauen . 4. If thy thoughts concerne thy selfe , or others thy brethren , labour to think better of others than thy selfe : for thou seest no such thing in them as in thy selfe : Phil. 2. 3. Let euery one esteeme better of another than of himselfe . Yea , the more thou seemest to excell others in gifts , the more humble labor to be . An hard rule , and difficult to be practised : and therefore it is often cōmended to vs , as Rom. 12. 16. Make your selues equall to them of the lower sort ▪ and elswhere . For this purpose , conceiue not onely what thou hast receiued , but what thou wantest , and what good things thou art without : and then with Paul , say thou hast not yet attained to perfection . 5. If thy thoughts concerne any sinne , be sure it be to hate and reno●nce , to bewaile and mourne for it , in thy selfe or others . For there is a slynesse and subtilty in sinne , which while we thinke of , it easily gaineth some tickling and consent , which at least hindreth that through-hatred that wee ought to maintaine against it . The third rule for the inner man concerneth the will , namely , that our care must be , there bee but one will betweene God and vs : for so hath the Lord taught vs to pray , Thy will bee done . 1. Wherein soeuer God hath reuealed his will to vs , in that we must rest . 2. Whatsoeuer his will determineth of vs , that wee we must account holy and iust , whether with vs or against vs. 3. Whatsoeuer his will prescribeth to vs , whether obedience to the law , or faith of the Gospel , wee must hold our selues fast bound in conscience vnto it , let it seeme neuer so crosse to vs , or contrary to his law , as Abraham did in offering his sonne . 4. Whatsoeuer his will disposeth to vs , prosperity or aduersity , sicknesse or health , life or death , or whatsoeuer else ; all is from a most wise hand , disposing euery thing for the good and saluation of his elect , and so should bee entertained . Thus Eli said , It is the Lord , let him doe what is good in his eyes : and Hezekiah , The word of the Lord is good , euen when it threatned the ouerthrow of his house and Kingdome . So Dauid , Psa. 39. 9. I held my tongue , and said nothing , because thou Lord didst it : and Iob , The Lord giueth , and the Lord taketh , blessed be the name of the Lord. CHAP. IX . Rules for the conscience . THe fourth sort of rules for the inner man , concerns the conscience . 1. Beware of doing any thing with a blind conscience . A blind man swallowes many a gnat , and a blind conscience swalloweth any sin . This is a wicked conscience , to which no sinne so great shall come , but a man shall thinke hee doth God good seruice in it , as Christ speaks of them that would s●ay his Disciples . Why doe heathens persecute Christians , and Papists pursue Protestants euen to death , but out of blinde zeale and conscience , that they root out a false religion ? And whatsoeuer a man doth by an erroneous and seduced conscience , is sinne : the rule of conscience to heathens being the law of nature , and to the Church the law written , euen the whole word of God as a pillar of cloud and fire to direct it in all the way to heauen . Therefore let the word of God dwell plenteously in you , in all wisedome , Col. 3. 16. 2. Doe nothing with a doubtfull conscience : for whatsoeuer is done with a scrupulous conscience , is sinne , and is not onely an offence of God , but of the conscience too , which is as a little God within vs : for it is not of faith , nor obedience to the knowne will of God. Rom. 14. vlt. Hee that doubteth , is condemned : because his action is not of faith . Therefore vers . 5. he saith , Let euery man bee fully perswaded in his minde . 3. Labour to get a good conscience aboue all things . Act. 23. 1. I have endeuoured in all good conscience till this day . A pure conscience by nature hath no man , but made pure by the bloud of Christ sprinkled vpon it by faith , in that he hath obtained full remission of sinne , and by his bloud also merited the Spirit of Sanctification , by which the conscience of the beleeuer is daily cleansed . 4. Labour to get a pure conscience in all things . A man by obseruing many things , may get himselfe good credit , but a good conscience must bee in all the things of God. The Pharisies might not goe into Pilates iudgement hall , lest they should bee polluted ; and yet at the same time , they could dispence with their conscience , to crucifie the Sonne of God , a sinne defiling heauen and earth , whiles the Sunne was ashamed , and the earth trembled at it . The Papists may not eat flesh in Lent , their consciences will not suffer them ; but to kill Kings , and blow vp Parliament-houses , their consciences giue them good leaue . Many Protestants will not steale , kill , commit the act of adultery : but their conscience can dispense with couetousnesse , vnbridled anger wantonnesse , filthy speeches , &c. But if Gods word be the same , so must the conscience : and hee that serues God as Paul did in pure conscience , 2 Tim ▪ 1. 3. will doe so at all times , in all places and things , and will auoid sinne in his closet as much as in mos● publike meetings , yea , small sinnes as well as great . 5. It is as great wisdome to keepe things well , as to purchase them : therefore we must ( if we would wall● wisely ) bee as carefull to keepe good conscience a● to obtaine them : and therunto obserue two things ▪ 1. Daily take away matte● of accusation , which is sinne , by repentance . 2. Rather displease all men than thine owne conscience , thy friends , thy family , thy rulers , nay , thy owne selfe before thy conscience . So did Daniel and his fellows . So did Cyprian ( as Augustine relates it ) when the Emperor in the way to his execution said , Now I giue thee space to consider whether thou wilt obey me in casting a graine into the fire , or be thus miserably slaine : Nay ( saith hee ) In re tam sanctâ deliberatio non habet locum : there needs no deliberation in this case . The like we reade in the hystory of France : In the yeare 1572. presently after that tragicall and perfidious slaughter and massacre of so many thousands of Gods Saints by treacherous Papists , Charls the ninth King of France , called the Prince of Conde , and proposed to him this choice ; Either to goe to Masse , or to die presently , or to suffer perpetuall imprisonment . His noble answer was , that by Gods help he would neuer chuse the first , and for either of the two latter , hee left to the Kings pleasure and Gods prouidence . Thus a good conscience makes a good choice for it selfe , chusing any thing rather than to offend God. CHAP. X. Rules of wisedome concerning the affections . THe fifth sort of rules for the inner man concerneth the affections , and hath these particulars : 1. Delight thy selfe in the Lord , and make him thy chiefe ioy . Psal. 37. 4. For the obiect of our ioy must not be carnal , but the Lord himself , apprehending him as Gen. 17. 1. el shaddi , almighty to saue , all-sufficient to supply , and a large portion , our Sunne , our shield , grace , and glorie , Psal. 84. Salomon hauing tried his heart with all other delights , came at last to a recantation : and so doe all Gods children , and say , Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs , Psal. 4. 2. Labour to affect all other things in God , and for God , nothing like him , much lesse aboue him , or against him : Psal. 34. 8. Taste and see how good God is ; that is , in all things labour to find the sweetnesse of God in all his creatures , and all his actions . A wise man will not insist in the gift , but looke to the giuer , whose loue hee prizeth more than the token of it . If any affection make vs vnfit to pray , or any way thrust vs from God , it is carnall . 3. Let vs labour to get our affections more to heauen than earth : Col. 3. 2. Set your affections on things which are aboue , and not on things which are on earth : where we see plainly , that these two cannot both haue the affections set on them , no more than two Masters serued at once : as also that it is not enough to affect heauenly things , but also with chiefe affection and care , in the first place . Hence is that ordinary rule , that spirituall things must be affected and asked simply , being simply good , but temporall with limitation , as being but conditionally good . 4. Feare the euill of sin more than the euill of punishment , because the euill of sinne is more euill . Sinne is simply euill , and so is nothing else , no not the punishment of it . A wise man should rather chuse hel than Gods offence : for there is nothing but sinne which God hateth , and wee ought to hate nothing so much : sin directly resisteth Gods glory , but punishment makes for it in the manifestation of his iustice . 5. Be affectionate one in the case and condition of another . In case of spirituall misery , sinne , weaknesse , humane frailty : Bee tender hearted one to another , euen as God for Christs sake forgaue you , Eph. 4. 32. so Col. 3. 12. Now beloued , as the elect of God put on tender mercy , kindnesse , &c. one to another . And in the temporall miseries of our brethren , put on bowels of compassion , be not without naturall affection , forget not Iosephs affliction ; but lend , giue , clothe , feed , protect from violence , and turne not thine eyes from thine owne slesh . The phrase ( bowels of mercy ) shewes that all our mercy must be from within , euen from the tender compassions of the estate of our brother : and the same in Isa. 58. 10. that we power out our soules to the needy : that is , our soules must first be mercifull , and then our mercies will be plentifull , which is noted in the word powring . CHAP. XI . Rules of wisedome for the outward man , and first concerning his calling . NOw we come to such rules of wisedome , as wherby the outward man is to bee ordered , that wee may walke ( both toward our selues , and others ) not as vnwise , ▪ but as wise , and that by the wisedome which is from aboue . And these rules concerne , 1. his calling , 2. his estate , 3. his words , 4. his actions . Directions to walke wisely in his course and calling are these : 1. Seeing the calling is a part of Christian obedience , and duty to God , a Christian may neither liue out of a calling , nor in any calling not warranted by Gods word . For if God set vs in our callings , hee promiseth both to be with vs in them , and to giue vs good successe , and to helpe vs against the tediousnesse of them , Ios. 1. 8. Therfore sanctifie thy calling , and euery part thereof , by the word and prayer . 2. In the whole exercise of our calling ▪ wee must shew all good ●aithfulnesse . 1. To God , by depending on him , who hath made our calling a chiefe meanes of our maintenance , and not sacrificing to our own nets . For it is the Lord that giues power to get substance . 2. To our selues , by walking diligently , and abiding in our calling , that we may eat our owne bread , and prouide for our selues and ours , and giue to him that needeth , Eph. 4. 28. For by idle and inordinate liuing , through the neglect of the vocatiō by Gods iust iudgment men fall into the depth of sin , drunkennes , gaming , whoredome , theeuing , and nothing comes amisse to an idle person . Besides , discredit , bad report , and pouerty , come as an armed man vpon such a one . 3. To others , whether we be Masters or seruants , as knowing that in our calling wee are to practise most Christian duties , as loue to our brethren , patience , truth , fidelity , vprightnesse , as being euer vnder Gods eye . 3. Another point of wisedome in our callings , is , not to meddle with other mens businesse , but follow our owne close . 1 The. 4. 11. Study to be quiet and to doe your owne businesse . And euery where the Apostle reproues busie-bodies , who going beyond their owne bounds , thrust their sickle into euery mans haruest , and being out of their owne places and businesse , intermeddle with that which no way concernes them . And these are disturbers of peace and ciuill tranquility , kindling and blowing vp contentions for lacke of other work . The same rule is for women also , that they be not gadders , but house-keepers . 4. In all earthly businesse , studie to carry an heauenly minde . A Christian while hee conuerseth in earth , must haue his conuersation in heauen , and know , that in all the wayes of this present life , hee ought neuer to step out of the way to eternall life . Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course , seeing wee haue an expresse promise , that if wee seeke Gods kingdome first and principally , these outward things should ( so farre as they are needfull for vs ) without such carking care bee cast vpon vs. 5. As all duties of the calling must be profitable in themselues , and for the publike good , so the most profitable must bee most intended , and specially performed . A Minister must reade the Word , but must apply himselfe more to Preaching , as being more necessary . A Magistrate must execute iustice vpon transgressors of mens lawes , but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law. Masters of Families must prouide for the bodies and health of their Family , but especially for the good and saluation of their soules . CHAP. XII . Rules of wisedome concerning a mans estate , and first for aduersity . THe rules of wisedome concerning a Christian mans estate , are these : first , generall ; secondly , speciall . The generall rule for all estates , is this : Be prepared for any estate , contented in euery estate , and assure thy selfe the present estate ( whatsoeuer it is ) is best for thee , though not euer in thy sense , yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it . This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned , Phil. 4. 11 , 12. I can want , and abound ; I can be full , and hungry : I haue learned in all estates to be contented . The speciall rules are either for prosperity , or for aduersity . Concerning aduersity & afflictions , these are the rules of Christian wisedome : 1. Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God to enioy the pleasures of the world , but to enioy God , which thou maist doe as well in affliction as in prosperity , and to cleaue to him in his seruice , looking for nothing but afflictions , as a pilgrim going to thy Countrey , the way whereunto , lyeth through afflictions . This ground not laid ; men count troubles a strange thing , 1 Pet. 4. 11. and start at the mention of them , as the Apostles , Ioh. 11. 8. when they heard Christ speaking of going into Iurie , where the Iewes had lately sought to stone him . And note it to be a corruption of the heart , to bee more grieued for thine owne troubles than the troubles of the Church , for priuate than publike euils . 2. La● vp strength and comforts aforehand : as 1. Humility , to ouer-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts , and to bring in contentednesse to sweeten our troubles ; and our labour will be well spent : for if we can rellish the hardest part of our life , our whole life else will assuredly be more sweet and ioyfull . 2. Growe vp in the knowledge of God , which will make thee rise vp in much comfort , and will bring in comfort against that confused heauinesse , distrust , and dangerous affections & passions , which else in trouble might beat vs downe , and off him . 3. Get assurance of faith , which will sweetly warme the heart in the sense of Gods loue in Iesus Christ : The fruit of which will be , First , to enable vs to trust our selues with God in any estate , and bee assured the Lord is with vs in fire and water , in the midst of the valley of the shadow of death . Secondly , to depend on him for strength : for howsoeuer Satan would make vs bel●eue our affliction is greater than it is , or wee are for it ; yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength , and not aboue . Thirdly , to wait vpon him for a good issue and seasonable deliuerāce , who hath promised to turne it to the best . This shall keepe vs from fainting , distrust , and despaire . 3. In all euils of punishment take occasion to set vpon the euill of sinne , and reuenge vpon that : complaine of it to God & men , murmure and grudge at nothing else . If affliction be sharper then ordinary , it is sure some sinne or lust addes a sting vnto it . But this rule mortifies sinne and vnruly passions , and will weaken the heart , and make a man say with the Church , I will beare the wrath of the Lord , because I haue sinned . 4. Make them no heauier then God maketh them , by impatience , frowardnesse , and loosenesse of heart . God sometimes layes on a little finger , and the froward heart laies on the whole hand and loines , to make the burden heauier with faithlesse heauinesse and distrust , which is but an addition of new and worse troubles then the former . How inconsiderately doe many men load themselues with troubles too too light in themse●us , and on the shoulders of wise men , who can make a vertue of necessity , and st●p ouer a number of rubbes , which others stoope to remoue and infinitely toyle themselues ? How doe many in smaller troubles , as discurtesie of neighbours , vnrulinesse of children , vnfaithfulnesse of seruants , smaller losses and crosses in family-matters , giue place to vnquietnesse , impatience , and passion , till their folly haue ( by seeking to ease their burden ) increased it from a dram to a talent ? And now how vnmeet are they for the seruice of God ? how vnprofitable in any Christian society ? how sowre and heauy in countenance , disguised in speech , and impotent in their behauiour ? All which testifie the frowardnesse of the heart , wherein had there beene a dram of Christian wisedome and moderation , the passion had not swelled to the cause , much lesse so far exceeded it . 5. Make not haste from vnder any affliction . Hee that bèleeues , makes not haste . But labour for a right vse of it rather than the remouall : attaine once a right vse , and doubt not of a good issue . Gold is not presently puld out of the fire so soone as it is cast in , but must stay a while till it bee purged . A Musician strains vp a string , and lets it not downe , lest the harmony and musicke be spoiled : So the Lord deales with his children , but neuer forgets mercy nor measure ; nay , it is mercy so to measure them , as they may be purged by them . 6. Obserue and marke thy troubles , and thy disposition in them : first , to grow vp in wisedome and experience by them : thus thy sufferings will become wholsome instructions . Obserue where thou wast most pinched , and wherein thou tookest the greatest comfort : secondly , to grow vp in an infallible hope of Gods goodnesse , and a good issue for time to come . For this , obserue Gods seasonable hearing of thy prayers , and the proofes of Gods helpe in most needful times ; which shall bee a strong meanes to keepe thee from fainting , feares and despaires from time to come . So did Dauid in the case of the Lyon & Beare , and through all the 23. Psalme . Thus the Apostle from obseruations of times past , gathers assurance for the time present , and to come , 2 Cor. 1. 10. — who deliuered vs from so great death and doth deliuer vs , and in whom wee trust , that he will yet hereafter deliuer vs. Thirdly , to be able to comfort others with such comforts as our selues were vpheld with in our troubles , 2 Cor. 1. 4. which comforteth vs in all our tribulation , that we may be able to comfort them which are in affliction , by the comfort where . with our selues are comforted of God. Thus to the godly ariseth light out of darknesse , sweet comes out of sowre , and out of the eater meat . CHAP. XIII . Rules of wisedome for prosperity . IN prosperity take these directions . 1. If riches increase , set not thine heart vpon them , Psal. 62. 10. For why shouldest thou , considering the danger how easie it is to waxe wanton ? how hard for a rich man to be saued ? how few by outward things are drawne to the loue of heauenly ? how many are insnared and choaked with them ? how flitting and vncertaine they be ? how certainly we must leaue them , or they vs , and come to account for them . 2. In the carriage of thy prosperity be suspicious of thy selfe , thankfull to God , and returne the glory of it to him of whom thou receiuest it . Dauid , while he had liberty , easily strayed , Psa. 119. 67. Thankfulnesse is Gods tribute , which being denied him , hee re-enters on his owne , Deut. 28. 47. Because thou seruedst not the Lord with ioyfulnesse , and a good heart , in the abundance of all things , thou shalt serue thine enemies in hunger , in thirst , and in neede of all things . So doe many Prodigals . 3. Feare the crosse before it come , and prouide for it . The thing that I feared is come vpon me , Iob 3. 25. and , he waited for his changes . It was an addition to the great plague of Babylon , Isa. 46. 11. that euill should come on her , and shee not know the morning thereof : Destruction shal come vpon thee suddenly ere thou be aware . Therefore cast the costs of religion and well-doing beforehand . 4. Neuer account thy selfe prosperous if it be not well with Gods Church : Good Vriah would not rest as long as the Arke of the Lord was abroad , and his Lord Ioab in the field : as a good child being in health mournes and droupes for the mothers sicknesse . Dauid thought it not fit to dwell in seiled houses , and the Arke of God lie in tents : for the neglect whereof , the Iewes are reproued , Hag. 1. 4. Nehemiah , euen before the King , was of a sad countenance , and sorrowfull at heart , when he receiued euill tidings of Ierusalem , chap. 2. vers . 2. Hester and Mordecai ioyed not in the greatest aduancements , so long as the sentence against the Iewes was vnreuersed . And Moses might haue liued well , and at pleasure , in Pharaohs Court : but he chose rather to suffer affliction with Gods people , than to enioy such pleasures . 5. In thy prosperity consider the affliction and aduersity of others . The contrary hereof was the sinne of the Princes of Israel liuing in prosperity : Amos 6. 6. They lie on beds of iuory , and stretch themselues on beds , drinke wine in boles , and annoint themselues with oyle , but none remembred the affliction of Ioseph . The like of Diues his inhumanity towards Lazarus . Yea , sometime it shall be wisedome to goe into the house of mourning , which will strike a deeper impression ; and to visit others in aduersity , and marke their speeches , who embraced these outward pleasures with greatest and sharpest appetite , and thou shalt finde the affliction farre more bitter , and their sorrow in the losse so much the sharper , as the loue was eager in inioying their peace : and perhaps they will tell thee , they were neuer such gainers by all their prosperity , as they were losers by it , or gainers by that present affliction . CHAP. XIIII . Rules to carry our speeches wisely , as those that ayme at the Apostolicall rule of Christian circumspection . 1. COncerning the ground of them : Labour to get a good heart , for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth will speake . The heart of the wise guideth his mouth wisely , Prou. 16. 23. And , if the heart indite a good matter , the tongue will be the pen of a ready writer , Psal. 45. 1. Such as the heart is , such will bee the speech : and therefore hee that hath no care of his heart , cannot bee a good and carefull speaker . The Apostle requires gracious speech , Col. 4. 6. but that must come from a gracious heart : as Psal. 37. 30 , 31. the mouth of the righteous will speake of wisedome , and his tongue will talke of iudgement . For the Law of his God is in his heart , and his steps shall not slide . and Pro. 31. 26. She openeth her mouth with wisdome , and the Law of grace is in her tongue . On the contrary , a gracelesse heart cannot speake well : Prou. 10. 20 , 21. The heart of the wicked is little worth : the lippes of the righteous doe feed many ; but fooles shall die for want of wisedome . The true reason , why many mend not their bad speeches , is , because first they mend not their heart . 2. Concerning the matter of speech : 1. Because all must be wholesome so much as we may , therefore chuse the best matters to talke of , matters of religion , faith , hope , and the way to saluation : for wisdome alwayes chuseth the best . 2. If it be chosen or offered , it concernes either God , or our neighbours , or our selues . I. If it concerne God , or any part of his name , attributes , word or workes , wee must speake most reuerently , as those who are not worthy to take his name into our mouths . The precept is , Leuit. 19. 12. Thou shalt not defile the name of the Lord , but feare his glorious name , Deut. 28. 58. And they defile his name , who in common talke , lightly and carelesly vse his name , of God , or Lord , or any other of his titles in ordinary speech : and they , who are ordinary or idle swearers and cursers : and iesters in Scripture-phrases , who are farre from trembling at his word , Isa. 66. 3. and those that mocke at sinne and Gods iudgements , and abuse or are vnthankfull for any of his mercies . II. If the matter of thy speech concerne thy brothers person , the rule is , to speake of the good thou knowest by him , behinde his backe : but of euill , not without calling , nor without griefe ; and before him , or to him . Tit. 3. 2. Warne them that they speake euill of no man , but bee soft , and shewing all meeknesse to all men . Contrary wherunto is scoffing , deriding , cursing , railing , bitter and slanderous speeches , tending to the offence of any man : yea , if mens speeches may iustly offend vs , wee must bee soft and calme , shewing all meeknesse , not rendring rebuke for rebuke , but passing by his sinne , espie in his person the image of God worthy to bee reuerenced and loued . If thou spea●e of his sayings o● actions , if they be euill , speake as little of them as may be , if they be doubtfull , construe them in the best part : for loue is not suspitious , but hopeth all things . Praise God for his good actions : and as for sinnes in him , deale plainely and truly with him : Leu. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother , but shalt plainly rebuke him , and not suffer his sinne vpon him . Wee must not lie , dissemble , flatter , or sooth vp any in their sinnes , which is a most ordinary sin against this rule of wisedome . III. If the matter of thy speech concerne thy selfe , speake modestly without vanity or boasting : Prou. 27. 2. Let another man praise thee , and not thine owne lips . Nay , we should rather extenuate and lessen the good in vs , if wee must needs speake of it , as Paul , I am the least of the Apostles ▪ and in an others person , I know a man , &c. 2 Cor. 12. 2. 3. Concerning the manner of our speech . First , because euery mans speech by nature is corrupt , therfore striue to make it gracious , and powdred with salt , Col. 4. 6. that is , well seasoned and sauoury , not sauouring of the flesh and corruption , but wee must driue out or drie vp the corruption of them , with the salt of grace . Against many , who powder their speech with oathes , and curses , and filthy rottennesse , or fondidle speeches , sauouring of the filthy sincke and puddle within . Secondly , it must bee iust and sincere , the truth of our heart , Psal. 15. 2. without dissimulation or lies , seeing God made the tongue to expresse the heart . A fearefull thing it is , that most mens speeches are turned into meere complement . Thirdly , it must bee more earnest , ioyfull , and comfortable when thou speakest of heauenly things , than of earthly : not iesting , or foolish talking , but rather giuing of thankes , Eph. 5. 4. 4. Concerning the end of our speech : It must tend to edification ▪ Eph. 4. 29. to feed many , Prou. 10. 21. and minister grace to the hearers . It must bend it selfe still for God , the defence of good men and actions , and the disgrace of sinne . Better no speech , than to no good end . And yet many in their light , and idle speeches say , why , I hope I doe no harme . Yea , but what good doth it ? Shame will not let thee say , thou intendest edification . Therfore looke well vnto it . 5 ▪ Concerning the measure of our speech : First , wee must not speake too little , and omit gracious speeches when occasion is offered , as many dry and barren hearts and mouthes , haue not a word for God and goodnesse , that haue words enough , and more then enough in any other argument ; like idols in good things , that haue mouthes , and speake not ; or as if they were possessed with dumbe spirits , and not suffered to speake any good . Tell such a one of a good farme , or bargaine , or natural things , and they sauour and rellish them well enough : whereas a good motion strikes them dumbe , and makes them as fishes out of their element . Neither , secondly , must our words be too many : for in many words are many sinnes . The foole multiplieth words , Eccles. 10 , 14. and Prou. 29. 11. A foole powreth out all his minde . But he that hath knowledge , spares his words , Pro. 17. 27. and he that refraines his lips , is wise , cha . 10. 19. It is folly to lay on more words then the mat●er requireth , and argueth impotency of minde , and car●ies a shew or demonstration of passion , and excesse of affection , or pride in speaking . 6. Concerning the season of our speech . All our words must be seasonable , as well as seasoned , that is , fitted to circumstances , times , places , and persons . Wisdome will seeke a season for good words : for there is a season wherein the prudent will keepe silence . ▪ And how good is a good word in due season ? Pro. 15. 23. It is like apples of gold , and pictures of siluer . Husband men obserue seasons in sowing , and so must hee that lookes for an haruest of his speeches . Abigail would not speake to her husband Nabal in his drunkennesse , but when he had slept out his wine . Euery man is not capable of euery good speech , nor no man at all times alike . There is an vnaduised opennes , against which our Sauiour by his example armes vs , Ioh. 2. vlt. Hee would not commit himselfe to some , who are said to beleeue in him , because hee knew what was in man. Silence is best where no good can bee done , as Christ was silent before the high Priest : and Rabsecai must not bee answered . To meet a man in the heat of his passion with good words , is to meet a Beare robbed of her whelps : but let the passion be calme , and then tell him how disguised and vncouered he was , he will perhaps beleeue it . CHAP. XV. Motiues to looke to our tongue . 1. BEcause a good man cannot bee an euill speaker : if the speech be naught , the religion is vaine , Iam. 1. 29. Lying and accusing is the diuels work . 2. Watching of good speech keepes out euill , which ingendereth to euil . Take vp Dauids resolution , Psal. 39. 1. I thought I will take heed to my wayes , that I sinne not with my tongue : I will keepe my mouth bridled , while the wicked is in my sight . And this is necessary , because the tongue is an vnruly member , as fire , and by this meanes shall become our glory , & our brothers shield . 3. God hath a time to call to reckoning the words that are thought but wind , Psal. 50. 20 , 21. euen euery idle word , Matth. 12. 36. CHAP. XVI . Rules of wisedome concerning our actions , that in all of them we may shew forth Christian prudence and circums●ection : and first in generall . FIrst , euery Christian is to examine the worke he is to doe , whether he be about a good work , wherof he may expect comfort , Gal. 6 ▪ 3 Let euery man proue his owne worke , and so he shall haue comfort in himselfe . And good reason : for his work must be tried afterwards , and therefore it is wisedome to try it beforehand . And the same rule of examining it , is now , and shall be hereafter . This tryall stands in foure things : 1. Whether it be good in it selfe , and in the matter of it : if it be lawfull , if it be commanded , The rule for the goodnesse of any action is the word of God : What I command thee , that doe onely . Or else it will be asked , Who required those things at your hands ? And for the matter of our actions , we haue a special rule , Phil. 4. 8. Whatsoeuer things are true , honest , iust , pure ; whatsoeuer things pertaine to loue , and are of good report ; if there be any vertue or praise , thinke on these things . And Rom. 12. 17. and 1 Cor. 8. 21. Prouide things that are honest , not onely before the Lord , but also before men . 2. Examine whether it be good in the doer , vndertaken by vertue of a speciall calling , and answerable to that duty which himselfe oweth to God or man. God vpholdeth the societies of men by order ; which is , when euery man keeps his owne standing , and euery one moues ( as the seuerall starres ) but euery one in his owne spheare , not troubling the motion of another . So publike men should attend the publike office ; and priuate men reforme in priuate , but let the publike alone . For Christ reproued Peters curiosity , in asking what Iohn should doe , Ioh. 21. 21. And the sonnes of Sceua wanted calling for an action that was good in it selfe , and therefore were torne and wounded of the Diuell . 3. Examine whether it be good in the circumstances , seasonable and conuenient , or whether the season serue not for some better action then that . For wisedome will intend of necessaries the most necessary , and of profits the most profitable . 4. Examine whether the action now to bee done bee good in the ends of it , which especially are two , 1. Gods glory , 1 Cor. 10. 3. Let all be done to the glory of God. 2. The good and edification of our brethen , 1 Cor. 14. 26. Let all be done to edifying : yea , seeking their profit in some cases aboue our owne . Then , Secondly , if by examination wee finde the actions good in themselues , in vs , in circumstances , and ends , wee must bee carefull wee spoile not good actions by ill handling , but endeuour to doe good actions well , and to good matter adde a good manner of doing . Now the right manner of doing a good action well , stands in three things : To vndertake them holily : To doe them sincerely : And to finish them humbly . The first is , when we begin them with prayer : for as in all matters , small and great , wee are to take counsell at Gods mouth ; so wee are to begge leaue and blessing at least secretly to our selues , without which nothing is sanctified vnto vs. The second is , when wee doe things sincerely , as in Gods sight , with a good heart , and keeping good conscience ; that a man if he be questioned in any thing , may be able to say with Abimilech , Gen. 20. 5. With an vpright heart did I this thing : and whatsoeuer may befall him for well-doing , hee may appeale to God with Hezekiah , and say , Lord remember that I haue walked vprightly before thee . The third is , when in affecting all our best actions wee labour to see our defects and wants , and mourne that wee neither doe that wee should doe , nor in the manner we should . Wherof there will bee three notable fruits : 1. This will breed and nourish humility . 2. It will driue vs out to Christ to get a couering . 3. It will make vs ascribe all the glory of our actions to God , of whom we haue not only all the power , but euen the will and purpose : Phil. 2. 13. For it is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed according to his good pleasure . CHAP. XVII . Rules to carry workes of mercy wisely . IF our actions concerne others , then they bee works either of mercy , or of iustice : For workes of mercy much wisedome is required , and that is shewed in these particulars : 1. See thy charity come from a good ground , namely , from a heart qualified with two graces : 1. Faith : for whatsoeuer is not of faith , is sinne , Rom. 14. 23. Thou must first giue thy selfe to the Lord , and then to his Saints , 2 Cor. 8. 5. Thy mercie must issue from the sense of Gods mercie in Christ to thine owne soule , apprehended by faith in Iesus Christ. Bring forth fruit in this vine . 2. It must proceed from loue . Works of mercy must come from the fountaine of a mercifull heart , Rom. 12. 8. He that distributeth , let him doe it of simplicity , that is , out of meere compassion , not out of any by and sinister respects . For if I feed the poore with all my goods , and want loue , it profiteth me nothing , 1 Cor. 13. The reason is , because the Lord lookes more at the affection than the action . Whence many , not giuing out of a tender heart , sympathizing and fellow-feeling their brethrens misery , lose both their gift and reward . What comfort or helpe is in that worke of mercy , which is wrung out by importunity , or by strength of law , or for shame lest a man should be noted , or by terrour of conscience , when a man would heale the gripes of a galling aud accusing conscience , by giuing away at his death a little ill-gotten goods to the poore , which were none of his to giue but to the right owners : or when out of desire of praise , or out of superfluity , when a man knowes not else what to doe with his wealth , but some must haue it ? if out of any of these respects , all is lost . 2. Concerning the right subiect of workes of mercy : Doe good vnto all , but especially to the houshold of faith , Gal. 6. 10. To all , viz. the poore that are not able to recompence vs ; not looking for recompence of man , but casting our bread vpon the waters , where there is no likelihood of euer reaping it againe . And to all , euen our enemies who stand in need of vs , and such as vsually doe and will recompence our good with euill , Rom. 12. 14. Mat. 5. 44. And good reason : for first , all haue our flesh , Isa. 58. 7. from which wee must not hide our face . 2. A●l haue Gods image on them , which wee must not refuse . 3. Hereby wee shall be likest to God , who doth good to al● , and to vs being enemies : and attaine the most difficult practice of the law . 4. Wee shall hereby master the corruption of our owne heart , which lusteth after reuenge , and perhaps ouermaster the malice of our aduersaries , at least make them inexcusable . But especially to the houshold of faith : because here is Gods image renewed , here is one of the bloud and kindred of Christ : and if the good Samaritan was commended for mercy shewed to a stranger , how much more will the Lord Iesus accept that which is done to one of those little ones that beleeue in him , as done to himselfe ? 3. Concerning the matter of mercy : The greatest mercy we can shew to any , is toward their soules , which stands in instructing the ignorant , in counselling the weak , in forgiuing offenders , in admonishing or correcting him that erreth , comforting distressed consciences , and confirming them that are in good wayes . This therfore must be obserued , in all corporall mercy to ioyne spirituall , labouring in all the other the good of this : and especially to pray for such mercies from God for them , as neither we nor other men can minister vnto them . And though that be to be done , yet the other also must not bee left vndone , but wee must bee mercifull to the outward man of our brother , in giuing , lending freely , clothing , feeding , visiting , protecting from violence , &c. For this is mercy actuall and acceptable , fitted to that rule , 1 Ioh. 3. 18. that wee shew mercy not in word and tongue , but in deed , and in truth . This age aboundeth with mouth-mercy , which is good cheap , but a little hand-full were better than a great many such mouth-f●ls . 4. Concerning the measure of our mercy : Wee must bee mercifull in the highest degree that we can get our hearts vnto , and be as like our heauenly Father in mercifulnesse as may be . This rule is , 1 Cor. 16. 2. that euery man lay vp and distribute as God hath prospered him , that is , according to his ability : for he that sowes sparingly , shall reape sparingly . Doubtlesse men would not bee so niggardly and sparing , if they knew , that what is mercifully bestowed is safest kept : the bosomes , bellies , and mouthes of the poore , is the best treasury to lay our goods in : and if we expected to reape after the measure of mercy at the last day , wee would more liberally sowe , Hos. 10. 12. Yea , a poore man may be bountifull in a little , which was the commendation of the poore widdow for her two mites , Luk. 20. 5. Concerning the manner of shewing mercy : First , it must be done seasonably and speedily when need is : Prou. 3 ▪ 28. Say not vnto thy neighbour , Goe , and come to morrow , if now thou haue it with thee : for thou maist be cut off from the opportunity , or that from thee ; besides that thou omittest a present duty which is enioyned , Gal. 6. 10. While wee haue time , let vs doe good . And life is very vncertaine . Secondly , it must bee done cheerefully : God loues a cheerefull giuer : not groningly , or grudgingly , as if euery penny were too much , as many pinch ▪ pennies , who haue pounds enough for any lust or pleasure , doe part with pence to the poore Saints as from their ioynts or eyes . Thirdly , it must be done wisely : true mercy is dispensed by iudgement . It spares not where God will punish , as as Sauls cruell mercy : A glasse for Magistrates , whose remisnesse can swallow any thing , and punish nothing , neither drunkennesse , nor prophanation of the Sabbath , nor swearing , nor inordinate walking . It is no mercy ( out of extreme necessity ) to releeue strong rogues , wandring beggers , and able idle persons , but rather to punish and redresse them : nor to keepe hospitality for drunkards , gamesters , and riotous persons , but a good man is mercifull , and measures his affaires by iudgement , Psal. 112. 5. Fourthly , mercy must bee shewed constantly , according to the precept , Be not weary of well doing : let not the springs of our compassion be euer dried vp : as wee would neuer haue God weary of doing vs good . Fifthly , we must not rest or reioyce in any worke of mercie as meritorious , but in the acceptance and couering of it , saying when we haue done all wee can , Wee are vnprofitable seruants . CHAP. XVIII . Rules for workes and actions of iustice : in 1. the ground : 2. moderation . IN all our ciuill conuersation with men , see that our externall righteousnes flowe from inward piety . God in the morall Law hath coupled the two tables as the vpholders one of another , Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God , and thy neighbour as thy selfe . Wee must loue man in God , and for God. Christ aimed at both in the worke of our redemption , that wee should serue him in righteousnesse as well as in holinesse all our dayes , Luk. 1. 75. Ciuill righteousnesse , abstracted from piety , is Pharisaic●ll and vnfruitfull . Giue to Caesar Caesars , and to God Gods. Concerning moderation of iustice : Neuer stand so vpon strict iustice , but that sometimes for peace wee must depart from our right , according to the precept , Phil. 4. ver . 5. Let your equall minde bee knowne vnto all men : and the practice of our Sauior Christ , Matth. 17. 27. who needed not , nor could haue beene compelled to pay toll ; but to cut off occasion of offence and contention , hee departs from his right , and payes it : hee might haue said , It is my right and I will stand vpon it , and will not lose my freedome ; and men thinke they say well , if they demand but their right : But our Lord , for our example , departed from his right , and accounted the preseruation of peace better than his owne right . This rule is grounded vpon the common law of nature , which seeks the common good , and is as carefull of the neighbours good as his owne . Contrary whereunto is that deuillish and carnall speech , Euery man for himselfe , and God for vs all : and yet it is come into common practice , against all rules of nature and Scripture . CHAP. XIX . Rules of wisedome for iustice , 1. Commutatiue , 2. Distributiue , 3. Promissiue , 4. Retributiue . COncerning iustice cōmutatiue , in contracts and bargaines , some rules concerne the seller , and some the buyer . The seller must not abuse or wrong the buyer , neither in the kind , nor quantity , nor quality of his commodity , concealing the defect , with that prophane protestation , Caueat emptor : nay , the caueat is for the seller , who would not be deceiued in his bargaines with oathes , lies , tricks ; and so is bound to doe to others : 1 Thess. 4. 6. Let no man oppresse defraud his brother in any matter : Here the holy Apostle condemnes fraud by two reasons ; 1. From the neare coniunction we haue one with another , he is our brother , in flesh , and in faith : 2. From the certainty of Gods wrath , For the Lord is the auenger of all such things● Leu. 19. 11. Yee shall not steale , nor deale falsly , nor lye one to another . And in Ezek. 22. 12 , 13. a fearefull destruction is threatned against Ierusalem , for bribes , vsury , fraud , and oppression . Where by the way , Vsurers may doe well to consider amongst whom the Lord there rankes them . The buyer also must not enrerta●ne the seller with words of dissimulation , vilifying the thing , to buy it beneath the worth , Prou. 20. 14. nor detaine the price beyond the agreed time , as many doe whose care is to get into debt , and take vp more commodity in one yeare , than they meane to pay in twenty ; and when all is done , pay poūds scarce with crowns : A little more safe theeuery than that by the highway , neuer a whit more honest or iust . In iustice distributiue , neuer forget that golden rule , to doe as wee would be done vnto : Mat● . 7. 12. Whatsoeuer yee would that men should doe vnto you , that doe yee vnto them : for this is the Law and the Prophets : the royall law , Iam. 2. 8. that is , the Kings law , and the chiefe of all lawes which concerne our neighbours . Obiect . But here the Vsurer hath a text for himselfe , saying , I would willingly pay ten in the hundred if I had need , and therefore I may take so . Ans. 1. This must be ordered by grace , and the word of God , not by mens blinde and depraued iudgement . 2. This generall rule must guide vs where we want a special word , which wee haue in the case of Vsury . 3. It is false that thou sayest ; thou wouldest not pay vse if thou couldst borrow freely ; therefore if in thy need thou wouldst borrow freely , lend freely . Others hauing ouer-reacht their neighbours , say , They may and must make the most of their owne , and they forced not their wares on them : But tell me , wouldst thou bee ouer-reached or deceiued ? or wouldst thou haue another to make aduantage of thy necessity or simplicity ? I know thou wouldst not : Goe thou , and doe the like . Concerning promissiue iustice , in promises and couenants , the rule is this , That all lawfull promises must be kept , suppose they were made neuer so rashly , to persons neuer so bad , though to the very great hinderance of the party making them . I explaine it thus : First , I say , a lawfull promise , not such as Herod made to Herodias , to giue her Iohn Baptists head in a platter : for of such it is well said , Reseinde fidem , In turpi voto muta decretum , Breake thy word , and change thy determination so did Dauid in Nabals case . But if it bee lawfull , thou must not bee perfidious or slippery , as many like Eeles can slip out of most faire and cautelous contracts for their owne aduantage . Obiect . What if I haue done it rashly ? Answ. Repent of thy rashnesse , but performe thy promise . Obiect . What to a lewd fellow , or an hereticke ? Ans. Papists say , no. A position that hath couered and coloured more horrible treachery and perfidiousnesse , then euer was found among the heathens . But Ioshua when he was circumuented , and drawne in by lies and deceit , to make a rash couenant with the Gibeonites , strangers to the Couenant of grace , did faithfully keepe it : and when Saul many hundred yeares after did breake that contract , he was plagued with sore famine , which could neuer be asswaged but by the death of his sonnes , 2 Sam. 21. 6. 14. So in the Turkish history : The story of Ladislaus , suddenly breaking the truce made for ten yeares , with Amurathes the great Turke , by the counsell of Pope Eugenius , sheweth in the euent , the wickednesse of that position and practice , by the effusion of much Christian bloud , and the confusion of as many as had hand in that treacherous counsell . Obiect . But I shall be greatly hindred . Ans. Acknowledge thy crosse , make a good vse of it , but performe thy promises : Who shall dwell on Gods holy Mountaine ? He that sweareth to his owne hindrance , and changeth not , Psalm . 15. 4. Take heed of forfeiting heauen for a little earth . Concerning iustice retributiue , in borrowing and lending , Rom. 13. 8. Owe nothing to any man saue loue . Doth not nature teach vs to giue euery man his due ? and doth not grace teach vs to deale iustly , a maine point of which iustice is to pay debts ? But our rule aimeth at two things : First , to keepe out of debt as much as may be● Owe nothing . and that is by auoyding the meanes of debt : as , 1. to liue aboue ones degree and ability , to neglect frugality and moderation : 2. drinking , gluttony , wine tobacco : 3. building , purchasing , wardrobe : 4. suretiship , and rash vndertaking of others payments : 5. gaming , dicing , whoring : 6. vsurie . All which directly make against this rule of iustice . Secondly , to get out of debt being in , and make due and timely satisfaction , and not as many , who force their Creditors to recouer by law , what was in loue sent them . What is the general voice of men in their trades , but complaints of mens vnfaithfulnesse , whiles many make no conscience of paying debts , others can pay some to keepe their credit , or all to bee trusted againe , but few pay any of conscience , because of the Commandement ? Obiect . But I am not able to pay my debts . Answ. Then Goe and humble thy selfe to thy Creditor , Pro. 6. 3. purpose and promise to pay all when thou art able . Obiect . So I shall vtterly impouerish my selfe . Answ. 1. Is not a little with righteousnesse , and peace with God and thy conscience , better than a great deale with iniquity ? 2. Consider how God blessed a little to that poore widdow , that sold all to pay her debts , 2 King. 4. 7. her oyle was increased till shee had enough for her Creditor , and her selfe . CHAP. XX. Rules of wisdome for our owne necessary actions , in respect of their 1. order , 2. subiect . THe fourth sort of rules for actions , respecteth such as concern our selues , and these are either necessarie or indifferent actions . Wee were sent into this world to doe some necessarie businesse , which wee must intend , and not waste our time in impertinent things . The Master that sent his seruants into the vineyard , sent them in to worke . Doe wee thinke that God sent man into the world to play and sport , for his recreation sake or idlenesse , yea , or to eat and drinke , and onely to get what to maintain himselfe by ? No , but for some thing beyond all these : else his end were not beyond the bruit beasts . Or can we thinke that God hath giuen men gifts of reason , vnderstanding , iudgement , and meanes of nature and grace , for the culture of all these , only to enioy outward things , to feed their pleasure and appetite , which they might fully enioy without all these gifts ? No , but the Master gaue his seruants talents to trafficke withall , to make their Lord and themselues gainers . Wee must therefore acknowledge some thing to be absolutely necessary , vnto which all other things are necessary but respectiuely , and carry our selues vnto euery thing accordingly . If wee would know what that is , which is absolutely necessary , our Sauiour tels vs , One thing is necessary , namely , to know how a man may come into Gods sauour and be saued ; and all earthly things are respectiuely necessary , so farre as they conduce to this . To know the vertue of Christs death and resurrection , is absolutely necessary ; all things are to bee counted but drosse and dung vnto this , Phil. 3. 10. But in all necessary actions , the rule of wisedome requires that the most necessary action be done first and most : Eccles. 9. 10. Whatsoeuer thy hand shall finde to doe , doe it with all thy might . Nothing in the world is so necessary , as to repent vs of sinne past , and the reason for it is the present time , to day . Nothing so necessary as amendment of life for time to come : therefore doe it now : Delayes in all things are dangerous ; in this , often deadly . And this most necessary businesse must be done most . Well said Augustine , He must needs faile in necessaries , who ouer-flowes in superfluities . How then can men answer the wasting of their liues and time in pleasures , recreation , eating , drinking , buying , selling , and sieldome finde in their hands the businesse which tends vnto eternall life ? A good rule therefore it is , often to examine our selues thus ? What am I doing ? and whether in all inferiour things doe I aime at the chiefe ? In eating I must not forget the bread of life . In recreation and pleasure , I must chiefely affect the pleasures of Gods house . In buying and selling , I must specially helpe forward my purchase of eternall life . In my earthly calling I must expresse the calling of Christianity . This is the way to doe the one necessary thing most of all . 3. Most necessary actions in euill men are euill : the best actions of the vnregenerate are sinnes : and therefore it is most necessary to be a good man. The truth hereof appeares , because a man may doe what God commands , and omit and forbeare a worke prohibited , and yet sinne in both : for example , Aristides practised iustice most strictly ; yet herein he sinned , because it was no worke of faith . Alexander conquering Darius violated not the chastity of Darius his wife and daughters , but forbare this prohibited and sinfull action ; yet therein he sinned , because hee forbare not of good conscience . But wee must know , that this sinne lieth not in the substance or matter of the worke , which is materially good , but in the vice of the doer , and manner or end of doing : neither are these sins in themselues but onely by accident . CHAP. XXI . Rules for necessary actions , in respect of the meanes , and the order of the two Tables . NO action is so necessary , as it must be thrust on by euill meanes . Wee must not doe the least euill for the greatest good , which was Lots sinne , to procure good by euill ; neither yeeld to a lesse euill to preuent a greater , in euils of sinne . In ciuill things , it is a most necessary thing to preserue life ; but not with a lye , vsury , Sabbath-breaking , or going to witches : Life is not so necessary as without separation to cleaue to that which is good . In spirituall things , to preach the word is so necessary , as Paul cries woe vnto himselfe if if he doe not , because the flocke of God depends vpon him : But if I may not preach , vnlesse I wound my conscience , by compounding with heretikes , and blending truth with errour ; I must neuer preach but leaue the care of the Church to God , who without my lye , will prouide for the good of it . Thus Elijah fled and left his ministery , because he could not exercise it , vnles he would haue receiued Baals ceremonies , and flattered with the Baalites : and if hee had not thus forsaken his place , he had forsaken the Church . Great Athanasius chused rather to leaue his Church , then to yeeld any thing to the Arrians . Saint Paul knew , that after hee went from Ephesus , grieuous Wolues would come in not sparing the flocke : and yet because he could not stay to preach , vnlesse hee would haue restored some Pharisaicall obseruations ; and vnlesse for peace sake hee would haue yeelded to the rites and image of Diana , hee left the place , because he must not doe the greatest good by any euill meanes . Neuer let any thinke to thriue , by meanes which God hath accursed , and vpon which himselfe cannot pray for a blessing . All necessary actions must bee done according to the order of the Tables , euer esteeming the duties of the first Table , more necessary then they of the second . This is Christs owne rule , Mat. 22. 38. This is the first and great commandement , and the second is like to this , both in respect of the necessary binding , and of the end : for euen these are a worship of God , if they be performed in faith , and for his commandement sake . Wherefore ▪ else did the Lord deliuer two Tables , whereas hee might haue put all into one , but that he would preferre and claime the first place to duties that immediately concerne his worshippe ? From whence Diuines gather that rule of Antinomy and truth , That when the two Tables are opposed , and both call for necessary duties , which both cannot be done at the same time , the second Table must giue place to the first : as Act. 5. 25. It is meet to obey God rather then man. Magistrates must be obeied ; but the first Table derogates from the second , when both cannot be obserued . So in the New Testament , Parents and friends are to be loued ; but if they be not hated for Christ , when both cannot be loued together , one cannot be Christs disciple . But here be three caueats : 1. That a speciall Commandement is more necessary , and dispenseth with all the ten : and it is a principle , that all Commandements of both tables runne with one exception , If God command not otherwise . Thou shalt not kill , nor steale , vnlesse God command Abraham to kill his sonne , and the Israelites to rob the Aegyptians . Thou shalt make no grauen image , vnlesse God command Moses to make a brazen serpent . Thus obseruations of immediate commandements giue all Soueraignty to God , who is to be simply obeyed and acknowledged aboue his Law. 2. Morall duties must take place of all ceremonies : The rule of Diuines is , that charity dispenseth with ceremony , according to that , I will haue mercy and not sacrifice , because mercy is morall , and sacrifice ceremoniall . So Abimelech gaue Dauid the Shewbread which was not lawfull but in the case of necessary mercy . And it was superstition in the Iewes , that they would rather suffer their City to be taken , than fight vpon the Sabbath day in their owne defence . God allowes an oxe to bee pulled out of a ditch , and led to water , and allowes a necessary prouision for the body , vnto which euen Sabbath-duties must giue place . 3. Necessity ( wee say ) hath no law , but that is to bee vnderstood in mans lawes , when some sudden case falleth out , so as the inferiour cannot haue recourse to the law-maker , that then hee may interpret the law himselfe , and breake the letter of it , to follow the reason and intent of it : as in case of the murder of a theefe . But in the law of God , one onely case doth dispense with it , and that is when necessity so altreth a fact , as it taketh away from it all reason of sinning : As for example ; It is not lawfull to marry ones sister , but in the beginning of the world extreme necessity altered this fact , and gaue dispensation . So it is not lawfull to take away that which is anothers , but extreme necessity makes it lawful , because it is not anothers any longer , seeing the law of nature it selfe maketh some things common in such extreme necessity . On the Sabbath we must hold our selues strictly to Gods worship , but if an house be on fire , wee may leaue it without sinne . Note the equity of that law , Deut. 23. 24 , 25. CHAP. XXII . Rules of wisedome for necessary actions in respect of the scope and binding of them . ALL necessary actions , as they must beginne with Gods will , so they must end with his glory . The end and scope of all our actions must be God : 1. Because hee made all things for himselfe . 2. He is the alpha and omega , the beginning from whom all is , and the end for whom , and vnto whom all must be referred . 3. If in all indifferēt things Gods glory must be our aime , much more in necessary : but so it is in indifferent things , as eating , drinking , &c. 1 Cor. 10. 31. and Rom. 14. 6. Hee that eateth , eateth to the Lord , or ought-so to doe . 4. The very heathens had a glimmering hereof , professing that they were not borne for themselues , but partly their friends , partly their Country , and partly God. But the Scripture speakes more plainly , that wee owe all our selues to God : something indeed we owe to our neighbour , but that is in and for God. In the necessarie duties of religion , or our calling , wee must hold our selues bound to doe them whatsoeuer follow . Two things commonly hinder vs herein , which wee must arme our selues against : The first is feare of mens iudgements , faces , offence , and censures ; but wee must tread this vnder foot , if we haue a commandement and calling to doe any thing , as Paul did , 1 Cor. 4. 3. I passe little to be iudged of any man : neither feared he any persecution or trouble , so he might finish his course with ioy . Ieremy must make his browe of brasse , to speake the word of the Lord , chap. 1. vers . 17. A Christian must prepare to passe through good report , and bad report , and to count neither liberty nor life deare vnto him . Daniel would open his window , and pray as hee was wont , euen when his life was sought after . Secondly , euents of actions doe often and much trouble vs : for remedy whereof obserue two rules : 1. That of the Wise-man , Eccles. 11. 4. He that obserues the wind , shal not sowe : it is a foolish husbandman , who for sight of a cloud either his seed time or haruest : So for sowing workes of mercie , he that sticks in doubts , and saith , I may bee poore , or old , long diseased , full of children , or persecuted for the Gospell , and must prouide for one , neglects his seed time by looking at winds and clouds . So many a carnall Gospeller saith , If I should goe so often to Church as some , and be so forward in religion , I shold lose much profit , and incurre much rebukes and reproches . Therfore , 2. we must learne to leaue euents and successes to God : for it is not in man to direct his steps , God disposeth as he pleaseth . The Saints of God are often frustrate of their godly purposes , as Dauid in purposing and preparing to build an house for the Lord : but 1. they lose nothing if they doe their duty : 2. Gods Ouer-ruling hand will dispose all to the best : therefore there let them rest . CHAP. XXIII . Rules for actions indifferent : 1. in generall . A Great part of mans life is spent in the doing of naturall and indifferent actions , which in themselues are neither good nor euill , but as they are vsed : and being so common and ordinary , many sinnes creep into them , because we take our selues free and loose to doe as we list in them : which conceit growes out of ignorance of Gods wisedome , who by his word hath tied vs as strait in the vse of them as in things most necessarily inioyned . For there is no action in which we must depart from God. Obiect . They are therefore indifferent , because they are neither commanded nor forbidden , and therefore as they be free , so be we also in them . Answ. Although there bee no word commanding or forbidding , yet there is a word directing and ordering in them , as wee shall see in some generall rules concerning them all , and in speciall rules applied to some particulars . The generall rules concerning them all , as meat , drinke , apparell , recreation , houses , marriage , and the like , are these : 1. The most indifferent action that is , must be vsed by warrant and leaue from God : warrant is from the word , leaue is by prayer ; and thus must euery creature of God bee sanctified by the word and prayer , 1. Tim. 4. 5. Our meat , our apparell , our houses , our recreations must all be vndertaken and vsed , First , by the warrant of the word : for else it cannot be done in faith , Rom. 14. 23. and whatsoeuer is not of faith , is sinne . The word must direct me in this particular meat , apparell , recreation , that it is lawful in it selfe and to me , or else I sinne in it . Secondly , by prayer : for we must lift vp our hearts at least in the vse of them all : 1. In inuocation for an holy vse , suspecting all our wayes , and our inclinations to corrupt our selues in euerything . 2. In thanksgiuing for our liberty in all the creatures , that were iustly forfeited , and Gods blessing in them . This neglected , 1. Wee may haue the creature , but want the blessing ; haue bread , but not the staffe of bread ; haue money , but not a bagge to hold it ; cloathes , but no warmth ; marriage , but not the comfort of it : and so in the rest . 2. Wee doe not distinguish our selues from the bruit beasts , who liue by things before them , and neuer looke aboue them to the giuer . 3. We haue no title recouered in any of them , but they all remaine vncleane , as was signified in all the vncleane beasts , as all other had beene , but that they were permitted by special leaue , without which we are but vsurpers . 4. God is not acknowledged the author of our life & liberties , and so is depriued of his honor & homage , which no Lord among men will endure , in such as hold the least coppy vnder them . 2. The most indifferent action that is , must bee don● for God , that is , to the glory and honour of God ; whatsoeuer wee eat or drinke , &c. 1 Cor. 10. 31. For while we take our part in the comforts of the creatures , God will not lose his part of them , that is , his glory by them . Doth my eating and drinking make mee heauy and vnfit for the seruice of God , to performe it with cheerefulnesse ? Here I haue sinned in a lawfull thing : for God lookes to bee serued with cheerefulnesse and a good heart , in the abundance of all things , Deut. 28. vers . 47. Doth my apparell tend to pride vp and aduance my selfe ? This is a sinfull vse of a lawfull thing , wherein I should glorifie God. Doe my recreations and sports not onely iustle out my duties of Christianity , of reading , and meditating , and priuate prayer ; but ingrosse my time , so that I neglect my special calling ? Herein I vse my liberty vnlawfully , and turne it into a wicked licentiousnes : Recreation was neuer ordained by God to bee an occupation , but onely an helpe vnto it . 3. The most indifferent action that is , must be vsed in loue , as well as in faith , to edification , as wel as in sanctification . This generall rule is in 1 Cor. 14. 26. Let all things be done to edifying . Rom. 14. 21. It is euill to eate with offence : and it is good , neither to eat flesh , nor to drink wine , nor to doe any thing wherby thy brother stumbleth , or is offended , or made weake : and Paul would neuer eate , rather then offend a weake brother . In case of offence , in different things loose their indifferency , and become sinnes , and must not be done , be they neuer so small , neuer so profitable , neuer so powerfully enioyned by authority , because an higher authority of God , bids vs not offend our brother ; the conscience of our brother must be more tender vnto vs , than our owne peace and preferment . Daniel and his fellowes refusing the Kings meat , might seeme very vnwise , and too strict , for so small a thing to lose the Kings fauour , and their owne aduancement : but it was not frowardnesse in them , nor disobedience to the King , but conscience and obedience to Gods commandement in a case offensiue to themselues and others : so they would not doe the least euill for the greatest good . So , is this garment lawfull to mee , and offensiue to other of Gods children ? Then haue I no liberty in it . Is this eating , or drinking , or tobacco-taking lawfull to mee , and may it offend in circumstances ? I must auoid occasion of offence . Is this sport and recreation lawful in it selfe and to others , but is it offensiue in mee a puulike man , a professor , a Preacher ? Wisedome teacheth to refraine it . So the Apostle saith , All things ( that is , indifferent , of which he there speakes ) are lawfull , but all things are not expedient . Now as we must be farre from offending any , so our endeuour must be to build vp our brethren and our selues in the vse of euery indifferent action . Quest. How may that be ? Answ. When in the ciuill vse of them we adde some spirituall meditation , as Christ when hee spake of bread , stirred the people to meditate on and labour for the food that abideth to eternall life : so in eating and drinking we should sometime thinke of feeding on Christ , the true bread and water of life ; in putting on our clothes , of putting on Christ as a garment : in putting them off , of putting off the old man and the lusts thereof : in marriage , of the contract betweene Christ and the faithfull soule : in our iournies abroad , and returnes home , meditate with the Apostle Paul of our being from home , and at home with the Lord , &c. Thus shall we cherish and refresh our soules with our bodies . 4. The most indifferent things must be vsed in sobriety and moderation ; and this is , 1. When wee vse them as helps , not hindrances to our calling , generall or speciall , but our hearts are kept by them in a fitnesse vnto both . This is our Sauiours rule , Luk. 21. 34. Take heed that your hearts bee not oppressed with surfetting or drunkennesse , or the cares of this life , that that day come vnawares . 2. When we exceed not in them our ability and degree , but square our selues to the most sober of our age and condition : the neglect of which rule makes the feast of churlish Nabal , like the feast of a King , and brings soft apparell out of Kings houses into very cottages , to the great confusion of all degrees , so as euery man is out of order ; the seruant more gallant than his Master or Mistris , Schollers arrayed in vnseemely sort like Souldiers , the Gentleman like a Noble-man , and the Carter like a Courtier , and euery Degree many degrees beyond it selfe . 3. When wee hold them indifferent not in our iudgement onely , but also in affection , keeping the command of these , and bee sure they command not vs : 1 Cor. 6 12. All things are lawfull for me , but I will not bee brought vnder the power of any thing : and , 2 Cor. 7. 30. Wee must reioyce in the creature as not reioycing ; vse it as not vsing ; buy , sell , and haue a wife as not hauing . This is to affect indifferent things indifferently . Contrary whereunto is that excessiue desire and vse of any creature , which makes our seruants our masters , and puts vs out of possession of them , that we may be possessed by them , as when riches haue our hearts , and wee haue not power to command them to any good vse ; the heathen disclaimed this slauery , My riches are mine ( said Seneca ) not I my riches : would God Christians would say so much , to whom grace offers better things . So when a man or woman haue enslaued themselues to any creature , and made it a tyrant and commander , as insatiable drunkards , who can no more bee without strong drink or wine , than the fish without water , or themselues without ayre : The Mule ( they say ) must haue the bag hang by his mouth , and these must haue the bottle or pot at their elbow continually . Others that so addict themselues to that bewitching weed Tobacco , aboue all reason , set more thoughts vpon it than they bestow vpon God , bestow more time on it by tenne parts in one day than vpon Gods seruice , yea , than vpon any profitable calling ; bestow more charge vpon it then vpon all pious and charitable vses , through the yeere ; yea serue it as their God night and day , and all to turne their bodies into chimnies , their blood into foot , their best and radicall humour into smoake . This is an intemperate and sinfull vse of a creature , in it selfe good , if physically vsed : for we condemne not drinke , when we condemne drunkennesse , but the drunken vse of it . Neither can these dry drunkards more iustifie their sinne then the moist , nay farre lesse , seeing the one is ordained for common vse , so is not the other . But without comparing them together , it is a great sinne to be a slaue either to a pot or to a pipe . 5. In all indifferent actions , we must endeuour so wisely to passe them , as we doe not for them loose any thing , better then they ; such as are , 1. Time : men must not cast away much time in them . We should eate out as little time with our meat as we may , much lesse play away our time . Women must be conscionable to spend as little time as may be in arraying and trimming themselues ; for time is better then apparell . Neither for wealth must wee exchange our time , but that we reserue speciall times for better ends : for all the wealth on earth wil not buy an houre of time . 2. Our good name is better then any indifferent thing , and ought to be more precious then the sweetest ointment : wee must not eate and drinke to be counted gluttons and drunkards ; nor play in excesse , to be counted dicers and gamesters , which are infamous names , and such persons were banished out of the heathens Common-wealth : nor so apparell our selues as to be accounted proud , garish , and wanton ; nor build to be accounted vaine and prodigall : but preferre our good names before the vse of these . 3. Our goods and portion of wealth which God hath giuen vs , are better then the excessiue vse of any of these , and wee must not waste our goods more then is fit for our estate . Men haue no warrant to venture great summes of money vpon a fewe casts at dice , or bowles , or other sports . We are not Lords of our goods but stewards , and must be drawne to an account for them . Religion will teach a man good husbandry , and though it allow not onely a necessary and conuenient expense , but also for honest delight & pleasure , in meat , drinke , apparell , recreation , building , &c. yet it allowes no prodigality , except in the case of godly and charitable vs●s , to the poore members of Christ. Oh how rich should some meane men be in good workes , if they had giuen that to the poore which they haue lost in play ? and who can say but one is farre better , far more comfortable then the other ? 4. Our vertues and graces are farre better then any indifferent thing , and therfore we must not loose these for the other . Against which rule they sinne who in meates and drinkes loose moderation , sobriety , and tem●●rance ; and they who in apparell loose their humility and lowlinesse ; and they who in recreation loose their patience , meeknesse , loue and peace ; and they who in marriage loose their chastity and holines , &c. By all which rules wee see , how godlinesse takes not away the vse of Gods creatures , ( for it onely giues liberty in them : ) but orders the vse thereof , that they may be vsed in the iust measure of their goodnes , and giue place to better ; and restraines vs no further then so , as the calling be not exceeded , nor the rules of moderation violated . CHAP. XXIV . Speciall rules for meate and drinke . NOW for the speciall rules of things indifferent , because I must not suffer this discourse to growe so large as it would ; omitting all other things indifferent , there be three things , as most common , so more specially to bee treated of ; 1. Meate and drinke : 2. Recreation : 3. Apparell : for all which the word of God is plentifull in the rules of Christian wisedome , and direction . 1. Rules for eating and drinking . First , for the lawfulnesse of it : 1. It is necessary , to nourish and strengthen vs in our duties , and repaire strength decaied . 2. It may also serue for delight : for God hath giuen vs leaue liberally to vse the creatures , not onely bread to strengthen the heart , but oile to make his face glad . 3. God hath affoorded vs leaue to feast together , and inuite one another , for the maintaining and cherishing of Christian loue , and mutuall fellowship , as wee see in Iobs children , which was not vnlawfull : & the Primitiue Churches had their agapa's and loue-feasts , of which the Scripture makes mention , Acts 2. 46. Secondly , for the propriety ; wee must eate and drinke our owne , the sweat of our owne browes , not other mens . Many cut large pieces in other mens loaues , I meane that which they know is not theirs , but other mens , if all debts were paied . This is an high kind of iniustice , 2 Thes. 3. 12. not to eat our own bread . Thirdly , for the measure : wee must eate and drinke according to the call of nature , or honest and moderate delight , to make vs and keepe vs in a fitnesse to godly duties of hearing , reading , praying , &c. All that eating and drinking whereby men make themselues heauy , sleepy , vnweldy , and vnfit for good duties , is sinfull ; for this is not a refection or refreshing , but a destruction or oppression of nature . Fourthly , for our affection ; we must eate and drink with moderation of affection , not to sit at it as though wee had nothing else to doe , as many who bring themselues vnder the power of the creature , such as cannot be without the pot at their mouth , or without the pipe at their nose ; men of whom the Apostle speakes , that corrupt themselues with the creatures , losing sobriety , modesty , chastity , health , and reason it selfe . Here is an vtter peruerting of Gods ordinance ; who hath giuen vs his creatures to refresh and help our selues by them , but men instead thereof , hurt and destroy themselues by them . Fifthly , for the time ; wee must not so eat and drinke , as wee eat vp also too much time : for so wee hinder our selues in our callings , which we ought specially to further , redeeming the time , Ephes. 5. 16. Numbers set downe to eat and drinke , and in feasting and feeding their bodies , neuer feele the passage of three or foure houres ; whereas to sit out a Sermon of one houre long is very tedious ; so little care haue most men of feeding their soules . Sixthly , in eating , desire to taste the goodnesse and sweetnesse of God himselfe in his creatures ; else haue wee no better vse of them than the bruit creatures . Say to thy selfe , O Lord , how sweet and good art thou in thy selfe , who canst put such sweetnesse in thy creature ? Seuenthly , we should vse good and sauoury speech , as salt to our meat , to acknowledge Gods bountie and goodnesse , to praise him and to edifie others . Our empty and barren hearts cannot tell how to weare out the time of feasting , but either in trifles , or inuiting of others to eat and drinke , who need rather bridles , than spurres . Quest. What , no other speech but of Scripture ? how then should wee bee merry ? Answ. It is true , that commonly all other speech but earnall , is vnsauoury : but a Christian must consider , 1. That he eats and drinks before the Lord , and his speeches must become the presence of God , who heareth and expecteth that all the speech of Christians bee better than silence . 2. All the speeches of Christians ought to sauour of sobriety and wisedome , and the grace of the heart : for , whom call wee to our tables but Gods children by profession , who must bee like themselues euery where ? 3. God hath giuen vs leaue to be merrie , but with this onely restraint , Bee merry in the Lord ; not against him ; nor setting him out of sight , as those who neuer thinke themselues merry , but in rude and vngodly behauiours and speeches vnbeseeming Christians . Plato and Zenophon thought it fit and profitable , that mens speeches at meales should bee written : And if Christians should so doe , what kinde of bookes would they be ? Eighthly , in our eating and drinking wee must be carefull to season our harts with these and the like meditations : 1. How prone we are to know immoderate ioy , and prouoke God in our feasts : Iob was suspitious of his sonnes , sent to them to sanctifie themselues , and afterward himselfe sacrificed for them . 2. That wee shall not want incitements or prouocations of such as are inuited with vs , or otherwise to forget our selues , which incitements wee must watch against , and arme our selues aforehand . I remember the story of Antigonus , who being inuited to a place where a notable harlot was to be present , asked counsell of Menedemus what he should doe : hee bade him onely remember that hee was a Kings sonne . Good men may be inuited where none of the best may meet them ; the best counsell is , to keep in mind that they be Kings sonnes , Gods children ; and a base thing it were to be allured from their profession , by the vngodly . 3. To consider in our eating and drinking our owne end , and mingle our feasting with a meditation of death ; as Ioseph had his tombe in his garden , to season his delight with ▪ meditation of his end . Alas , this feeding and feasting is but a little repaire of a ruinous house which must goe downe . The Egyptians had a skeleton or carkasse brought into their feasts to the same purpose : So doe thou , set thine owne carkasse before the eye of thy mind , and it will moderate thee in the pampering of it . 4. Consider how many poore ones want some of thy superfluity . It is a great sin of great men , to drinke wine in boles , and eat the fat , and to forget the affliction of Ioseph , Amos 6. 6. Therfore , Neh. 8. 10. Eat the fat , and drinke the sweet , and send part to them for whom nothing is prepared . Say with thyselfe , Who am I to bee so full , when many are hungry ? That I should abound when so many want ? How am I indebted vnto God to be thankefull ; and shall I requite his loue with such vnkindnesse , as to grow wanton , idle , and forgetfull of him , when hee is most mindefull of mee ? Must I eat and drinke to rise vp to play ? No , I must bestirre me in such duties , wherein I may expresse much loue for much loue . CHAP. XXV . Rules for the right ordering of our selues in our sports . THese concerne , 1. the matter and kinde of our sports and playes : 2. the manner of vsing them aright : 3. the right ends . First , the matter of our sports must bee in things which our consciences tell vs are lawfull or indifferent . Therefore , 1. Holy things , as phrases of Scripture , must not bee played with : Thou shalt feare the holy name of God : not delight thy selfe in swearing . 2. Sinfull things are not to be matter of our sport : as , 1. To make a man drunke , or sweare , or to laugh at such persons : for this is a matter of sorrow to see Gods image so defaced : and Dauids eyes gushed out with riuers of tears , to see such spectacles , 2. Vnlawfull sports are playes and enterludes , which are the representations of vices not to be named among Christians ; besides mens wearing of womens apparell , the incentiues of lust and fewellers of fleshly flames . Heathen Law-giuers haue banished such out of their Countries . 3. Mixt dancing of men and women together , neuer read of in Scripture with approbation , and here in our text noted to be the fruit of idolatry , riot , drinking , and all other dissolute , behauior . Would God , the root , and tree , and all branches laden with such fruit , were quite stubbed vp . The heathens themselues condemned it : It was an ordinary speech among the Romans , None but either a drunkard or a mad man danceth . It were too long to inferre the sentences of the heathen . The generall consent of Fathers , and the determinations of Councels make against this wicked and lasciuious practice . Basil in a Sermon of his concerning drunkennesse , saith , God made our knees not to caper like Goats , but to bow to the worship of God , and our Lord Iesus Christ. And Viret on the 7. Commandement , Chorea in circulo , centrum diabolus , circumferentia eius Angeli . Therefore let the Sonnes of light detest such an vnfruitfull worke of darkenesse : for what is there here but lust of the flesh , and lust of the eyes ? what is here else , but carrying fire in the bosome , and walking vpon coles ; and how can a man auoid burning ? This practice agrees neither with the grauity of the man , nor the shamefastnesse of the woman : nay , the very sight of it in a woman , is known more to ouerwhelme a man than strong drinke , as we may see in Herod , Mar. 6. 22. 4. Vnlawfull games are such as the lawes of the land make vnlawful , which binde the conscience in things indifferent : now among vnlawful games , the lawes reckon dicing , and so doth the law of God , because it hath no good report in it , no prayse , no vertue , Phil. 4. 8. and then it cannot be indifferent . And the like may be said of all those playes , the ground of which is lot , seeing a lot is an oracle and declaration of Gods will , a part of his Name , more solemne than any oath , and must not bee vainly vsed , or for recreation . Obiect . It is no lot , we vse it for no such end . Ans. That is no matter ; the Iewes cast lots for our Sauiours garments , the nature of lots remained , though the good end was neglected . Obiect . Gods prouidence ouer-rules all other games . Answ. In other lawfull games that depend vpon wit , strength , or skill , our owne infirmity , or want of skill , may bee blamed in all imperfection : but here , because the ground is a lot , wherin we haue no cunning , ( vnlesse by cogging and cheating , which very roysters condemne ) nothing can be accused but Gods immediate direction : let men consider whom they dishonour , when they say , What lucke , what chance is this ? Lyranus in his praeceptorium , by nine reasons proueth the vnlawfulnesse of playing with dice. The heathens themselues condemned it euen in their Princes ; as Suet●nius in the life of Augustus reports , that it was his greatest blemish , that hee was at leasure to play at dice. Chilo being sent from the Lacedemonians to Corinth , vpon an Embassage , and finding the Senators of that City at cards and dice , would performe no part of his message , saying , he would not so much dishonour the Lacedemonians , as that they should either make or meddle with such persons . Were such games infamous among lieathens ? how vnworthy then are they among Christians . Secondly , as sports and playes must be indifferent in their nature , so also in their vse ; and that is when we confine our selues to the lawful manner of vsing them . 1. The persons must haue two qualities : 1. they must be pure : for to the pure all things are pure , and to none else : secondly , they must be wearie , and need refreshing : for God alloweth not the most lawfull sports , till the body and mind stand in need ; till then wee must be busie in better things . 2. All sports must bee sanctified by the word and prayer , 1 Tim. 4. prayer before , and thanksgiuing after : because wee are in more danger to forget our selues herein , than in any thing else ; in that we vnbend our selues from our ordinary businesse , and thinke wee may take more liberty than vsuall . A strange lesson to gamesters . 3. All sports must bee ioyned with the feare of God : Reioyce with trembling , which suffers not a man to powre out himselfe to pleasure . 4. All must bee ioyned with moderation agreeing to the time , person , and place . A man must not be a louer of pleasure , set vpon sport , as some , who are giuen ouer to sport , neuer wearie , all the weeke long is too little . The Apostle commands , to reioyce , as not reioycing : that is , to be so moderate and retired , as not to ouer-value sports , nor to set our affections on them , as those who haue other things to doe . So obserue due circumstances : Some at cards and dice turne night into day , and sit vp all night and day , longer than they could for ten times more money be bound to any good businesse . Some wickedly encroach on time allotted to Gods seruice , some part of the Sabbath day , and other times : some keepe from Church , and some runne from Church with their games in their mouthes : others bestow vpon them too much time which should be employed in the calling , either generall or particular , and so much indammage themselues thereby . The mowers rifle is good to bee set to his sythe , when it is blunt ; but if hee doth nothing but whet still , hee spoyles his sythe , and hinders his worke . Therefore let vs moderate our selues in our sports , according to the most sober of our age , degree , condition , and sort of life , and vse them with such as are both godly and wise , who may rather watch ouer vs that we offend not , rather than draw and prouoke vs so to doe . 5. Wee must not exchange any vertue or good thing with our delight and sport : ( as before we noted ) because euery thing that is good , euen the least , is better than any indifferent thing : and therfore , 1. We must not by sports hinder our callings , but fit our selues to them : 2. We may not clogge our selues with them , because they ought to speed our way in our spirituall course and race . Take heed they become not the deuils bird-lime , in which while we wallow , we are disabled to mount aloft in heauenly meditations . 3. We may not lose our patience , our meekenesse , our loue , as they that scorne , quarrel , storm , and rage like heathens , against lucke , chance , or fortune ; yea , sweare and curse , if neuer so little crossed , as they that neuer heard of religion . 4. We may not lose our goods , or waste our substances , or play away more than without any doubt or scruple of conscience we may bestow vpon honest delight , the necessary maintenance of other things , and necessary contribution to the Ministery , and the poore first liberally prouided for . 5. Wee may not lose our good name , which is a precious thing , as to bee counted gamesters , dicers , common bowlers , or idle persons , or a companion of them , or by obscene , scurrilous ; or vncomely words or actions , carry the brand of a rude and disordered mate . 6. Wee may not lose our mastery ouer our sports , to let them haue vs at command : for , hee that thus loues pastime shall be a poore man , Prou. 21. 17. Now wee come to the right ends , which in our sports wee must set before vs , if we would not sinne . 1. The end of sports must not bee to passe the time , which wee ought to redeeme , and not let passe without gaining something by it better than it selfe . Nor to maintaine idlenesse , as men that cannot else tell what to doe with themselues ; for this is as ill as idlenesse : for idlenesse is not onely not working , but a doing of trifles , and that which we dare not bring into our account to God. A pittifull thing , that Christians hauing so much to doe , and so much meanes , and so many cals to their businesse , should find nothing so fit as cards and dice. 2. The end of our sports must not bee to purchase our neighbours money , or to helpe our selues by his hinderance . And I would know , by what right of Gods word I can hold my neighbours money , which comes into my hand without labour , loue , gift , or iust contract . If it bee not mine by iustice distributiue or commutatiue , it cannot bee mine by God : But no law of God or man , hath ranked wagers in either : nay , the ciuill law compels none to pay that which is lost ; or if he haue paid , hee may recouer it within fifty houres . But the right ends of sports are these : 1. Gods glory : nothing can bee lawfull wherein some glory is not wonne to God , in whatsoeuer wee doe , 1 Cor. 10. 31. And therefore such sports as doe not inable vs to cheerefulnesse in the duties of religion and Christianity , faile in this end . 2. All our earthly ioyes must helpe forward our spirituall ioy in God , and the eternall ioyes of his Kingdome : if they come in comparison with them , or will step vp to hinder vs therein , they are to bee contemned . Our chiefe ioy must euer bee placed in the Lord , and our chiefe affections must bee reserued for that fulnesse of ioy which is at Gods right hand . First seeke the kingdome of God , euen in these , and aboue these : how doth hee so , who spends more time in these than in that ; yea , more by a thousand degrees , if wee would measure the time of his sports , by the time of godly desires , & religious duties ? 3. The preseruation of our own health , & not to impair the health of our soules or bodies , as many by their watching to play destroy their health , and call numbers of diseases vpon themselues , and oftentimes vntimely death . In this vse alone can all recreations become good and comfortable vnto vs , although our corrupt nature is loth to be so confined . Obiect . If onely these recreations , in this manner , and these ends bee lawfull , you leaue vs none . Answ. Onely these , in this manner and ends are lawfull ; and yet wee disallow nothing which Gods word alloweth , which ought to gouerne all his people . Gods word alloweth for the exercise of the body , the vse of the bowe , 2 Sam. 1. 18. of musicke , Neh. 7. 67. of hunting , hawking , birding , and such sports , without swearing , disorder , and needlesse tormenting of the silly creatures . And for the exercise of wit , hee alloweth honest riddles , Iudg. 14. and such games as the ground of which is wit or skill , as chesse , draughts , &c. Besides , an heart that is sanctified , would inure it selfe to heauenly ioyes , and preferre them aboue carnall , and little affect these which loose persons so much dote vpon . And to those who will be ready to obiect the vse and custome of the world , and the practice of so many fore-running ages , I answer and conclude with the Apostles words , Rom. 12. 2. Fashion not your selues according to this world , but proue what is the will of God. Or if you will not walke by Gods rules , your sinne shall destroy your owne soules : looke you to your duties , I haue endeuoured to do mine in discouering the same vnto you . CHAP. XXVI . Rules of wisedome concerning our apparell . HAuing thus finished the rules of wisdome , concerning meat , and drinke , and recreations , we come to such rules as concerne apparel : and they are foure : 1. The matter of our apparell must not be stately and costly ; which must be measured partly by the ability our selues haue , partly the condition of life we are in , and partly by the example of such as are sober , graue , and wise in our ranke . Yea , euen in the matter of our apparell , our sobriety and modesty must appeare ; yea , our humility ; when God made Adam garments , he made them of skins , homely and base , that hee might reade therein his mortality , and that by his sinne hee was become like the beasts whose skins couered him . 2. For the manner of our apparell , it must not be strange , garish affecting new fashions , which argues leuity and new fanglednesse , but such as becommeth holinesse , Tit. 2. 3. and according to the sober custome of our Countrey and ranke . Zeph. 1. 8. I will visit Kings Children , and those that weare strange apparell ; that is , such as in the forme or fashion is wanton , curious , odde , sauouring of pride , lightnesse , and singularity . A fearefull threat , vnder which our whole land lieth , which is a receptacle of all the fashion of all Countries , besides our owne daily inuentions of new fashions of monstrous apparell , that were men and womens bodies as monstrous as their apparell , they would bee cast out of the company and account of men : and how soeuer their bodies bee , surely their mindes be monstrous , and filled with vanity : and how iust were it with God , seeing such persons will not fashion their cloathes to their bodies , to fashion them to their clothes ? The Apostle wisheth vs not to fashion our selues according to the world ; which precept is so farre out of date and vse , that almost the fashions of al the world , and the vanity of all Countries , may seeme to bee arriued and landed in this land of ours , that a man may read in capitall letters vpon mens garments the lightnesse and lewdnesse that is within . 3. For the measure of it : beware of excesse in apparell , which is a great sinne , and carrieth with it , 1. Expence of wealth , which might be better reserued to the vse of the Church or Common-wealth , or couering the poore and naked Saints . All excesse is commonly maintained with couetousnesse , iniustice , or vnmercifulnesse . 2. A note of a vaine mind that glories in his wardrobe , as if a theefe should boast of his bolts , or glory in his brand , or marke of fellony : for apparell is the couer of our shame . 3. Waste of time , and idlenes , in the too accurate and curious culture of the body , which should be spent either in adorning the soule , or following our ordinary calling . 4. Oftentimes debts & vniust detaining of mens dues from them . We haue knowne great rents soone turned into great ruffes , and lands into laces . We haue heard of some braue dames , in such variety of fashions and colours , as if they had stood in a Pedlars shop about them : and of some braue Gallants , that haue carried some whole Mannors vpon their backs . But M. Latimer , in his time a man of much obseruation , noted one commodity in his leather coat , which he wore at the Court ; when the Gallants mocked him , hee told them his was paid for , and so were not many of their Veluets and Sattins . 4. Consider the ends and vse of apparell , and that is , 1. spirituall , 2. ciuill . Spirituall , many wayes : 1. When by putting cloathes on , wee see our misery , and in the nakednesse of our bodies the nakednesse of our soules . 2. When we labour to put on Christ Iesus as a garment , to couer vs form the stormes & tempests which our sinnes haue raised against vs. I counsell thee to buy of me the white garments of innocency , Re. 3. 3. When by girding our apparell to vs , we labour to girt vp our loynes , and looke for our Lord Iesus . 4. When by putting off our old garments , wee daily put off some relique of the old man. 5. When in adorning the body , wee study to adorne the minde with humility , holinesse , modesty , meeknesse , &c. Not make any superstitious vse , or put religion in garments . Ciuill , and that is threefold : 1. for health , 2. for honesty , 3. for ornament . 1. For health and necessity , to defend vs from the iniury of weather , and to keepe vs warme : to this end God cloathed Adam ; and it is a curse to put on clothes , and not be warme , Hag 1. 6. 2. For honesty , in two branches : 1. Decencie . 2. Distinction . First , decencie : for nakednesse in the state of innocency was a glorious ornament , but presently after the fall , shame and deformity came in ; and therfore presently Adam sewed leaues together , and God made coates to hide and couer that nakednes . Now decency requires seemely and clenly apparel , not fordid , base , and slouenly : and condēneth that affected nakednes of men & women , especially , who weare their cloathes , so as they discouer the nakednesse of many parts of their bodie ; whereas sinne hath cast shame on euery part , and cals for a couer ouer all but for necessity . Secondly , distinction of persons , sexes , ages , and callings . The man may not weare the womans apparel , nor the woman the mans , Deut. 22. 5. Against which law of nature and common honesty , how manly doe women attire themselues , and how effeminately doe men imitate women , as though both were willing to change sexes ? How vndecent is it to see an old man in a youthfull habit , to see a Minister in his ruffians haire , pickadillies , and fashion like some souldier ? to see a peasant cloathed like a Prince ? as all sorts of men almost are confused in apparell . Ioseph when hee was set ouer all the land of Egypt , was distinguished from inferiour Princes by his fine linnen , and golden chaine . In times past soft garments were in Kings houses , but now that is no distinction of Courtiers . CHAP. XXVII . Concerning ornament in apparell : wherein three questions are resolued . THE third and last ciuill vse of Garments is ornament : where consider two or three questions . Quest. 1. Whether be ornaments lawfull to be vsed , seeing the Apostle commands women , that their apparell be not outward , with broydered haire , and gold , nor pearles ; nor costly apparell , which hee opposeth to comely apparell ? 1 Peter 3. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 9. Answ. They are : for the Apostle simply condemneth not the things themselues , which are the good creatures of God ; nor all vse of them in ornament , which Rebecca and Ioseph being aduanced , and all the Israelitish women , ware in eare-rings and bracelets , which was not their sinne . But he condemnes in them , 1. The ouer-common and vnseasonable vse : for ornaments are not sit for all persons and times , but must be vsed sparingly , not commonly , hauing respect to times and solemnity . They bee for great , not for common men , neither for those euery day : the rich man in the Gospell is condemned , for going in fine purple euery day . 2. He condemnes the affected and excessiue vse of them ; for they more affected the adorning of the body , than of the mind , to which the Apostle in both places calleth them : whereas a Christian must chiefly prouide for the adorning of the minde inwardly . 3. He condemnes their offensiue vse of them , who did not vse them as the sober and graue matrons of their yeares and age ; but being newly conuerted from the heathens , still retained the heathenish ornaments , and would not , being Christians , bee put down by the heathens , but retained the former manner of adorning themselues . 4. Hee condemnes their end in wearing these things , which was to set forth their bodies , and pride vp themselues with their ornaments ; whereas all ornaments must be vsed to Gods glory , while wee adorne his Temple , and not to draw mens eyes vpon vs. Quest. 2. May not a man weare long haire for ornament . Answ. The ornament of a mans head is short haire : long haire is an effeminate ornament . 1 Cor. 11. 14. Doth not nature it selfe teach , that if a man haue long haire , it is a shame for him ? but if a woman haue long haire , it is a praise to her . Obiect . We may vse other things for ornament , and why not our haire ? Answ. In ornament we must looke we be without offence , and that is when wee frame our selues to the example of the graue and sober , who amongst vs count the fashion of flaring lockes , effeminate and ruffian-like . Againe , in ornament , as in euery thing else , wee must expresse godlinesse , modesty , and sobriety : whereas this fashion of men is receiued as a badge of a light mind , and an intemperate person . Obiect . The Nazarits did nourish their haire . Answ. That was by the speciall law of their profession which profession , and law , and all , is now ceased . If thou wilt be a Nazarite , thou must drinke no wine , nor strong beere ; a hard law to many of our locksters . That of Absolom doth not necessarily conclude against it , that his haire became his halter : yet it is not to be passed lightly : Compare his pride with his fall , and wee may obserue that God doth ordinarily punish vs in that wherein we sinne . Quest. 3. May not a woman paint her face , and mend her complexion ? Answ. No , euery one ought to bee content with their owne feature and complexion : and to deuise artificiall formes and fauors to set vpon their bodies or faces , is a most abominable practice . For , 1. They are not content with their forme which God hath giuen in them , either because they are proud and would not be inferiour to others in beauty ; or because they are vnchaste , and would by art allure louers , when nature hath failed them . 2. The forme of it is a lye ; it is no beauty , but a picture of it , no sincerity , no truth in it . They dissemble themselues to bee other than God made them . What truth may wee expect within , when a man may reade in their faces , lying and dissimulation ? How is this to abstaine from the appearance of euill ? 3. What a dishonour is it to God , that a wretched worme should goe about to correct and mend his workmanship ? How would a meane workeman take it , that a bungler should offer to correct or alter his worke ? 4. What an indignity is it to take the face of that which they say is a member of Christ , and make it the face of an harlot ? We reade but of one in the Scripture that painted her face , and that was Iezabel , an arrant strumpet , and called the mother of fornications . How much more vnseemely was it in that Vicar of Christ Pope Paul the second , as Platina writes ? 5. Our Sauior plainly tels vs , Mat. 5. that wee cannot make one haire white or blacke , that is , wee haue not power of our haire to make it , no not to colour it : and yet these will make as many white and blacke as they list . 6. If thou be ashamed of that face which God hath made thee , hee will one day bee ashamed of that face thou hast made thy selfe . And dare a Christian carry a face in his life time , which neither God made at first , nor he dares appeare withall in the resurrection ? Obiect . But I must please my husband , and hold his heart to mee . Answ. Will it not please him to behold the face that God made ? or canst thou please him in bringing a strange beauty to couzen him withal , that he knowes is not thine owne ? or if he take thee for beautiful when thou art deformed , wouldest thou bee thus deceiued in a husband , for a faire man to marry a painted husband . Obiect . But I may couer a deformity in my body . Answ. Yes , but not by setting a new forme vpon thy face , nor by dissembling . Obiect . Doth not the Apostle say , 1 Cor. 12. Wee put couers vpon the members that are least honest ? Answ. 1. The Apostle speakes of not contemning the poorest Christian , vnder that similitude . 2. We couer vncomely parts , but with what ? with cloathes to hide them , not with painting , stibium , white lead , purpurisse , or check varnish . 3. If thy externall forme be not so beautifull , beautifie it with grace , humility , the feare of God , and other Christian vertues . The Churches beauty is within , which God and his Angels , and good men respect in the person that is most deformed and contemptible . CHAP. XXVIII . Rules for our carriage towards all men ▪ in generall . THe second sort of rules concerning man and the things of men , respecteth our carriage towards other men ; and that , 1. In generall ▪ towards all : 2. In speciall , towards good , or bad . The generall rules are these : 1. Wisely to distinguish betweene men , and not promiscuously respect all alike . 1. This is a point of wisedome , 1 Cor. 6. 6. and 2. commanded vs , Iud. 22. haue compassion on some , putting difference , others saue with feare . Againe , 3. Many precepts can neuer bee obserued without it : as , first in things respecting God , Cast not holy things to dogges , Matth. 7. 6. that is , such as are knowne to bee wilfull repellers of the truth , lest they profane them , and teare you : secondly , in things of men , Doe good to all , but especially to the houshold of faith : thirdly , concerning our selues , Hee that hateth will counterfeit , though he speake fauourably , beleeue him not , &c. Prou. 26. 24 , 25. Therefore labour to discerne one from another . 4. There is great difference betweene an Israelite and an Egyptian , betweene a Iew and a Samaritan ; and we must obserue the difference ; wherin the Lord goes before vs , who though hee be patient and good vnto all , yet hee is specially good vnto Israel , euen the vpright of heart . Obiect . This is to anticipate Gods iudgement and censure . Answ. No , because our iudgement reacheth not to a mans finall estate , but to the present onely ; for wee may not iudge beyond our eyes , nor yet against them : It is alike folly and wickednesse to iusti●ie the vngodly , as to condemne the innocent . Against this rule ●aile those generall men , whom all fashions and companies please wel enough , no matter whether Protestants or Papists , religious or prophane , drunkards or sober , swearers or fearers of an oath ; as the Iewes , they put no difference between Christ ▪ and the theeues , who were crucified with him , but onely that Christ was the worst . Others put difference betweene the godly and others , such as betweene Iewes and Samaritans , they will not meddle with a man truly fearing God for a dish of water . But a fearefull signe it is when grace is not acknowledged . 2. Although wee must make account to liue amongst all , yet our care must bee to sort with the best : that is , we must embrace friendship with all so farre as is possible , Rom. 12. 18. and so as we warre not with God ; but familiarity onely with good men , who are but a few . Lightnesse of familiarity is indiscretion . Here the rule holdeth wel , to trie before we trust : yea , a wise Christian must not commit himselfe to euery one that seemeth good by the example of Christ , Ioh. 2. 24. For , 1. Much hypocrisie lieth at the root of mens harts : 2. Satan hath taught many to transforme themselues , and make religion and good words a cloake for their own ends : 3. Neuer did the deuil more hurt to Christianity than by false brethren , who were sent in to spie their liberty . For euen thy brethren , and the house of thy father , euen they haue dealt vnfaithfully with thee , — beleeue them not though they speake faire to thee , Ier. 12. 6. He that eateth bread with me ( saith Dauid ) and he that dips his finger in the platter with mee , euen he lift vp his heele against me : and Christ saith , A mans enemies are they of his owne houshold . 4. Solomon saith , An vnfaithfull man is as a broken tooth , and a sliding foot , Prou. 25. 19. 5. Christ would not commit himselfe to some that are said to beleeue in his name , because he knew what was in man. Many friends are like deepe ponds , cleare on the top , and all muddy at the bottome . And therefore a Christian must bee well aduised before hee inwardly conuerse with another . Now if a man must be carefull euen in entertaining good company , how carelesse are men of themselues , when they thrust themselues into euill company , which is more contagious then any sicknesse , more infectious then any pestilence ? no age so catching of any disease , as euery age is of deadly diseases of the minde in such poysoned ayre . Let no Christian that will be ruled by Gods wisedome , presume to conuerse in any such company , further then the limit of his particular calling , or other iust occasion and dealing is offered . 3. In our conuerse with all men , we must keepe a determination either to doe good vnto others , or receiue good from others , helping one another to life as occasion shall be offered , Heb. 10. 24. Let vs consider one another , to prouoke to loue and good workes : Iude 20. Edifie one another in your holy faith . Motiues so to doe : 1. How profitable should wee be , if our lips were euer feeding others , Pro. 10. 20. and if our diligence were to draw vnderstanding from others , Prou. 2. 5. How should wee abound in wisedome , and make our whole life fruitfull ? This would keepe vs in good trading and returne of goodlinesse . 2. This is the right end and improuement of our gifts , for the good of the whole body , Rom. 12. 6. 3. Here is an excellent worke of loue , which is called the bond of perfection , which tyes persons and vertues together , and perfects them by frequent actions . 4. In what company soeuer a man comes , his care must be that his life and conuersation be a visible confutation of all vngodlinesse . Daniels piety confuted idolatry , and Lot was a reall reproofe of Sodome . A Christians light must alwaies shine , euen in the darkenesse of the world , and against it . Should the life of a Christian be like the life of vnbeleeuers , couetous , contentious , conceited , vniust , & c ? or shold not the life of a wise Christian , varie from the multitude and common people , in iudgement and practise ? Did not Christ and his followers so ? This rule is opposite to that worldly wisedome , to swim with the streame , and to doe as the most doe , to auoid the note of singularity . But here , as in all the course of godlinesse , 1. Wee must become fooles , that we may be wise : 2. We must not auoid mens euill speaking , by running with them into the same excesse of riot : 3. Wee must not take the example of many & great ones , but of Christ , the greatest and wisest of all : and Phil. 3. 17. Be yee followers of mee , and looke on them that walke so . These examples suite to our rule . 5. Christianity enioynes loue vnto all , euen the worst : whose vices wee must hate , their persons we must loue ; by which vertue all men haue place in our prayers , in our mercy and compassion as occasion requires . This grace couers a multitude of sinnes in all , it beareth with infirmity , it forgiues offences in all : Col. 3. 13. forbearing and forgiuing one another . And therefore the Apostle wisheth vs , aboue al things to put on loue . And to consider that motiue , Col. 4. 7. Euery one is one of vs , euen the worst in the naturall and ciuill bond ; one of vs , if not in faith , yet in flesh ; one of our neighbours , or congregation , or at least by the common bond of a Christian. 6. Religion requires curtesie as well as piety , good manners together with good conscience ; and therefore we must be curteous to all , 1 Pet. 2. 17. & 3 , 8. Honour all men . And Rom. 12. 10. In giuing honour goe one before another . Which honour is a good opinion conceiued inwardly , and expressed outwardly by reuerent words and deeds . Christianity will make vs haue a low opinion of our selues , and better of others then of our selus . Ob. Some are so bad , or so base , as no honour or respect belongs vnto them . Answ. None is so bad but hath some honour on him , he is Gods creature , he is a man , a Christian , and he may be a good man , a member of Christ , and certain reuerence belongs to all this . Ob. But how can superiors , in higher place , honour their inferiours ? Answ. Many wayes : 1. In action , by testifying their good opinion of them in words , gestures , or deeds , not the least contempt : and so Iob behaued himselfe , selfe , 31. 13. 2. In affection , especially , when superiours whom God hath by their place made receiuers of honour , could out of an humble affection be well pleased either to want it , or returne it vpon their inferiours if they might doe it without offence , or might it stand with good order which God hath set in the Church and Common-wealth . CHAP. XXIX . Rules of walking wisely towards good men . THE first of these rules is in respect of our affection , to loue the godly with brotherly loue . It is true indeed , all men must be loued , but here is required a more speciall loue , as betweene brethren , of which Saint Peter saith , 2. 1. 7. Ioyne with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse , because they are of the same father and family of God. The reason of this rule is this : the nearer any man comes to God , or expresseth him , the more right he hath into our affections for Gods image sake : and here is a straiter bond then that of nature . The Apostle makes this a mark of Gods child , to loue the brethren , 1 Ioh. 3. 10. and Dauid professeth , that all his delight was in the Saints , the excellent on earth : and Rom 2. 10. Be affectioned one to another with brotherly loue . And because this cannot be , except men see more in Gods pople then ordinary , therefore labour to see , 1. Their high birth and true nobility , Ioh. 1. 13 Not of bloud , nor of the will of flesh , but of God. 3. Their kindred and alliance : they are Sonnes of God , brethren of Christ , who was not ashamed to call them brebrethrē , Heb. 2. 11. 3. Their high office and place , whom Christ the faithfull witnesse , the first borne from the dead , and the Prince of the Kings of the earth , hath loued and washed from their sinnes by his bloud , to make them Kings and Priests vnto God , Reu. 1. 5. 4. Their beauty and glory , being couered with long white robes of righteousnesse and holinesse ; such as Kings anciently were distinguished by , wherein they appeare most louely and gracefull to God , Angels , and good men : nothing is wanting to their perfection of beauty , seeing they are complete in Christ the head of all power , Col. 2. 10. 5. Their present wealth , and future expectation : Their goods are God the chiefe good , Christ giuen them of God for righteousnesse , the holy Ghost sent into their hearts for sanctification and consolation ; eternall election , effectuall calling , iustification . And their future expectation is the City of God , the heauenly Ierusalem , which God hath prepared for them , Heb. 11. 16. Now were it a wise course for a man to disaffect the chiefe fauourite of his King ? and are not Gods children Gods chiefe fauourites ? Were it a safe thing to hate the people of God , to disaffect them , to lowre vpon them , seeing the Lord obserues what lookes are cast downe vpon his children , as in Cain ? How was Balaam slaine by the Lord for desiring euill to Israel , though himselfe could doe them none but by his wicked counsell ? These are the last times in which men are louers of themselues , and of men onely for their owne aduantage , 2 Tim. 3. 2. they loue them for their wealth , ease , and pompe , not for God and his graces . 2. Wee must not onely affect their persons , but also embrace a fruitfull fellowship and society with them in the Gospell . This is the Apostles rule , 1 Pet. 2. 17. Loue brotherly fellowship : and how glad was hee for the fellowship of the Philippians in the Gospell , Phil. 1. 5. Now the meanes of fruitfull conuersing with the godly , are these : First , to consider one another , what need the best haue to bee prouoked and whetted on , especially in these euill and cold dayes , yea , such times as nip and blast piety , and the feare of God , Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily , least yee be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne . Think what a fearefull thing it is to fall from the grace of God , yea or the degrees of it ; and would we suffer a brother to runne into this danger ? Secondly , chuse fit matter to conferre of in company , either by calling to minde things heard , or by stirring vp to profitable hearing , diligent proceeding , in offensiue walking , watchfull speaking , and the like : or if need be , of admonition , exhortation , or reproofe , shew thy loue therein ; full clouds will distill rain , light will shine abroad , and charitable knowledge is communicatiue . Thirdly , bee sure to performe these priuate Christian duties in good , and holy , and vnrebukeable manner : as , 1. orderly , those beginning which are fittest in gifts and place , as Elihu spake in his turne : 2. humbly , none seeking to speake beyond his skill and reach : 3. wisely , watching the fittest time , and best occasion : 4. meekly and louingly , without reasonings and murmuring , Phil. 2. 15. none crossing others , but through loue one forbearing another , aduising in the spirit of meekenesse , and with offering to submit themselues in other cases to receiue words of exhortation and admonition : 5. Conscionably , so as in all such meetings and conference , euery one be an helper to the truth , 3 Iohn 8. to finde it out , not to obscure or weaken it . By these meanes we shall haue cause to reioyce in our Christian fellowship , as Ionathan and Dauid , 1 Sam. 23. 14. Fourthly , obserue the graces that are in others , for a patterne to our selues , 1 Thes. 1. 7. for our owne prouocation and imitation : Yea , spie and encourage the graces of God in the weakest and meanest Christian , so framing our selues to that marke of a good man , who honours all that feare the Lord , Ps. 15. 4. Neither let the strongest scorne to ree●iue helpe from the weakest : Moses was content to be aduised by Iethro , and Dauid by Abigail : and note Pauls humility , Rom. 1. 12. he hoped to come and be comforted by their faith , as wel as to helpe theirs . Fiftly , in the vse of good company , beware of giuing any occasion of scandall , or offence to any , Matth. 18. 7 , 8. leaue no ill smell behinde thee : auoide the note of pride , conceit , forwardnesse in speaking , frowardnesse , or stiffenesse in thine owne sense , 1 Iohn 2. 10. He that loueth his brother , there is no occasion of stumbling or scandall in him . Motiues to prouoke vs wisely to carry our selues in good company . 1. Consider how in our company we are especially to watch , seeing in no part of our life we are sooner corrupted then in that , seeing in no part of our life wee doe so much discouer our selues , and seeing in no part thereof , we doe either more good or more harme seeing wee doe nothing without witnesse , & should doe nothing which wee would not haue exēplary . 2. As Sathan laies snares euery where , so also in our company one with another , not so much to bring the godly to such excesse of riot , as he effecteth in wicked societies , where is swearing , gaming , drinking , rayling , &c. but to make them vnfruitfull , and keepe them from the good they might do : and sofarre preuaileth , as sometimes impertinent speech , sometime debate & detracting speeches arise , and the most tolerable speech is worldlinesse , which stealeth away the heart and the time ; so as some who intended more good to themselues and others , carry away hearts smiting them , for not better employing that oportunity . 3. There is apparant losse , when we watch not to doe or receiue good , in company with good men . For godly men by reason of their callings , and distance of places , seldome meet ; and when they doe , they lose the gaine of that time in their speciall calling ; and if they get it not vp in the furtherance of the generall calling of a Christian , it is vtterly lost . And what but this makes the mindfulnesse one of another sweet in their absence , when there was reaped so good fruit one of another in their presence ? 4. By this wise and fruitfull carriage of company and meetings of good men , Christians shall stop the mouthes of such as are euer complaining of , and accusing Christian meetings to be scarce to any other purpose , but to detract , defame , slander , censure , to strengthen one another in faction , and the like . Or if such mouthes will not bee shut , yet the conscience of Christians may reioyce in the contrary innocency , and not bee deiected by such false testimony . 3. Rule . In our speeches , let vs be proctors and sollicitors for the Saints , speake wisely and willingly of the good we know in our brethren , and maintaine the cause , person , and name of good men to our power . The sincerity of loue betweene Dauid and Ionathan was manifest ; in that Ionathan defended Dauids innocency to Saul his father , not onely to the losse of his Kingdome , but the danger of his own life . Ebed-melech the blacke-moore spake a good word for Ieremy , and was saued from destruction , when his master Zedekiah was slaine . Nicodemus euen in the beginning of grace spake for Christ , when the whole Councell was against him . And how dangerous is it to deuise and inuent words against Cods children , as Dauids enemies ; to belie , or reproach them , to raise or receiue slanders against them ? If such as stand not for grace , shall fall , then much more they that stand against it . How needfull is this Apology for them , against the reproaches and scornes of this age ? How earnestly would children speake for their parents , brethren , or kindred ? Euen so should it bee here . It is nothing to speake for a man when others speak for him . 4. Rule . Concerning our actions towards good men , we should euery way bestirre our selues to procure their good and welfare : we must to our hearts and affections ioyne our hands and helpe to doe them good , yea , be ready to lay our hands vnder the feet of the Saints . Gal. 6. 10. Doe good to all , but especially to the houshold of faith . Now in speciall , 1. We must preuent from them all the euill we can , hinder them from sinnes , and from falling , hinder by al means reproach from their profession , and danger from their persons . 2. If thou findest a good man s●iptinto an infirmity , labour to couer it , make the best of it as may be , vaunt not thy selfe ouer him , but consider thy selfe , and by al good means cure it if it lye in thy power . 3. If thou finde a good man stand in need of inward comfort , and cast downe , helpe to raise him againe : Christ was sent to speake a word of comfort to the wearie , and euery Christian hath receiued of his annointing . When Dauid was in deepe distresse , his faithfull friend Ionathan comforted him in the Lord his God , 1 Sam. 23. 16. 4. If thou knowest a good man helpes , and without outward comforts , thou must now shew bowels of mercy and compassion , gladly receiuing the poore Saints , communicating willingly and freely to their necessity , 1 Pet. 3. 8. Loue one another as brethren , be pittifull . 1 Ioh. 3. 17. He that hath this worlds good , and seeth his brothers need , and shuts vp his compassion from him , how dwelleth the loue of God in him . To stirre vs vp hereunto , consider these motiues : 1. Say with thy selfe , What ? am not I a member of the same body with him ? Is not he of the same family and houshold of Saints ? This is the Apostles argument , especially do good to the houshold of faith . 2. What shall I gaine , if by word or deed I shall make sad the hearts of good and godly men ? Cannot Cain cast downe his lookes , but God lookes on it ? Cannot Ismael laugh at Isaac , but the Lord arraigns and condemnes him of high persecution ? Surely then cannot I carry the like indignities scotfree . 3. Doe I read Merioz accursed , because she came not out to helpe the people of God , though she had no hand against them ? Iudg. 5. 23. Surely I must nor only not haue a hand against good men , but I must set my hand to helpe them , else is not my heart so right as it should . Pilats wife wished her hsuband to haue nothing to doe against that iust man : but happy had Pilate beene ( who was not violent against Christ ) to haue beene earnest and resolute for his deliuerance ; the defect whereof was his ouerthrow . And so it shall bee heauy enough in the day of iudgment , that wicked mens hands haue not helped the godly , seeing the sentence shall not run because they had hurt them , but because they helped them not . CHAP. XXX . Rules how to walke wisely towards euill men : 1. in generall . THe generall rule is in Col. 4. 5. Walke wisely towards them that are without , that is , the Gentiles who were not conuerted , without the border of the Church : for euen in the Church some are of Gods domestickes , some without as strangers that want faith as yet . And godly men must walke so much the more warily , not onely because they haue Gods eye , and godly mens eyes on them , but euen eyes of men yet vnconuerted , who must not be cast backe , or confirmed in their errour , or hardened against the truth , but by all wise walking ( if it be possible ) won to the loue and liking of it . Now towards all vnbeleeuers , and vnconuerted men in generall , these parculars are worthy obseruation : 1. That euery Christian auoid all known euils & offences , by which euill men might be occasioned to abide out of the Church . The law is , Thou shalt put no stumbling blocke before the blind : for this is a fea●●full iudgement of God on men vnconuerted , they would willingly bee blinded , and hardened in their naturall estate . Now our rule is , being our selues pulled out of danger , to helpe others out also ; nay , our light must reproue their darkenesse , their couetousnesse by liberality , their pride by humility , their impatience by patience , &c. 2. All vnconuerted men hate the light , and are prone to blaspheme the Gospell , and to reproach the holy profession of it . Wise Christians therefore must cut off occasions from them , and take heed of defiling their owne neast : 1 Tim. 5 14. Giue no occasion to the aduersary to speake euill : and Dauid prayeth , that none might be ashamed because of him . Ezec. 36. 20. the Lord complaines , that the Israelites among the heathen polluted his name , and made them say , These are the people of the Lord , and are gone out of his land . A lewd childe ( saith Salomon ) dishonoureth the whole house . Nay on the contrary , the meanest Christian in his place , by his wise and Christian walking , must adorne the profession of Christ ; so the Apostle to Titus 2. 10. Seruants must be no pickers , but shew all good faithfulnesse , to adorne the Gospell of the Lord Iesus . An holy course of life will make the Gentiles say , as they in Esay 61. 9. They are the seed of the blessed of the Lord. 3. All vnconuerted men esteeme of doctrine by the life , and the profession by the practise of professors ; for they haue no taste of the doctrin in it selfe : and therefore in the cariage of our profession , wee must apply our selues if it be possible to win them . So the Apostle ( 1. Pet. 2. 12. ) wisheth the Iewes , to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles , that they might glorifie God in the day of their visitation . And women are commanded , so to watch their whole behauiour , as their husbands might be wonne by their godly conuersation . Priuate men must conuert others by their priuate conuersation . Motiues so to doe , are these : 1. Christians are on a mount , set on a scaffold , nothing they doe escapeth sight and censure , all is marked , they stand or fall not alone , but to many . 2. They haue a light with them , which drawes all eyes vpon them , and discouers all . 3. The eyes of the wicked are not on others , but on them , to disgrace them , and through them to smite Christ himselfe . 4. The will of God is , By weldoing to silence the ignorance of foolish men , 1 Pet. 2. 15. 5. What a glory is it , to slaughter enuy it selfe , to stop an open mouth , and cloath an aduersary with his owne shame ; that he that would accuse vs , must accuse the Sunne of darknesse when it shines . 6. Hereby we shall be conformable to Christ , whom when Satan came to sift , he found nothing in him : wicked men shall say as Saul said to Dauid . Thou art more righteous then I , &c. CHAP. XXXI . Rules how to walke wisely towards euill men , in speciall : and first for scorners . NOw wee come to speciall rules concerning speciall sorts of euill men , of whom some are exceeding euill in themselues , some are euill also to good men . Of the former ranke are scornefull persons : of the latter hurtfull . For scorners , obserue these rules . 1. If we know men to be so farre naught , as they scorne goodnesse , good men , and good things , we must auoid their company so much as wee may . For what comfort can a godly man take in such company , where all good and godly communication must either be banished or derided ? There is no hope of doing good , there is danger of taking harme . 2. If we be by occasion beset , or cast into the company of prophane , brutish and scornfull persons , then obserue these rules . First , grieue thou wast not better directed , Psal. 120. 5. Woe is me , that I remaine in Meshec , and dwell in the tents of Kedar . Secondly , be sure though thou seest no place or opportunity of good , that thou hast no fellowship with them in any of the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse . If they will be no cleaner by thy company , be not thou defiled by theirs . If they will not consent to thee in good , consent not thou to them in any sinne . Thirdly , please them not by yeelding to any sinne , but giue apparant tokens of dislike . Obiect . Why , may we not by yeelding a little to them , draw them to vs ? Answ. No , but the way to winne them , is a pure conuersation with feare , 1 Pet. 3. 12. much lesse may we flatter them in any euill . Micaiah would not flatter with the King , the foure hundred false Prophets did . Fourthly , acknowledge thy selfe a childe of wisedome , which is iustified of all her children : suffer not Gods glory to be trodden down by thy silence ; wisely breake off fooleries , by sauoury riddles or questions , as Sampson : and in a wise and peaceable manner , change the matter : holding it a setled ground of religion , not to relinquish piety , to keepe peace with wicked men : Heb. 12. 14. Follow peace , and holinesse . No corruption of man must driue vs from our station . Fifthly , so soone as wee may , depart from them : Prou , 14. 7. Depart from the foolish man , when thou perceiuest not in him the lippes of knowledge . And beware of falling into the like company againe . Ioseph wisely declined the company of his Mistresse , when she daily spake vnto him , Gen 39. 10. and Dauid would not returne with Saul , when hee perceiued his wilfulnesse against him , 1 Sam. 26. 25. CHAP. XXXII . Rules to carry our selues wisely towards euill men , euilly affected to vs. IF men bee not onely euill in themselues , but also to vs , then it is either in euill purposes , or in euill practices against vs. If they purpose euill , then our Sauiours rule is , Beware of men , Mat. 10. 17. for they will deliuer you vp to the Councels . By men , our Sauiour meanes those whom in the former words hee calleth woolues , that desire to make a prey and spoile of the sheepe of Christ , and in his caueat aduiseth , 1. Wisely to preuent the plots and traines of vngodly men , discreetly to preuent our owne trouble so neere as we can . How wisely did Iaacob preuent the fury of his brother Esau ? And as they watch to traduce vs , so must wee watch to cut off occasions of entrapping ; Luk. 6. 7. the Scribes and Pharisies watched whether Christ would heale on the Sabbath day or no , to find accusation against him ; our Sauiour for all this omitted not to do good , but in doing it by his question vnto them cut off so farre as he could , the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulnesse of it . So must wee : And yet prepare stoutly to beare whatsoeuer the Lord measureth out by them . 2. Our Sauiour would haue vs wisely decline their fury , not without cause prouoking them : It is no wisedome to prouoke an euill man : It is no good discretion to stirre vp a Lyon , to take a Beare by the tooth , or a dogge by the eares . For they desire nothing more , than matter to stirre vp their corruption by : So H●zekiah commanded his seruants not to answer Rabseca one word . 3. Ioyn with serpentine wisedome , innocencie of doues , Mat. 10. 16. Nothing more vexeth & vanquisheth an aduersary than innocency : no better brest-plate than righteousnesse . But if a man had the innocency of Christ himselfe , the aduersary will watch aduantages , and play vpon a mans simplicity : therefore ioyne serpentine wisdome , as Paul did , Act. 23. 6. he testified his innocencie , and that with all good conscience he serued God till that day ▪ but what tell you Ananias of doues innocency ? he commands to strike him on the mouth : the more innocent , the lesse endured ; he fared the worse for that : and therefore he ioynes in season serpentine wisedome ; for , perceiuing his greatest enemies to be Pharisies and Sadduces , he professeth himselfe a Pharisie , and the sonne of a Pharisie , and that he was brought in danger for the hope of the resurrection which the Sadduces denied ; and so casting a bone betweene them , and setting them by the eares , hee escaped betweene them . 4. Out of their malice we should draw our owne good , so warily to carry our selues towards them , as that wee may finde that of the heathen true , An enemy often hurteth lesse , and profiteth more than many friends . Wee must both in their absence , and presence especially , take heed we doe not disaduantage our selues . It was some disaduantage to Paul , when in the Councell ( although hee was prouoked , and vniustly smitten ) hee called the high Priest whited wall : he was glad to excuse it by his ignorance . We may not be to bold , or too forward to speake in a good matter . 5. If euill men haue done vs harm , and wrongfully molested and persecuted vs , our rule is , 1. In respect of them , to pitty , pardon , and pray for them . If we doe them good , wee shal either ouercome their euill with goodnesse , or heap coales on their heads . 2. In respect of our selues , possesse our soules with patience , and shew meeknesse and moderation , and say as Dauid in Shimei his rayling , It may be the Lord will doe me good for his cursing of mee this day . 3. In respect of our duty , still to shew an vndaunted constancy , and resolution for the truth and all good wayes : 1 Pet. 3. 14 , 15. If ye suffer for righteousnesse , blessed are ye ; but feare not , neither be troubled , but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts , and bee ready alwayes to giue an answer to euery man that asketh a reason of your hope . Thus farre of the rules of Christian wisdome : of which I may say with Moses , Deut. 4. 5. 6. These are the rules and ordinances : keepe them , and doe them : for this is your wisedome . CHAP. XXXIII . Containing motiues for circumspect walking . BVt because this accurate and circumspect walking is growne out of request , and men generally are too well contented to walke at aduenture , and ( as men that shoot at rouers , ) secure themselues in a loose and neglected course , and goe on carelesly , as if there were no danger in wandring from God , and declining from the good way , we will vse some Motiues to prouoke euery Christian that tenders either Gods glory or his owne saluation , to vndertake this Christian course . 1. In regard of God : 1. Whose commandement is , that all our wayes bee ordered aright , Prou. 4. 26. and that the Saints walke worthy of the Lord , and please him in all things , Col. 1. 10. 2. Whose word must be our rule , to which wee must continually frame our whole course and euery part thereof : for 1. the morall law is a perpetuall rule , binding at all times without any intermission : 2. the precepts of it are to make the Word our continuall Counsellour , to binde it to vs , not to let it depart , but to meditate in it night and day . And what is it lesse than blasphemy , to charge the Saints with folly , singularity , and a Saintish purity , in that wherin they were most acceptable to God ? as , Dauid set the Lord before him continually : and when he professeth his great loue to the law ▪ saith , that all the day long his meditation is in it ? Psal. 119. 79. Read we not , that the twelue tribes serued God instantly , night and day ? Act. 26. 7. and the Apostles were assured , they had a good concience in all things , Heb. 13. 18. Was this care ( so incessant ) commendable in them , and is the same godly care now growne a vice , an hatefull practice , or heresie ? 3. Who being a God of pure eyes , will strictly stand for iustice . And doe wee feare we can be too strict , who are to giue account of euery idle word , and roauing thought , much more of euery vnwarrantable action ? Are wee not to passe a strict and strait iudgement , wherein euery secret shall be made open , and in which it shall be rewarded according to our workes ? and shall the Deuill delude vs , or the wicked world make vs beleeue we need not be so strait laced , as to say with Dauid , I will look to my wayes ? 4. Who if he pōder al a mans paths , how ought he himselfe to ponder them ? for all the wayes of a man are before the Lord , and hee pondereth all his wayes , Pro. 5. 21. 2. In respect of our selues : no watch or circumspection can be sufficient to vs , whose natures are carried to euill as naturally as to our ordinary food . The whole frame of the heart of man is euill continually , as ready to receiue any impression of temptation , as the dry tinder a sparke of sire ; and not onely to receiue such sparkes , but to conceiue them , and hatch euill , and hammer it out on the anuils of our hard hearts , like cunning workemen . Whence it cannot be auoided , but that without our daily watch , sin must multiply and grow vpon vs , euen ouer our heads , to a numberlesse number . 3. In respect of the wicked amongst whom wee liue , who are ready to take all aduantages , and watch for ourfals , both to harden themselues , and reproach through vs Gods holy religion . For if they can scorne and contemne the seruants of God for well-doing , and religious actions , how would these men of Gath and Askelon , these vncircumcised Philistimes , triumph and glory in the fals of any of Gods Worthies ? Hence was the ground of our Sauiors exhortation to his Disciples , Behold , I send you as sheepe among wolues , and therefore be wise as serpents , Mat. 10. 16. Nay , we must not onely by our circumspect wayes stoppe their mouthes , but conuince themselues , and winne them to the same holy profession with vs : 1 Pet. 3. 1 , 2. 4. In respect of our brethren ; who some of them are not yet conuerted , some are already called ; both whom we offend and scandalize by our vnwatchfull walking , and so the name of God is blasphemed because of vs that professe it , as the Apostle speakes of hypocriticall Iewes , Rom. 2. 24. Hence are those many exhortations , Col. 4. 5. Walke wisely towards them that are without , least you giue them any iust occasion of exception or stumbling : & 1 Cor. 10. 32. Giue no offence , neither to the Iewes nor Grecians , nor to the Church of God. And how circumspect had hee need to be , that must walk inoffensiuely betweene the Iew and Gentile , seeing what was giuen to the one , seemed detracted from the other ? Yet so much is required to walke , euen betweene the godly and prophane , whose wayes are diametrally contrary . 5. The way to heauen is full of snares , crosses , and dangers , by reason of our enemies , and therefore requires all our diligence either to auoid them , or else wisely to step ouer them . Wee can be very wary in the dangerous wayes of this world , to take direction or company , and armour , and the day-light to further vs : And why not in this way to heauen ? Besides , it is a narrow way , and on high : all which makes it more perillous to decline from . How circumspect had he need be , that walks vpon a narrow high rocke , a thousand faddom from ground , especially where a little slip or error tumbles him downe , to dash him all to pieces ? 6. Is there any time afforded vs , wherein we may set loose our hearts to any vnlawfull liberty , or cast our selues vpon Sathans snares , as Peter did , in going into the high Priests hall , Matth. 26. 71. Or can wee doe so , and not be catcht by the deceitfulnes of sinne ? Stand we against such enemies as will not take aduantages , who doe nothing but seeke them , especially when feare is set aside , which is the soules watch-man ? And if men will take liberty , and be at their own hand , haue they not full leaue to fall often , lye long , rise hardly , and being vp againe walke weakly , and not recouer their cheerefulnesse many a day , if euer ? and must they feare nothing so much , as least they keepe their watches , and preserue themselues from fals ? Lastly , a man may pull downe more in one day , than hee can build in many : and experience shewes , that a man is more weakened by one dayes surfet and negligence , than in an hundred , wherein he preserues the care of his health : euen so it is in the soule , the health whereof is kept in strictnesse of diet , and obseruation of Gods rules . 7. Who knoweth not that Christianity is a trade which will not forward if it bee not close followed : an husbandry , which the Professor shal neuer thriue by , if hee be not of a diligent hand ; wherein something must be done daily , or else the heart shal soone lye like the sluggards field described by Salomon ? It needeth therefore be hedged and fenced with the feare of God , and kept with all diligence . Pro. 23. 17. 8. This alone is the way to attaine true comfort , which no man can finde , by allowing himselfe in any course which God alloweth not . This alone is to walk safely : Pro. 10. 9. Hee that walkes vprightly , walkes safely : and what other meanes hath the Wise-man appointed to preserue from falling , than to take hold of instruction , and not leaue her ? This alone is the way to get peace peculiar to the Israel of God , to walke by rule , Gal. 6. 16. neither can a course not attended , stand with this Apostolicall iniunction of Christian circumspection . CHAP. XXXIIII . Answering obiections against circumspect walking . ANd whereas our age aboundeth with men of prophane mindes and mouthes , who would turne all this our glory into shame , and censure this speech of the holy Ghost , which prescribeth a strict , precise , and accurate walking : ( why ? say they : what need men be so strict ? and , shall no man come to heauen , but such as are so strict and curious ? ) and the whole world , almost , thinkes it a most idle and needlesse course : wee will therefore answer some obiections that are made against it . Obiect . 1. A great many haue liued honestly and well , that were neuer so foolish and strict . I hope to serue God , and doe no man harme , and what need more ? Answ. 1. Wee must walke by rule , not by example , except it be of the best , not of the most . 2. The Pharisies led a ciuill life , were outwardly very iust to the tything of Mint and Anise , and very deuout in their worship : and yet if our righteousnesse exceed not theirs , we can neuer enter into the kingdome of heauen , Mat. 5. 20. 3. The righteousnesse of God goes beyond all ciuill and outward righteousnesse ; it is inward , in spirit and truth ; it cuts off not onely outward acts of murder , vncleannesse , theft &c. but inward motions of hatred , wantonnesse , couetousnesse : it strikes at roots and branches , and hates the least and secretest euill , which ciuill righteousnesse makes no bones of . Obiect . 2. But this circumspect and strict walking is taken vp but by a few , and those of the meanest : some men of great wisedome , place , and learning fauour it not , but scorne and oppose it . Answ. 1. Christianity was euer hated by the most of the world , because of the crosse : the Church is blacke , because the sunne lookes on her , but comely to God and his Angels ; and this makes few enter that way . 2. The Apostle directly meets with this obiection , 1 Cor. 1. 27. Not many mighty , not many noble , not many wise : but God hath chosen a few poore people , and they shall call vpon his Name : And why not many of those ? Because they cannot so easily deny themselues and this euill world , which they must doe that will be saued . 3. Let vs not wholly cast our eyes vpon the examples of the world now declining ; and , as at last , so at worst ; but vpon such as formerly haue been set as eye-markes in the Scripture , and we shal find some , both great , and noble , and learned , going before vs in strict and circumspect walking . The holy Patriarks ; Noah , Abraham , Isaac , Iacob ; godly and zealous Kings , Dauid , Salomon , Iosiah ; the holy Apostles , who endeauoured alwayes to haue a cleare conscience before God and all men , Acts 24. 16. yea , the most wise , noble , and learned that euer was , the Sonne of God , whose conuersation was such as none could accuse him of sin . These are the cloud of witnesses , which we must follow in running the race set before vs , Heb. 12. 1. Obiect . 3. But what an impossible commādement is this , and who can beare it ? Can wee be Saints in this world , thus to order our selues in euery thing ? Wee are sinners , and must be sinners , and cannot be thus strict as you require . Wee hope wee generally meane well , and God ( we hope ) will supply the rest . Answ. 1. The scope of this plea is , to giue ouerall , because they cannot attain all : which is but a false fire , by which the deuill discourageth many from the narrow way , and the narrow looking to their owne way . For true it is , that we call with the Scripture for a keeping of all Gods commandements , alwayes , and to liue with God , and walk with him : but with Euangelicall interpretation , which accepteth the will , desire , and endeuour to walke with God in euery thing ; which cannot but in some measure be found in a true beleeuer , and cannot but in Christ be accepted , where it is true and hearty . Thus the Scriptures interpret themselues : 1 Chr. 28. 7. If Salomon shall endeuour to keep my commandements , &c. Hos. 6. 3. Wee shall endeuour to know the Lord. What can God accept lesse , or a good heart tender lesse than hearty wishes , where strength is wanting to please God in all things ? 2 ▪ Let vs by the straitnesse of the Commaundement consider whence we are fallen , and see our impotency , and confesse our failings , but not therefore allow our selues in any euill , or venture on any sin which wee might by this circumspection auoid , or remit our endeuour in the respect of all Gods Commandements . 3. For such as thinke it sufficient to meane wel in generall ; consider this , that as no Master is pleased , if his Steward bring him in a generall bill of great sums spent , wherein hee may hide much deceit ; but sets downe no dayes accounts , or weekes bils of parcels : no more in the matter of heauenly treasure , is it enough to hide himselfe in generall good meanings , but in euery particular to auoid deceit and suspition of it . And as it is with a traueller in an vnknowne way , who will not goe at random , nor count it a sufficient direction to bee set Eastward or Westward , but he will aske euery man of euery Towne , and take good heed of euery marke , to passe him from one place to another : so in this our passage to heauen , we must keepe our speciall directions , and walke with God in euery thing , if we wil happily passe vnto heauen . Obiect . 4. But what need such daily and continuall troubling of our selues ? What was the Sabbath made for , but for Gods seruice ? and wee keepe our Church as well as any : but for the weeke-dayes , wee haue callings to follow , and cannot intend such things : and it were better if some of these nice fellowes were more diligent in their calling , as we be . Answ. 1. Seeing the rule by which we must walk , is to serue God in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes , we haue no liberty to part the weeke betweene God and vs. Neither must wee put on holinesse as an holy-day garment , to put it off at night : neither may wee be lesse holy on other daies than on the Sabbath : howsoeuer wee must exercise our holinesse in the publike worship of God on that day , and in the priuate worship , and in the personall callings on the other dayes . 2. Hee is a good Christian , that keeps a perpetuall Sabbath , and is not onely one on the Sabbath day . The triall of soundnesse is at home , in the middest of a mans house ; and not at Church , where the Pharisie is often aboue the Publican . 3. Thou hast a calling on the weeke-day , in which thou must sweat and abide who euer thou art ; but thou must not so play the good husband , as to become a worldling . Vse the world as not vsing it , as not affecting it : and acknowledge thy special and personall calling to be subordinate to the generall : for in the whole exercise of thy special calling , thou must shew forth thy knowledge , and religious keeping of a good conscience : once diuorce these two , and neuer look for successe on thy labours . Obiect . 5. But this is fitter for Ministers and cloistered persons , who haue giuen themselues to continuall deuotion , than for ordinary and common men , who are not acquainted with such nouelties . Answ. 1. If all Christians be alike subiect to sinne , al haue need to be continually alike fenced against it . If all haue the same enemies , all had need stand vpon their ground . If one mans heart be as wicked as anothers , euery man had need set a watch round about himselfe . And if any haue more need than other , it is vnlearned and simple persons , who want such means of helping themselues , as learned Preachers haue . 2. As for the nouelty of this circumspect course , wee must needs say it is so to such as are of Festus his suit , who thinkes Paul learned euen to madnesse , to call him to such strictnesse : or Gallio his Disciples , Act. 18. who being of no religion , cannot bee at leisure to giue it hearing . But we haue seene it to be no nouelty to the Spirit of God , euery where charging it vpon vs : nor to the godly guided by his Spirit , who can neither be idle nor vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. Obiect . 6. I like such as can be so strict , and I could wish so to be ; but then I must part from the pleasure and ioy of my life : for this continuall watch and circumspection is full of melancholy , and vncomfortable : it hinders neighbours from sports and merriments , breakes of good company , and makes the husband and wise often look heauily one vpon another : and besides , I should lose some profits and customers , and wrong my estate by neglecting it . Ans. 1. This is a cleane contrary iudgement to Gods Spirit : Pro. 3. 17. Her wayes are the wayes of pleasures . Gods wisedome , ordering the wayes of man , brings true ioy and pleasure . For , is there no ioy in God , in his word , which was wont to be as sweet , as the hony-combe , nor in the Spirit of God , which is called the Comforter ? Is it such a thing of heauinesse to liue with God ? Alas ! what is such an heart made of ! 2. What delights doe we call men from , but such as are carnall , foolish , perishing , and vnlawfull ; stollen waters so sweet and sauoury to corrupt flesh , the forbidden fruit which a Christian should neither touch nor taste , and happy he were if he neuer saw it ? 3. There is no sorrow in godly life ; but all the sorrow of Gods seruants , is , that they cannot bee more godly . Lay this for a ground , that God is thy chiefe delight , and no man may be so moderately ioyfull as thou . 4. For pleasant companionship , thou losest no good company , but exchangest for better : thou hast now fellowship with God , vnion with Iesus Christ , the inseparable presence of Gods blessed Spirit , the attendance of the Angels , the Communion of the Saints , the benefit of their prayers , conference , comfort , and example . This is a pleasant thing for brethren in the faith to liue together in vnity . And what true ioy is there in the company of gamesters , drinkers , swearers , riotous or idle persons , who are neuer merry vnlesse they bee mad , and neuer glad but when they haue driuen away the remembrance of God ? 5. As for the losse of any part of thy estate , trust God on his word : Pro. 3. 16. In her right hand is length of dayes , and in her left hand , riches and glory . Neuer did true piety weaken any mans estate : but godlinesse hath beene the true and constant gaine : this makes a small portion sweet and pretious , and entailes a blessing vpon it , when it passeth into the hands of our posterity after vs. CHAP. XXXV . Markes of a man walking circumspectly . ANd seeing most men beguile themselues with the goodnes of their present course , and esteem a ciuill life & external honesty , not onely vnblameable enough , but iustifiable and sufficiently commendable ; Be it known to them that if they examine not the goodnesse of their course by this doctrine , they are farre from Gods approbation , whatsoeuer they may conceiue of themselues . In which examination I will help them with a few notes and signes of a circumspect Person , by whose wayes as by a right line they may both see the crookednesse , and at length begin to straiten the obliquity of their owne . 1. A circumspect man watcheth all occasions for his owne good and aduantage , and if they be offered , slips them not : So a circūspect Christian looks round about him , and thinkes it not sufficient to take occasions of grace and well-doing , being offred , but will seeke them . How might euery moment of our liues make vs more stored with grace then other , if we would seeke occasions of good to our selues ? What a rich stocke of grace might we haue attained ? How rich in good workes ? How should we haue furthered our reckoning ? 2. A circumspect man lookes round about him , and so ordereth his many businesses , as one hinder not the other , but all may goe forward , and so saueth one commodity as another be not lost or lie in hazard : So a circumspect Christian casteth his occasions ; as , seeing euery Christian duty is enioyned him , he hath respect to all Gods Commandements . Duties of piety shall not iustle out ciuill duties , nor ciuill duties eate out duties of piety ; but as one hand helpes another , so one table shall further the other , one calling forward another : yea , he lookes to the thriuing of all his graces . Hee will walke very humbly before God , but so as hee maintaine his ioy in God. His moderation shal not damp his zeale , his zeale shall not out-runne his knowledge . His prouidence shall not lessen his faith , nor his faith destroy his prouidence . His loue with mens persons brings him not into loue with their sinnes , and his hatred of their sinnes , impeacheth not his loue of their persons . His righteousnesse to men hindreth not his mercy , neither doth cruell mercy withstand or thrust down needfull iustice . Thus he is busie in maintaining all his graces , all of them being of great vse , and all of them flowing from the same Spirit . 3. A circumspect man will be sure not to disaduantage himselfe by his words , but will speake to his owne profit : So a circumspect Christians words make for his owne best aduantage . Hee will speake for Gods glory , for good men , and good causes . He will be sure to profit himselfe and others with gracious & religious speeches , and be silent where fruitfull speech will not bee heard . Exercise to good speeches brings a dexterity and readinesse of well-speaking , to which euery Christian is exhorted , Col. 4. 6. Let your speeches be gracious alwayes ▪ and powdred with salt , that yee may know how to answer euery man. 4. As a wary and circumspect man proues a good husband for the world , so circumspect Christians are the best husbands for their soules : such a one hath wisdome and will to increase his estate of grace by euery thing , and thinkes himselfe then truly rich , when hee thriues in the best commodities . He conceiues himselfe rich , not when hee hath things about him to leaue to his heirs , but when hee hath his wealth personally in himselfe , and for himselfe , such wealth as he carries to heauen with him . A circumspect Christian will not winne the whole world with the losse of his owne soule , which is nothing but to make his heires happy in his owne eternall misery . A circumspect Christian is not so carefull to heape vp gold , as good workes in abundance , and by workes of mercy and loue , hee makes himself bags that wax not old , a treasure in heauen that can neuer faile , where the thiefe commeth not , nor the moth corrupteth , Luk. 12. 33. A circumspect Christian is not so carefull for the soyling , tilling , and sowing of his ground , the mounding of his pasture , the weeding of his field , the pruning of his trees , the feeding of his cattell ; as in fencing the heart against temptation , in sowing the seed of Gods word , in weeding of sinne by the roots out of his soule ; in feeding and fostering of grace . Here is a good husband for himselfe : hee hath that within himselfe that is better then all without him , and requires more tendance then they all . How improuident then are we in our generall callings , whiles wee take not opportunities of good in publike or priuate , but slip many lessons , Sermons , and comforts on the Sabbath , and on weeke-dayes ? and whiles wee will not offer a sacrifice of almes , when God sets vp an Altar before vs ? How doe our speciall callings eat out our care of the generall , and are all in ciuilities , whiles for the thrift of grace , wee are altogether idle and vnprofitable ? How many vaine and vile speeches , vnfruitfull , vnsauoury , and hurtfull , doe our corrupt hearts send out , according to their owne fulnesse , by swearing , slandering , lying , cursing , and the like ? How bad husbands are men for their soules , whiles they haue not a horse , a pig , a sheepe , yea , scarce a dog about their house , but is more tended , and better prouided for than their soules ? whiles they will scarce let any dunghill lye about their house , so nasty as their soules ? nor any patch of ground so neglected as their owne hearts , that they grow like nettles and brambles , to bee cut vp and cast into the fire ? FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A13534-e130 Pro. 11. 10. and 29. 2. Eccl. 9. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Esse● 8. 6 Sine pi●s ce●tu●lex murus rebus seruandis par●● est Pro. 10. 25. Iustus fundamentum mundi . 2 Sam. 8. 17 2 Chro. 27. 32. 1 King. 4. 3 2 Kin. 18. 1● Pro. 11. 11. Tota vita Christiani ●anctum desiderium est . Aug. in Ioh. tract 4. Esa. 9. Psa. 119. 98 99 , 100. Iosh. 1. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Pro. 10. 32. Notes for div A13534-e890 Strict and accurate walking , not wartanted only , but necessarily enforced in the Scriptures ▪ Notes for div A13534-e1260 Christian circumspection what it is not . What it is And in what . To circumspect walking foure things required . Notes for div A13534-e1710 True wisedom , what it is . They are wisest men that walke most strictly . Notes for div A13534-e1860 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Psal. 37. 5. Prou. 1. 32. 1 Cor. 7. 31 Phil. 4. 12. 1 Tim. 6. 6. 1 Pet. 2. 3. Such as charge strict walking of sillinesse and folly , do● it with greater folly . Luk. 1● . 34 Notes for div A13534-e2330 Meanes of spirituall wisedome . 1. Acquaintance with the Scriptures . Ps. 119. 115 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . 2. Meditation . 3. Embracing of admonition . 2 Sam. 12. 4. Company of the wise . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Theorg . Notes for div A13534-e3480 Rules of wisedome concerning things of God. 1. Loue God as the chiefest good . Rom. 11. 36. 2. Purchase Christ aboue all gaine . Phil. 1. 21. 〈…〉 3. Chuse best things first . Luk. 12. 20 Psal. 4. 4 ▪ Feare Go● and keepe his Commandements . Notes for div A13534-e3830 Rules for the mind . 1. To enlighten it . Psa 131. 1. 1 Cor. 2. 2. 2. To dec● it . Rules for the thoughts . 1. Giue God the first thoughts 2. Examin them whence they come and whither they goe . 3. Pul them from the world . If they concerne thy selfe or others , see they be humble . Phil. 3. 12. 5. If they concerne sin . be sure it bee to hate it Rules for the will. Concurrence of our will with Gods will. 1. reuealing . 2. determining . 3. prescribing . 4 disposing . 1 Sam. 3. 18. Esa. 39. 8. Ch. 1. v. 21 Notes for div A13534-e4480 Rules for the conscience . 1. Beware of a blind conscience Ioh. 16. 2. 2. Doe nothing with a doubting conscience . Conscientia nos animae . Tertul. 3. Get a good conscience ab●ue all things . 4. Aime at a pure conscience . Ioh. 18. 28. 5. Keepe diligently the goodnesse and purity of conscien●e by 2. things . Notes for div A13534-e4830 Rules concerning the affections . 1. Giue God the chiefe affections . 2. Affect all other things in God , and for God. 3. Fix them more vpon heauenly things , than earthly . Mat. 6. 24 ver . 33. 4. Feare euill of sin , more than of suffering . 5. Commiserate the afflicted estate of our brethren . Amos 6. 6. Notes for div A13534-e5220 Rules fo● the speci●l calling . 1. Liue in a lawfull calling . 1 Tim. 4 5. 1. Shew al● good fait●nesse in 〈◊〉 1 To God. Hab. 116. Deut. 8. 18. 2. To ●ur selues . Prou 6. 11. 3. To others . 3. Be not busie in other mens callings . Tit. 2. 5. 4 In earthly busines carry an heauenly●minde ▪ Phil. 3. 30. 5. Intend most the most necessary duties of them . Notes for div A13534-e5650 One general rule for all estates , is to think the present estate best for thee . Rule for affliction . 1. God may be as well inioyed in aduersity as prosperity . 2 Lay vp strength and comfort aforehand . Psal. 23 ▪ 4. 1 Cor. 10. 13. Rom. 8. 28. 3. In euils of punishment to set vpon euill of sinne . Mic. 7. 9. 4. Make them no heauier than God hath made them . ●cuius fit patientia . Quicquid corgere est nefas . Horat. 5 Make not too much haste from vnder them . Isa. 18. 16. Esa. 27. 9. 6. Obserue both the trials and the fruits . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ 1 Sam. 17. 37. Notes for div A13534-e6180 Rules for prosperity . 1. Consider the danger of it . 2. Be suspicious of thy selfe . Has aeterna sa●●●s consequitur d●pes . Has aeterna sit●s . — Sen. 3. In thy calme prouide f●r a storme . Luk. 14. 28. 4 Thinke not thy selfe prosperous , if the Church of God be not . 2 Sam. 7. 2. Heb. 11. 25. 5. In thy prosperity cast eye on others afflictions . Eccles. 7. 2. Notes for div A13534-e6660 Rules for speeches . 1. Let word● issue from a good foūtaine . Mat. 5. ●8 . Let the matter be choise . 1. If it concern God , what . 2. If our neighbour ▪ 1 Cor. 13. 7 ▪ 3. If our selues . 1 Cor. 15. 9 ▪ 3. The manner . 1. Sauory . 2. Sincere . 3. Most earnest in things heauenly . 4. The end of our speech , edification . 5. The measure . 1. Not too little . Psal. 115. 5. 2. Not too much . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . 6. The season . Amos 5. 13 Notes for div A13534-e7320 Motiues to gouern the tongue Iam. 1. 6. 8. Notes for div A13534-e7480 Rules for our actions in general . 1. Examine what thou art doing . This triall stands ' in 4. things . 1. Whether good in the matter Deu. 12. 32 Esa 1. 12. 2. If good in the manner . Act. 19. 15 , 16. 3. If good in circumstances . 4. If good in the ends 2. Finding the action good , spoil it not ●y 〈◊〉 handling . The right manner of doing a good action in three things . Esa. 38 3. Notes for div A13534-e7900 Rules for workes of mercie . 1. Mercy must proceed from faith and l●ue . Ioh. 15. 1. 2. The subiect of mercy . 1. In generall , all . Eccl 11. 1. For foure reasons . 2. In speciall the faithfull . Mat. 25. 45. 3. The matter o● mercie . 1. To the soule . 2. To the body . 4. The measure of it , to our a●ility . Gal. 6. 7 , Manus pau●●ris , Christi gazophy ▪ lacium . 5. The manner of shewing mercy . 1. Seasonably . 2. Cheerefully . 2 Cor. 9. 7. 3. Wisely . 4. Constantly . Gal. 6. 9. 5. Humbly . Notes for div A13534-e8550 Rules for workes of iustice . 1. Concerning the ground . 2. Concerning moderation of iustice . Notes for div A13534-e8700 1. Iust●ce commutatiue . 2. Iustice distributiue . Luk. 10. 37 2. Iustice promissiue Iuramentum non sit vinculum iniquitatis . 1 Sam. 25. Con. Constā . fiues non seruanda cum haeretic . 4. Iustice retributiu● Notes for div A13534-e9250 Rules for necessary actions . 1 ▪ Ground . Thou wast sent into this world for necessary businesse . Luk. 10. 42. 2. For the order ; The most necessary things must bee done first . Deficit in necessarijs , qui redundat in superfluis . August . 3. For the subiect : The most necessary actions of euill men are euill . Notes for div A13534-e9490 4. For the meanes . The best action may not bee trust on by euilmeans Rom. 3 ▪ 8. 1 Cor. 9. 16 ▪ Act. 20. 29. 5. For the order of the two tables . Duties of the first table must be done first . Three caueats . Mat. 12. 7. Ma● . 12. 11. Exo. 12. 16 Notes for div A13534-e9950 1. Scope . God must be the end of all our actions . 2. Binding . Necessary duties must be ●one , what euer follow . Dan. 6. 10. Notes for div A13534-e10200 Generall rules concerning all indifferents . 1. The most indifferent 〈◊〉 be by Go●s 1. warrant ▪ ● . l●aue . Former by the word . Latter by prayer . Reas. 2. The most in 〈◊〉 must be done for God. 3. The most indifferent must be vsed in loue 1. Not offending others . Dan. 1. 8. 2. But building them vp . 4 ▪ The most indifferent must be vsed in sobriety . Diuitiae meae sunt , non ego diuitiarum . Senec. 5. For no indifferents forgoe better things thē they : as , 1. Time. 2. Good name . 3. Estate . 4. Vertues . Notes for div A13534-e10830 Rules for eating and drinkings . 1. Necessity . 2. Propriety . 3. Measure 4. Affection . 5. Time. 6. Sweetnesse . 7. Communication . 8. Meditation of 4. things . Notes for div A13534-e11310 Rules for sports . ● 1. Matter of them : not , 1. holy things . 2. Nor vnholy . Nemo nisi a●t ebrius a●t insanu● tripudiat . 2. The manner . 3. The right ends of sports . 1. Negatiue . 2. Affirmatiue . Notes for div A13534-e12040 Rules for apparell . 1. For the matter . Primavestis data est propter vsum , non propter luxum ▪ 2. The fashion . England the worlds ape . 3 For measure . Excesse in apparell a great sin . Reason . 4. The kinds of apparell . 1. Spirituall . 2. Ciuill : thre●fold . 1. Health ▪ 2. Honesty : in Decency . Distinction . Notes for div A13534-e12510 3. Ornament . Deut. 32. Against looks and long haire in men . Against painting of faces and complexions . 2 King. 9. 30. Notes for div A13534-e13010 Generall rules to carry our selues towards all men . 1. Respect not all alike . 2. Must liue by all , but sort with the best . In al companies do good or take good . Reas. 1. By conuersation actually confute all wickednes . Loue euery mans person , no mans sin , Ioyne with good conscience , good manners . Notes for div A13534-e13670 1. Rule brotherly affection . Heb. 13. 1. Psal. 16. 2. Many things in Gods child●ē might draw our eyes vnto them . 2. Rule . Faithfull communion . Meanes of fruitfull ronuerse . Motiues thus to carry our selues in good company . 3. Apology 4. Rule . Helpfulnesse . Meanes of it . Mot●ues to the former duty . Notes for div A13534-e14810 Rules of wise walking towards euil men . 1. Auoid al iust causes of scandal . 2. Stop mouths of euill men . 3. Seeke to win them . Motiues . 1 Sam. 26. 25. Notes for div A13534-e15190 Rules how to carry our selues towards scorners . 1. Auoid them . 2. If cast into their company , obserue 5. rules . Notes for div A13534-e15460 Rules how to carry our selues to our enemies . 1. Wisely preuent their plots 2. Decline their fury . 3. Ioin with serpentine wisedome , innocency of Doues . 4. Out of their euill draw som● good . Hauing receiued wrong from them doe three things . Notes for div A13534-e15890 Motiues to the former rules . Psal. 39. 1. Notes for div A13534-e16500 Cant. 1. 5. Zeph. 3. 12. Luk. 1. 75. Psal. 101. 2. 1 Cor. 7. 3● Psal. 19. Ioh. 16. Psal. 123. 1 Notes for div A13534-e17420 Markes of a circumspect walker . Gal. 4. 6.