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"Abra

liever, rather than my own purblind reason. ham, not being weak in faith, considered not his own body, now dead." Rom. iv. 19. If sense should have had the hearing of that business; yea, if that holy man had put it to a reference between sense and reason also, what resolution his thoughts should come to concerning this strange message that was brought him, he would have been in danger of calling the truth of it in question, though God himself was the messenger; but faith brought him honourably off.

Again, Is it conscience that the temper assaults?—and it is not seldom that he is shooting his fiery darts of horror and terror at this mark-faith receives the shock, and saves the creature harmless. "I had fainted, unless I had believed," (saith David) Psal. xxvii. 13. He means when false witnesses rose up against him, and such as breathed out cruelty, as appears verse 12. faith was his best fence against man's charge, and so it is against Satan's and conscience's also. Never was man in a sadder condition than the poor jailor, Acts xvi. much ado he had to keep his own hands from offering violence to himself; who that had seen him fall trembling at Paul and Silas' feet, with that sad question in his mouth, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" ver. 30. could have thought this deep wound, that was now given his conscience, would so soon have been closed and cured? as we find it, ver. 34. The earthquake of horror, that did so dreadfully shake his conscience, is gone, and his trembling turned into rejoicing; now mark, what made this blessed calm. "Believe (saith Paul) on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved, "verse 31. and verse 34. it is said, he "rejoiced, believing in God with his whole house." It is faith stills the storm which sin had raised; faith that changed his doleful note into joy and gladness. Happy man he was, that had such skilful surgeons so near him, who could direct him the nearest way to a cure!

Again, Is it the will that the temptation is laid to catch? Some commands of God cannot be obeyed without much self-denial, because they cross us in that which our own wills are carried forth very strongly to desire; so that we must deny our will before we can do the will of God.

Now a temptation comes very forcibly, when it runs. with the tide of our own wills. What! saith Satan, wilt thou serve a God that thus thwarts thee in every thing? If thou lovest any thing more than another, presently he must have that from thee: no lamb in all the flock will serve for a sacrifice; but Isaac, Abraham's only child, he must be offered up. No place will content God that Abraham should serve him in, but where he must live in banishment from his dear relations and acquaintance. Wilt thou, saith Satan, yield to such hard terms as these? Now faith is the grace that doth the soul admirable service at such a pinch as this: it is able to appease the tumult, which such a temptation may raise in the soul, and dismiss the rout of all mutinous thoughts, yea to keep the king of Heaven's peace so sweetly in the Christian's bosom, that such a temptation, if it comes, shall find few or none to declare for it. "By faith (it is said) Abraham obeyed, and went out, not knowing whither." Heb. xi. 8. And we do not read of one fond look that his heart cast back upon his dear native country, as he went from it, so well pleased had faith made him with his journey. It was hard work for Moses to strip himself of the magistrate's robes, and put his hands on his servant's head hard to leave another to enter upon his labours, and reap the honour of lodging the Israelites' colours in Canaan, after it had cost him so many weary steps to bring them within sight of it; yet faith made him willing. He saw better robes, that he should put on in Heaven, than those he was called to put off on earth. The lowest place in glory is beyond all compare greater preferment than the highest place of honour here below; to stand before the throne there, and minister to God in immediate service, than to sit on a throne on earth, and have all the world waiting at his foot.

Secondly, The shield doth not only defend the whole body, but is a defence to the soldier's armour also. It keeps the arrow from the helmet as well as head, from the breast and breast-plate also. Thus faith is armour upon armour, a grace that preserves all the other graces. But of this more hereafter.

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SECT. IV.

Quest. 4. What doth this "above all" import?

Answ. There is variety among interpreters about it. Jerome reads it, in omnibus, sumentes scutum fidei; in all things taking the shield of faith, i. e. in all duties, enterprises, temptations, or afflictions; whatever you are called to do or suffer, take faith. Indeed faith to the Christian is like fire to the chymist; nothing can be done without it Christianly. "Without faith it is impossible to please God." Heb. xi. 6. And how can the Christian please himself in that wherein he doth not please his God? Others read it, "over all take the shield of faith," i. e. take it over all your graces, as that which will cover them. All other graces have their safety from faith; they lie secure under the shadow of faith, as an army lies safe under the protection and command of a strong castle planted round with cannon. But we shall follow our translation, as being most comprehensive, and that which will take these within its compass. "Above all take," &c. that is, among all the pieces of armour which you are to provide and wear for your defence, let this have the pre-eminence of your care to get, and having got, to keep it. Now, that the Apostle meant to give a pre-eminency to faith above the other graces, appears, First, by the piece of armour he compares it to, the shield, which of old was prized above all other pieces by soldiers. They counted it greater shame to lose their shield than to lose the field; and therefore, when under the very foot of their enemy, they would not part with it, but esteemed it an honour to die with their shield in their hand. It was the charge that one laid upon her son, going into the wars, when she gave him a shield, that he should either bring his shield home with him, or he be brought home upon his shield; she had rather see him dead with it, than come home alive without it. Secondly, by the noble effect which is here ascribed to faith: "By which ye shall quench all the fiery darts of the wicked." The other pieces are nakedly commended; take the girdle of truth, breast-plate of righteousness, and so the rest, but nothing singly as

cribed to any of them what they can do; but when he speaks of faith, he ascribes the whole victory to it. This quencheth all the fiery darts of the wicked. And why thus? Are the other graces of no use, and doth faith do all? What need then the Christian load himself with more than this one piece? I answer, Every piece hath its necessary use in the Christian's warfare, not any one part of the whole suit can be spared in the day of battle, but the reason (I humbly conceive) why no particular effect is annexed severally to each of these, but all ascribed to faith, is to let us know, that all these graces, their efficacy, and our benefit from them, is in their conjunction with faith, and influence they receive from faith; so that this is plainly the design of the Spirit of God to give faith the precedency in our care above the rest; only take heed that you do not fancy any indifferency or negligence to be allowed you in your endeavours after the other graces, because you are more strongly provoked and excited up to the getting and keeping this. The Apostle would intend your care here, but not remit it there; cannot we bid a soldier above all parts of his body to beware of a wound at his heart, but he must needs think presently he need take no care to guard his head? truly such a one would deserve a cracked crown to cure him of his folly. The words thus opened, we shall content ourselves with one general observation from them, and it is this.

CHAP. II.

SHEWETH THE PRE-EMINENCE OF FAITH ABOVE OTHER GRACES, IN FOUR PARTICULARS.

DOCT. That faith of all graces is the chief, and chiefly to be laboured for. There is a precedency or pre-eminence peculiar to this above all other. It is among graces, as the sun is among the planets; or as Solomon's virtuous women among the daughters, Prov. xxxi. 29.

Though every grace hath done virtuously, yet thou, O faith, excellest them all. The Apostle indeed gives the precedency to love, and sets faith on the lower hand, 1 Cor. xiii. 13. "Now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three, but the greatest is charity;" yet you may observe that this prelation of it before faith hath a particular respect to the saint's blissful state in heaven, where love remains, and faith ceaseth; in which regard, love indeed is the greater, because it is the end of our faith: we apprehend by faith, that we may enjoy by love; but if we consider the Christian's present state, while militant on earth, in this respect love must give place to faith. It is true, love is the grace that shall triumph in heaven; but it is faith, not love, which is the conquering grace on earth: "This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith." 1 John v. 4. Love indeed hath its place in the battle, and doth excellent service, but it is under faith its leader, Gal. v. 6. "faith which worketh by love:" even as the captain fighteth by his soldiers, whom he leads on, so faith works by love, which it excites. Love (it is true) is the grace that at last possesseth the inheritance, but it is faith that gives the Christian a right unto it, without which he should never have enjoyed it. John i. 12. "To as many as received him, he gave power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name." In a word, it is love that unites God and glorified saints together in heaven; but it was faith that first united them to Christ, while they were on earth, Eph. iii. 17. "that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith." And if Christ had not dwelt in them by faith on earth, they should never have dwelt with God in heaven. But I proceed to shew wherein it appears that faith hath such a prelation above other graces; which take in these following particulars.

SECT. I.

First, In the great enquiry that God makes after faith above all other graces. Nothing more speaks our esteem of persons or things than our enquiry after them. We ask first and most for those that stand highest in our

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