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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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suspect it Lastly this joy in the holy Ghost in some is an habituall gladnesse of heart which constantly after assurance is found in them though they feele not the passions of joy but in others there is felt at sometimes the vehement passions of joy but not the constant gladnesse Now eyther may be the true joy of the holy Ghost if it agree to the former signes But what should wee doe to get the joyes of God 1 Thou must be in the generall Gods servant and devote thy selfe to holinesse else thou canst never feele them Esay 65.13 2 Thou must voluntarily seeke godly sorrow for thy sins for these joyes are promised to and most felt by such as mourne for sin Psal. 126.2 3 5 6. Esay 61.3 Prov. 14.10 Mat. 5.5 3. Thou must labour after the affections of godlinesse till thou come to love Christ and the Word and holy exercises thou canst not get the joy in the holy Ghost if we did once love to be Gods servants the Lord would refresh us with the joyes of his presence Esay 56.6 7. But what should we doe to preserve the joyes of God that'wee might more constantly rejoyce in the holy Ghost Observe these rules 1. Thou must get a meeke spirit For passion and pride hinder the refreshings of God wonderfully Esay 29.19 2. Preserve uprightnesse the upright shall have an harvest of joy But if thou nourish the love of any sinne it is impossible to keep the joyes of God Psal. 96.11 Prov. 29.6 12.20 3. Lose not Gods presence but set him in thy sight and walk before him There is fulnesse of joy at his right hand Psal 16.11 4. Be much in well-doing For that will make our joy abound Col. 1. 9 10 11. 5. Hang upon the brests of the Churches consolation and sincerity Esay 66.11 6. Take heed of much carnall or outward reioycing For the immoderate liking of earthly things hardens the heart in the things of God Hence wee may briefly note the causes why many professors have no more ioy 1. Some neglect the meanes 2. Others are mastered by strong affections as Envy or Passions c. 3. Others have neglected mortification 4. In many their very unprofitablenesse is the cause 5. In some the love of some secret sinne blasts all grace and joy Thus of the 8. verse Verse 9. Receiving the end of your faith the salvation of your soules THis Verse is a ratification of the former in which the Apostle labours to assure salvation to all such as have the former signes 1. The matter assured is the salvation of our soules 2. The certainty of the assurance is in the word receiving which imports it is as sure as if we had received it already 3. The instrumentall cause is faith for salvation is the end of faith Receiving If this word be marked in it selfe and the coherence foure things arise to be observed 1. First that wee should receive the graces and blessings of God with much joy and love of Christ who is the foundation of the merit of all This I note from the coherence with the former Verse 2. Secondly we are seldome glad at heart longer then we are receiving some blessing or promises from God Note that he joyns this word to the joyes of the holy Ghost in the end of the former Verse 3. Thirdly that salvation is received even in this life received I say 1. In the promises of it 2. In the graces which begin eternall life in this life 3. In the certainty of the assurance of it 4. The word in the Originall signifies to carry back againe or to fetch out of the field which imports we cannot get salvation nor any promises or graces that concerne it but we must fight for it there will be some bicketing before it can be carried away out of the field Of your faith Faith is here expresly made the instrument of our salvation This is a principle and should be unmoveable in the heart of every Christian that without faith our religion is to no end For wee cannot be saved without it which should teach us both to seek this faith and to account of it as most precious and to this end to make sure that our faith be right wee cannot be too oft urged hereunto I will instance but in foure signes of a true perswasion For I take it for granted that the most of us say we are perswaded God loves us and Christ died for us Now wee may try whether this perswasion be right foure waies 1. First if it will endure the tryall of manifold tentations as the coherence shews a true perswasion will If it will support us in adversity of all sorts in some measure especially if it will fence us against the scornes and oppositions of the world this will prove it to be a true perswasion 2. Secondly if it be such a faith as will beleeve all that is written Act. 24.14 so far as it sees it to be the will of God though it be against reason or affection or profit or the opinion of any other 3. Thirdly if it have the seale of the spirit For hee that truely beleeveth hath a witnesse in himselfe even the witnesse of the spirit of adoption testifying by unspeakable joyes the assurance of Gods love Eph. 1.14 1 Ioh. 5.10 4. Fourthly if it be accompanied with a sincere life and love of all that truely feare God for the image of God in them True faith will shew it selfe by this love Gal. 5.6 The end of your faith The word here rendred the end doth further signifie a reward or wages which is given at the end and so these things may be observed 1. First that in the end the Lord will take account of the use of all gifts or graces in men 2. Secondly that unlesse we hold out to the end we can never have reward 3. Thirdly that true faith will hold out to the end if it be true it will abide 4. Fourthly Faith it selfe will once have an end and therein love excels faith because that will never end 5. But the last and chiefest point is that it will be a glorious time when the end comes that God disposeth the rewards of beleeving which may serve for foure uses 1. First it may comfort Gods afflicted servants For the expectation of the poore shall not perish for ever Psal. 9.18 and God will certainly give an end and expectation Ier. 29.11 And have we not seene the end of the Lord in many things in our temporall troubles and can we doubt him for our last end why should any feare death Is it not the time of receiving wages No hireling is afraid of the time of receiving his wages 2. Secondly it should teach us therefore to wait upon God and possesse our soules with patience holding fast our confidence of assurance For the end shall come and it will not be long before it shall be 3. Thirdly for information we
they shew forth the vertues of Christ and resemble his holinesse of carriage 5. And hee is manifested with them in that eternall fellowship of glory in the kingdome of heaven It is the first kinde of manifestation which is here meant Now Christ was manifested for them 1. on earth 2. in heaven On earth he was manifested 1. In his incarnation when hee shewed himselfe in our nature thus was accomplished that great mysterie of godlinesse God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 2. In his passion for so he was that true brazen serpent Ioh. 3. 3. In his ascension shewing himself in triumph leading captivity captive and giving gifts unto men Eph. 4. In heaven he is manifested for us 1. By session 2. By intercession By session for so hee was declared wonderfully as head of the Church when being set at the right hand of God all power was given him both in heaven and earth And by intercession he daily appeareth before God for us In this manifestation Christ hath turned himselfe into all formes for us for he hath beene manifested for us as a servant to doe our work as a surety to pay our debts as a sacrifice to expiate for our sins as a treasurer to supply all our wants as a Prophet to instruct us as an Advocate to plead our cause and as a King to subdue our enemies and rule over us The points of doctrine from hence to be observed are these 1. That God may conceive a wonderfull love to his people and have a glorious plot for their good and yet not manifest it of a long time Coherence shews this The Use should be in all distresses publike or private for the Church where we live or for our owne particular to live by faith and not mistrust or murmure or limit God as if hee had forgotten the cause of his people little knowest thou the thoughts of God concerning thy good and therefore we should check our owne hearts as David did and say Why art thou so sad oh my soule c. Secondly if God once doe manifest his love to thee oh then know thy happinesse and rejoyce in thy portion how rich is that goodnesse the Lord shews thee when in prayer or the word he declareth hid and mighty things in his answers Ier. 33.3 2. When God manifests Christ he discovers his greatest treasure the utmost of all Gods benefits for Christ is unsearchable riches and ●● is hee in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed The Use is That therefore seeing God accounts the manifesting of hi● Son for us to be such a matter we should hence admire and praise this goodnesse of God that sent his owne Son into the world for our sakes and nou● in heaven honors and heares him for our sakes and in our behalfe especially this should quicken us unto the study of that sacred knowledge of Christ and his Kingdome and we should willingly serve so mighty and divine a Saviour 3. That it is no comfort to know that Christ is manifested till wee know he is manifested for us it is ill trusting to the knowledge of Christs incarnation we must seeke by all possible prayer and supplication that he may be acknowledged as a Saviour for us 4. The knowledge of Christs manifestation for us should be a point that should move and stir affection in the heart of every beleever and therefore it is to that end in this place urged But what should I doe might some one say to shew that my heart is affected towards my Saviour in this point of his manifestation either on earth or in heaven for me We must shew our affection herein foure waies 1. By beleeving in him without any doubting seeing in respect of the obedience of the law the discharge of our debt the conquest of our enemies the advocation in our causes c. he hath so fully manifested himselfe 2. By manifesting our selves without feare or delay for his sake wee should put our selves out into the open profession of his truth with all boldnesse but yet so as wee learne by his example how to manifest our selves● that is to say 1. In the fulnesse of time that is after good advise and sound deliberation too hasty profession often-times doth great hurt 2. With resolution to endure all sorts of reproaches or what else in the labour or opposition might befall us though we should be accounted as he was Esay 53. Heb. 12.3 3. With all integrity being carefull to shew forth his vertue and not to blemish our profession with any spotted conversation especially expressing our imitation of his humility and dove-like harmlesnesse and respect of Gods law and contempt of the world 4. With all constancy even unto the death that wee may receive the crowne of life 3. By manifesting our selves to be ready to do any service to his servants 4. By longing for the time of his last and full manifestation in his appearing at the last day Thus of the fift point concerning our redemption The sixt is who are redeemed viz. such as by Christ doe beleeve in God for you who by him doe beleeve in God verse 21. For you The maine doctrine is twofold 1. That beleevers onely have benefit by Christ for them was redemption intended for them Christ shed his bloud for them he was made a sacrifice for them he was manifested both by incarnation and the preaching of the Gospell and by intercession in heaven Ioh. 17.9 19. Heb. 11.6 The Use is 1. For instruction Be sure thou have faith whatsoever thou want 2 Cor. 13.5 thou perishest else for ever Ob. If I have all faith yet I may perish 1 Cor. 13.3 Sol. All faith to doe miracles not to lay hold on Christ. 2. It is all faith without love and lovest thou not Gods children 2. For cons●●●ation to the godly to whom God hath given this precious faith it is to be truely rich to be rich in faith it makes the poorest begger equall with the highest Monarch Iam. 2.5 because it procures priviledges better then that of Princes it intitles them to a birth better then that of the so●● of men Ioh. 1.12 13. and for honour they have favour with the Highest that can doe more for them then all the Kings of the earth Ioh. 3.16 and for alliance it makes them a kinn to all the Saints and for contentment it fills them with joy unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.9 and for victory it makes them more then conquerors Rom. ● and for riches they have all the treasures of Christ and for possessions they have an immortall inheritance especially their glory shall appeare in the day of Christ 2 Thes 1.10 3. It should quicken the godly to a care to repaire and establish themselves in the faith and to this end to pray as 2 Thes 1.11 4. It shews the miserable estate of divers men in the very visible Church There are three sorts of Christians
For I meddle not with Pagans or Antichristians 1. The first is of Christians in name such as are so onely in appearance or profession or the account of man 2. The second is Christians in signe that is such as are so onely by baptisme that have onely received the outward badge of Christianity 3. The third i● such as are so indeed and such onely are they that beleeve in God and that by a lively saith in Christ Jesus 2. Doctrine i● that every one that doth beleeve is redeemed Iohn 3.16 Heb. 10.39 The Use is First for comfort to the abject God accepts not persons it matters not what money meanes clothes dyet thou hast onely if thou beleevest be of good comfort Ob. The devils beleeve and yet are not happy Sol. They beleeve that Christ is but they beleeve not in Christ they trust not in him or they beleeve that he is their Judge but not their Saviour Ob. But divers in Iob. 2. beleeved and yet Christ trusted them not Sol. They beleeved his doctrine but they trusted not on his merits they had historicall but not justifying faith Ob. But those that received the word with joy beleeved and yet fell away Mat. 13. Sol. They had a temporary faith but not a saving faith they could neversuffer for his sake nor were they ever new creatures to desire to be rid of all sinne nor did that joy arise from a particular application The second Use is not to have the glorious faith of Christ in respect of persons Iam. 2.1 2. c. Thus of the generall Now in particular concerning faith five things may be here noted 1. The subject of faith viz. you that are begotten againe 2. The object of faith viz. God 3. The nature of faith viz. to beleeve in God 4. The cause of faith viz. Christ by him you beleeve c. 5. The time of the exercise of faith Doe beleeve For the first when he saith for you he meaneth such as he had described before verse 3. so that the doctrine is that faith is seated onely in the hearts of regenerate men onely in the godly It is called the faith of Gods Elect. Tit. 1.1 and their hearts are purified tha● have faith Act. 15.9 they are turned from darknesse to light Act. 26.28 1. This doctrine shewes us a way how to try our faith whether we have faith or no namely by the tryall of our regeneration as 1. If our hearts be purified Act. 5.9 that is if wee have been humbled for secret and inward sinnes so as the filthinesse of them is abated and washed away 2. If we have overcome the respect of profits and pleasures of the world so as we can use them as if we used them not 1 Ioh. 5.4 3. If we love our kindred in grace best Gal. 5.6 1 Ioh. 3.14 4. If we find the new gifts of the spirit for faith alwaies dwelleth amongst them Gal. 5.22 2. This doctrine shewes againe the true Christians prerogative God hath dealt better with him then with other men It is no matter if God have not given them so much money or meanes or credit or health as they it is enough God have given them faith 3. It should awaken wicked men in the midst of all their pleasures and riches if they misse faith it should tame their jollity if they consider that they must perish for all those things what hope or comfort can they have when God shall take away their soules Ob. But might some of these say It seems the Lord puts a difference and shuts out men from faith and keeps them without it Sol. 1. The condemnation of the unbeleeuer is of himselfe Iohn 3.20 2. The Lord commands all to beleeve even every creature Mar. 16. 1 Ioh. 3.23 3 He sends the Word to offer grace to all the proclamation is generall and no man excepted that hath desires after God Esay 55.1 4. We see of every condition of men God retaines some to mercy and that shews he takes no pleasure in thy death and that he would have all men be saved Yea 5. the Lord doth beseech men to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.20 For the second The object of faith is God God is the object of faith not generally in his nature but particularly in his mercies and promises of grace in his word of truth the Go●pell When I say God is the object of faith I meane hee is that which faith both looks upon 〈◊〉 relies upon Faith is alive when it beholds Gods face in Christ. It thinkes of God it admires God it longs for God it trusts onely upon God it carries us unto God it is imployed for God it is contented with God it desires no more but God Ob. But what reason hath man to beleeve in God For God is terrible in his nature he abhors sinne and revengeth it with all severity it is hee that will judge men for sinne yea it is hee that woundeth the very particular sinner c. Sol. Yet faith carries men unto God because of his own commandement that men should beleeve because of the gracious promises he hath made to beleevers because of the experience of as miserable sinners as he have beleeved and were not disappointed because faith stils Gods displeasure and makes the Lord put on the bowels of tender kindnesse yea here appeares the wonder of faith that though it know that it is Gods own hand that fighteth against sinne yet it will run onely to God to heale them againe Hosea 6.1 Ob. But must we not beleeve in Christ as well as in God Sol. If by this title of God wee understand the essence of God then CHRIST is included for wee beleeve in the promises of the whole Trinity and so in Christ who is the second person But if by God wee meane the first person in the Trinity and the holy Ghost then it is spoken to our capacitie the more fitly to expresse the meanes of our reconciliation which is by the mediation of Christ the middle person of the Trinity so that the word God doth not exclude Christ from being the object of our faith with the Father but it includes that Christ is more then the object for he is a meanes of our acceptance with the Father c. The Use is twofold 1. Here againe we may take occasion to try our faith If thy faith be a true faith thou maist know it by the object of it if it set thy thoughts and affections on God if thou canst say as David Psal. 73.25 then certainly thou hast faith and so contrariwise 2. Is God the object of faith then be of good comfort hee will never deny his promise Tit. 1.2 Hee is able to keepe what thou committest to him 2 Tim. 1.12 He is an Ocean able every way to fill thee with all sufficiency and happinesse The third thing followes viz. the nature of faith which is to beleeve in God To beleeve is more then to understand
conjecture hope remember or affect It is to doe all that with affiance assent or perswasion and that is more plaine i● we note the phrase of speech in God for we may be said to beleeve foure waies 1. To beleeve that God is 2. To beleeve God 3. To beleeve of God 4. To beleeve in God for this latter doth import a casting of our selves upon God There are also foure things distinctly in faith 1. The understanding of the Doctrine of the promise of grace 2. The second is the ●●●ent unto the tender of grace signified 1. By earnest desire after the happinesse revealed in the Gospell 2. By a willing base estimation of all earthly things in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Gods love in Christ. 3. The third is the relying upon God or the resting of the heart upon the truth of Gods promises as having found the chiefe good in which wee will trust and beyond which we desire no more All this is imported in this phrase if we note it 4. The fourth is the resolution to acknowledge and avouch this confidence in God both by our cleaving to Gods promises in all estates and by our profession of the doctrine of Gods free grace herein The Use is a gaine for tryall If the Lord have enlightned thee to see the doctrine of his grace in Christ if he have gotten thy consent to his truth especially if he have wonne thy affections so as thou canst with love and ioy and affiance take his word and rest in his love to thee as perswaded of his mercies toward thee and that thou canst also vow thy selfe to the profession of it assuredly thou dost beleeve 2. This doctrine confutes the Papists and carnall Protestants that thinke faith is no more then to beleeve the story of Christ and to hope well for the rest whereas to beleeve in God doth evidently import more then to beleeve that God is and to beleeve God to say true The opinion of those that think that to beleeve that Christ is the Sonne of God is enough to salvation hath more charity then authority in it Many places of Scripture prove we must beleeve that Christ is the Son of God and it is a charectiristicall difference betweene the true Church and divers false assemblies but yet the Scripture shewes we must beleeve more then that or else we may perish For the condition Ioh. 3.16 is not to beleeve that he is the Son of God but to beleeve in him which is to receive and apply him Iohn 1.12 4. The fourth thing is the cause of faith By him It is by Christ that wee beleeve in God and that for divers reasons 1. As he is the expiatorie cause of Gods favour to us For did not he satisfie for on● sins we had no reason to beleeve that God should regard us Our faith is in his bloud Rom. 3.15 2. As by his intercession hee covers the weaknesse of our faith and appears before God for us 3. As he is the giver and worker of our faith Eph. 2.8 10. 4. As he is Protector of our faith and preserves it Heb. 12.3 he is called the author and finisher of our faith 5. As he crownes our faith it is he that gives power to every beleever to become the son of God Ioh. 1.12 It is he that gives them eternall life Ioh. 17.2 3. The Use is first for confutation of merit not onely of works but of faith we nei●her could obey the law nor yet beleeve the Gospell of our selves Eph. 2.8 therefore there is no boasting of our selves 2. It should teach us to keepe our faith with all diligence and to continue grounded and established in it seeing it is a treasure Christ hath intrusted us withall 3. Thirdly if wee finde any sicknesse or weaknesse in our faith at any time runne to Jesus Christ for succour he that is the author of it will be the finisher of it also The last thing is the time Doe beleeve It is to be observed that he speaks of faith in the present time which imports divers things 1. That there was a time wherein they did not beleeve 2. That a Christian hath continuall use of his faith the just live by faith Habac. 2.4 1. He cannot goe into Gods presence without it 2. He cannot heare the word without it Heb. 4.2 2 Tim. 3.15 3. He cannot use well his calling but must live by faith Mat. 6. 4. He cannot beare afflictions without faith 1 Pet. 1.7 3. That there is no time wherein a Christian beleeveth not this must be understood thus 1. There is a twofold man the old man and the new man In respect of the new man hee alwaies beleeves for faith is the life of the new man Gal. 2.20 2. That a distinction must be made betweene the act of faith and the habit of it the habit can never be lost the act may cease 3. We must distinguish betweene faith and the Concomitants of faith Actuall joy peace in beleeving may be intermitted but not beliefe it selfe 4. Distinguish betweene faith sick and faith found Faith sometimes in spirituall diseases may have a Lethargie a palsie a swone a traunce c. and so for the present is but not discerned The Use is therefore 1. First for consolation to such as are afflicted under the want of sense of faith it doth not follow thou hast not faith because thou feelest it not because there is no time wherein thou beleevest not Quest. But what should one doe for comfort when the sense of faith is gone Answ. First looke to time past thinke of the times wherein thou didst stand and rejoyce in the grace of God 2. Looke upon the present fruits of faith and by that thou maiest discerne that faith hath roots though they be under ground those fruits are 1. An unfained desire to forsake all sin 2. Griefe because we have not faith as we would have it 3. Love of such as feare God even the meanest of them 4. The hatred of such as by following foolish vanities forsake their owne mercy 5. Griefe for the evill of our best works though never so secret joyned with the abhorring of our selves so as we are confounded for our sins which seeme to us to be as so many abominations Ezech. 36. 6. By the desire of Gods favour above all things 3. Pray to God to help thy unbeliefe and make thee sound in the faith instead of froward complainings that thou hast not faith goe to God and make thy humble moanes unto him and hee will heare thy teares and give thee faith For it is his gift and he will be fought unto Psal. 143. the whole 142.3.7 4. Know that this will be but for a short time Faith will revive and be found unto praise and glory 1 Pet. 1.6 7. Psal 30.6 David said in his haste he was cast out of Gods sight yet hee found that God even then heard the voice of 〈◊〉 cry
to him he is no part of his flocke he is without God in the World and without Christ as the lost sheepe is without the protection and keeping of the shepheard Wicked men have no keeper they are left to the way of their own hearts which is a fearefull curse Esay 53.6 The wicked shall be as a sheep that no man takes up Esay 13.14 2. Because hee hath no certaine pasture The provision for his life for soule and body is altogether uncertaine Hee is like Cain a vagabond upon the earth Hee is here to day he knowes nor where he shall be tomorrow God hath not given him any assurance of the keeping or getting of any thing he hath or desires Hee is like the stray sheep that hath all the world before him but knowes not where to settle Mat. 9.26 3. Because in the midst of all the best possessions of this life they have no peace Esay 57. ult The sound of feare is alwaies in their eares If a stray sheep get into a good pasture yet he is still in feare apt to be frighted with every sound ready to runne away upon every occasion so is it with them that are rich in the world and not ri●h with God 1 Tim. 6.10 4. Because he is shut out from all comfortable society with the godly he enjoyes not the sound fruit of communion with Saints The stray sheep may sort with hogges or wilde beasts but from the sheep it is gone away Evill company is a miserable plague of a mans life to sort with such all a mans da●es from whom he may have a world of vanity and filthinesse but not any thing scarce worthy of the nature of men in an age Every wicked man is an alien a stranger and forainer from the Common-wealth of Israel Ephes. 2.12 5. A sheepe going astray is easily taken by a strange Lord it is driven any whither by anybody it is so silly And such is the fearefull estate of a man living in sinne strange Lords may easily surprize him false teachers may easily seduce him evill company may carry him to any wickednesse a Prince may turne him to any religion a very Atheist or Divell incarnate may easily lead him captive 6. A Sheep is apt to be worried with Dogs or devoured with Wolves or wilde Beasts when there is no Shepheard to tend him So it is with wicked men their soules their bodies their estates are all in danger to bee seized upon by Divels by unjust and unreasonable men especially as any of them are more simple so they are more liable to become a prey to the mighty ones of the earth 7. Men that wander out of the way of understanding shall remaine in the congregation of the dead Ps. 49.15 Pro. 21.16 And therefore he that converts a man from the er●our of his way is said to save a soule from death Iam. 5 ult And this going astray of unregenerate men is the more grievous because they are liable to many aggravations for First they goe astray from the womb they were never yet in the right way Psalm 58.3 Secondly because they wander in every worke they do as was said of Egypt Esay 19.14 All their works are abominable Psal. 14. All things are impure Thirdly because this is the curse of all unregenerate men we are turned every one to his owne way Esay 53.6 Fourthly because they delight to wander place their felicity in their sins and will not be reclaimed or advised Fiftly because they may provoke God so long that he may sweare they shall never enter into his rest Psal. 95.10,11 The third point is the cause of their going astray and that is noted in the originall word They were deceived Now then it is to bee considered distinctly who are the great deceivers of the world that cause millions of ●oules to goe astray First the Divell is the Arch-deceiver he hath beene a lier and a murtherer from the beginning he deceived our first Parents and made them and all their posterity goe astray Iohn 8.44 1 Tim. 2.14 And by him are all wicked men drawne out of the way and led captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.26 Secondly Antichrist is the next great deceiver who by his sorceries made all Nations in the time of the Gospell goe astray Eccles. 18.23 with his divellish doctrine and by wicked sorceries he deceived the Christian world Thirdly a ●●arme of wicked ministers have deceived whole Townes and Countries and made the sheep goe astray even their whole flocks in many places some of them because they take the fleece and never feed the flock Ezech. ●4 2 c. Iohn 10.12 some of them by preaching lies and flattering the people with devices of men and say Peace when there is no peace Ierem. 23.17 19 20 32. Fourthly the world is a mischievous deceiver and it deceiveth by evill example and evill company and evill report raised against the godly and the good way and the inticements of profits and pleasures and vanities of all sorts and honours and the like Fiftly mans owne heart deceiveth him yea the heart of man is deceitfull above all things Ier. 17.19 It will use such carnall reasons pretend such vaine excuses entertaine such deceivable hopes and joyne it selfe to such swarmes of temptations and lusts as it cannot avoid wandring if there were no other deceivers to go withall the way of our own harts is alwaies to go out of the way Sixtly ignorance of the Scripture is a chiefe cause of erring and going astray both in opinion and life Mat. 22.29 Seventhly the love of some particular sin doth utterly undoe many a man that will not be warned of the deceitfulnesse of sin Heb. 3.12 Thus covetousnesse made many a man to erre from the faith 1 Tim. 6.20 Eighthly God himselfe in a fearefull kinde of justice many times not only consents but permits a very spirit of perverinesse and errour to seize upon some men that refused to be guided or kept by God so as they are given over to eternall perdition and destruction by reason of it Fourthly the signes of a lost sheepe follow and they are First he that refuseth reproofe is out of the way Men that cannot abide to be told of their faults are not healed Pro. 10.17 as he is in the way of life that keepeth instruction Secondly he that liveth in any knowne sinne without repentance is a lost sheepe Thirdly he that fouleth with his feet that which the good sheepe should eate or drinke and he that thrusts with the side and pusheth the diseased with his hornes is no good sheepe Ezek. 34.17 19 21. They are so farre from feeding upon the good Word and Ordinances of God that by wicked reproaches they soule it as much as they can and they that if they find a poore Christian that is diseased with some infirmities will push at him to dishearten him utterly from a religious course these are wicked beasts they are no good
concerning the practice of true Christians it shewes That the rules of holy life have beene the same in all ages of the world before the Law and under the Law and now under the Gospel We may see by the carriage of holy men before the Law that they walked by such rules as these and the reason is because the rules of a religious and vertuous life were in the minde of God from all eternity and so given to men from the beginning and cannot change in as much as God is unchangeable in the formes of things And this point may shew us how hard the world is to learne in that these lessons have beene taught from the beginning and yet the most men have not learned them And besides godly Christians should be encouraged to live by rule and to walke circumspectly seeing this is no harder a taske required of them than what hath beene required in all ages Thirdly it is worth the observing who the persons are that give this counsell to strive as well as we can to live out of trouble and to lead a quiet life They were two great Champions that had endured a world of troubles themselves Peter I meane and David and yet we see they presse other men to seeke to live as quietly as is possible and thus did Paul doe also 1 Tim. 2.2 1 Thes. 4.11 Heb. 12.11 Now one maine reason why they doe so is because they themselves did feele by experience how unable they were to beat crosses when they fell upon them It was this Peter that denied his Master upon the very sight as it were of adversaries and it was this David that gave this advice after himselfe had changed his behaviour before A●im●lech as you may see by the title of the Psalme Which should teach us to be thankfull for that publike or private quietnesse any of us doe enjoy and besides it should warne those unruly froward Christians that live not in quiet either at home or abroad to repent and amend their words and works They cannot imagine what singular comfort and contentment they withhold from their owne lives and the lives of others If they did but know how much God abhorr●s a froward Christian they would be more affraid than they are Thus of the generall observations The first part concernes the persons that are exhorted and they are described by two formes of speech the one such as will love life the other such as would see good daies If any man will love life From this forme of speech three things may be observed Doct. 1. That men by nature are prone to the love of life and so prone that the most men will breake all bounds and will love life whatsoever be said to them or done to them This is a point so sensibly felt by the experience of the most that heare it that it needs no proofe If any man aske what the reason should be why there is such an inordinate love of life in the most many things may be answered The first cause of it is the generall corruption of nature in the most men which came in by sin To love it selfe is nature but to love life so pertinaciously is from degeneration and the great abasement of the nature of man that cannot now move it selfe towards the perfection of it selfe for unto the godly the change of life is an alteration that brings perfection Secondly ignorance and unbeliefe is the cause of it If men did know and beleeve those glorious things God speakes of a better life they would loath this present life and long to be in heaven Thirdly the cause in many is that their hearts are ingaged upon such perplexed and intricate projects about profit or pleasure or greatnesse in the world that they are not at leasure to examine the reasons of the love of life the heart of man is usually oppressed with some one or other of these projects Fourthly in all sorts of people there is such an in●●rable inconsideration that no warning from the Word or workes of God no experience of their owne or other mens can force them to a serious and constant meditation of the things concerne their true happinesse Fiftly the love of life ariseth in the most from the Idols of their hearts There is one thing or other that they have set their hearts upon in a vicious manner and this unreasonable love of their particular sins doth hold them downe in bondage to this present life and so cannot be cured of the disease till they repent of their beloved sins And the guiltinesse of their consciences makes them affraid of death and judgement and to embrace this present life upon any conditions And in godly people this inordinate love of life ariseth from the defect of particular repentance for it Thus of the first point Doct. 2. Men have cause to take off their affections and not to be so desperately bent to the love of this present life This is a point very profitable to be urged and most men and women have need of it and therefore I will shew more largely the reasons why wee should not love life or not so inordinately as to be unwilling to leave it upon any termes The first reason may bee taken from the commandement of Christ who gives this charge to all that will bee his Disciples that they must not love life As they must deny themselves in other things so in this particular And be so gives this in charge as he seemes to threaten them with the losse of life if they love it so Luk. 17.33 Ioh. 12.25 The second reason may be taken from the example of the godly that have not loved life Iob detested life Iob● Salomon tels of a multitude of occasions that he had to hate life in his book of Ecclesiastes and a multitude of godly men have shewed the proofe of it in laying down their lives willingly when they have beene cal●●● to it Act. 20.24 Phil. 2.20 Heb. 11.35 37. The third reason may be taken from the consideration of life in it selfe both in the nature of it and in the end of it for the nature of it it is but a winde or a vapour Iames 4. so meane a thing that no man can well tell how to describe it perfectly which is the greater wonder that it should get the love of all the world and yet no body knowes what it is he loves And for the end of it it is not in the power of man to number his owne daies God hath set an appointed time for every mans death and though they love life never so much they cannot hold it beyond that time Iob 7.1 And besides our times are so hid that a man cannot be sure of a moneth a weeke a day an houre and shall our hearts be so bewitched with that which we know not how long we shall enjoy Iob 24.1 and the rather because there are so many wayes for life to goe out at though but
verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
is urged from the example of Christ Heb. 12.3 4. 2 Cor. 4.17 18. Rom. 8.17 That your faith and hope might be in God In these words the eighth point is contained viz. the end of our redemption viz. that our faith and hope might be in God that is that knowing our debts to be paid in Christ and God to be well pleased in him we might for ever relie upon God for present favour and future salvation Faith and hope are not all one Faith lookes upon Christ exhibited and made present in his ordinances Hope lookes upon Christ hereafter more fully to be revealed Faith beleeveth the promises to be true Hope expecteth performance Faith beleeveth eternall life is given us and Hope waiteth when it will be revealed Faith is the mother of Hope and Hope is the nurse of Faith Faith takes notice of present prerogatives and Hope chiefly looks to things to come The doctrines that may be observed from hence are divers Though we doe truely beleeve yet we doe need to be often stirred up to faith and hope still For 1. We beleeve but in part 2. We need faith all our life long 3. We are hard of beleefe in our selves 4. There is nothing the devill more opposeth 5. There is nothing God or Christ more desireth as the coherence shews 6. Nothing more glorifieth our profession and daunteth our adversaries then an unmoveablenesse of hope 7. Nothing more provides for us A Christian could live by his faith if he had nothing else The Vses also are divers for therefore 1. We should stir up one another and be examples one to another in beleeving and receive the exhortation one from another 2. Especially every one of us should be carefull to increase in faith and provide to beleeve in God at all times Quest. But what must we doe that we may doe so Answ. 1. Desire the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2.2 2. Be frequent in the use of the Sacraments 3. Pray to God to increase thy faith Luke 17.5 4. Practice holinesse and be diligent about those graces mentioned 2 Pet. 1.10 in the coherence Quest. But how can we beleeve still For 1. We have not alwaies meanes to accomplish the good we desire Answ. Doe as Abraham did Rom. 4.10 beleeve the promise above hope Quest. 2. God himselfe sometimes fights against us Answ. Say with Iob Though he kill me yet will I trust in him Iob 1.3 Quest. 3. But our crosses are desperate Answ. Yet say as David did Psal. 23.4 Though I walke in the shadow of death yet c. Quest. 4. But we have sinned Answ. Christ hath prayed that thy faith might not faile Luke 22.32 Quest. 5. But our faith is so weake we feare we cannot beleeve still Answ. There are comforts for that in these places Esay 42.3 2 Cor. 12.9 and God hath received the weake in faith Rom. 14.1 3. Quest. 6. But I have so many hinderances and have so many things to passe through Sol. Yet be perswaded as Rom. 8.38 and say with Paul Through Christ I can doe all things Phil. 4.13 3. All this adoe about faith and hope should make us carefull to informe our selves of the things by which faith is assaulted that when such things befall us we may be armed against them Now besides such things by which faith is assaulted intimated before there are many things without us to omit our owne doubts and Sathans tentations within us that have assaulted and tryed faith 1. False doctrines 2. Contentions in the Teachers of the Church 3. Treacherie of brethren 4. Prosperity of the wicked and impu●ity of wickednesse 5. The small number of beleevers 6. The deformity and oppression of the Church 7. The falling away of many from the faith 8. The delay of Gods promises 9. The tokens of Gods wrath 10. The scoffes of mockers 4. Lastly hence wee may gather a reproofe to our selves for our marvellous neglect in faith and hope how might the Lord justly have left us for ever as a people without Christ and without hope in the world There is one faith and hope in all Gods servants Your faith Eph. 4.5 The use is therefore to love one another seeing we have all one faith one I say in respect of the Author meanes object and end 2. It should comfort poore Christians whatsoever difference God hath put otherwise yet they have the same faith that Abraham David the Martyrs or any had Here is implyed that all faith and hope in other things besides God is vaine Hope in the wedge of gold is vaine The Hypocrites hope in credit is vaine Trust in the arme of flesh is vaine c. And the truth is a Christian is never perfectly well till he can place his faith and hope onely in God It is good for him sometimes to be stripped of all other things that he may put his confidence in God Verse 22 Seeing you have purified your soules in obeying the truth through the Spirit to the unfained love of the brethren so that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently THE fourth reason to inforce the exhortation in the 13. verse is contained in these words and is taken from that relation and respect wee beare unto the godly it is in effect this By repentance and holinesse we are all made brethren and in repentance and reformation of our lives one main thing we aime at is the advancement of our happinesse and holinesse in the love of the brethren whom we prefer before all people in the world and resolve to rest in the contentment of their communion and therefore wee ought so to resist the impediments within us or without us and to order our lives with such holy sobriety and so to stir up our hearts in the hope of the happinesse to come that we may in all purity of nature and life and earnestnesse of affections cleae unto them in this world as the onely people we shall live withall in the world to come There are two things in this verse 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. and an exhortation by way of Use. The proposition is this Ye have purified your soules in obeying the truth by the spirit unto unsained love of the brethren or brotherly love The Use is therefore see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently The proposition properly and in it selfe concerns sanctification which is here described in five things 1. The nature of it imported in that metaphoricall tearme purified 2. The subject of it their soules 3. The forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it which is twofold 1. The principall the Spirit of God 2 The cause in some respect is themselves ye have purified 5. The end is brotherly love amplified by the speciall property of it viz. unfained Before I enter upon the particulars in generall and for the coherence divers things may be noted The Coherence is double 1. both with
righteous Potiphars house is blessed for Ioseph so Labans house for Iacob 2. Thou maist learne their waies 3. Thou maist come to acquaintance with the Father by living amongst the children thou maist get to know God by living amongst the godly Quest. But what if they doe neglect the love of the godly Answ. Thereby they shall discover their owne misery as these places shew 1 ●oh 2.11 13 14 15. 4.8.10 Quest. But what should be the cause multitudes of people have no more mind of society and affectionate conversation with the godly Answ. There are divers causes of it 1. Worldlinesse 2. A naturall hatred of goodnesse as in Cain● 1 Ioh. 3.13 3. A love of darknesse and shunning of the light because their deeds are evill Ioh. 3.21 very prophanesse and love of sin Men will not forsake their corruptions and therefore seeke such company as they may nourish their corruptions in 4. Ignorance of their priviledges both in earth and heaven For if those were knowne they would appeare the onely excellent ones 2. The second Use is for instruction It should teach and perswade with all that 〈◊〉 God to give him his end he aimes at and to shew our love to them by society with them by defending them and by well-doing to the uttermost of our power 3. It is comfortable in divers respects For 1. This very duty of loving the godly doth much commend us to God It is a signe it is the maine thing Gods aime is at and it affords us many benefits For it shewes 1. We are translated from death to life 1 Ioh. 3.14 2. Hereby we know 1. That we are of the truth 1 Ioh. 3.19 2. That we are borne of God 1 Ioh. 4. 3. That God dwelleth in us 1 Ioh. 4.11 3. All we doe shall be fully rewarded Mat. 11.41 4. And it may give us boldnesse in the day of judgement 1 Ioh. 4.17 2. It may comfort all the godly in this that God provided that every body should love them and encourage them He gives a charge to that end and therefore it implyes that he himselfe will love them with all tendernesse and constancy of love Vnfained Our love must be without hypocrisie Rom. 12.10 1 Ioh 3.18 The Use is therefore for instruction to teach us to avoid all dissimulation and faining Quest. How may I know whether my love be unfained Answ. Divers wayes 1. If I be as willing to doe them good as to proffer it 1 Ioh. 3.18 or seem to be willing 2. If we seeke not our owne things Phil. 2.3 but can love them against profit credit c. 3. If we love all as well as some the meanest as well as the greatest all Saints Eph. 1.15 4. If I can goe to God for them in secret 5. If I can love them constantly 6. If I can reprove as well as flatter or praise 7. If I can propose them as patterns to follow 8. If my sorting with them make me more holy and humble 9. In generall If I doe to them as I would be done by 2. It serves for reproofe of all faining dissimulation especially in our cariage towards the godly by lying levity flattery complementing hypocrisie despight envy malice scornes censure and back-bitings 3. ● astly cannot God abide faining amongst men how much more doth he abhor it when we counter●et with him as hypocrisie is hatefull any where so much more in Gods service for hypocrites are re●koned as a kind of sinners shall never escape Mat. 25. Hitherto of the Proposition The Exhortation or Use folowes in the last word See that ye love one another with a pure heart ferv●ntly This contains the Apostles charge for the performance of brotherly love where note 1. the matter of the charge see that ye love one another 2. the manner how it is to be done with a pure heart and fervently See that c. This word see to it hath two things in it the one expressed the other implyed 1. That which is exprest is the necessity of brotherly love it is a thing must be looked unto 2. That which is implyed is the difficulty of it the●● be many impediments if we looke not to it For the first it is not arbitrary whether we will carry our selves lovingly and brotherly and shew it by the fruits of love it is not any speciall goodnesse or curtesie in us more than God calls for For it is strictly injoyned and we must see to it It is a speciall Commandement that God and Christ hath given us Ioh. 13. 1 Ioh. 4.21 which I observe for two Uses 1. First it should much excite us to strive and labour in the workes of love seeing God hath given a speciall charge about them 1. A servant that hath many things to doe if he be specially charged to looke to one thing is used in that one to shew a singular diligence sure it is God will take well what we doe in this duty faithfully and contrariwise will judge us for it if we be negligent herein Secondly this would be noted to restraine that beholdingnesse which many stand too much upon For as it is said in the Proverbs The borrower is servant to the lender so it falleth out often in other cases that men looke for extraordinary observance and subjection of those to whom they have shewed their love by any workes of it whereas they should remember that they have done but their duty as being specially urged by Gods precept hereunto Now for the second observation This word see to it imports that if men do not looke to it there will be many impediments to hinder them from this brotherly love especially from the purity and servency of it For either Ignorance will blinde them or Envy will corrupt them or Pride and inequality of place and gifts will swell them or In●●rmities will dull them or Forgetfulnesse will disappoint them or Objections and excuses will deceive them or Trespasses will alienate them or the scornes of the world will sunder them Note this caveat given by the Apostle should quicken us to be sure we looke about us that the Devill doe not be witch us and by his methods in any of those eight waies or any other hinder us from the comfort reward of wel-doing in obeying God in this especial charge Thus of the matter to which he exhorts The manner followes 1. With pure hearts 2. Fervently With pure hearts We must love one another with pure hearts The heart is in Scripture accounted pure not onely when it is void of all corruption but when it is upright and sincere and this the puritie of the heart respecteth either God or man In respect of God there be foure things which make the heart pure in Gods acceptation through the intercession of Christ. 1. The first is Faith 2. The second is the desire of purity 3. The third is the battaile against inward sinnes 4. And the fourth is
a spirit without guile a heart without hypocrisie But of this puritie he intreats not here The purity of heart that concernes men hath three things in it or there are three things required in our affections towards others whom we ought to love and with whom we converse in which we should shew the purity of our hearts 1. The first is the respect of holinesse In our love one to another wee should chiefly aime at holinesse and the furtherance one of another in the best things Our fellowship should be in the Gospell Phil. 1.5 and we should exhort one another to good works Heb. 10.25 we should cleave to that which is good and abhorre evill Rom. 12.10 2. The second is the respect of chastity we should take heed of worldly lusts and all impurity of heart or life that way we must mortifie inordinate affections and the evill concupiscence Col. 3.5 and avoid all those works of darknesse such as are chambring and wantonnesse c. Rom. 13.13 avoiding both the matter and appearance of evill 1 Thes. 5.22 1 Pet. 2.12 3. The third is the respect of truth and plainnesse of heart the heart is pure when it is without dissembling so we must love one another indeed as well as in shew 1 Iohn 3.18 and for right ends For Gods glory and the grace of God in them and for their good and not serve our owne turnes onely We may know that our hearts and affections are pure 1. If wee rejoyce not in iniquity but in the truth 1 Cor. 13. 2. If we make conscience of lesser sins and the very appearance of evill to avoid them 3. If wee love purity in others and admire commend and defend it in them 4. If daily we seeke a pure heart of God in secret judging our selves for what drosse wee finde in our natures 5. If we seeke not our owne things Phil. 2.4 6. If we cannot beare sinne in any 7. If our conversing with them make us grow more in holinesse and grace 1 Thes. 3.12 13. c. And therefore we should both try our selves and strive daily more and more after this uprightnesse and purity of our hearts that God requires of us and to this end we should 1. Pray daily to God to create cleane hearts in us 2. We should avoid society with impure persons 3. We should take heed of idlenes and fruitlesse mispending of the time For the heart gathers impurity with very emptinesse 4. We should often think of that rule Doe as thou wouldest have others doe to thee 5. Converse much with the pure For with the pure thou wilt be pure and with the froward thou wilt learne frowardnesse 6. Acknowledge your sins one to another This wonderfully fenceth the heart against impurity in conversation and excites a pure love one to another with much honor and delight This greatly convinceth and reproveth such as have taken upon them a profession of love to others but it is for corrupt ends their hearts are not pure nor are they stirred up with desire after the godly further then lust or their owne carnall ends give hope to their projects Fervently God in the second place requires a fervent love hee stands much upon it and therefore he requires else-where that above all things we should put on ferv●●● love God is not contented with it that we doe not hate one another but we must love one another nor is he contented with a cold love but would have it fervent a burning ardent inflamed affection Quest. But how may the ferventnesse of our love be discerned if it be aright Answ. If thy love be a fervent love 1. Thou dost account it the greatest felicity on earth to enjoy Gods favour and the delightfull fellowship of the Saints Psal 16. ● 2. Thou mayest discerne it by the longings and inf●amed desires after the godly such as were in Paul 3. Thou canst cover a multitude of sinnes thou levest as God loves 1 Pet 4.8 4. It is diligent thou shewest it by the paines and labour of love 5. It is speedy it seekes no delaies it fa●●h not goe and come againe to ●●●row 6. Thou dost greatly lament thy absence from the godly as a bitter crosse 7. Thou dost as Paul did in some measure thou dost daily and heartily pray for them and give thanks without 〈◊〉 as he shews in the most of his Epist●es standing before God often the heart doth take fire from thence which war●es the heart afterwards Quest. What is the cause this fervent love is so rarely found amongst men Answ. There are divers causes in divers sorts of men As 1. Unregeneracy Wee must know that no man can love his brother with this love but he that is borne of God 1 Ioh. 4.7 without repentance and the true love of God this love is never had 2. Prejudice in others The names of the godly are so buried under the disgrace of the world that this keeps off many from declaring their love to them though sometimes they have motions of good affections 3. The love of wicked persons 4. In others the cause is hatred of the good malice like Cain 1 Ioh. 3. 11. they can love any but the Saints 5. Security in prosperity Many when they be sick acknowledge the way of God and send for the Ministers and good people but when they are well they start back like a bow 6. Conceitednesse and a high opinion of themselves 7. Neglect of society with the godly 8. Worldlinesse 9. Suspitiousnesse Quest. But what must be done that wee might be abundant in love one towards another and that it might be more generall in the places where wee live Answ. First let the wicked turne from his wickednesse wee may not returne to them they must returne to us what peace or love while their whoredomes drunkennesse c. testifie to their faces Wee may love them with a generall love as Gods creatures but with a fervent love we may not nor may we converse freely with them as multitudes of places of Scripture shew Secondly to nourish affection amongst the godly wee must remember these rules 1. Remember much and often Gods love to us in Christ 1 Ioh. 4.9 10 11. Eph. 5.1 2. 2. Thinke much of the commandment of God and his acceptation Eph. 5.1 2. 3. Meditate often of our dwelling together in heaven Iam. 2.5 1 Pet. 4.8 else pu●blind 2 Pet. 1.7 4. Converse much together have fellowship in the Gospell 5. Consider the promises made hereunto Eph. 4.15 16. 2 Pet. 1.9 10 11. Phil. 2.1 Esay 19. Verse 23. Being borne anew not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God which liveth and endureth for ever IN these words the Apostle intreats of the immortality of the soule of man Now there is a double immortality of the soule For sometimes immortality signifieth an everlasting continuance of man without ending dying or ceasing to be and so the soules of the wicked
possible obedience of heart and life Psal. 2.11 Sixthly wee should follow his Colours and take his pa●t and contend for the truth against all the world and in particular against Antichrist that man of sinne Revel 17.14 Seventhly We should imitate the praises and vertues of this chosen One especially in two things to weet humility and constancy as the Prophet Esay sheweth 42.2 3 4. Lastly And specially this Chosen or rather this knowledge of this Chosen of God should teach us to relie upon Christ without wavering with all trust and confidence for our reconciliation with God for the obtaining of knowledge comfort deliverance preservation yea and salvation too for this is he whom God hath given for a covenant to all people and his soule delights in him And therefore also wee may runne boldly to the Throne of grace and put up our petitions by Christ. For wee are here assured that God will denie him nothing as these places evidently shew Psal. 42.6 7 8 16. Psal. 49.6 8 9 10 11 12. Math. 12.17 to 22. But then we must looke to it that wee observe the seasons and opportunity of grace Esay 49.8 2 Cor. 6. 2. Let us therefore embrace while God is to be found and offers us Christ for wee may seeke when God will not be found as Es●● sought the blessing when it was too late Heb. 12.15 And further this may serve for singular terrour to all unbeleevers that will not have Christ to rule over them He is elected already of God and therefore will mightily pursue all the enemies of God and the Church and all those that disobey him whom God hath chosen hee will pursue them both with the terrours of his Word his mouth being made like a sharpe sword and with the plagues of his hand being made like a polished shaft Esay 49. ● He will appeare to wicked men in the day of wrath as a mighty man and as a man of warre though to his owne hee be as a Lamb to them hee will be as a Giant they shall not be able to resist and though hee lift not up his voice in the streets of his people yet hee will set upon them with roaring and singular terrour even with all the signes of furious displeasure and though for a time hee may seeme to put up the contempt of men that disallow him yet at the length hee will not refraine and will destroy at once c. Esay 42.13 14 15. Besides This doctrine of Christs chosen or of Gods choice should notably check that unbeliefe and fearefulnesse that is too often found even in 〈◊〉 in the deare servants of God When God hath published his election of Christ for the service of our redemption why doth some say The Lord hath forsaken and his Lord hath forgotten him Can God forget his people or will hee ever denie his Chosen Shall not Christ be regarded in our behalfe who is the person whom his soule loveth Esay 49.8 c. 13 14 15 16. Precious First in respect of his nature hee is the choicest 〈◊〉 in heaven and earth never such a man all the creatures in heaven and in earth are inferiour to him Secondly In respect of his gifts he is qualified with all the treasures of wisdome and grace above all his fellowes Col. 2.3 Psal. 45. Thirdly In respect of his works never creature did works of such price so usefull so exquisite so transcendent Fourthly In respect of his sufferings he paid such a price to God in the ransom of man as all the world besides could not raise or any way make Fiftly In respect of effects he gives the most precious things no treasures like those may be had from him his very promises are precious 2 Pet. 1.4 This may serve first to informe us in divers things as First Concerning that matchlesse love of God to us that gave us his Son who is so precious Rom. 8.34 Secondly Concerning the horrible sinne of Iudas and the high Priests that valewed him but at thirty pieces Thirdly Concerning the most miserable condition of all prophane people and persons even whole multitudes of people that so neglect Christ that can with Esau sell him for trifles pleasures or profits even as meane sometimes as a messe of pottage c. The more glorious Christ is the more vile is their sinne of neglect or contempt of Christ. Woe to them that disallow him then Even to all those sorts of men before mentioned ● Christ will not be a foundation stone to support them nor a precious stone to enrich them but as the upper and nether milstone to grinde them to pieces or as a rock falling upon them Quest. But what should be the reason that Christ is in no more request amongst men Answer First One cause is mans ignorance both of their owne misery out of Christ as also of the glory of Christ in himselfe and of the priviledges man might attaine by him and of the singular glory to come Secondly Another cause is unbeliefe Men have a secret kind of Atheisme in them and doe not beleeve the report of the servants of Christ out of the Word Esay 53.1 3. Thirdly Another cause is that the most men looke upon the out-side of the Kingdome of Christ and of the estate of Christians which because they finde it covered with afflictions and seated in a low condition without outward splendour they therefore contemne it Our life is hid with Christ in God Colos. 3.3 Fourthly But the maine reason is because men doe falsly esteeme of other things they set so high a price upon their pleasures profits lusts credits honours hopes c. that Christ is not remembered nor valued unlesse it be at Iudas his rate and yet many will not valew him at so much as thirty pence but they will make shipwrack of a good conscience even for a peny I meane for extreame small gaine in buying and selling and such like dealing And thus much of the third thing we may be informed of The last is concerning the wealthy estate of all true Christians How rich are they that possesse this Mine of treasure who have his spirit graces righteousnesse ordinances and glory And as it may thus informe us so it should ●each us Vse 2. First To account of Christ as most precious to esteeme of him as ever precious in our eyes and shew it 1. By seeking to get Christ above all gettings 2. By accounting all things but as dust and dung in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Iesus Christ Phil. 3.8 3. By selling all to buy this precious stone Math. 13. forsaking father and mother house and land for Christs sake and the Gospels 4. By keeping our communion with Christ with all carefulnesse 5. By avoiding all the waies by which Christ is disallowed and disesteemed 6. By longing for and loving his appearing 2 Tim. 4. hasting to it and looking for his comming 2 Pet. 3. Secondly to consecrate our selves and
all these clouds and in the very dunghill of his unbeliefe and sinfulnesse can find out his owne part of faith In plaine tearmes there is no time after conversion but if a Christian were throughly sisted and put to it he would be found resolved in that point to rest upon the covenant of grace for all happinesse by Christ alone I say at all times in that part of him that is regenerate Christ can die in no man and if faith could die then should Christ also die in us seeing he liveth in us by faith A man may be without faith in the judgement of the world in his own judgement but never is without faith in the judgement of God A man may want this or that faith but not faith simply as that faith Luke 18. to rely upon God without failing and to call upon him with continuall perseverance as resolved that God will help us in that particular It is true If the Sonne of man come to search amongst men he shall scarcely finde that faith upon earth but yet a true faith in the generall he will find in the breast of every godly man and woman Peters faith did not faile when he denied his Master For Christ had prayed that his faith should not faile and was heard in that he prayed Shall not be confounded The Prophet Isaiah hath it thus He that beleeveth shall not make haste and it may be understood either as a precept Let him not make haste or as a promise He shall not make haste Men make haste two waies either in their behaviour when they runne headlong upon the duties they are to doe or when through impatience they will not tarry Gods leasure for their helpe and deliverance but fall to use unlawfull means and take that which comes next them without consideration of the lawfulnesse of it Now the beleever must avoid both these and God will in some measure sanctifie and guide the beleever thereunto The Apostle Paul Rom. 9.33 10.11 And the Apostle Peter in this place following the Greeke translation reade it He that beleeveth shall not be ashamed as in the Romans or confounded as here They swarve not from the meaning of the Prophet For by this tearme is avouched That the godly that beleeve shall never have cause to repent themselves or to fly from God to use ill meanes The holy Ghost then in this place is pleased to assure the beleever that he shall not be confounded To be confounded signifies sometimes to be reproached so Psal. 14.6 The wicked are said to confound the counsell of the godly that is they reproached it Sometimes it signifies to be daunted or dismayed Sometimes to be disappointed or broken in their purposes as Esay 19.9 10. Sometimes to be extreamly ashamed and so it is rendred Rom. 10.11 Sometimes to be put to a Non pl●● as Acts 9.22 Sometimes to be driven into amazement or wonder Acts 2.6 Sometimes to be brought into such a straite as one hath neither hope nor help 2 Cor. 4.8 9. Lastly it signifieth to perish utterly or to be undone or damned for ever and so confusion shall come to all that hate Sion or serve graven Images It is true that sometimes to be confounded is taken in the good sense and signifies either the affection of wonder as before Acts 2.6 or else a spirituall grace in the heart of a Christian by which his soule mourns and is abashed and ashamed with him And so there may be three reasons or rather causes assigned wherein the godly ought to be confounded As first in repentance for their sins of which these places intreat Ezech. 36.32 Ier. 31.19 Ezech. 16 61. and for this cause rebellious offenders must be noted their company shunned that they may be confounded in themselves for their sins 2 Thes. 3.14 and the Lord complaines that the people were not ashamed for their sins Ier. 6.15 Secondly when God or Religion or the godly are reproached and disgraced thus Psal. 44.15 16. Ier. 51.51 Thirdly the people that professe the truth doe erre through indiscretion or give offence or live in any grievous evill Esay 29.22 23. Ezra 9.6 7. Now because the confusion here mentioned is a misery God will turne away from the beleever therefore I will explaine that point and shew how many wayes God keeps the beleever from being confounded They shall not be confounded This God will make good unto them both in this life and in the day of Judgement In this life they shall not be confounded neither in respect of their outward estate nor in respect of their spirituall estate For their outward estate whether we respect their condition and credit or the meanes of their preservation For their credit God will doe one of these two things For either God will make them exceeding glorious and make them high in praises as Esay 49.2 3. or ●● the least though they may passe through evill reports yet they shall not be utterly ashamed God will give them good report amongst the godly will greatly esteem them himselfe 2 Cor. 6.8 Heb. 11.2 Faith shall obtaine a good report And for the meanes of their preservation Either first God will save them from the temptations that fell on the world so as in the evill time they shall be provided for and preserved from distresse as Psal. 37.19 or else secondly God will not disappoint their trust but come to their succour and deliver them as Psal. 22.6 and 25.3 and Rom. 5.3 or else thirdly if God doe defer for a time hee will in the meane time refresh their hearts and lighten their faces with the comfort of his favour and presence as Psal. 34.6 Or else fourthly if the Lord let the affliction yet continue he will give thē strength to beare it and patience and magnani●●ity so as it shall be no great burthen to them as it is shewed of Christ Esa. 50.6 7. so of Paul Phil. 1.20 2 Tim. 1.12 Or else fiftly though they may be many wayes distressed yet they shall never be forsaken or perplexed so as to have cause to despaire They shall not be destroyed 2 Cor. 4.9 In all these senses they shall not be confounded in respect of their outward estate And for their spirituall estate they shall not be confounded and this may be shewed in divers things First in respect of illumination they shall not abide in darknesse Iohn 12.46 Secondly in respect of justification their sins are not imputed to them and the Lord so surely forgives the beleever that the conscience shal be satisfied with that propitiation is made in the bloud of Christ for it is not ashamed of the former evill waies because it beleeveth that they enjoy Gods pardon as if they had never been Zeph. 3.11 Thirdly in respect of Adoption because by beleeving they are made the sons of God so need not be ashamed at any time of their condition Ioh. 1.12 Fourthly in respect of accesse
purpose to exalt the praise of the gifts of God in our calling and partly to shew that we enter upon the possession of the former prerogatives the most of them when wee are called by the grace of Jesus Christ and partly thereby guiding us to the knowledge of that worke of God which may assure us of our interest in the former prerogative All which shewes that wee have great reason seriously to study the doctrine of our calling by Jesus Christ. Calling is either personall or naturall or spirituall or supernaturall The personall calling is to some office the naturall to the exercise of some morall vertue the spirituall or supernaturall is to Christ calling us to seeke happinesse and blessednesse in him This is here meant And so the calling of a Christian is to be reckoned among the gifts or endowments God bestowes upon his people which that we may distinctly understand according to the order of them there are seven gifts of God First vocation by which he calls men out of the world into the Church Secondly justification by which he forgives the Called their sinnes and clothes them with the rich Robe of Christs righteousnesse Thirdly sanctification by which he qualifies their nature with all heavenly gifts necessary for their salvation Fourthly adoption by which he acknowledgeth and receiveth them for his sonnes and heires Fifthly Christian liberty by which hee frees them from all things that might hold them in bondage or in a servile condition as from the rigour and curse of the Law from the dominion of sinne from the burden of Moses ceremonies and humane traditions and from those servile feares in Gods service bred by the spirit of bondage Sixthly consolation by which hee keepes them in this happy condition which he performeth three wayes First by defending them against all adversaries Secondly by delivering them out of their many troubles in their militant estate Thirdly by bestowing upon them the gifts of perseverance to the end and for ever Seventhly temporall blessings by which hee furnisheth them for this present life The sixe first of these are gifts principall the last is but accessary The three first are the chiefe gifts and the three next are such as arise out of the first Now this worke of calling men into the Church is either externall or internall By the externall men are called into the visible Church by the internall men are called into the invisible Church And that we may conceive of this distinctly in respect of calling all men may bee cast into foure companies First some are not called at all any way by the Gospell as many of the Pagans c. Secondly some are called onely externally as those in Matth. 20. Many called but few chosen Thirdly some are called internally onely as the thiefe on the Crosse. Fourthly some are called both internally and externally so the Elect of God for the most part and ordinarily It is the last sort of men that are understood here Now that this worke of God calling us may in the order of working bee more cleerly understood we may conceive it thus The first cause is Gods love of men his kindnesse and love to men as the Apostle calls it Tit. 3.4 First First that God conceives in himselfe a compassionate love of man lying in his extreame naturall distresse Secondly Christ then as Mediator layes the ground of this calling and so be doth two wayes First by removing what might hinder the worke as the displeasure of God and the curse of the Law which he did by being made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.22 Secondly by purchasing and bringing to light immortality and also the people that should possesse it which purchase hee made with his owne blood Act. 20.28 2 Tim. 1.9 10. Thirdly then God sends the Word of reconciliation furnishing men with gifts to preach the Gospel and souseth their ministery of reconciliation as the onely ordinary meanes of calling men 2 Cor. 5.18,19 Rom. 10.14.17 Fourthly the Spirit of Christ doth inwardly perswade the hearts of men to receive the Word and so to be reconciled to God Use. The use of this doctrine of our Christian calling may serve both for instruction and for terror for instruction and so it may teach First unregenerate men in the Church as ever they would be saved to awake to the care of their calling Eph. 5.14 to be entreated while they have the ministry of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.20 and to open when Christ knockes Rev. 3.21 taking heed they be not as the horse or mule Psal. 32.9 And that they may prosper in this worke of their calling they must looke to two things First that they be not hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin Heb. 3.13 Secondly that they despise not prophesying but account the feet of them that bring the glad tidings to be beautifull Esa. 52.9 There are foure reasons assigned by the Apostle H●b 3. c. why men should be ruled when Christ grants them the meanes First because it is to day they know not how long they shall have the meanes Heb. 3.7 c. Secondly because of all deceits it is most miserable to bee deceived of the things offered us in the Gospell vers 13. Thirdly because God is extreamly grieved and provoked by our neglects herein vers 16. Fourthly because else we shall faile of the promise of entring into his rest Heb. 4.1 2. Secondly godly men should hence learne divers things First to be diligent above all things to make their calling sure Now there be divers signes of a true effectuall calling such as these As First the opening of the heart to receive the Word of God and to attend the things which are spoken Act. 16.14 whereby they are enabled to heare as the learned Esa. 51.6 Secondly the wearinesse of heart under the burthen of sinne Mat. 11.29 and 9.13 Thirdly the answer of the heart to the voice of Christ consenting to obey and to enter into covenant with God Esa. 1.18 19. Fourthly the taking away of the detestable things and their abominations from them Ezek. 11.17 21. Col. 2.11 Fifthly the knitting of the heart to the godly Ezek. 11. ●8 Sixthly the removing of the stony heart and the planting of the heart of flesh Ez●k 11.19 Seventhly the vertues of Christ as in the coherence in this text Eightly in generall the truth of our calling appeares by the demonstration of the spirit and power The holy Ghost quickning the heart to new obedience called the manifestation of the spirit 2. Cor. 2.4 5. Eph. 2.5 Secondly it should teach them to strive to walke worthy their calling for the manifestation of the spirit was given to profit withall and we are therefore called that we might be to the praise of his rich grace Now that we may walke in some measure as becomes this great gift of God First we should be humble and not wise in our owne conceit though hardnesse lye yet upon the heart
For if in all these senses it be a marvellous light then First we should be marvellously affected with it and strive to be exceeding thankfull for it How have wee deserved to be cast againe into darknesse for our extream unthankfulnesse How have we given God cause to take away the Candlesticke from us Let us therefore strive after thankfulnesse and admiration and if the Lord doe worke it in us let us take heed wee lose not our first love Secondly we should arme our selves for the defence of the light we should preserve it as a singular treasure both in our hearts and in our Churches wee should with the more resolution resist the works of darknesse standing alwaies upon our guard Rom. 13.12 Thirdly we should strive after all the degrees of the assurance of faith Fourthly we should strive to make our light shine the more excellently both for the measure of good workes Malac. 5.16 and for the strict and precise respect of the exact doing of good duties Now we have the light so cleerly shining wee may doe every thing more exactly than if it were darke Ephes. 5.15 Our gifts must not be hid The light must not be put under a bushell Matth. 5.15 Phil. 2.15 Wee should now avoid not onely greater faults and falls but lesser stumblings 1 Ioh. 2.10 11. We should do all things to the life and power of them and shew discretion aswell as knowledge This doctrine also doth imply the grievous misery of wicked men for if it bee marvellous light into which the godly are called there is a marvellous darknesse in which wicked men live The whole creation of God had beene but a confused heape if God had not set in it the light of the Sunne such a confused Chaos is the world of men if the Gospel shine not into their hearts Finally this should much comfort the godly they are called into marvellous light in all the senses before named which should much enflame their hearts and they should rebuke their owne hearts for not valuing so rich treasure We may from hence take occasion to note how little wee should trust to the judgement of flesh and blood in valuing spirituall things when the very godly themselves doe not so much esteeme of them as they should Whatsoever we thinke yet in Gods account the light of the Gospel the light of faith and knowledge the light of Gods countenance c. is marvellous light But if the light of the godly be marvellous in this world what shall it be in the world to come when God and the Lambe shall be their immediate light Here God lights us by the meanes there God himselfe will bee our everlasting light Here our light may bee darkened with clouds of affliction and temptation there shall be an eternall light without all darknesse Here wee have no light but what is infused into us there we shall our selves shine as the Sunne in the firmament Hitherto of the description in Tropicall termes Now it followes in plaine words VERS 10. Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in times past were not under mercy but now have obtained mercy THe Apostle takes the words of this verse out of the Prophet Hosea chap. 1.11 where the Lord promiseth that the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea and in the place where was it said unto them Ye are not my people it shall be said unto them Ye are my people Now the Apostle applies that sentence to the people to whom he wrote shewing that it was accomplished in them Quest. The question is of whom the Prophet and Apostle spake Ans. Some say of the Israelites in the letter both because the same chapter shewes that they were cast off and called Loammi not Gods people as also because the Apostle is thought to write onely to the Jewes But the Apostle Paul Ro. 9.24 25 26. apparently expounds it of the Gentiles chiefly and therefore wee must rest in his sense which by the way shewes that this Epistle was written to the Elect amongst the Gentiles as they were strangers and pilgrims in the world and not to the provinciall Jewes onely The Apostle then to the singular comfort of Christians in those times shewes that now were the Prophesies accomplished concerning the calling of the Gentiles which was before a great mystery hidden from ages and generations Col. 1.26 admired by Angels Eph. 3.10 1 Pet. 1.12 Before I open the words of this verse in particular some use would be made of this great worke of calling the Gentiles and so from the consideration of their estate both before and after calling And first for the meditation of the estate of the world or the Nations of the world before Christ preached unto them note First the horrible infectiousnesse of sinne whole worlds of people are poysoned with it Secondly the dreadfull horrour of Gods Justice against sinne which as we may see plainly in the sufferings of Christ so also very lively in the desertion and forsaking of the Gentiles so many millions of men perishing without pardon or pity and therefore it was never safe to follow a multitude in evill nor to pleade the practice of fathers or forefathers with such like And for the meditation of their calling againe in Christ by the Gospel wee may gather matter First of information and so first that God is not tied to any place If Israel after the flesh will not serve him hee will raise up children unto Abraham from among the Gentiles Mat. 21.43 Secondly that the Church of Christ is now Catholicke of all Nations and therefore Christs Kingdome is the largest Kingdome in the world and the glory of it must not be restrained to Rome or any one place Secondly of consolation for here we may observe First the infallibility of Gods promises these promises concerne the calling of the Gentiles as being dead and were most unlikely and yet wee see them fulfilled which should teach us to trust upon God Secondly the wisdome and power of God working light out of darknesse The rebellion of the Jewes is so farre from laying Sion waste or dissolving Religion that it is an occasion of a greater worke of God among the Gentiles yea when profanenesse seemes to over-grow all and the whole world seemes to live in wickednesse yet wee know not what times may come for the glory of Religion among Jewes and Gentiles Thirdly Gods wonderfull love to his Elect hee will gather them from all the foure windes of heaven Though they be few in number in comparison and live dispersed in every Country yet God the great Husbandman will not want meanes to fetch them home into his garner A husbandman that had all his field growne over with weeds save here and there one graine of corne on a land would never be at the paines of gathering and separating yet God will Fourthly the great encouragement that
visible mortall and immortall passible and impassible passible on earth and impassible in heaven But we have learned from the Prophets and Apostles to beleeve three Persons and so to acknowledge that the second Person suffered onely and that in his humane nature Secondly we may hence learne that Christ was subject to the Law after a peculiar manner so as no other man was subject for he did not onely fulfill the Law by a most perfect obedience but he suffered the malediction and curse of the Law also Some men are subject to the malediction of the Law onely and so are all the wicked reprobates that obey it not Some men are subject to the Commandements of the Law and not to the malediction and so our first parents were while they continued in their innocency because God did not require them to suffer so long as they obeyed the Law and so all godly men in Christ are under the Law in respect of obedience but not in respect of malediction only Christ is subject to the malediction and obedience of the Law as our surety Thirdly hence we learne a plain demonstration of the truth of the humane nature of Christ He had not a fantasticall body but a true body because he did verily suffer in the flesh as followes afterwards Fourthly hence we may be informed of the excessively vile disposition of the world in that it is so set on wickednesse that the very Saviour of the world if he come into the world shall suffer from the world Fiftly we may hence learne that Christ suffered willingly and of his own accord For in that he that is God suffered it shewes he had power to preserve himselfe so as all the world could not have forced him to suffer and therefore we have cause so much the more to admire his love to us that suffered for our sakes as the next point will shew Sixtly we may hence learne to know how abominable sinne is that makes the Son of God suffer miserable things if he become a surety for sinne Seventhly we may hence learne to know the inevitable destruction and fearfull perdition of impenitent sinners For if God spared not his owne Sonne that was but a suretie for sinne and did none himselfe will hee ever spare them that are principals and monstrous offenders Eightly did even Christ suffer then we should evermore arme our selves with the same mind and provide to suffer in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.1 It is a shame for us to expect or desire a life of ease and prosperity seeing the Prince of our salvation was consecrated through afflictions Heb. 2.10 and 12.3 And the more should we be confirmed to suffer in willingnesse in this life because God hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Sonne in sufferings Rom. 8.29 Lastly in that it was Christ that suffered we may hence gather comfort to our selves in his passion all the dayes of our life because his sufferings must needs be of infinite merit being the sufferings of him that is God as well as man Thus of the Person suffering The persons for whom he suffered follow For us The sufferings of Christ were not casuall such as befell him for no use nor were they deserved by himselfe For he never offended God nor did hee seeke his own peculiar good in them but he suffered all he did for our sakes Isa. 53.5 He was wounded for our transgressions the chastisement of our peace was laid upon him and verse 8. Hee was plagued for the transgression of Gods people and as the Apostle saith he was delivered to death for our sinnes and rose againe for our justification Rom. 4.25 Hee was sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 He gave himselfe for us Ephes. 5.2 Now he suffered for us in divers respects as First to make satisfaction unto the justice of God for our sinnes and to appease the wrath of God toward us as the former places shew His sufferings were a sacrifice for sinne He bare the curses of the Law which were due to us Gal. 3.10 And thus he paid our ransome and pacified God especially in his death and buriall He nayled the hand-writing that was against us to his crosse Col. 2.15 And as Ionas was cast into the bowels of the sea to still the raging of it so was Christ cast into the bowels of the earth to make the seas of Gods wrath quiet for us Secondly he suffered as to make satisfaction for our sinnes so together with that satisfaction to remove from us the many miseries might have falne upon us for our sinnes Thus he was judged and condemned at the barre of Pilate that we might be acquirted at the barre of God He endured all sorts of paines and torments in soule and body that wee might be delivered from eternall torments in hell He died that hee might deliver us from death and the feare of it and from him which had the power of death which is the divell Heb. 2.13 He was crucified that he might abolish the power of sinne in us Rom. 6.10 Thirdly he suffered for us that so by his sufferings he might merit the supply of our wants and the possession of happinesse Hee suffered to make us blessed Thus he died to ratifie the eternall counsell Heb. 9.15.16.17 He was poore to make us rich 2 Cor. 8.9 He was bound to make us free Hee was unclothed to cover our nakednesse He was forsaken of God for a time that we might be received to everlasting mercy Hee was crowned with a crowne of thornes that he might merit for us a crowne of glory Hee found no mercy from the Priests and Jewes that we might finde sure mercy with God He was cast out of the earthly Jerusalem and suffered without the gates that he might provide a place for us in the heavenly Jerusalem Fourthly he suffered for us in this that he suffered that so he might have a sympathy of our sufferings and have a feeiing of our miseries He suffered being tempted that he might be able to secure us being tempted Heb. 2.17 18. and 4.15 The consideration hereof may serve for divers uses Uses First it should breed in us an admiration of the love of Christ to us that could ever be willing to become surety for us and suffer for us especially considering what we were viz. unjust men 1 Pet. 3.18 wicked men Rom. 5.6 enemies to him Rom. 5.8 10. That one should die for a good or righteous man or for one that is a common good for or to other men is very rare But it might be Ionathan might die for David or a subject be willing to die for a good Prince about no man would die for his enemies as Christ died for us Secondly it should worke in us sorrow and hearty griefe for our sins wee should now mourne as heartily for piercing Christ by our sinnes as if we had lost an only childe c. We complaine of the Jewes and Iudas and Pilate for
that he was never guilty of any offence against God or man Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be gathered out of these words but because one is principall I will but touch the rest Doct. 1. Mens sinnes are of mens making man made sinne God made none Doct. 2. It is a hatefull thing to be a maker of sinne As it was most glorious for God to make a world of creatures so it is most ignominious for man to make a world of sinnes Doct. 3. Christ made no sinne This is the chiefe Doctrine and plaine in the Text He was not only free from the first and worst kinds of making of sinne mentioned before but he was free from all sinne in all estates of his life he knew no sinne he did none iniquity he was that just One by an excellency Quest. But how came it to passe that the man Jesus had no sinne seeing all other men bring sinne with them into the world and daily sinne Answ. He was sanctified from the wombe being conceived by the holy Ghost which no other are so as both originall sinne was stopped from flowing in upon him in his conception and besides hee was qualified with perfect holinesse from the wombe and therefore is called that holy thing borne of the Virgin Luke 1.35 And it was necessary his humane nature should bee so holy and that hee should doe no sin because his humane nature was to be a tabernacle for the Deity to dwel in Col. 2.9 and besides from his very humane nature as well as from his Deity must flow unto us life and all good things and therefore he must needs be undefiled The man-hood of Christ is as the conduit and the God-head as the spring of grace unto us Besides his sufferings could not be availeable if he were not innocent himselfe The Uses follow and so Uses First we see the difference between the two Adams the first made sinne and infected all the world with it the other made no sinne but redeemed all the world from it The first Adam as he had power not to sinne so he had power to sinne but the second Adam had not only a power not to sinne but also no power to sinne not only as they say in Schooles Posse non peccare but also Non posse peccare Secondly we may hence see in what a wofull damnity against goodnesse the world stands when this most innocent Man that never did any sinne that never offended God or man in all his life when he I say comes into the world how is he despised and rejected of men Who looked after him unlesse it were for his miracles few honoured him for his holinesse How is the world set on wickednesse that it should account him without forme or handsomenesse that shone before God and Angels in such a spotlesse innocency Oh what wit had the rulers of this world that condemned him as a malefactor that had no spot in him from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot that never did man wrong or sinned against God Isa. 49.7 and 53.2 3 4. Thirdly we may hence see cause to wonder at the love of Christ to us Oh how is it 〈…〉 of such a world of sinnes that yet himselfe never knew sinne What heart of man can sufficiently admire his love unto us that can abase himselfe to be made sinne for us that never did sinne himselfe Fourthly is it not hence also most manifest that impenitent sinners shall not be spared or pitied of God Did not God spare his owne Son that never offended in all his life and shall he spare them that never left offending of him Oh what madnesse hath besotted men so as with stubborne wilfulnesse still to trust upon an unknowne mercy in God yea such a mercy as God could never conceive in the case of his Sonne that was not to him as they are in any respect Were these men but throughly beaten from this sinfull plea of mercy in God they would repent of their sins in time and seeke true mercy from God which never is with-held from penitent sinners Lastly Did our Saviour Christ suffer so patiently such extreme things that never deserved any evill in himselfe What a shame is it for us to be so unquiet and dejected or so froward or so unsettled when any crosses or afflictions fall upon us who yet have deserved at Gods hands to suffer a thousand times more and worse things than those that doe befall us In his mouth was found no guile We reade in the Scripture of guile in the spirit when we have false hearts and guile in the hands by false weights and ballances and guile in the mouth in deceitfull words Guile in words is committed many wayes First by lying when men speake what they thinke not Secondly by flattering when men praise others after a corrupt maner or for corrupt ends Thirdly by backbiting when men censure others behind their backs of malice or whisper evill against others Psal. 41.7 Fourthly by wresting the words of others to their hurt Psal. 56.11 and 52.1 2. Fiftly by with-holding the just praises of others or Apologie Sixtly by fearefulnesse in evill times when men will not stand for the truth or speake against their Consciences Seventhly by disgracefull jests Ephes. 5.4 Eighthly by telling the truth of malice 1 Sam. 22.9 10. Ninthly by boasting of a false gift Pro. 27.1 Tenthly by hypocrisie and dissimulation and that divers wayes as 1. When men speake faire to mens faces but reproach them behinde their backs or flatter them meerely to catch them and intangle them in their talke as the Pharisees often tempted Christ. 2. That reproveth sinne in others and yet commits it himselfe Rom. 2.19 3. That colours sin under pretence of Religion Marke 12.40 4. That professeth Religion in words and yet denieth it in his heart 5. That hideth his sin by deniall or excuses to avoyd shame and punishment 6. That gives good words to men in affliction but relieves them not 1 Iohn 3.17 18. None of these nor any other wayes of guile were found in Christ though they called him a deceiver and sought all occasions against him Thus of the sense the doctrines follow Doct. 1. Guile in words is a vice that wonderfully dishonours a man it was a fault would give great advantage to the enemies of the truth As it is a sinne which is in a speciall manner hatefull to God Psal. 5.7 so it is shamefull amongst men and therefore as any man would enjoy good dayes let him refraine his tongue from evill and his lips that they speake no guile Psal. 34.13 Doct. 2. When he saith that they found no guile in his mouth it imports that they sought it And so we learne that the godly are so hated of the wicked that they seeke occasion against them when they see not or heare not of any faults in them they search and inquire and lie in waite
his zeale upon us Mat. 11.28 and so in a wise it is a property of a meeke and quiet spirit to be easie to bee directed and advised and governed Ob. But is it not lawfull to be angry Sol. Yes it is at some times for some persons upon some causes and in some maner Anger is a tender vertue and such a one as by reason of our unskilfulnesse may be easily corrupted and made dangerous Ob. But we must reprove or correct Sol. You may doe so but that you must reprove with passion or unquietly I reade not but rather you must reprove with the spirit of meeknesse And besides many rules are requisite to the right use of reproose and correction Ob. But can all this be attained Sol. It may or else it would not be required in the new Covenant so often and so vehemently urged and the Church of God is not without instance of such as have attained it and though in many things we may sin all yet this vertue may be had though not in the perfection of it Object But I have desired and endeavoured to attaine to it and cannot Sol. First use the meanes to attaine it yet still it may be had at length though not presently Secondly it may be doubted of many that pretend this that they have not such desire nor use not such endevour in sincerity they are not watchfull and carefull to looke to the opportunities of this vertue or the occasions of the contrary vices Ob. But may not one have comfort of this vertue if he be at any time angrie Sol. Moses the meekest man on earth was once angry and Christ himselfe we reade was angry but where this vertue of anger is not habitually it reignes not and where it is it is bridled and ordered Or else I may answer that the act of meeknesse may be interrupted and yet the habit preserved Ob. But we are so provoked and have such wrongs as are very great and absurd c. Sol. Else it were no great praise to be quiet a Mastive a Beare a Lion it may be can be quiet sometimes if they be not stirred or provoked There is nothing from without us can make us vicious without the working of a vile nature in our soules The Use should be first for instruction I may say of meekenesse and quietnesse as Christ said of humility If you heare these things blessed are you if you doe them Iohn 13. Now there are many reasons should move us to be very carefull to expresse a meek and quiet spirit in our behaviour at home and abroad as first Gods Commandement He requireth this at our hands earnestly as appeareth by the places before quoted and other Scriptures Pro. 4.24 ●●condly we have an excellent example for it in Christ and hee chargeth us of all the things which be imitable in him to learne meekenesse and lowlinesse of him Mat. 11.29 Thirdly it will be a signe of our election and true sanctification and that God loves us Col. 3.12 Psal. 147. ● and that we have attained the wisedome that is from above Iames 3.17 Fourthly it is a great ornament to a man as this Text imports and that both in the sight of God and man A meeke behaviour is very lovely and comely Pro. 19.11 5. Hereby we shall bring much rest to our soules Mat. 11.29 Our hearts and consciences will be at great peace whereas there are many occasions of trouble to our consciences which flow from passion and an unquiet and cont●ntious course of life 6. Meekenesse is incorruptible it will last for ever both in the habit of it and in the comfort and fruit of it and besides it will keepe the spirit from such putrefaction and corruption as passion and unquietnesse useth to breed in the spirits of other men 7. Meekenesse makes the heart very capable of grace and of the Word of God The heart is fit to have the Word graffed upon it when it is meeke and quiet Iames 1.21 and the Lord teacheth the humble his way Psal. 25. Pro. 3.32 and he will give more grace to the humble Iames 4.7 8. God will be the protection of the meeke he will relieve them and make them glorious by deliverance Psal. 76.8,9 147.5 6. 149.4 Zeph. 2.3 Yea a meek spirit is a great advantage to a mans outward estate for the meeke shall inherit the earth God loves no Tenants better than such nor grants longer leases to any than to them Mat. 5.6 Secondly this discourse of a meeke and quiet spirit should greatly humble such Christians as are froward and passionate and unquiet and in particular such wives as are guilty of these or the like faults Now that this Use may be more profitable to these Christians I would add two things first reasons to disswade them from frowardnesse and unquietnesse secondly I would shew them remedies how to help themselves against these faults There be many things observed in Scripture and which they may feele in themselves which should move them to hearty repentance for this unquietnesse and frowardnesse as to consider 1. The causes of frowardnesse and unquietnesse which are in generall their ill nature and in particular pride idlenesse want of love to those with whom we converse ignorance and love of earthly things From these or some of these roots proceeds this vice 2. That the Scripture maketh this fault to be a sign of a wicked and naughty person Pro. 6.12 14. 21.24 especially where one is guilty of it in the power and custome of it and besides reckons it among the faults of which there is little hope of cure Pro. 29.20 3. It causeth many and vile effects for 1. It is a great affliction and vexation to such as converse with them that are guilty of it as these places shew Prov. 17.1 21.9 19. 27.3 15. 2. It is very hurtfull to the party that is guilty for it makes him run into many sins as these places shew Pro 17.19 22.8 29.22 Psal. 37.8 and besides it brings upon him great misery for it makes a breach in his spirit within Pro. 15.4 and brings much mischiefe upon him without Pro. 17.20 and further it makes him abominable in the sight of God Pro. 3.32 8.13 11.20 and shames him almost incurably amongst men Pro. 12.8 25.9 10. and further no body that is wise will make any friendship with them but every body will avoide them as much as they can Pro. 22.24 Wives tha● be so froward and peevish and hard to please and unquiet should much think of these things And yet besides it interrupts prayer 1 Pet. 3.7 and is a great hinderance to the power of the Word Iames 1.19 20 21. Lastly if it bee not repented of it will bring damnation of body and soule Mat. 5.22 3. It grieves the spirit of God Eph. 4.30 Now Christian men or women that desire to mend this fault of frowardnesse and unquietnesse may attaine
one way to come in And further we can find no meanes that hath sufficient power to make a man live God hath so reserved the power of life in his owne hands that none of the means we use to preserve life can doe it to make it hold out for a moment if God doe not from above give speciall assistance Man liveth not by bread Mat. 4. and if a man had abundance of all worldly things yet a mans life consisteth not in that Luke 12.15 c. The fourth reason may be taken from the profession of a Christian or his state or relative calling or condition in this life First we are Christs spirituall souldiers Now men that goe to warre intangle not themselves with the things of this life that they may please them that have chosen them to bee souldiers 2 Tim. 2.4 Secondly we are pilgrimes and strangers in this life and therefore nothing should be more easie to us than to be wearie of the present condition and to long to be at home Thus did the Patriarches Heb. 11.13 Thirdly in this life we are but poore cottagers that dwell in poore houses of clay and shall we love to bee here rather than in those eternall mansions 2 Cor. 5.1 Ioh. 14.2 The fift reason may be taken from the sinnes of life Even sinne is a disease and a loathsome contagious one Now then see what life is thou thy selfe hast innumerable sinnes and there is no man alive that sinneth not in the whole world Now if every man have innumerable contagious diseases what a loathsome pest-house is this world to live in The thoughts of a man can reach to the depth and length of this argument but inconsideration buries all wholsome counsell and motives But besides this respect of sinne a Christian finds from his owne sinnes if there were none else in the world great cause to be wearie of life first because sinne argues the imperfection of his nature both in soule and body and so long as he is in this sinfull life he can never have a perfect nature now a man that loves himselfe for this reason would never love life Rom. 7.23 Secondly because sin is an offence to God now a child of God should therefore loath life because by sinning be doth injury to God his mercifull Father and in the most holy Christians this argument hath extraordinary force The sixth reason may be taken from the crosses of life Hath not every day his griefe Is there any estate or degree of men free from them Are not those whom God loves corrected yea and perhaps more than other men Seriously thinke of what thou dost suffer in thy particular What diseases or infirmities are in thy bodie What unquietnesse and vexation dost thou suffer in the house where thou livest What crosses doe follow or feare thee in thy calling Yea doth not thy religion breed thee trouble If the reproaches and oppositions be considered of which godly men sometimes suffer we might say with the Apostle Of all men they are most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 Paul saith he was a man crucified while he lived Gal. 2.20 and did alwayes in his body carry about the dying of the Lord Jesus 2 Cor. 4.10 Besides consider of the danger of what may come upon thee in life What if war come or the pestilence or sudden poverty that cannot be cured or with fearefull diseases that will fill thee with horrible pain Nay what if thou shouldest fall into some shamefull fault Oh what were the misery would follow upon it The seventh reason may be taken from the extreme vanity of those things that seeme to be felicities in life all the things in life that with any colour of reason can be made objects of thy love are either the people of the world or the commodities of the world Now for the first of these thou hast no reason to be in love with life for the people of the world with whom thou livest for 1. Amongst all the thousands of men and women thou seest in the world it may be there is scarce one that loveth thee entirely scarce one from whom thou maist enjoy delight or comfort They are poore things thou canst have from the rest whether they be neighbours or strangers More than thou givest thou shalt not receive unlesse it be in poore complements of salutations and ceremonies of life 2. If thou didst excell in the priviledge of being loved by friends kindred wife or children yet reckon how small a portion of thy life is refreshed from them there is sometimes more delight in one poore dreame than will be had this way in a long time 3. Thinke of it what changes and losses thou dost or maist suffer if there were any thing worthy thy love in friendship or acquaintance thy friends may be daily lost either by the change of their minde from thee or by distance in habitation or by death and the pleasure is had by thy acquaintance is made not worth the having either by interruption or by discord and taking of offence or want of power or will to help when thou hast most need 4. Who would not hate life for this very reason which I now give Let a man consider by experience in all others how little the world cares for him If thou wert to die what would the world care or almost any in the world Let it be thy wife children neighbours hearers dearest friends yea thy religious friends what would any of these care for thy death Looke not at their words but note it in their deeds How few will be sorry for thee or for how short a time and how soone wilt thou be cleane forgotten or how poore a thing is the greatest memory any man hath when he is dead Dost thou live to heare this and yet wilt be so mad as to love life for the love thou bearest to any other 5. The evill thou sufferest from the world is greater than the good thou canst get by it thinke of the reproaches injuries oppositions contempts persecutions infections thou maist finde from unreasonable men How many thousand would triumph over thy poore fame if thy feet doe but slip Lastly the company thou shalt have of Angels and spirits of just men in another world should make thee loathe all these things in this life whether thou respect number or power or dearenesse in friends even in such as must be companions of thy life and therefore for the company that is in the world thou hast no reason to love life The commodities of the world are lands houses money honour credit beauty pleasure and the like now m●n have no cause to be so in love with these if they consider 1. How small a portion they have of these If a man had won the whole world and the glorie of it yet it were not worth the having if he must lose his own soule May if it were all had upon the best conditions yet it would not
cloake of malice five wayes 470 How Christian Libertie is a cloake of malice in things indifferent 472 Cases in things indifferent wherein Christian Libertie is vilely abused 473 Life Live How we may live like Gods children 13 A religious Life is the best Life 541 Naturall Life but a meane thing in divers respects 649 The degrees of a spirituall Life 650 Whence it hath its originall even from God and that in three respects 651 Divers things nourish this spirituall Life 654 It differs from eternall Life in many wayes 657 Mans Life is grasse 193 Excellent uses of it 193 194 What we must doe to attain eternall Life 661 A Christians helps hereto 662 Sixe signes of it 663 Five properties of it 664 What duties this Life should imprint in us ibid. For what reasons men should take off their affections from the love of this Life 698 699 In what cases some men may be in love with this Life 702 Mans Life short in what respects and why 705 The uses of it 706 Light The acceptation of the word Light 342 Gods servants are brought into great Light ibid. Excellent instruction and consolation drawne from it 342 343 In how many respects the Light of the godly is called A marvellous Light 343 344 Excellent uses thereof 344 Love Seven signes of the Love of Christ in the sparkle and seven more in the flame 71 What we must doe to get that Love 72 Seven things to be observed to keepe our hearts in this Love ibid. Christs Love to the godly 332 How many wayes the people of God are Gods only beloved ones 361 How to preserve this Love ibid. How we should shew our Love to the Brotherhood 477 Nine signes of unfained Love 180 The impediments of brotherly Love 181 Seven signes of fervent Love 182 Nine causes of the want of it 183 What to doe that we may have and hold it ibid. Reasons to perswade to the Love of the Brethren 680 With what kind of Love we ought to love them 681 Rules for it 682 Three caveats to be looked unto in loving our Brother 683 Lusts. The sorts of Lusts which must be hatefull unto us after our Calling 114 Eight reasons why we should avoyd Lusts after our Calling ibid. Foure preservations against Lusts 115 Lusts how to be avoyded 362 Three differences of Lusts in the godly and wicked 363 Helpes to avoid them ibid. Lusts are fleshly in divers respects 365 How Lusts hurt the soules of godly and wicked men both 366 How we may get victory over our Lusts 387 How we may know that we have gotten this victorie ibid. M MAdnesse Signes of spirituall Madnesse 460 Magistrates They are to be submitted to 424 This submission hath in it sixe things 425 Objections against it answered 427 428 We must be subject to all sorts of Magistrates 428 429 In what things Magistrates are not to be obeyed 431 In what matters Ecclesiasticall Magistrates have no power ibid. In what he hath power 432 Whether we must obey Magistrates in things unlawfull 437 Divers motives in God to move man to the obedience of Magistrates 438 Excellent uses of the point 439. c. In what cases not fit to complaine to the Magistrates 529 Malice It s acceptation 203 Signes of it and reasons against it ibid. Remedies 204 Aggravations of it ibid. Men may use the libertie as a cloake of Malice five wayes 470 Man He is but grasse 193 194 c. His glory vaine in sixe respects 196 What his true glory is 197 Manifest Manifestation Christ manifested five wayes 153 We must shew our affection to this his Manifestation foure wayes 153 154 Marriage Sixteene motives for man and wife to live together quietly and comfortably in Marriage 576 Masters The originall of Masters 492 Signes of good Masters 493 Reasons against frowardnesse in Masters 494 Signes of good Masters 495 Meditation Rules for Meditation 289 Meeknesse It is shewed in foure things 330 What things are requisite to Meeknesse 613 Motives to it ibid. c. Helps to attaine to Meeknesse 616 Mercy Gods Mercy abundant 32 33 It ought not to be any cause of libertie either to the godly or wicked 33 Whether the Lord shewes any Mercy to the wicked 33 34 Shewed foure wayes● 331 What sorts of people God will not be mercifull unto 352 What wicked men in particular are not under Mercy 354 Why many obtaine not Mercy 355 Foure properties of Gods Mercy 356 It is tender many wayes ibid. It is free many wayes ibid. c. Eternall 357 Nine effects of it 358 Excellent uses of it 358 359 Helps to obtaine mercy 359 What Bowells of Mercy doth import 683 Milke The word called Milke in many respects ●30 Excellent uses thereof 231 ●32 Mind Vide Unitie Our Minds must be rightly ordered 6●4 For what reasons we ought to be all of one Mind ibid. Minister This word Minister sounds Servic● 89 Miserie All Miserie referred to 〈◊〉 heads ● of 〈◊〉 ● Of 〈◊〉 3. Of adversities 4. Of death 77 The remembrance of our past Miserie is profitable in sixe respects 338 Mortification None but mortified Christians are true Christians 536 Repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man 538 Signes of Mortification 539 Men truely mortified shall live happily 540 N NAme Of a good and evill Name Vide Report Nature The naturall condition very miserable many wayes 608 New Newnesle The necessitie and honour of our New birth 32 The meanes of the New birth 34 The lets ibid. Foure signes of it 35 Uses of it 35 36 Speciall duties of such as are new borne 229 Priviledges of such ibid. Speciall-signes of a New heart 415 A New behaviour discovered divers wayes 416 Why repentance is called a New birth 184 Why we had need to be put in mind of our New birth 185 Lets of it ibid. O OBedience What the causes of it with sixe rules for it 19 Motives to it 20 Of obedience in word● ibid. Our Obedience must be the Obedience of children in sixe respects 113 Our Obedience to God a speciall sign● of his feare 482 Sixe things required to 〈◊〉 sound Obedience 588 The extent of our Obedience in respect of times truths places and persons 176 177 How 〈◊〉 may know their Obedience to be right 177 In 〈◊〉 things the Spirit worketh 〈◊〉 Obedience ibid. P PArents How many wayes children are infected by the traditions of their Parents 142 Why they are so infectious ibid. Seven rules for Parents ordering their children ibid. c. Passeover The manifold passages concerning the sprinkling of the Passeover expounded 25 26. c. Patience It is to be shewed foure wayes 331 People Many sorts of People in Scripture 346 Why wicked men are said not to be a People ibid. Who are not Gods People 347 Men are Gods people three wayes 348 The miserie of those that refuse their calling to be Gods People 337 How Gods people excell all others 349 The uses thereof 350 Rules for Gods People
the 〈◊〉 use of t●th Vse Vse Doct. 1. Vse Doct. Vse Doct. Vse Doct. The glory given to Christ after his resurrection shewed in 8. things Vse Difference betweene faith and hope Doct. 1. Vse Divers questions and doubts resolved Ten things that assault faith against which we should be armed Doct. 2. Vse Doct. 3. Vse A large explication of the ceremonies about the clensing of the Leper as it concerns the sanctification of the sinner Vse Vse Rev. 2.22 Iam. 4.8 8. Things to be done to get a cleane heart What truth is What it is to obey truth How our hearts are purified in obeying the truth Vse Vse Vse Vse 8 Things for the discovery of hypocrites How men may know their obedience be right or no. Doct. In 8 things the Spirit worketh our obedience Vse Vse Doct. Vse How we may know who are godly The good men may get by conversing with the godly Why the most men have no mind to converse with the godly Doct. Vse ● Signes of unfained love Vse The impediments of brotherly love Of purity of heart both as it respects God and man How we may know that our hearts are pure towards others What we must doe to get and increase purity of heart How the ferventnesse of love may be discerned 7. Signes Nine causes of want of fervent love What must be done that our love might be fervent 〈…〉 new birth Wh●●●● diff●rences between true repentance and false Vse Why it is needfull to be often put in minde of our new birth The lets of the new birth Vse Vse 1. Foure degrees of immortality Vse Vse The differen●e between true 〈◊〉 and temporary joyes Esay 4.6 Tit. 2.5 Vse Vse 8 Thin●s to be observed if w● will heare th● word as the w●rd o● God How the word may be said to live Vse Six waies to shew the life of the word in our conversation Mat. 13. Doct. Vse Mat. 6. Ioh. 1.12 2 Cor. 5.1 Gal. 5.24 Gal. 1.10 Psal. 16 10. Prov. Psal. 49. Ps. 92.6 7. Vse Ier. 9.24 P●al 49. Dan. 2.37 Phil. 2.3 1 Thes. 2.6 ● Cor. 11 18. Esay 8.7 Doct. Mans glory vaine for six reasons Eccles. 5. What is mans true glory The inconveniences men bring upon themselves by forgetting death Quest. Answ. Esay 21.9 Quest. Answ. Doct. Ioh. ● 31 c. Vse The coherence The Analysis of the first part of this chapter 5. Things to be avoided if we would profit by the word Generall observations The benefit of briefe catalogues of sins or duties or graces How many wayes the sins ●ere mentioned doe hinder the word Of Malice Acceptation of the word Signes of malice Reasons against malice From the causes From the effects 1. In us 2. In God Vses Aggravations of malice Note Remedies for malice 1. In our selves Note 2. In others Of Guile The acceptation of the word Object Solut. Why Guile is to be avoided Vse● The misery of deceitfull persons The ●g●●ava●ons of the sin of d●●●it 1. The maner of deceiving 2. The persons upon whom it is p●actised 3. The time Object 1. Solut. O● the misery of such as 〈◊〉 by d●●●●● Note Object 2. Solut. Servants must not use lying and deceit to please th●● mast●●s Object 3. Solut. Of 〈◊〉 c●● 〈◊〉 Object 4. Solut. Vse 2. The iniquity of the time Vse 3. Against ●quivocation Vse 4. The signes of a man without guile Incouragemēts to such men Note that he sayes all malice and all Guile How many wayes men commit Hypocrisie 〈…〉 〈…〉 What may befall him What will befall ●hem The objections of hypocrites removed Vses For information Note For instruction The sorts of Hypocrisie we are most in danger of Preservatives against Hypocrisie Note Object Solut. About censuring other men for Hypocrisie Quest. Answ. How an open hypocrite may be discerned Object Solut. What makes an hypocrite Vse 3. Quest. Answ. First when a man had rather be good then seeme so How a man may know that he is not an hypocrite The ha●●fulnesse of the 〈◊〉 of envy Signes of a man free from envy The aggravation of evill speaking R●asons to disswad● from Evill speak●ng Note Rules against evill speaking What we should doe to avoid evill speaking in others 5. Generall doctrines Note For tryall How we may dis●e●ne our desire and affection after the word Note Other signes of true desire Impediments to true desires externall Inwa●d 〈◊〉 wicked m●n 〈◊〉 of affection in the godly Meanes to get true desires ●o the word Rules for the preserving of good desires Rules for such as be afflicted with melancholy The Motives The causes why the most are but babes in religion Note Speciall duties of such as be but new borne babes Speciall praises in children by nature to be expressed by us Priviledges of weake Christians How far wicked men may desire after the word Note Note Divers kindes of growth In what graces christians ought especially to grow Philip. 1.10 1. Thes. 3.12 Philip. 2.13 Ephes 4 3.4 Rules to helpe our growth Impediments of growth Signes of growth Vnprofitablenesse of life aggravated in many respects Apostasie is twofold Encouragement for weake Ch●istians Wherein Gods graciousnesse is ●cene What we must doe to taste the goodnesse of God Doct. 2. Note A true taste is scene by the cause and effects of it Wherein the taste of wicked men and the godly differ How far the taste of wicked men may goe Vse Divers things noted for clearing the sin against the holy Ghost Doct. 4. The causes why so many have little or no taste of the word Christ is diversly described by the Apostle Eph. 1.7 Christ doth many waies excell earthly Lords towards his servants Christ is three waies called a stone 〈…〉 1 Cor. 7.8 Matth. 16.18 What kind of men disallow Christ. Christ chosen of God diversly Christ is precious many ●●yes Causes why Christ is no more precious with men Pro. 8.11 16. Five points in generall We come to Christ many 〈◊〉 Esay 9.6 In what manner we must come to Christ. Psal. 40.7 Many are the reasons why we should come to Christ. Matth. 22. In what respects the godly are likened to stones Reasons why we ought to be lively stones How vve 〈◊〉 our livelinesse What vve must doe to quicken our hearts Means to build up a Christian. Prov. 24.17 Luke 14. 23. Causes why many are so little edified Ioh. 13. 21. Christ hath a five-fold Tabernacle Esay 40. 22. A godly man like the Tabernacle in divers respects Godly men are Priests in many respects Exod. 29.21 Vses Divers sorts of sacrifices for Christians Mark 8.34.35 1 Ioh. 2.2 Rom. 3.25 Prov. 23.26 Speciall la●es to be observed in offering up our sacrifices What we must doe to get our works acceptable to God What is meant by Scripture and why it isso called Wherein the Scriptures exceede all other writings Malach. 3.1 Esay 55.4 Esay 62.11 Math. 4.11 Vse That Christ is laid as a foundation-stone imports many things The Church is like Mount Sion in
16.8 Or else in respect of the second table 2. Defects in the manner of doing righteously and so 1. In generall 5. waies Many defects in Gods worship How the 〈◊〉 com● 5 to be diseased The diseases of the soule are grievous many wayes Why many feel not the diseases of their soules Wherein Christs healing excels for our com●ort Ezek. 36. H●s 14.2.3 Esay 19 2● Jer. 17.14 What we must do● to be healed of Christ. Psal. 147.3 Esay 57.15 18. Gal. 6.14 Rules for such as desire Christ to heale or help their bodily griefes What is meant by going astray The misery of such a● goe astray ●ppears in divers r●spects Aggravations of their misery 〈…〉 mens 〈◊〉 as●ray Esay 16 1● Job 12.28 Signes of a l●s● sheep● Divers things that give hope of curing to such as be out of the way 〈…〉 〈…〉 The time of returning 〈…〉 returning 〈…〉 against d●vers the 〈◊〉 aggravations against divers that returned 〈…〉 of lost 〈◊〉 do 〈…〉 The meanes of returning 〈…〉 〈…〉 Q●●st 〈…〉 What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepheard Christ is one Shepheard He is the true Shepheard He is the good Shepheard 1 Tim. 1.13 16 1 Cor. 9 10 11 Hee is the great Shepheard and that in divers respects The happinesse of such as live under this Shepheard appeares in ten particular priviledges Cant. 1.7 Zach. 11 9.10 Explanation of the tearme Bishop Christ excels all other Bishops in ten respects Such are happy that live under the charge of this Bishop Duties of such as be under the charge of this Bishop Generall scope Note Sixteene motives f●r man and wife to live quietly and comfortably together Use. Five speciall causes of disorder betweene man and wife Helps for man and wife to attain an orderly and quiet life Reasons to prove that women ought to be taught their duties as well as men Why the Apostle is so large in setting down wives duties What thing● are imported by often repeating of them Note Eight reasons why Wives ought to be subject Why the Apostle chargeth wives only with subjection In what things they are to be subject The maner how they must submit In what cases the wife ought not to subj●ct her selfe Particular sins of the wife again subjection Divers waies of winning men Note Causes o● revolting in many are divers Nine signes to know whether we be won effectually Sixe things required to sound obedience Divers kinds of winning Note What a Minister must doe to win soules To be won what it imports Note Why all are not converted at once Divers waies from God to further our salvation Doct. 1. By what meanes we may win wicked men in our conversation What things a wife must especially practise to win her husband Note Use. In what respects godly men are said to be pure Note Motives to chastity Preservatives of ch●stity How a chaste wife may be discerned Reasons why wicked men are sinitten with a servi●e feare Feare two 〈…〉 Reasons why we ought to expresse this f●●re of God in our conversation By what waies we must shew this feare of God By what waies we are to expresse this feare of God towards men What sorts of men have not Gods feare Wherein wives shew their fear of their husbands El●v●n rea●o●● against v●ine ●tt●re in ●omen Foureteene waies by which app●r●ll or dressing our s●l●●s becomes vicious Wh●t the man of the ●eart i● His originall Wh●r●in he e●cells the outward man His naturall condition very miserable many wayes Especially in his workes which are abominable By what means the man of the ●eart may be men●ed How we may know when the man o● the heart is right Not● 〈…〉 Note What things are requisite to me●knesse Motives to meeknesse O●iousnesse of frowardnesse from the cause and effects of it Helps for the attaining of quietnesse and meeknesse Rules for our practise so as God may bee pleased with 〈◊〉 Two singular vertues in a good example When an example binds In what things Antiquity is ill pleaded In what cases respect is to be bad unto old times Use. Signes of such as trust in God Reasons proving the excellency of this trusting in God Admirable effects of this trusting in God Helps to attain this grace of trusting in God Rules to be observed in our right trusting in God Vid 1 Tim. 5.5 Ier. 49.11 Note Doct. Ga●ly women da●g●ters of Sar●h three wa●es What things mar a good action How we are said to do well Reasons why we 〈◊〉 alwaies to be doing well Causes of amazement in wives Why Husbands duties are noted in the last place Mo●●v●● 〈◊〉 pers●ade Husbands to be carefull of their duties What things cohabitat●●n doth import In what cases it is 〈◊〉 full for the husband to be absent Whether separation from bed and brood be lawfull Cases of nullitie Concerning divorce what rule is to be observed Excellency of divine knowledge in many respects Means to give power to our knowledge What this dwelling with knowledge imports How many waies husbands honour their wives In what things women are more fraile than men H●w godly men come to be heires Wherein the greatnesse and glory of our adoption appeareth What kind of persons we must be to attaine this adoption Marks of Gods heirs and adopted children How Gods ●eires must carry themselves Naturall life but a meane thing in divers respects Degrees of spirituall life The originall of this life It hath its originall from God three waies The nature of it consists in a saving knowledge or celestiall light Which knowledge must have these properties and effects in it Divers things nourish this life This life differs from eternall life many waies 1. In respect of place 2. In respect of the means that preserve this life 3. In respect of the company 4. In respect of the quality of the life it selfe 5. In resect of the effects of life in ●●ch degree 1. For righteousnesse 2. ●●r peace 3. For joy Wh●t men must d●e to attaine this life A Christian hath many helps to attaine it Signes of this life are six Properties of this life are five What duties this doctrine should compell godly men to practise Grace manifold What is meant here by grace Two wayes considered What it excludes What it includes What priviledges follow on such as enjoy Gods grace Men tr●nsgresse against the grace of God many wayes Godly men and women are heires together many wayes The excellency of prayer appeares in many respects F●om whence the sorts and difference of Prayer doth arise Prayer may be hindred seven waies in the hearing of it How it is interrupted in the making of it Five things of singular use to keep us quiet in trouble Note For what reasons we ought to be all of one mind Helps unto unity of mind 2 Pet. 1. ult Aggravations against discord in opinion Many are the ill causes of dissenting In what things we may not be of one minde with the Church of Rome Wherein ●e expresse our compass●on The motives or reasons to perswade us to it Who are brethren Reasons to perswade us to love as brethren With what kind of love we are to love the brethren Rules to be observed that brotherly love many continue Either such things we are to avoid Or such things we are to practise How to order our selves towards our brethren in case of sinne against God or trespasse against us Three caveats to be looked unto in our loving of them What things bowels of compassion or mercy import When our bowels of mercy are right Motivés to be pitifull What things are comprehended under courtesie Divers kinds of blessing When we blesse in deed Wherein particularly For what reasons ● Christian should be much affected with the con●ideration of his calling Reasons proving the necessity of knowing our calling and assurance By what means a Christian comes to know his calling Divers sorts of Christians Causes why many weake Christians know not their calling Note Godly men doe inherit blessing many wayes 1. From men 2. From their own consciences 3. From God and that divers wayes In this life godly men have Gods blessing three wayes What we must doe to get Gods blessing How godly men may grow in the comforts of Gods blessing Note Note For what reasons men ought to take off their affections from the love of this life In what respects the vanity of earthly things appeare Men have no reason to be in love withearthly commodities and that for divers causes In what cases it may be lawfull for some persons to be in love with this life What such must doe to prolong their life What daies are evill in respect of wicked men Wherein godly mens daies are evill Great difference between● the evill daies of wicked and godly men Evill daies common to wicked and godly men 2 Sam. 19.36 What are good daies in generall In particular there are divers sorts of good daies to the godly Mans life is short In what respect it is short Causes why most mens lives are so short Uses