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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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manner had the promise of the Kingdom but in the mean time he was so traced and hunted by Saul that he said in himself I shall surely one day fall by the hands of Saul but howsoever the Lord still deferred his promise he knew not how to break it the Kingdome was rent from Saul and given to him that was better than he Why God delayeth to answer his children Reasons Now the chief Reasons of this dealing of the Lords with his Children are these 1 In Gods delaies there is a seasonable time for all the graces which he giveth to be set on work such as are faith patience hope prayer all which cease in the accomplishment Secondly hee will have his childrens case often desperate that his own hand may bee acknowledged in giving them unexpected deliverance How could Israel but acknowledge his out-stretched arm in their delivery when they saw nothing but the mountains before them the enemies behind them and the sea as a wall on either side and if the Lord had delivered them before they came into the bottom of the sea as he easily could have done the glory of his work had been obscured which all ages since have admired and extolled till this day How did Jonah and the Ninevites acknowledge the finger of God in calling him to that Ministery when as he seemed utterly cast away being buried in the Whales belly three days and three nights for when by the powerful Word of God the Fish was commanded to cast him on the dry ground what a worthy fruit of conversion it had in them generally the History doth declare What great glory the Lord won to himself by saving Daniel not from the Den but from the Lions teeth in the Den and the three children not from the Furnace but the very fire in the Furnace it appeareth in that the very Heathen Kings themselves made publick Edicts that no God but Daniels and no God but Shadrachs c. should bee worshipped through all their Dominions because no God could deliver their worshippers as hee had done Thirdly the Lord often longer absenteth himself from his own children that when he is returned they might make the more account of him it pleased him to deal herein as a Mother with her child who although she bee tender enough over it will sometimes get her out of sight and behind a door in the mean time the child falleth and getteth some knocks and all this to make the child perceive its own weaknesse and depend upon her so much the more Example hereof we have Cant. 3.4 when the Church had sought her beloved in her bed in the streets among the Watch-men and found him not at last after much seeking and sorrowing after him she findeth him whom her soul loved then she took hold on him and would not let him goe till she had brought him to the house of her mother Vse 1. Tedious and heavie afflictions may not bee an argument of Gods hatred It is a simple opinion of simple people that God loveth not that man who is exercised with any strange crosse especially if it be more lasting and lingring upon him Lingring afflictions no sign of Gods hatred Why dost thou not consider ignorant man that the Lord suffered his own wel-beloved Son to lye in the Grave till the third day before he raised him up What sayest thou to the Israelites in Aegypt did they cease to be the people of God or to be dear to God when the heaviest tasks were laid upon them Whose bloud was it that Manasseh made the streets of Jerusalem run with but the Saints In the Persecutions of the Primitive Church we read of thirty thousand of the dear Saints of God put to death in seventeen days under the Tyrant Maximinian and as many chained under met al 's and mines Who was it that asked if the Lord would absent himself for ever and whether his mercy was clean gone for evermore Was not this the voyce of David a man after Gods own heart Wouldst thou hear the style of Gods children in the Scriptures thou hearest them called worms of Jacob dead men of Israel Isa 41.14 Wouldest thou know their state neither is that unanswerable to that stile read Heb. 11. from verse thirty five to the thirty ninth They wandred in Sheep-skins and Goat-skins and they of whom the world was not worthy were banished the world as unworthy to live in it Impossible therefore it is as Salomon teacheth to know love or hatred by any thing before a man Eccles 9. A man may be a Dives and a Devil or little better another may be a Lazarus and a Saint Fat pastures for most part threaten slaughter when lean ware need not fear the Butcher 2 In tedious and heavy afflictions and graves of misery prescribe not unto God neither the time nor the manner of thy release but leave all to him in whose hand times and seasons and means of deliverance are Wee would not by our good wills lye one day no not one hour under affliction our spirits are as short as Jehorams was what shall I attend any longer upon the Lord is not this evil from him Some crosses more smart and durable why And hence are all those murmurings and complaints Oh never was any in such misery or so long as I am But the Lord knoweth what hee doth and whom hee hath in hand Hee seeth perhaps 1 That thou hast strong hidden corruptions thy hard knots must have hard wedges as hard bodies strong potions 2 It may bee thou wast long in thy sin before thy conversion and thy Cross is the longer to be a means to bring thy old sins into fresh memory that so thou maiest renew thy repentance 3 It may bee thou hast since given some great scandal to the Church and so thy correction abideth till thou hast testified thy repentance 4 Thy heart perhaps can tell thee that some other crosses of some other kinde have been neglected or would not have smarted half so much therefore the Lord will have this to stick by increasing the smart and with-drawing his comforts till thy great heart bee made to stoop 5 Look whether some lust as yet not denyed lendeth not a sting to this cross above all the former whether thy heart bee over-mastered or fretful and peevish for even so wee deal with our Children who when a little smart doth but set them on frowardness wee meeken and overcome with more stripes 6 Or else the Lord in mercy lingringly doth correct as thou are able to bear to bend thee and work thee to good whereas if hee should bring his chastisements roughly and at once it would break thy heart great cause therefore hast thou to subscribe to his wisdome whose waies are all justice and mercy 3 Hence wee fetch our assured comfort The Lord will seasonably remember his children at least the third day That as God delivered his Son the third day so will
hee any sluggishness or dulness in his nature to hinder his prayer neither did hee ever make a prayer which did not merit of it self to bee heard or wherein hee was not heard 3 Miraculous which is above the strength of man and is sometime given to the Saints to commend their doctrin as unto Moses Exod. 24.18 and to Eliah 1 King 19.8 And of this kind was our Saviours fast because no man can fast so long or half so long and remain alive and much less can a man fast so long and not bee hungry all the while as it is said of Christ Secondly The reasons of this fast are 1 Negative 2 Affirmative I Negative 1 It was not to commend fasting as the Papists teach for it is no commendation to fast when one hath no stomack or is not hungry as Christ was not Besides it is in it self no worship of God but a thing indifferent and onely commanded and commendable so far as it is an help to religious exercises 2 Much less that wee should imitate him as the Papists do in their Lent-fall For 1 it is none of the moral imitable actions of Christ but effected as other miracles by a power transcending the strength of men and Angels yea by the same power whereby hee gave sight to the blinde and leggs to the lame hee is as imitable in one as in the other 2 If they will imitate Christ they must abstain from all food not onely from flesh and that for forty daies and forty nights for Christ all this while are nothing yea and they must not bee hungry all the while as hee was not Luke 4.2 3 Christ did not fast once a year as they do but once in all his life 4 There is no proportion no agreement between Christs fast and their Lenten fast for 1 Christs was a total fast an utter abstinence theirs is a mock-fast They glut themselves in the time of their fast with most dainty meats and drinks in fulness and delicacy Christs fast disagreeth from Popish fasts in seven things or eight 2 Christs was voluntary theirs is forced against the use of the Primitive Church among whom it was left free to every mans Conscience when and how long it pleased him to use it neither were any Laws set down for the Lent-fast yearly to be kept in imitation of Christ till Gregory the Great or as other write Telesphorus Bishop of Rome about four hundred years after Christ but it was free for the time and kinds of meats 3 Christs fast was for a necessary cause their 's in times of joy when no just cause urgeth for the times sake for custom and superstitious imitation when no publike danger is to be prevented nor any special grace to bee obtained whereas by Christs fast the greatest evil in the world was diverted and the greatest good procured 4 Christs was without ostentation in secret in the Wilderness when none saw him whereas in Cities and societies of men hee ate and drank but these will bee known to fast and with the Pharisee profess I fast twice a week c. 5 Christ fasted not as counting some meats unclean which are all good and ought not to be refused as unclean but received with thanksgiving as sanctified by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.3 4 5. They fast with condemning of flesh and whatsoever cometh of it as unclean for that time which is more Jewish than Judaism it self for even in the Ceremonial Law those things that were pronounced unclean were never to bee refused as unclean in themselves but only in regard of the Commandement But much more now all difference of meats being taken away according to Peters vision Acts 10.11 may all be lawfully used at all times for the nourishment of man and the contrary is a doctrin of Devils 6 Christ fasted not without instant prayer for even the Saints of God alwaies when they did fast joyned prayer which otherwise were but a bodily exercise 1 Tim. 4.8 And hence fasting is often put for fasting and prayer Hester 4.3 16. But they fast in want of extraordinary prayer and when no need or occasion is above ordinary 7 Christ did not fast as placing the Kingdom of God in meats and drinks whereas they account the observation of their fasts a thing meritorious to satisfie for sin and purchase the Kingdom of Heaven which is their common doctrin wherein what else doe they than attribute the Kingdom of God to meat and drink 8 Let them shew where the people of God ever presumed to imitate the fasts of Moses or Elias if they cannot how dare they embolden themselves to imitate Christ and injoyn the meanest of their Disciples so to doe under pain of Damnation for this is the boldness of Bernard saying As Christ forty days after his Resurrection ascended to Heaven so none can ascend thither that fasteth not these forty days And yet here I condemn not the Lent-fast among us so it be observed only as a civil and politick Ordinance and not as any religious fast or observation for I esteem it as lawful for a King for a time to forbid his subjects some sorts of meat and injoyn others as he seeth most fit for his Common-wealth as for a Physician to prescribe a diet to his Patient forbidding some meats and appointing others for the health of his body Much less doe I condemn all fasting in general but wish it were more observed than it is so it be rightly But this fast of the Papists in the institution observation causes manner and end of it is wicked and sacrilegious Christ fasted this fast for four causes II. The affirmative ends of this fast of Christ were these 1 To prepare himself by fasting and prayer to his most weighty calling for although Christ was full of the Holy Ghost and seemed not to need the benefit of fasting and prayer to fit him yet he took on him our infirmities with our nature and as man needed such help as our selves doe 2 To teach us not rashly and headily to enter upon or undertake any calling but by fasting and prayer to prepare our selves who have more need of preparation than Christ had and to get Gods blessing on the same but especially this concerns the Magistrate and Minister Obj. You said this fast was not for our imitation Ans True it was not in the extent but in the end it was in the former Christ is to be admired in the latter to be imitated 3 To set out his Miracles and Divine power for the honour and authority of his Person and Doctrin to shew himself the Son of God Obj. Moses and Elias fasted this fast and yet were meer men Ans They did it by his power he by his own they were upheld by the power of God but he by his Divine power their fasting was but a type and shadow of this But to make every man able to imitate this fast obscures Christs glory and
ground under the milstone of Gods heavie displeasure and Levit. 19.13 Thou shalt not robb thy neighbour the Work-mans hire shall not abide with thee till the morning The reason is in Deut. 24.15 Lest thy Servant cry against thee to the Lord surely it shall be sin unto thee Obj. 2. But thou mayest make the best of thine own commodities by hoysing the prices and diminishing or corrupting the quantity or quality No man can force thee to sell thy own in dear times unlesse thou wilt and much lesse to give it away to the poor and needy then shut up thy heart live to thy self let others shift for themselves as thou doest for one Ans It is written that covetousness is the root of all evil and that it is Idolatry and the Lord hath sworn by a great oath even by his own excellency Amos 8.4 that he will never forget any of their works that swallow up the poor and make the needy of the Land to fail that were weary of the Sabbath because it hindred their setting of Wheat to sale that made the Epha small and the shekel great and falsified their weights and sold corrupt corn that is took all courses for gain Besides the fearful fruits of covetousness in Achan Gehezi Ahab Judas Object 3 But thou lendest thy money too freely ten in the hundred thou maiest take by Law but if by cunning tricks and devices thou canst get twenty in the hundred thou shalt grow rich the sooner Answ It is written Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again and Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not give to usury to thy brother and Exod. 22.25 If thou lend mony to my people thou shalt not bee an Usurer and Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt take no usury nor advantage neither lend him money nor victuals to increase and What shall it profit a man to win the whole world and lose his own soul Object 4. But thou art a poor man and defraudest thy self of profit thou mayest by an oath or a lye or a little cunning and sleight get good gains and why needest thou be so nice Answ It is written Prov. 22.2 The rich and the poor meet together and the Lord is the maker of them both that is in their persons and in their estates and Levit. 19.11 12. Yee shall not swear by my name falsly neither defile the name of the Lord thy God and That the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and thief and Yee shall not steal nor deal falsly nor lye one to another and that all that love abomination and lyes shall bee kept without the gates of the holy City with dogs Rev. 22.15 and that I must not lye for Gods glory much less for my own profit Object 5 But thou maiest revenge thy self upon thy enemy and make him know whom hee hath in hand broach some untruth or other upon him and thou shalt at least disgrace him and if thou le●st him go with this every one will scorn thee Answ It is written Vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord and Thou shalt not bear false witnesse and Matth. 7.12 Whatsoever you would that men should do to you the same do you to them and It is the glory of a man to pass by offences Object 6. But the cause is good the Catholike cause it is but a title of rebellion or treason indeed it is a meritorious work and thou shalt bee Canonized a Romish Martyr if thou shalt kill a King or Queen or Prince that is an Heretick but above all if thou canst by one terrible blow not only kill the King Queen and Prince but also the whole Council all the Lords all the Judges all the Laws all the Law-makers yea and blow up the whole Parliament-house and with that three heretical Kingdomes together Answ Here wee can hold no longer but in such a temptation as is so direct a worship of the Devil with our Lord say Avoid Satan bee packing foul Devil for It is written Rom. 13.1 Let every soul be subject to the higher powers and 1 Pet. 2.14 Submit your selves to all manner ordinance of man and the fearful judgement of Corah Dathan and Abiram with their complices betide such Catholike rebels as dare lift up their hands against the Lords annointed not to cut off his lap but his life which is the life and breath of all his people Use 2. The scripture the hammer of heresies Instance in justification by works The like use hath the Scripture in the right use of it against all errors and heresies as wee may see in these instances 1 If the Papists would teach us justification by workes Answ It is written Rom. 3.20 By the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified and the like in Gal. 3.3 4 5. And Paul had as many merits as any yet he would not bee found in his own righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 and our righteousness is but as filthinesse or filthy clouts and after our best indeavours wee are but unprofitable Servants 2 If they urge us with transubstantiation and real presence Answ It is written that after Christ had given the Sacrament In transubstantiation hee went into the garden and suffered which hee could not if hee had been eaten before and not being glorified and 2 remembrance is of things absent 3 He continues in heaven till his comming to judgement Act. 3.21 4 The Fathers are the same Sacramental bread 1 Cor. 10.3 and yet Christ was not then in the flesh 5 There is no alteration in the sign of Baptism and there is the same use of the sign of the Lords Supper In the seven Sacraments 3 If they object unto us seven Sacraments Wee reply against their five bastard ones as in that of Matrimony for the rest thus 1 It hath no sign instituted by God when he brought Eve to Adam here is matrimony but no sign the ring which they make a sign is not 2 It is not proper to the Church as Sacraments are but common to Jews Turkes and Infidels 3 Every Sacrament belongs to every Member of the Church but matrimony belongs not to their Priests and Votaries 4 All Sacraments serve to confirm faith so doth not matrimony Adam in innocency had no need of saith but hee had need of matrimony In orig nal sin after baptism 4 If they tell us that by Baptism Original sin is quite washed away Wee Answer No true Baptism takes away the guilt but not the being of sin and it is written of David Psal 51.5 that hee confessed hee was still in Original sin see also Rom. 7.7 and Jam. 1.13 In absolute necessity of Baptism 5 If they would thrust upon us the absolute necessity of Baptism Answ It is written that Circumcision being the same in signification and use with Baptism was omitted in the wildernesse forty years and that David doubted not of his uncircumcised childs salvation and that children are holy through their beleeving
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
was who would fain be with Christ but cast himself into the night as though that had been a work of darkness Moses for his courage was called Pharaohs God he told Pharaoh to his face hee would not leave an hoof behind him that Pharaoh himself stood in awe of him 2 The wicked who are stout in their wickedness and sin is with them as bold as an Harlot as Salomon speaketh Now the Magistrate with Job must bestirre himself and cloath himself with zeal and courage that the young men may hide themselves and the old rise up at his presence Job 29.8 whereas an irreligious mildnesse and remisnesse strengthneth the hands of the ungodly 3 The wicked one even Satan himself who emboldneth offenders against the chiefest Ordinances of God I mean Magistracy and Ministry to bring them into contempt and so bring in all confusion into the earth Secondly they must be men fearing God and they are specially called upon to kisse the Son of God Psal 2. For 1 Gods fear is the beginning of wisdome and who should be wise if not Magistrates to judge and discern of the most difficult cases amongst men 2 If hee fear not God he will fear the face of man and so accept of persons condemned Deut. 1.17 3 He must herein assist the Lord himself in planting the fear of God in all his government Cyrus must perform not his own but all the Lords desire hee must say to Jerusalem thou shalt bee built and to the Temple thy foundations shall be surely laid Isa 44.28 Every Christian Magistrate must be a Nursing Father to the Church and here begin his government as Moses with celebrating the Passeover Exod. 12. Joshua with renewing Circumcision Joshua 5.7 Gideon with destroying Baal Judg. 6. David with establishing the Ark Salomon with building Gods house Asa with renewing the Lords Altar And whereas many inferiour Magistrates look on whilst this care slippeth into other mens hands yet must they all know that they are Gods Vicegerents and the judgement is Gods that is from God and for God and therefore they must not only cut off Thefts Murders Adulteries and such barbarous outrages and ryots against publick peace and humane society but Blasphemies Heresies Swearing Sabbath-breaking and such sins as more directly oppose God and his Worship and these will the fear of God where it is especially hunt out This was the grace that made Nehemiah seek the wealth of Israel by making the Princes swear to Gods Covenant this made him almost forget himself in zealous revenge against the Sabbath-breakers all Jerusalem could not maintain this one sin against that one godly Magistrate Thirdly Magistrates must be men dealing truly 1 Affecting sincerity truth and justice which are the very sinews of humane society 2 Effecting it by taking true pains that the truth of every cause may be sifted out Exod. 23.6 and receive a true sentence that the poor may not be born down with power and greatness nor go away in a good cause disappointed Deut. 16.20 3 Opposing with all their strength whatsoever is opposite unto truth not suffering the truth to be clouded and veiled by flourishing pleas or shews of truth but resembling God whose Judgement-seat is said to be a throne of whit● Ivory Optima respub quae maxime leges minime ●hetore●●ndiat for the purity and innocency both of the Judge and Judgement before which every secret shall one day be set in a clear light Fourthly They must be men hating covetousness For 1 a publick person must seek the publick good and not be privately minded or self-seeing 2 He will then hate gifts which blind the wise and pervert the words of righteousness Now what a fearful inversion of Gods order were it if he who is set up to execute judgement should pervert it 3 He is in place wherein if he bee corrupt hee may help himself by the damage of others but who should hinder the confusion that would flow in as a deluge if the means ordained by God to help the oppressed should be corrupted to help forward oppression Now such a man thus qualified Jethro thought sit to bee set over thousands and over hundreds over fifties and over tens To this serve those ancient Ceremonies used among Gods own people in the installing of their governours example whereof we have in Joash 2 Kin. 11.12 whom when Jeho●adah had set into the right of his Kingdom they did three things unto him 1 They crowned him with a Crown of pure gold set with Pearls and precious Stones and these signified both the integrity of his Person and the incorruption of his manners 2 They gave him the book of the testimony the book shewed that wisdome is meet for a Ruler and that it was the book of the Testimony sheweth that 1 The most necessary wisdome for a Magistrate is the wisdome of God 2 That he must judge by Gods Book and directions and therefore must be learned in Gods Laws and skilful in the cases of Gods Statute-book and 3 The Book was given him that he might keep and preserve it and see the contents of it observed in others for he is a keeper of both the Tables 3 They annointed him to signifie the power and gifts of courage magnanimity and other ornaments sit to attend Magistracy And indeed it notably preserveth the honour of this Ordinance when the person executing it is as eminent in gifts and graces as in place and preheminence I take not upon me to teach your Worships how to govern but only declare how the Lord would every way have this Ordinance of his and the bearers of it honoured and what be the special ornaments which draw the eyes and reverent respect of inferiours upon you Now more severally your gravity Reverend Judge your humanity your equity in the just and unpartial carriage of causes your zeal against vice and vicious persons who gladly decline your censure your diligent frequenting the house of God your care of promoting the pure Worship of God which you witnesse by your new erection dedicated thereunto have got you a worthy and due regard through all our Country wherein though I bee but a stranger yet must hee bee more strange that meeteth not with the report of your vertues And you noble Knight whom I have known of longer time will give me leave to conceal a great part of that I conceive of your worth You do well to imitate your worthy Parents one of whom hath left you with a fair inheritance a pattern as I have heard of many vertues from which you may not depart the other God hath yet left unto you to follow you with motherly advice and counsel to set before you still the best Patterns but above all the glass of Gods word the reverent observation whereof if you adde to the other excellent endowments of your mind person and estate you shall give a number of your years and rank leave to come behind you and follow you
it is but an infirmity what need a man bee so precise and scrupulous as to stand upon such small trifles all which is but to plead for Satan against our own safety He was afterwards an hungry In these words is set down the effect of Christs fast After he had fasted forty days and forty nights he began to be hungry all the while before he was not hungry neither did he want power to have fasted longer and by his Divine power upheld his human nature if hee pleased but now the miraculous fast being finished he begun to hunger Quest How could Christ be hungry seeing he was able to feed so many thousands with seven Leaves and two Fishes Besides Joh. 4.34 he saith My meat is to doe the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Or if he could be hungry why would he Ans Some have thought that Christ needed not to eat sleep c. as wee need when our bodily strength is exhaust by labour by fasting and watching And some of the Fathers as Ambrose and Theophylact upon Mar. 11.12 hold that Christ only by dispensation gave his body leave to be hungry when he pleased as though he neither was wont nor could nor ought to bee ordinarily hungry as other men nor necessarily forced to eat But wee must know that Christ took upon him a true human body and the form of a Servant in which he was obnoxious to all our infirmities only sin excepted And the infirmities which he undetook not are these What infirmities our Saviour took and took not in three propositions 1 He was not to take any which might hinder the perfection of his soul or body Of his soul as vices sins proneness to evil heaviness to goodness Christ took miserable infirmities in his soul as Augustine saith such as are natural negative ignorance as of the day of Judgement and the time of figges fructifying but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Damascene saith damnable and detestable Of his body because it was extraordinarily conceived and created of the Holy Ghost who being of infinite wisdome and power could not e●re or not bring his body to perfection Therefore he was not to bee blind lame deaf c. which are infirmities in many other men 2 Christ was not to take all infirmities in general Christ took not all infirmities of every particular man for three causes for 1 Some arise of particular causes which could not be in Christ as namely some hereditary infirmities and diseases as the Leprosie Falling-sickness Stone c. some from redundance of matter in generation have some monstrous or superfluous part some from defect want some part or have some part withered or scanted None of this can agree to Christs most perfect conception of the Holy Ghost 2 Some infirmities are acquisite as by Surfeits Feavers and Gouts by fulness These could not befall Christ who never exceeded the mean his whole life being a continual exercise of sobriety neither had hee ever any acquisite infirmity but voluntarily undertaken 3 Some defects and infirmities are the fruit of some special judgement of God as Uzziah his Leprosie was a special stroke of Gods hand for a special sin so some are born fools and simple Neither could these belong to Christ who had no sin nor cause of judgement in him 3 Christ was to take upon him all natural and indetractable infirmities as the School-men call them and only them Natural that is such as follow common nature infirmities common to all men And indetractable or inculpable which detract not from the perfection of his person nor of his grace nor of the work of our redemption Of this kinde are hunger thirst labour weariness sleep sorrow sweat and death it self all these are common to all men Now hunger being a common infirmity incident to all men yea to Adam in innocency who was hungry and did eat as Gen. 1.39 every tree bearing fruit shall be to you for meat and slept chap. 2. vers 21. a heavie sleep fell on the man yet without molestation therefore Christ did necessarily hunger as other men do not by an absolute necessity for 1 he needed not have taken our nature or been incarnate 2 As he was God he could have exempted himself from all the abasement and miseries that he suffered neither by a coacted necessity for he willingly submitted himself to this necessity But by a necessity ex hypothesi or conditionate having taken our nature to redeem it he was necessarily to take on him all our weaknesses sin only excepted for these reasons Reasons why Christ took on him our infirmities five Mans nature is known by defects Gods by perfection 1 He was not only to be like a man and in the shape of a man but also a very true man like unto his brethren in all things except sin therefore it is said Heb. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to assure the truth of his incarnation against all Anthropomorphites and such like Hereticks 2 This was a part of his obedience and consequently of our redemption that he suffered the same thing as we do both in body and in mind Vere pertulit lang●ores nostros he hath truly born our infirmities Isa 53.4 3 That he might sanctifie unto us these infirmities and take away the sting of them lest we should be wearied and faint in our mindes Heb. 12.3 and that we might have an example in suffering 1 Pet. 2.21 4 That he might be a compassionate High Priest Heb. 2.17 18. touched with infirmity yea cloathed with our frail nature that we should not doubt of his grace who vouchsafed to be so abased for us 5 Himself confirmeth the same in that he took not on him such a body of ours as Adam had before sin but such a one as he retained after his fall so far as it was obnoxious to all incriminal pains of sin namely such as was subject to weariness Joh. 4.6 to sorrow tears and weeping as over Jerusalem Luke 19.41 and at the raising of Lazarus Joh. 11.35.38 and in his Agony when he shed tears and used strong cries Heb. 5.7 to sweating water and bloud in the garden yea to death it self from all which Adams body was free before the fall And by these his body was by a true necessity overcome as ours are and this not for a short time or space at his pleasure but all the time of his life till he breathed out his holy spirit yea thirsting upon the cross it self John 19.28 Neither was this onely to confirm the truth of his humane nature but to fulfill all righteousnesse and carry away all the punishment of our sinnes and so work a perfect salvation for us Therefore Christ truely and necessarily was hungry as wee use to be Obj. Christs meat was to do the will of his father As for that place in Joh. 4.34 I answer 1 It must bee meant comparatively in that the execution of his
to our recreations these bee no holy things sports are inferiour to our lawful Callings which are to be laid aside farr from holy things and unsutable to the Lords Holy-day The like if not more may be said against pampering a mans self and others by feeding or feasting and of drinking or any such wicked passing away the Sabbath The same also is to be spoken of a day of Feasting of publick Thanksgiving which have the reason of a Sabbath Of these and all other Gods holy Ordinances wee may say as the voyce said to Peter What God hath sanctified pollute thou not Doct. 2. A place is no longer holy than God and his Worship is present Was Jerusalem a holy City how then is the beautiful City become an Harlot how is it that this City which was the seat of Gods worship and the habitation and collection of the Saints is now an harbour of Turks and Infidels over-run with Turcisme or Idolatry Surely because the cause of this holiness ceased the worship of God was corrupted the Son of God despighted the Gospel of God rejected the Saints of God murthered the day of Visitation neglected And therefore they being infinitely departed from God and his pure worship God departs from them and God being gone the place ceaseth to be holy Bethel while the vision of the Ladder lasted there was an holy place and so long as Gods Worship continued there but when it adm●tted the pollution of Idolatry it must be called Bethel no more but Beth-aven When the Congregation of Israel brought the Ark from Gilgal and set it up in Shilo then was Shilo the standing house of God the seat of religion and justice which God had chosen Josh 18.1 but for the sins of this place the Lord rejected it as Jer. 7.12 Goe now to Shilo into my place where I set my name in the beginning and behold what I did unto it for the wickedness of Israel if we will know what look 1 Sam. 4.4 when by the villany of Elies Sons and outrage of the people the Lord was provoked hee gave Israel into the hands of the Philistims there were thirty thousand Foot-men slain the Ark was taken Hophni and Phineas slain Eli the High Priest brake his neck then did the glory depart from Israel and the Ark never came at Shilo more So the Temple at Jerusalem was holy the City holy so long as they continued in the true Worship of God but after they crucified the Lord of life both City and Temple as prophane were destroyed so as Jerusalem although the holy City of God if her filthiness be found in her skirts she shall be had in derision Lam. 1. the most beautiful rod if held out against God shall bee broken yea the Temple of God if it become a denne of Theeves God will depart from it For what is it that can tye God to any place but his own worship to which he hath tied himself by promise Vse 1. Let not the vain Romanist boast of the pretended chair of Peter from which God cannot possibly depart Can God depart from Shilo for the sins of Priest and people where first he put his Name and can he not depart from Rome Can he depart from the holy City where he promised hee would rest and can he not be driven from the great City of the Whore to which hee never made any such promise Can he depart in displeasure from her whose foundations were layed among the holy Mountains Psal 87.1 and can hee not depart from the Whore Revel 11.8 that sitteth upon seven Hills Shall Bethlehem where Christ was born be forsaken and cannot Babylon where Christ is daily Crucified Nay the Lord is long since departed from her and her final confusion is at the door Vse 2. And if Jerusalem once the holy City but now a Cage and Nest of unclean Saracens and Turks bee left of God what a superstitious error prevailed in former times wherein such bloudy Battels were fought for the recovery of the holy Land most superstitiously putting religion and holiness even in the place it self after all the holy things were prophaned and God himself departed The evil success of such Battels ever shewed how God was offended with such superstitious warres and another mischief by them oppressed the Christian world to keep it in blindness For the Pope making his advantage of this blinde devotion if any King or Prince in Christendom stood between him and his proceedings one way or other he would send him out of his own Country in expedition for the Holy Warre and there hold him till he had effected his own designs in that Princes Country and so strengthned himself in all Lands as Histories manifest Use 3. Let us not bear our selves as though we had God so sure as the Papist thinks he hath him in a Box or pretend any vain priviledge that we have to exempt us from danger True it is we have the word with peace liberty and protection but the fear is that our security and deadness of heart with dissoluteness and prophaneness in behaviour will forfeit all God sendeth Jerusalem to Shilo saying Trust not in lying words saying Jer. 7.4 12 The Temple of the Lord but amend your wayes and I will let you dwell in this place but if you will not goe to Shilo and see what I did to it and look for the like So now God sends us to Jerusalem that we may consider what he did to it being once the praise of the earth and if the same sins be found in us as were in Jerusalem the Lord will doe no other with us than he did with it even as he threatned 2 King 21.13 he will stretch over us the line of Samaria that is bring the enemy in our necks and the plummet of the house of Ahab an Idolater take away his holy things and exchange them with filthy Idolatry and wipe us as a man wipeth a dish even turn us upside down What were the sins of Jerusalem but pride idleness fulness of bread and contempt of the poor In all which England doth equal if not goe beyond Jerusalem and yet wee charge our selves as little with our sins as Jerusalem did And if wee look to the immediate causes and fore-runners of Jerusalems over-throw and compare them with our Land wee shall see it high time to look about us for I. In general Jerusalem had grievously sinned and therefore was had in derision Lam. 1.8 Her sins were great many of long continuance with treasured wrath and all this in a place of such means and light Now no place in the world hath more means than wee wee are farre beyond Jerusalem in means and therefore farre beyond her in sins II. More specially 1 They did not hear the words of Gods servants the Prophets nor obey them therefore the Lord made that house like to Shilo Jerem. 26.6 and hence Jerusalem afterward had time enough but too late to charge her self
over them but his Vicar neither love they the truth in the Canonical Scripture further than it will stand with their Popish Canon Law Or if a man come to read out of custom and coldly without fervency and love experience will tell him though thus he read much his profit shall bee but small 3 With repentance and faith and a good heart 2 Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be converted to the Lord the veil shall be taken away this veil is natural ignorance and infidelity VVhere the former is no marvel if the word read and known be not understood as a blind man cannot see the Sun shining in his strength VVhere faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become unprofitable Impossible it is that the wisdom of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious liquor into a fusty cask This is the cause that men of great learning want sound understanding because they want sound conscience Hos 14.10 The ways of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4 With a purpose not only to know but to practise Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine be from heaven The scope of the Scripture is not only to beleeve in the Son of God but to walk in the obedience of faith Now if men read over all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge only or for vain-glory or to advance themselves into preferments or to oppose the truth as Hereticks and Papists doe no marvel if they never attain the true sense of them 5 With prayer for the Spirit to lead us into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is only able to acquaint us with his own meaning If any man want wisdom he must ask it of God Jam. 1.5 so did David Psal 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy law Is it any marvel that they who flie the judgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councils and only swallow that sense which they give and never look after Gods Spirit should miss of the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errors and heresies To these might bee added meditation diligence keeping of order and time special application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods Word and no man shall lose his labour hee shall bee taught of God who hath promised to reveal his secret to them that fear him So much of the qualification of the person II. Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learn and keep by him to try when a Scripture is wrested or no. Rule 1 The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plain places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it self and so made the people to understand as Junius noteth out of the original So the Bereans having heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the Old Testament Thus the Apostles themselves teaching Christs resurrection Acts 2.16 prove it out of the Old Testament viz. Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And to prove that those words cannot be meant of David himself he appeals to another testimony in 1 King 2. where it is said that David slept with his fathers and lay buried in his Sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a special way whereby the Scripture giveth wisdom to the simple Psal 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisdom tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and try their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many pervert the Scripture to their own destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they hear Christ say The Father is greater than I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God co-essential and co-equal with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Job 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for ever And consequently that the former place speaks of his Human nature the latter of his Divine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwrack of faith and Heretically erre in the foundation of Religion teaching justification by the works of the Law out of Jam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 We are justified by faith without the works of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousness which we had done but according to his grace he saved us Which places being compared shew that one speaks of justification before God as Paul the other of justification before men as James the former of justifying the person the latter of justifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turn you turn you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his own conversion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is only evil continually and it is God that works both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God work us wee are meer patients and after that acts agimus being moved we move for his grace must not bee idle in us The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that wee are justified by faith without works casts off all care of his conversation What can his works doe what need they But he could not thus pervert the Scripture to his destruction if he compared it with such Scriptures as say that faith without works is dead and that faith works by love The reconciling whereof would teach them that although works be excluded from justification yet not from faith they must bee in the person justified though not in the justification of his person This conference of Scripture is either in places parallel and like or in such as seem to be opposed and unlike The conferring of like places bringeth great light to the reader As for example 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing If we would understand what is meant by this nothing compare we it with Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither uncircumcision availeth any thing nor circumcision where nothing is to avail nothing and is not referred to Circumcision or uncircumcision it self but to the person it is
4 Do wee know that God himself is the chief good and should not wee cast our eyes beyond our selves sinful lumps and heaps of dust that all the springs of our affections might run into this main Shall wee bestow the pitch of our affections upon lower things as earthly-minded men do when wee may satiate them with God himself and the things of his glory 5 There is no loss in neglecting our selves for God but great advantage for his eye is upon us to bee a speedy faithful and royal rewarder of us The preferring of our Lords cause above our selves is the preferment of our selves in the end Hee that loseth his life for my sake saith Christ shall find it And therefore as Caesars eye made his Souldiers prodigal of their blood so Gods eye upon us should make our selves small in our own eyes that his glory may bee maintained and reserved wholly to himself Moses preferred Gods honour before his own for hee looked for the recompence of reward Vse 1. The Use hereof belongs to such as are specially set forth to set up Gods causes The Magistrate is not now a private man to seek himself or to set forward his own designs or to shew his heat in his own private causes but to prefer Gods causes before all mens his own or others David a King how calm was hee in his own case when Shimei trayterously railed upon him and Abishai would have fetched his head Oh no said hee God hath bid him rail c But when Gods cause was in hand Oh then away from not yee wicked and I will have no wicked person in my house I will timely destroy the wicked from the house of God Good Nehemiah neglecteth his own allowance and departed from his own right for the peoples sake chap. 5. but cha 13. how zealous is hee for God hee will not let God lose his right not one whit of the Sabbath must bee allowed to any use but Sabbath-duties Such a courage for God and the Truth ought the Magistrate to have as neither for fear of men nor any mans favour or affection hee neglect any thing which God would have him do especially for the house of God and the Offices of it Alas how many Magistrates are of Gallios minde to think religion but a matter of words as if God made them governours of men only but not of Christians keepers of the second Table to preserve Peace and Justice and not of the first to preserve Piety and Religion and if they bee so why are not Blasphemies and horrible Oaths and innumerable prophanations of the Sabbath severely punished why are not Popish and prophane persons compelled to come into the house of God Shall a pilferer of a trifle of a mans goods know that the Magistrate bears not the Sword in vain and shall not hee that robs God of his Glory by Cursing Swearing contemptuous breaking of the Sabbath know the contrary The calling of a Minister is more specially to promote the causes of God which therefore must affect him above all his own respects How earnest was Christ in his Fathers work when his Parents came to seek him at twelve years old hee rebuked them for interrupting him whereas in all private converse hee gave them reverence Luk. 2. When his Disciples brought him meat hee neglected that also saying It is my meat and drink to do the wilt of my Father And if preferring Gods causes will not suffer us to respect our selves much less will wee bee hindered by others wee cannot tune our songs to mens ears but must deal faithfully and plainly though wee displease men How zealous was Christ against the Hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 23. though it created him much envy and malice When hee saw the invincible hardnesse of Heart in his hearers how did hee mourn in his spirit and looked angerly about him Mark 3.5 Surely if wee go about to please men or set up our selves in the World Gods causes will affect us slenderly Therefore it shall bee our happy portion to set the top of our ambition the glory of God and in our judgements and practice prefer the winning of souls before the winning of the World Vse 2. Let every man learn to consider what businesse God hath put in his hand to do and not bee hindered in that for that is Gods work Gods cause upon which depends some part of Gods glory And whatsoever he may glorify God in for which hee can warrant his calling let him set that forward and let no respect hinder him let him not suffer God to bee dishonoured in his family nor where hee can hinder it let the spirit of patience swallow a number of private and personal wrongs but when God comes to be wronged let him stir up the spirit of zeal and courage Vse 3. Here many are reproved who fail against this Doctrin as 1 Men that follow nature abandoning religion hot and fiery in their own quarrels not a word can bee sooner uttered against them but they are ready to draw and to stab Their own names may not be mentioned without all due respect But for Gods causes and quarrels let others look to that How h●t was Cain in own cause but so much the cooler in Gods causes and service Haman how busy in his own private quarrel to bring Mordecai to death yea to destroy the whole Church had not his gallows caught himself Oh beware by these examples of more zeal in thine own cause than in Gods in thy own name than in God 2 Such Ostriches as can digest any high contempt of God without indignation or reproof and can suffer men to swear and curse by God and Christ his blood wounds and tear him to small peeces It would bee thought disloyalty to hear the Kings Majesties name or title contumeliously spoken of and not bring the party to condign punishment It was an old Law among the Romans that if any man did swear by their God Janus it should bee death unless the Senate approved it or it were made before a Priest why that it might bee either punished or reproved It were well if wee had such a Law amongst us 3 When care of our own houses eat up the care of Gods house Things shall be neat and convenient at home no care how Gods house lies When base trifles are preferred before Gods Word and the good setling of it as stage-plaies and enterludes When Gods Sabbaths and time must give place to our callings or recreations or are passed away in Gods Worship more heavily than holy daies or work-daies Here is a man affected more with his own sin than the highest causes of Gods glory III. The reason of our Saviours denial For it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Our Saviour had sharply reproved Satans impudence in his bold onset this third time but yet because it is not sufficient to thrust off an adversary with heat
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
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
apprehend and apply unto our selves Christ and all his merits for the very nature of justifying and saving Faith standeth in these two degrees 1 In apprehension and receiving of Christ for to beleeve and receive Christ are all one Joh. 1.13 2 In applying to ones self Christ and his merits particularly which is not only to know that Christ is God in himself and all other parts of truth necessary to bee beleeved but a full perswasion of the mercy of God through Christ to belong unto himself in particular so as hee bee able with Thomas to say My Lord and my God not onely confessing that Christ dyed for sinners which the very Devils beleeve but as Paul describeth the true Faith in the Son of God by the proper speech and voice of it Gal. 2.20 Who dyed for mee and gave himself for mee Further the description restraining this grace to beleevers giveth us to understand that faith is not of all 2 Thess 3. Faith is not of all nor so common as men take it to bee not every one that can say I beleeve in God hath faith nor every one that will boldly say Christ is his Saviour hath presently saving Faith For. 1 The Prophet Esay speaketh of a number that beleeved not the Prophets report and to whom the arm of God was not revealed Isa 53.1 The Evangelists and the Apostles also complain in their times how this prophecy was accomplished notwithstanding they heard the blessed word of truth from the mouth of truth it self and saw the wonderful Miracles in the hands of Christ himself and his Apostles for the confirmation of that truth 2 The end of Faith which is salvation belongeth not to the most and therefore not faith it self the means for there are few which shall bee saved 3 The Word the parent of faith is wanting to many people and where it is so neglected by the most as grace and Gods blessing is withdrawn from it besides that the unfaithfulnesse of Teachers and abundance of iniquity in all sorts of men provoketh the Lord to revenge with his fearful stroak of slownesse of heart to beleeve that in the midst of means men should wilfully perish now if there be no seed-time what fruit or harvest of faith can be expected 4 The Scriptures not only deny true and saving faith to the reprobate whose eyes the Lord blindeth and whose hearts he hardneth lest they should see and beleeve Isa 6.9 but impropriateth it to the elect whence it is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1.1 To them whom God hath predestinated to life for so many as were ordained to life everlasting beleeved Acts 13 48. to the sheep of Christ Joh. 10.16 But yee beleeve not for yee are not of my sheep to them that are regenerate by the Holy Ghost as 1 Joh. 5.1 Whosoever beleeveth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God Lastly the description addeth the final cause of faith to bee Salvation namely in regard of beleevers for the main end of all graces is the glory of God and so Abraham by beleeving is said to give glory to God Rom. 4.20 but the subordinate end of faith is the salvation of the elect and therefore is it called saving faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In salutem animae Be●● Faith never quite lost Heb. 10.39 we are not they which with-draw our selves unto perdition but we follow faith to the conservation of the soul 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your souls And from hence followeth it that saving faith can never be quite shaken out of the heart of him that once hath it being 1 but once given to the Saints Jude 3. and a gift of which God never repenteth him 2 A gift flowing from Gods eternal election as we have shewed out of Acts 13.48 3 A seed of God perpetually preserved in the regenerate who sin not because this seed of God remaineth in them 1 Joh. 4.4 4 It hath the promise of the Father to be the victory that overcometh the world the intercession of the Son of God that it fail not Luke 22.32 and the confirmation of the holy Spirit who by it sealeth up and giveth his earnest into the hearts of beleevers 2 Cor. 1.22 so as unless the mighty power of the Father Son and holy Spirit upholding it can bee shaken it can never be by all the gates of Hell so shaken out of the heart but that the end of it shall be salvation which could not be if the elect did not ever abide in communion and fellowship with Christ Popish doctrin teacheth not true faith to this day From which description of true justifying faith it is evident that Popish Doctrin knoweth not teacheth not nor suffereth men to be taught the true Doctrin of saving faith because it utterly disclaimeth the very essential form of it which is special application of Christ and his merits with affiance and resting only on them unto salvation yea and more they condemn this glorious work of faith as a mortal sin and stile it by the name of presumption and so by Gods just judgement they take up such a faith in stead of it as is common not only to Hereticks and Reprobates but to the very Devils themselves who beleeve as much as Popish doctrin requireth to salvation yea and more they tremble also For doe not they know and assent that there is one God that all that is in the Word of God is true and certain that all the Articles of the Creed are the true grounds of Christian religion and if you goe any further excepting the thrusting in of general Councils and Traditions which every good Catholick must take in with the former Popish faith leaveth you and biddeth you farewell and even those things which are absolutely necessary to salvation to bee beleeved by saving faith as that the Scriptures are Gods Word that the Articles of faith comprised in the Creed of the Apostles are of undoubted truth they embrace only by Historical faith by which yet was never man saved for if ever man were then might the Devils also by the same faith But justifying faith is another manner of thing it seateth not it self in the understanding only as the former but takeeth up the whole soul even the heart will and affections also all which lay hold and cleave unto Christ for salvation Neither is it a common and general work of the Spirit upon good and bad as the former illumination and assent is but a special favour and extraordinary grace proper to the elect as wee have heard and the stranger entreth not into this their joy The second point to be considered is the benefit or excellent fruit of this grace 1 It is the first stone to be laid in the building of a Christian Five excellent fruits of saving faith and therefore called a substance and foundation Heb. 11.1 and the Colossians are said to be rooted and built and
yeelding to any sin but give apparent tokens of dislike Object Why May wee not by yeelding a little to them draw them to us Answ No but the way to win them is a pure conversation with fear 1 Pet. 3.12 much less may wee flatter them in any evil Mica●ah would not flatter with the King though four hundred false Prophets did Fourthly Acknowledge thy self a childe of Wisdome which is justified of all her children Suffer not Gods glory to bee trodden down by thy silence Wisely break off fooleries by savoury Riddles or Questions as Sampson and in a wise and peaceable manner change the matter holding it a settled ground of Religion not to relinquish piety to keep peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 Follow peace and holiness No corruption of man must drive us from our station Fifthly So soon as wee may depart from them Prov. 14.7 Depart from the foolish man when thou perceivest not in him the lips of knowledge And b●ware of falling into the like company again Joseph wisely declined the company of his Mistress when shee daily spake unto him Gen. 39.10 and Dav●● would not return with Saul when hee perceived his wilfulness against him 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXII Rules to carry our selves wisely towards evil men evi●●y affected to us IF men bee not onely evil in themselves but also to us then it is either in evil purposes or in evil practices against us If they purpose evil the● our Saviours Rule is Beware of men Matth. Rules how to carry our selves to our enemies 10.17 for they will deliver y●● up to the Councils By men our Saviour means those whom in the former w●rds hee calleth Wolves that desire to make a ●●ey and spoyl of the sheep of Christ and in his Caveat adviseth 1 Wisely to prevent the plots and trains of ungodly men discreetly to prevent our own trouble so near as wee can 1 Wisely prevent their plots How wisely did Jacob prevent the fury of his brother Esau And as they watch to traduce us so must wee watch to cut off occasions of entrapping Luke 6.7 The Scribes and Pharisees watched whether Christ would heal on the Sabbath day or no to finde accusation against him our Saviour for all this omitted not to do good but its doing it by his question unto them cut off so far as hee could the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulness of it So must wee And yet prepare stoutly to bear whatsoever the Lord measureth out by them 2 Decline their fury 2 Our Saviour would have us wisely decline their fury not without cause provoking them It is no wisdome to provoke an evil man It is no good discretion to stir up a Lion to take a Bear by the tooth or a Dog by the ears For they desire nothing more than matter to stir up their corruption by So Hezekiah commanded his servants not to answer Rabshecah one word 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves Matth. 10.16 Nothing more vexeth and vanquisheth an Adversary than innocency no better brest plate than righteousness But if a man had the innocency of Christ himself the Adversary will watch advantages and play upon a mans simplicity therefore joyn Serpentine wisdome as Paul did Act. 23.6 hee testified his innocency and that with all good conscience hee served God till that day But what tell you Ananias of Doves innocency hee commands to strike him on the mouth the more innocent the less indured hee fared the worse for that and therefore hee joyns in season Serpentine wisdome For perceiving his greatest enemies to bee Pharisees and Sadduces hee professeth himself a Pharisee and the son of a Pharisee and that hee was brought in danger for the hope of the Resurrection which the Sadduces denied and so casting a bone between them and letting them by the ears hee escaped between them 4 Out of their evil ●raw some good 4 Out of their malice wee should draw our own good so w●rily to carry our selves towards them as that wee may finde that of the Heathen true An enemy often hurteth less and profiteth more than many friends Wee must both in their absence and presence especially take heed wee do not disadvantage our selves It was some disadvantage to Paul when in the Council although hee was provoked and unjustly smitten hee called the High Priest Whited wall hee was glad to excuse it by his ignorance Wee may not bee too bold or too forward to speak in a good matter 5 Having received wrong f om them do three things 5 If evil men have done us harm and wrongfully molested and persecuted us our Rule is 1 In respe●t of them to pitty pardon and pray for them If wee do them good wee shall either overcome their evil with goodness or heap coals on their heads 2 In respect of our selves possess our souls with patience and shew meekness and moderation and say as David in Shimes his railing It may bee the Lord will do mee good for his cursing of mee this day 3 In respect of our duty still to shew an undaunted constancy and resolution for the truth and all good wayes 1 Pet. 3.14 15. If yee suffer for righteousness blessed are yee but fear not neither bee troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and bee ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh a reason of your hope Thus far of the Rules of Christian Wisdome of which I may say with Moses Deut. 4.5 6. These are the Rules and Ordinances keep them and do them for this is your wisdome CHAP. XXXIII Containing motives for Circumspect walking BUt because this accurate and Circumspect walking is grown out of request and men generally are too well contented to walk at adventure and as men that shoot at tovers secure themselves in a loose and neglected course and go on carelesly as if there were no danger in wandring from God and declining from the good way Motives to the former Rules wee will use some Motives to provoke every Christian that tenders either Gods glory or his own salvation to undertake this Christian course 1 In regard of God 1 Whose Commandement is That all our wayes bee ordered aright Prov. 4.26 and that the Saints walk worthy of the Lord and please him in all things Col. 1.10 2 Whose Word must bee our Rule to which wee must continually frame our whole course and every part thereof For first The moral Law is a perpetual Rule binding at all times without any intermission 2 The Precepts of it are to make the Word our continual Counsellor to binde it to us not to let it depart but to meditate in it night and day And what is it less than Blasphemy to charge the Saints with folly singularity and a Saintish purity in that wherein they were most acceptable to God As David set the Lord before him continually and when hee