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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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meaning of the words is this Whereas you thinke that I came to destroy the Law and the Prophets by making them of none effect you are deceiued nay on the other side know that the ende of my manifestation in the flesh was to fulfill the law both in my doctrine and person and also in the persons of men both good and badde In this Apologie of Christ for his behauiour towards the Law obserue what malice some of the Iewes especially the Scribes and Pharises bare vnto him for Christ was the Author of the Law and yet they maliciously suspect and charge him with the abrogation therof so as he is faine to cleare himselfe in this behalfe The like hath beene the malice of wicked men in all ages against the deerest seruants of God Act. 6. 14. Stephen is accused to speake blasphemous words against the Law Act. 21. 28. Paul is charged with the same crime And such is the malice of the Papists against all Euangelicall reformed Churches because wee denie Iustification by workes therefore they condemne vs for enemies to good workes and in many other points they fasten vpon vs notes of reproach for holding the truth Yea among our selues the like malice doth appeare in those that brand their brethren with odious names because they shew forth more care then others of their dutie to God but let all Gods children beware of this Pharisaicall practise Againe obserue the Titles vnder which he comprehendeth the whole Scriptures of the olde Testament The Law and the Prophets Luke 16. 31. they are called Moses and the Prophets Luke 24. 27. Christ beganne at Moses and at all the Prophets and interpreted vnto them in all the Scriptures there Moses and the Prophets containe all the Scriptures of the old Testament Here then we may note a propertie of the bookes of the olde Testament namely that euery one of them was written either by Moses or some other of the Prophets And by this wee may knowe the Canonicall bookes of the olde Testament and distinguish them from the bookes called Apocrypha for the Apocrypha bookes were not penned by any of the Prophets who spake and writ in the Hebrew tongue the natiue language of the Iewes but by some other in the Greeke tongue which was not the language of the olde Prophets These bookes may bee regarded in sundrie respects as containing many worthie Rules touching manners in which regard wee may preferre them before other writings of men so farre forth as they are consonant with the Scripture and so the Church of God hath of long time reuerenced them but yet they are no part of the Law nor of the Prophets And therefore the Church of Rome doth notably wrong and abuse the world in stiling these Apocryphall bookes for Canonicall Scripture Thirdly Christ in this his Apologie sheweth a sweet consent betweene the Law and the Gospel They are not contrarie one to the other for Christ who is the substance of the Gospel came to fulfill the Lawe● and therefore Paul saith that by faith wee establish the Law and Hebrewes 9. 19 20. c. When Moses had giuen the Lawe vnto the people hee offered sacrifices and sprinkled the blood thereof vpon the booke and vpon the people which was a type of the shedding of Christs blood as it is there expounded which did notably signifie this consent betweene the Law and the Gospel in so much as without Christ the Law could not stand Now this consent betweene them standeth herein The Law requireth perfect obedience and threateneth death to the least breach thereof not propounding any way for the fulfilling thereof out of our selues but the Gospel directeth vs to Christ who as our suretie hath fulfilled the Lawe for vs for which cause Christ is called the ende of the Lawe for righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth And through Christ it is that the righteousnesse of the Law is fulfilled in vs which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Verse 18. For truely I say vnto you till heauen and earth perish one iot or one title of the Law shall not escape till all things bee fulfilled Here our Sauiour Christ propoundeth the second argument for the clearing of himselfe from their false imputation of destroying the Lawe and it is drawne from the nature of the Law which is immutable The Exposition For This sheweth the dependance of this verse vpon the former Truely I say vnto you This is a forme of speech which our Sauiour vsed when he would solemnely auouch any waightie truth and propounding this in his owne name herein he sheweth himselfe to bee the Doctour of his Church whome we must heare in all things for hee speaketh as one that cannot lie The thing hee saith is this Till heauen and earth perish one iotte or title of the Lawe shall not passe In which wordes he setteth downe the stabilitie and the vnchaungeablenesse of the Lawe and that hee might fully expresse his mind● hee borroweth a phrase from the Hebrewe Alphabet wherein Iod is the least letter One iot signifying that not so much as this little letter Iod shall passe out of the Lawe Againe by Title some thinke is meant the Hebrewe vowels but properly it signifieth a line bent crooked or the toppe of an horne so that here it properly signifieth the bending or bowing that is in the top of some Hebrew letters insinuating that not so much as the least part of a letter in the Law should passe away Now these things must not be taken properly for it hath beene and may be that in the Hebrew copies of the old Testament some letters should bee changed as may appeare by the diuers readings in sundrie copies for that may be without the losse of any sentence but Christs meaning is this That not the least parcell or sentence in the Law shall passe away making parts in the Law to be as titles in the Alphabet Till heauen and earth perish that is neuer so much this phrase insinuateth for though heauen and earth shall be changed in regard of their qualities yet the substance of them shall neuer passe to nothing and in this sense is the word Till vsed else-where 1. Sam. 15. 35. Samuell came no more to see Saul till the day of his death that is neuer Till all things be fulfilled that is till euery thing commanded in the Law bee done so as it shall no more vrge a man to any obedience which shall neuer bee for it must eternally bee fulfilled so that this phrase hath the like sense with the former importing thus much euen for euer and euer so that this is the meaning of this verse That the Law of God is vnchangeable not onely in the whole but for euery part thereof and the fulfilling thereof shall neuer haue an ende Christs reason then stands thus If the Lawe bee immutable and for obseruation eternall then I came not to destroy it but
the Lawe is immutable and eternall and therefore I came not to destroy it First here obserue that the Law of God is made perpetuall and vnchangeable If any man aske how this can be seeing the Apostle faith The Lawe is changed Answer The Law is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall as hath beene said now that place is principally to be vnderstood of the Ceremoniall law which indeede is abrogated in regard of the obseruation of it in Gods worship but in the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out it remaineth still and is now more plaine then euer it was As for the Iudiciall law though it be abrogated vnto vs so farre forth as it was peculiar to the Iewes yet as it agrees with common equitie and serues directly to establish the precepts of the Morall lawe it is perpetuall If it be said that Christ changed the Morall law in changing the Sabbath day from the seauenth day to the eight I answer Christ did so indeed by his Apostles but that is no change of the substance but of the ceremonie of the Sabbath for the substance of that law is the inioyning of a seauenth daies rest vnto the Lord. Now though the seauenth day from the creation be not kept yet a seauenth day is kept still If it be further said that the Law it selfe is abrogated for that euery one that breaketh the Lawe is not accursed according to the sentence thereof Deut. 27. 26. Answer Wee must knowe that the Law is but one part of Gods word and the Gospel another reuealing another part of Gods will besides that which the Lawe made knowne for it addes a qualification to the Law moderating the rigour thereof after this manner Hee is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any commandement except saith the Gospel he bee reconciled againe in Christ and in him haue the pardon of his transgressions And yet the Morall law remaines for euer a rule of obedience to euery childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his iustification before God Againe this propertie of the Law in beeing vnchangeable and for euer to be kept sheweth that no creature may dispense with the Law of God Mens lawes may be abrogated and changed but Gods Law euen in the least parts thereof must stand for euer till it be accomplished to the full but if it might be dispensed with then not onely iots and titles thereof but whole lawes might bee abrogated This shewes the blasphemous impietie of the Popes of Rome who in their Canons be authorized to dispense with the lawes of God yea in the last Councell of Trent hee is priuiledged to dispense with some of the lawes of Consanguinitie against nature flatly forbidden in the word of God which is most horrible rebellion and a great disgrace vnto God Thirdly from this propertie of the Law we may obserue that it is not likely that any whole booke of Canonicall Scripture is lost for not one sentence of the Law shall passe till all be fulfilled much lesse then can whole bookes perish Sundrie men do thinke that whole bookes be loste but that opinion cals into question the fidelitie of the Church and Gods own prouidence in preseruing his word neither can it stand wel with this text that saith no title thereof shal faile Those that seeme to be lost were either humane writings as bookes of lawes and Chronicles such as our books of statutes or Chronicles be or books of philosophie such as Salomon writ or else some of them are in the Canonicall Scripture for the bookes of Samuel and the Kings were written by diuers Prophets and therfore we may more safely hold that no part of holy Scripture is lost neither shall euer faile For howsoeuer after the last iudgement the vse of the word written shall cease yet the substance thereof shall remaine in mens hearts and be kept for euer Fourthly this immutabilitie of the Law containes a matter of great terrour woe vnto al impenitent sinners for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues with a presumption of Gods mercie yet the curse of Law which is against them shall stand for euer and therefore while they goe on in sinne they haue iust cause to houle and crie for Gods iustice in that his Law is inuiolable neither will gold or siluer pacifie Gods wrath for though a man by his power and wealth were able to ouerturne heauen and earth yet that would not helpe him though heauen and earth be brought to nothing yet euery part of Gods Law must stand for euer and be fulfilled And therefore whosoeuer doe lie in any finne must in time repent humble themselues forsake their sins and betake themselues vnto Christ that he may fulfill the Law for them or else the cuise thereof shall certainly be fulfilled in them and they shall there lie howling vnder it eternally where is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Fiftly this immutabilitie of the Law and so proportionably of euery part of Gods word as it prooueth the Scriptures to be the word of God so it is a most excellent ground of comfort for all Gods seruants to stablish their hearts in the assurance of all his promises A Christian heart is subiect to receiue many doubtinges of the truth of Gods promises especially in the time of triall and temptation but this must be remembred for euer that the whole word of God is immutable though mans promises may faile and their lawes be abrogated yet no iot or part of Gods word shall passe vnfulfilled and therefore they must constantly waite for the accomplishment thereof for in due time it shall be fulfilled Sixtly we are hereby taught to put on patience in afflictiōs for they come by the speciall appointment of our God who saith in his word That through many afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of heauen now euery part of Gods word must be accomplished and therefore Christ bade Peter to put vp his sword when he would haue rescued his apprehension for saith he I could pray to my Father and hee would send more then twelue legions of Angels to helpe me but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say It must be so Matth. 26. 52 53 54. Seauenthly our Sauiour Christ in this propertie of immutabilitie giueth vnto the whole Law and vnto euery sillable and letter thereof his proper force vertue and sense so as there is nothing in it not so much as one letter vaine or idle for euery commandement reueales the perfect iustice of God and euery letter serues to expresse the same comaundement And herein the Law of God differeth from mens lawes for in them bee many vaine and idle words yea oftentimes whole sentences but in the law of God it is not so Prou. 8. 8. All the words of my mouth are righteous there is no
miserie S●g●e of regeneration 4 A ground of contentatiō in losses God bountie a Gen. 28. 2● b Gen. 32. 10 1. Duties frō Gods boun ti● 2 3 4 5 6 A double prouidence in man 1. Godly ● Inordinate prouidence 7. Reason against distrustfull care A rule for our life The continued miserie of mans life Duties 1. 2 3 6. part of Christs s●rmon 4. kinds of lawfull iudgment 1 2 3 4 ●i●t 23 1 2 3 Math. 16. 6. Luk. 6. 37. Rash iudgement descrbed The practis● of rash iudgment Rash censure of mens persons Iob 1. 8 9 10 11. Ras● censure of mens behauiour 1. Sam. 10. 3 4 Reason● against rash iudgement 1 2 3 4 5 Duties to be obserued when we speake of others 1 2 3 4 Of suspecting euill of others Ho● to iudge of others ●ightly 1. Rule 2. Rule 3. Rule a Mat. 23. 27 b Luk. 13. ●2 c Isa. 1. 10. 2. Reasons against rash iudgement A tast of m●s naturall pride How to know and iudge rightly of our owne sinnes A maine cause of personall defamation ●ecles 7. 23 ●4 How to get a good name Psal. 34. 13. Eccles. 10. 20 Gods iustice in punishing sinners i● their kind A terror to all oppressors Amos ● 5. Matth. 24. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our word thoughts must haue good groūd Prov. 20. 18. Luk ● 18. Eccles. 5. 1. Mans cor●●pt prying 〈◊〉 the f●●●ts of others 〈…〉 in degree Bellar. de amiss grat stat p●cc l. 1. c 9. How the father 's called some sinnes veniall Rash iudgement per●erts a mans good meaning 1. Sam. 10. 3. Mans carnal securitie Eph. 5. 14. 1. Thess. 5. 3. Iudges of others should be blame●esse R●●h censurer● the vi●est persons The remedy of rash iudgment How to cast out a beame out of a mās owne eye 1 Maine sinnes common to all 2 3 Idolatrie of the heart 4 Hypocrisie 5 Pride 6 How to perceiue the gricuousnes of our sinnes 1. Rule 2. Rule 3. Rule 4. Rule How to iudge our selues Reform our waies Motiues to all the duties 1 2 3 An hypocrite A rule for brotherly correction Reforming our selues brings spiritual wisdom a 2. Chr. 33. 13. How to vnderstand Gods word How to know our adoption How to know true religion Brotherly correction commanded 1. Who must correct Exceptions in the case of correction 1 2 3 4 How euery Christian is a Pastor Heb. 10. 24. Who must be corrected Outward dignity frees none from correction Exod. 2. 14. The matter of reproofe The manner how to reprooue Heb. 10. 24. 2 1. Sam. 25. 36. 37. 3 2. Sam. 21. 1 2. c. ● Tim. 5. 1. 4 5 7. part of Christs sermon Gods word is an holy thing Rom. 3. 11. Gal. 2. 20. Vse the word holily Psal. 26. 6. The pure word alone ought to be taught Exod. 30. 32 33. Exod. 30. 32 33. a Synod Laodic ca. 59 Doctrines of Gods word are pearles How to esteeme of Gods word Prou. 3. 14. How to cosu●● our sel●●● in 〈…〉 ● Tim. 3. 9. Ministers must preserue puritie of doctrine 1. Tim. 6. 2● Dogs and swine are obstinate enemies Math. 15 2● Tit. 3 10. 11. Difference betweene dogs and swine 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. Who must iudge men to be dogs swine Where dogs and swine are to bee found How the word must Be dispensed Matth. 13. 15. Excommunication is Gods ordinance e ende of● excommunication Pius 5. pont in Bulla cōtra Elizab. Who must execute this censure How farre excommunication reacheth 1. Reason The holy things of God must be kept from contempt a 2. Thess. 3. ● b Math. 6. 9. 2. king 1● 36. 2. Reason Ministers may seeke to auoide persecutions Math. 10. 16. Ioh. 10 11. Of flight in persecution ● Part of Christs sermon a Iam. 4. 3. 4. Conditions in acceptable praier 2 3 4 2. Rule Gods promise to hear and respect the person in Christ. Zeale serueacie in praier 1. Cor. 4. 7. Causes why w● should be seruent in prayer ● Pet. 4. 18. We must be vrge●t in prayer The best are not here perfect ● Cor. 12. 4. ●ev 3. 17. God withdrawes himselfe sometime frō his children Reasons of the commādement to pray A speciall faith required in praier Rhem. on Iam. 1. sect 6. Bellarm. de iustif l. 3. c. 13 Hab. 2. 4. A moti●e to diligence in praier How God hear●th the wicked C●n. 18. Gods readinesse to heare Vse Our God the onely true God A moriue to loue God Comfort to the afflicted A prerogatiue of parents 1. Tim. 5. 8. Riotous patent reprooued Also such as neglect religious education Most vnnaturall parents A note of an euill man to seeke himselfe Euill men may do good things Gifts of the spirit twofold Luk. 11. 13. How the father giu●● the holy Ghost 〈…〉 gian vi de August ● 4 in Iulianū cap. 8. How to get grace Pro. 24. 30 31 A comfort to the weak in grace Vniuersall grace confuted Anabaptists familist● Aqui● 1. ● ● 〈◊〉 art 3. 9. part of Christs sermon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A propertie of our corrupt nature We should doe no hurt to ourneighbour How to deale in bargaining Pretences for badde dealing cut off How to get loue How to keep a good conscience The reason How to know the Scripture of the old Testament Apocrypha bookes not Canonicall Eccl. ● 6. New Testament diuine scripture The bookes of Moses the 1. Script Certaintie of Scripture How it may be knowne ● from the causes 2. From the effects 3. From the properties of Scripture 4. From miracles 5. From contraries 6. From testimonies Of Martyrs Testimony of t●e spirit Obiections against scripture answered Popish twofold Scripture Andrad orthod explic l. ● Authority of Scripture The power of Scripture in giuing iudgement a 1. Cor. ● 15 b 1. Ioh. 41. What iudge we must choose The Church an incompetent iudge c Conc. Tri sess 4. d ●ckius Enchir. loc com tit 1. d● Eccles. eius author Scripture is authenticall 3. sorts of bookes 1. Diuine ● Ecclesiasticall 3. Humane bookes ● God 's estimony alone in prea●●ing Act. 26. 〈◊〉 Vnwritten traditions not authenticall Andrad orthod explic l. 2 pag 63. Whether the authority of Christ the Prophets be equall The ignorāt abuse this ●ule 10. Part of Christs Sermon Two distinct places for mens finall aboad Mens different estat in heauen and hell No purgatorie * Bellarm. de purgat l 2. c. 6. Striue to escape hell get to heauen Two waies 1. The way of life A Christians life is twofold 1. Spirituall Fruits of spirituall life Spiritual life is seene in temptation How temporall life is lead by faith A eiuill l●●nest life not sufficient to saluation We must not liue by sense Measure not gra●● by feeling Learne to know Gods ●●ll How to liue in afflictions 1. The way of nature 2. The way of false faith Tur 〈…〉 e. Iudaisme Poperie a Concil T●id sess 6. cap.
conioyned in the whole course of our liues and conuersation both before God and man No worke in man but faith is required to his Iustification though in God there be respect to his owne free mercie and to Christs merits but in our liues faith and works must goe hand in hand together Now that these may thus be well distinguished I shew it plainely In the fire is both heate and light yet in the warming of the bodie the heate hath force onely and not light though to many other vses it serue necessarily euen so in a child of God are required both faith and workes but to iustifie him faith onely is required though works be necessarie thorough his whole life for they iustifie vs before men and winne vnto vs a testimonie of our iustification before God not onely in our owne hearts but from the Lord Iam. 2. 21. and therfore we must not content our selues with a faith in speculation voide of workes but within the compasse of our callings doe what good we can for Gods glorie and the comfort of our brethren The Third head from whence offences are taken is the state of the Church first in regard of the wants that be in the Church and namely in this our Church Hence sundrie men take occasion to condemne our Church as no Church our Sacraments as no sacraments our Ministers as no Ministers and our people as no Christians and therefore doe seperate themselues from our Church as beeing no true members of the Church of God To preuent this occasion of sinning three Rules must be obserued first that to beleeue and confesse the doctrine of saluation taught and deliuered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseparable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing els but a companie of Gods people called by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles vnto the state of saluation This doctrine is the seede of regeneration whereby men are begotten vnto Christ and it is that s●ncere milke whereby they are fedde and nourished vnto eternall life Now I say that this our Church of England through Gods mercie doth maintaine beleeue and professe this doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for the proofe hereof let him that doubteth haue recourse to our English confession and to a booke intituled the Articles of Religion established in the Church of England in which are set downe the foundations of Christian Religion allowed and held by all Euangelicall Churches And further to shew that this our profession is not in hypocrisie but in truth this our Church is readie to maintaine and confirme the same doctrine by the shedding of their blood against all foes wha●soeuer and this thing indeede hath beene the onely cause of all our disse●tions with the Church of Rome whereupon wee see there is iust cause our Church should be reputed the true Church of God and a good member of his Catholike Church Secondly obserue the practise of Christ and his Apostles towardes the Church of the Iewes which in their time without all doubt was exceedingly corrupt for the office and place of the high Priest was bought and sold and through ambition and couetousnes became annuall y●a there were two high Priests together at one time all which were against Gods ordinance Againe the Scribes and Pharisies which were the Doctors of that Church erred in some fundamentall points of doctrine teaching Iustification by workes and withall they greatly corrupted the law of God both by their doct●ine and traditions and the Temple became a denne of theeues and yet for all this Christ did not separa●e from that Church neither taught his Disciples so to doe but was present at their sacrifices and assemblies and kept his Passeouer with them and so did his Apostles till they saw them of obstinacie and malitiousnes refuse the grace of God off●red vnto them in the ministerie of the Gospel Now their example must teach vs that so long as our Church holdeth Christ wee must esteeme it to be the Church of God and not for some wants thereof depart from it Thirdly all the reformed Churches in Europe doe with one con●ent honour our Church as a true Church of Christ now their iudgement is not slightly to be regarded but to be preferred farre before the rash opinions of priuate men for the Church hath a gift of discerning in waightie ma●ters shee can iudge of bookes of Scripture which be authenticall which not shee can iudge of spirits and of doctrines and therefore also can iudge what companie of men is a true Church and what is not and this their iudgement also must confirme vs in this truth that this our Church is a true member of Gods Catholik church Now whereas some alleadge the wants of our Church to make it no Church I answer though I will not excuse any default in it wherein i● is wanting to that which Gods word requireth but rather desire that the righteousnes thereof may breake forth as the light and saluation thereof as a burning lampe yet this may be saide in behalfe of our Church that the wants thereof are not such as doe anyway rase the foundation of religion or of Gods holy worshippe and so can not make it to cease to be a true Church and therefore none ought to separate from it for such wants and yet this hindereth not but that Gods seruants may in a godly manner desire the Reformation of things that be amisse for a good Church may be bettered and we ought to striue after perfection The Second offence taken from he Church is from the d●uersitie of opinions that be therein for hence many reason thus learned men be of so many opinions that we know not what to follow and therefore we will be of no religion till the truth be established by some generall Councell and all agree in one For the auoiding of this offence we must know that though men dis●er in sundrie opinions in the true Church of God yet they all agree in the Articles of faith and in the foundation of Gods worship their difference is in matters beside the foundation and therefore it must hinder none from receiuing and embracing true religion Againe it is Gods will that there should be diuersities of opinions yea scismes and heresies in his Church that men might be prooued whether they hold the truth in synce●itie or not as we may see 2. Cor. 11. 19. Deut. 13. 1 2. Now in this ●ase Ieremias direction must be obserued Stand in the parting of the wa●es saith hee and inquire for the olde and auncient way ● that is the doctrine of the Prophets what God willeth and commandeth by them and by his Apostles and that we must follow with all good conscience This Christ intended whē he bade the Iewes to search the Scriptures which testified of him and this we must sanctifie by earnest praier as Cornelius did Act. 10. 1
and it is the corruption of nature that mooues men to seeke their owne aduantage and preferment by the losse and debasing of others Thirdly here we learne that in common iniuries wherein wee are wronged by others we must not requite like for like but doe good for euill we must not looke at that which they doe to vs but at that which we would they should doe Fourthly henee wee learne that in matters of commoditie whereabout we deale in the world we must not only look vnto our selues but also seeke the good of our neighbours it is the maner of men to seeke thēselues only in their affairs each man will ●el as deere as he can according to the prouerb Euery man for himselfe and God for us all but neither the saying nor the practise is from God he would haue vs according to the law of nature to seeke the common good and to doe as we would be done vnto Fiftly this rule of equity cuts the throat of all those pretences wherby bad dealing is smoothed ouer in the world for ill minded persons vse to colour their doings with these and such like sayings the gripple seller saith The thing is mine may I not make of mine owne what I can the deceiuer saith he thrusts his ware on no man the vsurer saith he bids no man hire his money but others intreat it of him and giue him thanks but these pretences are nought these men follow a crooked line they ought to see in their owne hearts whether they would haue other men deale so with them the vsurer may pretend he pleasures the poore but his helpe is no better then his is that giues a draught of colde water to him that is in a burning feauer which seemes pleasant at the first but after turnes to his great annoyance Sixtly we would haue all men to shew forth their loue vnto vs wee then must be as carefull to shew forth our loue to others by the practise of all good duties This is against our nature but yet beeing the commaundement of Christ we must endeauour our selues to obey the same Lastly here we haue direction how to keepe a good conscience in all our dealings with men in the world for such things as are expressed in the word we must follow the direction thereof but where wee want a particular commandement there we must order our actions by this generall rule enter into thy conscience and there search how thou wouldest haue other men deale with thee and follow that in thy dealings with them and so shalt thou keepe a good conscience For want of this come so many disorders as are in the world and therfore happy were our times if men would doe as they would be done to Thus much for the commaundement now followes the reason For this is the Law and the Prophets The meaning By the Law we must vnderstand the fiue bookes of Moses which were the first Scripture that euer was written so Luke the 16. 31. They haue Moses the Prophets By the Prophets we must vnderstand all the rest of the bookes of the olde testament besides the fiue bookes of Moses the Prophets beeing put for the bookes of the Prophets as Matth. 2. 23. It is written the Prophets that he shall be called a Nazarite which testimonie is taken out of the booke of Iudges and it sheweth that the booke of Iudges is to bee numbred among the bookes of the Prophets and they are called the Prophets because they were written by some Prophet And here this commandement touching i●stice is called the law and the Prophets because it is the summe of the Law and Prophets yet some may aske how this can bee true seeing this commaundement onely concernes things to be practised and the Law and Prophets besides morall duties containe matters of faith to be beleeued I answer this commaundement must be vnderstood to be the summe of the Law and the Prophets not for all things but for that which they prescribe touching this point of iustice and equitie and the practise hereof To doe as wee would be done to is the fulfilling of that which is set downe in the Law and in the Prophets touching equitie in all humane actions Now the meaning beeing thus opened the reason standeth thus beeing drawne from diuine testimonie That which is the summe of the Law and of the Prophets touching equitie must be done But to doe as we would be done to is the summe of the Law and the Prophets therefore we must so doe From this reason we may gather a rule wherby to iudge concerning the olde Testament what is Scripture and what is not all Scripture of the olde Testament is either the Law or the Prophets that is was either penned by Moses or by some of the Prophets who were extraordinarily mooued and enabled thereunto And therefore all the bookes from Genesis to Malachie are Canonicall Scripture because they are written by some of the Prophets To this purpose S. Peter saith 2. Pet. 1. 19. We haue a most sure word of the Prophets c. But for the bookes of Apochrypha they are not Canonicall Scripture because they were not penned by Moses or any of the Prophets which is plaine by this that all of them were first written either in latine or in Greeke none in Hebrew originally where as al the old Prophets sent from God writ their bookes in the Hebrew in the language of that people to whom they were sent ●aue onely that some part of Daniel Ezra and Nehemiah were in Chaldie which language the people learned in the captiuitie Secondly the Prophets could not erre either in iudgement memorie o● vnderstanding by reason of the immediate assistance of the holy Ghost as Act. 15. 28. It seemed good to the holy Ghost and to vs and Peter calls their word most sure But the Authors of the bookes of Apocrypha erred as may be shewed in them all Tobit 6. Raphaels counsel for driuing away the deuil by the smell of the liuer of a fish is a meere fabulous deuice for the deuil is by nature a spirit and cannot be affected with such things The storie of Iud●h is fabulous which saith Nabuchadnezzar was king of Assy●●a when the people returned from the captiuitie and Ioaki● was high Priest In the addition to Hester Chap. 16. 11. Haman a is said to be a man of Macedonia but the true Scripture saith he was an Agagite comming of Agag The author Ecclesiasticus confesseth his inabilitie in writing those things but the true Prophets were all sufficient to this worke and freed from errour by the immediate assistance of the holy Ghost And Chap. 46. 13. that author writeth that Samuel prophesied after his death and shewed vnto Saul his death but the true storie Canonicall saith God had forsaken Saul and would answer him neither by dreame nor Vrins nor by Prophets 1. Sam. 28. 6. The booke of Maccabees commendeth
one for killing himselfe which is the most cruell and dangerous murther that can be and the author also excuseth his insufficiencie in penning of it which beseemeth not him that is guided by Gods spirit In the song of the 3. children it is said the flame ascended 49. cubits aboue the furnace which seemes incredible especially that still they should then cast in fuell or approach so neere as to put any man into it Likewise in the storie of Susanna it is said vers 45. that Daniel was a young childe when he executed iudgement vpon the two false witnesses which was in the ende of Astiages raigne immediately before the raigne of Cyrus and verse 64. Daniel by this meanes is said to growe famous which cannot possibly accord with the true storie of Daniel neither for his age nor for his fame and reputation And the like may be said of the rest whereby it is plaine these bookes cannot be canonicall Scripture And yet they are not to be reiected but reuerently esteemed of as the books of worthy men Here some may say If Moses and the Prophets comprehend all Scripture that hath diuine testimonie then the bookes of the new Testament shall not be Scripture because they were not written by the Prophets Answ. They were either penned by the Apostles or by other Apostolike men and allowed by the Apostles as Saint Lukes Gospel and the Acts were written by Luke a Physition and Saint Marke that writ that Gospel was not an Apostle yet those bookes were approoued by Apostolike authoritie which is all one as if they had beene written by the Apostles and the Apostles in speaking and writing were of equall authoritie with the Prophets hauing the infallible assistance of the holy Ghost as well as the Prophets for Acts 15. 28. they say It seemeth good to the holy Ghost and to vs and Ephes. 2. 20. the Church is said to be built on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles where the Apostles are made equall with the Prophets II. Point This reason also doth giue vs to vnderstand what was the first Scripture that euer was penned namely the bookes of Moses before which there was no word of God written which was for the space of 2400. yeares It may be asked what was then the booke of the warres of the Lord mentioned Numb 21. and the booke of the Righteous spoken of by Ioshuah Chapt. 10. 13. Answer These were the writings of men humane stories like to our bookes of Chronicles Yet it is said Iude 14. Enoch the seauenth from Adam prophesied Answ. That prophecie was not penned but went from hand to hand ●y word of mouth and if it were penned yet it was not done by Enoch himselfe but by some Iew in his name long after Moses for it cannot bee prooued that Enoch euer penned any part of Scripture Some will aske mee how the people of God did for that space of two thousand and foure hundred yeares before the Law was written what guide had they for to knowe the will of God Answer They had the word of God immediately taught them by word of mouth from God himselfe as we may see in the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob and they to whom it was deliuered did also conuaie the same from man to man by tradition And because it may seeme strange how religion could for so long time bee preserued pure without writing wee are to knowe that before the lawe was written the Church of God from the beginning was the most part in one familie onely as in Adams Enochs Noes Abrahams c. whereby it was a more easie thing to preserue Gods word among them Againe those men that first receiued the word of God without writing were of long continuance liuing neere to a thousand yeares space whereby they might better see the word preserued and continued without writing by tradition Besides when religion was corrupted God himselfe restored the puritie thereof reuealing his will againe and renewing his couenant vnto his seruants as hee did to Abraham and the rest of the Patriarkes Here then behold how the heads of families preserued Gods word and true religion in the beginning of the world namely by teaching it to their posteritie and from them we may learne what is the dutie and ought to bee the practise of euery gouernour of a family at this day they must not thinke themselues discharged for that the word is written in the Church and euery man may read and heare the same but they must see the same bee taught vnto their children and to the rest of their familie that so it may bee preserued among them So God commandeth his people to teach their children the seruice of the Passeouer Exod. 12. 26. 27. and to whet the words of the Law vpon their children Deut. 6. 7. III. Point In this reason our Sauiour Christ takes for granted that the writings of Moses and of the Prophets are of infallible certaintie for it is all one as if he had said this must needes be euery mans dutie to doe as he would be done to for this is the Law and the Prophets and so answerable to them all other bookes of Scripture containe doctrine of infallible truth and certaintie Here some may aske how we should be perswaded hereof in our consciences Answ. By these Arguments which are all drawne from Scripture it selfe for as euery Science and Arte hath his grounds and principles so hath the holy Scripture which is not the Church but Scripture it selfe 1. from the causes 2. from the effects 3. from the properties 4. from signes 5. from the contraries 6. from the testimonie that is giuen hereof The 1. Argument Among the causes the first and principall is the Author thereof which is God himselfe to him doe Scriptures referre themselues also shew how God is their Author In Scripture we read that God spake to Adam to Enoch Noe Abraham and the rest and of Christ the new Testament giues most liuely testimony making him the Author subiect thereof Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if Scripture had not beene Gods word it would long agone haue vanished Again the cause conuersant must bee considered the deuill by wicked men and heretickes hath laboured to take away Gods word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserued in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all angels that is by the power of God Thirdly the pen-men the instrumentall causes they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue and pietie farre exceeded other writers and if they had beene meere polititians their writings would haue shewed it for the pen-men of holy Scripture haue there in faithfully registred their own faults which no politike person would haue done Againe consider the matter of holy Scripture which stands in
bookes Diuine Ecclesiasticall and Humane Diuine bookes are the bookes of God penned by the Prophets and Apostles and they are all the word of God for whether we regard the matter of them or the manner of reuealing them they are all from God the Prophets and Apostles were onely Gods hands and instruments in penning them the holy Ghost gaue the matter the order and the very words from whence it must needs follow that they are of al-sufficient authoritie of themselues Ecclesiasticall bookes are bookes of diuine matters penned by learned men in the Church and they are either generall bookes or particular Generall bookes Ecclesiasticall I call those which were either made or confirmed by the whole Church as the Creedes of the Apostles the Nicene and of Athanasius and the foure first generall Councels and these haue Catholike allowance yet not absolute authoritie but depending on Scripture Particular bookes Ecclesiasticall I call the Catechismes and Confessions of particular Churches made by them or by particular members thereof which haue not authoritie of themselues but from the Scripture or from generall consent Now both these kindes of bookes may bee called Gods word so farre forth as they agree with Scripture and yet they are also the word of men because they were penned by men and haue both order and style from men and in this regard that they were partly mens workes they are not authenticall of themselues but depend vpon the authoritie of Scripture Humane bookes are bookes penned by men either of the Church or out of the Church concerning humane things as bookes of naturall Philosophie of Policie and other Artes and these are not the bookes of God but of men alone hauing both matter and style from men many of them containe excellent truthes in their kind yet gathered onely from experience and common reason but they haue not in them that truth which is truth according to godlinesse seruing to builde vp and to binde the conscience vnlesse it bee in one case to stoppe the mouthes of Atheists and Epicures and to conuince their consciences And thus by conference of all bookes wee see that Scripture alone is authenticall in it selfe and no bookes beside Uses 1. This teacheth vs that ministers in the dispensing of Gods word should content themselues with the testimony of Scripture alone for the end of the ministerie is to worke and confirme faith and to settle and build vp the conscience in the truth of religion and matters concerning saluation which no other word can doe saue onely the word of God in Scripture that hath sufficient authoritie in it selfe from which conscience cannot appeale and for which cause our Sauiour Christ the true Prophet of the Church contents himselfe with the testimony of the Law and Prophets alone and after him his Apostles did the like See this notably confirmed by Paul who in his preaching to the Iewes professeth himselfe to haue said none other thing then that whic● the Prophets and Moses said should come Other writings haue the●● good vse in their time and place but not in the publike ministerie for authoritie and testimonie from Scripture is authenticall This the Scripture saith therefore it is so but authority from Councels and Father ●is sophistrie as Austin saith so therefore it is so this is no good reason for it implies that all that Austin said is true which indeede is false ●ee beeing as all men are subiect to errour 2. Use. This also sheweth that wee cannot beleeue vnwritten traditions thoug● they be called Apostolicall The Church of Rome intend to decei●e vs when they would beare vs in hand that halfe of those things t●●t are to be beleeued are not written in Scripture but receiued by tr●dition but these traditions we cannot beleeue by a diuine faith hovsoeuer by a common humane faith we may for they are contained in t●e bookes of Councels and Fathers which were worthie men yet subiect to errour 3. Vse Th●● also sheweth that we must submit our selues with feare and trembling to the word of God for it hath absolute authoritie to iudge vs and to con●ince our conselence in all matters of faith manners that pertaine to saluation IV. Point Wh●●eas Christ alleadgeth Moses and the Prophets to confirme his minist●●ie it may be demanded whether there be any difference for authoriti● between Christ and the Prophets for he that alleadgeth another m●●s authoritie seemes to be inferiour thereto I answer if we cōpare C●rist the Prophets we must distinguish between their doctrine th●ir persons The doctrine of Moses of the Prophets is equall to th● doctrine of Christ 2. waies First in certaintie of truth for it is as vnd●ubtedly true as if Christ himselfe had taught the same Secondly in e●ficacie authoritie for the power of binding conscience for the doct●in of the Prophets binds conscience as fully truly as if Christ himse●fe had spoken it And yet the person of Christ is aboue the person of Moses of all the Prophets for he is the Sonne of God both God ●an they were men he is the author of truth they only the instrumēts pen-mē therof frō hence it coms that Christs doctrine doth more bind vs to obedience then the doctrine of the Prophets because the person deliuering it is of more authority excellēcy and for this cause Christ alleadges Moses and the Prophets not for that his word is inferiour to theirs but that in regard of our obedience he might increase the authoritie of Moses and the Prophets because a greater measure of obedience is required to Christs word in regard of the dignitie of his person And this shewes that we now are more bound to obedience vnder the Gospel then the people vere vnder the law for we haue Christs doctrine which in regard of ●is person is of more authoritie then Moses and the Prophets see the point plainely laid downe by the Author to the Hebrewes in the irst Chapter he saith God in times past spake to hi● Church by his Propets but in these last dayes he hath spoken to vs by his sonne and in the second chapter verse 1. he laies downe the vse of this that now we haue Christ for our teacher namely that therefore we ought more aboundanly to giue heede to the things that we haue heard least at any time we le them slip c. shewing that our disobedience now shall be more seue●ly punished V. Point Ignorant people abuse this text to persvade themselue s that preaching is needlesse because no man can say moe then this doe as ye would be done to for this is the summe of the law a●d the Prophets But we wust know that this is not the summe of all tht the Prophets say but onely touching the matter of iustice and equi●e and indeede that we may attaine to saluation more is needfull for ve must not only know Gods word in generall but in particular
thinketh on them though heauen be Gods throne and the earth his footstoole yet will hee looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit yea the Lord will dwell with him that is of a contrite and broken heart Christ came to preach the glad tidings of the Gospel to the poore yea the Lord filleth the hungrie that is the poore and hungrie soule with good things but the rich he sends emptie away Let these and many such fauours with God which they enioy prouoke vs to become poore in spirit Secondly are they blessed that be poore in spirit then here all poore and wretched persons in the world may learne to make good vse of their wants and distresses they must consider them as the hand of God vpon them and thereby be ledde to the viewe of their sinnes and by the consideration of their sinnes be brought to see their miserie in thēselues the true ground of this spirituall pouertie Now when they are once poore in spirit they are in a blessed state in the iudgement of Christ. If a man bleed dangerously at the nose the best way to saue his life is to let him blood else-where and so turne the course of the blood another way euen so when a man is oppressed with worldly calamities hee cannot finde any comfort in them for in themselues they are Gods curses yet if thereby he can bee brought to see his spirituall pouertie then of curses they become blessings vnto him and therefore when we are in any distresse wee must not onely fixe our eies vpon the outward crosse but by meanes of that labour to see the pouertie of our soules and so will the crosse lead vs to happinesse Thirdly they that abound with worldly wealth must hereby learne to become poore if they would be saued Poore I say not in goods but in soule and spirit this indeed is hard to flesh and blood for naturally euery rich man blesseth himselfe in his outward estate and perswades himselfe that God loues him because he giues him wealth but such conceits must he striue against and learne of God to reioyce in this that he is made lowe Iam 〈…〉 Fourthly on this saying of Christ that the poore are blessed the Popish teachers obseruing the word translated poore to be●oken outward pouertie goe about to builde their vowe of voluntarie pouertie whereby men renouncing their wealth and possessions of this world doe be take themselues to some Monasterie there to liue a poore and solitarie life But their voluntarie pouertie will not agree with this text son Christs poor● here pronounced blessed are such as by reason of their pouerty are miserable and wretched wanting outward comforts as we shewed o●t of Luke where Christ opposeth them to the rich who abound with all worldly delights but to vndergoe the Popish vow of voluntarie pouertie is no estate of miserie or distresse for who doe liue in greater ●ase or enioy more freedome from the crosses and vexations of this life then their begging Friers Againe if their vowed pouertie had any ground in this text then Christ should pronounce such poore blessed as made themselues poore but that he doth not for then in the next verse he should pronounce such mourners blessed as voluntarily cause themselues to mourne for that verse dependeth on this as a more full explanation of this first rule But no man will say that they that mourne without a cause are there called blessed and therefore Popish vowed pouertie hath no ground on this place And thus much of the persons II. Point Wherein the blessednes of these poore consists namely in hauing a right to the kingdome of heauen For theirs is the kingdome of heauen By kingdome of heauen for the better conceiuing of this blessednes we must vnderstand a state or condition of man whereby he is in Gods fauour and hath fellowship with God The truth of this description is euident by the tenour of the new Testament Now this estate of man is called a Kingdome because herein God rules as king and man obeies as Gods subiect for no man can be in Gods fauour nor enioy his fellowship vnlesse God be his King ruling in his heart by his word and spirit and he Gods subiect resigning himselfe to be ruled by him for this happie estate consists in Gods gracious ruling of man and mans holy subiection vnto God Indeede fewe doe see any great happines in this estate but the truth is mans whole felicity stands herein Rom. 14. 17. The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Here the Apostle teacheth vs three things namely that when Gods spirit rules in a mans heart then first he is iustified there is righteousnes secondly he hath peace with God euen that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding thirdly the ioy of the holy Ghost which is all vnspeakable comfort passing all worldly ioy whatsoeuer And these three doe notably set out the state of an happie man which will yet more plainly appeare by their contraries in Iudas who beeing a wretched sinner vnrighteously betraied his master and thereupon fell into the miserie of a guiltie accusing conscience which was the cause of his desperate death and also that his bodie burst asunder and his bowells gushed out now if an euill conscience be so fearefull then ●ow blessed an estate is the peace and ioy of a good conscience which a man then hath when God by his word and spirit ruleth in his heart Againe this estate is called the kingdome of heauen because that man in whom Christ 〈…〉 by his word and spirit is alreadie himselfe in heauen though i● bodie he be yet on earth for heauen is like a citie with two gates thorough both of which a man must passe before he obtaine the full ●oyes thereof now so soone as God by his word and spirit rules in any mans heart he is alreadie entred the 〈…〉 te of grace which is the first gate the other remaines to be passed thorough at the time of death which is the gate of glorie and then he is in full possession Doth true happines consist in this estate where Christ ruleth and man obeies then here behold the errour of all Philosophers and wise men of this world touching happines for some haue placed it in pleasure some in wealth and others in ciuill vertue and some in all these But the truth is it stands in none of these A naturall man may haue all these and yet be condemned for the ciuill vertues of the heathen were in them but glorious sinnes Our Sauiour Christ hath here reuealed more vnto vs then all the wise men of the world did euer know and hereby we haue iust occasion to magnifie the bookes of Scripture farre aboue all humane writings because they doe fully set out vnto vs the nature and estate of true felicitie which no humane
workes could euer doe we must therefore account of them not as the word of man but of the euerliuing God yea this must perswade vs to maintaine the bookes of Scripture against all diuellish Atheists that denie the same to be the word of God Secondly hereby we are taught from the bottome of our hearts to make that petition for our selues which Christ teacheth in his holy prayer namely that he would let his kingdome come that is not suffer sinne Sathan or the world to raigne in vs but by his word and spirit to rule in our hearts giuing vs grace to be guided thereby in all our waies We affect nothing more then happines and therefore we must oftentimes most seriously make this request to God preferring this estate with God before all pleasures and happines in this world and vse all good meanes to feele in our hearts the power of Christs kingdome Thirdly this should mooue vs to heare Gods word with all feare and reuerence for by this meanes the kingdome of Christ is erected in vs when the word of Christ takes place in our hearts by faith and brings forth in our liues the fruits of righteousnesse and true repentance then may we truely say the kingdome of heauen is in vs. Lastly Christ ascribing this happie title of his heauenly kingdom to them that be poore and of a contrite heart doth herein minister a soueraigne remedie against all temptations from outward pouertie and distresse Doubtlesse pouerty is a grieuous crosse not onely in regard of the want of bodily comforts but especially because of that contempt and reproach which in this world doth hang vpon it wherevpon many doe esteeme their pouertie as a signe of Gods wrath against them and thereby take occasion to despaire thinking the kingdome of darkenes belongeth vnto them But here consider you poore this sentence of Christ where he plainely teacheth that if a man in outward distresse can be brought to feele his spirituall pouertie and the wretchednesse of his soule by reason of his sinnes then he is so farre from hauing iust cause to despaire of Gods fauour by reason of his pouertie that on the contrary he may gather to his soule a most comfortable assurance from the mouth of him that cannot lie that the kingdome of heauen belongs vnto him Vers. 4. Blessed are they that mourne for they shall bee comforted Here is Christs second rule touching blessednesse wherein consider two points first the parties who are blessed they that mourne secondly wherein their blessednesse consists namely in receiuing comfort For the first by mourners we must not vnderstand euery one that is any way grieued but such as haue iust and waightie causes of griefe and doe therfore mourne for the words import an exceeding measure of griefe such as is expressed by crying and weeping as is plaine by Saint Luke who thus relateth Christs saying blessed are ye that now weepe And yet euery one is not blessed that mourneth vnder grieuous distresse for Caine Saul Achitophel and Iudas were all deepely affected in soule with their most woefull estates though farre from this blessednes This rule then must thus be vnderstood that they are blessed who with their mourning for waightie causes of griefe doe withall mourne for their sins for so was the former Rule to bee vnderstood of those that with the sense of their outward distresse had adioined an inward feeling of their spirituall wants and this verse is but a more full explication thereof as if he should haue said they are blessed that are poore in spirit Yea put case a man bee distressed for most waightie causes of griefe so as hee howle and crie vnder the burthen of them yet if withall hee can vnfainedly mourne and waile in heart for his sinnes notwithstanding all his pouertie and distresse he is truely blessed This blessed sentence vpon them that mourne serues sundry waies for a soueraigne salue to the conscience of a Christian. As first put the case a man were distressed with grieuous calamities and withall were ouertaken with some hainous sinne whereupon not onely his body is afflicted but his conscience also wounded and so hee is cast into the gulfe of desperation yea say further that by reason of the terror of his conscience his flesh were withered and his marrowe consumed in his bones were not this a cause of exceeding mourning yet loe our most blessed Physition Christ Iesus hath made a plaister for his sore for if this man of distresses can withall truely mourne for offending God through his transgressions he is vndoubtedly blessed for Christ hath said it whose word shall neuer faile though heauen and earth come to nothing A blessed text which beeing well applied will not onely support the heart in great distresse but recouer the conscience from vnder deepe despaire Secondly put case a man were grieuously sicke and that he felt the very pangs of death without all ease to seaze vpon him so as both speech and sight with all outward comforts began to faile him this state were lamentable yet if in his soule he can truly mourne for his offences euen in this extremitie he is blessed Thirdly put case a man were taken of his enemies and his wife and children slaine before his face hauing their braines dashed out vpon the stones afterward himselfe put to a most wofull racke and torture this were an estate more wofull then death yet herein a man must not iudge himselfe a cast-away but with mourning for this miserie he must labour to be sorrowfull for his sinnes and then he neede not feare what flesh can doe vnto him for he is blessed Christs word must stand let thy distresse be what it will if vnder it thou mourne for thy sinnes blessed art thou We cannot conceiue while we enioy peace of the worth of this rule in the euill day neither doe we know how neere the time is wherein we shall haue neede thereof and therefore we must now learne this neuer to be forgotten to season all other mourning with godly sorrow for our sinnes II. Point Wherein this blessednes consists namely in that their mourning shall haue an ende and be turned into true comfort That this is true happines will appeare by the contrarie for the woe and sorrow that is here begun and continued in the world to come is the punishment of the damned spirits the portion of the Reprobate which is endles miserie therfore vnto thē that mourne it is true happines that they shall receiue comfort This promise of Comfort is accomplished foure waies First when God tempers and delaies the sorrowes and afflictions of them that mourne according to the measure of their strength 1. Cor. 10. 13. God is faithfull and will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that you are able to beare This was promised to Dauid and his seede that if they did sinne he would correct them with the
finished till death So then it is plaine there is a perfection in the child of God though ioyned with much weakenesse euen in this life his nature is perfect being renued in soule to sound iudgement to an honest heart and a good conscience his actions are perfect in Gods acceptance through Christ while he bewailes his imperfection and endeauours sincerely to please God in all things This is that which Christ enioynes to his Disciples this we must labour for if we wil resemble our heauenly father we can get no higher in this life but let vs attaine to this and in the life to come we shall bee perfect in degrees for then our regeneration shall be accomplished But herein men faile and come short of their dutie as first all those that spend their strength and wit to get the things of this world these men little thinke of this perfection which the Lord requires in his children it may be they will heare the word but yet their hearts are so glued to the earth earthly things that they sauour not of regeneration they know not what it meanes but if they will be Gods children they must follow Iehosaphat 2. Chro. 17. 6. who lift vp his heart to the waies of the Lord for that is the meanes to come to perfection Secondly those also are reprooued that content themselues with a small measure of knowledge and doe not striue after perfection as Christ requireth how can they haue a sound iudgement which studie not to know the doctrine of the Scripture Thirdly that generall want of Christian perfection is here reproued when men content themselues to yeeld respect to the outward duties of the first Table that concerne Gods worship and yet neglect the duties of the second Table that concerne their brethren in generall and pertaine to their functions and callings in particular This is a common fault in Magistrates Ministers Parents Masters Seruants c. they will be Christians in the Church but they neglect to shew the power thereof in their callings but this is a grieuous want of sincerity which makes them farre vnlike their heauenly father for hee is euer like himselfe and therefore looke what men professe in Gods worship that must they practise in their callings A magistrate must be a Christian vpon the Bench as well as in the Church in the administration of iustice as well as in the Congregation and so must Ministers Masters and all estates God allowes not of their seruice in the Church that serue their wicked lusts at home Ierem. 7. 9 10. Gods sacrifices vnder the law must be whole and sound not halt and lame or maimed and such should our obedience be vnder the Gospel with sincere respect to all Gods commandements It profited Herod little to heare Iohn gladly and to doe many things so long as he kept his brothers wife nor Iudas to follow Christ while his heart was vpon the bagge Let our practise of religion therefore shew forth the truth of our publike profession and so shall we in some sort resemble our heauenly Father Chap. 6. Vers. 1. Take heede that you giue not your Almes before men to be seene of them or else yee shall haue no reward of your Father which is in heauen IN the former Chapter the Euangelist hath faithfully recorded three parts of our Sauiour Christs Sermon and here hee beginneth the fourth which reacheth to the nineteenth verse of this Chapter wherein our Sauiour Christ goeth about to reforme his hearers of all abuses in doing good workes and hee instanceth in these three Almes deedes Praier and Fasting not so much commanding them as giuing direction for the right manner of performing them so as they may be acceptable vnto God From the first verse to the fift hee intreateth of Almes deedes propounding two seuerall commandements touching the manner of giuing Almes The first is in this 1. verse Take heed that you giue not your Almes before men to be seene of them which he enforceth by an effectuall reason in the words following or else re shall haue no reward of your Father which is in heauen And then exemplifieth it by a particular example of a corrupt manner of giuing Almes borrowed from the ambitions practise of the Scribes and Pharisies v. 2. The second commandement touching Almes giuing is in the 3. verse whereof he renders a reason in the 4. verse For the first commandement Take heed c. This may seeme to bee repugnant to that precept giuen before Chap. 1. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes But here is no contrarietie if we marke well for in the former chapter wee are commanded to doe good workes before men that they may see them and glorifie God for the same Now here wee are not forbidden simply to doe good workes before men but to doe them before men for this ende to haue our praise of men that we might be glorified for doing them howsoeuer it went with God Before we come to the Rule the words are somewhat to bee scanned for whereas we read them thus Giue not your Almes before men c. Some ancient Churches after other copies and translations read them thus Doe not your righteousnesse or iustice before men which must not seeme strange that in Gods booke there should be diuers readings for in former ages before Printing was inuented the Scriptures of God were conuaied from hand to hand by meanes of writing now they that writ out the copies of Scripture did now and then mistake some words and letters by negligence or ignorance and put one thing for another whereupon doe come these diuers readings yet wee must not thinke that the word of God is hereby maimed or made imperfect for the true sense of the holy Ghost remains sound perfect though it may be we cānot discerne of the right reading And the sense of Scripture is rather to bee iudged the word of God then the words and letters thereof Now it beeing here vncertaine whether reading to follow for either of them containe a sense conuenient to the place therfore I will exclude neither but from them both propound this instruction That the giuing of Almes is Iustice and a part of Righteousnesse which God requires at our hands This the Apostle sheweth plainely out of the Psalmes 2. Cor. 9. 9. He hath distributed and giuen to the poore his righteousnesse remaineth for euer And in common reason it must be so for a man is but a Steward ouer the goods which hee possesseth the poore with whom hee liueth hath title to part thereof and he must giue vnto them by Gods expresse commandement so as vnlesse he giue in some sort he plaies the thiefe robs the poore by keeping backe that which is their due In regard whereof we must learne first to acknowledge that prouiding of maintenance for the poore is not a worke of
doctrine and style the doctrine of Scripture is the Law and the Gospel now the Law is set forth in most excellent puritie nothing therein is against right reason or common equitie In the lawes of men are many things found against reason and equitie they commaund such things as common reason would condemne and omitte many things which reason and equitie would commaund And for the Gospel in it is set downe doctrine altogether aboue mans reason touching Christs incarnation and mans redemption by his death and although these things bee aboue nature yet wee finde them true wholesome and good in experience of conscience which also prooues that they are the word of God Men may deuise things aboue nature but they can neuer be wholesome to the conscience Further for the style of Scripture the phrase is plaine familiar and yet in any one speech there is more maiestie then in all the writings of men Lastly the ende of Scripture prooues the same to bee Gods word for the Scripture sets vp Gods worshippe and mans saluation and yet giues nothing to men or Angels but all to the glorie of God but for the writings of men they doe either directly or by insinuation ascribe some thing to the writers thereof II. Argument From the effects one worke of Scripture is this It is against our corrupt nature crossing and condemning the same and yet it winneth men to the loue therof and to obedience thereto which could not be vnlesse it were the truth of God for wee abhorre and detest the words of men that be against our nature A second effect is this Gods word serues notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoeuer euen in the pangs of death when no word of any man can doe him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soule and the God of our life III. Argument From the properti●s of Scripture the first whereof is Antiquitie The Scriptures of all writings are most auntient and euermore truth is most auntient among humane writings wee haue none of certaintie in the things they record before the times of Nehemias and Ezra but Scripture sets downe things done from the beginning A second propertie is mutuall consent for though the bookes of Scripture were written by diuers men in sundry ages and times yet all agree within themselues no contradiction is in Scripture but the writings of men haue not this consent no not in the same Author IV. Argum. From the signes and miracles thereof The doctrine of Scripture teacheth and recordeth true miracles as the parting of the Sea the staying of the sunne and moone the taking away of barrennesse and the incarnation of the son of God a miracle of all miracles all which beeing wrought by the power of God shew that the Scripture which recordeth them is the infallible truth of God V. Argum. From the contraries Contrarie to the word of God is the will of the deuill mans corrupt nature the deuil hates Scripture and mans sinfull nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby now that which is contrary to these to must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God VI. Argument From testimonie There bee two kindes of testimonies touching Scripture one of holy Martyrs who in all ages haue sealed the truth thereof with their blood preferring the word of God before their owne liues It will be said that Heretikes haue died for falshood Answer There is great difference in their endes the Martyrs haue vnspeakable ioy in the spirit in their torments but Heretikes haue no such ioy but a naturall senslesse blockishnesse whereby they vndergoe these tortures A second testimonie is most principall and that is the testimony of Gods spirit for when men beginne to learne and obey the word of God then the spirit of God setles their consciences in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture whereupon it is called the sealing of the spirit of truth because it assures a man in conscience of his reconciliation with God which assurance none can haue till he be first resolued of the certaintie of Scripture which is the groūd thereof Question How may a man finde this seale in himselfe Answer When hee findes the Scripture imprinted in his heart as the signe of the seale is in the waxe and his heart is transformed into Scripture as the waxe is into the similitude of the seale then doth the spirit out of the holy Scripture seale vp assurance of the truth thereof vnto his soule None other writing of any man hath the like worke in the heart of man and from these grounds especially from this last may wee resolue our selues that the Bible is of infallible certaintie And yet for further resolution let vs see what obiections are made against it I. Obiect It is said that Scripture is against all reason Ans. This is not true for the Law is perfect reason and the Gospel is aboue reason not contrarie to reason nay holding this principle of nature that God is almightie euen the Gospel it selfe may stand with reason as that the sonne of God should be incarnate and that by his death we should receiue life which is the summe of the Gospel II. Obiect There bee falshoods in Scripture for the passage thorough the redde Sea was no miracle but might bee done in the ebbing of the Sea as in other countries there is oft-times passage through the Washes Answer The Scripture saith the water stood as walls on each side the passage which could not bee by an ebbe againe reason shewes that it could not bee by naturall course for their passage ouer was at the full of the Moone when all Seas are most full and doe not ebbe and flowe as they vse to doe at other times III. Obiect The greatest part of the world reiect the Bible as Turks and Pagans and the Iewes care not for the new Testament Ans. We must reuerence Gods worke in this withholding his mercie in Christ from some to whome he denies the meanes which is his holy word for hence it comes that some reiect the Bible because God in his secret yet most iust iudgement withholds this blessing from them And therefore though Atheists barke yet the truth is Scripture is th● word of God Vses 1. Seeing the word written is the certen truth of God we must take heede of beeing seduced by Popish teachers who say there be two kinds of Scripture Inward and Outward Inward Scripture is a consent of doctrine written by the holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholikes and this say they is right Scripture The outward Scripture i● written in paper and parchment which hath no certen sense but as the present Church determines thereof But this is a deuillish doctrine abolishing written Scripture the true word of God and setting vp the opinions of their owne hearts making Scripture what themselues will we must therefore hold
the written word to be right Scripture and the ground of that which is in the heart for the word written carries a most certen sense beeing both text and glosse whereas their inward Scripture varieth as men doe vnlesse it be grounded on the written word II. Use. The certentie of Scripture must teach vs to beleeue Gods word and not to feare to rest our selues vpon it The Author of Scripture by his prouidence preserues his owne word so as all the men in earth for substance cannot corrupt the same and therefore whatsoeuer it saith we neede not doubt but it is the will of God III. Point From this reason we may also gather the Authoritie of Canonicall Scripture for we must doe as we would be done to because the law and the Prophets say so and hence it followes that the law and Prophets haue an high soueraigne and absolute authoritie This authoritie of Scripture stands in two things I. in power to giue iudgement II. in the all-sufficiencie thereof in and of it selfe and both these are noted here by our Sauiour Christ in this reason For the first the power of giuing iudgement is that whereby Scripture doth fully and absolutely determine of all things needfull to saluation concerning faith and maners and for this cause the laws of God are oft in Scripture called iudgements There be diuers iudgements ascribed to sundrie sorts of persons in Scripture First it giues a iudgement to euery priuate man The spirituall man discerneth or iudgeth all things and Saint Iohn biddes the beleeuers in the Church p●●●●● the spirits that is trie by iudgement the doctrines deliuered Secondly the Scripture giues iudgement to publike persons as to Pastors Ministers and to the gouernours of the Church Let two or three propheci● and the rest iudge 1. Cor. 14. 29. and the spirit of the Prophets is subiect to the Prophets v. 32. Thirdly Iudgement is ascribed to the Prophets Apostles in Scripture Act. 15. 28. It seemed good to the holy Ghost and to vs and this is an high Iudgement which befals not any priuate man or any ordinarie minister or general Councel ordinarily but is peculiat to extraordinarie Prophets that were the pen-men of holy Scripture And these three kindes of Iudgements must be distinguished the two first kinds are inferiour ministeriall kinds of Iudgement depending on an higher and more soueraigne Iudgement for priuate men and ordinarie ministers and Councels giue Iudgement yet not of themselues but by their rule which is the word of God and this Iudgement is nothing else but a ministerie pronouncing and declaring the meaning of the will of God reuealed in his word But besides this there is a soueraigne kind of Iudgement you c●safed to the Prophets and Apostles determining absolutely in matters of faith conscience what is to be done what is not and this is the Iudgement of God himselfe whereupon the Apostles might say It seem●th good to the holy Ghost and to vs Act. 15. 28. And that this their Iudgement is absolute appeares by Scripture He that heareth you heareth me saith Christ to his Apostles he that ref●s●th you refuseth me Luk. 10. 16 and Paul deliuering the Gospel of Christ to the Galatians bids them hold him accursed that teacheth thē otherwise Gal 1. 7. and the promise of sending the spirit of truth Ioh. 16. 13. was directly intended to the Apostles and onely in them fully accomplished For our better conceiuing hereof wee haue a resemblance of this soueraigne iudgement in the common wealth the high Court of Parliament giues iudgement of matters in law and so doe Lawyer● and Iudges in common Courts but yet there is great differen●e betweene these two the court of Paliament makes the lawe and determines absolutely in ciuill matters without controlement what must be done and what not but the Lawyers make not the law but pronounce the meaning of the law vnto men Now the Scriptures the Prophets and Apostles they are like to the cour● of Parliament in giuing iudgement priuate men and ordinarie ministers giue iudgement like vnto the Lawyers which is not absolute but ministeriall depending on an higher iudgement Vses 1. If the Prophets Apostles haue soueraigne power to giue absolute iudgement in matters of faith and manners then we must here learne to make choice of a right Iudge for vnto one must wee appeale in matters of faith and conscience and this right Iudge is Gods word which wee must sticke vnto and to none other The commandement is plaine for matters of difficultie that concerne the conscience Isay 8. 20. To the law and to the testimonio and our Sauiour Christ referres vs to Scripture for all matters that concerne saluation Ioh. 5. 39. Search the Scripture If you would know what is true in religion what is erroneous what is equitie in any matter of conscience wee must haue recourse to Scripture It will be said Scripture is an vnfit Iudge it cannot speake I answer It speakes sufficiently to determine of all matters of faith and conscience wee see in common experience a man may resolue his friend in matters of doubt as well by letter as by word of mouth why then may not the word of God sent from heauen vnto his Church resolue mens consciences in all matters of doubt for faith and manners And indeed let any man come in humilitie seriously search the Scripture and he shall finde resolution therein for any matter of conscience whatsoeuer Vse 2. By this authoritie of Scripture in giuing soueraigne iudgement we are taught to take heed of an incompetent Iudge which men for many hundred years haue set vp in their hearts to relie vnto in matters of faith and conscience and that is to put the Church in roome of the word for soueraigne iudgemēt The Church of Rome teacheth that the Church must iudge of the Scripture yea without Scripture giue soueraigne determination in matters of conscience as hauing more authoritie then Scripture because it giues authoritie thereunto but this is the ground of Atheisme and heresie and the path way to Popery the true Church of God must haue the honour of Christs spouse but yet the authoritie of soueraigne iudgement must not bee giuen to her but onely to the word of God himselfe The second part of the authoritie of Scripture is that euery part of Canonicall Scripture is Authenticall that is of sufficient authoritie of it selfe though it bee not confirmed by any other testimonie for Scripture is the word of God and the testimonie of Scripture is the testimonie of God himselfe then which none can be greater as Saint Iohn saith If wee receiue the testimonie of men the testimonie of God i● greater 1. Ioh. 5. 9. For the better conceiuing of this point conferre all the bookes that are or euer were together and thereby it will appeare that the Scripture is of it selfe Authenticall There be three sorts of
apparell checked 386. b Professors of religion that shall be saued 515. b. professors that shal not be saued 512. c. the true wisdome of professors 537. m. the folly of some professors 541 Prophet how God calleth Prophets and teachers 501. m. notes of a true Prophet ib. b. 502. c. what makes a false prophet 491. c. societie with false prophets must be auoided 495. m. why god suffereth false prophets 497. b. dāger of false prophets ib. m. the●r pretences 497. c. fruits notes of false prophets 520. m. 503. punishment of false prophets 510. m. 79. m. of discouering a false prophet 500. m. what it is to prophesie 521. m Prosperity a fruit of Gods kingdom 274. m Prouidence of God rightly conceiued of 164. m. 165. m. particular prouidence prooued 169. b. 379. m. preseruing prouidence 207. b. how to rest on Gods prouidence 379. m. a rule for prouision of worldly things 344. m. mans spirituall prouidence 358 Publicans described 201. b Purgatory confuted 105. b. 476. m Pure in heart 30. how it is gotten 31. Q QVarelling a note of a badde man 91. m R RAca 91. m Raine a common blessing of God 208. m. ●nseasonable raine is Gods punishment 209. c. of astrologicall predictions of raine ibid. m. sorcerers cannot cause raine 209. m Reconciliation to God 108. c. of brotherly Reconciliation 110. m. 301. b Reregeneration signes of it 402. m Religion how to know true religion 430. e. and a truth in religion 494. m. it must not be tempered to mens humors 175. b. naturall mens behauiour in religion 334. b. 337. b Remission of sinne goeth with repentance 299. m Repentance the grounds of it 516. e. the nature of it ibid. the practise of it 300. m. motiues thereto 76. b. 534. m Repetition in Scriptures implie importance 118. e Reprobation how we maintaine it 133. m. God is not cruell to his creatures therein 526. m. Reproba●es neuer haue true faith 530. e Reproofe of the manner of reproouing 429. b Restorers of true religion ought to be reuerenced 4●4 b. of their calling to preach the truth 501 Restraint of our nature by Gods word 484 c. Reuenge twofold 176. m. desire of reuenge must be auoided 301. b priuate reuenge vnlawfull 176. e reasons against it 177. e. kinds of priuate reuenge ib. b. lawfull reuenge handled 179. m. when reuenge may be sought by the magistrate 180. m Reuiling forbidden 95. e. it is a kind of pe●sequution 43. e Reward whether it implie merit 45. m. 221. m Riches a great lord 368. e. when rich men forsake God 370. b. how the rich may continue their wealth 400. e Right to earthly things two-fold 18. m Righteousnes true and sauing 86. m. mans naturall conceit thereof 85. m gods righteousnes notes Christs obedience 395. b. how it is made ours ib. ● Rome no true part of Chr. Church 81. m. 168. m. separation from Rome no scisme 496. m Rules of expounding the law 93. ● 110. e S SAbbath of the change of it 74. e. how trades men may sel thereon 193. e Sacrifice what the giuing thereof signified 103. e Sadduces 84. e Salt three properties therof resembling the ministerie 47. m Salutation must be friendly 212. m Sanctification of the creature 291. b. sanctification goeth with iustification 87. e. a comfort against doubting thereof ●1 m Sathans policies against Gods children 310. m. his malice against the Church 492. m. he is limited in tempting 308. m. how to resist him 312. e Schooles of the Prophets approoued 5. 200 Scismatikes differ from false Prophets 492 Scripture excelleth all other books 11. b. the certentie of Scripture handled 466 467 468. authoritie of Scripture handled 469. how it giues iudgement ibid. 470. how some take offence at Scripture 127. m. popish distinction of Scripture into inward and outward 469. m Scribes what they were 84. m. Sects among the Iewes 84. e Securitie in sinne 295. m. 423. m. carnal securitie cōdemned 488. e. their excuses remooued 489 Selling how made a worke of mercie 187. m See God the secret seer 228. b Senses what senses must be the instruments of mercie 16. m. how to ground our senses 119. b Separation from our Church vnlawfull 552. b Seruice preparation to Gods seruice 104. m. what it is to serue God 367. m. the error of the ignorant herein 368. m Silence in hearing Gods word 548 Sinnes differ in degree 422. m. sinne goeth not alone 224. b. it raigneth not in Gods child 371. m. maine sinnes in all men naturally 425. e. most secret sins knowne to Christ. 533. e. purpose of sinning must be auoided 534. e. how to perceiue the grieuousnes of our sinnes 426. e. how to reforme our sinne in our selues 425. m Slacknes in the better sort reprooued 490. e Speaking of others how to behaue our selues 403. m Spirits whether we may goe into places haunted by euill spirits 315. e Stewes falsly grounded on lawes of toleration 142. m Students in diuinitie their dutie 537. b. studie of Scripture should be diligent 77. b Successe how to leaue it to Gods blessing 375. m Suffer how they that suffer deseruedly may be blessed 43. b. suffering wrong examples 180. e. 182. e. it is the state of a Christian to suffer 185. b Suits in law how lawful 36. b. common suits in law vnlawful 108. m. 183. m Sunne the benefit of it 208. b Superiours their dutie 537. b. a note of euill superiours 184. e Suspition of suspecting euill of others 414. b Swearing how farre forth forbidden diuers opinions 155. b. ordinarie swearing forbidden ib. e 171. m. pretences for swearing answered 156. m. times cases wherein an oath is lawfull 157. m. the right maner of lawfull swearing 158. m. swearing by faith troath c. vnlawfull 161. m T TEacher properties of a badde teacher 175. e. 200. b Temporall blessings how they must be sought 399. m. how rightly vsed 292. their dependance on Gods kingdome 400. e Temptation kinds thereof 303. m. degrees therein 304. b. it is the state of Gods children 302. m. whether euery temptation come from Satan 171. e. how God leades into temptation 305. m. helps against temptation 306. e Testament how to know the bookes of the old testament 72. e. 463. in new testament is diuine scripture 464. e Thankesgiuing should be frequent with Gods children 266. m. 319 Toleration of false religion vnlawfull 469. b Tongue abuses thereof 95. m Traditions vnwritten 473. m Treasure heauenly what it is 347. 348. how we lay it vp 347. m. 349 Trees how some become euill 508 Trust in God a notable ground thereof 318. e Turcisme a false religion 481. b Tyrant priuate men may not kill a tyrant 182. m V VAnitie of the creatures 346 Ueniall sinnes what they are with Papists 93. b. how the father 's called some sinnes veniall 42● Uniuersall grace confuted 244. m. 246. m. 392. m. 459. e. 482. e Vnmerciful men their number and miserie 25 m
z Hos. 1. 9. a Rom. 1● 18. b 1. Cor. 6. 6. c Vers. 7. d Rom. 12. 18 e 2. Chr. 19. 2 vses 1 f Epes 4. 3. Vertues preseruing peace 1. Humilitie g Pro. 15. 10. ● Meekenes Long suffering h Gen. 13. 8. 9 4. Humanitie i 2. Cor. 5. 20 k Isay 59. 16 and 63. 5. l Ier. 5. 7. and 12. 11. m Ezech. 2● 30. 31. n Gen. 18. 32 o Isay 32. 17. p Isay 54 14 q Reu. ● ● r 1. Co● 6. 1. s Heb. ● 14. The 1. vse 2 1 a 1. Cor. ●3 3. 2 b Act. 2. 13. c Act. 26. 24. d Ioh. ● 48. e Luk. 〈◊〉 15. Tertul. apol cap. 7. 16. 3 Gods church must be afdicted Luk. ● 1● The world hates Gods Church and ●hy ● 1 2 Gen. 3. 2. Caueats about flight in persecution f 1. Pet. 4. 15. Luk. 6. ●2 1 2 g Luk 6. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h 2. Sam. 6. 14. 1● Re●●l ● Rhemis● this verse 1. 2 3 i Luk. 6. 23. k Act. 7. 51. Ministers must seeke to expresse ●he properties of salt l Act. 2. 37. m 1. Cor. 2. ● ● n Iudg. 9. 〈◊〉 Foure kinds of vnsauoury Ministers o Isay 56. 10 1 2 p 2. Tim 2. 1● 1● 3 q Ier. 23. 1● ●7 r ●zek 13. 10. 1● 4 as no● not neuer and ●●terrogations impor●●ng deniall s 2. Sa● ●4 t 〈…〉 44. ●2 13. u Matth. 24. 48 49 50. x Ioh. 5. 35. y 2. Cor. 4. 6. z 2. Cor. ● 3. 4. 1 2 3 a Isay 6. 8. Rhem●sts on this place b 1. Kin. 9 10 2. parts of a Ministers office Vse c Rom. 1● 3● 2. Cor. 1. 1● ●ph 6. 19. Colos. 4 3. 2. Thes. 3. 1. d Z●k 3. 1. e 1. Th. 2. 18. Of good workes A good worke described f Col. 2. 22 23. Deut. 12. 32. Bellarm● de Mona l. 2. c. 7 g Levit. 7. 1● Obiect 1. h Psal. 106. 30 31. Obiect ● i 1. Ki. 18. 40. k Mat. 26. 7. Obiect 3. l vers 12. Obict 4. m Mat. 12. 35. n Rom. 14. 1● o Gal. 5. 14. The vse Tollet instruct sacer lib. 6. cap. 21. Two sorts of good works 1 2 1. Tim. 4. 5. 1 Necessitie of good works Bellar. de Iustifie l. 4. c. 7. 2. The dignitie of good works Bellar. de Iustif. l. 4. ● 15 ●7 I●●●● 4. ● The vse of good works Three fold 1. Concerning God 1 2 3 r Eph. 5. 1 2. 1. Concerning our selues 1 s Iam. 2. 21. 2 t 1. Pet 2. 5 6 3 u Psal. 78 72. 4 x Rom. 3. 16. y Mat. 28. 19 z 1. Cor. 9. 22 The third part of Christs sermon The law in generall Ceremonial Iudiciall Morall Difference between the Law and the Gospel 1 2 3 4 a 2. Co ●3 7. ● b Rom. 10. 5. 5 c Rom. 4. 5. Tonens August Confes. lib. 2. cap. 6. Bellar. de Iustis l. 4. c. 3. 1 Law Gospel differ in precepts 2 3 4 Christ fulfilleth the law 3. waies 1 2 d Gal. 4. 4. 3. The Vse Vse 2. A propertie of the old Testament Concil Trid. sess 4 sect 1. Consent of Law and Gospel e Rom. 3. 3● f ver 23 24. g Rom. 10. ● h Rom. 8. ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods law is ●perpetuall i Heb. 7. 12 k See Treatise of Cōsc cap. 2. sect 5. Of the chāge of the Sabboth day No creature may dispense with Gods lawe l 1. In Gregorian de cōcess praeb cap. proposuit in Glos. Papa dispensat contra novum vetus Testamentum m Sess. 24. Can. 3. n I. euit 1● No booke of Scripture is lost A terrour to the wicked moouing to repentance Pro. 11. 4. A comfort to the godly A ground of patience p Act 14. 2● The integritie of the Law q Ps. 19. 7. 8. Diligent stadie of the Scripture r Ioh. 5. 39. The meanes of Luthers conuersion Magistrates must be keepers of the Law s Deut. 17. 18 19. What it is to keep the law How some commandements are little Punishment of a false Prophet The meaning The corruptiōs of hypocrites respecting Gods word t Iam. 2. 10. u Psal. 119. 6 ● Corruptió x Tollet Summa Cas. Consc. l. 6. cap. 3. v Lib. de iusta abdicat Heur z Pope Six●us 4. a Calixt ● ●pud grat dist 27. Can. Presbyt Rbem ● Tim. ● sect 5. b Heb. 13. 4. Psal. 119. A ground of obedience Difference between a false prophet and a true Rome no part of Christs Church and why a Sanders treatise of the worship of images Bellar. de Imag Sanct. l. 2. c. 8. b Bellar. ib. cap. 12. c Idem de sanct beat l. ● c. 1● d Concil Trid. sess 5. Can. 5. e Bellar. de Concil author l. ● c. 15. f De Rom. Pontif. lib. 4. c. 15 16. g Rhe. Heb. ● sect 10. Cōcil Trid. sess 22. c. 1 2. c. h See the Popes robberie of Christ at large Foxe Acts Monuments ● 784. edit 1583. i Ha●d answ to Iewel art 4. diuis 19. The office of a faithfull Teacher Doe and teach A comfort to faithfull Ministers in their peoples vntowardnesse k Isay 49. ● l Isay 6. 9. 10 m 2. Cor 2. 15 16. The reward of a faithfull Minister Scope A Scribe 1. Ciuill 2. Ecclesiastlcall Pharise ● Sects 1. Essenes ● Sadduces ● Pharises n Act. 26. 5. o Act. 23. 6. Herodia●s p Luk. 11. 3● Matth. 23. 25. q Luk. 18. 11 12. Matth. 6. 2. 5. 16. r Mark 7. 3. 4. s Phil. 3. 6. Mans naturall conceit of righteousnes Ciuill honestie insufficient for the soule True righteousnesse t 2 Cor. 5. 21 Parts of Christs righteousnesse Obiect 1. Bellar. de Iustific l. 2. c. 7. Answ. Obiect 2. Answ. Obiect 3. Answ. Obiect 4. Answ. Christs righteousnesse is made ours by faith Sanctificatiō goeth with Iustification ● The vse 1 2 a Phil. 3. 8 9. 3 Matth. 16. 26. 4 Psal. 51. 10. Antiquitie no infallible marke of truth How the Pharises expounded the law i Rhem. Test. pre● sect 1● k Hart. conf with Rainol chap. 2. div 2. Mans naturall conceit of keeping the Commandemēts Exposition 1 3. degrees of murther 2 3 Courts among the Iewes 3. P. Fagius in Deut. 16. Gehenna Rhem. o● this place 2. Rules for the expounding of the Law 1 2 a Mark. ● 5. Aduised anger not vnlawfull b Eph. 4. 26. ●ow lawful anger may be discerned 1 2 Anger must be bridled How 1 2 Signes of despite are degrees of murther 1 2 c Gen. 21. 9. ● 3 4 5 Make conscience of gesture d Deut. 25. 7 8 9. Abuses of the tongue 1 e Prov. 12. 18 f Eph. 4. 31. 2 g Eph. 4. 31. 3 4 5 Reuiling tearmes forbidden Grieuous practises here forbidden 1 Vsurie 2 Hoarding vp of corne 3 Fighting 4 Soule-staruing 5 Offending The true vse of this law 1. Search our hearts 2. Iudge our selues Actuall killing When killing is allowed 1 2 a Cen. 22.