The tryall of true wisdom, with how to become wise indeed, or, A choice and cheap gift for a friend both to please and pleasure him, be he inferior or superior, sinful or faithful, ignorant or intelligent / By R. Younge ... ; add this as an appendix, or third part, to The hearts index, and, A short and sure way, to grace and salvation. Younge, Richard. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A67781 of text R39197 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing Y194). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 124 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 18 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A67781 Wing Y194 ESTC R39197 18266274 ocm 18266274 107266 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. A67781) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107266) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1138:29) The tryall of true wisdom, with how to become wise indeed, or, A choice and cheap gift for a friend both to please and pleasure him, be he inferior or superior, sinful or faithful, ignorant or intelligent / By R. Younge ... ; add this as an appendix, or third part, to The hearts index, and, A short and sure way, to grace and salvation. Younge, Richard. Younge, Richard. Hearts-index, or, self-knowledg. Younge, Richard. Short and sure way to grace and salvation. 35 p. J. Crump and H. Cripps, [London : 1658] Caption title. Errata: p. 35. Imprint suggested by Wing and NUC pre-1956 imprints. Imperfect: faded, with print show-through. Reproduction of original in the Union Theological Seminary Library eng Grace (Theology) Salvation -- Biblical teaching. Calvinism -- England. A67781 R39197 (Wing Y194). civilwar no The tryall of true wisdom; with how to become wise indeed. Or, A choice and cheap gift for a friend; both to please and pleasure him: be he Younge, Richard 1658 21132 25 0 0 0 0 0 12 C The rate of 12 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. 2005-08 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-09 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2005-10 Jonathan Blaney Sampled and proofread 2005-10 Jonathan Blaney Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-01 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion THE TRYALL OF TRUE WISDOM ; WITH How to become Wise indeed . OR , A Choice and Cheap Gift for a Friend ; both to please and pleasure him : Be he inferior or superior , sinful or faithful , ignorant or intelligent . By R. Younge of Roxwel in Essex , Floreligus . Add this as an Apendix , or Third Part , to The Hearts Index . And , A short and sure way , to Grace and Salvation . Section 41. LUcian tells of an Egyptian King , who had Apes taught ( when they were young ) to dance , and keep their postures with much art : these he would put into rich Coats , and have them in some great presence to exercise their skill ; which was to the admiration of such as knew them not , what little sort of active , nimble men the King had got : And such as knew them , thought it no less strange ; that they should be trained up to so man-like , and handsome a deportment . But a subtile Fellow that was once admitted to see them , brought and threw amongst them , a handful of Nuts : which they no sooner spied ; but they presently left off their dance , fell a scrambling , tore one anothers rich Coats ; and to the dirision of the beholders ( who before admired them ) they discovered themselves to be meer Apes . These ensuing Notions ( which I have purposely taken , as a handful out of the whole sack , to squander away amongst my acquaintance ) are such Nuts , as will discover not a few ( who are men in appearance , and their own opinion ) to be as wise , and well affected as Aesops Cock ; that preferred a barley Corn , before a Pearl : or Plinies Moal , that would dig under ground with great dexterity : but was blind , it brought into the Sun . Or Diaphontus , that refused his mothers blessing , to hear a song : Or the Israelites , who preferred Garlick and Onions , before Quails and manna . Men no more differ from Beasts , Plants , Stones ; in speech , reason , shape , than some differ from others , in heart , in brain , in life . Whence the very heathen Poets usually & most fitly compare some men to stones , for their hardness , and insensibleness ; others to plants , that only fill their veins ; a third sort to beasts , that please their senses too ; a fourth to evil Angels , that only sin , and cause others to sin ; a fift to good Angels , that are still in motion , alwayes serving God and doing good , yet ever rest . Again , Experience teaches , that mens judgements and censures are as various , as their pallats : For what one admires , another slights ; as is evident by our Saviours Auditors ; of which some admired , others censured , a third sort wept , a fourth scoft , a fift trembled , a fixt blasphemed when they heard him . And how should it be otherwise , when the greater part , are as deeply in love with vice and error ; as the rest are with vertue , and truth . When mens conditions , and constitutions vary as much ; as their faces . As the Holy Ghost intimates , in comparing several men , to almost every several creature in the Universe . Nor is the Epicure more like a swine , the Lustful person a Goat , the Fraudulent man a Fox , the Backbiter a barking Dog , the Slanderer an Asp , the Oppressor a VVolf , the Persecutor a Tyger , the Church-robber a wild Bore , the Seducer a Serpent , yea a Devil , the Traytor a Viper , &c. 2 Tim. 4 17. Luk. 13. 32. Phil. 3. 2. Psal. 22. 12 , 13 , 16 , 20 , 21. & 74. 13 , 14 , 19. & 80. 13. Matth. 23. 33. Dan. 7. 4 , 5 , 6 , &c. Zeph. 3. 3 , 4 , &c. Cant. 2. 15 , 17 , &c. then every of them is unlike another . Amidst such a world of variety , I have chosen to set forth , how one man differs from , and excels another in brain , and to prove , that to be wise indeed , is the portion but of a few , even amongst us . And this discovery alone ( as I deem ) will be richly worth my pains , and each mans serious Observation . Sect. 42. NOw all sorts of men , may be comprised , under one of these three Heads : The Sensual . Rational . Spiritual . For if you observe it , some men like the Moon at Full , have all their light towards earth , none towards Heaven : Others like the Moon at VVaine , or Change , have all their light to Heaven wards , none to the earth : a third sort like to the Moon in eclipse , as having no light in it self , neither towards earth , nor towards Heaven . Touching these three degrees of comparison , you shall find , that the one exceeds the other ( in wisdom ) as the stars exceed one another in glory . Of which particularly . First , There is no less difference , between the Rational and sensual , the wise and simple , the learned and unlearned , than there is between men and beasts ; as Menander speaks . Or between the living and the dead , as another hath it . And yet the Rational , do not so far excel the sensual , as the spiritual excel the rational . Sensual men are so be-nighted , and puzled with blindnes , that they know no other way than the flesh leads them . It is the weight that sets all their wheels a going ; the horses that draw their chariot , the very life of their corruption , the corruption of their life , without which they do nothing . The minds of brutish men , that have been ill bred , are so drowned in sin , and sensuallity ; and their spirits so frozen , and pitifully benumed with worldliness , and wicked customs , that they cannot judg aright , either of spiritual matters , or rectified reason . Yea , in matters experimental , they are of as deep a judgement as was Callico , who stuft his pillow ( a brass pot ) with straw , to make it soft . Or that Germain Clow● , who under-took to be very ready in the ten Commandments : but being demanded by the Minister which was the first ? made answer , Thou shall not eate . Or that simple fellow , who thought Pontius Pilate must needs be a Saint , because his name was put into the Creed . They are like the Ostrich , Job 9. 17. whom God hath deprived of wisdom , and to whom he hath given no part of understanding . Which men also , are so far from receiving instruction , that they will scorn and scoff at their admonisher . As they have no reason , so they will hear none . Nor will they believe any thing , but what they see , or feell : and he that learns of none but himself , hath a fool to his t●acher . Yea , such as refuse admonition , are by wise Solomon branded , for the most incorigible Fools alive ; so that their knowledge is ignorance , their wisdom folly , their sight blindness . They neither consider what reason speaketh , or Religion commandeth ; but what the will and appetite affecteth . For will is the axeltree , lusts and passions the wheels whereupon all their actions are carried and do run . Appetite being their Lord , Reason their servant , and Religion their slave . Whereas Religion should govern their judgement , judgment and reason their wills and affections ; as Adam should have done Eve . They that are after the flesh , do minde the things of the flesh : The carnal minde is enmity against God , for it is not subject to the law of God , neither indeed can be , Rom. 8. 5. to 9. And which leaves them without all hope of being wiser , they had rather keep conscience blind , that it may flatter them , than inform it , that it may give a just verdict against them , counting it less trouble , to believe a favorable falshood , than to examine whether it be true . So that it is impossible for fleshly minded men , to believe what sots they are , touching the good of their souls . Wherefore when we see the folly , and misery of those that serve sin and Satan , and how peevishly averse they are to their own eternal salvation , let us pity them , as being so much more worthy our commiseration , as they are more uncapable of their own misery . And so much of the First sort , namely , Sensuallists . Sect. 43. SEcondly , There is another degree of Knowledge , that is accrued or obtained , by education and learning , observation and experience , called natural or speculative knowledge , or reason improved . For humane learning , is as oyl to the lamp of our reason , and makes it burn cleerer : but faith and illumination of the spirit , more than doubles the sight of our minds ; as a prospective glass does the corporal sight , Matth. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 2. 7. to 17. Joh. 12. 46. For as the soul is the lamp of the body , and reason of the soul , and religion of reason , and faith of religion : so Christ is the light , and life of Faith , Joh. 1. 9. & 8. 12. Act. 26. 18. Eph. 5. 14. Christ is the sun of the soul ; reason and faith the two eyes : reason discerns natural objects , faith spiritual and supernatural . We may see far with our bodily eye sence , farther with the minds eye reason ; but farther with the souls eye faith than with both . And the Beleever hath the addition of Gods spirit , and faith above all other men . I am the light of the world , saith our Saviour , he that followeth me ( meaning by a lively faith ) shall not walk in darkness , but shall have the light of life , Joh. 8. 12. and more see two eyes than one : yea , the day with one eye , does far more things descry , than night can do with more than Argos eyes . So that as meer sense is uncapable of the rules of reason ; so reason is no less uncapable , of the things that are divine and supernatural , Jer. 10. 14. 1 Cor. 2. 14 , 15 , 16. Eph. 5. 8. And as to speak is only proper to men : so to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven , is only propper to believers , Psal. 25. 14. Prov. 3. 32. Amos. 3. 7. Now of natural and speculative knowledge , the wicked have as large a share as the godly : but of spiritual , experimental , and saving knowledge which is supernatural , and descendeth from above , Jam. 3. 17. and keepeth a man from every evil way , Prov. 2. 12. the wicked have no part with the godly . Whence all men in their natural condition are said to be blind and in darkness , Matth. 4. 16. & 15. 14. Eph. 4. 18 , 19. & 5. 8. Whereas believers , are called children of light , and of the day , 1 Thes. 5. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Nor is this kind of knowledge , any way attainable , but by Grace from above . No learning , experience , or pains in studdy and Books , will bring them to it , Ephe. 1. 17 , 18. & 3. 19. except they become new creatures , have hearts , eyes , and eares sanctified from above ; and that the holy Ghost becomes their teacher , Deut. 29. 2 , 3 , 4. Psal. 111. 10. Joh. ●● . 15. Rom. 8. 14 , 15. Nor is it saving knowledge that they seek after : For though many of them , be great seekers after knowledge , great pains-takers to become wise : yet it is not divine and supernatural knowledge , that they labor for , or desire . Indeed wisdom in the largest sense , hath ever carried that shew of excellency with it , that not only the good have highly affected it , ( as Moses who studied for wisdom ; and Solomon who prayed for wisdom ; and the Queen of Sheba who travelled for wisdom ; and David who to get wisdom , made the word his counsellor , hated every false way , and was a man after Gods own heart ) but the very wicked have labored for it , who are ashamed of other vertues ; as , O the pleasure that rational men take in it ! Prov. 2. 3 , 10 , 11. & 10. 14. Phil. 3. 8. Knowledge is so fair a virgin , that every cleer eye is in love with her ; it is a pearl despised of none but swine , Prov. 2. 3. 10. 11. ( whereas brutish and blockish men , as little regard it ) they who care not for one dram of goodness , would yet have a full scale of knowledge . Amongst all the trees of the garden , none so pleaseth them as the tree of knowledge . And as wisdom is excellent above all , so it is affected of all , as oyl was both of the wise and foolish virgins . It hath been a mark that every man hath shot at , ever since Eve sought to be as wise as her Maker : but as a hundreth shoot , for one that hitts the white : so an hundred aim at wisdom , for one that lights upon it , Eccles. 7. 28. because they are mistaken in the thing . For as Iacob in the dark mistook Leah for Rachael , so many a blind soul , takes that to be wisdom , which is not like Eve , who thought it wisdom to eate the forbidden fruit , and Absalom , who thought it wisdom to lye with his Fathers Concubines in the sight of all the people ; and the false Steward , who thought it wisdom to deceive his Master . And so of Josephs brethren , of Pharoah and his deep counsellors , of Achitophel , of Herod , of the Pharisees in their project to destroy Jesus ; and many the like . All these thought they did wisely , but they were mistaken , and their projects proved foolish , and turned to their own ruine . Sect. 44. BUt take some Instances , to prove that all sorts of Naturians are Fools , in comparrison of the Godly . I 'le begin with those that rep●●e themselves , and are reputed by others , the wisest amongst men : And they are your profound Humanists , and cunning Polititians , wherein you shall see , whether the most and greatest number are not grosly mistaken , in their opinions and verdicts touching Wisdom . First for profound Hamanists , a man would think that they were incomparably wise ; for none so thirst after knowledge and wisdom as they ; & to get it they are no niggards of their labor : nor do they leave any thing unstudied but themselves . They know all parts and places of the created world , can discourse of every thing visible and invisible , divine , humane and mundane ; whether it be meant of substances or accidents , are ignorant of nothing but the way to heaven , are acquainted with all Laws and customs , save the Law of God , and customs of Christianity ; they are strangers no where but in the court of their own consciences : Yea , they build as hard , and erect as high as did the Babel-builders ; but all to no purpose : they never come to the roof , and when they die they are undone . They spend all their time in seeking after wisdom ; as Alchimists spend all their estates , to find out the Philosophers stone ; but never find it ; they never attain to that , which is true wisdom indeed . For as the ragged Poet told Petronius , that Poetry was a kind of learning , that never made any man rich : so humane learning of it self , never made a wise man . As thus ( if I may be so bold ) what is it , or what does it profit a man , to have the etymologie , and derivation of wisdome and knowledge , without being affected with that , which is true wisdom indeed to be able to decline vertue , yet not love it ? to have the theory , & be able to prattle of wisdom by rote ; yet not know what it is by effect and experience ? To have as expert a tongue , and as quick a memory as Portius ; a perfect understanding , great science , profound eloquence , a sweet stile ? To have the force of Demosthenes , the depth of Thesius , the perswasive art of Tully , &c. if withal he wants Grace , and lives remissely ? With the Astronomer , to observe the motions of the heavens ; while his heart is buried in the earth ? to search out the cause of many effects , and let pass the consideration of the principal , and most necessary ? With the Historian , to know what others have done , and how they have sped ; while he neglecteth the imitation of such , as are gone the right way ? With the Law-maker , to set down many Lawes in particular , and not to remember the common Law of nature , or Law general that all must die ? Or lastly , with Adam to know the Nature of all the Creatures : and with Solomon to be able to dispute of every thing , even from the Cedar to the Hyssop or Pellitory ; when in the mean time he lives like Dives , dyes like Naba●● and after all goes to his own place with Iudas ? Alas ! many a Fool goes to hell with lesse cost , less pains , and far more quiet : that is but raw knowledge , which is not digested into practice : It is not worth the ●●me of knowledge , that may be heard only and not seen , Ioh. 13. 17 〈◊〉 . 4. 6. Good discourse is but the froth of wisdom : the sweet and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it , is in well framed actions : that is true knowledge , that makes the knower blessed . We only praise that Mariner , that brings the 〈◊〉 safe to the haven . What sayes Aristotle ? to be wise and happy are terms reciprocal . And Socrates , that learning , saith he , pleaseth me but a little , which nothing profits the owner of it , either to vertue , or happiness : And being demanded , Who was the wisest and happiest man ? He Answered , He that offends least . He is the best scholar , that learns of Christ obedience , humility , &c. He is the best Arithmetitian , that can add grace to grace ; he is the best learned , that knows how to be saved . Yea , all the Arts in the world , are artless Arts to this . Sect. 45. THe best knowledge is about the best things ; and the perfection of all knowledge , to know God , and our selves : Knowledge and learning , saith Aristotle , consisteth not so much in the quantity , as in the quality ; not in the greatness , but in the goodness of it . A little gold ( we know ) is more worth than much dross : a little diamond , than a rocky mountain . So one drop of wisdom , guided by the fear of God ; one spark of spiritual , experimental , and saving knowledge , is more worth than all humane wisdom and learning : yea , one scruple of holiness , one dram of faith , one grain of grace , is more worth than many pounds , of natural parts . And indeed Faith , and Holiness , are the nerves , and sinews ; yea , the soul of saving knowledge . What saith Aristotle ? No more than the knowledge of goodness , maketh one to be named a good man ; no more doth the knowledge of wisdom alone , cause any person properly to be called a wise man . Saving knowledge of the truth , works a love of the truth known : yea it is a uniform consent , of knowledge and action . He only is wise , that is wise for his own soul : he whose conscience pulleth all he hears , and reads to his heart , and his heart to God : who turneth his knowledge to faith , his faith to feeling , and all to walk worthy of his Redeemer . He that subdues his sensual desires and appetite , to the more noble faculties of reason , and understanding ; and makes that understanding of his to serve him , by whom it is , and doth understand . He that subdues his lusts to his will , submits his will to reason ; his reason to faith ; his faith , his reason , his will , himself to the will of God : this is practical , experimental , and saving knowledge ; to which the other is but a bare name , or title . A competnet estate ( we know ) well husbanded , is better than a vast patrimony neglected . Never any meer man ( since the first ) knew so much as Solomon : many that have known less , have had more command of themselves . Alas ! they are not alwayes the wisest , that know most : For none more wise and learned in the worlds account , than the Scribes and Pharisees : yet Christ calls them four times blind , and twice fools in one chapter , Matth. 23. And the like of Balaam , 2 Pet. 2. 16. who had such a prophetical knowledge , that scarce any of the Prophets , had a cleerer revelation of the Messiah to come . And the same may be affirmed of Judas , and Achitophel ; for many that know a great deal less , are far wiser . Yea , one poor crucified thief , being converted , in an hours time , had more true wisdom and knowledge infused into him , than had all the Rulers , Scribes , and Pharisees . It is very observable , what the High Priest told the Council , as they were set to condemne Christ ; Ye know nothing at all : he spake truer than he meant it ; for if we know not the Lord Iesus , our knowledge is either nothing , or nothing worth . Rightly a man knows no more than he practiseth . It is said of Christ , 2 Cor. 5. 21. that he knew no sin ; because he did no sin ; in which sense , he knows no good , that doth no good . These things if ye know ( saith our Saviour ) happy are ye , if ye do them , Joh. 13. 17. And in Deut. 4. 6. Keep the commandements of God , and do them : for this is your wisdom , and understanding before God , and man . What is the notional sweetness of Honey , to the experimental taste of it ? It is one thing to know what riches are , and another thing to be Master of them : It is not the knowing , but the possessing of them that makes rich . Many have a depth of knowledge , and yet are not soul-wise ; have a liberary of divinity in their heads , not so much as the least Catechisme in their consciences ; full brains , empty hearts . Yea , you shall hear a flood in the tongue , when you cannot see one drop in the life . Insomuch , that in the midst of our so much light , and means of Grace , there be few I fear , that have the sound , and saving knowledge of Jesus Christ , and him crucified , which was the only care , and study of St. Paul , 1 Cor. 2. 2. Sect. 46. ANd that I am not mistaken , the effect shews : For if men knew either God , or Christ , they could not but love him ; and loveing him , they would keep his commandments , Ioh. 14. 15. For hereby ( saith St. John ) It is manifest that we know him , if we keep his commandments , 1 Joh. 2. 3. But he that sayeth , I know him , and yet keepeth not his commandments is a lyar , and there is no truth in him , ver. 4. What saith our Saviour ? This is life eternal to know thee the only true God , and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent , Joh. 17. 3. But how shall a man know , whether he hath this knowledge ? Answ. St. John tells you in those last words mentioned , and so plainly , that you cannot be deceived , except you desire to deceive your own soul . The knowledge of God that saves us , is more than a bare apprehension of him ; it knows his power , and therefore fears him ; knows his justice , and therefore serves him ; knows his mercy , and therefore trusts him ; knows his goodness , and therefore loves him , &c. For he that hath the saving knowledge of God , or of Christ , hath every other Grace : There is a sweet correspondence between every one , where there is any one in truth : As in the generation , the head is not without the body , nor the body without each member , nor the soul without its powers and faculties ; so in the regeneration , where there is any one grace in truth , there is every one , 2 Cor. 5. 17. If you will see it in particulars , read Psa. 9. 10. Jer. 9. 24. 1 Joh. 4. 6. Joh. 4. 10. 1 Joh 4. 7 , 8. & 2. 3. Joh 42. 5 , 6. 1 Ioh. 4. 7. which Scriptures shew , that as feeling is inseparable to all the organs of sense ; the eye sees and feels , the ear hears and feels , the pallat tastes and feels , the nostrils smell and feel ; so knowledge is involved in every grace : Faith knows and believes , Charity knows and loves , Patience knows and suffers , Temperance knows and abstains , Humility knows and stoops , Repentance knows and mourns , Obedience knows and does , Confidence knows and rejoyces , Hope knows and expects , Compassion knows and pities . Yea , as there is a power of water in every thing that grows ; it is fatness in the olive , sweetness in the figg , cheerfulness in the grape , strength in the oak , taleness in the cedar , redness in the rose , whiteness in the lilly , &c. so knowledge is in the hand obedience , in the mouth benediction , in the knee humility , in the eye compassion , in the heart charity , in the whole body and soul , piety . Alas ! If men had the true knowledg of Jesus Christ , it would disperse and dispel , all the black clouds of their reigning sins in a moment ; as the Sun does no sooner shew his face , but the darkness vanisheth : or as Caesar did no sooner look upon his enemies , but they were gone : Egypt swarmed with locusts , till the west wind came , that left not one : He cannot delight in sin , nor dote upon this world , that knows Christ savingly . Vertue is ordained a wife for knowledg ; and where these two joyn , there will proceed from them a noble progine , a generation of good works . Again , as the water engendereth ice , and the ice again engendereth water ; so knowledg begets righteousness , and righteousness again begetteth knowledg . It is between science and conscience , as it is between the stomack and the head ; for as in mans body , the raw stomack maketh a thumatick head , and the thumatick head maketh a raw stomach ; so science makes our conscience good , and conscience makes our science good : Nor is it so much scientiae capitis , as conscientia cordis , that knows Christ and ourselves ; whence Solomon saith , Give thine heart to wisdom , Prov. 2. 10. and let wisdom enter into thine heart , Prov. 4. 4. And when he would acquaint us how to become wise , he tells us , that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom , Prov. 1. 7. as if the first lesson to be wise , were to be holy . Again , If it be asked , Why the natural man perceiveth not the things of the spirit of God ? Saint Paul answers , he cannot know them , because they are spiritually discerned , 1 Cor. 2. 14 and indeed if they are spiritually discerned , how should they descern them that have not the spirit ? For though the outward man receives the elements and rudiments of Religion by breeding and education , yet his inward man receiveth them by heavenly inspiration , 1 〈◊〉 2. 11 , 12 , 13. & 12. 3. 8. Matth. 16. 16 , 17. Deut. 29 2 , 3 , 4 , Psa. 111. 10. Luke 24. 45. Ioh. 15. 15. And this alone is enough to prove , that no wicked man is a wise man ; for if God alone be the giver of it , we may be sure that he will reveal his secrets to none but such as he knows will improve their knowledge to his glory , and the good of others : Even as the husband man will not cast his seed but into ground that will return him a good harvest , Psa. 25. 14. Luke 24. 45. Mark 4. 34. Gen. 18. 17. 1 Joh. 4. 7. Sect. 47. BUt would these men ( any one , even the best of them ) thus improve , or imploy their knowledge ? Or do they desire it to any such end ? No : but to some other end , as I shall in the next place acquaint you . Some men desire not to know , some desire only to know ; Or rather thus , Few men in comparison desire knowledge , fewer that desire divine and supernatural knowledge ; fewest of all that desire to be the better , or that others should be the better for their knowledge : More particularly , a world of men desire knowledg for no other end but to remove their ignorance ; as Pharach used Moses , but to remove the plagues . Others again study the Scriptures , and other good Books , only to make gain thereof ; or to be the abler to dispute and discourse , as boys go into the water , only to play and paddle there , not to wash and be clean . With Eve , they highly desire the tree of knowledg , but regard not the tree of life . As I would fain know , what fruit or effect the knowledge of most men produces in them , except it be to inable them to dispute and discourse , to increase wit , or to increase wealth , or to increase pride , or perhaps to increase Athiesm , and to make them the more able and cunning to argue against the truth and power of Religion ? Whether the utmost of their aim be not to enrich , dignifie , and please themselves ; not once casting the eye of their souls at Gods glory , their neighbors good , or their own salvation ? Whether their main drift be not purchasing of a great estate for them and theirs , with out either fear of God , regard of men , or the discharge of their duty and calling ? Again , whereas a godly man and a good Christian , thinks himself as happy in giving light to others , as in receiving it himself ; how many are there , who as themselves are never the better , ( I mean in regard of Grace ) for their great wisdom and learning , so no more are others ; for commonly they resemble dark Lanthorns which have light , but so shut up and reserved as if it were not : and what is the difference betwixt concealed skill , and ignorance ; It is the nature and praise of good , to be communicative , whereas if their hidden knowledge do ever look out , it casts so sparing a light , that it only argues it self to have an unprofitable being . And for the most part these men if they may be thought great Rabbies , deep and profound Schollars ; this is the hight of their ambition , though neither the Church be benefited , nor God glorified by it ; whereas they ought the contrary : for as the grace of God is the fountain from which our wisdom flows ; so the glory of God should be the Ocean to which it should run : yea , that God may be honoured with , and by our wisdom , is the only end for which he gives us to be 〈◊〉 : And for default of this end , he not seldom croffeth the mean● , whereby while men strive to expel ignorance , they fall into 〈◊〉 ; as an E●●●●rick to cure one Disease , causeth a worse . Briefly , to conclude this 〈◊〉 , So many as are pust up with their knowledge , or do not part with their sins , th●w that they never sought it for Gods glory , but for their own honour and glory . And certainly if we seek not Gods glory in doing his work , he will give us no wages at the latter end . Sect. 48. BUt for men to do no good with then gifts , is not all ; yea , it were well if that were the worst , for not a few of them resembl Achitophel , and Jonadab , who imployed their wit wickedly , and do mischief insteed of good with their wisdom : like Herod , when you shall see turning over the Bible , searching the Scriptures , examining the Prophets ; but to what end and purpose ? To know good , but to do evil : yea , the greatest evil under the Sun , slay Christ in the cradle : With many , their knowledge and learning is not for God and for Gideon ; but for Antichrist and for Babylon ; and so of all other gifts ; how many are the worse for them ? As give Saul a Kingdom , and he will tyrannize ; give Nabal plenty , and he will be drunk ; give Judas an Apostleship , and he will sell his Master for mony ; let Sarmantus have a good wit , he will exercise it in scoffing at holiness . Briefly , how oft doth wisdom without grace prove like a fair estate in the hands of a sool , which not seldom becomes the owners ruine ? Or Absoloms hair , which was an ornament , wherewith he hanged himself : So that wisdom without grace is nothing else but a cunning way of undoing our selves at the last . Many mens knowledge to them , being like the Ark to the Philistims , which did them more hurt than good : When their knowledge makes them prouder , not better ; more rebellious , not more serviceable ; as it is Isa. 47. 10. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge they have caused thee to rebel : And very often this falls out , that as the best soyl usually yieldeth the worst air , so without grace there is nothing more pestilent than a deep wit , no such prey for the Devil , as a good wit unsanctified . VVit and Iearning well used , is like the golden ear-rings and bracelets of the Israelites , abused like the same gold cast into an Idol ; than which , nothing more abominable . Now when it comes to this , That they fight against God with the weapon he hath given them ; when with those the Psalmist speaks of , Psal. 73. 9. They set their mouths against heaven , and are like an unruly Jade , that being full fed kicks at his Master ; what course doth the Lord take with them ? Answ. Read but that Parable , Luk 19. 24. Iob 7. 17. it will inform you : For to him that useth his Talent of knowledge well , he giveth more ; as to the servant that used his talents well , he doubled them : but to them that use not their knowledge well , much more if they abuse it , he taketh away that which he had formerly given them : as he took heat from the fire when it would burn his Children , Dan. 3. 27. As you 〈…〉 , Isa. 44. 25. 2 Thess. 2. 10 , 11 , 12. Iob. 7. 17. Psa. 111. 10. 1 Cor. 〈◊〉 15. Eccles. 2. 26. Prov. 28 5. Matth. 21. 43. Acts 26. 18 Isa. 29 14. & 44 25. & 6. 9 , 10. Dan. 2. 19. 23. Iob 5. 13 , 14. Iob 9. 39. & 12. 40. Rom. 1. 28. Ephe. 4. 18 , 19. 1 Cor. 1. 20. 2 Thess. 2. 10 , 11 , 12. turn to the places , for they are rare . I will destroy the Tokens of the Soothsayers , and make them that conjecture , fools : I will turn the wise men backward , and make their knowledge foolishness , saith the Lord , Isa. 44. 25. He taketh the wise in their own craftiness , and the counsel of the wicked is made foolish , Job . 5. 13. the case of Achitophel : And justly are they forsaken of their reason , who have abandoned God ; yea , most just it is , that they who want grace , should want wit too . And so much of abusing their gifts . Lastly , These great knowers and wise men are so far from desiring soul wisdom , and saving-knowledge to the ends before specified , that they do not at all desire it , for that it suits not with their condition . For Naturalmen desire only humane and mundane knowledge : Spiritual men , that which is heavenly and supernatural ; and the reason why they desire it not , is , for that they know it not . A man desireth not that he knoweth not , saies Chrisostome ; neither are unknown evils feared : wherefore the work of Regeneration begins at Illumination , Acts 26. 18. Coll. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Now according as men are wise , they prize and value this wisdom , and endeavour to obtain it , Prov. 18. 15. For it is more true of divine wisdom , than it was of that Grecian beauty : No man ever loved her , that never saw her ; no man ever saw her , but he loved her . And so on the contrary , according as men are ignorant and blockish , they under-value and dis-esteem it , hate it , and are prejudiced against it : And hereupon carnal men being blinded by the Prince of darkness , together with their own wickedness , and being of a reprobate judgement , do most usually and familiarly term and esteem this soul-wisdom , this divine , spiritual , experimental , and saving-knowledge to be meer foolishness , or madness , Wisd. 5. 3. to 9. and the Professors thereof to be fools & madmen ; Elisha was counted no better , 2 King. 9. 11. and the rest of the Prophets , Hosea 9. 7. and Paul , Acts 26. 20. and all the Apostles , 1 Cor. 4. 10. Yea , our Saviour Christ himself with open mouth was pronounced mad by his carnal hearers , Joh. 10. 20. Mark . 3. 21. and this hath been the worlds vote ever since . The sinceer Christian was so reputed in Pliny's time , and after in St. Austin's time : yea , Julian the Pelagian could gibe St. Austin , that he had none of the wise Sages , nor the learned Senate of Philosophers on his side ; but only a company of mean tradesmen , of the vulgar sort , that took part with him : Whose Answer was , Thou reproachest the weak things of the world , which God hath chosen to confound the things that are mighty . To worldly men Christian wisdom seems folly , saith Gregory . And well it may , for even the wisdom of God is foolishness with the world , 1 Cor. 1. 18 23. therefore no disparagement to us his servants , if they repute us fools ; nor I think any honour to such sensualists that so repute us : However we will give them their due : For , Sect. 49. I Grant that in some kind of skill they out-strip the best of Gods People , who , if they are put to it , may answer as Themistocles did when one invited him to touch a lute ; for as he said , I cannot fiddle ; but I can make a smal town a great state : So the godly may say , We cannot give a sollid reason in Nature , why Nilus should over-flow only in the Sommer , when waters are at the lowest ? Why the Loadstone should draw iron , or incline to the pole-star ? How the heat of the stomach , and the strength of the nether chap should be so great ? Why a flash of lightening should melt the sword without making any impression in the scabbard ? Kill the Child in the womb , and never hurt the Mother ? How the waters should stand upon a heap , and yet not over-flow the earth ? Why the clouds above being heavie with water , should not fall to the earth suddenly , seeing every heavy thing descendeth ? Except the reason which God giveth , Gen. 1. 6. & Job 38 8. to 12. & 26. 8. Psal. 104. 9. But we know the mystery of the Gospel , and what it is to be born a new , and can give a sollid reason of our faith : we know that God is reconciled to us , the Law satisfied for us , our sins pardoned , our souls acquitted , and that we are in favour with God ; which many of these with their great learning do not know . And thus the godly are proved wiser than the wisest humanist that wants grace . You have likewise the reasons why these great knowers , know nothing yet as they might and ought to know : that is to say , First , Because they are mistaken in the thing ; they take speculative knowledg for soul wisdom ; & soul saving wisdom to be foolishness & madness . Now if a man take his aim amiss , he may shoot long enough ere he hit the white : and these men are as one that is gone a good part of his journey , but must come back again because he hath mistaken his way . Secondly , Because they are Unregenerate , and want the Eye of Faith . Thirdly , For that they seek not to God for it who is the giver thereof , and without whose spirit there is no attaining it . Fourthly , Because they are proud , and so seek not after it , as supposing they have it already . Fiftly , Because if they had never so much knowledge , they would be never the holier , or the better for it , but rather the worse ; nor would they imploy it to the honour of God , or the good of others . Sixtly , Because they either do , or would do mischief insteed of good with their knowledge . Seventhly , Because they will not consult with the word about it , nor advise with others that have already attained to it . Or thus , They read and hear the Scriptures and mind not , ( I mean the spirituallity of the word ) or mind and understand not , or understand and remember not , or remember and practice not . No , this they intend not of all the rest ; and they that are unwilling to obey , God thinks unvvorthy to know . When the Serpent taught knowledge , he said , If ye eate the forbidden fruit , your eyes shal be opened , and you shal know good and evil : But God teacheth another lesson , and saith , If ye will not eate the forbidden fruit , your eyes shall be opened , and you shall know good and evil , Rom. 12. 2. See Psa. 111. 10. & 119. 97 , 98 , 99 , 100. Or if you do eat it , you shall be like images that have ears and cannot hear , Rom. 11. 8. Isa. 6. 10. Matth. 13. 14. Psal. 115. 6. From all which Reasons we may collect , That there are but a few amongst us , that are wise indeed , and to purpose ; For these Seven Hinderances are applyable to seventy seven parts of men in the Nation . Besides , if these great knowers know so little , how ignorant are the rude rabble , that despise all knowledge ? Nor can it be denied but all impenitent persons , all unbelievers ( who prefer their profits and pleasures before pleasing of God ; as Herodias prefered John Baptists head before the one half of Herods kingdom , ) are arrant fools ; yea , fools in folio : For if they were wise , sayes Bernard , they would foresee the torments of Hell , and prevent them . And so wise are the godly , for they prefer grace , and glory , and Gods favour , before ten thousand worlds . Sect. 50. OBject . But here thou wilt say , ( or at least thou hast reason to say ) if there be so few that are soul-wise , I have all the reason in the world to mistrust my self ; wherefore good Sir , tell me how I shall be able to get ihis spiritual and experimental knowledg ? this divine and supernatural wisdom ? Answ. By observing these Five Rules : First , Let such a willing and ingenuous soul , resolve to practise what he does already know , or shall hereafter be acquainted with from the word of God and Christs faithful Messengers : For he that will do my Fathers will , sayes our Saviour , shall know the doctrine , whether it be of God orno , Joh. 7. 17. A good understanding have all they that keep the commandments , ( sayes holy David ) Psal. 111. 10. and proves it true by his own example and experience : I understood ( sayes he ) more than the Antient , and became wiser than my teachers , because I kept thy precepts , Psal. 119. 97 , 98 , 99 , 100. To a man that is good in his sight , God giveth knowledg and wisdom , Eccles. 2. 26. The spiritual man understandeth all things , 1 Cor. 2. 15. VVicked men understand not iudgment , but they that seek the Lord , understand all things , Prov. 28. 5. Admirable incouragements for men to become godly and consciencious ; I mean practical Christians . Secondly , If thou wouldest get this precious grace of saving knowledge ; the way is , to be frequent in hearing the word preached , and to become studious in the Scriptures , for they and they alone make wise to Salvation , 2 Tim. 3. 15. Ye err ( saith our Saviour ) not knowing the Scriptures , Matth. 22. 29. Mark 12. 24. We must not in the search of heavenly matters , either do as we see others do ; neither must we follow the blind guide carnal reason , or the deceitful guide our corrupt hearts ; but the undeceivable , and infallable guide of Gods word which is truth it self : and great need there is ; for as we cannot perceive the foulness of our faces unless it be told us , or we take a glass and look our selves therein : so neither can we see the blemishes of our Souls , which is a notable degree of spiritual Wisdom , but either God must make it known to us by his spirit , or we must collect the same out of the Scriptures , that coelestial glass ; though this also must be done by the spirits help . Therefore Thirdly , If thou wilt be Soul-wise and truly profit by studying the Scriptures , be frequent and fervent in Prayer to God who is the only giver of it , for the direction of his holy spirit : For first , humble and faithful Prayer , ushered in by meditation , is the cure of al obscurity . Especially being accompanied with fervor and fervency ; as you may see , Matth. 21. 22. If any lack wisdom , saith St. James , let him ask of God who giveth to al men liberally and reproacheth no man , and it shal be given him , Jam. 1. 5. Mark the words , it is said if any ; wherefore let no man deny his soul this comfort . Again , ask and have ; It cannot come upon easier terms . Yea , God seems to like this sute so well in Solomon , as if he were beholding to his Creature , for wishing well to it self . And in vain do we expect that alms of grace , for which we do not so much as beg . But in praying for Wisdom , do not pray for it without putting difference ; desire not so much brain-knowledg as to be Soul-wise , and then you will imploy your wisdom to the glory of the giver . Let thine hearts desire be to know God in Christ , Christ in Faith , Faith in good works ; to know Gods vvill that thou mayest do it ; and before the knowledg of all other things , desire to knovv thy self ; & in thy self , not so much thy strength , as thy vveakness : Pray that thine heart may serve thee insteed of a commentary , to help thee understand such points of Religion as are most needful and necessary , and that thy Life may be an ●●●●sition of thy invvard man , that there may be a sweet harmony betwixt Gods VVord , thy judgment , and vvhole conversation , that what the natural man knoweth by roat , thou mayst double by feeling the same in thine heart and affections . As indeed experimental and saving knovvledg is no less felt than knovvn ; and , I cannot tell how , comes rather out of the abundance of the heart , than by extreme study ; or rather is sent by God unto good men , like the Ram that was brought to Abraham when he would have Sacrificed his son Isaak . When Christ taught in the Temple , they asked , Hovv knovveth this man the Scriptures , seeing he never learned them ? So it is a wonder what learning some men have , that have no learning ! Like Prisilla and Aquila , poor Tent-makers , who were able to school Apollos that great Clerk , a man renovvned for his learning : What can we say to it ? For no other reason can be given but as Christ said , Father so it pleaseth thee : For as Jacob said of his venison , when his Father ask'd how he came by it so suddenly ? Because the Lord thy God brought it suddenly to my hands . So holy and righteous men do more easily understand the words of God , than do the wicked , because God brings the meaning suddenly to their hearts ; as we read , Luk. 24. That Christ ( standing in the midst of his Apostles after he vvas risen from the dead ) opened their understandings , that they might understand clearly the Scriptures , and vvhat vvas vvritten of him in the Lavv of Moses , and in the Prophets , and in the Psalms , vers. 44. 45. Lo how suddenly their knowledge came unto them ! But see what a general promise ( God in the Person of wisdom ) hatth made to all that serve him , Prov. 1. Turn you at my reproof , and behold I will pour out my spirit unto you , and make known my words unto you , vers. 23. And Psal. 25. The secrets of the Lord are revealed to them that fear him , and his covenant is to give them understanding , vers 14. These secrets are hid from the wicked , neither hath he made any such covenant with them but the contrary : As see , Dan. 12. 10. Unto you it is given to knovv the secrets of the Kingdom of Heaven , but to others in Parrables , that they seeing should not see , and hearing they should not understand , Luke 8. 10 : Mark : 3 : 11 : Matth : 13 : 13 : Again , It is not enough to pray , except also it be in Christs name , and accrding to his vvill , believing to be heard for his sake , and that it be the intercession of Gods ovvn spirit in you : And ( being truly sensible of your sins and wants ) that you chiefly pray for the pardon of sinne , the effusion of grace , and for the assistance of Gods Spirit : that you may more firmly believe , more soundly repent , more zealously doe , more patiently suffer , and more constantly persevere in the practice and profession of every duty . But above all you must know , that as Sampsons companions , could never have found out his Riddle , if they had not plowed with his heifer : so no man can know the secrets of God , but by the revelation of his Spirit , 1 Cor. 12. 8. Mat. 16. 17. Yea , suppose a man be not inferiour to Portius , or Pythagoras , who kept all things in memory , that ever they had read , heard , or seen : To Virgil , of whom it is reported , that if all Sciences were lost , they might be found again in him : To Aben Ezra , of whom it was said , that if Knowledge had put out her candle , at his brain she might light it again ; and that his head was a throne of wisdome : or Josephus Scaliger , who was skilled in thirty Languages : Yet if he want the Spirit of God to be his teacher , he is a dunce to the meanest , and most illiterate believer . For one excellent , and necessary prerogative of the spirituall man is this ; he hath God for his teacher ; he learns the Counsels of God , of that spirit which onely knoweth Gods counsels , Luk. 21. 15. which is no small priviledge : for the scholar learns quickly , when the Holy Ghost is his teacher ; the Eye sees distinctly , when the Holy Ghost doth enlighten it . With the Spirits helpe , the meanes can never be too weake : without , never strong enough , Luk. 24. 44 , 45. Pro. 1. 23. § 51. Fourthly , Thou must get an humble conceit of thine own wisdome . The first step to knowledge , is to know our own ignorance . We must become fools in our own opinion , before we can be truly wise , as the Apostle sets it down , 1 Cor. 3. 18. And indeed , the opinion of our knowing enough , is one of the greatest causes of our knowing so little : For what we presume to have attained , we seeke not after . Yea , the very first lesson of a Christian is humility . He will teach the humble his way , Psalm . 25. 9. Jam. 4. 6. 1 Pet. 5. 5. And he that hath not learned the first lesson , is not fit to take out a new . Pride is a great let to true wisdome : For God resisteth the proud , and giveth grace to the humble , Jam. 4. 6. 1 Pet. 5. 5. Whence it comes to passe , that few proud wits are reformed , Iohn 9. 39. And for this cause also did our Saviour propound his woes to the Pharisees , his doctrines to the People . A heart full of pride , is like a vessell full of aire : This self opinion must be blown out of us , before saving knowledge will be poured into us . Christ will know none but the humble , and none but humble souls truly know Christ . Now the way to become humble , is , by taking a serious view of our wants . The Peacocks pride is much abated , when she looks on the blacknesse of her legs and feet . Now suppose we know never so much ; yet that which we know , is far lesse then that which we are ignorant of : and the more we know , the more we know we want , Pro. 1. 5 , 7. Psal. 73. 22. And the lesle sensible we are of our blindness , sicknesse , deformity , &c. the more blinde , sick , and deformed we are . Fifthly , Thou must labour to get a true and lively faith : For as without faith we cannot please God : so without faith , no man can know God . Faith most cleerly beholds those things which are hid both from the eye of sense , and the eye of reason , John 12. 46. Unregenerate men , that what faith , are like blinde Sampson without his guide : Or like Poliphemus , who never had but one eye , and that Ulysses put out . For so does the pleasure and custome of sinne blinde the Sensuallist . We must have mindes lifted above nature , to see and love things above nature : heavenly wisdome , to see heavenly truth ; or else that truth which is saving , will be to us a mystery , Mark . 4. 11. If it seem not foolishnesse , 1 Cor. 2. 7 , 8 , 14. To them that are lost , the Gospel is hid , 2 Cor. 4. 3 , 4. Whereas the Believer discerns all things , even the deep things of God , 1 Cor. 2. 10. 12. 15 , 16. Yea , God Giveth him a mouth and wisdome , where against all his adversaries , shall not be able to speak or resist , Luk. 21. 15. These are the five steps , which lead up to the palace of wisdome , which all must ascend by , that mean to enter . If you have once attained this precious grace of saving knowledge , you will as much as in you lies , employ the same to the glory of the giver , And so much to prove , that he is the wisest man , whose knowledge lies in the best things , ( as the weaker vessel may hold the better liquor ) and that if men be never so learned , except they have learned the Mystery of the Gospel , and what it is to be borne again by their own experience , ( which few with their great learning do indeed know ) they are in Gods account , no better then fooles . I come now to prove , that the greatest Politician is a verier fool then the former . § 52. Secondly , If we shall look upon the most cunning Politician , with a single eye : judge righteous judgement , and not according to appearance onely , we shall finde that the greatest Polilician is the greatest fool . For he turns all his Religion into hypocrisie , into Statisme , yea , into Atheism , making Christianity a very foot-stool to policy . I confesse they are wiser in their generation , then the children of light ; and are so acknowledged by Christ himself , Luke 16. 8. But why ? not that there is a deficiency of power in the godly , but will : for could not David go as far as Achitophel ? could not Paul shew as much cunning as Tertullus ? Yes , surely if they would : But because their Master , Christ , hath commanded them to be innocent as doves ; They have resolved in an heroical disposition with Abraham , Gen. 14. 22. that the King of Sodome shall not make them rich . No crooked , or indirect meanes , shall bring them in profit ; they will not be beholding to the king of Hell for a shoo-ty . And hereupon the Foxes wiles , never enter into the Lions head . But to speak of them as they are : These cunning Politicians , in stead of being wise as serpents , they are wise serpents . They are so arted in subtleties , through time and practice , that they are neer upon as wise , as that old serpent the Devill . Indeed he hath one trick beyond all theirs ; for like a cunning fencer , he that taught them all their tricks , kept this one to himselfe , namely , how to cheate them of their soules . But take a short Character of them . They are such cunning dissemblers , that like Pope Alexander the sixth , what they thinke , they never speak . Why is this cast away , saith Iudas ? Crafty cub , he would have had it himself . They are like a fellow that rides to the pillory , they goe not the way they look . They will cut a mans throat under colour of courtesie , as Ulysses by gold , and forged letters , was the meanes of stoning Palamides , even while he made shew of defending him . And then to wipe off all suspition from themselves , their gesture and conntenance shall be like Julius Caesar's ; who seeing Pompey's head fell a weeping , as if he had been sorry for it , when by his onely meanes it was cut off . So like Rowers in a boat , whilest in their pretence they look one way , in their intent they goe the quire contrary : As our Saviour found it to fare with the Pharisees , and Sadducees , Matth. 16. 1 , 3. which made him to conclude , with , O hypocrites ! Nor shall any man be able to determine , either by their gesture , words , or actions , what they resolve , though like Hebrew letters , you spell them backward . Onely this you may be sure of , that they do not intend , what they pretend ; Like as in jugling feats , though we know not how they are done , yet we know well , that they are not done as they seem to be . Now if they can any way advantage themselves by anothers ruine , and do it cunningly ; as Iezabel did , when she killed Naboth , by suborning false witnesse against him , and proclaimed a Fast before the murther : Though all such policy be but misery , and all such knowledge , ignorance , Yet , ô how wise they think themselves ! but they are grosly mistaken : for wherein does this their great wisdom consist ? but first ; in being wise to deceive others : as the Old serpent did our first Parents ; or secondly in the end to deceive themselves , as the same serpent did , which brought a curse upon himselfe for so doing , Gen. 3. The crafty Fox hugg'd himselfe to think how he had cozened the Crow of her break-fast : but when he had eaten it , and found himself poysoned with it , he wisht the Crow her own again . Wealth got by deceit , is like a piece of butterd spunge , an Italian trick , it goes down glib ; but in the stomack swells , and will never be got out again . The gains a man gets by deceiving , at last he may put in his eye , and yet see himselfe miserable . Sin is the greatest cheater in the world , for it deceives the deceiver . §. 53 That it is so with them , and all others who goe to Counsell , and leave the God of wisdome behind them : let their case be viewed in other persons . What saith Pharaoh to his deep Counsellors ? Come , let us do wisely , when indeed he went about that which destroyed both him and his countrey . The Scribes , Pharisees , and Elders , took counsel against Christ ; as though they would most wisely prevent their own salvation . Josephs brethren , to prevent his having dominion over them , ( as his dreames imported ) thought they had taken a very wise course , in selling him to the Ishmaelitish Merchants , which was indeed the onely meanes to effect it . They murther Christ , lest the Romans should come : and by so doing , their coming was hastned . The Jews say , Come let us kill him , that the inheritance may be ours : But in killing him , they lost the inheritance and themselves too . And so it always fares with our Machivillians in the end , speed they never so wel for a time . For let the Devil promise them never so fair , ( suppose it be a Kingdome ) the up-shot will be but sad and doleful : as it fared with Athaliah , who having slain all the Kings seed , that she alone might raign , lost both the government , and her life too . Or as it did with Abimelech , who slue seventy of his brethren , that he might with safety enjoy the Kingdome lost both it , and his life with it . And many the like we read of . Whence St. Ambrose observes , that the plots of the wicked , alwayes return upon their own heads . As Pope Hildebrands servant , by stumbling , was killed with that stone he should have thrown down on Frderick the Emperour , at his Devotions . Or as Griphus his mother , was made to take that draught , where-with she intended to poyson him . Yea , how little was Judas set by of the High Priests , when once he had served their turn ? How did they shake him off in that pittiful distresse , with look thou to it ? And so how poor are the witches , that in confidence of these promises , even sell their souls to the Devill . See here in these few Examples , you have the depth and solidity of our greatest and wisest Politicians , and yet lewd men , most ridiculously and absurdly , call wicked policies , wisdome , and their successe , happinesse . But herein Satan makes them of all fools the superlative , in mistaking villany and madnesse for the best vertues . And what is the summa totalis of all but this ? Faux-like , they project other mens over-throw , purchase their owne . Neither hath any man been wise to do evill , but his wisdome hath had an evill end . As ô the multitude of Examples that are recorded , to give credit to this Doctrine ! Was not the wisdome of the Serpent turned into a curse ? the wisdome of the Pharisees into a woe ? the wisdome of Achitophel into folly ? the wisdome of Nimrod into confusion ? the wisdome of the unjust Steward into expulsion out of Heaven ? the wisdome of Jezabel , into a shameful death ? &c. So that in the issue , their case proves but like the spiders , that was weaving a curious net to catch thè swallow : who when she came , bore away both net , and webb , and weaver too . Wherefore , ô God , make me but soul-wise , and I shall never envy their knowledge , that pity my simplicity : Let me be weake in policy , so I may be wise to salvation . And I cannot but wonder to see , how the most are mistaken in them : But being thus discovered , I hope it will appear , that as love & lust are not all one , so a cunnning Politician & a wise man are not both one . As we have seen some that could pack the cards , & yet were not able to play well . § 54. True , if men shall look upon them side-wayes , as Appelles painted Antigonus , that is , upon their strength of ●rain and parts alone , and not consider them whole , and together , their abilities , with their deficiencies , they will take them for wise men , and so be mistaken . But If you would know how to call them , they are properly subtle persens ? as the Holy Ghost stiles Jonadab , who gave that wicked and crafty counsell to Amnon , 2 Sam. 13. 3 , 5. And the woman of Tekoah , 2 Sam. 14. 2. And Elimas , Act. 13. 10. as being rarely gifted to deceive , and more crafty and wily then is usual . But not wise men ; for this is rather wisdome backwàrd , and to study the dangerous art of self-sophysiry , to the end they may play wily beguile themselves , and to plot self-treason , then which there is no greater , when the betrayer and betrayed , spell but one man . Again , admit them the most , they are not wise in good , though they be wise to do evill : Or if you will , wise in goods , not wise in grace : For as that old Serpent seemed to boast , that he was richer then Christ , when he said , All these are mine , Matth. 4. 9. So the Politician may truly say , for the most part , I am wiser then my plain dealing neigbour by five hundred pounds . So that in some sense it may be said of them , as one speaks of women , though partially , that they are more witty in wickednesse then men . Nor can I more fitly compare them , then to Dats , Night-crows , Owles , and Cats , which can see better in the darke , then in the light . Their wisdome is like that of the Polipus : which is a most stupid and foolish fish , yet useth great skill in taking of other fishes . Never the lesse , yield them all that hath been mentioned , this is the up-shot . They are blinde , and in darknesse , as having their beginning from Satan , the Prince of darknesse , and their end in Hell , which is the pit of darkness : and because they are wise onely to evill , their wisdome shall have but an evill end . In the dialect of the wise man , the greatest sinner is the greatest fool , Prov. 1. 7. And David thinks , there is no fool to the Atheist , Psal. 53. 1. & 49. 13. And Saint Austin tells us , that the wisest Politician upon earth , the most ample , and cunning Machivillian that lives , be he a Doctor in that deep reaching faculty , is worse then a foole : For if the Holy Ghost , saith he , termes him a fool that onely laid up his own goods , Luke 12. 18 , 20. finde out a name for him , that takes away other mens . And though worldly men call the simple fools , yet God calls the crafty fools , Jer. 8. 9. Mat. 6. 23. And of all atheisis , and fools , which seeme wise , there be no such fools in the world , as they that love money better then themselves . And so you have the wisdome of Humanists , and Politicians desciphered ; together with the wisdome of Gods servants . You see the difference between them , and therein as I suppose , that neither of the former are so wise as the godly man , nor so wise as the world reputes them , or they themselves . I confesse the one speak Latine , Greek , and Hebrew , the other Statutes , History , and Husbandry , well enough to make their neighbours think them wise : but the truth is , they seem wiser then they are , as is said of the Spaniard ; whereas the godly , like the French , are wiser then they seem . The former are wise men in foolish things , and foolish men in wise things . Sharp-eyed as Eagles , in the things of the earth , but blinde as Beetles in the matters of heaven . O that they had but the wit to know , that when all is done , Heaven is a brave place , where are such joyes , as eye hath not seene , nor care heard , neither hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive the things which God hath prepared there for them that love him , 1 Cor. 2. 9. §. 55. Now as I have shewn these two sorts of men their folly , to the end some of them may be convinced , and ashamed , and consequently become soul-wise , that so they may be saved ; which is the principal thing I drive at ( for I take no pleasure in disgracing men purposely . ) So it were as easie to prove , that all sorts of sinners , are no better then sots , and shallow-brains , in comparison of the conscientious Christian . Nor do I see , but it may prove of great , and general concernment : therefore that others also may have benefit by the same , I will briefly touch upon some particulars . And the next that I will speak to , shall be such as come neerest to these last mentioned ; that is , your Covetous , Miserly Muck-worms , who though they be neer neighbours to those Ambodexters I last spake of , yet they are not the same men . Now although you cannot name one property of a natural fool , but the Covetous man is in that particular a greater fool : Yet I will make the parallel in one onely : lest I should weary my Reader , before I have dispatcht all my Clients , or halfe listed my men . The Covetous miser , if you mark it , esteems not of things according to their true value ; but preferreth bables and trifles before things of greatest worth , which is the most remarkable property of a naturall fool , that is , being like the ignorant Indians in Florida , Virginia , New England , and K●nida , who for a Copper kettle , and a few toyes , as Beads , and Hatchets , will depart from the purest gold , and sell you a whole Countrey , with the houses and ground which they dwell upon . As Iudas preferred thirty pieces of silver , before him that was Lord of the whole world , and ransome of man-kinde : so the covetous man prefers Earth , yea hell to heaven , time to eternity , his body before his soul ; yea , his outward estate before either soule or body . Whereas the godly care for the soul , as the chief jewell , and onely treasure ; and for the body for the soules sake ; and settle their inheritance in no land but the land of promise ; their end being to possesse a kingdome without end . They are not like Shebna , who built his sepulchre in one Countrey , and was buried in another : But like our English Merchants , that traffique in Turkey , get wealth in Turky , yet plant not in Turky , but transport for England . It cannot be said of them , as it may of the most ; that they worship the golden Calfe : because they consider , that Pecunia , the worlds Queen , ( I meane that world , whereof the Devill is King ) extends her Regiments , but to the brim of the grave , and is not current one step farther . Worldly hearts are penny-wise , and pound-foolish ; they know how to set high prizes upon the worthlesse trash of this world ; but for heavenly things , or the God that owns them , they shamefully under-value . Like Judas , who valued Maries ointment , which she bestowed upon the feet of Christ , at three hundred pieces of silver , and sold his Master , on whom that odour was spent , for thirty . But it is not so with the godly ; they think it the best purchase that ever was in the world , to buy him who bought them ; in comparison of whom all things else are dross and dung , as Paul speaks , Phil. 3. 8. And indeed if we once have him , we have all thing , as the Apostle argues , Rom. 8. 32. 1 Cor. 3. 21 , 22 , 23. So that the godly's man is onely rich , the servant of Christ is Lord of all . Whereas by a just judgement of God upon the covetous Miser , who makes Mammon his god : The Devill makes them his Drudges , to get and bring him in Gold , as the King of Spain does the poor Indians ) that he may keep it in banke , for the next prodigall to spend as ill , as the other got it . As how often is that spent upon one Christmas revelling by the son , which was forty years a getting by the Father ? O fools , incomparable ! to take a world of care and paines , endure so much grief , sting of conscience , loss of credit , to deprive themselves of Heaven , damn their own souls , to get wealth : and when they have got it , not to be a jot the better for it . Yea , they are less satisfied , and contented then other men , meanlier accommedated then mean men : Yea , a poor beggar that hath nothing here , is in better estate , then a rich Miser , that hath nothing in effect , either here or hereafter . O that they would but use that ! yea , half that wit , study , and industry hereafter , to save their souls , that they have formerly done to damn them . But hear more . Aristippus cared onely for his body , as if he had had no soule : Zeno but for his soule , as if he had had no body : Achitophel for his Family alone , as if neither soule nor body had been worth caring for : but these neither for body , nor soule , nor any thing , but for a little muck to leave behind them . Yea , he can finde in his heart to goe to hell for another , that wishes him gone , and will damn his own soul to leave his son rich . Yea , what a deale of paines and care does the covetous man take for his own damnation ? ever tormenting himself to get that ; for getting whereof he shall be tormented : so himselfe is voluntarily miserable here , and hereafter , that others may be happy . And so much of the Miser . The next I will fall upon , shall be such as equall these in their Idolatry another way ; as § 56. Fourthly , what think you of common Idolaters ? are not they arrant fools ? I 'le give you but one instance mentioned , Exod. 32. and you will need no more . Turn to the place , and there you shall find , that those blockish Israelites made them a molten Calfe , and then said , This is thy god , that brought thee out of the land of Egypt , ver. 34. This is such a pregnant example , that there needs no more to prove it ; that a Beast should be their god ; yea , and a beast of their own making , and that this beast should have brought them out of Egypt , which could not move it selfe , but as it was moved , and that before it had any being . This is such a blockish absurdity , that as one would think , should never enter into the heart of him , who is endowed with a reasonable soule . But what can the Prince of darknesse propound ? that a wicked heart , ( blinded with the custome of sinne , and given up by God , to be further blinded by Satan ) will not believe , as appears by our Ranters , Shakers , and Quakers at this day . And such other fools are the Papists , though great Clerks , and wise men : who ( if I could intend to aquaint you ) maintain a thousand ridiculous tenents , stif●y defending those things for truth , which the Holy Ghost calls in expresse words , The doctrine of devils , 1 Tim. 4. 1 , 2 , 3. And most justly are they forsaken of their reason , who have abandoned God . Yea , most just it is , that they who want grace , should want wit too . If Idolaters will need set up a false god for the true , is it not equal , that the true God should give them over to the false ? Again , Fifthly , how does lust blinde and besot men ? when the Adulterer prefers a filthy strumpet before his own chaste wife , though his own lawfull Consort is known to be more comely , and lovely then the strange woman . Yea , when they shall confesse the same ( as it was the speech of one too great to name ) That were she not his wife , he could love her above all women in the world ; a word able to rot out the tongue that spake it . But take an instance of this nature , I 'le give you one amongst many very remarkable . We read , Judges 16. that Sampson cared more for his pleasure in this kinde , then his li●t . O strange debauchednesse ! his filthy lust of a Nazarite , leaves him scarce a man ! He that might not drink wine , is drunk with the cup of fornication . How could hee other then thinke , if lust had not blinded and bewitched him ? She whose body is mercenary to me , will easily fell me to others ? she will be false , if shee will be an Harlot . Was there ever such a motion made to a reasonable man ? Tell me , wherewith thou mayest be bound to do thee hurt ? Who would not have spurned such a sutor out of doors ? And when upon the tryal he saw such apparent treachery , he yet wilfully betrays his life , by her to his enemies . All sins , all passions have power to blinde , and infatuate ; but lust most of all . Never man that had dranke flagons of wine , had lesse reason left him , then this Nazarite . Many an one loses his life , but he casts it away ; not in hatred to himself , but in love to a Strumpet , He knew she aimed at nothing but his slavery , and death , yet had not power to deny her . He had wit enough to deceive her thrice , not enough to keep himself from being deceived by her . Thrice had he seen the Philistims in her chamber , ready to surprise him upon her bands ; and yet will needs be a slave to his Traitor . Yea , in effect , bids her binde him , and call in her Executioners to cut his throat . O beware of a Harlot , as you would of the Devill ! and the rather , for that under the habit of a woman , it may be the Devill in shape of a woman , as some have so been cheated . But Sixthly , what can we think of an improvident Gamester ? is not he a Fool ? who will hazard his whole estate upon the chance of a treacherous dye , that flatters him with his own hand , to throw away his wealth to another . And a Thief he is too , for if he wins , he robs another ; if he looses , he no lesse robs himself . § 57. Seventhly , let me refer it to any rational man , whether the Voluptuous Prodigal is not a stark Fool ? who suffers himself to be stolne away for an Apple : For , for a little tickling of the palate , a kind of running Banquet , he will hazard the losse of eternal comfort , and expose himself to a devouring fire , an everlasting burning ? Isa. 33. 14. And what greater folly ? Is it not a dear purchase ? an ill penni-worth ? yea , a desperate madnesse , to buy the merriment of a day , ( yea , possibly the pleasure of an hour , may deterimine it ) with ages of pangs , with eternity of unsufferable torments , that are capable of neither ease 1. or end . Nor is this all , for they run upon Gods judgements , as Balaam did upon the swords point in the Angels hand , and yet are so farre from being afraid , that they applaud their own wisdome , for giving such liberty to their lusts ; thinking no men in the world enjoy the like freedome . When indeed their bondage is much worse then the cruel and tyrannical bondage , and slavery of Egypt . For first , that bondage was of the body onely , but the service of sinne is of the whole man , body and soul . Secondly , in the bondage of Egypt , they served men ; but in this bondage , service is done to sinne & Satan , most vile Lords , which command most base , and filthy works . Thirdly , in the bondage of Egypt , the most harm was temporall , losse of liberty , smart and pain of body , in this service of sinne , the losse is eternal , even destruction in Hell for ever ( without the infinite goodnesse of God . ) Fourthly , in this bondage under Pharaoh , they had a sense of their thraldome , and desired liberty ; in this of sin , men do not so much as suspect themselves to be bound , but think themselves free , and despise liberty . Lastly , in all outward bondage , they which are bound may possibly help themselves ; as by running away , or by intreaty , or by ransome : In this bondage we lie still , as it were , bound hand and foot ( till God by his mercy deliver us ) not having so much as the least thought of relieving our selves . By all which it appears , that such who take the most liberty to sin , are the most perfect slaves in the world ; because most voluntary slaves : and that Christs service is the onely true freedome ; his yoke an easie yoke ; his burthen but as the burthen of wings to a bird ; which makes her flye the higher . Wherefore , as we serve the lawes , that we may be free : so let us serve Christ , and we shall be the freest people alive . A godly man being demanded , what he thought was the strangest , and foolishest thing in the world , answered , an impenitent sinner , or an Unbeliever : For , said he , that a man should provoke God , so gracious and mighty , that he should believe Satan the father of lies and cruelty , forget his own death so imminent and in-evitable ; obey the command of his Flesh , a Drudge so ignoble , admire the world so fickle and dangerous , prefer it before Heaven so blessed & glorious ; wilfully cast himself into hell , a place so woful and dolorous , and all for vanity , such a wretched emptinesse ; that he should feare the blasts of mens breath , and not the fire of Gods wrath ; weep for the losse of friends , & not for his soul : And lastly , that Christ should stand at the door of his heart , craving for entrance , that he may remedy all , and make him everlastingly happy ; and God call him every day , either by his Word in the mouthes of his Messengers , or by strange judgements , or extraordinary mercies upon himselfe , or others , and all in vain Such an one , sayes he , is the most foolish and degenerate creature alive : Thus I might go on to Traytors , Murtherers , Back-byters , Seducers , Drunkards , Blasphemers , Persecutors of the godly , proud persons , Hypocrites , Thieves , Atheists , and what other sinners you can name : and prove them all fools alike . But I have already ( upon one occasion or other ) done it in some other Tract. Nor do I love to tautologize , except it be for a great advantage to my Reader , and for others good : though in such a case , I can , I thank God , dishonour my selfe , that I may honour my Maker . The which if men did well ponder , they would be more sparing of their censures ; How-ever I could wish , that our Reverend Divines would afford themselves more liberty in this case then they do . There be some expressions , that we borrow from our Predecessors , that deserve to be mentioned , or used ( by a Minister that remains perhaps twenty , or thirty years in a Parish ) more then once , though it be to the same Congregation ( for that which takes not , or is not minded at one time , may at another : and how many have been converted , by that onely argument ? that God seeth all things even in the darke , when the doors are shut , and the curtains drawn . ) Nor do I think , that a dull and flat tool , or instrument would be used , when a more quick , and sharp one may be had at as easie a rate , and perhaps neerer at hand . But we are mostly ( even the best of us ) loth to deny our selves ; though it be for our Masters , ( & many of our Brethrens great gain and ) advantage . But of this by the way onely , a word or two more , that may reach to all , that are in their natural condition , and I shall conclude . § 58. In the last place , Are not all wilfull sinners arrant fools ? who Adam-like , will receive what-ever comes , or is offered them ? be it bribe , or other sinful bait , not once thinking this is forbidden fruit , and thou shalt die the death . That think the vowed enemy of their souls , can offer them a bait without a hook ? you cannot but acknowledg them stark fools , though thou thy self beest one of the number . Again , for men to dishonour God , and blaspheme his Name , while he does support and relieve them , to runne from him , while he does call them , and forget him , while he does feed them . To imitate the Common Protestants in Queen Maries time , who laughed the Martyrs to scorn , and esteemed them superstitious fools , to lose their lives and fortunes , for matters of Religion , accounting faith , holinesse , immortality of the soul , &c. meer fopperies and illusions . To be quick-sighted in other mens failings , and blinde to their own . Are not these so many infallible properties of a fool ? and yet these are the lively characters , of every sensuallist . In so much , that if I should give you a list , or Catalogue of all the fools in one City , or County : You would blesse your selves , that there are so few Bedlam houses , and yet so many out of their wits , that can not perceive or discern the same . And yet no wonder ; for as I told you-ere-while , Sensual men are so be-nighted , and puzled with blindnesse , that they know no other way , then the flesh leads them . Yea , many by losse of conscience become Atheists ; and by losse of reason , Beasts . Yea , to any thing that is spiritually good , the natural man is blinde , and deafe , and dead , as ye may see by these ensuing Scriptures , 1 Tim. 5. 6. Rom. 1. 21 , 22 , 25. Ephes. 5. 14. Isa. 6. 9 , 10. John 12 40. Psal. 69. 23. Matth. 4. 16 & 15. 14. Ephes. 4. 18 , 19. & 5. 8. 1 Pet. 2 9. Acts 28. 27. Rom. 11. 8. Matth. 23. 16 , 17. 19. 24. 26. & 27. 3 , 4 , 5. 2 Pet. 2. 16. Revel. 3. 17. Rom. 6. 13. & 8. 11. Micah 7. 16. Psal. 58. 4. Eph. 2. 1. If our Gospel be hid , it is hid to them that are lost , in whom the god of this world hath blinded , 2 Cor. 4. 3 , 4. But it is otherwise with the godly : as let Satan , or the world offer a wise Christian the bait of pleasure , or profit : his answer shall be , I will not buy repentance so dear : I will not lose my soul , to please my sense . If affliction comes , he will consider , that Gods punishments for sinne , calls for conversion from sin : and in case God speaks to him by his Word , to forsake his evill wayes , and turn again to him , he will amend his course , lest if he heare not the word , he should feel the sword . Whereas nothing will confute a fool , but fire and brimstone . The Lord spake to Manasses and to his people ; but they would not regard : Wherefore the Lord brought upon them the Captains of the Host of the King of Ashur , that took Manasses , and put him in fetters , and brought him in chains , and carried him to Babel , 2 Chron. 33. 10 , 11. Fools , saith holy David , by reason of their transgression , and because of their iniquity , Psal. 107. 17. From which words , Musculus infers , that all wilfull transgressors are arrant fools . And it is the saying of Cardan : That dishonesty is nothing else but folly and madnesse . Yea , Solomon throughout all his Proverbs , by a fool , means the natural man ; and by a wise man , a man sanctified . O that it were rightly learned , and laid to heart by all , that are yet in the state of un-regeneracy ! for it is every one of their cases . To conclude in a word , Without knowledge , the soul is not good , Prov. 19. 2. The ignorant cannot be innocent . I am the light of the world ( sayes our Saviour ) John 8. 12. & 12. 46. Where light is not , Christ is not : for Christ is light . § 59. And so according to my skill , I have performed what I at first promised . It remains before we leave it , that some use be made thereof , that so both wise and weak , may learn something from what hath been spoken of this subject . Wherefore , in the first place , If it be so , that both the sensual and rational , even all that are yet in their natural estate , are uncapable of divine , and super-natural knowledge , that they are blinde touching spiritual things . Then let not any carnal wretch hereafter dare to speak evill of the things , actions , or persons , that are out of the reach of his capacity , but silently suspend his judgement , untill he be better informed : For as it pertaineth not to the Rustick , to jugde of letters : So it belongeth not to natural men to judg of spiritual things . Yea , let those ignorant ones , that have used to speak evill of the way of truth , learn to kick no more against the pricks , lest they bring upon themselves the same curse , that their fellows did , who brought up an evill report of the Holy Land , Num. 13. 32 , 33. & 14. 23 , 24. Yea , put case they shall think they do God good service in it , as many do in persecuting , and putting to death his children and Ambassadors , John 16. 2. as a world of examples witnesse . Yea , the Jews thought they did marvellous well , in crucifying the Lord of life . But what says the holy Ghost , Prov. 14. There is a way that seemeth right unto a man : but the end thereof are the ways of death , vers. 12. Even the Powder-traytors thought they merited , when they intended to blow up the whole State . Alass , Natural men are no more fit to judge of spiritual matters , then blinde men are fit to judge of colours . And yet none more forward then they ; as you may see by those blinde Sodomites , that dealt so roughly and coursely with Lot and his two Angel● , Gen. 19. 1. to 12. That they are ignorant , and so unfit , is evident of what is recorded of Michol , 2 Sam. 6. 16. Of Nichodemus , John 3. 4. Of Festus , Acts 26. 24. And lastly , of Paul before his conversion . I was , saith he , a blasphemer , a persecutor , and an opposer of Christ and his members ; but I did it ignorantly through unbelief , 1 Tim. 1. 13. It 's worth your observing too , that he was no sooner enlightned with the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ , but he was of a contrary judgement , and preached that faith which before he condemned and persecuted . And this will be every one of their cases , in the end ; if not in this life , yet hereafter , when Hell flames hath opened their eyes , they will confesse . We fools thought his life madnesse , and his end to be without honour : How is he now numbred with the children of God , and his lot among the Saints ? And when they shall see it , they shall be troubled with horrible fear , and shall be amazed at the strangeness of his salvation , so far beyond all that they looked for : and groaning for anguish of spirit , shall say within themselves , This is he whom we once had in derision , and in a proverb of reproach , therefore have we erred from the way of truth , we wearied our selves in the way of wickedness and destruction : but as for the way of the Lord , we have not known it . The light of righteousness hath not shined unto us , nor hath the Son of righteousness arose upon us . What hath pride profited us ? or what good hath our riches and our vaunting brought us ? with more of the like , for which read , Wisdom 5. And what is the cause they acknowledg not the same now , but their blindness and folly ? and because they put their own faults in that part of the wallet that is behind them ; but ours in the other part , or end which is before them : For self-examination would make their judgements more charitable . Read al●o these Testimonies , John 15. 21. & 16. 2 , 3. Mat. 16. 23. & 22. 29. 1 Cor. 2. 8. Isa. 5. 20. But I will give you other instances . Was it not an a gu●●nt that Haman was blinde ? who thought Mordecaies not bowing the knee to hi● , a more heinous offence , then his own murthering of thousands ? Were not the Jews , Scribes & Pharisees blind , who could see more unlawfulness in the Disciples plucking a few ears of Corn on the sabbath-day ? and the Palsie man's carrying his bed ; then in their own devouring of Widows houses ? who thought they might better murther Christ , then others believe in him ? and be themselves the greatest of sinners , then our Saviour to be in company with sinners ? Was not Ahab blinde ? who thought Elijah more troubled Israel , in doing the will of the Lord , then himself in provoking the Lord above all the Kings of Israel that were before him . And the like in our dayes . Is it not the manner of thousands with us ? not only of Clownes , and ill-bred people , who walk after the flesh , in the lusts of uncleanness ( whom St. Peter cals bruit beasts , led with sensuality , and made to be taken and destroyed . ) But of proud wits , who one would think should have more brains , and know something , to speak evill of the things which they understand not , 2 Pet. 2. 12. Yea , how severely will they censure , not only things indifferent , but the most holy and approved good duties in the godly ? while they will patiently passe by the most heynous crimes , as cursing , blaspheming , &c. in themselves and others ; an infallible signe of a man not born a-new . Yea , will they not more deeply censure our serving of God , then their own blaspheming of him ? and think it a more heynous offence in us to be holy , then for themselves to be prophane , and persecute holinesse . And what one does , is a law to the rest , being like a flock of sheep ; which if they but see one take a wrong way , all the rest will follow . As you may see in the Example of Corah , and his two hundred and fifty followers , in Demetrius and his fellows , in their quarrel against Paul and his companions . And lastly , in Lots neighbours , Gen. 19. where you shall read , that when some Godlesse persons had assaulted him , and his two Angels ; before night , all the men of the City , from the young even to the old , from all quarters compassed the house round , seeking to break it open , railing upon , and reviling him . Yea , though they were strook with blindnesse , they would not leave off , untill they had wearied themselves , and felt fire and brimstone about their cars , vers. 4 to 2 5. Natural men in heavenly things , resemble Shel-fish , that have no smell : Or the Cam●lion that hath no taste . Nor do they see any more , then the meer barke or out-side●f spiritual performances , 2 Sam. 6. 16. And the Flesh ( Satans ready instrument ) will be ever suggesting to them strange surmises , touching what the Religious either say , or do . And still , the more sottish , the more censorious : For where is least brain , there is most tongue , and loudest . Even as a Brewers Cart upon the stones , makes the lowdest noise , when his barrels are emptiest . They that knowleast , will censure most , and most deeply . It is from the weakest judgements , that the heaviest judgement comes . And so the more censorious , the more sottish , seem they never so wise in the worlds account : For admit the●have a shew of wisdome ; yet for matter of Religion and saving knowledge , they know not their right hand from their left ; as it fared with those sixscore thousand Ninevites , Ionas 4. 11. So that it 's no disparagement to us , seem they never so learned : As what but their ignorance makes them so censure us . They suspect much , because they know little ; as children in the darke , suppose they see what they see not . Yea , a Dogge will be very violent in barking at his own shadow on a wall , or face in a glasse . The Duke of Von●osme seeing his own and others faces in a well , call'd for ayd against the Antipodes . Paglarencis thought himselfe cozened , when he saw his sow had eleven Pigs , and his Mare but one Foale that would be confest . So that they are like Harpast , a blinde woman in Seneca's family , who found fault with the darknesse of the house when the fault was in her want of sight . Or the Owle , that complained of the glory of the Sunne , when the fault was in her own eyes . Or like Pentheus , in Euripides his Bacchus , who supposed he saw two Sunnes , two Thebes , every thing double : when his brain alone was troubled . Or those that are vertiginous , who thinke all things turn round , all e●re : when the errour is onely in their own brains . And so much for caution to the one . § 60. Secondly , for comfort to the other ; If all natural men are ( like Sampson without his guide , ) not able without the Holy Ghosts direction , to finde out the Pillars of the house , the principles of faith : let us not wonder , that they swerve so much from the godly in their judgement , and practice : As is it any strange thing to see a blinde man stumble and fall ? Neither let us be discouraged , maugre all their slander & opposition . Nor think the worse of our selves , if such shall reproach us never so : The Corinthians exceedingly slighted Paul , he was this , and he was that ; But what says Paul ? With me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you , 1 Cor. 4. 3 , 4. VVe know little children will often laugh at wise men , when they are about serious and necessary affairs : which notwithstanding is not an argument of the unworthiness of the things they laugh at , but of the folly of them which laugh . Will the Merchant be discouraged because his wine pleaseth not a sicke mans palate ? Much lesse cause have we to be discouraged by their distaste , or dislike of us and our actions , as having more certainty to rely upon ; they perhaps have sense , reason , and experience to rely upon , but we have them with the advantage of Gods Word , and Spirit , and Faith , three infallible witnesses . Yea , we have great cause to rejoyce , that they revile , and speak evil of us . For his is both a token of perdition to them , and to us of salvation , and that of God , as the Apostle phraseth it , Phil. 1. 28. True , they may raise any slander upon the best of us , as the Chief Priests did upon our Saviour , Math. 28. 13 , 14. and that slander may be believed time out of minde , ( as the Jewes to this day believe that his Disciples stole him cut of the Sepulchre ) Matth. 28. 15. to the hardning of many in their Atheism , and Unbelief : For what should hinder ? When Naboth was proved to be a blasphemer of God , and Susanna a whore upon oath ; and the same recorded to posterity ; when Ieremiah was reported to be an enemy to the State ? Paul a polluter of the Temple ? Steven a destroyer of the Law ? All the Disciples deceivers , and Christ himselfe a wine-bibber , a Sabbath-breaker , a seducer of the people , a Belzebub , &c. So we may perhaps under-goe the like , in one kind or other ( as the Devils servants , want neither wit nor malice to devise ; ) But what need it trouble us , so long as it shall add waight to our Crowns ? For if we any way suffer for Christ , be it but rebuke for his sake , happy are we here , and great shall our reward be in heaven , Mat. 5. 11 , 12. VVherefore let us never be ashamed of our Masters service , nor of their censures : No matter what Judas saith touching Maries ointment , so long as Christ approves of it . Did our Saviour Christ forbear to heal on the Sabbath day , because the Scribes and Pharisees took it ●ll ? no , but rather did it the more , Luke 6. 7. to 12. and Luke 13. 31 , 32. VVhen Peter and John were charged to speak no more in the name of Jesus ; their answer was , We cannot but speak that which we have heard and seen , Acts 4. 20. VVhen Michol scoft David , and called him fool for his dancing before the Arke , His answer was , I will be yet more vile , and more lowly in mine own eyes . He knew that nothing could be more heroical , then this very abasement . And it is our very case . Every scoffing Michol , ( for none else will do it ) every drunken sot , derides our holy profession : but with God and the gracious , we shall be had in honour . Yea , our very malicious , and scoffing adversaries shall honour us , by deriding us . Their dispraise is a mans honour , their praise his dishonour . VVherefore let us imitate St. Austin ; who as he feared the praise of good men , so he detested that of evill , and ungodly men . And take our Saviours counsel ; seek to justifie our judgements , to the children of wisdome , of whom she is justified ; and not to fools , by whom she is daily crucified . Neither let any think the better of such whom they extoll ; for the blinde eat many a flie . § 61. Thirdly , are the one regenerate , the other carnall ? the one of this world , the other chosen out of it ? the one children of light , and of the day , the other blinde and in darknesse ? the one Christs friends , the other his enemies ? do the one live after the flesh , the other after the spirit , Gal. 5. 15. 1 Pet. 4. 2. Then look we for no love from , or peace with them : Different dispositions can never agree . There can be no amity , where there is no sympathy . Athens and Sparta could never agree , for that the one was addicted to serve Minerva , the other Mars . Yea , when it was said of Phocian and Demosthenes , that they could never agree ; it was answered , No , how should they ? when the one drinks water , and the other wine . Much more may it be applyed to these , when the holy Ghost sayes , 2 Cor. 6. What communion between light and darknesse ? what peace between the Believer and the Infidel ? or unbeliever , vers. 14 , 15. And in another place ; Know ye not , that the amity of the world , is the enmity of God ? And that whosoever will be a friend of the world , maketh himselfe the enemy of God , Jam. 4. 4. And again , He that is borne after the flesh , will persecute him that is born after the Spirit , Gal. 4. 29. Yea , Solomon tels us directly , and in plain terms , That a wicked man is abomination to the just ; and that he who is upright in his way , is abomination to the wicked , Pro. 29. 27. Even our very ways which God hath commanded us to walke in , are abomination to them . VVhence it is , that the Naturall man can agree with all that be naturall ; be they civill , or prophane , Turkes , or Jewes , Papists or Atheists , because all these agree with him in blindnesse , and darknesse : But with a sincere , and holy Christian , a practicer of piety , he can never agree , because his light is contrary to the natural mans darknesse ; Grace in the one , is a secret disgrace to the other . VVherefore to be without enemies , or to have such our friends , we may rather wish then hope ; yea , once to expect it , were an effect of frenzy , not of hope . Onely let not us by our offending God , or jarring amongst our selves , put weapons into their hands to wound us withal : and then we are sure to have Christ ( who is able enough to vindicate all our wrongs ) to assist us , and prevent our Enemies . § 62. Fourthly , If none be truly wise , but such as have pass'd the second birth ; and that this wisdome which makes us differ , cometh downe from the Father of lights ; and that we cannot have it , except God vouchsafe to give it us : it may teach us to be humble , Job 42. 6. And not like the Ape , that is proud of his Masters jacket : And thankefull , for Heavenly notions , grow not in us ; wee spin them not out of our own breasts . Nor was there any thing in us , that makes us differ : we slept nigh half our time in ignorance , and that wee ever awakened , it was onely Gods infinite goodnesse and free grace . VVhat cause have we then to blesse the giver ? And to become suiters to our Saviour in their behalf , who are not yet awake : That he will be pleased to open their eyes , and remove that vail which is laid over their hearts , in their hearing the Gospel , 2 Cor. 3. 14 , 15 , 16. And in the mean-time , let us condole their disastres , and drop some teares in pity and compassion for their great and grievous misery . Fifthly , and lastly , If with God one spark of spiritual , experimental , and saving knowledge , be of more worth then all humane wisdome and learning , then strive we after that knowledge that will make us for ever blessed . Let us so be learned , that we may be saved . Let us not in our hearing , reading , and communication , do as little children , that looke onely upon the babies in a Booke , without regard to the matter therein contained . But like men in yeares , have more respect to the pith , and solidity of the matter , then to the phrase ; and to the profit of our souls , then the pleasing of our senses . Yea , let us so minde what we either hear or read ; that if any vertue be commended , we practice it ; if any vice condemned , we avoid it ; if any consolation be insinuated , we appropriate it ; if any good example be propounded , wee follow it . Yea , so minde wee what we hear , or read , as if it were spoke onely to each of us in particular ; which to do , is to be for ever happy . Good counsell for our young Gulls , who will hear no other Ministers but such as flatter sinne , and flout holinesse ; nor read other Books , then such as fill them with Pride , and Lust , and the Devil . So I have given you a good , and profitable Book , one faultlesse fault being born with . An answer that may satisfie such as shall make the Objection I expect , viz. about repetition , which I take to be a fault deserving thanks . If any shall finde themselves gainers by reading of this piece , let them also peruse the two fore-going parts , viz. The Hearts Index , and A short and sure way to Grace and salvation , as treating upon the most needful subjects for a natural mans conversion , that I could think of : The which being small things , are sold onely by James Crump , in Little Bartholomews , wel-yard ; And by Henry Cripps , in Popes-head Alley . ERRATA . Not to mention all the litterall mistakes , and points misplaced ; there is one fault in the Title page so grosse , ( though it past the view , both of Transcriber , Composer , Corrector , and Authour , without being discerned : ) that it would be mended with a pen , and of Floreligus , made Florilegus . FINIS .