A treatise of original sin ... proving that it is, by pregnant texts of Scripture vindicated from false glosses
Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664.
¶. 6.
The Bodies indisposition to any service of God, a Demonstration of its original Pollution.

BUt let us proceed to another particular wherein the original pollution of the body may be manifested, and that is by the indisposition that is in the body to any service for God, though it may be the soul is willing and desirous. The drousinesse, dulnesse and sleepinesse of the body doth many times cause the soul to be very unfit for any approaches unto God; Our Saviour observed this even in his very Disciples, when he said, The Spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak, Matth. 26. 41. when our Saviour was in those great agonies, making earnest prayer unto God, and commanding his Disciples To watch and pray, that they might not enter into temptation, yet they were heavy and dull, and therefore were twice reproved for their sleep; and this sleepinesse of theirs, was at that time, when (if ever) they should have been throughly awakened; but thus it falleth out often, that in those duties, and at those times, when we ought most to watch and attend, then commonly the body is most heavy and dull; Hence is that drousinesse and sleepinesse while the Word is preached, whereas at thy meals, or at thy recreations, and in wordly businesses there is no such dulnesse falleth upon thee; This ariseth partly from the soul, and part∣ly from the body; The soul that is not spiritual and heavenly, therefore it doth not with delight and joy approach unto God, and then the body is like an in∣strument out of tune, as earth is the most predominant element in it, so it is a clog and a burden to the soul; Therefore bewail thy natural condition herein; Adams body was expedite and ready, he found no indisposition in his body to serve the Lord, but how often, even when the heart desireth it, yet is thy body a weight and trouble to thee. Nazianzene doth excellently bewail this,

How I am joyned to this body, I know not (saith he) how at the same time I should be the Image of God, and roll in this dirt (so he calleth the body)—It is a kind enemy, a deceitfull friend, How strange is this conjunction, Quod vereor amplector, quod amo perhorresco? Doth not God suffer this wrestling of the body with the soul to humble us, that we may understand Page  384 that we are noble or base, heavenly or earthly, as we propend to either of these.
(Orat. de pauperum curâ) This should also make thee earnestly long for the coming of Christ, when all this bodily sinfulnesse shall be done away: Oh what a blessed change will there then be of this vile, heavy, dull and indi∣sposed body, to an immortal, glorious and spiritual body, then there will be no more complaints of this body of thine, then that will cause no jarre or di∣sturbance in the glorious service of God.