ONE reason which
moved me to write and print this little book was, that, though there are
many excellent heart-affecting discourses in the world that tend to convert the
sinner, I had the desire to try this simple method of mine; wherefore I make
bold thus to invite and encourage the worst to come to Christ for life.
I have been vile myself
but have obtained mercy, and I would have my companions in sin partake of mercy
too: and, therefore, I have writ this little book.
The nation doth swarm
with vile ones now, as ever it did since it was a nation. My little book, in
some places, can scarcely go from house to house, but it will find a suitable
subject to spend itself upon. Now, since Christ Jesus is willing to save the
vilest, why should they not, by name, be somewhat acquainted with it, and bid
come to him under that name?
A great sinner, when
converted, seems a booty to Jesus Christ; he gets by saving such a one; why
then should both Jesus lose his glory and the sinner lose his soul at once, and
that for want of an invitation?
I have found, through
God's grace, good success in preaching upon this subject, and perhaps, so I may
by my writing upon it too.1 I have, as you see, let down this net for a draught.
The Lord catch some great fishes by it, for the magnifying of his truth. There
are some vilest in all men's eyes, and some are so in their own eyes too;
but some have their paintings, to shroud their vileness under; yet they are
naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do; and for all these,
God hath sent a Saviour, Jesus; and to all these, the door is opened.
Wherefore, prithee,
profane man, give this little book the reading. Come; pardon, and a part in
heaven and glory, cannot be hurtful to thee. Let not thy lusts and folly drive
thee beyond the door of mercy since it is not locked nor bolted up against thee.
Manasseh was a bad man, and Magdalene a bad woman, to say nothing of the thief
upon the cross, or of the murderers of Christ; yet they obtained mercy; Christ
willingly received them.
And dost thou think
that those, once so bad, now they are in heaven, repent them there because they
left their sins for Christ when they were in the world? I cannot believe, but
that thou thinkest they have verily got the best don't. Why, sinner, do thou
likewise. Christ, at heaven gates, says to thee, Come hither; and the devil, at
the gates of hell, does call thee to come to him. Sinner, what sayest thou?
Whither wilt thou go? Don't go into the fire; there thou wilt be burned! Don't
let Jesus lose his longing, since it is for thy salvation, but come to him and
live.
One word more, and so
I have done. Sinner, here thou dost hear of love; prithee, do not provoke it,
by turning it into wantonness. He that dies for slighting love, sinks deepest
into hell, and will there be tormented by the remembrance of that evil, more
than by the deepest cogitation of all his other sins. Take heed, therefore; do
not make love thy tormentor, sinner. Farewell.