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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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is as altogether lost we are not able of our selues saith our Apostle to thinke one good thought and much lesse to conceiue the things of God which are all mysteries and written in a clasped booke and sealed with seauen seales vntill the Lord by his spirit open the vnderstanding such foolish children are we and and of none vnderstanding Nay further we haue not onely a depriuation of spirituall wisedome in vs but an auersation and vntoward disposition cleane contaarie thereunto that we can imagine and conceiue onely euill continually for what is else prooued by that we are called beasts in vnderstanding and willed not to be like the horse or mule which creatures are not onely with vnderstanding but exceeding ●●ke and hard to be taught euen when they are much broken and beaten And which of vs hath not experience of his owne slownes of heart to conceiue the things of our eternall peace neuer so plainely neuer so often taught in the ministerie neither is one nature here of better apprehension then an other for the speach is true not onely of simple ones but of the greatest clerks who here are not the wisest men the quickest natures Plato Aristotle Seneca are here as blinde as moles nay Nicodemus a ruler in Israel how babishly and foolishly did he apprehend the speach of Christ concerning the newe birth there was no way but for men to returne backe into the womb againe Thus sensuall and earthly is the best of our wisedome and no sharper is our conceit in such obiects till the Lord whet and frame them till which time we see our selues by this we haue said to be in the ranke of those men vpon whom Paul affirmed that they neither knewe the things of God nor could know them Disobedient This second degree of corruption of mind sheweth that we are not onely ignorant but froward in the things of God and such as will not be perswaded as the word in the originall soundeth and this is nothing els but a peruerse disposition which fighteth against the truth Which a little better to vnderstand we must knowe that before our fall the minde of man had two faculties about the truth of God 1. the knowledge of it so farre as was meete 2. an assent approouing that knowledge In stead of which are succeeded two contrarie corruptions since the fall 1. darkenes in stead of that light of knowledge 2. frowardnes or reasoning against it For example when the vnderstanding of man vnconuerted conceiueth something of that we deliuer out of the word whereas it should assent vnto the lawe that it is good and the Gospel that it is the arme of God vnto saluation the wisedome of the flesh on the contrarie it becommeth enmitie to all this it can finde euasions to shift off the curse it can couenant with hell and death And for the Gospel it is to one foolishnesse to an other offence Pauls preaching shall be counted madnesse or malice or something els which shall be reason and warrant inough to contemne it Deceiued This is the third degree of corruption of mind and a consequent of the former It is a word borrowed from trauellers that are in a wrong way that goe by gesse which they must needs doe who neither knowe the way nor will knowe it who are out and will not bee called in And this noteth a further miserie then before namely that men are naturally resolued in by-pathes delight in their wandrings and haue no delight to heare of the path of life eternall Doctr. 1. Out of the first degree of the miserie of our minds we learne what is the course of vngodly and vnconuerted men namely a foolish and vnwise walking That which the Lord speaketh of Israel is true of euerie naturall man My people is foolish they haue not knowne me they are foolish children they are wise to doe euill but to doe well they knowe not the same confirmeth the Apostle Ephes. 5.15 walke not as vnwise namely as ye did before your calling but as wise And if the knowledge and feare of God be the beginning of wisedome how can such as are without Gods teaching euer be wise to walke in the wayes of saluation We account such as want and are destitute of naturall knowledge in outward things no better then fooles and shall those goe for wise who haue not one sparkle of spirituall knowledge which ●s a farre more pretious wisedome then the other If they be deemed simple foolish men who care not to wrong and hurt their bodies much more may such as depriue their soules of spirituall foode raiment yea of eternall life it selfe If those who would exchange gold for a counter much more such as thinke it a good bootie to gaine a small portion of the world with the losse of their soules If they be fooles whom men so esteeme much more whom the Lord so stileth as euery where the naturall and vngodly man and this not for one or two foolish actions for thus the best euen Dauid himselfe confesseth that sometimes he doth verie foolishly but for that his whole course is the practise of notable folly And that we may see this truth in some instances we will note some maine properties of folly and see whether they are not most naturall to euerie naturall man The 1. maine propertie of fooles and silly bodies is that they knowe not the end of their liues why God made them and put them into this world euen so aske many men why God did inspire the breath of life on their faces how fewe would giue this direct answer that by glorifying God in my calling I might be lead to a better life herafter Ask many a man concerning heauen and earth and sea and other sensible things and they will giue some sensible answers as that the earth was made for man and beast to liue vpon the sea for fish and nauigation the ayre for man and beast to breath in the Sunne Moone and starres for light heat and comfort the beasts fishes foules c. for man but why thy selfe fewest would say for God but if they speake true some for themselues some for their familie some for their pleasures some for wealth or some baser ende to which such a noble creature as man is should be destinated The second propertie of folly is that as fooles liue for the present time if they can get meat drinke sleepe cloathes and necessaries for the present they forecast nothing to come euen so vngodly men if they can get wealth and lay vp things present for many yeares to come they dreame of no other heauen they forecast no day of death nor iudgement but oh foole what if thy soule be taken away this night this was that which that foole thought not of and as of their owne so they iudge of all other mens felicitie by things present into which folly Dauid himselfe was sliding when he confesseth himselfe as ignorant as a
from them but as by the learned it is called an Abridgment of all Pauls Epistles so is it fraught with such varietie of precepts sitted to all sorts sexs ages and conditions of men as whatsoeuer he hath in all his Epistles more largely handled the same he seemeth to haue summarily reduced into this one wherein as in a mappe or modell he would deliuer his whole spirit stile and vnderstanding in the doctrine of saluation And which he would leaue to the Church as a manuall or compendious summe of all Christian religion to the end that Christians beeing hence instructed in the matter of faith and manners might he made not only wise to saluation but profitable and fit for the place which God hath in any of the societies of 1. Church 2. Common-wealth 3. Familie assigned them vnto For if in any hee enlarge the doctrine of mans miserie by sinne or magnifie the doctrine of the Gospel and mans diliuerance from sinne If in any he cleare the doctrine of free iustification of faith alone or enforce the doctrine of good workes the fruites of that faith If in any he largely propound either such duties as belong to publike persons as namely the Magistrates and Ministers or such offices as are fitted to the seuerall conditions of priuate men If in any he prouoke to the practise of Christian curtesie and kindnesse or else if neede require of Christian seueritie and sharpnesse surely in this Epistle he doth with such admirable plainnes and shortnesse all these as no other nor all the other shew him a more skillfull workeman then this doth But accounting it follie to paint a pearle I will rather now giue some tast and reason of that I haue done as also remooue some scruples which may otherwise perhappes be mooued against it Gold lyeth not vpon the face but in the bowells of the earth and the richer any minerall is the more industrious hath nature beene to laid it vp in the deepest vaines Euen so considering that the price of the wisedome of God cannot be found to which the purest gold of Ophir nor all pearles are to be compared we may not thinke that the Lord is so prodigall of it or carelesse as to leaue it abroad for euery stranger that passeth by to take vp with an idle hand or to trample vnder his wandring feete but that hee hath disposed it as men doe their treasures which they hide and locke in their surest coffers and that vnder their eye And were it not so needlesly should we be commanded to seeke for her as for siluer and search for her as for treasures vpon which condition only it is couenanted that we shall vnderstand the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God For howsoeuer we may not ascribe darkenesse and obscuritie vnto the Scriptures vnlesse we will say that the Lord hath spoken something which he would not haue vnderstood and also falsifie that of the Apostle who compareth the word of the Prophets which of all parts of the Scriptures are the darkest to a light shining in a darke place yet the wisedome of God would haue not all but some places more difficult to our darke vnderstanding not only for the dazeling of the eyes of the worst who neuer care to know or comprehend any of these mysteries but that the best also might 1. see their owne dulnesse of conceit in heauenly things so to keepe them low in their owne eyes as who cannot attaine such an high knowledge of themselues 2. be stirred vp to more diligent studie reading hearing meditation and prayer that by this continuall exercise in the word they may profit and proceed in the knowledge of God and in the vnderstanding of these mysteries which are admirable to the Angels themselues 3. make so much the more both of the word and the ministerie of it the Lord foresaw that the things that are easie we easily contemne and that things lightly come by are lightly set by That any part of this booke is clasped and sealed it is in regard of our naturall blindnesse who cannot behold the brightnes of the sunne of righteousnes shining in the Scriptures But that this naturall corruption might not raigne in the elect for their hurt the Lord Iesus hath left to his Church the gift of interpretation which is as the key to open this closet of God and hath stirred vp faithfull men from time to time endued by his spirit who in attentiue and diligent reading of the Scriptures by the helpe of 1. Arts as Grammer Rhetorike Logicke Philosophie c. 2. knowledge of the proprieties of words and phrases of the tongues wherein they were written 3. comparing of Scriptures with themselues antecedents with consequents obscure places with plainer and figuratiue speaches with more proper 4. soundnesse of iudgement in the agreement and analogie of faith 5. diligent obseruation of predictions with their accomplishments of types with their truth and of the historie of the Church which it selfe is a commentarie of Scripture haue beene themselues enabled to vnderstand as also partly by liuely voice in the Ministrie and partly by their learned monuments and writings to make the people of God vnderstand euen the darkest mysteries conteyned in them so farre as is necessarie for the saluation of beleeuers Whose labours and writings to contemne sauoreth of a proud Anabaptisticall spirit who while they complaine of so many commētaries despise the gifts of God who by his seruants he communicateth to his Church and so are iustly left of God in the ignorance of the Scriptures or else in the grosse and ridiculous peruerting of them Well said that noble Eunuch How can I vnderstand without an interpreter what was Moses but an interpreter of the law what were the Prophets but interpreters of Moses what was Christ but an interpreter of the Prophets what were the Apostles but interpreters of Christ what are all Pastors and teachers wherewith Christ hath euer furnished his Church since he ascended into heauen but interpreters of the Apostles Well knew the Sonne of God commanding it and his Apostles commending it how behoouefull it was for the edification of the Church by interpretation of the Scriptures to draw out both the true sence and the true vse of them which are the two proper parts of interpretation seeing so many things are to vs hard to vnderstand and things which for their sense are easiest cannot so easily of euerie one be applyed to their proper vse without this helpe This is that edifying gift which the Apostle so highly advanceth 1. Cor. 14.3 4. He that prophesieth speaketh vnto men to edifying to exhortation and to comfort and he that prophesieth edifieth the Church This is that which the auncient Fathers since the Apostles haue fruitfuly laboured in as appeareth by their learned Sermons preached written This is that which the faithfull Pastors in all ages especially of later daies since the cleare light of