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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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partly from the Prophets witness 1 For the Apostles they witnessed of such facts of Christ as argued him First a Prophet vers 37 38. Who went about doing good and healing c. for these Miracles served to confirm his heavenly doctrin Secondly a Priest vers 39. Whom they sl●w and hanged on a tree which noteth his sacrifice Thirdly a King proved by three Arguments 1 By his rising from death vers 40 41. 2 By sending out his Apostles to preach v. 42. 3 By his coming to judge all flesh ver 42. 2 The same truth is confirmed by the witness of all the Prophets ver 43. In the Preface Peter maketh way unto his Doctrin three ways 1 By removing from himself an imputation of levity and sudden change of his mind which might otherwise have been objected against him for all men knew that he being a Jew had been very respective lest at any time he should come near an Heathen or Gentile such as Cornelius and his company were for so it appeareth by his answer in the Vision ver 14. yea and after his vision he was full of doubts whether he might adventure into their company till the Lord adds to his vision a voyce bidding him go in to Cornelius doubting nothing vers 20. Peter therefore most ingenuously in the first place acknowledgeth an error that had stuck by him namely in accounting now after Christs death and Resurrection whereby hee brake down all partition walls such as were uncircumcised an unclean company and like Doggs and Swine to whom holy things might not be cast and offered 2 That the Lord had removed this error manifestly teaching him both by vision and voyce that his grace did now extend it self over all sorts of men and therefore that he came not of his own head moved by remerity or rashness but upon good ground to teach even the Gentiles the mysteries of their salvation 3 He gets not audience only and attention but authority also to his Doctrine by shewing what a good conceit he had of Cornelius and his company that he had not now to deal with prophane and lewd persons but such as the Lord had sanctified to himself according to the vision and voyce What or whom the Lord hath sanctified account not thou prophane vers 15. Whence 1 We have in this holy man a Map of Humane frailty Observ 1. A Map of humane frailty in the Apostle in which wee may see how heavie the best are to their duties for was it not long before given Peter in charge to teach the Gentiles was not his commission large enough when among other Disciples he was dismissed by Christ himself to teach not only the Nations but all Nations Had not he heard often from the mouth of Christ and read in the Writings of the Prophets that the Gentiles must bee called in that the Tents of the Church must bee enlarged her Curtains stretched out and that their own sound must go over all the world yet Peter had forgotten all this and as though Christ had not been come or as if himself had never conversed with him he would still uphold the difference of peoples which his Mr. had destroyed confine salvation to the Jews only as if Christ had not been a common Saviour of Jews and Gentiles he must have new visions and voyces to lift him up to his duty or else he cannot be brought so much as to acknowledge it Let us look upon this example to condemn our own corruption by it yea to watch over it lest following as we are too proue the stream of it we be carried away from the most essential duties which by our calling either general or particular are by God enjoyned us Let the Popish guides also look upon this example and tell us whether Peter erred not 1 In judgement 2 After Christs promise 3 In a weighty matter forgetting his commission and calling yea and the calling and salvation of the whole body of the Gentiles all which he sailed in And then whether it be a sound ar●und upon Peters person or any promise made to him to build their Popes immunity and freedome from error in matter of faith so long as he siteth in Peters pretended chair Secondly In that the Apostle Peter secretly implyeth an acknowledgement of his error A pattern of special grace in the same Apostle We have in him a worthy pattern of a special grace to be practised of us all namely upon better grounds to lay aside any error in judgement or practice although never so long held or stifly maintained of us before and not be ashamed to profess that we so doe which vertue is a sound fruit of humility and argueth a good heart which is in love with the truth for it self and esteemeth it above his own estimation the observing whereof would cut off infinite controversies which could never bee carried and continued with such burning heat in the Church of God if the contention were not many times more for victory than for truth and rather lest error should bee acknowledged than that truth should triumph over it Thirdly In this Preface every Minister is taught wisely to cut off and remove such le●s as might hinder his doctrine among his Hearers and contrarily to win by all good means such credit to his person as that he may preserve a reverent estimation of himself in the hearts of his people So did the Apostle here and not without cause seeing the acceptance of the person of a Minister is a great furtherance for the entertainment of his doctrine not that the faith of God ought to be had in respect of persons but because mans weakness carrieth him beyond his duty herein And again Satan and his instruments seek exceptions against their persons whose doctrine is without exception well knowing that where the person is not first received hardly will any doctrine from him bee embraced Matth. 10.14 He that receiveth not you nor your words Whence the Apostle Paul was constrained to be much and often in the justifying of his person calling and conversation because to hinder his doctrine the false Apostles by all these laboured to bring him into contempt Nay our Lord Jesus himself was forced often to averre his person to be Divine his calling to bee heavenly and his conversation holy and without sin because the Jewes were ever hence disgracing his doctrine because of the meanness of his appearance Now whosoever would retain reverence and authority among his people must shew forth 1 Conscience of his duty 2 Love to his peoples souls and bodies 3 A wise and unblameable carriage and conversation these things if he doe not he hath more disgraced himself than his people can Of a truth I perceive that God accepteth not of persons By person is not here meant the substance of man or the man himself but the outward quality appearance or condition which being offered to the eye may make a man more or less respected
apart to their several offices by laying on of mens hands upon them even so God laid his hands on these that is Christ immediately by his own voyce called these to be witnesses unto him which was one of the priviledges of the Apostles 2 The Apostle in the words expresseth himself by limiting them to themselves to us namely Apostles who ate and drunk with him not only who before his death lived as it were at bed and board with him but after hee rose from the dead that we might not be deceived in our witnesse of him 3 To us whom be commanded to preach and testifie namely to the whole world these things together with his coming again to judgement Now for the further clearing of this publick witnesse of the Apostles wee will consider three things 1 That these twelve were appointed by Christ himself to this witnesse which the Apostle Peter plainly concludeth Act. 1.22 where speaking of one to be elected into Judas his room he saith he must be chosen of one of them which have companied w●th us all the time that the Lord Jesus was conversant among us beginning at the Baptism of John unto the day that he was taken up implying that whosoever was not thus qualified he was not fit to be made such a publick witnesse with them of his resurrection because to the making of an Apostle was necessary either an ordinary converse with Christ upon earth or else an extraordinary sight of him in Heaven by which latter Paul who made an honourable accesse to that number proved himself an Apostle T●e second thing is how they were furnished to this witnesse By what means the Apostles were furnished to their witness and this was su●●y ways 1 By their senses they ate and drunk with him that is were in a familiar sort conversant with him after he rose again 2 By word of mouth he gave them charge and commandement to doe it of both which wee are to speak in the text 3 By a Sacrament or sign of breathing upon them he confirmed them to their vocation saying As my Father sent me so I send you 4 By adding thereunto the thing signified for he opened their understandings and made th●m able to conceive the Scriptures and unfold all the Mysteries therein so farre as was behoveful for the Church 5 By bestowing sundry other great gifts upon them sending the Holy Ghost upon them in the likeness of fiery Tongues whereby they received the gift of Tongues he gift of Miracles of casting out Devils of healing the Sick by imposition of hands of preserving from poyson and deadly things of the Apostolical rod whereby death it self was at the command of their word either to take place as in Ananias and Saphira both struck dead with the word of the Apostle or to give place as in Dorcas who by a word of the Apostle was raised to life being dead By these means the Lord put into the hands of the Apostles great power to give witnesse of the resurrection of Christ Act. 4.33 The third thing is By what means they witnessed or gave testimony to Christ Ans Because they were to bee authentical and faithful witnesses to all the world and that both in the age wherein they lived as also in all the succeeding ages to the end of the world therefore was it necessary that they should give witnesse two wayes 1 By zealous and painful preaching by voyce while they lived 2 Even after their death by the holy Doctrin left behind them in their Works and Writings and thus doe they still remain publick witnesses to us on whom the ends of the world are come Doct. Hence observe that the office of the Apostles was to give testimony unto Christ after a peculiar manner Acts 1.8 When the Holy Ghost shall come upon you yee shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem Judea Samaria and to the uttermost parts of the earth I say they were to bee witnesses after a peculiar manner for these reasons The Apostles were to bee peculiar witnesses to Christ and why 1 To distinguish their witness from ours who are ordinary Ministers for every Minister is called of God to give witness to Christ but properly to speak they are rather Preachers and Publishers of things witnessed than witnesses or if witnesses yet herein they differ from the Apostles that they are not oculate or ear-witnesses nor such sensible witnesses as they were for this is an Apostolical speech and manner of preaching not derived to ordinary Pastors and Teachers to say That which wee have heard and seen and our hands have handled that we testify unto you 1 Joh. 1.1 2 They were all faithful witnesses and faithful men endued with faith and full beleef of the things they wrote and testified as all ordinary Ministers are not Whence the Evangelist John professeth of them all that they knew the testimony to bee true Joh. 21.24 True for the matter for they delivered the whole Counsel of God and kept nothing back that was fit to be known and true for the manner they all speaking as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1.21 and therefore exempted from all error in their witness as we are not 3 And hence followeth that their witness is to bee beleeved as infallible being the witness of such as with their eyes saw his Ma●esty vers 16. who did not at any time deliver any thing which they either heard not of Christ or saw him not doing or suffering but all other ordinary Ministers are so far to bee beleeved as they consent with these and so far as they testify no other thing than what these oculate witnesses have left in writing Object But Christ needeth not the witness of any man hee hath a greater witnesse than John or than any Apostle therefore there is no use of the Apostles witness Answ Christ hath indeed three greater witnesses than the witness of his Apostles namely 1 His Father that sent him beareth witnesse of him 2 The Scriptures if they bee searched testify of him 3 His works that hee did bear witnesse of him Joh. 8.18 5.39 5.36 but yet howsoever in regard of himself hee need no other testimony of man that wee might beleeve and bee saved hee useth the witness of men 〈◊〉 John and the Apostles and of this Divine Testimony in the mouth of the Apostles may bee said as Christ did of the voice from heaven Joh. 12.30 This voice came not because of mee but for your sakes In divine things we must lean upon a sure word Vse 1. From this Doctrin wee learn how necessary a thing it is in causes of Faith to lean upon true and certain things and not upon tottring traditions or unwritten verities which are the main pillars of Popish Doctrin Oh how good hath our God been to this Church and Land of ours in giving us a surer word of the Prophets and Apostles to become a light unto us in
more plain and sharp than they as appeareth 1 In the title he gives him Satan 2 In the commandement Avoyd First he calls him Satan which is the third name given him in this History for he had before been called a Devil that is a false accuser and a Tempter and now he is called a Satan signifying an adversary or enemy 1 To God directly 2 To man both in his person whom he often possesseth and vexeth Mat. 4.24 and also in his estate which hee doth often endamage and impoverish as we see in Job And Christ doth now so tearm him 1 To shew him that he takes better notice of him than before for he called him by no name before though he was called by the two former tearms by the Evangelist 2 That we should see further into his nature the more to beware of and detest him 3 To shew us how we may detect an adversary and smell a Devil namely when he sets against and opposeth the grounds of religion 4 To teach us that hee is no friend that offering us wealth and honour would draw us from God and religion The greatest kindness here is the greatest cruelty Avoyd 1 This is a word of indignation as we say to a Dogg avant for Christ was much offended and angry against this temptation when he saw and heard Satan so impudent and blasphemous So Christ gives this as a reason of the same speech to Peter Avoid Satan for thou art an offence unto mee Christ shews indignation because Satan shews his blackness 2 It is a word of rebuke and castigation of Satans importunity and impudency who would not bee satisfied at the first and second assault but still renews more hellish and horrible temptations Thus Luke expresseth it Hence behinde mee as one not worthy any longer to behold his face 3 It is a word of dismission or sending him packing and carries in it the force of a Commandement An Heretick saith the Apostle after once or twice admonition avoid Tit. 3.10 Thus deals our Saviour with Satan here who is Haereticorum haereticissimus An Arch-Heretick as a great man talking with a wrangling fellow whom no reason will perswade commands him away hee will hear him no longer Quest Why was our Saviour so angry at this temptation above the former wherein he exercised Meekness and Patience Answ 1 His Wisdome knew how far hee was to bear Satan at this time and how much to suffer from him and then how his mouth must bee stopped which Meekness and Lenity would never do there is no hope to win or overcome a Devil with kindnesse nor to shake him off that way nay rather this will more invite on his malice he will go so far as hee is suffered 2 Christ thirsted after mans salvation and his love to us and our redemption made him so angry with the Devil who sought by all means to hinder it for had hee been defiled with sin the work of redemption had availed us nothing 3 To note the hatefulness and detestation of that sin of Idolatry whether it bee covert or open that if our dearest friends should solicite unto it even the Wife of the bosome wee should pursue them to death and so shew our deadly hatred against it Deut. 13.1.6 4 The two former more concerned himself but this concerned his Fathers Glory directly hee hears him claiming all to bee his quartering the Armes and Royalties of God making himself a God and challenging worship due to God this hee could not bear his tenderness and zeal to his Fathers glory would not endure so vile a creature to carry away no not to challenge any part of his worship Doct. Gods causes must ever more affect us than our own How full of lowliness and meekness was our Lord and Saviour in all his own causes Hee did not strive nor cry neither was his voice heard in the streets Hee would not break a bruised reed nor quench a smoaking flax Isa 42.3 Matth. 12.20 When hee was reviled hee reviled not again When hee was called Glutton Drunkard a friend of Publicans and sinners Matth. 11.19 28. in stead of returning rough Language hee calleth saying Come unto mee all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will case you Hee was led as a sheep to the slaughter and opened not his mouth when they accused him of capital things knowing that his answers would not bee taken hee answered not a word Now hee was in his own cause But when hee takes his Fathers cause in hand how doth hee cloath himself with zeal which even consumes him Joh. 2.15 in purging his Fathers house hee laies about him and whips out the abusers of that holy place Moses in his own private cause was the meekest man upon the earth being contumeliously worded by Miriam and Aaron hee presently pardons it and prayeth for Miriam and gets her cured of her leprosy In Exod. 32. that froward people was ready to stone him yet when God begins to bee angry with them hee forgets all and praies God rather to put his name out of his book than not to pardon their sins But seeing the calf his calm spirit is vanished and hee breaks the Tables of stone that were in his hand The Apostle Paul every where provokes Christians to meekness patience and laying aside of revenge and stirringness of spirit in private causes yet Act. 17.16 when hee saw the idolatry of the Athenians his spirit was stirred up in him 1 The Religion which wee profess Reasons should bind us unto God most straightly therefore Augustine noteth the word either à religando or à relinquendo that where religion is it will leave all for God And hence is self-denial enjoyned as a necessary preparation to him that will profess Religion 2 Gods Glory is preferred by himself above all his Creatures as being the end of them all and therefore must so bee of us even above our selves for of him and through him and for him are all things Wee see in the Common-wealth how the instruments of publike Justice if any service bee commanded from the King must lay aside their own business and ease and execute the Kings pleasure before their own Such a good servant for his Lord was Paul saying My life is not dear unto me so I may finish my course with joy 3 Our Lord Jesus hath more affected our cause than his own what an infinite love shewed hee in descending from his glory to work the great and painful work of our redemption what infinite misery did hee sustain to help us out of it what an happinesse forsook he to recover us to that which wee had forsaken what a dear price did hee pay for our ransome when we were lost Is it not fit now that wee should bee earnest in the cause of such a friend May not hee well disdain that any thing in the World never so much concerning us should bee preferred before him yea or equalled with or loved without him
from our selves to seduce us and lead us away by our own concupiscence he hath the world his faithful armour-bearer in it hee hath false doctrin heresie wicked counsel wicked company wicked example on the right hand wealth honour power on the left contempt persecution vain presumption and rash confidence despair c. he hath all sins that are near of kin to us Quest Why is Satan thus restless in tempting Ans 1. Because of his infinite malice by which Satan restless in tempting for three reasons seeing hee cannot hurt God he rushes upon his Image in man 2 Because of his envie that man should climbe by Christ to that estate which himself is fallen from irrecoverably He would have him everlastingly unhappy like himself 3 Because of his special enmity against the godly for all contraries tend to the destruction of contraries Use 1. If Satan be so restless a tempter it behoves us so much the more to watch and pray against him The former the Apostle Peter commends unto us that seeing our adversary goeth about continually seeking to devour us we must watch and resist 1 Pet. 5.8 If our adversary were capable of end of days or end of malice we might be secure or if he were wearied with continual ranging or did take rest or truce But the Apostle tells us that so long as there is a world there shall be a Devil and so long as he is a tempter he will continually compass us whatsoever we are about if a good thing to hinder it as he stood at Jehoshuah● right hand if an evil to hatch contrive and thrust it forward and being done to draw and spin out as much wickedness from it as may be So where ever we be wee are not without a tempter at home or abroad in the street or in the field alone or in company in our callings or recreations in our eating and drinking in our preaching or hearing reading or praying the Tempter spares no attempt against us The latter our Saviour teacheth us namely to pray that we be not lead into temptation that seeing our enemy is mighty subtile and every way furnished for the assault God would give us strength to resist evil and persevere in good ways to the end Use 2. It justly reproves their folly who as if there were no tempter are tempters of themselves care not what occasions and weapons they minister to Satan run into such company and courses as if for want of Satans malice they would lay snares and hooks for themselves that Satan may easily draw them to all evil Of this sort are they that haunt Ale-houses and Taverns seekers of excess drinkers down of health and wealth drowners of sobriety and honesty what need this man any other tempter that sets himself to save the Devil this labour yet lest he should be alone in his sin he will fit him and send in before or after him some swearer or scorner or Atheist and they together shall swill in oathes and scoffs and impiety with their liquor and notably confirm each other in lewdness and prophaneness Of this sort also are they that watch the twilight to frequent lascivious company or the houses of light persons men or women or the society of such as are foul in their speeches and wanton in behaviour a secret poyson infecteth the heart hereby and this is to seek the tempter how hath he fenced himself with watching and prayer against temptation that thus goes out to meet it Joseph fled these occasions and ran out of the company of his lascivious Mistris Of this sort are they that use wanton and light attire and those that goe to Mass and say they keep their hearts to God and those that set up Images before them flat monuments of gross Idolatry Of this sort are they that run to Enterludes and Playes which are the Devils bellows and blow no few sparks into the gunpowder of our own corruptions It was wont to be said that there was no play without a Devil but there is never a one but there is a great many more Devils than one than seen every part person action speech and gesture almost is a notable tempter and corrupter what need these be driven of Satan that thus run before him Of this sort lastly are they that seek to Witches and Sorcerers these run to the tempter as Saul when God was gone from him took great pains to goe to the Witch yet he went in the night but our Witch-hunters run in the day the tempter need not come to them they will find him if he be in any corner of the country Vse 3. This is a special use to Ministers to bee careful and watchful over their people against this tempter 1 Thess 3.5 The Apostle from this ground provoketh and testifieth his care over them For this cause when I could no longer forbear I sent to know your faith lest by some means the tempter have tempted you And how jealous was hee over the Corinths 2 Corinth 11.3 saying I fear lest as the Serpent beguiled Eve through subtilty so your mindes should be corrupt from the simplicity of Christ and having written against the incestuous person that hee should bee delivered to Satan to humble him he writes in his second Epistle chap. 2.11 that they should now receive him again lest Satan circumvent us for wee are not ignorant of his wyles The Apostle knew there was a tempter that did mightily and continually assay to bring in corruption of doctrin and manners that would hinder them from the Word and choak it in them and therefore he was the more careful Thus should every good Shepheard watch his Flock against this ravening Wolf and reside and abide with them as he is sure the tempter doth How unsafe and destitute are many people left to the tempter by the absence of them who have taken their charge is plain by the Parable of the tares that when the Husband-man slept the envious man sowed tares hee slept a little and slumbred but he was present and if the tempter take the advantage of a little negligence in the presence of a Pastor how will hee bestir him in his absence what an harvest of tares must be reaped by that It is sure the tempter will not bee absent neither moneth nor quarter and therefore the Pastor had need not only to be still present but also watchful to espy the state of his people to help them out of sin and teach them to resist the tempter Vse 4. Beware of tempting any to evil or of with-drawing any from good for this is a Satanical practice Our Saviour Christ when Peter disswaded him to go to Jerusalem said Come behind mee Satan in which words hee shews that none can tempt to evil or from good but Satan or one led by him So the Apostle Paul calleth Elimas who sought to disswade the Governour from the faith the childe of the Devil Act. 13.10 because as Christ said of
and thou art good no longer But thou that art so impatient and thus betrayest thy meekness towards thy brother what wouldest thou do if thou hadst the Devil in hand as Christ had here Also this makes against railers and scoffers of others for Christ railed not on the Devil himself nor would overcome him otherwise than by humility Christs answer most modest Thirdly This Answer of Christ was a most modest answer Satan would have him confess himself the Son of God this hee denyeth not nor yet affirmeth but modestly acknowledgeth himself a man Man liveth not by bread onely The like wee may note elsewhere being called to his confession before the Governours If hee were the King of the Jews Matth. 27.11 If hee were the Christ Luke 22.67 If hee were the Son of God hee did not directly affirm it but either Thou sayest it or yee say that I am not denying but modestly assenting and ordinarily hee called himself the son of man not the Son of God teaching us by his example when wee speak of our selves Note to speak modestly Paul being to speak of great things of himself speaketh all in anothers person 2 Cor. 12.2 I know a man in Christ above fourteen years ago c. taken into Paradise c. and John speaking of himself saith And when Jesus saw his mother and the Disciple whom hee loved and who leaned on Jesus at supper chap. 19.26 Alas how far are wee degenerate from this our pattern who if wee bee but the sons of mean men we will stand upon it much more than Christ did upon being the Son of God we will pride it out and ruffle and brag and bear our selves upon our ancestors if they bee stept but one step above the lowest Christ when hee had good occasion would not scarce profess himself the Son of God being of another manner of spirit than that which breathed out that brag in the temptation afterward All these will I give thee II. Now to come to the second point in the answer namely the affection But Jesus answered and said The conjunction discretive sheweth our Saviours disagreement from Satan and that his Answer is negative to the temptation for although Christ both might by that miracle of turning stones into bread have shewed himself the Son of God and now needed bread being hungry yet hee would not yeeld to Satan Quest But seeing Christ who as God could have turned stones into sons of Abraham could much more turn stones into bread so easily by his word for if hee had spoken to the stones as Satan desired certainly they would have had ears to hear him why would hee not do it what hurt had it been Why Christ who could turn stones into bread would not five reasons Answ 1 Miracles must confirm faith in Beleevers unto salvation John 2.11 but Christ knew the Devil could not beleeve if hee had all the miracles in the World Besides hee had even now heard the Fathers voice testifying Jesus his beloved Son and Christ knew if hee would not beleeve the Fathers voice he would not beleeve for the Sons miracles 2 Christ would not by this miracle give the least suspition that either he distrusted his fathers seasonable providence or that he would depend for his preservation upon the means but upon his Fathers word hee was in his fathers work and lead by the Spirit into the wilderness and therefore knew he should not want necessaries 3 It was an unseasonable motion it was now a time of humiliation of temptation of affliction wherein it was fit to avoid all shew of ostentation which was the scope of the temptation for Satan would onely have him to shew what hee could do for a need for a vaunt of his power Now in a time of serious humiliation to advance himself by a miracle had been as seasonable as Snow in harvest 4 Christ would not give the least credit to Satan nor do any thing at his desire were it good and profitable which hee suggesteth for his end and issue is ever wicked and devillish yea hee would shew how he contemned the will of the Tempter for hee is not overcome unlesse hee bee contemned 5 Christ Jesus being the wisdome of his Father well knew that Satan grossy dissembled with him for hee spake as if hee wished well unto him and would have his hunger satisfied but could hee indeed respect the releef of Christ did hee desire Christs preservation and welfare knew hee not that hee was the promised seed that must break his head and destroy his works and therefore seeing Christ knew that Satan must needs seek his destruction in all his attempts hee had just cause to yeeld to none of them all though they seemed never so beneficial In that Christ here would not make his Divinity known to Satan neither by word nor miracle wee may note that Doct. Christ will not purposely make himself known to such as hee knows will make no right use of him Luke 23.8 When Herod saw Jesus Christ revealeth himself only to such as make right use of him hee was exceeding glad for hee had heard many things of him and hoped to have seen some miracle But Christ would not work any sign in his presence because hee had wrought workes enough already to prove him the Son of God neither was it fit to prostitute the power of God to the pleasure of a vain man who would have made no right use of it Matth. 12.39 This evil and wicked Generation seeketh a sign and none shall bee given them save the sign of the Prophet Jonah Why had they not infinite signes and miracles both then and afterwards Yes but they had none such as they would have for they would have some extraordinary sign as Mat. 16.1 Master shew us a sign from heaven as if they had said Either cause the Sun to stand still or go back as in Joshuahs and Hezekiahs daies or the Moon to stand as in Ajelon or call for an extraordinary tempest of thunder and rain as Samuel did which made all the people to fear the Lord and Samuel exceedingly 1 Sam. 12.18 or call for fire from heaven as Elijah did These and the like they thought beseeming men of God as for turning water into wine restoring of sight and legs c. those they saw little power in But why would not our Saviour give them such a sign as they desired Surely hee had just reason the same in this our doctrin for they did not desire it for a good end but as Luke saith expresly to tempt him not to help their infirmity but to feed their curiosity neither to increase and strengthen faith but to nourish their infidelity For had that been their end had they not beside the doctrin of the Prophets and the fulfilling of the promises the blessed Doctrin of the son of God of whom some of themselves said Never man spake like him and for the confirmation of that
many and mighty powerful miracles which were signs from heaven shewing that hee was from heaven And yet for all this they beleeved not So Matth. 27.42 the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees said If hee bee the King of the Jews let him come down from the Cross and woe will beleeve him No doubt Christ could but bee would not not onely because it was an hour of darknesse but because hee know they would never have beleeved him Psal 22 2● 23. I will declare thy name to my brethren to the seed of Jacob to Israel Reasons 1 This practice of Christ is answerable to his precept Matth. 7.6 Cast not holy things to doggs nor pearls before swine By holy things and pearls are meant the things of Gods Kingdom Christ and his merits c. so called both to shew the excellency of them in themselves being above all pearls Prov. 3.14 as also our duty to prize and lock them up in our hearts and keep them as we doe our pearls safely in our memories By Doggs and Hoggs are meant malicious and obstinate enemies convicted of enmity against Gods Word of whose amendment there is little hope every man naturally is an enemy to God and his Word and so a dogg and a swine as Christ called the Heathens and Gentiles It is not lawful to take the children bread and cast it to doggs Now to such as these we must preach and offer the Sacraments yea Christ offered himself and came to call sinnets but when his Word and Miracles were rejected and himself evil intreated as among the Pharisees then saith Christ Let them alone they are blind leaders of the blind 2 Christ shews himself unto none but such as he loveth and love him Joh. 14.11 and this was the ground of Judas his speech Lord what is the cause that thou wilt shew thy self to us and not to the world the world sees him not for none seeth him but to whom he sheweth himself and he sheweth himself to none but such as love him and none love him but such as love his word and keep it vers 23. 3 This was one cause why Christ spake so many things in Parables that such as would be blind might not see and such as would not make a right use of his holy doctrin might not understand Matth. 13.13 For many that heard them let them goe without further question in a careless manner whereas the Disciples of Christ inquired of him his meaning and one learned of another and so that which for the difficulty drave others away became in this manner of teaching much more easie and familiar yea much more perspicuous and clear than any other 4 Never could extraordinary means convert such as beleeved not the word the ordinary means and therefore Christ never or seldome gratified the Scribes and Pharisees with Miracles or extraordinary means because they resisted his Doctrin Person and Works or if any wicked men saw any of his mighty VVorks and Miracles they saw not himself in them as Pharaoh what a number of Miracles saw he yet he was never the better he would not acknowledge God nor his servants and in the Wilderness they who saw Miracles every day and moment yet not beleeving the VVord of God in them were never the better the arm of the Lord was not made bare unto them Vse 1 Ignorant persons that know not Christ nor desire to know him are in a woful estate being such as Christ counts unworthy to reveal himself unto and therefore he either keeps the means from them or leaves them without grace to make an holy use of them Numbers of men to whom Christ never revealeth himself Vse 2. In worse case are they that have the means and yet no tast of them no reformation by them their covetousness their pride their drunkenness and uncleaneness will not be left as many that come to Church to hear the VVord and receive the Sacraments and yet are no better than Doggs and Swine and altogether unreformed in their lives and courses Some draw the VVord of God into question and would be taught by Angels or Miracles as Satan here but Christ will not make himself known to them no more than to him so saith Abraham to Dives in Hell when he denied his request They have Moses and the Prophets if they will not beleeve them neither would they beleeve if one should rise from the dead Some are resolved to live as they list let the Preachers say what they can whereas he that is in Christ to whom he reveals himself is a new Creature for Christ speaks to the heart not to the ear only Others say they are decreed to life or death and therefore doe what they can they cannot change Gods mind and hence never goe about to change themselves But had Christ shewed himself to these he would have directed them to the means of saving knowledge namely to the Scriptures which testifie of him Joh. 5.29 and to faith which unites to him and to the fruits of faith which testifie the truth of it to his glory and their comfort Others will be saved by saith alone and by a profession of the Gospel and so neglect the works which justifie it and the power of godliness whereas if Christ in the Ministry had revealed himself to such he had quickned their faith and not left it as a Carkass for faith without works is dead Others poor simple people will be saved by mercy alone and never labour for knowledge faith or true feeling of their own estate and care not how sin abound that mercy may abound much more But had Christ met with them hee would let them see their misery in the causes and effects and teach them to hunger after mercy in the means and having obtained it to goe and sin no more lest a worse thing follow Others disclaiming the doctrin of mortification and self-denial therefore dislike the VVord as too straight a Doctrin stripping them of their pleasures and profits and hence some hold on in their lusts some return with the Swine to their wallowing in the mire they cannot dye to sin they cannot live without laughter mirth and sports Whereas had Christ revealed himself unto them he would have taught them that his yoke is an easier yoke than the yoke of sin Three properties of such as to whom Christ will make himself known and that there is no sound comfort but in mortified affections and actions Vse 3. VVhosoever would have Christ reveal himself fully unto him must labour to be thus qualified 1 He must be humble for he teacheth the humble in his ways Psal 25.9 but the proud hee sends empty away as rain makes vallies fruitful but falls off the mountains which are therefore barren 2 He must long and desire to meet Christ in his Ordinances for Christ is the scope of the VVord and Sacraments therefore desire to know nothing but Christ Crucified goe to the tents of Shepheards where
he hath told thee thou shalt meet him And this desire if it bee sincere will vent it self in earnest prayer to be taught of God Teach me thy statutes O open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy Law And it hath a promise to bee answered Joh. 14.21 I will love him and shew my own self to him 3 Hee must have a conscionable indeavour and industry to obey that part of Gods will which he revealeth unto him Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe his will he shall know whether the doctrin be from God or no. III. The third part in the answer is the matter of it a testimony of Scripture It is written Christ might have oppressed the Devil by his Divine power but being as man to be tempted he would as man overcome 1 To magnifie mans nature 2 To torment Satan the more and 3 To teach us how to overcome him And by this his practice he gives to understand that Doct. 1. The Word is a principal weapon of our Spiritual warfare Reasons The word written is a chief part of our spiritual armour to foyl Satan by yea indeed the principal weapon of our spiritual warfare is the VVord of God 1 Ephes 6.17 Take unto you the sword of the Spirit which is the VVord of God and therefore as a sword it serves 1 To defend us 2 To wound Satan 3 To cut asunder all his temptations so it did serve Christ here Neither is it a Carnal weapon but the sword of the Spirit that is a Spiritual weapon as the fight is spiritual not made by man but tempered framed sharpned and put into our hands by the Spirit of God himself for whose VVord else is it or whence hath it power but from Gods Spirit Revel 1.16 It is called the two-edged sword which goeth out of the mouth of Christ because it is sharp and piercing to wound all his enemies it pierceth to the very bones and marrow VVith this sword he slayes the wicked Isa 11.4 with this he visits Leviathan and slayes the Dragon that is the mightiest enemies of his Church Isa 27.1 with this sword he consumes Antichrist 2 Thess 2.8 and with this sword he soyls the Devil here with the same he slayes corruptions and Satanical temptations in the hearts of his own children 2 This part of our armour was signified by the Shields wherewith Salomons Temple was hanged Cant. 4.4 and by the smooth stones whereby David smote the Phitist●m 1 Sam. 17.40 here the Sons of David and Davids Lord smites the Goliah of Hell with a deadly wound Sauls Armour is here refused worldly weapons wisdome and subtlety and one stone is taken from the fountaines of holy Scripture out of the bag of his holy memory and by it Satan falls Yea it is the armory of the Church whence all other parts of Christian armour are to bee had 3 All the contention and fight of Satan is to fasten some error and falsehood upon us now therefore the onely fence from error is to bee girded with the girdle of truth now the title of truth is often given to the word of God Psal 19.10 The judgements of the Lord are truth and Joh. 17.17 Thy Word is truth to shew that so long as wee hold to the word wee are sufficiently armed against all falshood and error both in judgement and practice And the like may bee concluded from that it is called light discovering and chasing before it all mists and darkness The word a compleat armour 4 The Word is a compleat armour covers every part of the soul gives fence and direction to the minde understanding memory thoughts all the affections and all the faculties of the soul it covers every part and member of the body teacheth the eye to look the ear to hear the tongue to speak the feet to walk It directs us in all our conversation and actions of life towards God and men even to all conditions of men superiours equals inferiours poor and rich further it guideth us in all conditions of life in all times in all places in all ages prescribing rules to children and men young and old in all exercise and use of things indifferent as meat drink apparel recreation in a word in all things concerning this life or the life to come So as here is a sufficient defence for all occasions 5 Never did any man receive any hurt from Satan or his own corruptions or from this evil world but either because hee did not draw out this sword or did not ●ightly use it What other was the cause of the deadly wound of our first Parents and ours in them but that they drew not out this sword of Gods word but suffered the Serpent to wring it out of their hands How could Peter have been so greivously wounded in the High Priests Hall but that hee forgat the word of Christ which had admonished him of it the power of which was such as it healed his wound as easily as it had done Malcus his ear which hee had struck off and therefore wanted no power to have preserved him if he had remembred it What a fearful wound befell Lots wife because shee cast off this armour and forgate the Word charging her shee should not look back The like of Solomon all his wisdome could not sence him if hee cast off the word of God which had charged him not to meddle with out-landish wives but neglecting that must fall by them Vse 1. This is a confutation of Romish Teachers who disarm men of the Scriptures and wring this special weapon out of the peoples hands Papists by suppressing the scriptures w●ing the weapon out of mens hands common people may not have the Scripture in their vulgar tongue for this saith Harding is heretical But this place is sufficient to prove the contrary whence I conclude thus The weapons whereby people are senced from Satans temptations are not to bee taken from them but the scriptures are the weapons of defence against Satans temptations and again if all the common people bee assaulted and wounded and all have to do with Satan then all have need of this fence and cover against this most capital and deadly enemy But the assault is made against all and Satan seeks without exception whom hee may devour and therefore all without exception need the fence of the Scriptures And further whosoever turn the people naked unto all Satans temptations and disarm them so as they cannot but bee overcome are guilty of all the wickedness of the people to which Satan draws them and also of their destruction unto which they be drawn But Popish Teachers by destituting the people of the Scriptures turn them naked into temptation and disarm them and therefore are guilty of their sin and damnation But this practice of theirs is 1 Against the Scriptures This practise 1 against the scriptures for God would therefore have the scriptures written and commended to men in
his soul As for that A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump the Apostle speaks it to the Governours not to suffer such wicked persons and provoketh only private persons the peeces of that lump to be the more watchful over themselves but not to refuse Gods Ordinances for them And as neither that Church of Corinth ceased to be a Church for suffering that wicked man for the Apostle honours them with that style while he checketh that sin so neither doe particular members cease so to be for that such are suffered much less Look to thy own soul the Apostle wisheth every man to examine himself rather than others Object 5. But how can I hear the Word with profit from a wicked man Ans 1. A wicked man may preach salvation to another and damnation to himself as Judas and the builders of Noahs Ark. A statue may point another the way but it self stand still 2 An instrument hath all his efficiency from the first mover who is God himself a Knife with motion will cut if the hand will use it 3 The Word is like the Light now as the light of the Sun is not defiled though it pass through the dirtiest places so the Word is not polluted through awicked preacher 4 Look to thy own disposition that thy soyl be good as the seed is good take the benefit of the Sun and rain and it is no matter whether the hands be clean or foul that cast and disperse the seed 5 Let Preachers consider what a barr it is to all their labour to bee scandalous covetous disdainful envious noted for Gamesters companions c. how their example doth more harm than their teaching can doe good with how little power or prevailing he can point his finger to other mens sores which every one can point at in himself what an odious thing it is to make Gods people to loath Gods Ordinances because of him and what a woeful case is it that Paul intimates of such teachers who preaching to others themselves by disobedience become cast-aways 1 Cor. 9.27 Rules to avoyd entangling and seduction by Separatists perswasions 1 Labour for wisdom to discern between main truths in doctrin and inferiour in discipline as knowing that Jerusalem was the holy City before Nehemiah builded the wall of it between the person and the place not condemning the place for the person between the thing and the use and condemn not the use for the abuse between Offices and Executions substance and circumstances the being of a thing and the wel-being of it 2 Labour to reform thine own heart first for that is in thy power to amend and then thy own family and if it be in thy power goe further to the house of God but if thou beest a private man and this bee not in thy power thou must turn thee to prayers and tears and yet so strive in seeking the wel-being of things as by unthankfulness thou lose not the comfort of the things themselves 3 Be low in thine own eyes suspect thy own judgement condemn not much less contemn those that are not every way as thy self Pride and contention of spirit are inseparable and it is folly to look that men who have a different measure of grace should not differ in judgement and though they walk in the same way yet not after the same manner 4 Testifie thy self a sound Christian by the badge of Christ which is love by this shall all men know that yee are my Disciples if yee love one another Study to be quiet saith the Apostle and follow things that concern peace Love will make the best even of bad things and give a charitable construction of things doubtful and pitty and pray for such as erre howsoever and much more if they erre of ignorance Use 2. This doctrin teacheth us that the way to sanctifie a mans person or family is to set up the Worship of God in his heart or house 1 Thy heart must be the Temple of God yea as the Ark within the Sanctuary In the Temple God was daily worshipped there were daily Sacrifices offered the Scriptures read and expounded and prayers preferred unto God from his people Thou must get proportion in all these if thy heart be Gods Temple thou must privately yea secretly apart daily worship God with personal worship daily offer the sacrifices of praise and thanks for personal blessings and deliverances daily prefer thy personal prayers daily apart read and apply the Scriptures to thine own use for thus must it be in Gods temple And further thy heart must be as the Ark wherein were kept the Tables of the Law written with Gods own finger endeavour in obedience to all Gods Commandements intreat God to write his Law in thy heart that thou mayest never depart from it Thy heart as the Ark must keep the pot of Manna a type of Christ the food of life close Christ within thy heart and hold him as thy life never to part with him for that figured the Sacraments in which Christ is propounded the food of the soul Thy heart as the Ark must contain Aarons rod that had budded signifying the discipline and government of Christ unto which thou must subject thy self let this rod flourish in thee and stoop with reverence and fear to this scepter 2 Thy house and family must be sanctified also by setting up and preserving Gods worship there We read of some of the Saints who had Churches in their Houses Every Christian professing holiness must have the like care and endeavour in such Family-exercises as God hath prescribed as 1 In diligent teaching and instructing the family-partly in reading and partly in delivering precepts out of the word It is Gods Commandement Deut. 6.7 to whet the law continually on our children and train them up even from child-hood in the Scriptures The benefit whereof shall bee 1 To fit them for the publike Ministry 2 To cause the word to dwell plentiously in them 3 it is a notable means for their growth in godliness and to contain them in good order 2 In calling them to account for things delivered by catechising pittifully neglected in families who yet would be thought to bee Gods people This is the driving of the nail to the head to stick the surer It works care in those who easily reject good means It hinders vain thoughts words and exercises It banisheth much folly and ignorance that is bound up in the hearts of children and servants 3 In applying the works of God past or present on our selves or others to move them to confidence and trust in God by the works of his mercy and to fear to offend by the works of his justice and by this means the seeds not only of true Religion but of good conscience shall bee sown in them betimes this was holy Abrahams practise for which God would not hide his secret works from him Gen. 18.19 4 In daily private prayer with the family at least every morning and
and again The fencer having had a shrewd wound will not easily lye open in that part again The Citizens who have stood out a siege will survey the places most battered where the enemy had his strongest hope of entry and will most fortify them against another time Use 2. Where wee are most tempted know that there is some special grace to bee kept or lost A theef will not hanker after an empty chest but if hee know where Jewels or treasure is he will haunt there Vse 3. Abandon all doctrin of doubting as Satanical which Satan is much and often in both against Christ and his members And no marvel seeing doubting warreth against saith by which only Christ is apprehended and heavenly life and heat kept in us But of this before Cast thy self down II. Now follows the matter and scope of the temptation and the dart it self which is thrown at Christ The scope of Satan is 1 To bring Christ to presumption that seeing hee will needs trust in his Fathers providence and care hee assaies if hee can make him trust too much and seeing hee will bee so confident if hee can bring him to vain confidence as if hee should say If thou because thou art the Son of God canst live without bread upon the same ground thou canst go down without stairs And both Satans allegation of Scripture and our Saviours answer shew that this was the principal aim of the Devil 2 To fasten upon Christ vain glory as well as vain confidence as if hee should say Thou shalt have great honour and every man will beleeve if thou by this miracle shew thy self the Son of God to this purpose I have fitted the place where is greatest resort and where the Son of God ought especially to make himself known For where should the Son bee made known if not at his Fathers house Satan knew hee had overcome the first Adam by a temptation of vain-glory and now hee assaulteth the second Ye shall bee gods and Thou shalt be known to bee the Son of God if by flying in the air thou canst come down without hurt 3 To bring him to tempt God and try whether hee bee so powerful as to save him in such an attempt whether so true of his word as to keep him and whether the Angels did diligently watch him and bear him up as their commission was 4 Satan intended directly to kill him being a man-slayer from the beginning For every way the dart intended his destruction if hee should cast himself down for thus Satan thought If hee cast down himself and kill himself then hee is not the Son of God and so I shall gain him Or if hee cast down himself and not kill himself yet shall I make him both disobey God in tempting him as also obey mee Thus either way Satan makes sure of his prey 5 Satan had yet a further fetch which made him so bestir himself seeking in Christs downfall our utter ruine disgrace and destruction Strike off the head all the members with that blow are slain The bent of all Satans temptations against the Head is against all the Members Out of the same ground Satan raiseth a clean contrary temptation to the former In the former hee moves Christ to diffidence and despair in this to presidence and presumption In the former hee would have Christ use unlawful means in this to reject all means even lawful In the former hee perswades him to distrust where God had promised in this latter to trust where God had not promised In the former that bread was absolutely necessary here that a ladder and means of going down were not necessary at all as if hee should say Thou sayest that God is able to uphold thee being his son without means go too let us see how true that is If hee can ordinarily and extraordinarily preserve thee then Cast thy self down headlong from this pinacle for being the son of God thou shalt bee sure to be preserved safe without hurt Doct. Whence Observe That the Devil in tempting men labours to bring them to extreams And when hee cannot prevail in one hee would fasten on them the clean contrary sins If hee can get Christ because hee is the son of God either to contemn his Fathers providence as in the former or to presume on the same as in this temptation either will please him 2 Cor. 2.10 the Apostle sheweth that this is one of the wyles and stratagems of Satan by clean contrary waies to destroy the Church either by too much lenity which let fall the censures of the Church so as the incestuous person was not at all corrected or when they began to use too much rigour and severity forgetting the rules of Christian meekness and charity And in the incestuous person himself it will please him well either that hee go on without all remorse of his sin and the Church not meddle with him or that by the severity of the Church hee bee swallowed up of sorrow In regard of both which the Apostle saith We are not ignorant of his wyles Act. 14.11.19 when Paul and Barnabas came to Lycaonla to preach and publish the Gospel observe Satans wyle in the people either they must receive them as Gods and sacrifice unto them out of blinde zeal and devotion at which the Apostles rent their cloathes or else they must take them and stone them as they did Paul and drew him out of the City supposing hee had been dead ver 19. Matth. 21.9 when Christ came riding to Jerusalem multitudes flocked after him spred their garments in the way cut down boughs to strow therein and cried Hosanna hee was the son of David the blessed one that came in the Name of the Lord The people said it was Jesus the Prophet of Nazareth and all the City was moved But before night Satan had them in another extremity such was the envy of the Scribes and Pharisees that Christ was either glad to flye the City that night or the fear of the people that none durst entertain and lodge him vers 17. so hee left them and went into the Town of Bethania and lodged there And within few daies after all cryed Crucify Crucify 1 This comes to pass because Satan is contrary to himself Reasons according to his disposition are his waies Though hee bee the Prince of darkness yet can hee transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.14 Hee appeared in the shape of a serpent to Eve in the shape of a Prophet to Saul Sometime this crooked serpent can deny Christ to be the Son of God as here and sometimes preach him so to be Mark 1.24 2 His dexterity and sliness is another cause whereby hee can make one ground and that a good and true one to serve to rear up two extream evils in such cunning manner as hee was in hope to deceive the wisdome of God himself thereby for here out of Gods word that Christ was his Son hee
He was an eminent type of our Jesus or Joshua whose voyce speaking in the Scripture the Book of the Law we must attend unto in all things Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and our Saviour said to the Sadduces Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures plainly affirming that the Scriptures rightly known were a sufficient fence from all errour Luke 16.29 They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them Matth. 19.4 Christ by Scripture refuted the Pharisees abuse of that Scripture of Moses for putting away their wives Isa 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony 1 This is true by reason of the perfection of the Scripture Psal 19.7 Reasons The Law of God is perfect so perfect as man and Angel are accursed that shall adde unto it Prov. 30.5 6. Every word of God is pure a shield to those that trust in him put nothing unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyar It is a perfect Canon or rule which as a straight line shews the crookedness of that which is not strait It is a touch-stone and trial of all truths It is a perfect Law which is an universal Judgement to direct all and for all to bee led by which live under it It is perfect in the effect 2 Tim. 3.16 It is profitable to teach to improve to correct and instruct in righteousness and to make the man of God perfect Obj. The Apostle saith it is profitable but not that it is sufficient alone Ans We say not it is therefore sufficient because he saith it is profitable but because it is profitable for all purposes of teaching improving and makeing the man of God perfect therefore it is sufficient and perfect 2 In the Scripture we have the voyce of God speaking from Heaven than which voyce no voyce of man or Angel can be more clear or manifest Prov. 2. ● Out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding His wisdom in the Scripture is above Salomons in answering all dark and deep questions and no ca●e can be propounded which hath not there his satisfaction and determination Object But the Scriptures are a dumbe Judge and cannot determine Controversies Ans 1. We give earthly Kings leave to give definitive sentence and judgment in cases by their writing by which numbers who never heard their voyce but read the writing understand their meaning and shall we now call them ●●mb Judges or shall we deny this priviledge to the King of glory to determine by writing but wee must blasphemously account him a dumb Judge 2 The Scriptures are not a dumb Judge but a speaking Judge Rom. 3.19 That which the Law speaketh it speaketh to them that are under the Law Heb. 12.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have forgotten the consolation which speaketh to you as children Joh. 7.42 Doth not the Scripture say and what saith the Scripture so as it is a speaking Judge and gives to it self a mouth and a voyce and that a loud one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.27 the Apostle quoting the Prophet Esay saith Esay cries out concerning Israel c. 3 How doth their Speaking-Judge determine all Causes in Christendom delated unto him at Rome but by Writing and Bulls and Breves and yet hee scorns to be counted a dumb Judge 3 That is the noble and infallible Judge of all Controversies to which all flesh must stand which hath his authority of himself no way delegate but the Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for it self to bee beleeved because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired by God from whom lies no appeal whose judgement can by no means within or without it self be corrupted whose voyce alone cannot erre or be led by passion affection or respect of persons but is an unchangeable truth as God himself is the Author of it In every Common-wealth the fittest decider of a Controversie in the Law is the Law-maker the King himself the same is also true in the Church 4 Christ himself decided all Controversies by Scripture so did the Apostles so the ancient beleevers brought all their doubts to the Scriptures after their example Vse 1. This serves to discover the wickedness of the Church of Rome who 1 That they may be Judges in their Causes and 2 To avoyd the light of Scripture which they see so direct against them flie the Scriptures as an incompetent Judge of the Controversies of Religion between us and in stead of the Scriptures they appoint us four Judges the authority of all which is superiour by th●ir doctrine to the authority of Scripture ¶ I. The first Judge is the Church for that say they is to judge of the meaning of Scripture and but for the authority of the Church wee could not know which were Scripture Ans 1. We ask what they mean by the Church They say the Catholick Church But that is impossible to be Judge upon earth because it is a company of all the elect in Heaven and Earth which never was on earth at one time Then they say the visible Church But what if the Church bee not visible sometimes as in Elias his time or be in the Wilderness Then they say the Roman Church which hath ever been visible these fifteen hundred years Now we know our Judge and how our cause is like to goe in which it is a party But 1 It is not the Catholike Church unless a finger can bee an hand or an hand the whole body or a part become the whole and falsly and ridiculously call themselves Catholikes 2 That is no true Church which disagreeth from Christ the Head as Augustine saith and is fallen off Christ by many fundamental errors as Idolatry Justification by works and the like which yet are maintained by Romanists 3 Wee hold that the Orthodox and true Church is 1 A witnesse and keeper of the Scriptures but a jewell hath his price and excellency from it self not from the keeper 2 Having the Spirit of Christ the Church can discern true Scripture from false and supposititious writings but this by the help of Scripture as a Goldsmith by the touch-stone can discern gold from other metals but hee makes it not gold but onely tries it so to bee 3 It is to publish and declare the truth of Scripture without adding or diminishing as an Herald or Cryer manifests the Kings pleasure but it receives no authority from him 4 The true Church is a ministerial interpreter as having the gift of Prophecy but tyed to interpret and judge of Scripture by Scripture Christ is a magisterial interpreter But that the Church on earth should have authority over Scriptures is too unreasonable 1 It is to prefer mens voice and testimony above Gods 1 Joh. 5.9 If wee receive mans testimony the testimony of God is greater Joh. 5. ult If yee will not beleeve Moses his writings how will yee beleeve my sayings as if hee should say If yee beleeve not Scriptures my testimony will do you no good
nothing to his salvation So Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand till I make thy enemies thy foot-stool If wee would know whom this is meant of compare it with 1 Cor. 15.25 For Christ must reign till he have put all his enemies under his feet Psal 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee this place is explained by the like Heb. 1.5 For to whi●h of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my son c. Psal 97.7 Worship him all yee Gods What is meant by Gods and whom must the Gods worship see Heb. 1.6 When he brought his first born into the world hee said Let all the Angels of God adore him Concerning unlike places we have this rule That they speak not either of the same thing or manner or time and by wary observation of the circumstances this will easily appear in examples 1 Joh. 16.13 The Apostles after the gift of the Spirit were led into all truth and freed from error Yet Peter greatly erred after that Gal. 2.11 Answ The Apostles were led into all truth of doctrine and erred not but were not free from all error in life and conversation now Peters error was not directly in doctrine but in conversation with the Gentiles So as the opposition is not in the same thing 2 Isa 59.21 My word shall not depart from thee nor from thy seeds seed for ever saith the Lord yet Matth. 21.43 the Kingdom shall bee taken from you Answ The Prophet speaketh of the whole true Church of God which shall be perpetual upon earth our Saviour of the Nation of the Jews So as the seeming opposition is not in the same 3 Luk. 17.19 Thy faith hath made thee whole here Faith is greater than Charity but in 1 Cor. 13.13 Charity is greater than faith Ans They speak not of the same faith the former place speaks of justifying faith considered with his object Christ which not absolutely as a quality but relatively as apprehending Christ is greater than Charity the latter of miraculous faith which is less 4 Rom. 7.22 Paul delights in the Law of God yet vers 23. Paul resisteth the Law of God Ans This is indeed an opposition in the same person but not in the same part Paul stands of spirit and flesh according to the former part he delights in the Law according to the later he rebelleth against it 5 Luk. 10.28 Life is promised to the worker This doe and live Rom. 4.3 Not to him that worketh but to him that beleeveth is faith imputed to righteousness Ans Both speak of the word but not of the same part of the word which standeth of two parts the Law and this promiseth life to the worker and the Gospel which promiseth life to the beleever 6 Joh. 5.31 If I give testimony to my self my testimony is not true Joh. 8.14 If I testify of my self my testimony is true Ans Consider Christs testimony two ways 1 As the testimony of a singular man and thus considering himself as a meer man he yeelds to the Jewes that his testimony were unfit and not sufficient in his own cause because by the Law out of the mouth of two or three witnesses every word must stand but 2 Consider him as a Divine person coming from Heaven and having his Father giving witness with him thus his testimony is infallible not subject to passion or delusion And of this later the place speaketh 7 Matth. 10.8 Freely yee have received freely give Luke 10.7 The workman is worthy of his wages Ans The places speak of the same persons but not of the same works the former of miraculous works which are not to bee bought and sold for money the use of them being only to forward their ministery the later of the Function of Preaching and labour in building the Church equity requires that he that laboureth in the Ministry should receive recompence for his labour Gal. 6.6 8 Hos 13.9 God is not the author of evil Amos 3.6 There is no evil in the City which the Lord hath not done Ans It is not the same evil but that the evil of fault this the evil of punishment 9 Prov. 20.9 Who can say my heart is clean Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart Ans 1. A man absolutely considered in himself is all impure so the former place speaketh but relatively considered in Christ he is pure so the later 2 No man is pure in respect of the presence of corruption but the godly are in respect of the efficacy and rule of it 10 Mark ●● 15 The Apostles must goe out into all the world Matth. 10.5 They must not goe into the way of the Gentiles Ans Distinguish times and the Scripture will bee consonant enough the former place is meant of preaching after Christs time the latter w●i●e hee was living on earth Both are true because the times are diverse 11 Joh. 3.17 God sent not the Son to judge the world Joh. 5.27 The Father hath given all judgement to the Son Ans The time of his abasement at his first coming when hee came not to judge but to be judged must bee distinguished from his second coming in Glory and Majesty to judge the quick and the dead of this the later 12 Exod. 20.15 Thou shalt not steal Chap. 11.2 Robbe or spoyl Aegypt Ans A special Commandement of God never opposeth a general but is only an exception from it So of Abrahams mental slaying of his son If a man of himself should steal or kill it is sin but if God bid it is not 13 Malac. 3.6 I am the Lord I change not yet it seems he is changeable Jer. 18.7 Ans The Scripture speaks not in the same respect God changeth not in himself but in respect of us he is changed as the Schools speak non affectivè sed effectivè in respect of his work not of his affection for so there is no variableness or shadow of change in him 14 Psal 18.20 Judge mee according to my righteousness Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant Answ There is a twofold Righteousnesse one of the cause another of the person by this later hee will not bee justified by himself but in the other hee desires to bee justified his cause was good there was no such thing as they laid to his charge If Job would dispute with God his own cloathes would make him unclean but when he dealeth with his calumnious friends hee saith I will never let go mine innocency till I dye 15 Luk. 1.33 Of his Kingdome there shall bee no end 1 Cor. 15.24 Hee shall deliver up the Kingdome to his Father Answ Luke speaketh of Christs Kingdome in respect of it self the Apostle in respect of the administration of it In the former respect it shall never bee abolished Christ shall alwaies have a people to rule alwaies a Lordship and Headship but hee shall give up his Kingdome in respect of the manner and means of administring
the World therefore hee speaks true Answ 1 Hee is called the Prince of the World not simply but as it is corrupted the Prince of this World saith the Text which world this which lyeth in malice and hostility against the Son of God and the means of salvation 2 Hee is not so a Prince as having any right unto any creature for hee cannot possess a Pig without leave but by tyranny hee forceeth and commandeth as a Prince the wicked World unto his obedience for the World departing from God to his Adversary God in justice giveth Satan leave to prevail and rule in the Sons of disobedience But will it follow that because hee ruleth in the world by sin and death being the prince of darkness and having the power of death therefore the parts of the world must needs bee his Object 2 He is called the God of the World 2 Cor. 4.4 Ans True not in respect of dominion over things created but 1 In respect of Corruption for hee is the God of the evil in the world the Author Ring-leader and Nourisher of all evil 2 In respect of Seduction for hee is bold to use all earthly things which are made to Gods glory to serve to set forward his temptations and wicked mens lusts and so to set up his own kingdom 3 In respect of opinion or estimation because the people of the world make the Devil their God But this no more proves him to bee indeed the God of the World than an Idol is proved to bee a true God onely because Idolaters so esteem and make it Secondly The Devil affirms it to be in his disposition that hee may give it to whom hee will which must needs bee another lye because it is not his in possession for nothing can give that which it hath not 2 The Scriptures ascribe this to God as a perogative and peculiar to him By him Kings reign Prov. 18.15 All powers that are are ordained of God Rom. 13.1 Hee maketh low and hee maketh high It is the most high that beareth rule over the Kingdomes of men Dan. 4.22 The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away Job 1.21 3 Another notorious lye is that having them to dispose of hee will dispose them to Christ which is impossible seeing Christ had them already disposed unto him and had received them of his Father so as he only could say Matth. 11.23 All things are given to mee of the Father and Joh. 3.35 The Father loveth the Son and hath given all things into his hands Therefore the Devil offering him the Kingdomes of the World must needs lye Psalm 2.8 Ask of mee and I will give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession If then Satan say All this power will I give thee it is a lye for all power was given him in Heaven and in earth of his Father Matth. 28.18 So as in this profer hee belies the Fathers gift and the Sons right and derogates from the glory both of the Father and of the Son 4 Another lye is his false boasting making himself Lord and Casar of all when hee hath not one foot of all hee speaks of like Solomons Bragadocio There is one that maketh himself rich when he hath nothing and when hee pretends his unjust usurpation in the World to bee a just possession and title to the World And thus wee have examined the substance and truth of this Reason and have found neither substance truth nor reason in it Here note that Doct. Bad causes must ever bee thrust forward by bad means Satan had a naughty matter in hand as no better can beseem him namely the overthrow of the Son of God and all the salvation of mankinde and the means by which hee would effect his purpose is suitable lying and falshood and boasting and hee is no changeling never a true word comes out of his mouth 1 King 21. Jezabel had a wicked end to bring to passe namely the dis-inheriting of Naboth and setting Ahab into his possession and what means doth shee use but bribery perjury and murther of Naboth and his Children and all this under a colour of Religion and revenge of Gods cause a fast being proclaimed before it Matth. 26. the Jews had as wicked a cause as ever was undertaken viz. the oppressing and murther of the Son of God and what means must they use for what had the just man done They must accuse falsly and suborn false witnesses and deprave his words and make him speak what they list And what other means used they to falsify and suppress the truth and glory of his resurrection In this place Satan aims to bring Christ to Idolatry and the means is covetousness Peter had an ill cause in hand to hinder Christ from being apprehended and his means was bad unwarrantable striking Reasons And this must needs bee 1 In respect of God when a bad action is undertaken hee leaves it and as hee permits the action onely so hee permitteth bad means but never appoints or approves any means to bad and VVicked purposes which therefore must bee Wicked and Unhappy 2 In respect of Satan who seeks to make every action as sinful as possibly may bee hee knows that all instruments of falshood are hateful to God and therefore the more wicked means are used the more detestable and damnable the action is 3 In respect of men themselves for those that make no conscience of bad ends ma●e none of the m●ans as we may see in David himself whose conscience being so sleepy as to take another mans wife he will make no bones to hide it by murther of his faithful Captain 4 In respect of the means themselves which are near enough at hand bad means are easily sound and attempted What might be more difficult than to pick matter against the Son of God to bring him not only under disgrace but unto death Yet the Jewes could easily find a Law by which Law he was to dye or if they had had none they could easily make one If they wanted true witness they could suborn false If they wanted witness from others they could make use of his own We our selves have heard him what need wee any other witness Vse 1. This teacheth us to suspect those causes and actions that are brought about by bad means as 1 When men run out of Gods Ordinances and will not live by some honest calling and means of life but by Cards Dice Bowls Bets Cousnage and such instruments and means of injury and wrong they are convinced to live a lewd and wicked life for a good and honest life is blessed by God and carried by good and lawful and honest means such as these be not 2 All such goods as are gotten by lying swearing deceiving Sabbath-breaking over-reaching or helping forward sin in any man are here not only to be suspected but condemned and sentence passeth against them as such which the Devil hath
is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God c. First our Saviour would not yeeld to Satans temptations 2 nay hee repel● it with great vehemence 3 Hee hath just reason so to do I. Christ would not yeeld to the temptation no not for a world Quest Why what hurt had been in it Answ 1 Hee had taken the honour of God and given it to Satan wheras th● Lord hath said I will give mine honour to none other 2 Hee had consented to a Lye viz. that the World was Satans in possession and disposition 3 Hee had partaked and abetted all that injustice and wrong which Satan would offer to all the inhabitants of the earth if hee had yeelded or accepted any thing from him 4 Hee had impeached his own right and present possession of all things whereof hee was right beir already invested by his Father 5 Although the worship required was external yet it was Divine and so in giving it to Satan it had been idolatrous which had intangled the Son of God in sin and unfitted him to the redemption of mankind So as in respect of God of Christ of us and the whole Church it had been every way woful and dangerous as Satan yea our Lord well knew Doct. Hence wee learn From the example of our Saviour Christ to esteem and prefer Gods glory above all the World Christ could not bee corrupted with Gold nor Silver nor Kingdomes nor Glory but as a good Physician sees all Diseases and Eye-sores without contracting hurt to himself the Glory of his Father in his eye is an antidote to preserve him without infection And no marvel seeing hee had formerly preferred the Glory of his Fathers mercy in mans salvation above the glory of Heaven it self which he left and became a man of sorrows and was numbred among the wicked to that purpose Here is an example for us which wee cannot attain but must look on a far off for our imitation to come as near it as infirmity of flesh will afford us Moses That man of God so preferred the glory of God before the world that hee made a strange choice viz. To suffer with Gods people rather than to enjoy the treasures and honours of Egypt Heb. 11.24 25. Nay hee was so set for Gods glory as hee preferred it before his own part in the book of life Exod. 32.32 Rather than thou shouldest not glorify thy mercy in thy people and rather than thou shalt give the enemy cause to blaspheme rather blot my name out of thy book let me● have no part in Heaven The Apostles also following the steps of our Lord for Gods glory and the Gospels cause did Glory in the Worlds contempt and rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer for Christ Act. 5.41 Paul bare in his body the markes of Christ Gal. 6. v. 17. and was a prisoner Eph. 3.1 Reasons 1 Gods glory is the chief good and the utmost extent of all his own Counsels and actions wherein hee manifesteth his Mercy or Justice Rom. 9.22 23. and so it ought to be of ours 1 Cor. 10.30 Whatsoever ye eat or drink or whatsoever yee do do all to the Glory of God An earthly child honours his Father when hee imitates him in good so do wee honour our Heavenly Father in this imitation The first thing in Gods intention must bee the first in ours 2 The practice of this duty is a fruit of Faith and a support of Faith Heb. 11.24 By faith Moses refused to bee called the Son of Pharoahs Daughter The consideration of Gods faithfulness in promising and performing better things makes these inferiour things small in our eye as Moses therefore preferred the rebukes of Christ before the treasures of Egypt because hee looked at the recompence of reward And that the sight of Gods glory worthy to bee set above all things takes the part of faith to foil temptations is apparent in our Text by the practice of our holy Saviour 3 In the Lords Prayer the first Petition is that Gods Name may bee hallowed set before the desire of daily bread yea before remission of sins because all these are but means tending and serving to the main end of all which is Gods glory All our good-spiritual and temporal are or ought to be means tending to that end 4 Gods Glory is the dearest of all things to himself of which hee is most jealous and so ought to bee to all his children as wee professe our selves to be And what can more rejoyce the heart of a gracious and ingenuous child than the honour and high respect of his Parent 5 According to out estimation of God himself is our respect of his glory and so much as wee esteem his glory so much wee esteem himself It is true that Gods glory is eternal and so abides in it self not capable of our addition or detraction and God will bee ever most glorious though wee never had been neither need hee our help to make him glorious The Sun would shine in his brightnesse and glory if all Creatures were blind and no eye saw it But yet hee will try how much glory wee will ascribe unto him and how wee prize it and how industrious wee are to magnify and exalt it not that hee can get any good by it but wee our selves reap the fruit even as the fire is not hotter because wee stand by it but we are hotter so while wee glorify God not God but our selves are become better and more glorious God loveth his glory as hee loveth himself and wee as wee love himself so we love his glory 6 This is the perfection of Christianity and Grace here and of our glory and immortality hereafter to prefer his glory above all the World The Spouse Cant. 2.18 calleth Christ her best beloved which hee could not be if she● loved any thing better than him And our Saviour cashiereth him as unworthy to bee his follower that doth not at least in affection and full purpose forsake Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Goods and Lands for his sake This perfection of grace the holy Martyrs attained who rather than they would dishonour God in yeilding the least shew of Idolatry refused the whole World yea their lives And the perfection of glory in the life to come is that nothing else occupy or distract us from being wholly taken up in the immediate glorifying of God without either satiety or ceasing Vse 1. Let us learn to bee of the same minde with our Lord Jesus in whom wee have a worthy pattern of constancy and heavenly resolution in that all the world and the glory of it could not move him no not by a gesture to impair his Fathers glory The Heathen man could say if hee would forswear himself for any thing it should bee for a Kingdome Absolom for a Kingdome would kill his own Father Jehu for a Kingdome makes no end of Murthers One saith of him What was a basket full of
heads to a Kingdome 2 King 10.8 Herod for a Kingdome kills all the male Children Nay it were to be wished that only Kingdoms could draw men to mischief for then should not Ahab murther Naboth f●r a field nor Judas betray his Master for thirty pence nor Christians and Protestants lye and swear and forswear and transgresse for a peice of bread How many executions have we for thirty pence or thirteen pence Which shews how degenerate men are from Christ whom all the kingdoms in the world not the greatest things in them could move in the least manner and as it were indirectly to dishonour his Father Nay what shall wee say of them that profess they not no man else can trade and buy and sell to live without some lies and dissembling sometimes These may carry the name of Christ but the mind of Christ is farre from them Others think and say What need men be so nice to stand upon so small scruples as not to accept so good offers and promotions in the world which have some condition or other annexed which their Conscience cannot without offence swallow What may not he call a little evil good and a little good evil that so he may raise his own estate and doe himself and others much good And thus he is every where accused of indiscretion But to these we object Christs example who would not be moved with all the world to doe that he was not warranted for in the Scripture And for the imputation of indiscretion we alledge Moses example who when he was at age saith the text refused to be called the Son of Pharaohs Daughter and chose rather to suffer with the people of God And to all such alledgers wee say in one word Either was Christ farre wide in refusing so great an offer or else are they Use 2. As we must prefer the glory of God above the world so wee must promote it by our best means The Magistrate by procuring and stablishing that whereby God may be most glorified not administring justice by affection or reward or sparing Offenders by a cruel mercy who should bee made examples to others or not encouraging the godly All this dishonours God highly The Minister must use his gifts not for any private end but for Gods glory as a good servant that gains all for his Master And every private man must so carry his course of life his trade his speeches as God may bee honoured in all things his light in all things must shine that our heavenly Father may be glorified therefore in every thing whether it will carry the commendation not only of truth and honesty but of Christianity and religion To stir us up to this duty see some motives 1 All Creatures in their kind doe glorifie God and keep their standing the Sun the Starres the heavens declare the glory of God Psal 19.1 The Oxe knoweth his owner and the Asse the master of his crib Isa 1.3 The Crane Swallow and Turtle know their times Jer. 8.1 What a shame for Israel then not to acknowledge their Benefactor but come so farre behind the unreasonable Creatures VVhat a shame for Christians to come behind the Israelites who partake in farre greater mercies and means than they did 2 Hereby wee manifest our selves to bee the servants of God in resisting the dishonour of God and standing out for our Lord against Satan wicked men hypocrites whose whole desire is to obscure and darken the glory of God and as farre as they can with violence to tread it under foot Especially having vowed in our Baptism so to doe He is a Coward that seeing the readiness and alacrity of the enemy is not by it provoked to stout resistance especially standing in a good cause and sure of victory Can a child endure his father to be dishonoured and wronged by word or deed and put it up Can Gods child seeing a son honours his father 3 Our time is but short we are in our last conflict the time of our full deliverance and introduction into heavenly glory is at hand the Crown is in our eye almost upon our heads already and therefore let us encourage our selves a while to be instant for the glory of God which is our last scope and chief expectation even as a Traveller that sees the Evening come upon him is so much the quicker till he attain the place he desires so we having the evening of our life approach and our last hour should set our selves forward with more speed and alacrity towards our home holding on our right way which is the glorifying of God in all things 4 We have a cloud of examples before us 1 Of holy men who have endured Martyrdom and rejoyced in the flames that they were worthy by their so exquisite torments to glorifie God as Christ told Peter that by such a death he should glorifie God 2 Of holy Angels who spend all eternity in magnifying Gods holiness and glory Isa 6.3 one cries to another Holy holy holy is the Lord the whole world is full of his glory and Luke 2.14 Glory be to God in the highest heavens And shall not we approach to the Angelical life which is the happiest of all creatures 3 Of the blessed Son of God our Head whose whole life was nothing else but a seeking of the glory of his Father And should not the members imitate the Head Have wee so many faithful guides in so dangerous a way and should we be so cold and slow in the imitation of them 5 Our glorification is individually knit to our glorifying of God as 1 Sam. 2.30 Him that honoureth me will I honour Yea Christ claims his glory on no other condition but this but that he had glorified his Father on earth Joh. 17.4 As among men great benefactors are well pleased with small testimonies of thankfulness where ability wants to perform much so the Lord accepts our small obedience and study of glorifying him that hee plentifully remunerates it Means to come to glorifie God in some good measure 1 Pray for wisdome and a sound judgement Phil. 1.10 That yee may discern things that differ being filled with the fruits of righteousness to the glory and praise of God For every thing will not please and glorifie God 2 Renounce thy own glory in doing things Joh. 8.49 50. How can yee which receive honour one of another seek the honour that cometh of God Certainly Christ sought not his own praise but the praise of him that sent him 3 Observe Gods wisdom in his Word and Works his Power Justice and Mercy his benefits and corrections on thy self and others in all things praise him Hee that praiseth me glorifieth me Psal 50.23 4 Honour God in an honest and Christian conversation gracious speeches and an unspotted life honour the Gospel hereby stop the wickeds mouthes and glorifie God 1 Pet. 2.12 II. The manner of this answer of Christ Avoyd Satan which differeth somewhat from Christs other answers being
of words and sharp reproaches unless there bee added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures even the Devil himself not contenting himself by his power to repel him which Satan now beginneth to feel unless also by the power of the Word hee convince him and thereby award the dart and break the temptation into pieces Which must bee our rule in dealing with vain and jangling adversaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or provocation not to bee like them in frowardness or stifnesse in heat and perversnesse but to answer them with words of Wisdome with sound matter and moderation both to convince them and beat down self-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two Precepts Prov. 26.4 5. which seem contrary but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Ever remember one rule that no adversary suppose the Devil himself is to bee answered by affection or passion but by judgement and sound reason Yea if wee have no hope to win our adversary or do him much good as Christ had none of the Devil yet wee must testify to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selves and others The testimony alledged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God thou shall serve him and Deut. 6.13 An universal and affirmative precept by which every creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to perform Divine worship unto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Satan For it implyeth 1 That hee himself as now standing in this conflict with Satan is a creature of God as hee is man though otherwise as God hee hee equal to his Father As man hee is subject to the Law and to this precept among the rest 2 That Satan is not God as hee pretendeth by his unjust claimes nor any way equal to God 3 That therefore neither must hee being a creature give the least divine worship from God nor hee that thus claimes it can by any means bee capable of it 4 That the Scriptures of God reserve unto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether hee would give it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which upholds his Fathers right Quest But why doth our Saviour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Saviour 1 Changeth Moses saith Thou shalt fear Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2 Addeth for Moses hath not the word only which is of Christs putting to that text Answ 1 Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the Text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2 Our Lord both in great wisdome changeth the word fear into Worship and just cause for 1 Moses useth fear which is a general word in which is contained all such Divine duties as godly men ought to perform unto God and our Saviour mentions one special which is included in that general which thing Moses speaks as well as he in the general as he that commands a whole commands every part inward and outward 2 Hereby our Saviour aptly meets with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he useth the same word not tying himself to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3 He noteth the nearness and undividedness of Gods fear and his worship as where the cause is there will bee the effect so true fear and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here only but elsewhere as Isa 29.13 Their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Mat. 15.9 saith You worship me in vain As for the word only added which is not in the Law it no way addeth any contrary or diverse sense to Moses but only expoundeth or giveth a fit commentary to the text and speaketh that plainly in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and walk after no other gods which is all one with our Saviours Thou shalt serve him only As he that saith The King is the supream Governour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the only supream Governour 3 Christ and his Apostles had a priviledge in alleadging Scriptures without error and were in●a●●ble expounders as well as alleadgers 4 This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant us that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we being not tied so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our Sermons and Expositions which serve to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to several uses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5 To warrant us that Principles of Religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truly interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formal words express them not As for example In the Doctrin of Justification by faith we say we are justified by faith only before God here the Papists exclaim on us as accursed Hereticks because we read not the word only in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Ephes 2.8 By faith without works which exclusive is all one as to say only by faith as our Saviour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word only As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one as to say I only did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of justification And if the Devil himself had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might have said Thou thrustest in the word only and addest to Gods Word and therefore art not the Son of God But the Papists deal more impudently with us than the Devil did with Christ who said no such thing but yeelded to evidence of truth which they will not In the precept it self are three things 1 The person 2 The matter 3 The object 1 The peson thou the whole man and person which consisteth of a body and soul thou any reasonable Creature that challengest God to be thy God 2 The matter shalt worship and serve Worship is two-fold Civil or Divine I. Civil is a prostrating or bowing of the body or any outward testification of an high and reverent respect of man And this is due to men two ways 1 Of duty when men are to bee
reverently acknowledged for something wherein God hath preferred them before us as for years gifts graces authority or such as are set over us as Parents and Fathers of bodies and souls of Church and Country And this is required by the fifth Commandement and Rom. 13.1 7. neither doth the Gospel and Christianity take away but teach civility And performed by the godly both in speech as Daniel said O King and Paul to Festus O noble Festus and also in outward behaviour and gesture as Jacob bowed seven times to Esau and Joseph taking his Sons from the knees of his Father Jacob having blessed them did reverence to his Father down to the ground Gen. 48.12 David inclined his face to the earth and bowed himself to Saul who pursued his life 1 Sam. 24.9 The like of Ruth to Boaz chap. 2. and of Abigail to David 1 Sam. 25.23 she fell on her face and bowed her self to the ground and fell at his feet 2 Of courtesie which is a fruit of humility when a man to his equals and inferiours sheweth reverence and respect as Abraham to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. and to the Hittites his inferiours cap. 23.12 he bowed himself before the people of the Land Farr unlike the surliness and stiffness of proud and conceited persons who being voyd of all good nature nurture and religion know not to bow to any neither their betters in the way of duty nor equalls in way of courtesie Divine worship is two-fold 1 Inward the sum of the first Commandement standing in fear love and the like 2 Outward bowing or reverence the sum of the second Commandement The former bindes the soul and the will and affections and the whole inner man the later the outward man to give God his worship and service and to give no part of that to any other For the word only only mentioned in the latter branch must bee extended and referred to the former too The latter of these is here meant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the word properly signifieth to kiss or adore by some outward gesture to manifest a veneration 1 Because this was it which Satan required of Christ namely to fall down or bow unto him but Christ aptly refuseth it 2 This worship proceeds from an inward fear and apprehension of a Divine excellency and power not communicable to any Creature which Satan well know for even by this bowing he would have Christ to acknowledge in him a power to dispose of all earthly things which is proper to God And him only shalt thou serve By service is not meant the inward service of the heart for the words in Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord and serve him will not bear it the first thereof betokening the inward service the second the outward following the former as the effect the cause Neither would our Saviour invert the order in setting the stream before the fountain Therefore this word serve serveth to expound the former as an addition signifying nothing else but the outward service of God so that Christ here shews that it is not enough to give God outward reverence but that wee must as servants perform duties according to his will so the word signifies being taken from servants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who perform service to bodily Masters in bodily actions 3 The person to be worshipped and served is God only Him only whom we call the Lord our God according to the speech of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.3 Direct your hearts unto the Lord and serve him only for his glory will hee give to no other Quest Must we give outward worship to none but God Must we not bow our knee and uncover our heads to our King and Rulers Must we not rise up to the hoare-head Levit. 19.32 Must we not serve one another in love How then must we outwardly worship and serve God only Ans We must not deny any civil worship to any man to whom God hath made it due but external religious worship must not be given to any Creature man or Angel Quest How may we know the one from the other Ans They differ greatly 1 In the kind one is servil the other social the former due to an absolute Lord and Commander the latter due from one fellow-servant to another This distinction is grounded in Revel 19.10 where the Angel refused the worship done him by John upon this ground because he was a fellow-servant and one of the brethren for John being overcome with the greatness of the Angels glory and splendor out of humane infirmity ascribed to him more than civil honour and mixed some religious worship with it which only was due to God 2 Another difference is in the intention of the mind in worshipping Religious bowing is when a man inwardly apprehends a Divine power proper to God and incommunicable to the creature or when god-head or divine properties are conceived in the thing bowed unto As for example in falling down to an Image uncovering the head praying c. the mind now conceives a Divine power in the image of knowing ones thoughts hearing helping and the like at least that God hath tied his presence and grace to such a place where such an Image is set up But the civil bowing to the King or superiour or to the Chair of estate is a meer token of civil subjection without any conceit of deity in the mind only because we see in them excellent gifts of God or in place above in the Church Common-wealth or family For the same gesture may be civil and spiritual according to the intention of the mind of the worshipper 3 The end distinguisheth them the one is to exercise godliness the other to express civility the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one done as a man is a member of Gods Kingdom the other as he is in the rank of an earthly Kingdom As for example Kissing of the Popes feet is a worship done to a man and so seems civil but being tendred to him as to the Vicar of Christ as one that can pardon sins and cannot erre this religious end makes it a religious worship and therefore none of his being not offered to any other Prince or Emperour upon the earth 4 Some difference may be taken from the common estimation of the thing worshipped as if it be generally esteemed or reputed Divine and deity ascribed to that which in it self hath it not The Host as they call it is generally held to be Christs very self now for a man suppose a Protestant that knows it to remain very bread and that no such deity or change is in it to bow down before it to uncover his head or use gestures of adoration to it is an external religious gesture and is unlawful although his intention bee not to worship it but because in common estimation he ascribes a kind of God-head to the creature as others doe And whereas adoration is a sign
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
wickedness with tears pray for pardon promise amendment beg prayers of others as Pharaoh one would think them very penitent themselves think they are so also but the Moon changeth not so often as these spiritual lunaticks who hence may know that the evil spirit hath taken possession of them because they are never long in a good minde These few notes instead of many I thought good to set down to help men that are desirous to see how secretly Satan worketh in their souls and how hee can cunningly most forceably keep possession when hee seemeth most to disclaim it that thus they comming to perceive the disease may run out of themselves to seek for remedy Which what it is wee are now in the next point to declare The third point in the words to bee considered is The mighty power of Jesus Christ who onely could heal those that were thus oppressed and enthralled by the Devil and here consider 1 The ground 2 The proof or manifestation of it The ground was because God was with him How God was with his Son and how with his Servants It will bee objected that God is said to have been with many of his servants who yet had not this power as with Joseph Joshuah Moses and others Answ God was indeed with them onely by manifesting his presence in some powerful or loving effect which hee wrought in by or for them But never was God present with any of his Saints as hee was with his Son who had not the vertue onely and power of the God-head effectually and energetically working with him which was all they had but the god-head it self was after a sort bodily with him yea the fulnesse of the God-head was not only with him but in him bodily Col. 2.9 as elsewhere God is said not onely to bee with Christ but in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 So as hee of himself performed the works which proceeded from him which they did not and his actions as from himself were divine Quest Why then doth not the Apostle more shortly and plainly say that Christ was God as that God was with him Answ Hee might indeed have so said as truely but for the time spareth the weakness of his hearers contenting himself to deliver Doctrin as they were able to receive it in great wisdome by little and little instilling into their minds the knowledge of Christ and by degrees laying such grounds and foundations as whereby themselves might more easily rise to that high point of Divinity which the Apostle calleth a great mystery namely God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.26 Secondly For the proof or manifestation of this Divine power of Christ Christ powerfully treadeth Satan under his feet ●n overthrowing the power of Satan and treading him under his feet is evident in the Scripture The first promise that ever was made to man fallen is That this seed of the woman should bruise the Serpents head According to which prophecy hee not onely put Satan to flight in his own person Mat. 4. but took also his strongest holds where hee had strongly fortified himself in the persons of others as every where the History of the Gospel recordeth Hee rebuked the unclean spirits and made them cry for grief and anger Mark 9.25 Hee forced them to silence and would not suffer them to confess him Mar. 1.25 By his very word hee chained and bound them whom no bolts could hold nor any other means subdue such was his power and glory though men saw little of it that the Devils could neither fly from him nor yet abide his presence A whole legion of them ran to meet him a far off and worshipped him Mar. 5.6 most submisly intreated him that hee would not torment them and earnestly sued unto him that seeing they could no longer inhabit the man they might have power over the swine By all which examples and many more that might bee added appeareth what command Jesus Christ hath over the Devils and that by his onely word hee healed all those that were oppressed by them Quest It is true that Christ hath this power and glory in himself How the power of Christ foyleth Satan for us because God is with him but how commeth this power to bee so saving and soveraign unto miserable creatures who are held under the power of the Devil and that most justly Ans In healing all our diseases Mat. 8.16.17 among which this cute is numbred wee must knit and combine those two things which in Christ were inseparable namely his glory and his grace the latter of which makeeth the former soveraign unto us and appeareth in two actions in removing from us the next causes of all our diseases namely our sins For as the Physician in working a cure first removeth the distempered humours of his patient which are the matter of the disease so doth our heavenly Physician imply that this is the beginning of his cure and therefore often his first word is Thy sins are forgiven thee and his last word is goe and sin no more lest a worse thing befall thee 2 By taking our diseases upon himself which 〈◊〉 Physician doth or can do but this Lamb of God taketh away the sins of the world by taking them upon himself for he bare our infirmities Col. 2.22 and carried our sorrows and sins in the body of his flesh even to the cross where they were fastned with him buried them in his grave yea cast them into Hell and there left them by which most glorious triumph of his the snares and letters wherewith wee were chained to death and the Devil are broken and our souls as a bird are escaped Christ onely by his P●opes power casteth out Devils Hence note 1 That no man can cast a Devil out of a possessed party or ever did as a principal efficient cause but as an instrument and that onely by this power of the Lord Jesus to whom all power in heaven and earth is given and to whom all the honour of this power must bee ascribed for what power can countermand Satans but onely Gods I grant Satan may give place to beelzabub and depart his habitation for his greater advantage and forsake a body to get faster hold upon the soul or to delude many beholders but such hostile conquest over Satan argueth a mighty power of God which all the Devils in hell cannot resist Secondly That whosoever finde themselves any way molested of Satan must hasten themselves to Jesus Christ who onely can batter down the holds of the Devil In all thy spiritual captivity repair unto Christ and work their deliverance Feelest thou thy self held under any spiritual captivity or bondage doth the Law of evil present with thee toyl thee with heaviness and unchearfulness to any thing that is good seest thou in any measure Satans secret trains working against thy salvation Oh come unto Christ not faintly as the Father of the possessed child Mark
sheep but the most are goat some are in communion with him as the s●i●ns set and growing in the root but the most are out of fellowship with him and are no otherwise knit unto him than a sciens tyed to a tree by a thred I mean by the slender thred of outward profession Now as the Head onely imparteth of the life sence motion protection light and comfort which it hath to the members of its own body and no other even so the Head of this Mystical body quickneth moveth protecteth inlightneth graceth saveth onely such as are in true communion with him for these sheep onely hee giveth his life for these he rose again for these hee spoiled principalities and powers for these he slew hatred yea not for these onely but in these also and in these onely As for all the rest hee prayeth not for the world namely the wicked of the world hee dyed much lesse for them his death killed none of their sins but they are left in their sins and unto the reign and damnation of their sins without all benefit either of the death of Christ or of his resurrection When wee lay then that Christ killed sin wee must bee understood according to the Scriptures onely for and in true Beleevers who only can receive of his fulnesse The latter distinction concerneth sin wherein wee must consider two things 1 the guilt 2 The corruption of it In beleevers the whole guilt of sin is abolished by Christ though not the whole corruption The whole guilt of sin is wholly and at once abolished to all beleevers by means of Christ his Death and Resurrection but not the whole corruption which while they dwel in the body will dwell with them yet so as they neith●r live in it not it scarcely live in them For the former the Apostle asketh this Question Rom 6.2 How can wee that are dead to sin live in it and hence it is that such as are in communion with Christ are not onely said to bee dead but buried also with Christ and consequently they leave their sins in his grave even as Christ himself left them there where if they bee left there will bee a ●●tting and consuming of them away that they will bee every day less than other even as it is with the body that lyeth in the grave and those which remain yet unmortified they will bee even as dead ca●kases All the motions of sin in the ●●ct 〈◊〉 only in letting the life of it go loathsome and stinking which above all things the godly desire to bee covered Now how impossible is it that these should be the practices of such as live in sin Nay I say more that all the corruption of sin left in the godly can scarcely bee said to live in them I grant indeed some moving and stirring of it in them but it is such a motion as is in a beast which hath the throat cut it strugleth and striveth in letting life go but the beast is killed and the unclean issues of sin in the godly which indeed are many are like such issues which come from a dead man and are a very parting from them rather than any argument of the life of sin or of any delight in them This is that which the Apostle aimeth at Rom. 6.7 Hee that is dead is freed from sin as the Theef once hanged stealeth no more so sin once dead and executed in Christ liveth no more in state or strength the sinews of this gyant are cut and what strength of motion can bee in it In a word it is in Beleevers but dying sin sin destroyed the whole Host of sin is discomfited though some straglers of the Army wander here and there as Rebels in another mans dominions The second Enemy is Death which entered into the World by sin The second enemy is death and went over all men in that all men had sinned and standeth in full force and state by sin wheresoever it reigneth Now Christ by removing the cause hath also removed the effect for sin being slain death is also swallowed up in victory he hath made his word good O death I will be thy death who although he bee the last enemy that shall bee fully destroyed yet hath hee disarmed him taken away his dart and sting from him and so spoiled him as hee hath left him nothing to harm the elect withall The third Enemy is Hell the gates of which was set wide open by sin for The third Hell In the day thou sinnest thou shalt dye the death namely the second death as well as the former But Jesus Christ by descending into Hell and suffering the sorrows of the second death loosed the same from himself and all such as shall beleeve in his name unto the worlds end Rev. 1.18 I was dead but am alive for evermore Amen and I have the keys of Hell and Death which phrase seemeth to bee borrowed from great Commanders and Conquerours who having won and entered any City presently have the keyes delivered unto them in token of that regiment and authority which now of right belongeth unto them and plainly importeth that howsoever Christ was once dead yet by his death hee hath vanquished Hell and Death and so hath obtained full power and command over them both The fourth Enemy is Satan the arch enemy of mankinde most malitious The fourth Satan being a man-slayer from the beginning and most powerful being the Prince yea the God of this world yet hath the victorious Lyon of the tribe of Judah put to flight this roaring Lyon whose rage and malice made him bold to set upon the Son of God himself that so hee might work his own ruine and overthrow How Christ avoided his sundry fierce assaults and temptations in the wilderness broke his power and forces by his powerful dis-possessing and casting him out of men and women trod upon his neck by the power of his death and resurrection wee might at large out of the Evangelists shew but that wee have spent some time already in this argument so as now the gates of Hell can never prevail against the Faith of the godly the seed of the Woman hath broken the Serpents head the strong man is cast out by a stronger than hee the spoiler is spoyled and lead in triumph by him that appeared for this end to destroy the works of the Devil who hath this Tyrant also in chains reserved for the blacknesse of darkness for ever The last enemy but not the least in strength is the World The fifth the world Satans servant and armour-bearer which by all the power and policy it could use could not keep Christ down in the grave but hee rose again notwithstanding all the opposition of it this is that our Saviour professeth of himself a little before his death Bee of good comfort for I have overcome the world Joh. 16.33 As if hee had said trouble not your hearts although
savour Christ needed not to have ascended to send men without gifts hee sendeth no Messenger without a message no Steward without his provision no Captain without weapons no Watchmen without eyes this were a folly which the wisdome and weakness of man cannot brook but hee sendeth an interpreter the Learned tongue the prompt Scribe in the Law of the Lord such as are mighty in the Scriptures and are stored with things new and old Let us not implead the wisdome of the Son of God and say where shall wee have such store of Preachers for our several Parishes If wee want them the fault is our own and not Gods who hath given means men and maintenance enough if all these were wisely and thankfully disposed to his glory and the service of the Church 3 This Doctrin must bee applyed also to the more ignorant sort of men who never as yet came to see the absolute necessity of this Ordinance of Preaching as witn●ss 1 Their formal comming hereunto as forced by Law ●ow men see this necessity of preaching or constrained by custome and thence departing again without any fruit of Faith or increase either of knowledge of obedience or of comfort 2 The inbred corruption yea and malice of their hearts against it which bewrayeth it self in a number of frivolous Objections which they shame not to bolt out among their mates As that this preaching of the Gospel is but foolishness they see other have lived honestly and well without it before them and so have themselves done for many years and yet they live as well as those that are the forwardest to run after Sermons Alas poor souls how hath Satan over-reached them in a matter of such moment as is their whole estate and freehold of Heaven who if ever they come to see their lost estate and what a woful condition they stand in for the present they will tell us another tale with shame in their faces for that they have said they will profess the Ministry of Reconciliation to bee as necessary as their attonement and friendship with God which is better and sweeter than life it self Others conceive and complain as the Israelites Many pl●●● against it that there is too much Preaching and too much of this Mannah and some of better place but no better hearts avouch that it is so common that it grows into contempt Now would I ask of these was it the abundance of Mannah the Angels food that was the fault or their wicked loathing of it even so is it the commonness of the word that maketh the wicked contemn it for the hungry soul of the godly would never dispise it if it were ten times more common or rather because they see not the worth nor taste the sweetness of it des●●s● wee the Sun because it riseth daily and shineth all the day long upo● 〈◊〉 or the air which wee breath in every moment or doth the ordinary and common use of the bread upon our Tables bring bread out of request with us No wee see the necessity that without the Sun and without our daily bread and without the air wee cannot live And did wee see also as clearly that where vision faileth people perish wee should change with our minds our note and highly bless God for the commonness of it as we do in the other and sure I am that either the Apostle Paul did not fear this inconvenience or else hee oversaw it when he enjoyned the Ministers to Preach instantly both in season and out of season Others say the world was better when there was lesse Preaching and thence conclude that it is far worse now because there is more which though it bee a rude fallacy scarce worthy answer as putting that to bee a cause of mens wickedness which is not yet something must bee said unto it and fools must bee answered in their folly lest they bee wise in their own conceit Let these men bethink themselves and then tell us whether the Holy Gospel being the power and arm of God to save every beleever the glad tydings of salvation and word of life can make the World worse than it is For if that bee the use of it our blessed Saviour was far overseen to leave his glory of Heaven to take our flesh and in it to submit himself to the obedience of the whole Law and to the suffering of the whole curse of it for our disobedience if by all this hee leave the World or make the World worse than he found it How shall it bee true that is written of him that the Son of Man came not to destroy but to seek and save that which was lost if the Preaching of him make the World worse than it was wee will easily grant that the Gospel being a great sight it daily discovereth that corruption and darkness which before lay hid as the Sun rising manifesteth all those things which were wrapped up in the darkness of the night But to say that sin is the more because it is more seen by the light of the Gospel is a fancy or if sin it self in these daies of the Gospel by the multiplication of people bee multiplyed shall wee say the Gospel is the cause or rather the malice of men who pervert it to their own destruction taking occasion by it to turn the grace of God into wantonness Let not ●s therefore bee as the old Idolaters in Jeremies time who told him plainly that they would not hear the Word that hee spake in the name of the Lord for while they served the Queen of Heaven they had plenty of victuals and were well and felt none evil but since they left to burn incense unto her it was never well with them they had scarceness of all things and were consumed by the Sword and by Famine Jer. 44.17 18. and therefore they were resolved to do as their Fathers did But let us with thankfulness cast our eies upon the Grace of God that hath appeared and learn as it teacheth to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Many other allegations of simple people against this ordinance I might alleadge but they are well met withall by some others and my self have elsewhere answered many of them Beauties of Bethel and therefore referring the Reader thither I content my self with these few for the present and conclude this point with this exhortation to these poor seduced people that considering the straight charge and Commandement that lyeth upon us to Preach in season and out of season they would bee willing to pick out their duty therein implyed which is to bee diligent yea swift to hear to attend as earnest suters at the gates of Wisdome for their own good to lay up instruction as they would treasure gold and to call after the wisdome of God revealed in this ordinance without which never was any made wise to salvation And let them further know that
seeing God doth not extraordinarily save men where the ordinary means are afforded or offered the neglect of this means is to despite great salvation and to make themselves unworthy of life eternal And from the evidence of truth I avouch against every soul that turneth his ear from hearing the word preached that hee despiseth the pardon of the King of Heaven hee refuseth life and salvation offered hee chooseth death and forsaketh his own mercy Joh. 10.27 hee is no sheep of Christ for then would hee hear his voice Joh. 8.47 and if hee were born of God hee would hear the words of God Secondly The object of this Ordinance or what wee must Preach Christ the matter of our preaching and that is Christ The scope of the whole Scripture is Christ and it is wholly resolved into him The Law that is a School-master to Christ for by convincing of sin and making the sinner exceeding sinful it leadeth him forth of himself to seek salvation in Christ The Gospel preacheth nothing but Christ and him crucified for sin 1 Cor. 2. Wee preach Christ the power of God and the wisdome of God Hence is called the Gospel of Jesus Christ Mark 1.1 and the word of Christ Col. 3. not onely because it is from him being God a● an ●●h●●ent cause and preached by him as the chief Teacher of his Church but also for the material cause which is Christ The Apostle Paul calleth it the word of Truth n●t onely for the truth of it but because it publisheth that eternal Truth Jesus Christ as also the word of the cross not onely because the cross ordinarily attendeth the faithful preaching and profession of it but because the matter of it is Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2. Quest What is it to preach Christ Answ It standeth in two things To preach Christ wherein it stande h 1 In plain manner to preach the docttrin of Christ concerning his Person his Natures his Offices and the execution of them from his incarnation to his ascension 2 In powerful manner so to apply this Doctrin to every hearer that every one may feel a change to follow both in his heart and life For to teach onely the History of Christ his Doctrin his Miracles his Life his Death is not the full teaching of Christ for thus the unbeleeving Jews know Christ and the Infidel Turks can easily come to this knowledge of him But to reach Christ as the truth is in Christ is to apply every particular to the heart of a sinner that hee may bee framed to conversion and repentance which is the most difficult labour of the Ministery and most to bee striven in Many Teachers who can choose hard Texts and make learned discourses and shew much dexterity of wit reading and humane literature have not thus learned Christ themselves not can after such a lively manner teach him to others And pitty it is to see that whereas so great an Apostle as Paul who wanted not Arts Tongues and humane Learning desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified among the Corinths themselves it should bee the study of many men to shew the knowledge of any thing rather than of Christ and how they may paint out themselves rather than Christ in their Preaching Is not the end of preaching to make Disciples of Christ Mat. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was it instituted to please the ear or to prick and pence the heart Let the Minister therefore strive to ransack the hearts of men with whom hee is to deal that discovering their secret things they may fall down and say God is in him indeed Let him think hee hath spoken the word of Christ when hee hath both taught him and led his hearers unto him And this will not bee done but by the plainnesse of words and evidence of the Spirit It is thought a reproach to preach a plain Sermon whereas indeed that is the best Sermon which teacheth Christ most plainly 1 By true interpretation of Scripture 2 By wholesome savory and proper Doctrin gathered thence 3 By sound application of that Doctrin for the information of mens judgements and reformation of their lives where Christ crucified is thus held out there need no wooden Images nor Pictures nor the real sacrifice of the abominable Mass to put men in mind of him 2 Hearers may hence learn to judge of themselves whether they have heard aright or no. And then have you heard well when you not onely know that which you did not before but when you beleeve more love more hope more and are more changed than before When you find our Sermons as the glass wherein you see and discern the true estate of your souls when you are cast into the form of this Doctrin when your Lusts stoop and yeeld to this Scepter of Christ without this no knowledge is saving but all our preaching and your hearing tendeth to damnation if yee know these things blessed are yee if yee do them Joh. 13.17 The Apostles commanded in special to teach the doctrin of the last judgement Reasons The third point is what is the particular Doctrin which the Apostles and wee in them are so straitly enjoyned to preach and that is the Article of Christs comming again to judge the quick and the dead And surely it is not without reason that our Saviour should wish them to insist in this doctrin above others 1 Because this being the last work of Christ remaining to be done after his ascension it could not be so easily beleeved as those things which were ●●re●●y done and accomplished being still in fresh memory and so much the less deniable by how much they were still fixed even in the sences of all those who were eye-witnesses of the same And therefore hee would have his Apostles careful to help the weakness of mens faith in the expectation of his return to judgement by much and often beating upon it as a point that needeth more instance and perswasion than such as being past and so sensibly confirmed by many hundreds and thousands as they were are far more easily apprehended and beleeved 2 The Scriptures teach that the remembrance of this judgement to come is a notable means to quicken the godly in their duty to work in them a reverent fear and shake out security which breedeth hardness of heart therefore did the Apostle Paul considering the terrors of the Lord 2 Cor. 5.11 provoke both himself and others unto their Duty and no marvail seeing the children of God have even at the consideration of more particular judgements been stricken with the fear of the Almighty The Prophet Habakkuk when hee heard but of judgements to come saith That his belly trembled his lips shook and rottennesse entered into his bones Habak 3.16 And David being a noble King hath these words my flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements Psal 119.120 A special example whereof wee have in that famous
Preacher of righteousness Noah of whom it is recorded Heb. 11.7 that being warned by God of the flood to come an hundred and twenty years after hee was moved with a reverent fear of God to make the Ark. And as Noah was by hearing of the waters so the servants of God hearing of fire wherewith the world shall once again bee destroyed ought to bee and are moved with a reverent fear of God which is as a steel spur to provoke them to their duty 3 The Scriptures make the contempt of this day of judgement the ground of all sins and of the destruction of ungodly ones For as it was in the daies of Noah so shall it bee in the day of the Son of man they never dreamed of the judgement before it came and so perished in it so men eat and drink marry and give in marriage till the day come upon them as a snare and they taken as a bird in an evil net What was the cause that the evil Servant sate him down with drunkards and rose up to beat his fellow-Servants but because hee said with himself my Master will still defer his comming In all which regards neither the Apostles nor wee the ordinary Ministers succeeding them can want good reason to stir up our selves and others by the often and diligent propounding and applying of this holy Doctrin of Christ his comming again to judgement The verse containeth two things 1 Christ his appointment to this office that hee is ordained of God 2 The execution of it a Judge of the quick and dead Touching the former it will bee asked Dan. 2 9 Joh. 16 8. How Christ is ordained a Judge seeing the Father and holy Ghost judge also how God could ordain Christ a Judge seeing that both the Father and the Holy Ghost judge as well as hee Ans In the last judgement must bee considered 1 The decree of judging 2 The authority or judiciary power 3 The external and visible act or execution of judgement Now in regard of the two former all the three blessed persons the Father Son and Holy Ghost concur as having an equal decree of judging an equal authority and judiciary power an equal dominion over all creatures and an equal consent in the judging of them But in regard of the third the visible judicial act Christ is the Judge and that according to both his natures the God-head and Man-hood and yet both of them herein retaining their own properties Thus is Christ ordained of God a Judge and thus is it said that the Father ●udgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Son Joh. 5.22 Where by ●udgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must bee meant the administration of judgement for so the Evangelist expoundeth it in the 27. verse of the same Chapter where hee saith that the Father hath given him power to execute judgement And by committing it unto the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as opposing the second person in Trinity to the first or third or as excluding the other two but onely appropriating it thus far that by the Son in a visible form and according to his humanity shall the last and general judgement bee exercised For all that power of judging which is in God by nature shall bee in Christ as man by grace of personal union for the execution of it Now the wisdome of God thought fit in this manner Administration of judgement laid upon the Son for sundry reasons to lay the administration of the judgement upon the Son for sundry reasons 1 Because Christ having in his humanity accomplished the work of mans redemption and in it had been judged in the world it is meet that he should now manifest the glory of his manhood exalted above all creatures and shining in such brightness of glory as is fit for such a body as is united to the Divine nature Hence is it that often wee read this second comming opposed unto his former wherein hee pleased to cover and veil his glory which now he will reveal and display above the shining of a world of Suns Mat. 25.31 When the Son of man commeth in his glory and all the holy Angels with him then hee shall sit upon the throne of his glory Luk. 21.27 Then shall they see the Son of man come in a cloud with power and great glory Secondly Hee shall shew his neer affinity unto man in that hee shall in his humanity bee seen visibly descending in the clouds as hee was seen visibly to ascend by a cloud this was long since prophecied that every eye should see him Act. 1.11 and how meet is it that the Judge of all should bee seen of all Thirdly In regard of his Church which as it is justified by his first appearing in humility so must it bee glorified by the second appearing of the head of the Church in glory Fourthly That hee might in this last act of it fully accomplish his Kingly Office for when hee shall have faithfully finished this judgement which is committed unto him hee shall immediately deliver up the Kingdome unto his Father 1 Corinthians 15.24 not that hee shall then cease to bee an everlasting King of glory but because hee shall no longer exercise any temporary government as now hee doth Hee shall not rule his Kingdome by Civil Magistrates nor his Church by such Officers and ministery as are now appointed under him for the gathering of the Saints It shall not stand in need of the means of edification by the Word Sacraments or Censures the Lamb himself shall bee all these in the midst of the Throne of God In both these regards hee shall deliver up his Kingdome but hee must first appear in a most glorious humanity to finish this great business For these reasons is this great work committed to the Son immediately to execute The comfort of Gods children that their Saviour shall bee their Judge Vse 1. Is Christ appointed the Judge then may every godly man and woman comfort themselves seeing their Saviour shall bee their Judge If a mans brother were to bee his Judge hee would not fear but to get the day and the cause to go with him but hee is the elder brother of every beleever he bade the woman go tell my Brethren that I am risen again I know saith holy Job that my Redeemer or neer kinsman liveth yea hee is nearer than a Brother being the Husband of every faithful Spouse If the Wise should have her loving Husband who loveth her better than his own life to judge her cause what need shee fear but the matter will go well with her what need the members fear the head Let us comfort our selves with these words and lift up our heads because this day wherein our Head shall shew forth both his own and our glory who are his Members draweth neer He shall judge the wicked against whom all their villanies have been committed 2 This doctrin serveth also to
shall gild no matters here for what shall gold or silver pearls or jewels doe when Heaven and earth shall bee on a light fire Here shall be no sanctuaries nor priviledged persons or places to hinder the course of justice hence shall be no appeals but every person shall receive an eternal sentence of every cause according to the truth and equity of it for else the Judge of all the world should not doe right Vse 1 To comfort Gods children Gods children who here have all sentences pass agai●st them shall have justice at this day who in this world are herein conformed unto Christ for the most part causes and sentences passe against them and their light is darkned their innocency by the might and malice of the wicked trodde● down but then shall they be sure of the day God will cause their uprightnesse to break out as the Sun in his strength for when wickednesse shall ruin the sinner into Hell righteousnesse shall deliver their souls from death 2 To teach them to possesse their souls in patience when they see the confusions that are in the world to beware of revenge but commit all as Christ himself did to him that judgeth righteously Wee must be content for a while to see our righteous waies depraved our good repaied with evil by evil men and bee so far from thinking hence that there is no providence o● care in God over his Children as that wee must necessarily conclude hence this judgement day Observe the rule Eccl. 3.16 When thou seeest in the pla●e of judgement wickednesse and iniquity in the place of justice think in thy he●rt surely God will udge the just and the wicked for there is a time for every purpose and work and Chap. 5.7 If in a Countrey thou seest oppression of the p●or and the defraud●ng of judgement and justice bee not astonied at the matter for hee that a● higher than the highest regardeth it The same ground do the Ap●stles ●ft●n lay to raise this same exhortation unto patience in induring wrongs as Phil 4.5 Let your patient mind bee known unto all men the L●rd 〈◊〉 at hand Jam. 5.7 Bee yee also patient and settle your hearts for the c●mming of the Lord d●aweth neer As if these holy men had said with one m●uth look not to hav● your right here in this World as neither the wicked have their liv●e but wait the appointed time as the Husband-man doth for the we●ks of Harvest and this time is the comming of the Lord before which ti●e neither is the full recompense of righteousnesse given to the Saint● not punishment rendred unto the wicked in the full measure of it Grow n●t weary of well doing though yee meet with nothing but discouragements not out of love with the practice of piety although the world ha●e you f●r it as it did your head before you for in due season ye shall reap ●f yee faint not 3 This teacheth men carefully to look to all their works and waies that they bee just and justifiable The works and words of men which shall abide the tryal of that d●y must now be tryed before h●nd such as will hold water as wee say For there is a day of tryal when all those causes which they have by Mony Friends or wicked policy contrived and over-wayed in shall be brought about again into a clear light and put into the ballance of equity it self where they shall bee found too light And think seriously with your selves how those cause● words and actions will abide the tryal of that day which even for the present can bring no sound comfort to the heart but rather heaviness to the heart accusation and guiltinesse to the conscience fear in the thoughts and shame in the face if any man should know how impiously and injuriously they have been contrived how many Oppressions Wrongs Cruelties Usuries Revengeful sutes onely commensed to make men spend their goods and lose their peace how much of many mens estates would give a loud witn●ss against their owners but that men will not so long before hand trouble themselves with such thoughts Well look to thy self whosoever thou art If thy conscience now accuse thee or can accuse thee but thou wilt either stifle it or stop thine ears against the cry of it know that it hath a voice and will do good service to this Judge one day a thousand witn●sses cannot do more than it will do it will bring back old reckonings which Christ hath not reckoned for and set them in order before thee when thou that canst find none now shalt have leisure enough to look into them but all to the breaking of thy heart and increase of thy torment that thou didst not till too late look into thy reckonings Now to all such as mind hereafter to look into so main a business as this is The touchst●ne of this tryal is the word of God I will for the present commend onely one rule whereby they may discern whe●her their actions will abide the tryal that abideth them and that is this If the Word of God do now approve them they will then bee justifiable but whatsoever word or action hath passed from thee for which thou ●a●st not bring thy ground thence the same will cast thee in judgement This is that our Saviour telleth the Jews The word that I speak shall judge you at the last day J●h 12 48. The str●ctne●s of th● l st j●dgement 1 In regard o● pe●sons judged Thirdly This judgement of Christ shall bee most strict and accurate 1 In regard of the persons that shall bee judged who shall bee inquired into and brought to give accounts of themselves not onely generally as men or Chri●tians but in special according to the particular places and courses of life wherein they were set in this world For example publike persons must give account for themselves and others that have been committed unto them Magistrates for their People Ministers for their Flocks both of them how they entred how they ruled how they walked in and out before their people what faithfulness they used in discovering and discountenancing sin and ungodlinesse how diligent they have been to draw and force men to the keeping of the two tables how they have acquitted themselves from communicating in other mens sins and whether they have faithfully in their places denounced and executed the judgements of God whilest both of them have stood in the room of God In like manner private men must bee countable not onely for themselves but or all those that are under their charge as Fathers for the education of their Children Masters for the instructing and governing of their Servants and Family Tutors for their care or negligence towards such as are committed unto them for the rule of the Law is general and will take fast hold upon many a soul that think it enough to look to themselves that whosoever hindreth not that sin which hee can hinder
in prison and at length they see there was no heavenly husbandry in all this Thirdly In confessing our sin and pleading guilty Prov. 20.13 this is the covenant that whereas he that hideth his sin shall not prosper he that confesseth shall finde mercy Psal 32.4 I said I will confesse mine iniquity and thou forgavest me the punishment of my sin Job 31.33 It is too neer joyned to our natures to hide our sin with Adam and conceal it in our bosome or else to sum up all in a word without special grief for any special sin and herein they think they have peace which is but unfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to found humiliation he maketh them sick in smiting them and setteth their sins in order before them like a bill of parcels to the breaking of their hearts and the utter acknowledgement of themselves to be miserable bankcrupts For this purpose he maketh their own Consciences also to be judges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselves As David Against thee against thee have I sinned and again I am the man and again I have done very foolishly but these s●eep what have they d●ne The penitent Thief thus judgeth himself we are righteously here To conclude this point he was never truly humbled nor ●ver aright judged himself that is more ashamed to confesse than to commit sin Fourthly After pleading guilty in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poor Malefactor condemned to dye c●ys for mercy and all his hope and longing is for a pardon even so this is noted to bee the practi●e of the Church Hos 14.2 3. Oh Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take unto you words and turn to the Lord and say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously And which of the Saints have not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sin or have not preferred the shining of Gods countenan●e upon them above all the outward happinesse that the earth affordeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not hear him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall finde no repentance nor favour with tears therefore thou must forth-with cease to doe evil as being ashamed of it and learn to doe well lay Laws upon thy self be more severe against thy self in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently over those corruptions which have most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserve thy peace Bring thy self then with fear and trembling before Gods righteous Judgement accuse thy self and bewayl thy sins bee not ashamed to confesse but to commit them again be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou bee strongly armed with full purp●se against it And thus remembring thy sins God will forget them thus wi●●ing them deep in thine own books God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life he will hide them for ever and cast them utterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus judge thy self afore-hand thou shalt never be judged of the Lord. Vers 43. To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently proved whatsoever he hath form●rly delivered concerning the Doctrin and Miracles Life and Death Resurrection and Ascension and the coming of Christ again unto Judgement yet as though no proof could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himself in enforcing this holy doctrin and binding it upon the consciences of his Hearers he shutteth up his Sermon in this verse with another assured testim●ny above all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrin concerning him the sum and main end of all which is that through beleeving in his name the elect should receive remission of sins which is the sum and effect of this verse Where first may be asked Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ Reasons why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the ne●k of another In the answer whereof we shall see that none of them are needlesse or superfluous For 1 All the points of Christian religion are above and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the Heathen wh● still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse 2 Corin. 2.23 and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the Judgement Day and Christs Resurrection from the dead they mocked him Acts 17.32 The hardened Jews at this day on whom the Wrath of God is 〈◊〉 me to the uttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painful preaching of Christ who teach the same points than some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what need they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great Mysteries which the Spirit of God is so careful t● commend unto us as also to bewayl the infidelity of our hearts that need so much working upon them to entertain such necessary truths as these be 2 Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shew his care that in all his Sermon he taught nothing of his own which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all Ministers much more to beware lest in any of their Sermons they broach such doctrin or bring in such stuff of which they cannot prove the Prophets and Apostles to bee Patrons and Publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that wee teach no other doctrin 1 Tim. 1.3 neither contrary nor diverse from it no private opinions which are the causes of Schisms and Heresies nor vain conceits or jangling which breed questions but no godly edifying 3 It was not only their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should bee the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Jesus Christ himself preached no other Doctrin of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that be began at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Son of God who might have made every word hee spake Scripture tye himself to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his Sermons and shall not weak men who cannot without error depart an hair breadth from them be careful to contain all their doctrin within the limits of them especially seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3 The Apostle knew
be sold by Elisha Wallis at the Golden Horse-shooe in the Old-Bayley 1659. TO THE Right Honourable and Learned Knight Sir ROBERT NANTON One of the Principal Secretaries unto His Excellent Majesty and of his Majesties Honourable Privy Counsel All the Blessings of this Life and a better SIR THat which Solomon teacheth in that one Aphorism often repeated wanted not apparent weight and moments of Reason saying Prov. 11.10 29.2 that In the prosperity of the Righteous the City rejoyceth For God being in Covenant with them for their sakes doth good to such as are joyned in the same Society with them for one Joseph all P●tiphars house was blessed and for one Paul all that were in the ship with him are saved yea good and vertuous men by their presence as Lot in Sodome by their Prayers as Moses in the breach and by their prudent Counsel as that poor wise man Eccl. 9.15 withstand the judgements of God and save the City for had there been found one good man all Jerusalem had been spared for his sake Again vertuous men advanced will confer all their honour and grace to the publick good they live not to themselves and theirs but take in the Church and Common-wealth as fellow-Commoners of all their goodness Mordecaies authority wrought publike deliverance to the whole Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Josephs advancement sustained the whole Land by opening the Garners in time of Famine The honour of one good man shall bee the grace of all good men his power the strength of many his greatness the raising of many as when one Mordecai is raised light and joy Ester 8.16 and gladness and Honour came to all the Jews Further good men honoured by God will honour God again and withstand his dishonour they will to their power provide that Gods worship bee erected that his Sabbaths be sanctified that true religion bee maintained that falshood and errors bee suppressed that publ●ke p●ace bee not disturbed that common justice bee not perverted est Gods favour bee discontinued Sine pli● cen●uplex murus rebus servandis parum est and his judgements let in Whence they are to bee esteemed the strongest Towers the thickest Walls the most impregnable Forts the surest Muniments and the stoutest Horsemen and Chariots of their Countrey yea the Wise man in one word saith much more Prov. 10.25 Justu● fundamentum mundi that the Righteous is a sure foundation upholding the whole World But why write I this or to your Honour surely as one who ever reverenced your worthy parts I could not but crave l●ave to express my self one of the City rejoycing and praising God in your honours prosperity and advancement and the rather because my self was an eye-witnesse how God led you through some of your younger years which were so studiously and commendably passed as this your later time fitly answereth that expectation which was then conceived of you You were then dear to our common Mother that famous Vniversity of Cambridge which for your Eloquence and grace of speech and perswasion appointed you her Orator for your wisdome and gravity in government chose you her Proctor for your soundnesse in all kinde of fruitful and commendable literature tendred you all her honours and degrees and for your sober studious and vertuous conversation worth ly held now her great Ornament And now as riper for greater imployments the same God whose priviledge it is to dispense promotions for bee pulleth down one and setteth up another hath moved his Majesty not only to set your seat among the honourable but to admit you as it were into his breast and betrust you with the secrets of this great state and Kingdome an Office not more Ancient than Honourable befitting only men of rarest wisdome fidelity and fitnesse to stand before so great so wise a King This was a most honourable Office among the most ancient Kings of Israel for King David had his two Principal Secretaries Serajah and Jonathan whom the Text commendeth for a man of Counsel and understanding 2 Sam. 8.17 1 Chro. 27.32 and King Solomon his Son had two other Elihoreph and Ahiah who were in chief place neer the King 1 King 4.3 We read also of Shebna principal Secretary to King Hezekiah 2 King 18.18 of whom Junius saith hee was secundus a rege Now your place being a service of such Honour under his Majesty cannot bee without an answerable weight and charge Your Honour easily conceiveth that the Lord chargeth you with a chief care of honouring him who hath honoured you that you stand charged to his Majesty with great trust and fidelity that the Church expecteth that by your authority you should promote her causes and stand in the maintenance of pure Religion that the Common-wealth claimeth her part in you for the preservation of peace within her walls and prosperity within her Palaces that the Vniversity looketh you should advance her just causes promote Learning and incourage her Students by helping them into the rooms of the ignorant and unlearned Ministers in a word Prov. 11.11 that the whole City hopeth to be exalted by the prosperity of the righteous And now if your Honours thankful heart shall call upon you and say Quid retribuam Domino Tota vita Christiani sanctum desiderium est Aug. in Joh. tract 4. you will easily fall into frequent thoughts and desires of discharging all this expectation This shall be happily done if you shall chuse about you the wisest Counsellors for the happy and prudent carriage of your great affairs imitating herein that peerless pattern of wisdome Solomon himself who notwithstanding his extraordinary measure of wisdome chose unto himself selectissimum senatum a bench of most wise and grave Counsellors whose Counsel Rhehoboam after despis●d The best Counsellor is that great Counsellor who is daily to bee consulted by fervent prayer The next is the word of God Isa 9 which as it giveth no less certain direction in difficult cases than the Oracle did unto Israel or than did the pillar of the cloud and of fire by day and night for their motion or station while they passed through the wilderness so the daily consulting with Gods statutes by reading and meditation as with so many learned Counsellors made holy David wiser than the Aged than the Learned than the Princes than his Adversaries Psa 119 98 99 100. Josh 1. ● And if Joshuah would prosper and have good successe in his high enterprizes he must keep him to the book of the Law and not depart from it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prov. 10.32 The fear of God is wisdome and the next wisdome to that is to converse and consult with such as do fear God whose lips speak just and good things whereby a man shall become both wiser and better This is the high way to attain and retain grace and reputation with God and good men for this is an inheritance
lest yee bee hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Think what a fearful thing it is to fall from the grace of God yea or the degrees of it and would wee suffer a brother to run into this danger Secondly Chuse fit matter to confer of in company either by calling to minde things heard or by stirring up to profitable hearing diligent proceeding in-offensive walking watchful speaking and the like or if need bee of Admonition Exhortation or Reproof shew thy love therein full clouds will distill rain light will shine abroad and charitable knowledge is communicative Thirdly Bee sure to perform these private Christian duties in good and holy and unrebukeable manner As 1 Orderly those beginnings which are fittest in gifts and place as Elihu spake in his turn 2 Humbly none seeking to speak beyond his skill and reach 3 Wisely watching the fittest time and best occasion 4 Meekly and lovingly without reasonings and murmuring Phil. 2.15 none crossing others but through love one forbearing another advising in the spirit of meekness and with offering to submit themselves in other cases to receive words of Exhortation and Admonition 5 Conscionably so as in all such meetings and conference every one bee an helper to the truth 3 Joh. 8. to finde it out not to obscure or weaken it By these means wee shall have cause to rejoyce in our Christian fellowship as Jonathan and David 1 Sam. 23.14 Fourthly Observe the graces that are in others for a pattern to our selves 1 Thess 1 7. for our own provocation and imitation Yea spy and incourage the graces of God in the weakest and meanest Christian so framing our selves to that mark of a good man who honours all that fear the Lord Psal 15.4 Neither let the strongest scorn to receive help from the weakest Moses was content to bee advised by Jethro and David by Abigail and note Pauls humility Rom. 1.12 hee hoped to come and bee comforted by their faith as well as to help theirs Fifthly In the use of good company beware of giving any occasion of scandal or offence to any Matth. 18.7 8. leave no ill smell behinde thee avoid the note of pride conceit forwardness in speaking frowardness or stiffeness in thine own sense 1 Joh. 2.10 Hee that loveth his brother there is no occasion of stumbling or scandal in him Motives thus to carry our selves in good company Motives to provoke us wisely to carry our selves in good company 1 Consider how in our company wee are especially to watch seeing in no part of our life wee are sooner corrupted than in that seeing in no part of our life wee do so much discover our selves and seeing in no part thereof wee do either more good or more harm seeing wee do nothing without witness and should do nothing which wee would not have exemplary 2 As Satan layes snares every where so also in our company one with another not so much to bring the godly to such excess of riot as hee effecteth in wicked societies where is swearing gaming drinking rayling c. but to make them unfruitful and keep them from the good they might do and so far prevaileth as sometimes impertinent speech sometime debate and detracting speeches arise and the most tolerable speech is worldliness which stealeth away the heart and the time so as some who intended more good to themselves and others carry away hearts smiting them for not better imploying that opportunity 3 There is apparent loss when wee watch not to do or receive good in company with good men For godly men by reason of their Callings and distance of places seldome meet and when they do they lose the gain of that time in their special Calling and it they get it not up in the furtherance of the general calling of a Christian it is utterly lost And what but this makes the mindfulness one of another sweet in their absence when there was reaped so good fruit one of another in their presence 4 By this wise and fruitful carriage of company and meetings of good men Christians shall stop the mouthes of such as are ever complaining of and accusing Christian meetings to bee scarce to any other purpose but to detract defame slander censure to strengthen one another in faction and the like Or if such mouthes will not bee shut yet the conscience of Christians may rejoyce in the contrary innocency and not bee dejected by such false testimony 3 Rule In our speeches let us bee Proctors and Solicitors for the Saints speak wisely and willingly of the good wee know in our brethren 3 Apology and maintain the cause person and name of good men to our power The sincerity of love between David and Jonathan was manifest in that Jonathan defended Davids innocency to Saul his Father not onely to the loss of his Kingdome but the danger of his own life Ebedmelech the Blackmoor spake a good word for Jeremy and was saved from destruction when his Master Zedekiah was slain Nicodemus even in the beginning of grace spake for Christ when the whole Council was against him And how dangerous is it to devise and invent words against Gods children as Davids enemies to belye or reproach them to raise or receive slanders against them If such as stand not for grace shall fall then much more they that stand against it How needful is this Apology for them against the reproaches and scorns of this age How earnestly would children speak for their parents brethren or kindred Even so should it bee here It is nothing to speak for a man when others speak for him 4 Rule Concerning our actions towards good men 4 Rule Helpfulness wee should every way bestir our selves to procure their good and welfare Wee must to our hearts and affections joyn our hands and help to do them good yea bee ready to lay our hands under the feet of the Saints Gal. 6.10 Do good to all but especially to the houshold of faith Now in special 1 Wee must prevent from them all the evil wee can Means of it hinder them from sins and from falling hinder by all means reproach from their profession and danger from their persons 2 If thou findest a good man slipt into an infirmity labour to cover it make the best of i● as may bee Vaunt not thy self over him but consider thy self and by all good means cure it if it lye in thy power 3 If thou finde a good man stand in need of inward comfort and cast down help to raise him again Christ was sent to speak a word of comfort to the weary and every Christian hath received of his anointing When David was in deep distress his faithful friend Jonathan comforted him in the Lord his God 1 Sam. 23.16 4 I● thou knowest a good man helpless and without outward comforts thou must now shew bowels of mercy and compassion gladly receiving the poor Saints communicating willingly and freely to their nec●ssity 1 Pet. 3.8 Love one