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<description>"Watch and pray, that ye enter not into 
temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak" (Matt. 
26:41). These words, which Jesus spoke to his disciples in the garden of 
Gethsemane, serve as the foundation for John Owen's treatise <i>Of 
Temptation</i>. Owen preached on the subject of temptation frequently 
during 
his many years of service as the dean and vice chancellor of Christ 
Church in Oxford--<i>Of Temptation</i> is the culmination of his 
discourses 
on 
the subject. In his treatise, Owen addresses the nature and power of 
temptation, the risk of entering into it, and the means of avoiding its 
danger. Owen defines temptation as anything with the ability to entice 
the Christian's mind or heart away from obedience to God and redirect it 
towards sin. Owen warns us that our power is not strong enough to 
protect us from temptation; rather, it is by God's power of preservation 
that we are saved. As Christians, we can guard ourselves against 
temptation in part by praying for God's power to help us resist it. His 
treatise teaches Christians how to recognize the threat of temptation 
and protect themselves against it.<br /><br />Emmalon 
Davis<br />CCEL Staff Writer</description>
<pubHistory>First edition 1658.  The Works of John Owen, edited by William
H Goold, first published by Johnstone and Hunter 1850–1853.  Reprinted by
photolithography and published by the Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh
1965.</pubHistory>
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<published>The Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh, 1967.</published>
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<DC.Title>Of Temptation</DC.Title>
<DC.Creator sub="Author">John Owen</DC.Creator>
<DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Owen, John
(1616-1683)</DC.Creator>
<DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">John Owen</DC.Creator>
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<DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal
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<DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Doctrinal theology</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh2">Creation</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Classic;</DC.Subject>
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<div1 type="Work" title="Of Temptation: the Nature and Power of it; the Danger of Entering into it; and the Means of Preventing that Danger" shorttitle="Of Temptation" progress="0.67%" prev="toc" next="i.i" id="i">

<div2 type="Titlepage" title="Title page." shorttitle="Title Page" progress="0.68%" prev="i" next="i.ii" id="i.i">
<pb n="87" id="i.i-Page_87" />

<p class="h1" id="i.i-p1"><span style="text-transform:uppercase" id="i.i-p1.1">Of
Temptation:</span></p>

<p class="h2" id="i.i-p2"><span style="text-transform:uppercase" id="i.i-p2.1">the nature and power
of it; the danger of entering into it; and the means of preventing that
danger:</span></p>

<p class="h4" id="i.i-p3"><span style="text-transform:uppercase" id="i.i-p3.1">with</span></p>

<p class="h3" id="i.i-p4"><span style="text-transform:uppercase" id="i.i-p4.1">a resolution of sundry
cases thereunto belonging.</span></p>
<hr class="W30" />

<p style="text-align:center" class="Body" id="i.i-p5">“Because thou hast kept the word
of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which
shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.”—<scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.i-p5.1" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev. iii. 10</scripRef>.</p>
</div2>

<div2 type="Preface" title="Prefatory note." shorttitle="Prefatory Note" progress="0.88%" prev="i.i" next="i.iii" id="i.ii">
<pb n="88" id="i.ii-Page_88" />
<h1 id="i.ii-p0.1">Prefatory note.</h1>

<p class="Body" id="i.ii-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.ii-p1.1">This</span> small
work of Dr. Owen on “Temptation” appeared in 1658.  He had been urged to
publish it by the solicitations of friends to whose opinion he paid
deference.  The probability is, that they had already heard the substance
of it in discourses from the pulpit; and from an expression in the closing
exhortation (see p. 150), the discourses must have been delivered at
Oxford.  The motives of the author in committing it to the press are still
farther evinced in some allusions to the character of the times, which will
be found both in the preface and in the treatise itself.  The vigilant eye
of Owen detected certain mischievous effects accruing from the eminent
success which had attended hitherto the efforts of the party with whom he
acted.  The fear of a common danger had formerly kept them united in their
views and movements, while it lead them to depend upon the true source of
all strength and hope.  They were now sinking into those strifes and
divisions which paved the way for the restoration of monarchy; and Owen
speaks of “a visible declension from reformation seizing upon the
professing party of these nations.”  There is a tone of indignant and yet
pathetic faithfulness in his language, as he recurs to the subject of this
declension in the body of the treatise: “He that should see the prevailing
party of these nations, many of them in rule, power, and favour, with all
their adherents, and remember that they were a colony of Puritans, whose
habitation was a ‘low place,’ as the prophet speaks of the city of God,
translated by a high hand to the mountains they now possess, cannot but
wonder how soon they have forgot the customs, manners, ways, of their own
old people, and are cast into the mould of them that went before them in
the places whereunto they are translated.”  Owen may have feared the issue
of prevailing divisions, and anticipated the revival of the intolerant
system which the patriotism of the Long Parliament and the military genius
of Cromwell overthrew.  Under the impression than an hour of temptation had
come, and that the best security for religious principles was the
advancement of personal godliness, he published the following treatise.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ii-p2">Whatever motives incited him to the preparation of it, the
whole work, with the exception of a few paragraphs, might have been
written, with set purpose, for the people of God in every age.  In no work
is the sound judgment of our author more conspicuous.  He avoids all
fanciful speculations into the mysteries of satanic agency, such as were
too common on this theme.  He is too much in earnest that his readers
should be brought into a condition of safety against the wiles of the
devil, to break the force of his warnings and entreaties by ingenious
speculations and irrelevant learning.  Not merely in the warm appeals
interspersed with his expositions, but in the patient care with which no
nook of the heart is left unsearched, does the deep solicitude of Owen for
the spiritual welfare of his readers appear.  To one who reads the treatise
in the spirit with which the author wrote it,—simply that he may judge
his own heart, and know what temptation means, and be fully on his guard
against it,—the effect is far beyond what the mere wealth of fancy or the
arts of rhetoric could produce.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ii-p3">From the text, <scripRef passage="Matt. xxvi. 41" id="i.ii-p3.1" parsed="|Matt|26|41|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.41">Matt. xxvi.
41</scripRef>, the author considers in succession three topics educed from
it:—temptation, the means by which it prevails, and the way of preventing
it.  The most of the treatise is occupied with the last topic,—the means
of prevention.  It is subdivided into inquiries,—as to the evidence by
which a man may know that he has entered into temptation, the directions
requisite to prevent entering into it, and the seasons when temptation may
be apprehended.  The discussion of this last inquiry merges very much into
an illustration of the Christian duty of watchfulness, and the treatise is
closed by a general exhortation to this duty.  Slight defects in the
arrangement, the renewed discussion of a point after it had been quitted,
and the disproportionate space accorded to some parts of the subject, are
explained, perhaps by the circumstance that the treatise was originally a
series of discourses.—<span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.ii-p3.2">Ed</span>.</p>
</div2>

<div2 type="Preface" title="To the reader." shorttitle="To the Reader" progress="3.23%" prev="i.ii" next="i.iv" id="i.iii">
<pb n="89" id="i.iii-Page_89" />
<h1 id="i.iii-p0.1">To the reader.</h1>

<p class="Body" id="i.iii-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.iii-p1.1">Christian
Reader</span>,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iii-p2"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.iii-p2.1">If</span> thou art in
any measure awake in these days wherein we live, and hast taken notice of
the manifold, great, and various temptations wherewith all sorts of persons
that know the Lord and profess his name are beset, and whereunto they are
continually exposed, with what success those temptations have obtained, to
the unspeakable scandal of the gospel, with the wounding and ruin of
innumerable souls, I suppose thou wilt not inquire any farther after other
reasons of the publishing of the ensuing warnings and directions, being
suited to the times that pass over us, and thine own concernment in them.
This I shall only say to those who think meet to persist in any such
inquiry, that though my first engagement for the exposing of these
meditations unto public view did arise from the desires of some, whose
avouching the interest of Christ in the world by personal holiness and
constant adhering to every thing that is made precious by its relation to
him, have given them power over me to require at any time services of
greater importance; yet I dare not lay my doing of it so upon that account,
as in the least to intimate that, with respect to the general state of
things mentioned, I did not myself esteem it seasonable and necessary. The
variety of outward providences and dispensations wherewith I have myself
been exercised in this world, with the inward trials they have been
attended withal, added to the observation that I have had advantages to
make of the ways and walkings of others,—their beginnings, progresses,
and endings, their risings and falls, in profession and conversation, in
darkness and light,—have left such a constant sense and impression of the
power and danger of temptations upon my mind and spirit, that, without
other pleas and pretences, I cannot but own a serious call unto men to
beware, with a discovery of some of the most eminent ways and means of the
prevalency of present temptations, to have been, in my own judgement, in
this season needful.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iii-p3">But now, reader, if thou art amongst them, who takest no
notice of these things, or carest not for them,—who hast no sense of the
efficacy and dangers of temptations in thine own walking and profession,
nor hast observed the power of them upon others,—who discernest not the
manifold advantages that they have got in these days, wherein all things
are shaken, nor hast been troubled or moved for the sad successes they have
had amongst professors; but supposest that all things are well within doors
and without, and would be better couldst thou obtain fuller satisfaction to
some of thy lusts in the pleasures or profits of the world,—I desire thee
to know that I write not for thee, nor do esteem thee a fit reader or judge
of what is here written. Whilst all the issues of providential
dispensations, in reference to the public concernments of these nations,
are perplexed and entangled, the footsteps of God lying in the deep, where
his paths are not known; whilst, in particular, unparalleled distresses and
strange prosperities are measured out to men, yea, to professors; whilst a
spirit of error, giddiness, and delusion goes <pb n="90" id="i.iii-Page_90" />forth with such
strength and efficacy, as it seems to have received a commission to go and
prosper; whilst there are such divisions, strifes, emulations, attended
with such evil surmises, wrath, and revenge, found amongst brethren; whilst
the desperate issues and products of men’s temptations are seen daily in
partial and total apostasy, in the decay of love, the overthrow of faith,
our days being filled with fearful examples of backsliding, such as former
ages never knew; whilst there is a visible declension from reformation
seizing upon the professing party of these nations, both as to personal
holiness and zeal for the interest of Christ;—he that understands not
that there is an “hour of temptation” come upon the world, to “try them
that dwell upon the earth,” is doubtless either himself at present
captivated under the power of some woful lust, corruption, or temptation,
or is indeed stark blind, and knows not at all what it is to serve God in
temptations. With such, then, I have not at present to do. For those who
have in general a sense of these things,—who also, in some measure are
able to consider that the plague is begun, that they may be farther
awakened to look about them, lest the infection have approached nearer to
them, by some secret and imperceptible ways, than they did apprehend; or
lest they should be surprised at unawares hereafter by any of those
temptations that in these days either waste at noon or else walk in
darkness,—is the ensuing warning intended. And for the sake of them that
mourn in secret for all the abominations that are found among and upon them
that profess the gospel, and who are under the conduct of the Captain of
their salvation, fighting and resisting the power of temptations, from what
spring soever they rise in themselves, are the ensuing directions proposed
to consideration.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iii-p4">That our faithful and merciful High Priest, who both
suffered and was tempted, and is on that account touched with the feeling
of our infirmities, would accompany this small discourse with seasonable
supplies of his Spirit and suitable mercy to them that shall consider it,
that it may be useful to his servants for the ends whereunto it is
designed, is the prayer of him who received this handful of seed from his
storehouse and treasure.</p>

<p style="text-align:right" class="Body" id="i.iii-p5"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.iii-p5.1">John Owen</span>.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="I" type="Chapter" title="Chapter I." shorttitle="Chapter I" progress="6.25%" prev="i.iii" next="i.v" id="i.iv">
<pb n="91" id="i.iv-Page_91" />
<h1 id="i.iv-p0.1">Chapter I.</h1>
<argument id="i.iv-p0.2">The words of the text, that are the foundation of the ensuing
discourse—The occasion of the words, with their dependence—The things
specially aimed at in them—Things considerable in the words as to the
general purpose in hand—Of the general nature of temptation, wherein it
consists—The special nature of temptation—Temptation taken actively and
passively—How God tempts any—His end in so doing—The way whereby he
doth it—Of temptation in its special nature; of the actions of it—The
true nature of temptation stated.</argument>
<argument id="i.iv-p0.3">“Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation.”—<scripRef passage="Matt. xxvi. 41" id="i.iv-p0.4" parsed="|Matt|26|41|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.41">Matt. xxvi. 41</scripRef></argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.iv-p1.1">These</span> words of
our Saviour are repeated with very little alteration in three evangelists;
only, whereas Matthew and Mark have recorded them as above written, Luke
reporteth them thus: “Rise and pray, lest ye enter into temptation;” so
that the whole of his caution seems to have been, “Arise, watch and pray,
that ye enter not into temptation.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p2">Solomon tells us of some that “lie down on the top of a
mast in the midst of the sea,” <scripRef passage="Prov. xxiii. 34" id="i.iv-p2.1" parsed="|Prov|23|34|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.23.34">Prov. xxiii.
34</scripRef>,—men overborne by security in the mouth of destruction. If
ever poor souls lay down on the top of a mast in the midst of the sea,
these disciples with our Saviour in the garden did so. Their Master, at a
little distance from them, was “offering up prayers and supplications, with
strong crying and tears,” <scripRef passage="Heb. v. 7" id="i.iv-p2.2" parsed="|Heb|5|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.7">Heb. v. 7</scripRef>, being
then taking into his hand and beginning to <note place="foot" anchored="yes" n="1" id="i.iv-p2.3"><p class="footnote" id="i.iv-p3"><scripRef passage="Heb. ii. 9" id="i.iv-p3.1" parsed="|Heb|2|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.9">Heb. ii. 9</scripRef>;
<scripRef passage="Gal. iii. 13" id="i.iv-p3.2" parsed="|Gal|3|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.3.13">Gal. iii. 13</scripRef>; <scripRef passage="2 Cor. v. 21" id="i.iv-p3.3" parsed="|2Cor|5|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.21">2 Cor. v.
21</scripRef>.</p></note>taste that cup that was filled with the curse and
wrath due to their sins;—the Jews, armed for <i>his</i> and <i>their</i>
destruction, being but a little more distant from them, on the other hand.
Our Saviour had a little before informed them that that night he should be
betrayed, and be delivered up to be slain; they saw that he was “sorrowful,
and very heavy,” <scripRef passage="Matt. xxvi. 37" id="i.iv-p3.4" parsed="|Matt|26|37|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.37">Matt. xxvi.
37</scripRef>; nay, he told them plainly that his “soul was exceeding
sorrowful, even unto death,” <scripRef passage="verse 38" id="i.iv-p3.5">verse 38</scripRef>,
and therefore <pb n="92" id="i.iv-Page_92" />entreated them to tarry and watch with him, now
he was dying, and that for them. In this condition, leaving them but a
little space, like men forsaken of all love towards him or care of
themselves, they fall fast asleep! Even the best of saints, being left to
themselves, will quickly appear to be less than men,—to be nothing. All
our own strength is weakness, and all our wisdom folly. Peter being one of
them,—who but a little before had with so much self-confidence affirmed
that though all men forsook him, yet he never would so do,—our Saviour
expostulates the matter in particular with him: <scripRef passage="verse 40" id="i.iv-p3.6">verse
40</scripRef>, “He saith unto Peter, Could you not watch with me one hour?”
as if he should have said, “Art thou he, Peter, who but now boastedst of
thy resolution never to forsake me? Is it likely that thou shouldst hold
out therein, when thou canst not watch with me one hour? Is this thy dying
for me, to be dead in security, when I am dying for thee?” And indeed it
would be an amazing thing to consider that Peter should make so high a
promise, and be immediately so careless and remiss in the pursuit of it,
but that we find the root of the same treachery abiding and working in our
own hearts, and do see the fruit of it brought forth every day, the most
noble engagements unto obedience quickly ending in deplorable negligence,
<scripRef passage="Rom. vii. 18" id="i.iv-p3.7" parsed="|Rom|7|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.7.18">Rom. vii. 18</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p4">In this estate our Saviour admonishes them of their
condition, their weakness, their danger, and stirs them up to a prevention
of that ruin which lay at the door: saith he, “Arise, watch and pray.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p5">I shall not insist on the particular aimed at here by our
Saviour, in this caution to them that were then present with him; the great
temptation that was coming on them, from the scandal of the cross, was
doubtless in his eye;—but I shall consider the words as containing a
general direction to all the disciples of Christ, in their following of him
throughout all generations.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p6">There are three things in the words:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p7">I. The <i>evil</i> cautioned against,—<i>temptation</i>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p8">II. The <i>means</i> of its prevalency,—by our
<i>entering into it</i>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p9">III. The <i>way</i> of preventing it,—<i>watch and
pray</i>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p10">It is not in my thoughts to handle the common-place of
temptations, but only the danger of them in general, with the means of
preventing that danger; yet, that we may know what we affirm, and whereof
we speak, some concernments of the general nature of temptation may be
premised.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p11">I. First, For the <i>general</i> nature of tempting and
temptation, it lies among things indifferent; to try, to experiment, to
prove, to pierce a vessel, that the liquor that is in it may be known, is
as much as is signified by it. Hence God is said sometime to tempt; and we
are commanded as our duty to tempt, or try, or search ourselves, to know
what is in us, and to pray that God would do so also. So temptation <pb n="93" id="i.iv-Page_93" />is like a knife, that may either cut the meat or the throat of a
man; it may be his food or his poison, his exercise or his destruction.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p12">Secondly, Temptation in its <i>special</i> nature, as it
denotes any evil, is considered either actively, as it <i>leads</i> to
evil, or passively, as it <i>hath</i> an evil and suffering in it: so
temptation is taken for affliction, <scripRef passage="James i. 2" id="i.iv-p12.1" parsed="|Jas|1|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.2">James i. 2</scripRef>; for in
that sense, we are to “count it all joy when we fall into temptation;” in
the other, that we “enter not into it.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p13">Again, actively considered, it either denotes in the
tempter a design for the bringing about of the special end of temptation,
namely, <i>a leading into evil</i>; so it is said, that “God tempts no
man,” <scripRef passage="James i. 13" id="i.iv-p13.1" parsed="|Jas|1|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.13">James i. 13</scripRef>, with a design for sin as
such;—or the general nature and end of temptation, which is trial; so
“God tempted Abraham,” <scripRef passage="Gen. xxii. 1" id="i.iv-p13.2" parsed="|Gen|22|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22.1">Gen. xxii. 1</scripRef>.
And he proveth or tempteth by false prophets, <scripRef passage="Deut. xiii. 3" id="i.iv-p13.3" parsed="|Deut|13|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.3">Deut. xiii.
3</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p14">Now, as to God’s tempting of any, two things are to be
considered:—1. The end why he doth it; 2. The way whereby he doth it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p15">For the first, his general ends are two:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p16">(1.) He doth it to <i>show</i> unto man what is in him,—that is, the man himself; and that either as to his grace or to his
corruption. (I speak not now of it as it may have a place and bear a part
in judiciary obduration.) Grace and corruption lie deep in the heart; men
oftentimes deceive themselves in the search after the one or the other of
them. When we give vent to the soul, to try what grace is there, corruption
comes out; and when we search for corruption, grace appears. So is the soul
kept in uncertainty; we fail in our trials. God comes with a gauge that
goes to the bottom. He sends his instruments of trial into the bowels and
the inmost parts of the soul, and lets man see what is in him, of what
metal he is constituted. Thus he tempted Abraham to show him his
<i>faith</i>. Abraham knew not what faith he had (I mean, what power and
vigour was in his faith) until God drew it out by that great trial and
temptation.<note place="foot" anchored="yes" n="2" id="i.iv-p16.1"><p class="footnote" id="i.iv-p17"><scripRef passage="Gen. xxii. 1, 2" id="i.iv-p17.1" parsed="|Gen|22|1|22|2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22.1-Gen.22.2">Gen. xxii. 1, 2</scripRef>.</p></note> When God
says he knew it, he made Abraham to know it. So he tried Hezekiah to
discover his <i>pride</i>; God left him that he might see what was in his
heart, <scripRef passage="2 Chron. xxxii. 31" id="i.iv-p17.2" parsed="|2Chr|32|31|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.32.31">2 Chron. xxxii. 31</scripRef>. He knew not that he
had such a proud heart, so apt to be lifted up, as he appeared to have,
until God tried him, and so let out his filth, and poured it out before his
face. The issues of such discoveries to the saints, in thankfulness,
humiliation, and treasuring up of experiences, I shall not treat of.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p18">(2.) God doth it to <i>show himself</i> unto man, and that,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p19">[1.] In a way of <i>preventing grace</i>. A man shall see
that it is God alone who keeps from all sin. Until we are tempted, we think
we live on our own strength. Though all men do this or that, we will not.
When the trial comes, we quickly see whence is our preservation, <pb n="94" id="i.iv-Page_94" />by standing or falling. So was it in the case of Abimelech,
<scripRef passage="Gen. xx. 6" id="i.iv-p19.1" parsed="|Gen|20|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.20.6">Gen. xx. 6</scripRef>, “I withheld thee.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p20">[2.] In a way of <i>renewing grace</i>. He would have the
temptation continue with St Paul, that he might reveal himself to him in
the sufficiency of his renewing grace, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. xii. 9" id="i.iv-p20.1" parsed="|2Cor|12|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.9">2 Cor. xii. 9</scripRef>.
We know not the power and strength that God puts forth in our behalf, nor
what is the sufficiency of his grace, until, comparing the temptation with
our own weakness, it appears unto us. The efficacy of an antidote is found
when poison hath been taken; and the preciousness of medicines is made
known by diseases. We shall never know what strength there is in grace if
we know not what strength there is in temptation. We must be tried, that we
may be made sensible of being preserved. And many other good and gracious
ends he hath, which he accomplisheth towards his saints by his trials and
temptations, not now to be insisted on.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p21">2. For the ways whereby God accomplisheth this his search,
trial or temptation, these are some of them:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p22">(1.) He puts men on <i>great duties</i>, such as they
cannot apprehend that they have any strength for, nor indeed have. So he
tempted Abraham by calling him to that duty of <i>sacrificing his son</i>;—a thing absurd to reason, bitter to nature, and grievous to him on all
accounts whatever. Many men know not what is in them, or rather what is
ready for them, until they are put upon what seems utterly above their
strength; indeed, upon what is really above their strength. The duties that
God, in an ordinary way, requires at our hands are not proportioned to what
strength we have in ourselves, but to what help and relief is laid up for
us in Christ; and we are to address ourselves to the greatest performances
with a settled persuasion that we have not ability for the least. This is
the law of grace; but yet, when any duty is required that is extraordinary,
that is a secret not often discovered. In the yoke of Christ it is a trial,
a temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p23">(2.) By putting them upon <i>great sufferings</i>. How many
have unexpectedly found strength to die at a stake, to endure tortures for
Christ! yet their call to it was a trial. This, Peter tells us, is one way
whereby we are brought into trying temptations, <scripRef passage="1 Pet. i. 6, 7" id="i.iv-p23.1" parsed="|1Pet|1|6|1|7" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.6-1Pet.1.7">1 Pet. i.
6, 7</scripRef>. Our temptations arise from the “fiery trial;” and yet the
end is but a trial of our faith.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p24">(3.) By his providential disposing of things so as that
<i>occasions</i> unto sin will be administered unto men, which is the case
mentioned, <scripRef passage="Deut. xiii. 3" id="i.iv-p24.1" parsed="|Deut|13|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.3">Deut. xiii. 3</scripRef>; and innumerable other
instances may be adjoined.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p25">Now, they are not properly the temptations of God, as
coming from him, with his end upon them, that are here intended; and
therefore I shall set these apart from our present consideration. It is,
then, <pb n="95" id="i.iv-Page_95" />temptation in its special nature, as it denotes an
<i>active efficiency towards sinning</i> (as it is managed with evil unto
evil) that I intend.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p26">In this sense temptation may proceed either singly from
Satan, or the world, or other men in the world, or from ourselves, or
jointly from all or some of them, in their several combinations:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p27">(1.) Satan tempts sometimes <i>singly</i> by himself,
without taking advantage from the world, the things or persons of it, or
ourselves. So he deals in his injection of evil and blasphemous thoughts of
God into the hearts of the saints; which is his own work alone, without any
advantage from the world or our own hearts: for nature will contribute
nothing thereunto, nor any thing that is in the world, nor any man of the
world; for none can conceive a God and conceive evil of him. Herein Satan
is alone in the <i>sin</i>, and shall be so in the <i>punishment</i>. These
fiery darts are prepared in the forge of his own malice, and shall, with
all their venom and poison, be turned into his own heart for ever.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p28">(2.) Sometimes he makes <i>use of the world</i>, and joins
forces against us, without any helps from within. So he tempted our
Saviour, by “showing him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of
them.”<note place="foot" anchored="yes" n="3" id="i.iv-p28.1"><p class="footnote" id="i.iv-p29"><scripRef passage="Matt. iv. 8" id="i.iv-p29.1" parsed="|Matt|4|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.4.8">Matt.
iv. 8</scripRef>.</p></note> And the variety of the assistances he finds
from the world, in persons and things which I must not insist on,—the
innumerable instruments and weapons he takes from thence of all sorts and
at all seasons,—are inexpressible.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p30">(3.) Sometimes he takes in <i>assistance from ourselves
also</i>. It is not with us as it was with Christ when Satan came to tempt
him. He declares that he “had nothing in him,” <scripRef passage="John xiv. 30" id="i.iv-p30.1" parsed="|John|14|30|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.30">John xiv.
30</scripRef>. It is otherwise with us: he hath, for the compassing of most
of his ends, a sure party within our own breasts, <scripRef passage="James i. 14, 15" id="i.iv-p30.2" parsed="|Jas|1|14|1|15" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.14-Jas.1.15">James
i. 14, 15</scripRef>. Thus he tempted Judas: he was at work <i>himself</i>;
he put it into his heart to betray Christ; <scripRef passage="Luke xxii. 3" id="i.iv-p30.3" parsed="|Luke|22|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.22.3">Luke xxii. 3</scripRef>,
“he entered into him” for that purpose. And he sets the <i>world</i> at
work, the things of it, providing for him “thirty pieces of silver”
(<scripRef passage="verse 5" id="i.iv-p30.4">verse 5</scripRef>, “They covenanted to give him
money”); and the <i>men of it</i>, even the priests and the Pharisees; and
calleth in the assistance of his <i>own corruption</i>,—he was covetous,
“a thief, and had the bag.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p31">I might also show how the world and our own corruptions do
act single by themselves, and jointly in conjunction with Satan and one
another, in this business of temptation. But the truth is, the principles,
ways, and means of temptations, the kinds, degrees, efficacy, and causes of
them, are so inexpressibly large and various; the circumstances of them,
from providence, natures, conditions, spiritual and natural, with the
particular cases thence arising, so innumerable and impossible to be
comprised within any bound or order, that to <pb n="96" id="i.iv-Page_96" />attempt the giving
an account of them would be to undertake that which would be endless. I
shall content myself to give a description of the general nature of that
which we are to watch against; which will make way for what I aim at.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p32">Temptation, then, in general, is <i>any thing, state, way,
or condition that, upon any account whatever, hath a force or efficacy to
seduce, to draw the mind and heart of a man from its obedience, which God
requires of him, into any sin, in any degree of it whatever</i>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p33">In particular, that is a temptation to any man which causes
or occasions him to sin, or in any thing to go off from his duty, either by
<i>bringing</i> evil into his heart, or <i>drawing</i> out that evil that
is in his heart, or any other way diverting him from communion with God,
and that constant, equal, universal obedience, in matter and manner, that
is required of him.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.iv-p34">For the clearing of this description I shall only observe,
that though temptation seems to be of a more active importance, and so to
denote only the power of seduction to sin itself, yet in the Scripture it
is commonly taken in a neuter sense, and denotes the matter of the
temptation or the thing whereby we are tempted. And this is a ground of the
description I have given of it. Be it what it will, that from any thing
whatever, within us or without us, hath advantage to hinder in duty, or to
provoke unto or in any way to occasion sin, that is a temptation, and so to
be looked on. Be it business, employment, course of life, company,
affections, nature, or corrupt design, relations, delights, name,
reputation, esteem, abilities, parts or excellencies of body or mind,
place, dignity, art,—so far as they further or occasion the promotion of
the ends before mentioned, they are all of them no less truly temptations
that the most violent solicitations of Satan or allurements of the world,
and that soul lies at the brink of ruin who discerns it not. And this will
be farther discovered in our process.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="II" type="Chapter" title="Chapter II." shorttitle="Chapter II" progress="14.54%" prev="i.iv" next="i.vi" id="i.v">
<h1 id="i.v-p0.1">Chapter II.</h1>
<argument id="i.v-p0.2">What it is to “enter into temptation”—Not barely being tempted—Not to be conquered by it—To fall into it—The force of that
expression—Things required unto entering into temptation—Satan or lust
more than ordinarily importunate—The soul’s entanglement—Seasons of
such entanglements discovered—Of the “hour of temptation,” <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.v-p0.3" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev.
iii. 10</scripRef>, what it is—How any temptation come to its hour—How
it may be known when it is so come—The means of prevention prescribed by
our Saviour—Of watching, and what is intended thereby—Of
prayer.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p1">II. <span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.v-p1.1">Having</span>
showed what temptation is, I come, secondly, to manifest what it is to
<i>enter</i> into temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p2"><pb n="97" id="i.v-Page_97" />1. This is not merely to <i>be tempted</i>. It
is impossible that we should be so freed from temptation as not to be at
all tempted. Whilst Satan continues in his power and malice, whilst the
world and lust are in being, we shall be tempted. “Christ,” says one, “was
made like unto us, that he might be tempted; and we are tempted that we may
be made like unto Christ.” Temptation in general is comprehensive of our
whole warfare; as our Saviour calls the time of his ministry the time of
his “temptations,” <scripRef passage="Luke xxii. 28" id="i.v-p2.1" parsed="|Luke|22|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.22.28">Luke xxii.
28</scripRef>. We have no promise that we shall not be tempted at all; nor
are to pray for an absolute freedom from temptations, because we have no
such promise of being heard therein. The direction we have for our prayers
is, “Lead us not into temptation,” <scripRef passage="Matt. vi. 13" id="i.v-p2.2" parsed="|Matt|6|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6.13">Matt. vi. 13</scripRef>;
it is “entering into temptation” that we are to pray against. We may be
tempted, yet not enter into temptation. So that,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p3">2. Something more is intended by this expression than the
<i>ordinary work</i> of Satan and our own lusts, which will be sure to
tempt us every day. There is something signal in this entering into
temptation, that is not the saints’ every day’s work. It is something that
befalls them peculiarly in reference to seduction unto sin, on one account
or other, by the way of allurement or affrightment.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p4">3. It is not <i>to be conquered</i> by a temptation, to
fall down under it, to commit the sin or evil that we are tempted to, or to
omit the duties that are opposed. A man may “enter into temptation,” and
yet not fall under temptation. God can make a way for a man to escape; when
he is in, he can break the snare, tread down Satan, and make the soul more
than a conqueror, though it have entered into temptation. Christ
<i>entered</i> into it, but was not in the least <i>foiled</i> by it. But,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p5">4. It is, as the apostle expresseth it, <scripRef passage="1 Tim. vi. 9" id="i.v-p5.1" parsed="|1Tim|6|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.6.9">1
Tim. vi. 9</scripRef>, <span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.v-p5.2">ἐμπίπτειν</span>,“to
fall into temptation,” as a man falls into a pit or deep place where are
gins or snares, wherewith he is entangled; the man is not presently killed
and destroyed, but he is entangled and detained,—he knows not how to get
free or be at liberty. So it is expressed again to the same purpose,
<scripRef passage="1 Cor. x. 13" id="i.v-p5.3" parsed="|1Cor|10|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.13">1 Cor. x. 13</scripRef>, “No temptation hath taken
you;” that is, to be taken by a temptation and to be tangled with it, held
in its cords, not finding at present a way to escape. Thence saith Peter,
<scripRef passage="2 Epist. ii. 9" id="i.v-p5.4">2 Epist. ii. 9</scripRef>, “The Lord knoweth how to
deliver the godly out of temptations.” They are entangled with them; God
knows how to deliver them out of them. When we suffer a temptation to enter
into us, then we “enter into temptation.” Whilst it knocks at the door we
are at liberty; but when any temptation comes in and parleys with the
heart, reasons with the mind, entices and allures the affections, be it a
long or a short time, do it thus insensibly and imperceptibly, or do the
soul take notice of it, we “enter into temptation.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p6"><pb n="98" id="i.v-Page_98" />So, then, unto our entering into temptation is
required,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p7">(1.) That by some <i>advantage</i>, or on some occasion,
Satan be more earnest than ordinary in his solicitations to sin, by
affrightments or allurements, by persecutions or seductions, by himself or
others; or that some lust or corruption, by his instigation and advantages
of outward objects, provoking, as in prosperity, or terrifying, as in
trouble, do tumultuate more than ordinary within us. There is a special
acting of the author and principles of temptation required thereunto.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p8">(2.) That the heart be so far entangled with it as to be
put to <i>dispute</i> and argue in its own defence, and yet not be wholly
able to eject or cast out the poison and leaven that hath been injected;
but is surprised, if it be never so little off its watch, into an
entanglement not easy to be avoided: so that the soul may cry, and pray,
and cry again, and yet not be delivered; as Paul “besought the Lord” thrice
for the departure of his temptation, and prevailed not. The entanglement
continues. And this usually falls out in one of these two seasons:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p9">[1.] When Satan, by the permission of God, for ends best
known to himself, hath got some <i>peculiar</i> advantage against the soul;
as in the case of Peter,—he sought to winnow him, and prevailed.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p10">[2.] When a man’s lusts and corruptions meet with
peculiarly provoking <i>objects</i> and occasions, through the condition of
life that a man is in, with the circumstances of it; as it was with David:
of both which afterward.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p11">In this state of things, a man is entered into temptation;
and this is called the “hour of temptation,” <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.v-p11.1" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev. iii.
10</scripRef>,—the season wherein it grows to a head: the discovery
whereof will give farther light into the present inquiry, about what it is
to “enter into temptation;” for when the hour of temptation is come upon
us, we are entered into it. Every great and pressing temptation hath its
hour, a season wherein it grows to a head, wherein it is most vigorous,
active, operative, and prevalent. It may be long in rising, it may be long
urging, more or less; but it hath a season wherein, from the conjunction of
other occurences, such as those mentioned, outward or inward, it hath a
dangerous hour; and then, for the most part, men enter into it. Hence that
very temptation, which at one time hath little or no power on a man,—he
can despise it, scorn the motions of it, easily resist it,—at another,
bears him away quite before it. It hath, from other circumstances and
occurrences, got new strength and efficacy, or the man is enervated and
weakened; the hour is come, he is entered into it, and it prevails. David
probably had temptations before, in his younger days, to adultery or
murder, as he had in the case of Nabal; but the hour of temptation was not
come, it had not got its advantages about it, and so he escaped until
afterward. Let men look for it that are <pb n="99" id="i.v-Page_99" />exposed unto
temptations, as who is not? They will have a season wherein their
solicitations will be more urgent, their reasonings more plausible,
pretences more glorious, hopes of recovery more appearing, opportunities
more broad and open, the doors of evil made more beautiful than ever they
have been. Blessed is he who is prepared for such a season; without which
there is no escaping. This, as I said, is the first thing required to
entering into temptation; if we stay here, we are safe.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p12">Before I descend to other particulars, having now entered
hereon, I shall show in general,—1<i>st</i>. How or by what means
commonly any temptation attains its <i>hour</i>; 2<i>dly</i>. How we may
know when any temptation is come to its high <i>noon</i>, and is in its
hour.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p13">1<i>st</i>. It doth the first by several ways:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p14">(1<i>st</i>.) By long <i>solicitations</i>, causing the
mind frequently to converse with the evil solicited unto, it begets
extenuating thoughts of it. If it makes this process, it is coming towards
it hour. It may be when first it began to press upon the soul, the soul was
amazed with the ugly appearance of what it aimed at, and cried, “Am I a
dog?” If this indignation be not daily heightened, but the soul, by
conversing with the evil, begins to grow, as it were, familiar with it, not
to be startled as formerly, but rather inclines to cry, “Is it not a little
one?” then the temptation is coming towards it high noon; lust hath then
enticed and entangled, and is ready to “conceive,” <scripRef passage="James i. 15" id="i.v-p14.1" parsed="|Jas|1|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.15">James i.
15</scripRef>: of which more at large afterward, in our inquiry how we may
know whether we are entered into temptation or no. Our present inquest is
after the hour and power of temptation itself.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p15">(2<i>dly</i>.) When it hath prevailed on <i>others</i>, and
the soul is not <i>filled with dislike</i> and abhorrency of them and their
ways, nor with pity and prayer for their deliverance. This proves an
advantage unto it, and raises it towards its height. When that temptation
sets upon any one which, at the same time, hath possessed and prevailed
with many, it hath so great and so many advantages thereby, that it is
surely growing towards its hour. Its prevailing with others is a means to
give it its hour against us. The falling off of Hymeneus and Philetus is
said to “overthrow the faith of some,” <scripRef passage="2 Tim. ii. 17-18" id="i.v-p15.1" parsed="|2Tim|2|17|2|18" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.17-2Tim.2.18">2 Tim. ii.
17–18</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p16">(3<i>dly</i>.) By <i>complicating</i> itself with many
considerations that, perhaps, are not absolutely evil. So did the
temptation of the Galatians to fall from the purity of the gospel,—freedom from persecution, union and consent with the Jews. Things in
themselves good were pleaded in it, and gave life to the temptation itself.
But I shall not now insist on the several advantages that any temptation
hath to heighten and greaten itself, to make itself prevalent and effectual
with the contribution that it receives to this purpose from various <pb n="100" id="i.v-Page_100" />circumstances, opportunities, specious pleas and pretences,
necessities for the doing that which cannot be done without answering the
temptation, and the like; because I must speak unto some of them
afterward.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p17">2<i>dly</i>. For the second, it may be known,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p18">(1<i>st</i>.) By its restless <i>urgency</i> and arguing.
When a temptation is in its hour it is restless; it is the time of battle,
and it gives the soul no rest. Satan sees his advantage, considers his
conjunction of forces, and knows that he must now prevail, or be hopeless
for ever. Here are opportunities, here are advantages, here are specious
pleas and pretences; some ground is already got by former arguings; here
are extenuations of the evil, hopes of pardon by after endeavours, all in a
readiness: if he can do nothing now, he must sit down lost in his
undertakings. So when he had got all things in a readiness against Christ,
he made it the “hour of darkness.” When a temptation discovers “<span lang="LA" class="foreign" id="i.v-p18.1">mille nocendi artes</span>,” presses within doors
by imaginations and reasonings, without by solicitations, advantages, and
opportunities, let the soul know that the hour of it is come, and the glory
of God, with its own welfare, depends on its behaviour in this trial; as we
shall see in the particular cases following.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p19">(2<i>dly</i>.) When it makes a conjunction of
<i>affrightments and allurements</i>, these two comprise the whole forces
of temptation. When both are brought together, temptation is in its hour.
They were both in David’s case as to the murder of Uriah. There was the
fear of his revenge on his wife, and possibly on himself, and fear of the
publication of his sin at least; and there was the allurement of his
present enjoyment of her whom he lusted after. Men sometimes are carried
into sin by love to it, and are continued in it by fear of what will ensue
upon it. But in any case, where these two meet, something allures us,
something affrights us, and the reasonings that run between them are ready
to entangle us,—then is the hour of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p20">This, then, it is to “enter into temptation,” this is the
“hour” of it; of which more in the process of our discourse.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p21">III. There is means of prevention prescribed by our
Saviour; they are two:—1. “Watch;” 2. “Pray.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p22">1. The first is a general expression by no means to be
limited to its native signification of waking from sleep; to watch is as
much as to be on our guard, to take heed, to consider all ways and means as
to be on our guard, to take heed, to consider all ways and means whereby an
enemy may approach to us: so the apostle, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. xvi. 13" id="i.v-p22.1" parsed="|1Cor|16|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.16.13">1 Cor. xvi.
13</scripRef>. This it is to “watch” in this business, to “stand fast in
the faith,” as good soldiers, to “quit ourselves like men.” It is as much
as <span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.v-p22.2">προσέχειν</span>, to “take heed,” or look
to ourselves, as the same thing is by our Saviour often expressed; so
<scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 2" id="i.v-p22.3" parsed="|Rev|3|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.2">Rev. iii. 2</scripRef>. A universal carefulness <pb n="101" id="i.v-Page_101" />and diligence, exercising itself in and by all ways and means
prescribed by God, over our hearts and ways, the baits and methods of
Satan, the occasions and advantages of sin in the world, that we be not
entangled, is that which in this word is presseth on us.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.v-p23">2. For the second direction, of prayer, I need not speak to
it. The duty and its concernments are known to all. I shall only add, that
these two comprise the whole endeavour of faith for the soul’s preservation
from temptation.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="III" type="Chapter" title="Chapter III." shorttitle="Chapter III" progress="21.46%" prev="i.v" next="i.vii" id="i.vi">
<h1 id="i.vi-p0.1">Chapter III.</h1>
<argument id="i.vi-p0.2">The doctrine—Grounds of it; our Saviour’s direction in this
case—His promise of preservation—Issues of men entering into temptation—1. Of ungrounded professors—2. Of the choicest saints, Adam, Abraham,
David—Self-consideration as to our own weakness—The power of a man’s
heart to withstand temptation considered—The considerations that it useth
for that purpose—The power of temptation; it darkens the mind—The
several ways whereby it doth so—1. By fixing the imaginations—2. By
entangling the affections—3. Temptations give fuel to lust—The end of
temptation considered, with the issue of former temptations—Some
objections answered.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.vi-p1.1">Having</span> thus
opened the words in the foregoing chapters so far as is necessary to
discover the foundation of the truth to be insisted on and improved, I
shall lay it down in the ensuing observation:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p2"><i>It is the great duty of all believers to use all
diligence in the ways of Christ’s appointment, that they fall not into
temptation.</i></p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p3">I know God is “able to deliver the godly out of
temptations;” I know he is “faithful not to suffer us to be tempted above
what we are able, but will make a way for our escape:” yet I dare say I
shall convince all those who will attend unto what is delivered and
written, that it is our great duty and concernment to use all diligence,
watchfulness, and care, that we enter not into temptation; and I shall
evince it by the ensuing considerations:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p4">1. In that <i>compendious</i> instruction given us by our
Saviour concerning what we ought to pray for, this of not entering into
temptation is expressly one head. Our Saviour knew of what concernment it
was to us not to “enter into temptation,” when he gave us this as one
special subject of our daily dealing with God, <scripRef passage="Matt. vi. 13" id="i.vi-p4.1" parsed="|Matt|6|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6.13">Matt. vi.
13</scripRef>. And the order of the words shows us of what importance it
is: “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” If we are led
into temptation, evil will befall us, more or less. How God may be said <pb n="102" id="i.vi-Page_102" />to tempt us, or to “lead us into temptation,” I showed before. In
this direction, it is not so much the not <i>giving us up to it</i>, as the
powerful <i>keeping us from it</i> that is intended. The last words are, as
it were, exegetical, or expository of the former: “Lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil;”—“So deal with us that we may be
powerfully delivered from that evil which attends our entering into
temptation.” Our blessed Saviour knows full well our state and condition;
he knows the power of temptations, having had experience of it, <scripRef passage="Heb. ii. 18" id="i.vi-p4.2" parsed="|Heb|2|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.18">Heb.
ii. 18</scripRef>; he knows our vain confidence, and the reserves we have
concerning our ability to deal with temptations, as he found it in Peter;
but he knows our weakness and folly, and how soon we are cast to the
ground, and therefore doth he lay in this provision for instruction at the
entrance of his ministry, to make us heedful, if possible, in that which is
of so great concernment to us. If, then, we will repose any confidence in
the wisdom, love, and care of Jesus Christ towards us, we must grant the
truth pleaded for.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p5">2. Christ promiseth this freedom and deliverance as a great
<i>reward</i> of most acceptable obedience, <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.vi-p5.1" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev. iii.
10</scripRef>. This is the great promise made to the church of
Philadelphia, wherein Christ found nothing that he would blame, “Thou shalt
be kept from the hour of temptation.” Not, “Thou shalt be preserved
<i>in</i> it;” but he goes higher, “Thou shalt be kept <i>from</i> it.”
“There is,” saith our Saviour, “an hour of temptation coming; a season that
will make havoc in the world: multitudes shall then fall from the faith,
deny and blaspheme me. Oh, how few will be able to stand and hold out! Some
will be utterly destroyed, and perish for ever. Some will get wounds to
their souls that shall never be well healed whilst they live in this world,
and have their bones broken, so as to go halting all their days. But,”
saith he, “ ‘because thou hast kept the word of my patience,’ I will be
tender towards thee, and ‘keep thee from this hour of temptation.’ ”
Certainly that which Christ thus promises to his beloved church, as a
reward of her service, love, and obedience, is no light thing. Whatever
Christ promiseth to his spouse is a fruit of unspeakable love; that is so
in an especial manner which is promised as a reward of special
obedience.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p6">3. Let us to this purpose consider the general issues of
men’s entering into temptation, and that of bad and good men, of ungrounded
professors, and of the choicest saints.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p7">(1.) For the first I shall offer but one or two texts of
Scripture. <scripRef passage="Luke viii. 13" id="i.vi-p7.1" parsed="|Luke|8|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.8.13">Luke viii. 13</scripRef>, “They on the rock are
they, which, when they hear, receive the word with joy, and have no root,
but for a while believe.” Well! how long do they believe? They are affected
with the preaching of the word, and believe thereon, make profession, bring
forth some fruits; but until when do they abide? Says he, “In the time <pb n="103" id="i.vi-Page_103" />of temptation they fall away.” When once they enter into
temptation they are gone for ever. Temptation withers all their profession,
and slays their souls. We see this accomplished every day. Men who have
attended on the preaching of the gospel, been affected and delighted with
it, that have made profession of it, and have been looked on, it may be, as
believers, and thus have continued for some years; no sooner doth
temptation befall them that hath vigour and permanency in it, but they are
turned out of the way, and are gone for ever. They fall to hate the word
they have delighted in, despise the professors of it, and are hardened by
sin. So <scripRef passage="Matt. vii. 26" id="i.vi-p7.2" parsed="|Matt|7|26|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.26">Matt. vii. 26</scripRef>, “He that heareth these
sayings of mine, and doeth that not, is like unto a foolish man, which
built his house upon the sand.” But what doth this house of profession do?
It shelters him, keeps him warm, and stands for a while. But saith he,
<scripRef passage="verse 27" id="i.vi-p7.3">verse 27</scripRef>, “When the rain descends, when
temptation comes, it falls utterly, and its fall is great.” Judas follows
our Saviour three years, and all goes well with him: he no sooner enters
into temptation, Satan hath got him and winnowed him, but he is gone. Demas
will preach the gospel until the love of the world befall him, and he is
utterly turned aside. It were endless to give instances of this. Entrance
into temptation is, with this sort of men, an entrance into apostasy, more
or less, in part or in whole; it faileth not.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p8">(2.) For the <i>saints</i> of God themselves, let us see,
by some instances, what issue they have had of their entering into
temptation. I shall name a few:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p9">Adam was the “son of God,” <scripRef passage="Luke iii. 38" id="i.vi-p9.1" parsed="|Luke|3|38|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.3.38">Luke iii. 38</scripRef>,
created in the image of God, full of that integrity, righteousness, and
holiness, which might be and was an eminent resemblance of the holiness of
God. He had a far greater inherent stock of ability than we, and had
nothing in him to entice or seduce him; yet this Adam no sooner enters into
temptation but he is gone, lost, and ruined, he and all his posterity with
him. What can we expect in the like condition, that have not only in our
temptations, as he had, a <i>cunning devil</i> to deal withal, but a
<i>cursed world</i> and a <i>corrupt heart</i> also?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p10">Abraham was the father of the faithful, whose faith is
proposed as a pattern to all them that shall believe; yet he, entering
twice into the same temptation, namely, that of fear about his wife, was
twice overpowered by it, to the dishonour of God, and no doubt the
disquietment of his own soul, <scripRef passage="Gen. xii. 12, 13, xx. 2" id="i.vi-p10.1" parsed="|Gen|12|12|12|13;|Gen|20|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.12.12-Gen.12.13 Bible:Gen.20.2">Gen. xii. 12, 13, xx.
2</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p11">David is called a “man after God’s own heart” by God
himself; yet what a dreadful thing is the story of his entering into
temptation! He is no sooner entangled, but he is plunged into adultery;
thence seeking deliverance by his own invention, like a poor creature in a
toil, he is entangled more and more, until he lies as one dead, under the
power of sin and folly.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p12"><pb n="104" id="i.vi-Page_104" />I might mention Noah, Lot, Hezekiah, Peter,
and the rest, whose temptations and falls therein are on record for our
instruction. Certainly he that hath any heart in these things cannot but
say, as the inhabitants of Samaria upon the letter of Jehu, “ ‘Behold, two
kings stood not before him, how shall we stand?’ O Lord, if such mighty
pillars have been cast to the ground, such cedars blown down, how shall I
stand before temptations? Oh, keep me that I enter not in!” “<span lang="LA" class="foreign" id="i.vi-p12.1">Vestigia terrent.</span>” Behold the footsteps of
them that have gone in. Whom do you see retiring without a wound? a blemish
at least? On this account would the apostle have us to exercise tenderness
towards them that are fallen into sin: <scripRef passage="Gal. vi. 1" id="i.vi-p12.2" parsed="|Gal|6|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.6.1">Gal. vi. 1</scripRef>,
“Considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.” He doth not say, “Lest
thou also sin, or fall, or seest the power of temptation in others, and
knowest not how soon thou mayst be tempted, nor what will be the state and
condition of thy soul thereupon.” Assuredly, he that hath seen so many
better, stronger men than himself fail, and cast down in the trial, will
think it incumbent on him to remember the battle, and, if it be possible,
to come there no more. Is it not a madness for a man that can scarce crawl
up and down, he is so weak (which is the case of most of us), if he avoid
not what he hath seen giants foiled in the undertaking of? Thou art yet
whole and sound; take heed of temptation, lest it be with thee as it was
with Abraham, David, Lot, Peter, Hezekiah, the Galatians, who fell in the
time of trial.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p13">In nothing doth the folly of the hearts of men show itself
more openly, in the days wherein we live, than in this cursed boldness,
after so many warnings from God, and so many sad experiences every day
under their eyes, of running into and putting themselves upon temptations.
Any society, any company, any conditions of outward advantages, without
once weighing what their strength, or what the concernment of their poor
souls is, they are ready for. Though they go over the dead and the slain
that in those ways and paths but even now fell down before them, yet they
will go on without regard or trembling. At this door are gone out hundreds,
thousands of professors, within a few years. But,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p14">4. Let us <i>consider ourselves</i>,—what our weakness
is; and what temptation is,—its power and efficacy, with what it leads
unto:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p15">(1.) For ourselves, we are <i>weakness</i> itself. We have
no strength, no power to withstand. Confidence of any strength in us is one
great part of our weakness; it was so in Peter. He that says he can do any
thing, can do nothing as he should. And, which is worse, it is the worst
kind of weakness that is in us,—a weakness from treachery,—a weakness
arising from that party which every temptation hath in us. If a castle or
fort be never so strong and well fortified, yet if <pb n="105" id="i.vi-Page_105" />there be a
treacherous party within, that is ready to betray it on every opportunity,
there is no preserving it from the enemy. There are traitors in our hearts,
ready to take part, to close, and side with every temptation, and to give
up all to them; yea, to solicit and bribe temptations to do the work, as
traitors incite an enemy. Do not flatter yourselves that you should hold
out; there are secret lusts that lie lurking in your hearts, which perhaps
now stir not, which, as soon as any temptation befalls you, will rise,
tumultuate, cry, disquiet, seduce, and never give over until they are
either killed or satisfied. He that promises himself that the frame of his
heart will be the same under a temptation as it is before will be wofully
mistaken. “Am I a dog, that I should do this thing?” says Hazael. Yea, thou
wilt be such a dog if ever thou be king of Syria; temptation from thy
interest will unman thee. He that now abhors the thoughts of such and such
a thing, if he once enters into temptation will find his heart inflamed
towards it, and all contrary reasonings overborne and silenced. He will
deride his former fears, cast out his scruples, and contemn the
consideration that he lived upon. Little did Peter think he should deny and
forswear his Master so soon as ever he was questioned whether he knew him
or no. It was no better when the hour of temptation came; all resolutions
were forgotten, all love to Christ buried; the present temptation closing
with his carnal fear carried all before it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p16">To handle this a little more distinctly, I shall consider
the means of safety from the power of temptation, if we enter therein, that
may be expected from ourselves; and that in general as to the spring and
rise of them, and in particular as to the ways of exerting that strength we
have, or seem to have:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p17">[1.] In general, all we can look for is from our
<i>hearts</i>. What a man’s heart is, that is he; but now what is the heart
of a man in such a season?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p18">1<i>st</i>. Suppose a man is not a <i>believer</i>, but
only a <i>professor</i> of the gospel, what can the heart of such a one do?
<scripRef passage="Prov. x. 20" id="i.vi-p18.1" parsed="|Prov|10|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.10.20">Prov. x. 20</scripRef>, “The heart of the wicked
is little worth;” and surely that which is little worth in any thing is not
much worth in this. A wicked man may in outward things be of great use; but
come to his heart, that is false and a thing of nought. Now, withstanding
of temptation is heartwork; and when it comes like a flood, can such a
rotten trifle as a wicked man’s heart stand before it? But of these before.
Entering into temptation and apostasy is the same with them.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p19">2<i>dly</i>. Let it be whose heart it will, <scripRef passage="Prov. xxviii. 26" id="i.vi-p19.1" parsed="|Prov|28|26|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.28.26">Prov. xxviii. 26</scripRef>, “He that trusteth in
his own heart is a fool;” he that doth so, be he what he will, in that he
is foolish. Peter did so in his temptation; he trusted in his own heart:
“Though all men forsake thee, I will not.” It was <pb n="106" id="i.vi-Page_106" />his folly;
but why was it his folly? He shall not be delivered; it will not preserve
him in snares; it will not deliver him in temptations. The heart of a man
will promise him very fair before a temptation comes. “Am I a dog,” says
Hazael, “that I should do this thing?” “Though all men should deny thee,”
[says Peter,] “I will not. Shall I do this evil? It cannot be.” All the
arguments that are suited to give check to the heart in such a condition
are mustered up. Did not Peter, think you, do so? “What! deny my Master,
the Son of God, my Redeemer, who loves me? Can such ingratitude, unbelief,
rebellion, befall me? I will not do it.” Shall, then, a man rest in it that
his heart will be steadfast? Let the wise man answer: “He that trusteth in
his own heart is a fool.” “The heart is deceitful,” <scripRef passage="Jer. xvii. 9" id="i.vi-p19.2" parsed="|Jer|17|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jer.17.9">Jer. xvii.
9</scripRef>. We would not willingly trust any thing wherein there is any
deceit or guile; here is that which is “deceitful above all things.” It
hath a thousand shifts and treacheries that is will deal withal; when it
comes to the trial, every temptation will steal it away, <scripRef passage="Hos. iv. 11" id="i.vi-p19.3" parsed="|Hos|4|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Hos.4.11">Hos.
iv. 11</scripRef>. Generally men’s hearts deceive them no oftener than they
do trust in them, and then they never fail so to do.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p20">[2.] Consider the particular ways and means that such a
heart hath or can use to safeguard itself in the hour of temptation, and
their insufficiency to that purpose will quickly appear. I shall instance
in some few only:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p21">1<i>st</i>. Love of <i>honour</i> in the world. Reputation
and esteem in the church, obtained by former profession and walking, is one
of the heart’s own weapons to defend itself in the hour of temptation.
“Shall such a one as I fly? I who have had such a reputation in the church
of God, shall I now lose it by giving way to this lust, to this temptation?
by closing with this or that public evil?” This consideration hath such an
influence on the spirits of some, that they think it will be a shield and
buckler against any assaults that may befall them. They will die a thousand
times before they will forfeit that repute they have in the church of God!
But, alas! this is but a withe, or a new cord, to bind a giant temptation
withal. What think you of the “third part of the stars of heaven?”
<scripRef passage="Rev. xii. 4" id="i.vi-p21.1" parsed="|Rev|12|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.12.4">Rev. xii. 4</scripRef>. Had they not shone in the
firmament of the church? Were they not sensible, more than enough, of their
own honour, height, usefulness, and reputation? But when the dragon comes
with his temptations, he casts them down to the earth. Yea, great
temptations will make men, who have not a better defence, insensibly
fortify themselves against that dishonour and disreputation that their ways
are attended withal. “<span lang="LA" class="foreign" id="i.vi-p21.2">Populus sibilet, at
mihi plaudo.</span>” Do we not know instances yet living of some who have
ventured on compliance with wicked men after the glory of a long and useful
profession, and within a while, finding themselves cast down thereby from
their reputation with the saints, have hardened <pb n="107" id="i.vi-Page_107" />themselves
against it and ended in apostasy? as <scripRef passage="John xv. 6" id="i.vi-p21.3" parsed="|John|15|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.15.6">John xv. 6</scripRef>.
This kept not Judas; it kept not Hymeneus nor Philetus; it kept not the
stars of heaven; nor will it keep thee.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p22">2<i>dly</i>. There is, on the other side, the consideration
of <i>shame</i>, reproach, loss, and the like. This also men may put their
trust in as a defence against temptations, and do not fear but to be
safeguarded and preserved by it. They would not for the world bring that
shame and reproach upon themselves that such and such miscarriages are
attended withal! Now, besides that this consideration extends itself only
to <i>open sins</i>, such as the world takes notice of and abhors, and so
is of no use at all in such cases as wherein pretences and colours may be
invented and used, nor in public temptations to loose and careless walking,
like those of our days, nor in cases that may be disputable in themselves,
though expressly sinful to the consciences of persons under temptations,
nor in heart sins,—in all which and most other cases of temptation there
are innumerable reliefs ready to be tendered unto the heart against this
consideration; besides all this, I say, we see by experience how easily
this cord is broken when once the heart begins to be entangled. Each corner
of the land if full of examples to this purpose.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p23">3<i>dly</i>. They have yet that which outweighs these
lesser considerations,—namely, that they will not wound their own
<i>consciences</i>, and disturb their peace, and bring themselves in danger
of hell fire. This, surely, if any thing, will preserve men in the hour of
temptation. They will not lavish away their peace, nor venture their souls
by running on God and the thick bosses of his buckler! What can be of more
efficacy and prevalency? I confess this is of great importance; and oh that
it were more pondered than it is! that we laid more weight upon the
preservation of our peace with God than we do! yet I say that even this
consideration in him who is otherwhere off from his watch, and doth not
make it his work to follow the other rules insisted on, it will not
preserve him; for,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p24">(1<i>st</i>.) The peace of such a one may be <i>false
peace</i> or security, made up of presumption and false hopes; yea, though
he be a believer, it may be so. Such was David’s peace after his sin,
before Nathan came to him; such was Laodicea’s peace when ready to perish;
and Sardis her peace when dying. What should secure a soul that it is
otherwise, seeing, it is supposed, that it doth not universally labour to
keep the word of Christ’s patience, and to be watchful in all things? Think
you that the peace of many in these days will be found to be true peace at
last? Nothing less. They go alive down to hell, and death will have
dominion over them in the morning. Now, if a man’s peace be such, do you
think that can preserve him which cannot preserve itself? It will give way
at the first vigorous <pb n="108" id="i.vi-Page_108" />assault of a temptation in its height
and hour. Like a broken reed, it will run into the hand of him that leaneth
on it. But,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p25">(2<i>dly</i>.) Suppose the <i>peace</i> cared for, and
proposed to safeguard the soul, be true and good, yet when all is laid up
in this one bottom, when the hour of temptation comes, so many reliefs will
be tendered against this consideration as will make it useless. “This evil
is <i>small</i>; it is <i>questionable</i>; it falls not openly and
downright upon <i>conscience</i>. I do but fear <i>consequences</i>; it may
be I may be keep my peace notwithstanding. Others of the people of God have
fallen, and yet kept or recovered their peace. If it be lost for a season,
it may be obtained again. I will not solicit its station any more; or
though peace be lost, safety may remain.” And a thousand such pleas there
are, which are all planted as batteries against this fort, so that it
cannot long hold out.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p26">(3<i>dly</i>.) The fixing on this particular only is to
make good one <i>passage</i> or entrance, whilst the enemy assaults us
round about. It is true, a little armour would serve to defend a man if he
might choose there his enemy should strike him; but we are commanded to
take the “whole armour of God” if we intend to resist and stand, <scripRef passage="Eph. vi." id="i.vi-p26.1" parsed="|Eph|6|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6">Eph.
vi.</scripRef> This we speak of is but one piece; and when our eye is only
to that, temptation may enter and prevail twenty other ways. For instance,
a man may be tempted to worldliness, unjust gain, revenge, vain-glory, or
the like. If he fortify himself alone with this consideration, he will not
do this thing, and wound his conscience and lose his peace; fixing his eye
on this particular, and counting himself safe whilst he is not overcome on
that hand, it may be neglect of private communion with God, sensuality, and
the like, do creep in, and he is not one jot in a better condition than if
he had fallen under the power of that part of the temptation which was most
visibly pressing on him. Experience gives to see that this doth and will
<i>fail</i> also. There is no saint of God but puts a valuation on the
peace he hath; yet how many of them fail in the day of temptation!</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p27">(4<i>thly</i>.) But yet they have another consideration
also, and that is, the vileness of sinning against God. How shall they do
this thing, and sin against God, the God of their mercies, of their
salvation? How shall they wound Jesus Christ, who died for them? This
surely cannot but preserve them. I answer,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p28">First, We see every day this consideration failing also.
There is no child of God that is overcome of temptation but overcomes this
consideration. It is not, then, a sure and infallible defensative.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p29">Secondly, This consideration is twofold: either it
expresses the thoughts of the soul with particular reference to the
temptation contended withal and then it will not preserve it; or it
expresses the universal, habitual frame of heart that is in us, upon all
accounts, <pb n="109" id="i.vi-Page_109" />and then it falleth in with what I shall tender as
the universal medicine and remedy in this case in the process of this
discourse; whereof afterward.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p30">(2.) Consider <i>the power of temptation</i>, partly from
what was showed before, from the <i>effects</i> and fruits of it in the
saints of old, partly from such other effects in general as we find
ascribed to it; as,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p31">[1.] It will <i>darken the mind</i>, that a man shall not
be able to make a right judgement of things, so as he did before he entered
into it. As in the men of the world, the god of this world blinds their
minds that they should not see the glory of Christ in the gospel, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. iv. 4" id="i.vi-p31.1" parsed="|2Cor|4|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.4">2
Cor. iv. 4</scripRef>, and “whoredom, and wine, and new wine, take away
their hearts,” <scripRef passage="Hos. iv. 11" id="i.vi-p31.2" parsed="|Hos|4|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Hos.4.11">Hos. iv. 11</scripRef>; so it is in the nature of
every temptation, more or less, to take away the heart, or to darken the
understanding of the person tempted.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p32">And this it doth divers ways:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p33">1<i>st</i>. By <i>fixing</i> the imagination and the
thoughts upon the <i>object</i> whereunto it tends, so that the mind shall
be diverted from the consideration of the things that would relieve and
succour it in the state wherein it is. A man is tempted to apprehend that
he is forsaken of God, that he is an object of his hatred, that he hath no
interest in Christ. By the craft of Satan the mind shall be so <i>fixed</i>
to the consideration of this state and condition, with the distress of it,
that he shall not be able to manage any of the reliefs suggested and
tendered to him against it; but, following the fulness of his own thoughts,
shall walk on in darkness and have no light. I say, a temptation will so
possess and fill the mind with thoughtfulness of itself and the matter of
it, that it will take off from that clear consideration of things which
otherwise it might and would have. And those things whereof the mind was
wont to have a vigorous sense, to keep it from sin, will by this means come
to have no force or efficacy with it; nay, it will commonly bring men to
that state and condition, that when others, to whom their estate is known,
are speaking to them the things that concern their deliverance and peace,
their minds will be so possessed with the matter of their temptation as not
at all to understand, scarce to hear one word, that is spoken to them.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p34">2<i>dly</i>. By <i>woful entangling of the affections</i>;
which, when they are engaged, what influence they have in blinding the mind
and darkness and darkening the understanding is known. If any know it not,
let him but open his eyes in these days, and he will quickly learn it. By
what ways and means it is that engaged affections will becloud the mind and
darken it I shall not now declare; only, I say, give me a man engaged in
hope, love, fear, in reference to any particulars wherein he ought not, and
I shall quickly show you wherein he is darkened and blinded. This, then,
you will fail in if you enter into temptation:—<pb n="110" id="i.vi-Page_110" />The present
judgment you have of things will not be utterly altered, but darkened and
rendered infirm to influence the will and master the affections. These,
being set at liberty by temptation, will run on in madness. Forthwith
detestation of sin, abhorring of it, terror of the Lord, sense of love,
presence of Christ crucified, all depart, and leave the heart a prey to its
enemy.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p35">3<i>dly</i>. Temptation will give <i>oil and fuel</i> to
our lusts,—incite, provoke, and make then tumultuate and rage beyond
measure. Tendering a lust, a corruption, a suitable object, advantage,
occasion, it heightens and exasperates it, makes it for a season wholly
predominant: so dealt it with carnal fear in Peter, with pride in Hezekiah,
with covetousness in Achan, with uncleanness in David, with worldliness in
Demas, with ambition in Diotrephes. It will lay the reins on the neck of a
lust, and put to the sides of it, that it may rush forward like a horse
into the battle. A man knows not the pride, fury, madness of a corruption,
until it meet with a suitable temptation. And what now will a poor soul
think to do? His mind is darkened, his affections entangled, his lusts
inflamed and provoked, his relief is defeated; and what will be the issue
of such a condition?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p36">(3.) Consider that temptations are either <i>public or
private</i>; and let us a little view the efficacy and power of them
apart:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p37">[1.] There are public temptations; such as that mentioned,
<scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.vi-p37.1" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev. iii. 10</scripRef>, that was to come upon the
world, “to try them that dwell upon the earth;” or a combination of
persecution and seduction for the trial of a careless generation of
professors. Now, concerning such a temptation, consider that,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p38">1<i>st</i>. It hath an <i>efficacy</i> in respect of God,
who sends it to revenge the neglect and contempt of the gospel on the one
hand, and treachery of false professors on the other. Hence it will
certainly accomplish what it receives commission from him to do. When Satan
offered his service to go forth and seduce Ahab that he might fall, God
says to him, “Thou shalt persuade him, and prevail also: go forth, and do
so,” <scripRef passage="1 Kings xxii. 22" id="i.vi-p38.1" parsed="|1Kgs|22|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.22.22">1 Kings xxii. 22</scripRef>. He is permitted as to
his wickedness, and commissionated as to the event and punishment intended.
When the Christian world was to be given up to folly and false worship for
their neglect of the truth, and their naked, barren, fruitless,
Christ-dishonouring profession, it is said of the temptation that fell upon
then, that “God sent them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,”
<scripRef passage="2 Thess. ii. 11" id="i.vi-p38.2" parsed="|2Thess|2|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.2.11">2 Thess. ii. 11</scripRef>. That that comes so
from God in a <i>judiciary</i> manner, hath a power with it and shall
prevail. That selfish spiritually-slothful, careless , and worldly frame of
spirit, which in these days hath infected almost the body of professors, if
it have a commission from God to kill hypocrites, to wound negligent
saints, to break their bones, and make them scandalous, that they may be
<pb n="111" id="i.vi-Page_111" />ashamed, shall it not have a power and efficacy so to do? What
work hath the spirit of error made amongst us! Is it not from hence, that
as some men delighted not to retain God in their hearts, so he hath “given
them up to a reprobate mind,” <scripRef passage="Rom. i. 28" id="i.vi-p38.3" parsed="|Rom|1|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.28">Rom. i. 28</scripRef>. A
man would think it strange, yea, it is matter of amazement, to see persons
of a sober spirit, pretending to great things in the ways of God, overcome,
captivated, ensnared, destroyed by weak means, sottish opinions, foolish
imaginations, such as a man would think it impossible that they should ever
lay hold on sensible or rational men, much less on professors of the
gospel. But that which God will have to be strong, let us not think weak.
No strength but the strength of God can stand in the way of the weakest
things of the world that are commissionated from God for any end or purpose
whatever.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p39">2<i>dly</i>. There is in such temptations the secret
insinuation of <i>examples</i> in those that are accounted <i>godly</i> and
are professors: <scripRef passage="Matt. xxiv. 12" id="i.vi-p39.1" parsed="|Matt|24|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.12">Matt. xxiv.
12</scripRef>, “Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax
cold,” etc. The abounding of iniquity in some will insensibly cast water on
the zeal and love of others, that by little and little it shall wax cold.
Some begin to grow negligent, careless, worldly, wanton. They break the ice
towards the pleasing of the flesh. At first their love also waxes cold; and
the brunt being over, they also conform to them, and are cast into the same
mould with them. “A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.” Paul repeats
this saying twice, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. v. 6" id="i.vi-p39.2" parsed="|1Cor|5|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.5.6">1 Cor. v. 6</scripRef>, and <scripRef passage="Gal. v. 9" id="i.vi-p39.3" parsed="|Gal|5|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.5.9">Gal. v. 9</scripRef>.
He would have us take notice of it; and it is of the danger of the
infection of the whole body, from the ill examples of some, whereof he
speaks. We know how insensibly leaven proceedeth to give savour to the
whole; so it is termed a “root of bitterness” that “springeth up and
defileth many,” <scripRef passage="Heb. xii. 15" id="i.vi-p39.4" parsed="|Heb|12|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.15">Heb. xii. 15</scripRef>. If one little piece of
leaven, if one bitter root, may endanger the whole, how much more when
there are many roots of that nature, and much leaven is scattered abroad!
It is easy following a multitude to do evil, and saying “A conspiracy” to
them to whom the people say “A conspiracy.” Would any one have thought it
possible that such and such professors, in our days, should have fallen
into ways of self, of flesh, of the world? to play at cards, dice, revel,
dance? to neglect family, closet duties? to be proud, haughty, ambitious,
worldly, covetous, oppressive? or that they should be turned away after
foolish, vain, ridiculous opinions, deserting the gospel of Christ? In
which two lies the great temptation that is come on us, the inhabitants of
this world, to try us. But doth not every man see that this is come to
pass? And may we not see how it is come to pass? Some loose, empty
professors, who had never more than a <pb n="112" id="i.vi-Page_112" />form of godliness, when
they had served their turn of that, began the way to them; then others
began a little to comply, and to please the flesh in so doing. This, by
little and little, hath reached even the top boughs and branches of our
profession, until almost all flesh hath corrupted its way. And he that
departeth from these iniquities makes his name a prey, if not his
person.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p40">3<i>dly</i>. Public temptations are usually accompanied
with <i>strong reasons and pretences</i>, that are too hard for men, or at
least insensibly prevail upon them to an undervaluation of the evil
whereunto the temptation leads, to give strength to that complicated
temptation which in these days hath even cast down the people of God from
their excellency,—hath cut their locks, and made them become like other
men. How full is the world of specious pretences and pleadings! As there is
the liberty and freedom of Christians, delivered from a bondage frame, this
is a door that, in my own observation, I have seen sundry going out at,
into sensuality and apostasy; beginning at a light conversation, proceeding
to a neglect of the Sabbath, public and private duties, ending in
dissoluteness and profaneness. And then there is leaving of public things
to Providence, being contented with what is;—things good in themselves,
but disputed into wretched, carnal compliances, and the utter ruin of all
zeal for God, the interest of Christ or his people in the world. These and
the like considerations, joined with the ease and plenty, the greatness and
promotion of professors, have so brought things about, that whereas we have
by Providence shifted places with the men of the world, we have by sin
shifted spirits with them also. We are like a plantation of men carried
into a foreign country. In a short space they degenerate from the manners
of the people from whence they came, and fall into that thing in the soil
and the air that transformed them. Give me leave a little to follow my
similitude: He that should see the prevailing party of these nations, many
of those in rule, power, favour, with all their adherents, and remember
that they were a colony of Puritans,—whose habitation was “in a low
place,” as the prophet speaks of the city of God,—translated by a high
hand to the mountains they now possess, cannot but wonder how soon they
have forgot the customs, manners, ways, of their own old people, and are
cast into the mould of them that went before them in the places whereunto
they are translated. I speak of us all, especially of us who are amongst
the lowest of the people, where perhaps this iniquity doth most abound.
What were those before us that we are not? what did they that we do not?
Prosperity hath slain the foolish and wounded the wise.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p41">[2.] Suppose the temptation is private. This hath been
spoken to before; I shall add two things:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p42"><pb n="113" id="i.vi-Page_113" />1<i>st</i>. Its <i>union and incorporation</i>
with lust, whereby it gets within the soul, and lies at the bottom of its
actings. John tells us, <scripRef passage="1 Epist. ii. 16" id="i.vi-p42.1">1 Epist. ii.
16</scripRef>, that the things that are “in the world” are, “the lust of
the flesh, the lust of the eyes, the pride of life.” Now, it is evident
that all these things are principally in the <i>subject</i>, not in the
<i>object</i>,—in the <i>heart</i>, not in the <i>world</i>. But they are
said to be “in the world,” because the world gets into them, mixes itself
with them, unites, incorporates. As faith and the promises are said to be
“mixed,” <scripRef passage="Heb. iv. 2" id="i.vi-p42.2" parsed="|Heb|4|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.2">Heb. iv. 2</scripRef>, so are lust and temptation
mixed: they twine together; receive mutual improvement from one another;
grow each of them higher and higher by the mutual strength they administer
to one another. Now, by this means temptation gets so deep in the heart
that no contrary reasonings can reach unto it; nothing but what can kill
the lust can conquer the temptation. Like leprosy that hath mingled itself
with the wall, the wall itself must be pulled down, or the leprosy will not
be cured. Like a gangrene that mixes poison with the blood and spirits, and
cannot be separated from the place where it is, but both must be cut off
together. For instance, in David’s temptation to uncleanness, ten thousand
considerations might have been taken in to stop the mouth of the
temptation; but it had united itself with his lust, and nothing but the
killing of that could destroy it, or get him the conquest. This deceives
many a one. They have some pressing temptation, that, having got some
advantages, is urgent upon them. They pray against it, oppose it with all
powerful considerations, such as whereof every one seems sufficient to
conquer and destroy it, at least to overpower it, that it should never be
troublesome any more; but no good is done, no ground is got or obtained,
yea, it grows upon them more and more. What is the reason of it? It hath
incorporated and united itself with the lust, and is safe from all the
opposition they make. If they would make work indeed, they are to set upon
the whole of the lust itself; their ambition, pride, worldliness,
sensuality, or whatever it be, that the temptation is united with. All
other dealings with it are like tamperings with a prevailing gangrene: the
part or whole may be preserved a little while, in great torment; excision
or death must come at last. The soul may cruciate itself for a season with
such a procedure; but it must come to this,—its lust must die, or the
soul must die.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p43">2<i>dly</i>. In what part soever of the soul the lust be
seated wherewith the temptation is united, it draws after it <i>the whole
soul</i> by one means or other, and so prevents or anticipates any
opposition. Suppose it be a lust of the mind,—as there are lusts of the
mind and uncleanness of the spirit, such as ambition, vain-glory, and the
like,—what a world of ways hath the understanding to bridle the
affections that they should not so tenaciously cleave to God, seeing <pb n="114" id="i.vi-Page_114" />in what it aimeth at there is so much to give them contentment and
satisfaction! It will not only prevent all the reasonings of the mind,
which it doth necessarily,—being like a bloody infirmity in the eyes,
presenting all things to the common sense and perception in that hue and
colour,—but it will draw the whole soul, on other accounts and collateral
considerations, into the same frame. It promises the whole a share in the
spoil aimed at; as Judas’s money, that he first desired from covetousness,
was to be shared among all his lusts. Or be it in the more sensual part,
and first possesseth the affections,—what prejudices they will bring upon
the understanding, how they will bribe it to an acquiescence, what
arguments, what hopes they will supply it withal, cannot easily be
expressed, as was before showed. In brief, there is no particular
temptation, but, when it is in its hour, it hath such a contribution of
assistance from things good, evil, indifferent, is fed by so many
considerations that seem to be most alien and foreign to it, in some cases
hath such specious pleas and pretences, that its strength will easily be
acknowledged.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p44">(4.) Consider the end of any temptation; this is Satan’s
end and sin’s end,—that is, the dishonour of God and the ruin of our
souls.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p45">(5.) Consider what hath been the <i>issue</i> of thy former
temptations that thou hast had. Have they not defiled thy conscience,
disquieted thy peace, weakened thee in thy obedience, clouded the face of
God? Though thou wast not prevailed on to the outward evil or utmost issue
of thy temptation, yet hast thou not been foiled? hath not thy soul been
sullied and grievously perplexed with it? yea, didst thou ever in thy life
come fairly off, without sensible loss, from any temptation almost that
thou hadst to deal withal; and wouldst thou willingly be entangled again?
If thou art at liberty, take heed; enter no more, if it be possible, lest a
worse thing happen to thee.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p46">These, I say, are some of those many considerations that
might be insisted on, to manifest the importance of the truth proposed, and
the fulness of our concernment in taking care that we “enter not into
temptation.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p47">Against what hath been spoken, some objections that
secretly insinuate themselves into the souls of men, and have an efficacy
to make them negligent and careless in this thing, which is of such
importance to them,—a duty of such indispensable necessity to them who
intend to walk with God in any peace, or with any faithfulness,—are to be
considered and removed. And they are these that follow:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p48"><i>Obj.</i> 1. “Why should we so fear and labour to avoid
temptation? <scripRef passage="James i. 2" id="i.vi-p48.1" parsed="|Jas|1|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.2">James i. 2</scripRef>, we are commanded to ‘count it
all joy when we fall into divers temptations.’ Now, certainly I need not
solicitously avoid the falling into that which, when I am fallen into, I am
to count it all joy.” To which I answer,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p49"><pb n="115" id="i.vi-Page_115" />1. You will not hold by this rule in all
things,—namely, that a man need not seek to avoid that which, when he
cannot but fall into, it is his duty to rejoice therein. The same apostle
bids the rich “rejoice that they are made low,” <scripRef passage="chap. i. 10" id="i.vi-p49.1" parsed="|Jas|1|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.10">chap. i. 10</scripRef>.
And, without doubt, to him who is acquainted with the goodness, and wisdom,
and love of God in his dispensations, in every condition that is needful
for him, it will be a matter of rejoicing to him: but yet, how few rich,
godly men can you persuade not to take heed, and use all lawful means that
they be not made poor and low! and, in most cases, the truth is, it were
their sin not to do so. It is our business to make good our stations, and
to secure ourselves as we can; if God alter our condition we are to rejoice
in it. If the temptations here mentioned befall us, we may have cause to
rejoice; but not if, by a neglect of duty, we fall into them.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p50">2. Temptations are taken <i>two ways</i>:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p51">(1.) Passively and merely <i>materially</i>, for such
things as are, or in some cases may be, temptations; or,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p52">(2.) <i>Actively</i>, for such as do entice to sin. James
speaks of temptations in the first sense only; for having said, “Count it
all joy when ye fall into divers temptations,” <scripRef passage="verse 2" id="i.vi-p52.1">verse 2</scripRef>; he adds,
<scripRef passage="verse 12" id="i.vi-p52.2">verse 12</scripRef>, “Blessed is the man that
endureth temptation: for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of
life.” But now whereas a man might say, “If this be so, then temptations
are good, and from God;”—“No,” says James; “take temptation in such a
sense as that it is a thing enticing and leading to sin, so God tempts
none; but every man is tempted of his own lust,” <scripRef passage="verse 13, 14" id="i.vi-p52.3">verse 13,
14</scripRef>. “To have such temptations, to be tempted to sin, that is not
the blessed thing I intend; but the enduring of afflictions that God sends
for the trial of our faith, that is a blessed thing. So that, though I must
count it all joy when, through the will of God, I fall into divers
afflictions for my trial, which yet have the matter of temptation in them,
yet I am to use all care and diligence that my lust have no occasions or
advantages given unto it to tempt me to sin.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p53"><i>Obj.</i> 2. “But was not our Saviour Christ himself
tempted; and is it evil to be brought into the same state and condition
with him? Yea, it is not only said that he was tempted, but his being so is
expressed as a thing advantageous, and conducing to his mercifulness as our
priest: <scripRef passage="Heb. ii. 17, 18" id="i.vi-p53.1" parsed="|Heb|2|17|2|18" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.17-Heb.2.18">Heb. ii. 17,
18</scripRef>, ‘In that he himself hath suffered, being tempted, he is able
to succour them that are tempted.’ And he makes it a ground of a great
promise to his disciples, that they had ‘abode with him in his
temptations,’ <scripRef passage="Luke xxii. 28" id="i.vi-p53.2" parsed="|Luke|22|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.22.28">Luke xxii. 28</scripRef>.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p54"><i>Ans.</i> It is true, our Saviour was tempted; but yet
his temptations are reckoned among the <i>evils</i> that befell him in the
days of his flesh,—things that came on him through the malice of the
world and the <pb n="116" id="i.vi-Page_116" />prince thereof. He did not wilfully cast himself
into temptation, which he said was “to tempt the Lord our God,” <scripRef passage="Matt. iv. 7" id="i.vi-p54.1" parsed="|Matt|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.4.7">Matt.
iv. 7</scripRef>; as, indeed, willingly to enter into any temptation is
highly to tempt God. Now, our condition is so, that, use the greatest
diligence and watchfulness that we can, yet we shall be sure to be tempted,
and be made like to Christ therein. This hinders not but that it is our
duty to the utmost to prevent our falling into them; and that namely on
this account:—Christ had only the <i>suffering</i> part of temptation when
he entered into it; we have also the <i>sinning</i> part of it. When the
prince of this world came to Christ, he had “no part in him;” but when he
comes to us, he hath so in us. So that though in one effect of temptations,
namely trials and disquietness, we are made like to Christ, and so are to
rejoice as far as by any means that is produced; yet by another we are made
unlike to him,—which is our being defiled and entangled: and are
therefore to seek by all means to avoid them. We never come off like
Christ. Who of us “enter into temptation” and are not defiled?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p55"><i>Obj.</i> 3. “But what need this great endeavour and
carefulness? Is it not said that ‘God is faithful, who will not suffer us
to be tempted above what we are able, but will with the temptation also
make a way to escape?’ <scripRef passage="1 Cor. x. 13" id="i.vi-p55.1" parsed="|1Cor|10|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.13">1 Cor. x.
13</scripRef>; and ‘He knoweth how to deliver the godly out of
temptations,’ <scripRef passage="2 Pet. ii. 9" id="i.vi-p55.2" parsed="|2Pet|2|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.2.9">2 Pet. ii. 9</scripRef>. What need we, then, be
solicitous that we enter not into them?”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p56"><i>Ans.</i> I much question what assistance he will have
from God in his temptation who willingly enters into it, because he
supposes God hath promised to deliver him out of it. The Lord knows that,
through the craft of Satan, the subtlety and malice of the world, the
deceitfulness of sin, that doth so easily beset us, when we have done our
utmost, yet we shall enter into divers temptations. In his love, care,
tenderness, and faithfulness, he hath provided such a sufficiency of grace
for us, that they shall not utterly prevail to make an everlasting
separation between him and our souls. Yet I have three things to say to
this objection:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p57">(1.) He that <i>wilfully</i> or negligently enters into
temptation hath no reason in the world to promise himself any assistance
from God, or any deliverance from the temptation whereunto he is entered.
The promise is made to them whom temptations do befall in their way,
whether they will or not; not them that wilfully fall into them,—that run
out of their way to meet with them. And therefore the devil (as is usually
observed), when he tempted our Saviour, left out that expression of the
text of Scripture, which he wrested to his purpose, “All thy ways.” The
promise of deliverance is to them who are in their ways; whereof this is
one principal, to beware of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p58">(2.) Though there be a sufficiency of grace provided for
all the <pb n="117" id="i.vi-Page_117" /><i>elect</i>, that they shall by no temptation fall
utterly from God, yet it would make any gracious heart to tremble, to think
what dishonour to God, what scandal to the gospel, what woful darkness and
disquietness they may bring upon their own souls, though they perish not.
And they who are scared by nothing but fear of hell, on whom other
considerations short thereof have no influence, in my apprehension have
more reason to fear it than perhaps they are aware of.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vi-p59">(3.) To enter on temptation on this account is to venture
on sin (which is the same with “continuing with sin”) “that grace may
abound,” <scripRef passage="Rom. vi. 1, 2" id="i.vi-p59.1" parsed="|Rom|6|1|6|2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.6.1-Rom.6.2">Rom. vi. 1, 2</scripRef>; which the apostle rejects
the thoughts of with greatest detestation. Is it not a madness, for a man
willingly to suffer the ship wherein he is to split itself on a rock, to
the irrecoverable loss of his merchandise, because he supposes he shall in
his own person swim safely to shore on a plank? Is it less in him who will
hazard the shipwreck of all his comfort, peace, joy, and so much of the
glory of God and honour of the gospel as he is entrusted with, merely on
supposition that his soul shall yet escape? These things a man would think
did not deserve to be mentioned, and yet with such as these do poor souls
sometimes delude themselves.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="IV" type="Chapter" title="Chapter IV." shorttitle="Chapter IV" progress="46.98%" prev="i.vi" next="i.viii" id="i.vii">
<h1 id="i.vii-p0.1">Chapter IV.</h1>
<argument id="i.vii-p0.2">Particular cases proposed to consideration—The first, its
resolution in sundry particulars—Several discoveries of the state of a
soul entering into temptation.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.vii-p1.1">These</span> things
being premised in general, I proceed to the consideration of <i>three
particular cases arising</i> from the truth proposed: the first whereof
relates unto the <i>thing</i> itself; the second unto the <i>time</i> or
season thereof; and the last unto <i>deportment</i> in reference unto the
prevention of the evil treated of.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p2">First, then, it may be inquired,—1. <i>How a man may know
when he is entered into temptation.</i> 2. <i>What directions are to be
given for the preventing of our entering into temptation.</i> 3. <i>What
seasons there are wherein a man may and ought to fear that an hour of
temptation is at hand.</i></p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p3">1. How shall a man know whether he be entered into
temptation or no, is our first inquiry. I say, then,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p4">(1.) When a <i>man is drawn into any sin</i>, he may be
sure that he hath entered into temptation. All <i>sin</i> is from
temptation, <scripRef passage="James i. 14" id="i.vii-p4.1" parsed="|Jas|1|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.14">James i. 14</scripRef>. Sin is a fruit that comes
only from that root. Though a man be never so suddenly or violently
surprised in or with any sin, yet it <pb n="118" id="i.vii-Page_118" />is from some temptation
or other that he hath been so surprised: so the apostle, <scripRef passage="Gal. vi. 1" id="i.vii-p4.2" parsed="|Gal|6|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.6.1">Gal. vi.
1</scripRef>. If a man be surprised, overtaken with a fault, yet he was
tempted to it; for says he, “Consider thyself, lest thou also be tempted,”—that is, as he was when he was so surprised, as it were, at unawares.
This men sometimes take no notice of, to their great disadvantage. When
they are overtaken with a sin they set themselves to repent of that sin,
but do not consider the temptation that was the cause of it, to set
themselves against that also to take care that they enter no more into it.
Hence are they quickly again entangled by it, though they have the greatest
detestation of the sin itself that can be expressed. He that would indeed
get the conquest over any sin must consider his temptations to it, and
strike at that root; without deliverance from thence, he will not be
healed.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p5">This is a folly that possesses many who have yet a quick
and living sense of sin. They are sensible of their <i>sins</i>, not of
their <i>temptations</i>,—are displeased with the bitter fruit, but
cherish the poisonous root. Hence, in the midst of their humiliations for
sin, they will continue in those ways, those societies, in the pursuit of
those ends, which have occasioned that sin; of which more afterward.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p6">(2.) Temptations have <i>several degrees</i>. Some arise to
such an height, do so press on the soul, so cruciate and disquiet it, so
fight against all opposition that is made to it, that it is a peculiar
power of temptation that he is to wrestle withal. When a fever rages, a man
knows he is sick, unless his distemper have made him mad. The lusts of men,
as James tells us, “entice, draw away,” and seduce them to sin; but this
they do of themselves, without peculiar instigation, in a more quiet, even,
and sedate manner. If they grow violent, if they hurry the soul up and
down, give it no rest, the soul may know that they have got the help of
temptation to their assistance.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p7">Take an empty vessel and put it into some stream that is in
its course to the sea, it will infallibly be carried thither, according to
the course and speed of the stream; but let strong winds arise upon it, it
will be driven with violence on every bank and rock, until, being broken in
pieces, it is swallowed up of the ocean. Men’s lusts will infallibly (if
not mortified in the death of Christ) carry them into eternal ruin, but
oftentimes without much noise, according to the course of the stream of
their corruptions; but let the wind of strong temptations befall them, they
are hurried into innumerable scandalous sins, and so, broken upon all
accounts, are swallowed up in eternity. So is it in general with men; so in
particular. Hezekiah had the root of <i>pride</i> in him always; yet it did
not make him run up and down to show his treasure and his riches until he
fell into temptation by the ambassadors of the king of Babylon. So had
David; <pb n="119" id="i.vii-Page_119" />yet could he keep off from numbering the people until
Satan stood up and provoked him, and solicited him to do it. Judas was
covetous from the beginning; yet he did not contrive to satisfy it by
selling of his Master until the devil entered into him, and he thereby into
temptation. The like may be said of Abraham, Jonah, Peter, and the rest. So
that when any lust or corruption whatever tumultuates and disquieteth the
soul, puts it with violence on sin, let the soul know that it hath got the
advantage of some outward temptation, though as yet it perceiveth not
wherein, or at least is become itself a peculiar temptation by some
incitation or provocation that hath befallen it, and is to be looked to
more than ordinarily.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p8">(3.) Entering into temptation may be seen in the lesser
degrees of it; as, for instance, when the heart begins secretly to <i>like
the matter of the temptation</i>, and is content to feed it and increase it
by any ways that it may without downright sin.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p9">In particular, a man begins to be in repute for piety,
wisdom, learning, or the like,—he is spoken of much to that purpose; his
heart is tickled to hear of it, and his pride and ambition affected with
it. If this man now, with all his strength, ply the things from whence his
repute, and esteem, and glory amongst men do spring, with a secret eye to
have it increased, he is entering into temptation; which, if he take not
heed, will quickly render him a slave of lust. So was it with Jehu. He
perceived that his repute for zeal began to grow abroad, and he got honour
by it. Jonadab comes in his way, a good and holy man. “Now,” thinks Jehu,
“I have an opportunity to grow in honour of my zeal.” So he calls Jonadab
to him, and to work he goes most seriously. The things he did were good in
themselves, but he was entered into temptation, and served his lust in that
he did. So is it with many scholars. They find themselves esteemed and
favoured for their learning. This takes hold of the pride and ambition of
their hearts. Hence they set themselves to study with all diligence day and
night,—a thing good in itself; but they do it that they might satisfy the
thoughts and words of men, wherein they delight: and so in all they do they
make provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p10">It is true, God oftentimes brings light out of this
darkness, and turns things to a better issue. After, it may be, a man hath
studied sundry years, with an eye upon his lusts,—his ambition, pride,
and vain-glory,—rising early and going to bed late, to give them
satisfaction, God comes in with his grace, turns the soul to himself, robs
those Egyptian lusts, and so consecrates that to the use of the tabernacle
which was provided for idols.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p11">Men may be thus entangled in better things than learning,
even in the <i>profession</i> of piety, in their labour in the ministry,
and the <pb n="120" id="i.vii-Page_120" />like. Some men’s profession is a snare to them. They
are in reputation, and are much honoured on the account of their profession
and strict walking. This often falls out in the days wherein we live,
wherein all things are carried by parties. Some find themselves on the
accounts mentioned, perhaps, to be the darlings and “<span lang="LA" class="foreign" id="i.vii-p11.1">ingentia decora</span>,” or glory of their party. If
thoughts hereof secretly insinuate themselves into their hearts, and
influence them into more than ordinary diligence and activity in their way
and profession, they are entangled; and instead of aiming at more glory,
had need lie in the dust, in a sense of their own vileness. And so close is
this temptation, that oftentimes it requires no food to feed upon but that
he who is entangled with it do avoid all means and ways of honour and
reputation; so that it can but whisper in the heart that that avoidance is
honourable. The same may be the condition with men, as was said, in
<i>preaching the gospel</i>, in the work of the ministry. Many things in
that work may yield them esteem,—their ability, their plainness, their
frequency, their success; and all in this sense may be fuel unto
temptations. Let, then, a man know that when he likes that which feeds his
lust, and keeps it up by ways either good in themselves or not downright
sinful, he is entered into temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p12">(4.) When by a man’s state or condition of life, or any
means whatever, it comes to pass that his lust and any temptation meet with
occasions and opportunities for its provocation and stirring up, let that
man know, whether he perceive it or not, that he is certainly entered into
temptation. I told you before, that to enter into temptation is not merely
to be tempted, but so to be under the <i>power</i> of it as to be entangled
by it. Now, it is impossible almost for a man to have opportunities,
occasions, advantages, suited to his lust and corruption, but he will be
entangled. If ambassadors come from the king of Babylon, Hezekiah’s pride
will cast him into temptation. If Hazael be king of Syria, his cruelty and
ambition will make him to rage savagely against Israel. If the priests come
with their pieces of silver, Judas’s covetousness will instantly be at work
to sell his Master. And many instances of the like kind may, in the days
wherein we live, be given. Some men think to play on the hole of the asp
and not be stung, to touch pitch and not be defiled, to take fire in their
clothes and not be burnt; but they will be mistaken. If thy business,
course of life, societies, or whatever else it be of the like kind, do cast
thee on such things, ways, persons, as suit thy lust or corruption, know
that thou art entered into temptation; how thou wilt come out God only
knows. Let us suppose a man that hath any seeds of filthiness in his heart
engaged, in the course of his life, in society, light, vain, and foolish,
what notice soever, little, great, or none at all, it be that he takes of
it, he is undoubtedly entered into <pb n="121" id="i.vii-Page_121" />temptation. So is it with
ambition in high places; passion in a multitude of perplexing affairs;
polluted corrupt fancy in vain societies, and the perusal of idle books or
treatises of vanity and folly. Fire and things combustible may more easily
be induced to lie together without affecting each other, than
<i>peculiar</i> lusts and <i>suitable</i> objects or occasions for their
exercise.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p13">(5.) When a man is <i>weakened</i>, made <i>negligent</i>
or <i>formal</i> in duty, when he can omit duties or content himself with a
careless, lifeless performance of them, without delight, joy, or
satisfaction to his soul, who had another frame formerly; let him know,
that though he may not be acquainted with the particular distemper wherein
it consists, yet in something or other he is entered into temptation, which
at the length he will find evident, to his trouble and peril. How many have
we seen and known in our days, who, from a warm profession, have fallen to
be negligent, careless, indifferent in praying, reading, hearing, and the
like! Give an instance of one who hath come off without a wound, and I dare
say you may find out a hundred for him that have manifested themselves to
have been asleep on the top of the mast; that they were in the jaws of some
vile temptation or other, that afterward brought forth bitter fruit in
their lives and ways. From some few returners from folly we have every day
these doleful complaints made: “Oh! I neglected private prayer; I did not
meditate on the word, nor attend to hearing, but rather despised these
things: and yet said I was rich and wanted nothing. Little did I consider
that this unclean lust was ripening in my heart; this atheism, these
abominations were fomenting there.” This is a certain rule:—If his heart
grow cold, negligent, or formal in duties of the worship of God, and that
either as to the matter or manner of them, who hath had another frame, one
temptation or other hath laid hold upon him. World, or pride, or
uncleanness, or self-seeking, or malice and envy, or one thing or other,
hath possessed his spirit; <i>gray hairs are here and there upon him</i>,
though he perceive it not. And this is to be observed as to the manner of
duties, as well as to the matter. Men may, upon many sinister accounts,
especially for the satisfaction of their consciences, keep up and frequent
duties of religion, as to the substance and matter of them, when they have
no heart to them, no life in them, as to the spirituality required in their
performance. Sardis kept up the performance of duties, and had therefore a
name to live; but wanted spiritual life in their performances, and, was
therefore “dead,” <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 1" id="i.vii-p13.1" parsed="|Rev|3|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.1">Rev. iii. 1</scripRef>. As it is in distempers of the
body, if a man find his spirits faint, his heart oppressed, his head heavy,
the whole person indisposed, though he do not yet actually burn nor rave,
yet he will cry, “I fear I am entering into a fever, I am so out of order
and indisposed;”—a man may do so in this sickness of the <pb n="122" id="i.vii-Page_122" />soul. If he find his pulse not beat aright and evenly towards
duties of worship and communion with God,—if his spirit be low, and his
heart faint in them,—let him conclude, though his lust do not yet burn
nor rage, that he is entered into temptation, and it is high time for him
to consider the particular causes of his distemper. If the head be heavy
and slumber in the things of grace, if the heart be cold in duties, evil
lies at the door. And if such a soul do escape a great temptation unto sin,
yet it shall not escape a great temptation by desertion. The spouse cries,
“I sleep,” <scripRef passage="Cant. v. 2" id="i.vii-p13.2" parsed="|Song|5|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Song.5.2">Cant. v. 2</scripRef>; and that she had “put off her
coat, and could not put it on;”—had an indisposition to duties and
communion with Christ. What is the next news you have of her? <scripRef passage="Verse 6" id="i.vii-p13.3">Verse
6</scripRef>, Her “Beloved had withdrawn himself,”—Christ was gone; and
she seeks him long and finds him not. There is such a suitableness between
the new nature that is wrought and created in believers, and the duties of
the worship of God, that they will not be parted nor kept asunder, unless
it be by the interposition of some disturbing distemper. The new creature
feeds upon them, is strengthened and increased by them, find sweetness in
them, yea, meets in them with its God and Father; so that it cannot but of
itself, unless made sick by some temptation, delight in them, and desire to
be in the exercise of them. This frame is described in the <scripRef passage="119th Psalm" id="i.vii-p13.4">119th
Psalm</scripRef> throughout. It is not, I say, cast out of this frame and
temper unless it be oppressed and disordered by one secret temptation or
other. Sundry other evidences there are of a soul’s entering into
temptation, which upon inquiry it may discover.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.vii-p14">I propose this to take off the <i>security</i> that we are
apt to fall into, and to manifest what is the peculiar duty that we are to
apply ourselves unto in the special seasons of temptation; for he that is
already entered into temptation is to apply himself unto means for
disentanglement, not to labour to prevent his entering in. How this may be
done I shall afterward declare.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="V" type="Chapter" title="Chapter V." shorttitle="Chapter V" progress="55.20%" prev="i.vii" next="i.ix" id="i.viii">
<h1 id="i.viii-p0.1">Chapter V.</h1>
<argument id="i.viii-p0.2">The second case proposed, or inquiries resolved—What are the
best directions to prevent entering into temptation—Those directions laid
down—The directions given by our Saviour: “Watch and pray”—What is
included therein—(1.) Sense of the danger of temptation—(2.) That it is
not in our power to keep ourselves—(3.) Faith in promises of preservation—Of prayer in particular.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p1">2. <span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.viii-p1.1">Having</span> seen
the danger of entering into temptation, and also discovered the ways and
seasons whereby and wherein men usually so, our second inquiry is, What
general directions may be given to <pb n="123" id="i.viii-Page_123" />preserve a soul from that
condition that hath been spoken of? And we see our Saviour’s direction in
the place spoken of before, <scripRef passage="Matt. xxvi. 41" id="i.viii-p1.2" parsed="|Matt|26|41|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.41">Matt. xxvi.
41</scripRef>. He sums up all in these two words, “Watch and pray.” I shall
a little labour to unfold them, and show what is inwrapped and contained in
them; and that both jointly and severally:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p2">(1.) These is included in them a clear, <i>abiding
apprehension of great evil</i> that there is in entering into temptation.
That which a man watches and prays against, he looks upon as evil to him,
and by all means to be avoided.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p3">This, then, is the <i>first</i> direction:—<i>Always bear
in mind the great danger that it is for any soul to enter into
temptation.</i></p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p4">It is a woful thing to consider what slight thoughts the
most have of this thing. So men can keep themselves from sin itself in open
action, they are content, they scarce aim at more; on any temptation in the
world, all sorts of men will venture at any time. How will young men put
themselves on company, any society; at first, being delighted with <i>evil
company</i>, then with the <i>evil of the company</i>! How vain are all
admonitions and exhortations to them to take heed of such persons,
debauched in themselves, corrupters of others, destroyers of souls! At
first they will venture on the company, abhorring the thoughts of
practising their lewdness; but what is the issue? Unless it be here or
there one, whom God snatches with a mighty hand from the jaws of
destruction, they are all lost, and become after a while in love with the
evil which at first they abhorred. This open door to the ruin of souls is
too evident; and woful experience makes it no less evident that it is
almost impossible to fasten upon many poor creatures any fear or dread of
temptation, who yet will profess a fear and abhorrency of sin. Would it
were only thus with young men, such as are unaccustomed to the yoke of
their Lord! What sort of men is free from this folly in one thing or other?
How many professors have I known that would plead for their <i>liberty</i>,
as they called it! They could hear any thing, all things,—all sorts of
men, all men; they would try all things whether they came to them in the
way of God or no; and on that account would run to hear and to attend to
every broacher of false and abominable opinions, every seducer, though
stigmatized by the generality of the saints: for such a one they had their
liberty,—they could do it; but the opinions they hated as much as any.
What hath been the issue? I scarce ever knew any come off without a wound;
the most have had their faith overthrown. Let no man, then, pretend to fear
sin that doth not fear temptation to it. They are too nearly allied to be
separated. Satan hath put them so together that it is very hard for any man
to put them asunder. He hates not the fruit who delights in the root.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p5"><pb n="124" id="i.viii-Page_124" />When men see that such ways, such companies,
such <i>courses</i>, such businesses, such studies and <i>aims</i>, do
entangle them, make them cold, careless, are quench-coals to them,
indispose them to even, universal, and constant obedience, if they
adventure on them, sin lies at the door. It is a tender frame of spirit,
sensible of its own weakness and corruption, of the craft of Satan, of the
evil of sin, of the efficacy of temptation, that can perform his duty. And
yet until we bring our hearts to this frame, upon the considerations
before-mentioned, or the like that may be proposed, we shall never free
ourselves from sinful entanglements. Boldness upon temptation, springing
from several pretences, hath, as is known, ruined innumerable professors in
these days, and still continues to cast many down from their excellency;
nor have I the least hope of a more fruitful profession amongst us until I
see more fear of temptation. Sin will not long seem great or heavy unto any
to whom temptations seem light or small.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p6">This is the first thing inwrapped in this general
direction:—The daily exercise of our thoughts with an apprehension of the
great danger that lies in entering into temptation, is required of us.
Grief of the Spirit of God, disquietment of our own souls, loss of peace,
hazard of eternal welfare, lies at the door. If the soul be not prevailed
withal to the observation of this direction, all that ensues will be of no
value. Temptation despised will conquer; and if the heart be made tender
and watchful here, half the work of securing a good conversation is over.
And let not him go any further who resolved not to improve this direction
in a daily conscientious observation of it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p7">(2.) There is this in it also, that it is <i>not a thing in
our own power</i>, to keep and preserve ourselves from entering into
temptation. Therefore are we to pray that we may be preserved from it,
because we cannot save ourselves.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p8">This is another means of preservation. As we have no
strength to resist a temptation when it doth come, when we are entered into
it, but shall fall under it, without a supply of sufficiency of grace from
God; so to reckon that we have no power or wisdom to keep ourselves from
entering into temptation, but must be kept by the power and wisdom of God,
is a preserving principle, <scripRef passage="1 Pet. i. 5" id="i.viii-p8.1" parsed="|1Pet|1|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.5">1 Pet. i. 5</scripRef>. We
are in all things “kept by the power of God.” This our Saviour instructs us
in, not only by directing us to pray that we be not led into temptation,
but also by his own praying for us, that we may be kept from it: <scripRef passage="John xvii. 15" id="i.viii-p8.2" parsed="|John|17|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.15">John xvii. 15</scripRef>, “I pray not that thou
shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them
from the evil,”—that is, the temptations of the world unto evil, unto
sin,—<span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.viii-p8.3">ἐκ τοῦ πονηροῦ</span>, “out of evil”
that is in the world, that is temptation, which is all that is evil in the
world; or from the evil one, who <pb n="125" id="i.viii-Page_125" />in the world makes use of the
world unto temptation. Christ prays his Father to keep us, and instructs us
to pray that we be so kept. It is not, then, a thing in our own power. The
ways of our entering into temptation are so many, various, and
imperceptible,—the means of it so efficacious and powerful,—our
weakness our unwatchfulness, so unspeakable,—that we cannot in the least
keep or preserve ourselves from it. We fail both in wisdom and power for
this work.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p9">Let the heart, then commune with itself and say, “<i>I</i>
am poor and weak; <i>Satan</i> is subtle, cunning, powerful, watching
constantly for advantages against my soul; the <i>world</i> earnest,
pressing, and full of specious pleas, innumerable pretences, and ways of
deceit; my <i>own corruption</i> violent and tumultuating, enticing,
entangling, conceiving sin, and warring in me, against me; <i>occasions</i>
and advantages of temptation innumerable in all things I have done or
suffer, in all businesses and persons with whom I converse; the <i>first
beginnings</i> of temptation insensible and plausible, so that, left unto
myself, I shall not know I am ensnared, until my bonds be made strong, and
sin hath got ground in my heart: therefore on God alone will I rely for
preservation, and continually will I look up to him on that account.” This
will make the soul be always committing itself to the care of God, resting
itself on him, and to do nothing, undertake nothing, etc, without asking
counsel of him. So that a double advantage will arise from the observation
of this direction, both of singular use for the soul’s preservation from
the evil feared:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p10">[1.] The engagement of the grace and compassion of God, who
hath called the <i>fatherless</i> and <i>helpless</i> to rest upon him; nor
did ever soul fail of supplies, who, in a sense of want, rolled itself on
him, on the account of his gracious invitation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p11">[2.] The <i>keeping</i> of it in such a frame as, on
various accounts, is useful for its preservation. He that looks to God for
assistance in a due manner is both sensible of his danger, and
conscientiously careful in the use of means to preserve himself: which two,
of what importance they are in this case, may easily be apprehended by them
who have their hearts exercised in these things.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p12">[3.] This also is in it,—act <i>faith</i> on the
<i>promise</i> of God for preservation. To believe that he will preserve us
is a means of preservation; for this God will certainly do, or make a way
for us to escape out of temptation, if we fall into it under such a
believing frame. We are to pray for what God hath promised. Our requests
are to be regulated by his promises and commands, which are of the same
extent. Faith closes with the promises, and so finds relief in this case.
This James instructs us in, <scripRef passage="James 1:5-7" id="i.viii-p12.1" parsed="|Jas|1|5|1|7" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.5-Jas.1.7">chap. i.
5–7</scripRef>. What we want we must “ask of God;” but we must “ask in
faith,” for otherwise we must not “think <pb n="126" id="i.viii-Page_126" />that we shall receive
any thing of the Lord.” This then, also, is in this direction of our
Saviour, that we act faith on the promises of God for our preservation out
of temptation. He hath promised that he will keep us in all our ways; that
we shall be directed in a way that, though we are fools, “we shall not err
therein,” <scripRef passage="Isa. xxxv. 8" id="i.viii-p12.2" parsed="|Isa|35|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.35.8">Isa. xxxv. 8</scripRef>; that he will lead us, guide
us, and deliver us from the evil one. Set faith on work on these promises
of God, and expect a good and comfortable issue. It is not easily conceived
what a train of graces faith is attended withal, when it goes forth to meet
Christ in the promises, nor what a power for the preservation of the soul
lies in this thing; but I have spoken to this elsewhere.<note place="foot" anchored="yes" n="4" id="i.viii-p12.3"><p class="footnote" id="i.viii-p13"><cite title="Owen: Mortification of Sin in Believers" id="i.viii-p13.1">Mortification of Sin in Believers</cite>, vol. vi. chap. xiv.
p. 78.</p></note></p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p14">[4.] Weigh these things <i>severally</i>, and first, take
prayer into consideration. To pray that we enter not into temptation is a
means to preserve us from it. Glorious things are, by all men that know
aught of those things, spoken of this <i>duty</i>; and yet the truth is,
not one half of its excellency, power, and efficacy is known. It is not my
business to speak of it in general; but this I say as to my present
purpose,—he that would be little in temptation, let him be much in
prayer. This calls in the suitable help and succour that is laid up in
Christ for us, <scripRef passage="Heb. iv. 16" id="i.viii-p14.1" parsed="|Heb|4|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.16">Heb. iv. 16</scripRef>. This casteth our souls into
a frame of opposition to every temptation. When Paul had given instruction
for the taking to ourselves “the whole armour of God,” that we may resist
and stand in the time of temptation, he adds this general close of the
whole, <scripRef passage="Eph. vi. 18" id="i.viii-p14.2" parsed="|Eph|6|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.18">Eph. vi. 18</scripRef>, “Praying always with all
prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all
perseverance and supplication.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.viii-p15">Without this all the rest will be of no efficacy for the
end proposed. And therefore consider what weight he lays on it: “Praying
always,”—that is, at all times and seasons, or be always ready and
prepared for the discharge of that duty, <scripRef passage="Luke xviii. 1" id="i.viii-p15.1" parsed="|Luke|18|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18.1">Luke xviii. 1</scripRef>,
<scripRef passage="Eph. vi. 18" id="i.viii-p15.2" parsed="|Eph|6|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.18">Eph. vi. 18</scripRef>; “with all prayer and
supplication in the Spirit,”—putting forth all kinds of desires unto God,
that are suited to our condition, according to his will, lest we diverted
by any thing whatever; and that not for a little while, but “with all
perseverance,”—continuance lengthened out to the utmost: so shall we
stand. The soul so framed is in a sure posture; and this is one of the
means without which this work will not be done. If we do not abide in
prayer, we shall abide in cursed temptations. Let this, then, be another
direction:—Abide in prayer, and that expressly to this purpose, that we
“enter not into temptation.” Let this be one part of our daily contending
with God,—that he would preserve our souls, and keep our hearts and our
ways, that we be not entangled; that his good and wise providence will
order our ways <pb n="127" id="i.viii-Page_127" />and affairs, that no pressing temptation befall
us; that he would give us diligence, carefulness, and watchfulness over our
own ways. So shall we be delivered when others are held with the cords of
their own folly.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="VI" type="Chapter" title="Chapter VI." shorttitle="Chapter VI" progress="61.92%" prev="i.viii" next="i.x" id="i.ix">
<h1 id="i.ix-p0.1">Chapter VI.</h1>
<argument id="i.ix-p0.2">Of watching that we enter not into temptation—The nature and
efficacy of that duty—The first part of it, as to the special seasons of
temptation—The first season, in unusual prosperity—The second, in a
slumber of grace—Third, a season of great spiritual enjoyment—The
fourth, a season of self-confidence.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.ix-p1.1">The</span> other part
of our Saviour’s direction,—namely, to “watch,”—is more general, and
extends itself to many particulars. I shall fix on some things that are
contained therein:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p2">3. Watch the <i>seasons</i> wherein men usually do “enter
into temptations.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p3">There are sundry seasons wherein an hour of temptation is
commonly at hand, and will unavoidably seize upon the soul, unless it be
delivered by mercy in the use of watchfulness. When we are under such a
season, then are we peculiarly to be upon our guard that we enter not into,
that we fall not under, the power of temptation. Some of those seasons may
be named:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p4">(1.) A season of <i>unusual outward prosperity</i> is
usually accompanied with an hour of temptation. Prosperity and temptation
go together; yea, prosperity is a temptation, many temptations, and that
because, without eminent supplies of grace, it is apt to cast a soul into a
frame and temper exposed to any temptation, and provides it with fuel and
food for all. It hath provision for lust and darts for Satan.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p5">The wise man tells us that the “prosperity of fools
destroys them,” <scripRef passage="Prov. i. 32" id="i.ix-p5.1" parsed="|Prov|1|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.1.32">Prov. i. 32</scripRef>. It <i>hardens</i> them in
their way, makes them despise instruction, and put the evil day (whose
terror should influence them into amendment) far from them. Without a
special assistance, it hath an inconceivably malignant influence on
believers themselves. Hence Agur prays against riches, because of the
temptation that attends them: “Lest,” saith he, “I be full and deny thee,
and say, Who is the <span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.ix-p5.2">Lord</span>?”
<scripRef passage="Prov. xxx. 8, 9" id="i.ix-p5.3" parsed="|Prov|30|8|30|9" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.8-Prov.30.9">Prov. xxx. 8, 9</scripRef>;—lest, being filled
with them, he should forget the Lord; as God complains that his people did,
<scripRef passage="Hos. xiii. 6" id="i.ix-p5.4" parsed="|Hos|13|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Hos.13.6">Hos. xiii. 6</scripRef>. We know how David was
mistaken in this case: <scripRef passage="Ps. xxx. 6" id="i.ix-p5.5" parsed="|Ps|30|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.30.6">Ps. xxx. 6</scripRef>, “I
said in my prosperity, I shall never be moved.” All is well, and will be
well. But what was at hand, what lay at the door, that David thought not
of? <scripRef passage="Verse 7" id="i.ix-p5.6">Verse 7</scripRef>, “Thou didst hide thy face, and I
was <pb n="128" id="i.ix-Page_128" />troubled.” God was ready to hide his face, and David to
enter into a temptation of desertion, and he knew it not.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p6">As, then, unto a <i>prosperous</i> condition. I shall not
run cross to Solomon’s counsel, “In the day of prosperity rejoice,”
<scripRef passage="Eccles. vii. 14" id="i.ix-p6.1" parsed="|Eccl|7|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.7.14">Eccles. vii. 14</scripRef>. Rejoice in the God of
thy mercies, who doth thee good in his patience and forbearance,
notwithstanding all thy unworthiness. Yet I may add to it, from the same
fountain of wisdom, “Consider,” also, lest evil lie at the door. A man in
that state is in the midst of snares. Satan hath many advantages against
him; he forgeth darts out of all his enjoyments; and, if he watch not, he
will be entangled before he is aware.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p7">Thou wantest that which should poise and ballast thy heart.
Formality in religion will be apt to creep upon thee; and that lays the
soul open to all temptations in their full power and strength. Satisfaction
and delight in creature-comforts, the poison of the soul, will be apt to
grow upon thee. In such a time be vigilant, be circumspect, or thou wilt be
surprised. Job says, that in his affliction “God made his heart soft,”
<scripRef passage="chap. xxiii. 16" id="i.ix-p7.1" parsed="|Eccl|23|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.23.16">chap. xxiii. 16</scripRef>. There is a hardness, an
insensible want of spiritual sense, gathered in prosperity, that, if not
watched against, will expose the heart to the deceits of sin and baits of
Satan. “Watch and pray” in this season. Many men’s negligence in it hath
cost them dear; their woful experience cries out to take heed. Blessed is
he that feareth always, but especially in a time of prosperity.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p8">(2.) As in part was manifested before, a time of <i>the
slumber of grace</i>, of neglect in communion with God, of formality in
duty, is a season to be watched in, as that which certainly some other
temptation attending it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p9">Let a soul in such an estate awake and look about him. His
enemy is at hand, and he is ready to fall into such a condition as may cost
him dear all the days of his life. His present estate is bad enough in
itself; but it is an indication of that which is worse that lies at the
door. The disciples that were with Christ in the mount had not only a
bodily, but a spiritual drowsiness upon them. What says our Saviour to
them? “Arise; watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation.” We know
how near one of them was to a bitter hour of temptation, and not watching
as he ought, he immediately entered into it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p10">I mentioned before the case of the spouse, <scripRef passage="Cant. v. 2-8" id="i.ix-p10.1" parsed="|Song|5|2|5|8" osisRef="Bible:Song.5.2-Song.5.8">Cant. v. 2–8</scripRef>. She slept, and was drowsy,
and unwilling to gird up herself to a vigorous performance of duties, in a
way of quick, active communion with Christ. Before she is aware, she hath
lost her Beloved; then she moans, inquires, cries, endures woundings,
reproaches, and all, before she obtains him again. Consider, then, O poor
soul, thy state and condition! <pb n="129" id="i.ix-Page_129" />Doth thy light burn dim? or
though it give to others as great a blaze as formerly, yet thou seest not
so clearly the face of God in Christ by it as thou hast done? <scripRef passage="2 Cor. iv. 6" id="i.ix-p10.2" parsed="|2Cor|4|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.6">2
Cor. iv. 6</scripRef>. Is thy zeal cold? or if it do the same works as
formerly, yet thy heart is not warmed with the love of God and to God in
them as formerly, but only thou proceedest in the course thou hast been in?
Art thou negligent in the duties of praying or hearing? or if thou dost
observe them, thou doest it not with that life and vigour as formerly? Dost
thou flag in thy profession? or if thou keep it up, yet thy wheels are
oiled by some sinister respects from within or without? Does thy delight in
the people of God faint and grow cold? or is thy love to them changing from
that which is purely spiritual into that which is very carnal, upon the
account of suitableness of principles and natural spirits, if not worse
foundations? If thou art drowsing in such a condition as this, take heed;
thou art falling into some woful temptation that will break all thy bones,
and give thee wounds that shall stick by thee all the days of thy life.
Yea, when thou awakest, thou wilt find that it hath indeed laid hold of
thee already, though thou perceivedst it not; it hath smitten and wounded
thee, though thou hast not complained nor sought for relief or healing.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p11">Such was the state of the church of Sardis, <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 2" id="i.ix-p11.1" parsed="|Rev|3|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.2">Rev.
iii. 2</scripRef>. “The things that remained were ready to die.” “Be
watchful,” says our Saviour, “and strengthen them, or a worse thing will
befall thee.” If any that reads the word of this direction be in this
condition, if he hath any regard of his poor soul, let him now awake,
before he be entangled beyond recovery. Take this warning from God; despise
it not.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p12">(3.) A season of <i>great spiritual enjoyments</i> is
often, by the malice of Satan and the weakness of our hearts, turned into a
season of danger as to this business of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p13">We know how the case stood with Paul, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. xii. 7" id="i.ix-p13.1" parsed="|2Cor|12|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.7">2 Cor. xii.
7</scripRef>. He had glorious spiritual revelations of God and Jesus
Christ. Instantly Satan falls upon him, a messenger from him buffets him;
so that he earnestly begs its departure, but yet is left to struggle with
it. God is pleased sometimes to give us especial discoveries of himself and
his love, to fill the heart with his kindness; Christ takes us into the
banqueting-house, and gives our hearts their fills of love; and this by
some signal work of his Spirit, overpowering us with a sense of love in the
unspeakable privilege of adoption, and so fills our souls with joy
unspeakable and glorious. A man would think this was the securest condition
in the world. What soul does not cry with Peter in the mount, “It is good
for me to be here; to abide here for ever?” But yet very frequently some
bitter temptation is now at hand. Satan sees that, being possessed by the
joy before us, we quickly <pb n="130" id="i.ix-Page_130" />neglect many ways of approach to our
souls, wherein he seeks and finds advantages against us. Is this, then, our
state and condition? Does God at any time give us to drink of the rivers of
pleasure that are at his right hand, and satisfy our souls with his
kindness as with marrow and fatness? Let us not say, “We shall never be
moved;” we know not how soon God may hide his face, or a messenger from
Satan may buffet us.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p14">Besides, there lies oftentimes a greater and worse deceit
in this business. Men cheat their souls with their own fancies, instead of
a sense of God’s love by the Holy Ghost; and when they are lifted up with
their imaginations, it is not expressible how fearfully they are exposed to
all manner of temptations;—and how, then, are they able to find relief
against their consciences from their own foolish fancies and deceivings,
wherewith they sport themselves? May we not see such every day,—persons
walking in the vanities and ways of this world, yet boasting of their sense
of the love of God? Shall we believe them? We must not, then, believe truth
itself; and how woful, then, must their condition needs be!</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p15">(4.) A fourth season is a season of <i>self-confidence</i>;
then usually temptation is at hand.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.ix-p16">The case of Peter is clear unto this: “I will not deny
thee; though all men should deny thee I will not; though I were to die for
it, I would not do it.” This said the poor man when he stood on the very
brink of that temptation that cost him in the issue such bitter tears. And
this taught him so far to know himself all his days, and gave him such
acquaintance with the state of all believers, that when he had received
more of the Spirit and of power, yet he had less of confidence, and saw it
was fit that others should have so also, and therefore persuades all men to
“pass the time of their sojourning here in fear,” <scripRef passage="1 Pet. i. 17" id="i.ix-p16.1" parsed="|1Pet|1|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.17">1 Pet. i.
17</scripRef>; not to be confident and high as he was, lest, as he did,
they fall. At the first trial he compares himself with others, and vaunts
himself above them: “Though all men should forsake thee, yet I will not.”
He fears every man more than himself. But when our Saviour afterward comes
to him, and puts him directly upon the comparison, “Simon, son of Jonas,
lovest thou me more than these?” <scripRef passage="John xxi. 15" id="i.ix-p16.2" parsed="|John|21|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.21.15">John xxi.
15</scripRef>, he hath done comparing himself with others, and only crieth,
“Lord, thou knowest that I love thee.” He will lift up himself above others
no more. Such a season oftentimes falls out. Temptations are abroad in the
world, false doctrines, with innumerable other allurements and
provocations: we are ready every one to be very confident that we shall not
be surprised with them: though all men should fall into these follies yet
we would not: surely we shall never go off from our walking with God; it is
impossible our hearts should be so sottish. But says the apostle, “Be not
<pb n="131" id="i.ix-Page_131" />high-minded, but fear; let him that thinketh he standeth take
heed lest he fall.” Wouldst thou think that Peter, who had walked on the
sea with Christ, confessed him to be the Son of God, been with him in the
mount, when he heard the voice from the excellent glory, should, at the
word of a servant-girl, when there was no legal inquisition after him no
process against him nor any one in his condition, instantly fall a-cursing
and swearing that he knew him not? Let them take heed of self-confidence
who have any mind to take heed of sin. And this is the first thing in our
watching, to consider well the seasons wherein temptation usually makes its
approaches to the soul, and be armed against them. And these are some of
the seasons wherein temptations are nigh at hand.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="VII" type="Chapter" title="Chapter VII." shorttitle="Chapter VII" progress="68.23%" prev="i.ix" next="i.xi" id="i.x">
<h1 id="i.x-p0.1">Chapter VII.</h1>
<argument id="i.x-p0.2">Several acts of watchfulness against temptation proposed—Watch
the heart—What it is to be watched in and about—Of the snares lying in
men’s natural tempers—Of peculiar lusts—Of occasions suited to them—Watching to lay in provision against temptation—Directions for
watchfulness in the first approaches of temptation—Directions after
entering into temptation.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.x-p1.1">That</span> part of
watchfulness against temptation which we have considered regards the
outward means, occasions, and advantages of temptation; proceed we now to
that which respects the <i>heart itself</i>, which is wrought upon and
entangled by temptation. Watching or keeping of the heart, which above all
keepings we are obliged unto, comes within the compass of this duty also;
for the right performance whereof take these ensuing directions:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p2">(1.) Let him that would not enter into temptations labour
to know his own heart, to be acquainted with his own spirit, his natural
frame and temper, <i>his lusts and corruptions</i>, his natural, sinful, or
spiritual weaknesses, that, finding where his weakness lies, he may be
careful to keep at a distance from all occasions of sin.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p3">Our Saviour tells the disciples that “they knew not what
spirit they were of;” which, under a pretence of zeal, betrayed them into
ambition and desire of revenge. Had they known it they would have watched
over themselves. David tells us, <scripRef passage="Ps. xviii. 23" id="i.x-p3.1" parsed="|Ps|18|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.18.23">Ps. xviii. 23</scripRef>,
that he considered his ways, and “kept himself from his iniquity,” which he
was particularly prone unto.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p4">There are advantages for temptations lying oftentimes in
men’s <i>natural tempers and constitutions</i>. Some are naturally gentle,
facile, easy to be entreated, pliable; which, though it be the noblest
temper of nature, and the best and choicest ground, when well <pb n="132" id="i.x-Page_132" />broken up and fallowed for grace to grow in, yet, if not watched
over, will be a means of innumerable surprisals and entanglements in
temptation. Others are earthy, froward, morose; so that envy, malice,
selfishness, peevishness, harsh thoughts of other, repinings, lie at the
very door of their natures, and they can scarce step out but they are in
the snare of one or other of them. Others are passionate, and the like.
Now, he that would watch that he enter not into temptation, had need be
acquainted with his own natural temper, that he may watch over the
treacheries that lie in it continually. Take heed lest you have a Jehu in
you, that shall make you drive furiously; or a Jonah in you, that will make
you ready to repine; or a David, that will make you hasty in your
determinations, as he was often, in the warmth and goodness of his natural
temper. He who watches not this thoroughly, who is not exactly skilled in
the knowledge of himself, will never be disentangled from one temptation or
another all his days.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p5">Again: as men have peculiar natural tempers, which,
according as they are attended or managed, prove a great <i>fomes</i> of
sin, or advantage to the exercise of grace; so men may have <i>peculiar
lusts</i> or corruptions, which, either by their natural constitution or
education, and other prejudices, have got deep rooting and strength in
them. This, also, is to be found out by him who would not enter into
temptation. Unless he know it, unless his eyes be always on it, unless he
observes its actings, motions, advantages, it will continually be
entangling and ensnaring of him. This, then, is our sixth direction in this
kind:—Labour to know <i>thine own frame</i> and temper; what spirit thou
art of; what associates in thy heart Satan hath; where corruption is
strong, where grace is weak; what stronghold lust hath in thy natural
constitution, and the like. How many have all their comforts blasted and
peace disturbed by their natural passion and peevishness! How many are
<i>rendered useless</i> in the world by their frowardness and discontent!
How many are disquieted even by their own gentleness and facility! Be
acquainted, then, with thine own heart: though it be deep, search it;
though it be dark, inquire into it; though it give all its distempers other
names than what are their due, believe it not. Were not men utter strangers
to themselves,—did they not give flattering titles to their natural
distempers,—did they not strive rather to justify, palliate, or excuse
the evils of their hearts, that are suited to their natural tempers and
constitutions, than to destroy them, and by these means keep themselves off
from taking a clear and distinct view of them,—it were impossible that
they should all their days hang in the same briers without attempt for
deliverance. Uselessness and scandal in professors are branches growing
constantly on this root of unacquaintedness with their own frame <pb n="133" id="i.x-Page_133" />and temper; and how few are there who will either study them
themselves or bear with those who would acquaint them with them!</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p6">(2.) When thou knowest the <i>state and condition</i> of
thy heart as to the particulars mentioned, watch against all such occasions
and opportunities, employments, societies, retirements, businesses, as are
apt to entangle thy natural temper or provoke thy corruption.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p7">It may be there are some ways, some societies, some
businesses, that thou never in thy life escapedst them, but sufferedst by
them more or less, through their suitableness to entice or provoke thy
corruption; it may be thou art in a state and condition of life that weary
thee day by day, on the account of thy ambition, passion, discontent, or
the like: if thou hast any love to thy soul, it is time for thee to awake
and to deliver thyself as a bird from the evil snare. Peter will not come
again in haste to the high priest’s hall; nor would David walk again on the
top of his house, when he should have been on the high places of the field.
But the particulars of this instance are so various, and of such several
natures in respect of several persons, that it is impossible to enumerate
them, <scripRef passage="Prov. iv. 14, 15" id="i.x-p7.1" parsed="|Prov|4|14|4|15" osisRef="Bible:Prov.4.14-Prov.4.15">Prov. iv. 14,
15</scripRef>. Herein lies no small part of that wisdom which consists in
our ordering our conversation aright. Seeing we have so little power over
our hearts when once they meet with suitable provocations, we are to keep
them asunder, as a man would do fire and the combustible parts of the house
wherein he dwells.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p8">(3.) Be sure to lay in <i>provision</i> in store against
the approaching of any temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p9">This also belongs to our watchfulness over our hearts. You
will say, “What provision is intended, and where is it to be laid up?” Our
hearts, as our Saviour speaks, are our treasury. There we lay up whatever
we have, good or bad; and thence do we draw it for our use, whatever we
have, good or bad; and thence do we draw it for our use, <scripRef passage="Matt. xii. 35" id="i.x-p9.1" parsed="|Matt|12|35|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.12.35">Matt. xii. 35</scripRef>. It is the heart, then,
wherein provision is to be laid up against temptation. When an enemy draws
nigh to a fort or castle to besiege and take it, oftentimes, if he find it
well manned and furnished with provision for a siege, and so able to hold
out, he withdraws and assaults it not. If Satan, the prince of this world,
come and find our hearts fortified against his batteries, and provided to
hold out, he not only departs, but, as James says, he flees: “He will flee
from us,” <scripRef passage="James iv. 7" id="i.x-p9.2" parsed="|Jas|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.4.7">James iv. 7</scripRef>. For the provision to be laid
up, it is that which is provided in the gospel for us. Gospel provisions
will do this work; that is, keep the heart full of a sense of the love of
God in Christ. This is the greatest preservative against the power of
temptation in the world. Joseph had this; and therefore, on the first
appearance of temptation, he cries out, “How can I do this great evil, and
sin against God?” and there is an end of the temptation as to him; it lays
no hold on him, but departs. He was furnished with such a ready sense of
the love <pb n="134" id="i.x-Page_134" />of God as temptation could not stand before,
<scripRef passage="Gen. xxxix. 9" id="i.x-p9.3" parsed="|Gen|39|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.39.9">Gen. xxxix. 9</scripRef>. “The love of Christ
constraineth us,” saith the apostle, “to live to him,” <scripRef passage="2 Cor. v. 14" id="i.x-p9.4" parsed="|2Cor|5|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.14">2 Cor. v.
14</scripRef>; and so, consequently, to withstand temptation. A man may,
nay, he ought to lay in provisions of the law also,—fear of death, hell,
punishment, with the terror of the Lord in them. But these are far more
easily conquered than the other; nay, they will never stand alone against a
vigorous assault. They are conquered in convinced persons every day; hearts
stored with them will struggle for a while, but quickly give over. But
store the heart with a sense of the love of God in Christ, and his love in
the shedding of it; get a relish of the privileges we have thereby,—our
adoption, justification, acceptation with God; fill the heart with thoughts
of the beauty of his death;—and thou wilt, in an ordinary course of
walking with God, have great peace and security as to the disturbance of
temptations. When men can live and plod on in their profession, and not be
able to say when they had any living sense of the love of God or of the
privileges which we have in the blood of Christ, I know not what they can
have to keep them from falling into snares. The apostle tells us that the
“peace of God,” <span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.x-p9.5">φρουρήσει τὰς καρδίας</span>,
<scripRef passage="Phil. iv. 7" id="i.x-p9.6" parsed="|Phil|4|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.7">Phil. iv. 7</scripRef> “shall keep our hearts.”
<span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.x-p9.7">Φρουρά</span> denotes a military word,—a
garrison; and so <span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.x-p9.8">φρουρήσει</span> is, “shall
keep as in a garrison.” Now, a garrison hath two things attending it,—first, That it is exposed to the assaults of its enemies; secondly, That
safety lies in it from their attempts. It is so with our souls; they are
exposed to temptations, assaulted continually; but if there be a garrison
in them, or if they be kept as in a garrison, temptation shall not enter,
and consequently we shall not enter into temptation. Now, how is this done?
Saith he, “The peace of God shall do it.” What is this “peace of God?” A
sense of his love and favour in Jesus Christ. Let this abide in you, and it
shall garrison you against all assaults whatever. Besides, there is that,
in an especial manner, which is also in all the rest of the directions,—namely, that the thing itself lies in a direct opposition to all the ways
and means that temptation can make use of to approach unto our souls.
Contending to obtain and keep a sense of the love of God in Christ, in the
nature of it, obviates all the workings and insinuations of temptation. Let
this be a third direction, then, in our watching against temptation:—Lay
in store of gospel provisions, that may make the soul a defenced place
against all the assaults thereof.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p10">(4.) In the first approach of any temptation, as we are all
tempted, these directions following are also suited to carry on the work of
watching, which we are in the pursuit of:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p11">[1.] Be always awake, that thou mayst have an <i>early
discovery</i> <pb n="135" id="i.x-Page_135" />of thy temptation, that thou mayst know it so to
be. Most men perceive not their enemy until they are wounded by him. Yea,
others may sometimes see them deeply engaged, whilst themselves are utterly
insensible; they sleep without any sense of danger, until others come and
awake them by telling them that their house is on fire. Temptation in a
neuter sense is not easily discoverable,—namely, as it denotes such a
way, or thing, or matter, as is or may be made use of for the ends of
temptation. Few take notice of it until it is too late, and they find
themselves entangled, if not wounded. Watch, then, to understand betimes
the snares that are laid for thee,—to understand the advantages thy
enemies have against thee, before they get strength and power, before they
are incorporated with thy lusts, and have distilled poison into thy
soul.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p12">[2.] Consider the <i>aim</i> and tendency of the
temptation, whatever it be, and of all that are concerned in it. Those who
have an active concurrence into thy temptation are Satan and thy own lusts.
For thine own lust, I have manifested elsewhere what it aims at in all its
actings and enticings. It never rises up but its intendment is the worst of
evils. Every acting of it would be a formed enmity against God. Hence look
upon it in its first attempts, what pretences soever may be made, as thy
mortal enemy. “I hate it,” saith the apostle, <scripRef passage="Rom. vii. 15" id="i.x-p12.1" parsed="|Rom|7|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.7.15">Rom. vii.
15</scripRef>,—that is, the working of lust in me. “I hate it; it is the
greatest enemy I have. Oh, that it were killed and destroyed! Oh, that I
were delivered out of the power of it!” Know, then, that in the first
attempt or assault in any temptation, the most cursed, sworn enemy is at
hand, is setting on thee, and that for thy utter ruin; so that it were the
greatest madness in the world to throw thyself into his arms to be
destroyed. But of this I have spoken in my discourse of Mortification.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p13">Hath Satan any more friendly aim and intention towards
thee, who is a sharer in every temptation? To beguile thee as a serpent, to
devour thee as a lion, is the friendship that he owes thee. I shall only
add, that the sin he tempts thee to against the law, it is not the thing he
aims at; his design lies against thy interest in the gospel. He would make
sin but a bridge to get over to a better ground, to assault thee as to thy
interest in Christ. He who perhaps will say today, “Thou mayst venture on
sin, because thou hast an interest in Christ,” will tomorrow tell thee to
the purpose that thou hast none, because thou hast done so.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p14">[3.] <i>Meet</i> thy temptation in its entrance with
<i>thoughts of faith</i> concerning Christ on the cross; this will make it
sink before thee. Entertain no parley, no dispute with it, if thou wouldst
not enter into it. Say, “ ‘It is Christ that died,’—that died for such
sins as these.” This is called “taking the shield of faith to quench the
fiery <pb n="136" id="i.x-Page_136" />darts of Satan,” <scripRef passage="Eph. vi. 16" id="i.x-p14.1" parsed="|Eph|6|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.16">Eph. vi. 16</scripRef>.
Faith doth it by laying hold on Christ crucified, his love therein, and
what from thence he suffered for sin. Let thy temptation be what it will,—be it unto sin, to fear or doubting for sin, or about thy state and
condition,—it is not able to stand before faith lifting up the standard
of the cross. We know what means the Papists, who have lost the power of
faith, use to keep up the form. They will sign themselves with the sign of
the cross, or make aerial crosses; and by virtue of that work done, think
to scare away the devil. To act faith on Christ crucified is really to sign
ourselves with the sign of the cross, and thereby shall we overcome that
wicked one, <scripRef passage="1 Pet. v. 9" id="i.x-p14.2" parsed="|1Pet|5|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.5.9">1 Pet. v. 9</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p15">[4.] Suppose the soul hath been <i>surprised</i> by
temptation, and entangled at unawares, so that now it is too late to resist
the first entrances of it, what shall such a soul do that it be not plunged
into it, and carried away with the power thereof?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p16">1<i>st</i>. Do as Paul did: beseech God again and again
that it may “depart from thee,” <scripRef passage="2 Cor. xii. 8" id="i.x-p16.1" parsed="|2Cor|12|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.8">2 Cor. xii. 8</scripRef>.
And if thou abidest therein, thou shalt certainly either be speedily
delivered out of it, or receive a sufficiency of grace not to be foiled
utterly by it. Only, as I said in part before, do not so much employ thy
thoughts about the things whereunto thou art tempted, which oftentimes
raiseth farther entanglements, but set thyself against the temptation
itself. Pray against the temptation that it may depart; and when that is
taken away, the things themselves may be more calmly considered.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p17">2<i>dly</i>. Fly to Christ, in a peculiar manner, as he was
tempted, and beg of him to give thee succour in this “needful time of
trouble.” <scripRef passage="Heb. iv. 16" id="i.x-p17.1" parsed="|Heb|4|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.16">Heb. iv. 16</scripRef>, the apostle instructs us
herein: “In that he hath been tempted, he is able to succour them that are
tempted.” This is the meaning of it: “When you are tempted and are ready to
faint, when you want succour,—you must have it or you die,—act faith
peculiarly on Christ as he was tempted; that is, consider that he was
tempted himself,—that he suffered thereby,—that he conquered all
temptations, and that not merely on his own account, seeing for our sakes
he submitted to be tempted, but for us,” (he conquered in and by himself,
but for us.) And draw, yea, expect succour from him, <scripRef passage="Heb. iv. 15, 16" id="i.x-p17.2" parsed="|Heb|4|15|4|16" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.15-Heb.4.16">Heb. iv. 15, 16</scripRef>. Lie down at his feet,
make thy complaint known to him, beg his assistance, and it will not be in
vain.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p18">3<i>dly</i>. Look to Him who hath <i>promised
deliverance</i>. Consider that he is faithful, and will not suffer thee to
be tempted above what thou art able. Consider that he hath promised a
comfortable issue of these trials and temptations. Call all the promises to
mind of assistance and deliverance that he hath made; ponder them in thy
heart. And rest upon it, that God hath innumerable ways that thou knowest
not of to give thee in deliverance; as,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p19"><pb n="137" id="i.x-Page_137" />(1<i>st</i>.) He can send an <i>affliction</i>
that shall mortify thy heart unto the matter of the temptation, whatever it
be, that that which was before a sweet morsel under the tongue shall
neither have taste or relish in it unto thee,—thy desire to it shall be
killed; as was the case with David: or,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p20">(2<i>dly</i>.) He can, by <i>some providence</i>, alter
that whole state of things from whence thy temptation doth arise, so taking
fuel from the fire, causing it to go out of itself; as it was with the same
David in the day of battle: or,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p21">(3<i>dly</i>.) He can <i>tread down Satan under thy
feet</i>, that he shall not dare to suggest any thing any more to thy
disadvantage (the God of peace shall do it), that thou shalt hear of him no
more: or,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p22">(4<i>thly</i>.) He can give thee such <i>supply of
grace</i> as that thou mayst be freed, though not from the temptation
itself, yet from the tendency and danger of it; as was the case with Paul:
or,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p23">(5<i>thly</i>.) He can give thee such a comfortable
persuasion of <i>good success</i> in the issue as that thou shalt have
refreshment in thy trials, and be kept from the trouble of the temptation;
as was the case with the same Paul: or,</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p24">(6<i>thly</i>.) He can <i>utterly remove</i> it, and make
thee a complete conqueror. And innumerable other ways he hath of keeping
thee from entering into temptation, so as to be foiled by it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.x-p25">4<i>thly</i>. Consider where the temptation wherewith thou
art surprised hath made its entrance, and by what means, and with all speed
make up the breach. Stop that passage which the waters have made to enter
in at. Deal with thy soul like a wise physician. Inquire when, how, by what
means, thou fellest into this distemper; and if thou findest negligence,
carelessness, want of keeping watch over thyself, to have lain at the
bottom of it, fix thy soul there,—bewail that before the Lord,—make up
that breach,—and then proceed to the work that lies before thee.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="VIII" type="Chapter" title="Chapter VIII." shorttitle="Chapter VIII" progress="78.23%" prev="i.x" next="i.xii" id="i.xi">
<h1 id="i.xi-p0.1">Chapter VIII.</h1>
<argument id="i.xi-p0.2">The last general direction, <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.xi-p0.3" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev. iii. 10</scripRef>:
Watch against temptation by constant “keeping the word of Christ’s
patience”—What that word is—How it is kept—How the keeping of it will
keep us from the “hour of temptation.”</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.xi-p1.1">The</span> directions
insisted on in the former chapters are such as are partly given us, in
their several particulars, up and down the Scripture; partly arise from the
nature of the thing itself. There is one general direction remains, which
is comprehensive of all that went before, and also adds many more
particulars unto them. This contains <pb n="138" id="i.xi-Page_138" />an approved antidote
against the poison of temptation,—a remedy that Christ himself hath
marked with a note of efficacy and success; that is given us, <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 10" id="i.xi-p1.2" parsed="|Rev|3|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.10">Rev.
iii. 10</scripRef>, in the words of our Saviour himself to the church of
Philadelphia. “Because,” saith he, “thou hast kept the word of my patience,
I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon
all the world, to try them that dwell in the earth.” Christ is “the same
yesterday, today, and for ever.” As he dealt with the church of
Philadelphia, so will he deal with us. If we “keep the word of his
patience,” he will “keep us from the hour of temptation.” This, then, being
a way of rolling the whole care of this weighty affair on him who is able
to bear it, it requires our peculiar attention.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p2">And, therefore, I shall show,—(1.) What it is to “keep
the word of Christ’s patience,” that we may know how to perform our duty;
and, (2.) How this will be a means of our preservation, which will
establish us in the faith of Christ’s promise.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p3">(1.) The word of Christ is the word of the gospel; the word
by him revealed from the bosom of the Father; the word of the Word; the
word spoken in time of the eternal Word. So it is called “The word of
Christ,” <scripRef passage="Col. iii. 16" id="i.xi-p3.1" parsed="|Col|3|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.3.16">Col. iii. 16</scripRef>; or “The gospel of Christ,”
<scripRef passage="Rom. i. 16" id="i.xi-p3.2" parsed="|Rom|1|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.16">Rom. i. 16</scripRef>, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. ix. 12" id="i.xi-p3.3" parsed="|1Cor|9|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.9.12">1 Cor. ix.
12</scripRef>; and “The doctrine of Christ,” <scripRef passage="Heb. vi. 1" id="i.xi-p3.4" parsed="|Heb|6|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.6.1">Heb. vi. 1</scripRef>. “Of
Christ,” that is, as its author, <scripRef passage="Heb. i. 1, 2" id="i.xi-p3.5" parsed="|Heb|1|1|1|2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.1-Heb.1.2">Heb. i. 1,
2</scripRef>; and of him, as the chief subject or matter of it, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. i. 20" id="i.xi-p3.6" parsed="|2Cor|1|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.1.20">2
Cor. i. 20</scripRef>. Now, this word is called “The word of Christ’s
patience,” or tolerance and forbearance, upon the account of that patience
and long-suffering which, in the dispensation of it, the Lord Christ
exerciseth towards the whole, and to all persons in it; and that both
actively and passively, in his bearing with men and enduring from
them:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p4">[1.] He is patient towards his <i>saints</i>; he bears with
them, suffers from them. He is “patient to us-ward,” <scripRef passage="2 Pet. iii. 9" id="i.xi-p4.1" parsed="|2Pet|3|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.3.9">2 Pet. iii.
9</scripRef>,—that is, that believe. The gospel is the word of Christ’s
patience even to believers. A soul acquainted with the gospel knows that
there is no property of Christ rendered more glorious therein than that of
his patience. That he should bear with so many unkindnesses, so many
causeless breaches, so many neglects of his love, so many affronts done to
his grace, so many violations of engagements as he doth, it manifests his
gospel to be not only the word of his grace, but also of his patience. He
suffers also <i>from</i> them in all the reproaches they bring upon his
name and ways; and he suffers <i>in</i> them, for “in all their afflictions
he is afflicted.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p5">[2.] Towards the <i>elect</i> not yet effectually called.
<scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 20" id="i.xi-p5.1" parsed="|Rev|3|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.20">Rev. iii. 20</scripRef>, he stands waiting at the
door of their hearts and knocks for an entrance. He deals with them by all
means, and yet stands and waits until “his head is filled with the dew, and
his locks with the drops of the <pb n="139" id="i.xi-Page_139" />night,” <scripRef passage="Cant. v. 2" id="i.xi-p5.2" parsed="|Song|5|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Song.5.2">Cant.
v. 2</scripRef>; as enduring the cold and inconveniences of the night, that
when his morning is come he may have entrance. Oftentimes for a long season
he is by them scorned in his person, persecuted in his saints and ways,
reviled in his word, whilst he stands at the door in the word of his
patience, with his heart full of love towards their poor rebellious
souls.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p6">[3.] To the <i>perishing world</i>. Hence the time of his
kingdom in this world is called the time of his “patience,” <scripRef passage="Rev. i. 9" id="i.xi-p6.1" parsed="|Rev|1|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.9">Rev. i.
9</scripRef>. He “endures the vessels of wrath with much long-suffering,”
<scripRef passage="Rom. ix. 22" id="i.xi-p6.2" parsed="|Rom|9|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.9.22">Rom. ix. 22</scripRef>. Whilst the gospel is
administered in the world he is patient towards the men thereof, until the
saints in heaven and earth are astonished and cry out, “How long?”
<scripRef passage="Ps. xiii. 1, 2" id="i.xi-p6.3" parsed="|Ps|13|1|13|2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.13.1-Ps.13.2">Ps. xiii. 1, 2</scripRef>; <scripRef passage="Rev. vi. 10" id="i.xi-p6.4" parsed="|Rev|6|10|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.6.10">Rev. vi.
10</scripRef>. And themselves do mock at him as if he were an idol,
<scripRef passage="2 Pet. iii. 4" id="i.xi-p6.5" parsed="|2Pet|3|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.3.4">2 Pet. iii. 4</scripRef>. He endures from them
bitter things, in his name, ways, worship, saints, promises, threats, all
his interest of honour and love; and yet passeth by them, lets them alone,
does them good. Nor will he cut this way of proceeding short until the
gospel shall be preached no more. Patience must accompany the gospel.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p7">Now, this is the word that is to be kept, that we may be
kept from “the hour of temptation.”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p8">(2.) Three things are implied in the keeping of this word:
[1.] Knowledge; [2.] Valuation; [3.] Obedience:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p9">[1.] <i>Knowledge</i>. He that will keep this word must
know it, be acquainted with it, under a fourfold notion:—1<i>st</i>. As a
word of <i>grace</i> and <i>mercy</i>, to save him; 2<i>dly</i>. As a word
of <i>holiness</i> and <i>purity</i>, to sanctify him; 3<i>dly</i>. As a
word of <i>liberty</i> and <i>power</i>, to ennoble him and set him free;
4<i>thly</i>. As a word of <i>consolation</i>, to support him in every
condition:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p10">1<i>st</i>. As a word of <i>grace</i> and <i>mercy</i>,
able to save us: “It is the power of God unto salvation,” <scripRef passage="Rom. i. 16" id="i.xi-p10.1" parsed="|Rom|1|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.16">Rom.
i. 16</scripRef>; “The grace of God that bringeth forth salvation,”
<scripRef passage="Tit. ii. 11" id="i.xi-p10.2" parsed="|Titus|2|11|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Titus.2.11">Tit. ii. 11</scripRef>; “The word of grace that is
able to build us up, and to give us an inheritance among all them that are
sanctified,” <scripRef passage="Acts xx. 32" id="i.xi-p10.3" parsed="|Acts|20|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.32">Acts xx. 32</scripRef>; “The word that is able to
save our souls,” <scripRef passage="James i. 21" id="i.xi-p10.4" parsed="|Jas|1|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.21">James i. 21</scripRef>. When the word of the gospel
is known as a word of mercy, grace, and pardon, as the sole evidence for
life, as the conveyance of an eternal inheritance; when the soul finds it
such to itself, it will strive to keep it.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p11">2<i>dly</i>. As a word of <i>holiness</i> and
<i>purity</i>, able to sanctify him: “Ye are clean through the word I have
spoken unto you,” saith our Saviour, <scripRef passage="John xv. 3" id="i.xi-p11.1" parsed="|John|15|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.15.3">John xv. 3</scripRef>. To
that purpose is his prayer, <scripRef passage="chap. xvii. 17" id="i.xi-p11.2" parsed="|John|17|17|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.17.17">chap. xvii.
17</scripRef>. He that knows not the word of Christ’s patience as a
sanctifying, cleansing word, in the power of it upon his own soul, neither
knows it nor keeps it. The empty profession of our days knows not one step
towards this duty; and thence it is that the most are so overborne under
the power of temptations. Men full of self, of the world, of <pb n="140" id="i.xi-Page_140" />fury, ambition, and almost all unclean lusts, do yet talk of
keeping the word of Christ! See <scripRef passage="1 Pet. i. 2" id="i.xi-p11.3" parsed="|1Pet|1|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.2">1 Pet. i. 2</scripRef>;
<scripRef passage="2 Tim. ii. 19" id="i.xi-p11.4" parsed="|2Tim|2|19|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.19">2 Tim. ii. 19</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p12">3<i>dly</i>. As a word of <i>liberty</i> and <i>power</i>,
to ennoble him and set him free;—and this not only from the guilt of sin
and from wrath, for that it doth as it is a word of grace and mercy; not
only from the power of sin, for that it doth as it is a word of holiness;
but also from all outward respects of men or the world that might entangle
him or enslave him. It declares us to be “Christ’s freemen,” and in bondage
unto none, <scripRef passage="John viii. 32" id="i.xi-p12.1" parsed="|John|8|32|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.8.32">John viii. 32</scripRef>; <scripRef passage="1 Cor. vii. 23" id="i.xi-p12.2" parsed="|1Cor|7|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.7.23">1 Cor. vii.
23</scripRef>. We are not by it freed from due subjection unto superiors,
nor from any duty, nor unto any sin, <scripRef passage="1 Pet. ii. 16" id="i.xi-p12.3" parsed="|1Pet|2|16|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.16">1 Pet. ii. 16</scripRef>;
but in two respects it is a word of freedom, liberty, largeness of mind,
power and deliverance from bondage:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p13">(1<i>st</i>.) In respect of <i>conscience</i> as to the
worship of God, <scripRef passage="Gal. v. 1" id="i.xi-p13.1" parsed="|Gal|5|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.5.1">Gal. v. 1</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p14">(2<i>dly</i>.) In respect of <i>ignoble</i>, slavish
respects unto the men or things of the world, in the course of our
pilgrimage. The gospel gives a free, large, and noble spirit, in subjection
to God, and none else. There is administered in it a spirit “not of fear,
but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind,” <scripRef passage="2 Tim. i. 7" id="i.xi-p14.1" parsed="|2Tim|1|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.1.7">2 Tim. i.
7</scripRef>; a mind “in nothing terrified,” <scripRef passage="Phil. i. 28" id="i.xi-p14.2" parsed="|Phil|1|28|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.1.28">Phil. i.
28</scripRef>,—not swayed with any by-respect whatever. There is nothing
more unworthy of the gospel than a mind in bondage to persons or things,
prostituting itself to the lusts of men or affrightments of the world. And
he that thus knows the word of Christ’s patience, really and in power, is
even thereby freed from innumerable, from unspeakable temptations.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p15">4<i>thly</i>. As a word of <i>consolation</i>, to support
him in every condition, and to be a full portion in the want of all. It is
a word attended with “joy unspeakable and full of glory.” It gives
supportment, relief, refreshment, satisfaction, peace, consolation, joy,
boasting, glory, in every condition whatever. Thus to know the word of
Christ’s patience, thus to know the gospel, is the first part, and it is a
great part, of this condition of our preservation from the hour and power
of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p16">[2.] <i>Valuation</i> of what is thus known belongs to the
keeping of this word. It is to be kept as a treasure. <scripRef passage="2 Tim. i. 14" id="i.xi-p16.1" parsed="|2Tim|1|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.1.14">2 Tim. i.
14</scripRef>, <span lang="EL" class="Greek" id="i.xi-p16.2">Τὴν καλὴν
παρακαταθήκην</span>,—that excellent “<span lang="LA" class="foreign" id="i.xi-p16.3">depositum</span>” (that is, the word of the gospel),—“keep it,” saith the apostle, “by the Holy Ghost;” and, “Hold fast the
faithful word,” <scripRef passage="Tit. i. 9" id="i.xi-p16.4" parsed="|Titus|1|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Titus.1.9">Tit. i. 9</scripRef>. It is a good treasure, a
faithful word; hold it fast. It is a word that comprises the whole interest
of Christ in the world. To value that as our chiefest treasure is to keep
the word of Christ’s patience. They that will have a regard from Christ in
the time of temptation are not to be regardless of his concernments.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p17">[3.] <i>Obedience</i>. Personal obedience, in the universal
observation of all the commands of Christ, is the keeping of his word,
<scripRef passage="John xiv. 15" id="i.xi-p17.1" parsed="|John|14|15|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.14.15">John xiv. 15</scripRef>. <pb n="141" id="i.xi-Page_141" />Close
adherence unto Christ in holiness and universal obedience, then when the
opposition that the gospel of Christ doth meet withal in the world doth
render it signally the word of his patience, is the life and soul of the
duty required.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p18">Now, all these are to be so managed with that intension of
mind and spirit, that care of heart and diligence of the whole person, as
to make up a keeping of this word; which evidently includes all these
considerations.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p19">We are arrived, then, to the sum of this safeguarding duty,
of this condition of freedom from the power of temptation:—He that, having
a due acquaintance with the gospel in its excellencies, as to him a word of
mercy, holiness, liberty, and consolation, values it, in all its
concernments, as his choicest and only treasure,—makes it his business
and the work of his life to give himself up unto it in universal obedience,
then especially when opposition and apostasy put the patience of Christ to
the utmost,—he shall be preserved from the hour of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p20">This is that which is comprehensive of all that went
before, and is exclusive of all other ways for the obtaining of the end
purposed. Nor let any man think without this to be kept one hour from
entering into temptation; wherever he fails, there temptation enters. That
this will be a sure preservative may appear from the ensuing
considerations:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p21">(1.) It hath the <i>promise</i> of preservation, and this
alone hath so. It is solemnly promised, in the place mentioned, to the
church of Philadelphia on this account. When a great trial and temptation
was to come on the world, at the opening of the seventh seal, <scripRef passage="Rev. vii. 3" id="i.xi-p21.1" parsed="|Rev|7|3|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.7.3">Rev.
vii. 3</scripRef>, a caution is given for the preservation of God’s sealed
ones, which are described to be those who keep the word of Christ; for the
promise is that it should be so.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p22">Now, in every promise there are three things to be
considered:—[1.] The <i>faithfulness</i> of the Father, who gives it. [2.]
The <i>grace</i> of the Son, which is the matter of it. [3.] The
<i>power</i> and <i>efficacy</i> of the Holy Ghost, which puts the promise
in execution. And all these are engaged for the preservation of such
persons from the hour of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p23">[1.] The <i>faithfulness</i> of God accompanieth the
promise. On this account is our deliverance laid, <scripRef passage="1 Cor. x. 13" id="i.xi-p23.1" parsed="|1Cor|10|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.13">1 Cor. x.
13</scripRef>. Though we be tempted, yet we shall be kept from the hour of
temptation; it shall not grow too strong for us. What comes on us we shall
be able to bear; and what would be too hard for us we shall escape. But
what security have we hereof? Even the faithfulness of God: “God is
faithful, who will not suffer you,” etc. And wherein is God’s faithfulness
seen and exercised? “He is faithful that promised,” <scripRef passage="Heb. x. 23" id="i.xi-p23.2" parsed="|Heb|10|23|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.10.23">Heb. x.
23</scripRef>; his <pb n="142" id="i.xi-Page_142" />faithfulness consists in his discharge of
his promises. “He abideth faithful: he cannot deny himself,” <scripRef passage="2 Tim. ii. 13" id="i.xi-p23.3" parsed="|2Tim|2|13|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.13">2
Tim. ii. 13</scripRef>. So that by being under the promise, we have the
faithfulness of God engaged for our preservation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p24">[2.] There is in every promise of the covenant <i>the grace
of the Son</i>; that is the subject-matter of all promises: “I will keep
thee.” How? “By my grace with thee.” So that what assistance the grace of
Christ can give a soul that hath a right in this promise, in the hour of
temptation it shall enjoy it. Paul’s temptation grew very high; it was
likely to have come to its prevalent hour. He “besought the Lord, that is,
the Lord Jesus Christ, for help, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. xii. 8" id="i.xi-p24.1" parsed="|2Cor|12|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.8">2 Cor. xii. 8</scripRef>;
and received that answer from him, “My grace is sufficient for thee,”
<scripRef passage="verse 9" id="i.xi-p24.2">verse 9</scripRef>. That it was the Lord Christ and
his grace with whom he had peculiarly to do is evident from the close of
that verse: “I will glory in my infirmity, that the power of Christ may
rest upon me;” or “the efficacy of the grace of Christ in my preservation
be made evident.” So <scripRef passage="Heb. ii. 18" id="i.xi-p24.3" parsed="|Heb|2|18|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.18">Heb. ii. 18</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p25">[3.] The <i>efficacy</i> of the Spirit accompanieth the
promises. He is called “The Holy Spirit of promise;” not only because he is
promised by Christ, but also because he effectually makes good the promise,
and gives it accomplishment in our souls. He also, then, is engaged to
preserve the soul walking according to the rule laid down. See <scripRef passage="Isa. lix. 21" id="i.xi-p25.1" parsed="|Isa|59|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.59.21">Isa. lix. 21</scripRef>. Thus, where the promise
is, there is all this assistance. The faithfulness of the Father, the grace
of the Son, the power of the Spirit, all are engaged in our
preservation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p26">(2.) This <i>constant, universal</i> keeping of Christ’s
word of patience will keep the heart and soul in such a frame, as wherein
no prevalent temptation, by virtue of any advantages whatever, can seize
upon it, so as totally to prevail against it. So David prays, <scripRef passage="Ps. xxv. 21" id="i.xi-p26.1" parsed="|Ps|25|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.25.21">Ps.
xxv. 21</scripRef>, “Let integrity and uprightness preserve me.” This
integrity and uprightness is the Old Testament keeping the word of Christ,—universal close walking with God. Now, how can they preserve a man? Why,
by keeping his heart in such a frame, so defended on every side, that no
evil can approach or take hold on him. Fail a man in his integrity, he hath
an open place for temptation to enter, <scripRef passage="Isa. lvii. 21" id="i.xi-p26.2" parsed="|Isa|57|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.57.21">Isa. lvii. 21</scripRef>.
To keep the word of Christ, is to do this universally, as hath been showed.
This exercises grace in all the faculties of the soul, and compasses it
with the whole armour of God. The understanding is full of light; the
affections, of love and holiness. Let the wind blow from what quarter it
will, the soul is fenced and fortified; let the enemy assault when or by
what means he pleaseth, all things in the soul of such a one are upon the
guard; “How can I do this thing, and sin against God?” is at hand.
Especially, upon a twofold account doth deliverance and security arise from
his hand:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p27"><pb n="143" id="i.xi-Page_143" />[1.] By the <i>mortification</i> of the heart
unto the matter of temptations. The prevalency of any temptation arises
from hence, that the heart is ready to close with the matter of it. There
are lusts within, suited to the proposals of the world or Satan without.
Hence James resolves all temptations into our “own lusts,” <scripRef passage="chap. i. 14" id="i.xi-p27.1" parsed="|Isa|1|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.1.14">chap.
i. 14</scripRef>; because either they proceed from or are made effectual by
them, as hath been declared. Why doth terror or threats turn us aside from
a due constancy in the performance of our duty? Is it not because there is
unmortified, carnal fear abiding in us, that tumultuates in such a season?
Why is it that the allurements of the world and compliances with men
entangle us? Is it not because our affections are entangled with the things
and considerations proposed unto us? Now, keeping the word of Christ’s
patience, in the manner declared, keeps the heart mortified to these
things, and so it is not easily entangled by them. Saith the apostle,
<scripRef passage="Gal. ii. 20" id="i.xi-p27.2" parsed="|Gal|2|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.20">Gal. ii. 20</scripRef>, “I am crucified with
Christ.” He that keeps close to Christ is crucified with him, and is dead
to all the desires of the flesh and the world; as more fully, <scripRef passage="chap. vi. 14" id="i.xi-p27.3" parsed="|Gal|6|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.6.14">chap. vi. 14</scripRef>. Here the match is broken,
and all love, entangling love, dissolved. The heart is crucified to the
world and all things in it. Now the matter of all temptations almost is
taken out of the world; the men of it, or the things of it, make them up.
“As to these things,” says the apostle, “I am crucified to them,” (and it
is so with every one that keeps the word of Christ.) “My heart is mortified
unto them. I have no desire after them, nor affection to them, nor delight
in them, and they are crucified unto me. The crowns, glories, thrones,
pleasures, profits of the world, I see nothing desirable in them. The
reputation among them, they are all as a thing of nought. I have no value
nor estimation of them.” When Achan saw the “goodly Babylonian garment, and
two hundred shekels of silver, and a wedge of gold,” first he “coveted
them,” then he “took them,” <scripRef passage="Josh. vii. 21" id="i.xi-p27.4" parsed="|Josh|7|21|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Josh.7.21">Josh. vii. 21</scripRef>.
Temptation subtly spreads the Babylonish garment of favour, praise, peace,
the silver of pleasure or profit, with the golden contentments of the
flesh, before the eyes of men. If now there be that in them alive,
unmortified, that will presently fall a-coveting; let what fear of
punishment will ensue, the heart of hand will be put forth into
iniquity.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p28">Herein, then, lies the security of such a frame as that
described: It is always accompanied with a mortified heart, crucified unto
the things that are the matter of our temptations; without which it is
utterly impossible that we should be preserved one moment when any
temptation doth befall us. If liking, and love of the things proposed,
insinuated, commended in the temptation, be living and active in us, we
shall not be able to resist and stand.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p29"><pb n="144" id="i.xi-Page_144" />[2.] In this frame the heart is <i>filled with
better things</i> and their excellency, so far as to be fortified against
the matter of any temptation. See what resolution this puts Paul upon,
<scripRef passage="Phil. iii. 8" id="i.xi-p29.1" parsed="|Phil|3|8|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.8">Phil. iii. 8</scripRef>; all is “loss and dung” to
him. Who would go out of his way to have his arms full of loss and dung?
And whence is it that he hath this estimation of the most desirable things
in the world? It is from that dear estimation he had of the excellency of
Christ. So, <scripRef passage="verse 10" id="i.xi-p29.2">verse 10</scripRef>, when the soul is exercised to
communion with Christ, and to walking with him, he drinks new wine, and
cannot desire the old things of the world, for he says “The new is better.”
He tastes every day how gracious the Lord is; and therefore longs not after
the sweetness of forbidden things,—which indeed have none. He that makes
it his business to eat daily of the tree of life will have no appetite unto
other fruit, though the tree that bear them seem to stand in the midst of
paradise. This the spouse makes the means of her preservation; even the
excellency which, by daily communion, she found in Christ and his graces
above all other desirable things. Let a soul exercise itself to a communion
with Christ in the good things of the gospel,—pardon of sin, fruits of
holiness, hope of glory, peace with God, joy in the Holy Ghost, dominion
over sin,—and he shall have a mighty preservative against all
temptations. As the full soul loatheth the honey-comb,—as a soul filled
with carnal, earthly, sensual contentments finds no relish nor savour in
the sweetest spiritual things; so he that is satisfied with the kindness of
God, as with marrow and fatness,—that is, every day entertained at the
banquet of wine, wine upon the lees, and well refined,—hath a holy
contempt of the baits and allurements that lie in prevailing temptations,
and is safe.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p30">(3.) He that so keeps the word of Christ’s patience is
always furnished with <i>preserving considerations</i> and preserving
principles,—moral and real advantages of preservation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p31">[1.] He is furnished with preserving <i>considerations</i>,
that powerfully influence his soul in his walking diligently with Christ.
Besides the sense of duty which is always upon him, he considers,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p32">1<i>st</i>. The <i>concernment</i> of Christ, whom his soul
loves, in him and his careful walking. He considers that the presence of
Christ is with him, his eye upon him; that he ponders his heart and ways,
as one greatly concerned in his deportment of himself, in a time of trial.
So Christ manifests himself to do, <scripRef passage="Rev. ii. 19-23" id="i.xi-p32.1" parsed="|Rev|2|19|2|23" osisRef="Bible:Rev.2.19-Rev.2.23">Rev. ii.
19–23</scripRef>. He considers all,—what is acceptable, what is to be
rejected. He knows that Christ is concerned in his honour, that his name be
not evil spoken of by reason of him; that he is concerned in love to his
soul, having that design upon him to “present him holy, and unblamable, and
unreprovable in his sight,” <scripRef passage="Col. i. 22" id="i.xi-p32.2" parsed="|Col|1|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.22">Col. i. 22</scripRef>,—and his Spirit is grieved where he is interrupted in this work; concerned
on the account of his gospel, <pb n="145" id="i.xi-Page_145" />the progress and acceptation of
it in the world,—its beauty would be slurred, its good things reviled,
its progress stopped, if such a one be prevailed against; concerned in his
love to others, who are grievously scandalized, and perhaps ruined, by the
miscarriages of such. When Hymeneus and Philetus fell, they overthrew the
faith of some. And says such a soul, then, who is exercised to keep the
word of Christ’s patience, when intricate, perplexed, entangling
temptations, public, private, personal, do arise, “Shall I now be careless?
shall I be negligent? shall I comply with the world and the ways of it? Oh
what thoughts of heart hath he concerning me, whose eye is upon me! Shall I
contemn his honour, despise his love, trample his gospel in the mire under
the feet of men, turn aside others from his ways? Shall such a man as I
fly, give over resistings? It cannot be.” There is no man who keeps the
word of the patience of Christ but is full of this soul-pressing
consideration. It dwells on his heart and spirit; and the love of Christ
constrains him so to keep his heart and ways, <scripRef passage="2 Cor. v. 14" id="i.xi-p32.3" parsed="|2Cor|5|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.14">2 Cor. v.
14</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p33">2<i>dly</i>. The great consideration of <i>the temptations
of Christ</i> in his behalf, and the conquest he made in all assaults for
his sake and his God, dwell also on his spirit. The prince of this world
came upon him, every thing in earth or hell that hath either allurement or
affrightment in it was proposed to him, to divert him from the work of
mediation which for us he had undertaken. This whole life he calls the time
of his “temptations;” but he resisted all, conquered all, and is become a
Captain of salvation to them that obey him. “And,” says the soul, “shall
this temptation, these arguings, this plausible pretence, this sloth, this
self-love, this sensuality, this bait of the world, turn me aside, prevail
over me, to desert him who went before me in the ways of all temptations
that his holy nature was obnoxious unto, for my good?”</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p34">3<i>dly</i>. <i>Dismal thoughts</i> of the <i>loss of
love</i>, of the smiles of the countenance of Christ, do also frequently
exercise such a soul. He knows what it is to enjoy the favour of Christ, to
have a sense of his love, to be accepted in his approaches to him, to
converse with him, and perhaps hath been sometimes at some loss in this
thing; and so knows also what it is to be in the dark, distanced from him.
See the deportment of the spouse in such a case, <scripRef passage="Cant. iii. 4" id="i.xi-p34.1" parsed="|Song|3|4|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Song.3.4">Cant. iii.
4</scripRef>. When she had once found him again, she holds him; she will
not let him go; she will lose him no more.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p35">[2.] He that keeps the word of Christ’s patience hath
preserving <i>principles</i> whereby he is acted. Some of them may be
mentioned:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p36">1<i>st</i>. In all things he lives by <i>faith</i>, and is
acted by it in all his ways, <scripRef passage="Gal. ii. 20" id="i.xi-p36.1" parsed="|Gal|2|20|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.20">Gal. ii. 20</scripRef>.
Now, upon a twofold account hath faith, when improved, the power of
preservation from temptation annexed unto it:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p37"><pb n="146" id="i.xi-Page_146" />(1<i>st</i>.) Because it empties the soul of
its <i>own wisdom</i>, understanding, and fulness, that it may act in the
wisdom and fulness of Christ. The only advice for the preservation in
trials and temptations lies in that of the wise man, <scripRef passage="Prov. iii. 5" id="i.xi-p37.1" parsed="|Prov|3|5|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Prov.3.5">Prov. iii. 5</scripRef>, “Trust in the <span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.xi-p37.2">Lord</span> with all thine heart; and lean
not unto thine own understanding.” This is the <i>work</i> of faith; it
<i>is</i> faith; it is to <i>live</i> by faith. The great [cause of]
falling of men in trials is their leaning to, or leaning upon, their own
understanding and counsel. What is the issue of it? <scripRef passage="Job xviii. 7" id="i.xi-p37.3" parsed="|Job|18|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Job.18.7">Job xviii.
7</scripRef>, “The steps of his strength shall be straitened, and his own
counsel shall cast him down.” First, he shall be entangled, and then cast
down; and all by his own counsel, until he come to be ashamed of it, as
Ephraim was, <scripRef passage="Hos. x. 6" id="i.xi-p37.4" parsed="|Hos|10|6|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Hos.10.6">Hos. x. 6</scripRef>. Whenever in our trials we
consult our own understandings, hearken to self-reasonings, though they
seem to be good, and tending to our preservation, yet the principle of
living by faith is stifled, and we shall in the issue be cast down by own
own counsels. Now, nothing can empty the heart of this self-fulness but
faith, but living by it, but not living to ourselves, but having Christ
live in us by our living by faith on him.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p38">(2<i>dly</i>.) Faith, making the soul poor, empty,
helpless, destitute in itself, <i>engages</i> the heart, will, and power of
Jesus Christ for assistance; of which I have spoken more at large
elsewhere.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p39">2<i>dly</i>. <i>Love</i> to the saints, with care that they
suffer not upon our account, is a great preserving principle in a time of
temptations and trials. How powerful this was in David, he declares in that
earnest prayer, <scripRef passage="Ps. lxix. 9" id="i.xi-p39.1" parsed="|Ps|69|9|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.9">Ps. lxix. 9</scripRef>, “Let not them that wait on
thee, O Lord <span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.xi-p39.2">God</span> of hosts, be
ashamed for my sake: let not those that seek thee be confounded for my
sake, O God of Israel;”—“O let not me so miscarry, that those for whom I
would lay down my life should be put to shame, be evil spoken of,
dishonoured, reviled, contemned on my account, for my failings.” A selfish
soul, whose love is turned wholly inwards, will never abide in a time of
trial.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p40">Many other considerations and principles that those who
keep the word of Christ’s patience, in the way and manner before described,
are attended withal, might be enumerated; but I shall content myself to
have pointed at these mentioned.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p41">And will it now be easy to determine whence it is that so
many in our days are prevailed on in the time of trial,—that the hour of
temptation comes upon them, and bears them down more or less before it? Is
it not because, amongst the great multitude of professors that we have,
there are few that keep the word of the patience of Christ? If we wilfully
neglect or cast away our interest in the promise of preservation, is it any
wonder if we be not preserved? There is an hour of temptation come upon the
world, to try them that dwell therein. It variously exerts its power and
efficacy. There <pb n="147" id="i.xi-Page_147" />is not any way or thing wherein it may not be
seen acting and putting forth itself. In worldliness; in sensuality; in
looseness of conversation; in neglect of spiritual duties, private, public;
in foolish, loose, diabolical opinions; in haughtiness and ambition; in
envy and wrath; in strife and debate, revenge, selfishness; in atheism and
contempt of God, doth it appear. They are but branches of the same root,
bitter streams of the same fountain, cherished by peace, prosperity,
security, apostasies of professors, and the like. And, alas! how many do
daily fall under the power of this temptation in general! How few keep
their garments girt about them, and undefiled! And if any urging,
particular temptation befall any, what instances almost have we of any that
escape? May we not describe our condition as the apostle that of the
Corinthians, in respect of an outward visitation: “Some are sick, and some
are weak, and many sleep?” Some are wounded, some defiled, many utterly
lost. What is the spring and fountain of this sad condition of things? Is
it not, as hath been said?—we do not keep the word of Christ’s patience
in universal close walking with him, and so lose the benefit of the promise
given and annexed thereunto.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p42">Should I go about to give instances of this thing, of
professors coming short of keeping the word of Christ, it would be a long
work. These four heads would comprise the most of them:—First,
<i>Conformity</i> to the world, which Christ hath redeemed us from, almost
in all things, with joy and delight in promiscuous compliances with the men
of the world. Secondly, <i>Neglect</i> of duties which Christ hath
enjoined, from close meditation to public ordinances. Thirdly,
<i>Strife</i>, variance, and debate among ourselves, woful judging and
despising one another, upon account of things foreign to the bond of
communion that is between the saints. Fourthly, <i>Self-fulness</i> as to
principles, and selfishness as to ends. Now, where these things are, are
not men carnal? Is the word of Christ’s patience effectual in them? Shall
they be preserved? They shall not.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p43">Would you, then, be preserved and kept from the hour of
temptation? would you watch against entering into it?—as deductions from
what hath been delivered in this chapter, take the ensuing cautions:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p44">1. Take heed of leaning on deceitful assistances; as,—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p45">(1.) On your own <i>counsels</i>, understandings,
reasonings. Though you argue in them never so plausibly in your own
defence, they will leave you, betray you. When the temptation comes to any
height, they will all turn about, and take part with your enemy, and plead
as much for the matter of the temptation, whatever it be, as they pleaded
against the end and issue of it before.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p46">(2.) The most vigorous actings, by prayer, fasting, and
other such <pb n="148" id="i.xi-Page_148" />means, against that <i>particular lust</i>,
corruption, temptation, wherewith you are exercised and have to do. This
will not avail you if, in the meantime, there be neglects on other
accounts. To hear a man wrestle, cry, contend as to any particular of
temptation, and immediately fall into worldly ways, worldly compliances,
looseness, and negligence in other things,—it is righteous with Jesus
Christ to leave such a one to the hour of temptation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p47">(3.) The general <i>security</i> of saints’ perseverance
and preservation from total apostasy. Every security that God gives us is
good in its kind, and for the purpose for which it is given to us; but when
it is given for one end, to use it for another, that is not good or
profitable. To make use of the general assurance of preservation from total
apostasy, to support the spirit in respect of a particular temptation, will
not in the issue advantage the soul; because notwithstanding that, this or
that temptation may prevail. Many relieve themselves with this, until they
find themselves to be in the depth of perplexities.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p48">2. Apply yourselves to this great preservation of faithful
keeping the word of Christ’s patience, in the midst of all trials and
temptations:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p49">(1.) In particular, wisely consider wherein the word of
Christ’s patience is most likely to suffer in the days wherein we live and
the seasons that pass over us, and so vigorously set yourselves to keep it
in that particular peculiarly. You will say, “How will we know wherein the
word of Christ’s patience in any season is likely to suffer?” I answer,
Consider what works he peculiarly performs in any season; and neglect of
his word in reference to them is that wherein his word is like to suffer.
The works of Christ wherein he hath been peculiarly engaged in our days and
seasons seem to be these:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p50">[1.] The <i>pouring of contempt</i> upon the great men and
great things of the world, with all the enjoyments of it. He hath
discovered the nakedness of all earthly things, in overturning,
overturning, overturning, both men and things, to make way for the things
that cannot be shaken.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p51">[2.] The <i>owning of the lot</i> of his own inheritance in
a distinguishing manner, putting a difference between the precious and the
vile, and causing his people to dwell alone, as not reckoned with the
nations.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p52">[3.] In being <i>nigh</i> to faith and prayer, honouring
them above all the strength and counsels of the sons of men.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p53">[4.] In recovering his <i>ordinances</i> and institutions
from the carnal administrations that they were in bondage under by the
lusts of men, bringing them forth in the beauty and the power of the
Spirit.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p54">Wherein, then, in such a season, must lie the peculiar
neglect of the word of Christ’s patience? Is it not in setting a value on
the <pb n="149" id="i.xi-Page_149" />world and the things of it, which he hath stained and
trampled under foot? Is it not in the slighting of his peculiar lot, his
people, and casting them into the same considerations with the men of the
world? Is it not in leaning to our own counsels and understandings? Is it
not in the defilement of his ordinances, by giving the outward court of the
temple to be trod upon by unsanctified persons? Let us, then, be watchful,
and in these things keep the word of the patience of Christ, if we love our
own preservation.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xi-p55">(2.) In this frame urge the Lord Jesus Christ with his
blessed promises, with all the considerations that may be apt to take and
hold the King in his galleries, that may work on the heart of our blessed
and merciful High Priest, to give suitable succour at time of need.</p>
</div2>

<div2 n="IX" type="Chapter" title="Chapter IX." shorttitle="Chapter IX" progress="96.11%" prev="i.xi" next="ii" id="i.xii">
<h1 id="i.xii-p0.1">Chapter IX.</h1>
<argument id="i.xii-p0.2">General exhortation to the duty prescribed.</argument>

<p class="Body" id="i.xii-p1"><span style="font-variant:small-caps" id="i.xii-p1.1">Having</span> thus
passed through the considerations of the duty of watching that we enter not
into temptation, I suppose I need not add motives to the observance of it.
Those who are not moved by their own sad experiences, nor the importance of
the duty, as laid down in the entrance of this discourse, must be left by
me to the farther patience of God. I shall only shut up the whole with a
general exhortation to them who are in any measure prepared for it by the
consideration of what hath been spoken. Should you go into an hospital, and
see many persons lying sick and weak, sore and wounded, with many filthy
diseases and distempers, and should inquire of them how they fell into this
condition, and they shall all agree to tell you such or such a thing was
the occasion of it,—“By that I got my wound,” says one, “And my disease,”
says another,—would it not make you a little careful how or what you had
to do with that thing or place? Surely it would. Should you go to a
dungeon, and see many miserable creatures bound in chains for an
approaching day of execution, and inquire the way and means whereby they
were brought into that condition, and they should all fix on one and the
same thing, would you not take care to avoid it? The case is so with
entering into temptation. Ah! how many poor, miserable, spiritually-wounded
souls, have we everywhere!—one wounded by one sin, another by another;
one falling into filthiness of the flesh, another of the spirit. Ask them,
now, how they came into this estate and condition? They must all answer,
“Alas! we entered into temptation, we fell into cursed <pb n="150" id="i.xii-Page_150" />snares
and entanglements; and that hath brought us into the woful condition you
see!” Nay, if a man could look into the dungeons of hell, and see the poor
damned souls that lie bound in chains of darkness, and hear their cries,
what would he be taught? What do they say? Are they not cursing their
tempters, and the temptations that they entered in? And shall we be
negligent in this thing? Solomon tells us that the “simple one that follows
the strange woman knows not that the dead are there, that her house
inclineth to death, and her paths to the dead” (which he repeats three
times); and that is the reason that he ventures on her snares. If you knew
what hath been done by entering into temptation, perhaps you would be more
watchful and careful. Men may think that they shall do well enough
notwithstanding; but, “Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes
not be burnt? Can one go upon hot coals, and his feet not be burnt?”
<scripRef passage="Prov. vi. 27, 28" id="i.xii-p1.2" parsed="|Prov|6|27|6|28" osisRef="Bible:Prov.6.27-Prov.6.28">Prov. vi. 27, 28</scripRef>. No such thing; men
come not out of their temptation without wounds, burnings, and scars. I
know not any place in the world where there is more need of pressing this
exhortation than in this place. Go to our several colleges, inquire for
such and such young men; what is the answer in respect of many? “Ah! such a
one was very hopeful for a season; but he fell into ill company, and he is
quite lost. Such a one had some good beginning of religion, we were in
great expectation of him; but he is fallen into temptation.” And so in
other places. “Such a one was useful and humble, adorned the gospel; but
now he is so wofully entangled with the world that he is grown all self,
hath no sap nor savour. Such a one was humble and zealous; but he is
advanced, and hath lost his first love and ways.” Oh! how full is the
world, how full is this place, of these woful examples; to say nothing of
those innumerable poor creatures who are fallen into temptation by
delusions in religion. And is it not time for us to awake before it be too
late,—to watch against the first rising of sin, the first attempts of
Satan, and all ways whereby he hath made his approaches to us, be they
never so harmless in themselves?</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xii-p2">Have we not experience of our weakness, our folly, <i>the
invincible power</i> of temptation, when once it is gotten within us? As
for this duty that I have insisted on, take these considerations:—</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xii-p3">1. If you neglect it, it being the only means prescribed by
our Saviour, you will certainly enter into temptation, and as certainly
fall into sin. Flatter yourselves. Some of you are “old disciples;” have a
great abhorrency of sin; you think it impossible you should ever be seduced
so and so; but, “Let him (whoever he be) that thinketh he standeth take
heed lest he fall.” It is not any grace received, it is not any experience
obtained, it is not any resolution improved, that will preserve you from
any evil, unless you stand upon your watch: “What I say unto you,” says
Christ, “I say unto <pb n="151" id="i.xii-Page_151" />all, Watch.” Perhaps you may have had some
good success for a time in your careless frame; but awake, admire God’s
tenderness and patience, or evil lies at the door. If you will not perform
this duty, whoever you are, one way or other, in one thing or other,
spiritual or carnal wickedness, you will be tempted, you will be defiled;
and what will be the end thereof? Remember Peter!</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xii-p4">2. Consider that you are always under the eye of Christ,
the great captain of our salvation, who hath enjoined us to watch thus, and
pray that we enter not into temptation. What think you are the thoughts and
what the heart of Christ, when he sees a temptation hastening towards us, a
storm rising about us, and we are fast asleep? Doth it not grieve him to
see us expose ourselves so to danger, after he hath given us warning upon
warning? Whilst he was in the days of his flesh he considered his
temptation whilst it was yet coming, and armed himself against it. “The
prince of this world cometh,” says he, “but hath no part in me.” And shall
we be negligent under his eye? Do not think that thou seest him coming to
thee as he did to Peter, when he was asleep in the garden, with the same
reproof: “What! canst thou not watch one hour?” Would it not be a grief to
thee to be so reproved, or to hear him thundering against thy neglect from
heaven, as against the church of Sardis? <scripRef passage="Rev. iii. 2" id="i.xii-p4.1" parsed="|Rev|3|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.2">Rev. iii. 2</scripRef>.</p>

<p class="Body" id="i.xii-p5">3. Consider that if thou neglect this duty, and so fall
into temptation,—which assuredly thou wilt do,—that when thou art
entangled God may withal bring some heavy affliction or judgment upon thee,
which, by reason of thy entanglement, thou shalt not be able to look on any
otherwise than as an evidence of his anger and hatred; and then what wilt
thou do with thy temptation and affliction together? All thy bones will be
broken, and thy peace and strength will be gone in a moment. This may seem
but as a noise of words for the present; but if ever it be thy condition,
thou wilt find it to be full of woe and bitterness. Oh! then, let us strive
to keep our spirits unentangled, avoiding all appearance of evil and all
ways leading thereunto; especially all ways, businesses, societies, and
employments that we have already found disadvantageous to us.</p>
</div2>
</div1>


<div1 title="Indexes" prev="i.xii" next="ii.i" id="ii">
<h1 id="ii-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

<div2 title="Index of Scripture References" prev="ii" next="ii.ii" id="ii.i">
  <h2 id="ii.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
  <insertIndex type="scripRef" id="ii.i-p0.2" />



<div class="Index">
<p class="bbook">Genesis</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=12#i.vi-p10.1">12:12-13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=2#i.vi-p10.1">20:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=6#i.iv-p19.1">20:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=1#i.iv-p13.2">22:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=1#i.iv-p17.1">22:1-2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=39&amp;scrV=9#i.x-p9.3">39:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Deuteronomy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Deut&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=3#i.iv-p13.3">13:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Deut&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=3#i.iv-p24.1">13:3</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Joshua</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Josh&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=21#i.xi-p27.4">7:21</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Kings</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Kgs&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=22#i.vi-p38.1">22:22</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Chronicles</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Chr&amp;scrCh=32&amp;scrV=31#i.iv-p17.2">32:31</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Job</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=7#i.xi-p37.3">18:7</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Psalms</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=1#i.xi-p6.3">13:1-2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=23#i.x-p3.1">18:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=25&amp;scrV=21#i.xi-p26.1">25:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=30&amp;scrV=6#i.ix-p5.5">30:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=69&amp;scrV=9#i.xi-p39.1">69:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Proverbs</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=32#i.ix-p5.1">1:32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=5#i.xi-p37.1">3:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=14#i.x-p7.1">4:14-15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=27#i.xii-p1.2">6:27-28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=20#i.vi-p18.1">10:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=23&amp;scrV=34#i.iv-p2.1">23:34</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=28&amp;scrV=26#i.vi-p19.1">28:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Prov&amp;scrCh=30&amp;scrV=8#i.ix-p5.3">30:8-9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Ecclesiastes</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=14#i.ix-p6.1">7:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=23&amp;scrV=16#i.ix-p7.1">23:16</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Song of Solomon</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Song&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=4#i.xi-p34.1">3:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Song&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=2#i.vii-p13.2">5:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Song&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=2#i.xi-p5.2">5:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Song&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=2#i.ix-p10.1">5:2-8</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Isaiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=14#i.xi-p27.1">1:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=35&amp;scrV=8#i.viii-p12.2">35:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=57&amp;scrV=21#i.xi-p26.2">57:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=59&amp;scrV=21#i.xi-p25.1">59:21</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Jeremiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jer&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=9#i.vi-p19.2">17:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Hosea</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hos&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=11#i.vi-p19.3">4:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hos&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=11#i.vi-p31.2">4:11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hos&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=6#i.xi-p37.4">10:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hos&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=6#i.ix-p5.4">13:6</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=7#i.vi-p54.1">4:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=8#i.iv-p29.1">4:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=13#i.v-p2.2">6:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=13#i.vi-p4.1">6:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=26#i.vi-p7.2">7:26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=35#i.x-p9.1">12:35</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=24&amp;scrV=12#i.vi-p39.1">24:12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=37#i.iv-p3.4">26:37</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=41#i.ii-p3.1">26:41</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=41#i.iv-p0.4">26:41</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=41#i.viii-p1.2">26:41</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Luke</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=38#i.vi-p9.1">3:38</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=13#i.vi-p7.1">8:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=1#i.viii-p15.1">18:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=3#i.iv-p30.3">22:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=28#i.v-p2.1">22:28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=28#i.vi-p53.2">22:28</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=32#i.xi-p12.1">8:32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=15#i.xi-p17.1">14:15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=30#i.iv-p30.1">14:30</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=15&amp;scrV=3#i.xi-p11.1">15:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=15&amp;scrV=6#i.vi-p21.3">15:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=15#i.viii-p8.2">17:15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=17#i.xi-p11.2">17:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=21&amp;scrV=15#i.ix-p16.2">21:15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Acts</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=32#i.xi-p10.3">20:32</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Romans</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=16#i.xi-p3.2">1:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=16#i.xi-p10.1">1:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=28#i.vi-p38.3">1:28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#i.vi-p59.1">6:1-2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=15#i.x-p12.1">7:15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=18#i.iv-p3.7">7:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rom&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=22#i.xi-p6.2">9:22</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=6#i.vi-p39.2">5:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=23#i.xi-p12.2">7:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=12#i.xi-p3.3">9:12</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=13#i.v-p5.3">10:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=13#i.vi-p55.1">10:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=13#i.xi-p23.1">10:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=13#i.v-p22.1">16:13</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=20#i.xi-p3.6">1:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=4#i.vi-p31.1">4:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=6#i.ix-p10.2">4:6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=14#i.x-p9.4">5:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=14#i.xi-p32.3">5:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=21#i.iv-p3.3">5:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=7#i.ix-p13.1">12:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=8#i.xi-p24.1">12:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=8#i.x-p16.1">12:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=9#i.iv-p20.1">12:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Galatians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=20#i.xi-p27.2">2:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=20#i.xi-p36.1">2:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=13#i.iv-p3.2">3:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=1#i.xi-p13.1">5:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=9#i.vi-p39.3">5:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#i.vi-p12.2">6:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#i.vii-p4.2">6:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gal&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=14#i.xi-p27.3">6:14</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Ephesians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=0#i.vi-p26.1">6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=16#i.x-p14.1">6:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=18#i.viii-p14.2">6:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=18#i.viii-p15.2">6:18</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Philippians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=28#i.xi-p14.2">1:28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=8#i.xi-p29.1">3:8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=7#i.x-p9.6">4:7</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Colossians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Col&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=22#i.xi-p32.2">1:22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Col&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=16#i.xi-p3.1">3:16</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Thessalonians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Thess&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=11#i.vi-p38.2">2:11</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Timothy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Tim&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=9#i.v-p5.1">6:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Timothy</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=7#i.xi-p14.1">1:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=14#i.xi-p16.1">1:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=13#i.xi-p23.3">2:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=17#i.v-p15.1">2:17-18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Tim&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=19#i.xi-p11.4">2:19</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Titus</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Titus&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=9#i.xi-p16.4">1:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Titus&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=11#i.xi-p10.2">2:11</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Hebrews</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=1#i.xi-p3.5">1:1-2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=9#i.iv-p3.1">2:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=17#i.vi-p53.1">2:17-18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=18#i.vi-p4.2">2:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=18#i.xi-p24.3">2:18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=2#i.vi-p42.2">4:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=15#i.x-p17.2">4:15-16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=16#i.viii-p14.1">4:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=16#i.x-p17.1">4:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=7#i.iv-p2.2">5:7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=1#i.xi-p3.4">6:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=23#i.xi-p23.2">10:23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Heb&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=15#i.vi-p39.4">12:15</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">James</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=2#i.iv-p12.1">1:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=2#i.vi-p48.1">1:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=5#i.viii-p12.1">1:5-7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=10#i.vi-p49.1">1:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=13#i.iv-p13.1">1:13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=14#i.vii-p4.1">1:14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=14#i.iv-p30.2">1:14-15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=15#i.v-p14.1">1:15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=21#i.xi-p10.4">1:21</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Jas&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=7#i.x-p9.2">4:7</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Peter</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=2#i.xi-p11.3">1:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=5#i.viii-p8.1">1:5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=6#i.iv-p23.1">1:6-7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=17#i.ix-p16.1">1:17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=16#i.xi-p12.3">2:16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Pet&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=9#i.x-p14.2">5:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Peter</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Pet&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=9#i.vi-p55.2">2:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Pet&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=4#i.xi-p6.5">3:4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Pet&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=9#i.xi-p4.1">3:9</a> </p>
<p class="bbook">Revelation</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=9#i.xi-p6.1">1:9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=19#i.xi-p32.1">2:19-23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=1#i.vii-p13.1">3:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=2#i.v-p22.3">3:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=2#i.ix-p11.1">3:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=2#i.xii-p4.1">3:2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.v-p11.1">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.i-p5.1">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.v-p0.3">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.vi-p5.1">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.vi-p37.1">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.xi-p0.3">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=10#i.xi-p1.2">3:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=20#i.xi-p5.1">3:20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=10#i.xi-p6.4">6:10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=3#i.xi-p21.1">7:3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Rev&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=4#i.vi-p21.1">12:4</a> </p>
</div>




</div2>

<div2 title="Greek Words and Phrases" prev="ii.i" next="ii.iii" id="ii.ii">
  <h2 id="ii.ii-p0.1">Index of Greek Words and Phrases</h2>
  <div class="Greek" id="ii.ii-p0.2">
    <insertIndex type="foreign" lang="EL" id="ii.ii-p0.3" />



<div class="Index">
<ul class="Index1">
 <li><span class="Greek">ἐκ τοῦ πονηροῦ: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-p8.3">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">ἐμπίπτειν: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.v-p5.2">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">Τὴν καλὴν παρακαταθήκην: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-p16.2">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">Φρουρά: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.x-p9.7">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">προσέχειν: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.v-p22.2">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">φρουρήσει: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.x-p9.8">1</a></span></li>
 <li><span class="Greek">φρουρήσει τὰς καρδίας: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.x-p9.5">1</a></span></li>
</ul>
</div>



  </div>
</div2>

<div2 title="Latin Words and Phrases" prev="ii.ii" next="ii.iv" id="ii.iii">
  <h2 id="ii.iii-p0.1">Index of Latin Words and Phrases</h2>
  <insertIndex type="foreign" lang="LA" id="ii.iii-p0.2" />



<div class="Index">
<ul class="Index1">
 <li>Populus sibilet, at mihi plaudo.: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-p21.2">1</a></li>
 <li>Vestigia terrent.: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-p12.1">1</a></li>
 <li>depositum: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-p16.3">1</a></li>
 <li>ingentia decora: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-p11.1">1</a></li>
 <li>mille nocendi artes: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#i.v-p18.1">1</a></li>
</ul>
</div>



</div2>

<div2 title="Index of Pages of the Print Edition" prev="ii.iii" next="toc" id="ii.iv">
  <h2 id="ii.iv-p0.1">Index of Pages of the Print Edition</h2>
  <insertIndex type="pb" id="ii.iv-p0.2" />



<div class="Index">
<p class="pages"><a class="TOC" href="#i.i-Page_87">87</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.ii-Page_88">88</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iii-Page_89">89</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iii-Page_90">90</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_91">91</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_92">92</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_93">93</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_94">94</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_95">95</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.iv-Page_96">96</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.v-Page_97">97</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.v-Page_98">98</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.v-Page_99">99</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.v-Page_100">100</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.v-Page_101">101</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_102">102</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_103">103</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_104">104</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_105">105</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_106">106</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_107">107</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_108">108</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_109">109</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_110">110</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_111">111</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_112">112</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_113">113</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_114">114</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_115">115</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_116">116</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vi-Page_117">117</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-Page_118">118</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-Page_119">119</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-Page_120">120</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-Page_121">121</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.vii-Page_122">122</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-Page_123">123</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-Page_124">124</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-Page_125">125</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-Page_126">126</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.viii-Page_127">127</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.ix-Page_128">128</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.ix-Page_129">129</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.ix-Page_130">130</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.ix-Page_131">131</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_132">132</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_133">133</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_134">134</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_135">135</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_136">136</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.x-Page_137">137</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_138">138</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_139">139</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_140">140</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_141">141</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_142">142</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_143">143</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_144">144</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_145">145</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_146">146</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_147">147</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_148">148</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xi-Page_149">149</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xii-Page_150">150</a> 
<a class="TOC" href="#i.xii-Page_151">151</a> 
</p>
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</div2>
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