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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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in the way to it will he now disappoint thee No assuredly If he would not have saved thee he would have let thee alone as thy companions and many others and never have done this for thee O but the Devil is so strong and subtile and I so weak and simple He that hath pluckt thee out of his hands will never suffer him to get thee captive again It were else a disgrace to Christ Except therefore he be stronger then God and Christ thou needest not fear At the revelation of Jesus Christ. He plucks these Jews from Moses Law and the Ceremonies which were out of date but they could hardly be so perswaded and brings them to the Gospel which discovers Christ He was in that Law covered with Vails of Sacrifices and Ceremonies c. All these be done away in the Gospel where Christ is laid open without any covering Note We have the excellency of the Gospel that doth uncover and lay open Christ Jesus unto us brings us tidings of him who is the Way the Truth and the Life and the onely Savior of the world So that the Gospel is the glory of the World The Sun is not so necessary in the Firmament as the Gospel is to the world This teacheth us Christ which is life eternal and St. Paul desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified and counted all dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord O how welcome should this be It is well called glad tidings so it is indeed The Gospel is our pardon If we should finde evidences of great Lands and Inheritances to come to us or a Will wherein were bequeathed great Legacies to us how glad would we be of the same How often would we revise and read them over The Gospel brings us tidings and tells us the way to come to an everlasting inheritance and therein are bequeathed such blessed Legacies Item I give thee forgiveness of thy sins by my Sons death Item Eternal life by his obedience Item I give thee assurance that thou shalt be raised here from sin and that thy body shall be raised at the last day by my Sons Resurrection Item I give thee assurance of a place in Heaven by my Sons Ascension 1. Is it not a marvel then that the Gospel is so hardly entertained and that the World cares so little for it It s welcome to most people not as if it brought them news of a blessing but as if it would spoil them of all they have 2. How should they that want it be set on work to labor to get it as without which there 's no Salvation Its light food armor without which darkness famine spoil If the Sun should be wanting to a Town and could be procured how would all joyn to get it Or rain for a dry and barren ground who would not wonder at any that should be against it yet who joyns who labors for the Gospel 3. If the Gospel be the revelation of Jesus Christ then are the Ministers revealers of this blessed Secret therefore worthy to be acknowledged for their works sake for the greatness of their work and the excellency thereof Pharaoh reverenced and advanced Joseph for smaller matters O how beautiful are the feet of such Most people either rate them or at least set light by them not reverencing their calling but esteeming them more base then the meanest Tradesman But that grieves us not so much as that unkindeness that we meet with from them from whom we look for most comfort and encouragement Verse 14. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance TO Faith he addeth Repentance and Sanctification by the one to testifie the other as in the second Epistle he wills them to adde unto their Faith vertue as if he should say You that sometimes were the Children of wrath and are now by grace made Gods Children walk obediently as becomes such a mercy This Sanctification hath two parts and stands 1. In renouncing evil or the lusts which before grace we were wont to be led by 2. In putting on and embracing holiness of life that we may resemble the disposition of our Father who is holy and looks for holiness in his yea holiness in all maner of conversation For the order first goes Faith then Obedience and Sanctification for as the light and Sun-beams comes from the Sun a river from the Spring head fruit from the tree so doth obedience from Faith Till a man be pardoned and believe he cannot repent nor obey the will of God no more then a dead stick can bring forth fruit When by Faith we are ingrafted into Christ then we receive power not before one that hath never been humbled aright for sin cannot hate and flie from sin as he should He that seeth not the love of God to him cannot love God nor set upon a good life to deny his lusts being as dear as his life and to yield obedience is irksom to nature for this cause the Devil is such an enemy to our Faith and labors to shake it for then he knows he damps our care of a good life 1. This condemns Papists that boast of holiness of life and yet overthrow the foundation of it viz. A true justifying faith They may stir up good moods and a blinde devotion by scaring men with the pains of hell and telling them of the joys of heaven but no sound Obedience godly Life renouncing Lusts c. without the work of Faith from that will be Obedience even to suffering 2. It confutes them that think Repentance is before Faith they are indeed wrought at once and Repentance sheweth it self first but in order of nature Faith is as the root Many humble souls hold off and dare not believe O say they if I could repent so heartily as I see some and could serve God as I would then I could believe 3. It teacheth men that if ever they will set upon a good life indeed and in time they must begin at the right end and lay a foundation of true justifying faith for want of this many deceive themselves that have some purpose to do well being afflicted or somewhat stirred at the Word and fall out of a bad course to leave this and that evil or take up good duties and many that never had experience of the work of Faith that think they live well or some that upon some occasion thus promise You shall never hear me swear more I le never play more Never come in an Alehouse yet this lasts not but they fal to their old byase by and by because they took not the right course Many also purpose to repent and do great matters but this is a greater matter then the world thinks off a man must first be the childe of God ere he can obey and Faith must be wrought first ere he can
is not any dram of true grace in them and all the seeming good things they do are in hypocrisie and to no purpose for the love of evil and of good cannot be at one time in one heart O look to it will you lose all your comfort here and all your labor yea Heaven it self for some one sin 2. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works and to set upon good duties Such therefore as profess themselves to be Sanctified must be more fruitful Touching the grace here exhorted unto speak we both in general and particular In general where consider 1. What Love is It s a Sanctified affection of the heart wherewith whoso is endued endeavoreth to do all the good he can to all but especially to them that be nearest unto him It s an affection seated as is said in the heart as the others of Hope Fear Joy Grief c. are They were all good and well ordered in Adam but ever since his fall wofully corrupted and utterly disordered and perverted as this of love is turned either into an hatred of that we should love or into self-love It s a Sanctified Affection For ere a man can love he must be Regenerate and Sanctified throughout which comes by being united to Christ by Faith whereby our affections are in some measure purged and restored to their former integrity as to hate evil and love good God and our Brethren for Gods cause Love is a fruit of the Spirit and must come from a pure Heart good Conscience and Faith unfained and therefore cannot be in an unregenerate person there may be indeed a shew and shadow of it but that 's no true love They do not love one another neither possibly can love the people of God There 's no trust in them they do but watch their opportunity when to do them mischief O the wretched condition of such how needful wert for them to be wearied thereof And for the people of God they must not trust them or too much open themselves to them He onely that fears God is to be trusted he dares not deceive Wherewith whoso is endued endeavoreth Though love be in the heart yet it must and will shew it self forth in the Life Words and Deeds to Soul and Body else it s like the love of bad men to God who yet keep not his commandments or like the worldlings Faith which is without Works To do good For it s the nature of love it can do no hurt but what good it can it will do to Soul and Body and wheresoever any true good is done to Soul or Body Goods or Name there was love love did it To all For though brotherly kindeness be to the people of God yet love reacheth to all whether near or far off to Strangers Enemies such as are not yet called under the Turk Pope Pagans c. for whom we are to pray and to do them all the good we can with the pitiful Samaritan But especially to them that be nearest So God gives leave nay commands that our love begin at our selves and ours and so go on forward to them that be nearest by nature Therefore they that prefer Strangers before Kinsmen and Kinsmen before Children are blame-worthy and to bestow upon any to the undoing of ones Family is not love but folly as in them which wil spend in lewd company their Wives and Children at home being in want So must it be to them that ●e nearest by grace This is often commanded and highly also commended in the Scriptures This is the bond of perfection It bindes up all the duties that we owe to our Neighbor which are many holds them together as the bond of a Fagot and makes every duty easie as where this is not every duty is irksome nothing comes well off hand It ties Societies together and Families O how it keeps out evil how it sets up good By it small things have become great and for want of it great things have come to nothing It s the fulfilling of the Law It s a most beneficial vertue other vertues benefit our selves but this doth good to others Faith draws all from Christ to us Love lays out it self for others good as the Sun that hath no light for it self other vertues be like the Bung of a Barrel Love like the Tap that sets it abroach to the benefit of them that need If a man be as full of gifts as a Tun of Liquor if he have no Tap others may starve so for Temporal things without this all gifts are nothing but as sounding Brass We are not born for our selves but the perfection of all we have is to employ This is the lasting vertue which when others as Faith and Hope shall end shall spring afresh abound and abide for ever that vertue that makes us like to God for he is Love and doth good to all even his enemies though he have a special affection to his Children O that I could paint out the face of this lovely vertue that every one of us might grow in love therewith 2. The properties thereof whereby we may try whether it be in us and in what measure They are laid down by the Apostle unto the Corinthians Charity suffereth long and is kinde Charity envyeth not Charity vaunteth not it self is not puffed up doth not behave it self unseemly c. Take we notice of a few of them 1. Love will interpret things doubtful to the best that is speeches or actions of men towards our selves or others and if they may be taken well will not take them ill Our nature is to take every thing in the worst part Love doth otherwise the Mother saith a pin pricks the Childe or it breeds teeth when it may be its of frowardnes that it cryes Thus Josephs Brethren sold him spitefully into Egypt afterward when by reason thereof they were afraid what construction made he thereof God saith he did send me before you to preserve life If a thing be plainly evil yet it will make it no worse then it is nor say it was done deliberately when it may be it was done rashly or maliciously when it may be it was done weakly and in temptation for one may do injury to a bad action in making it worse and its better to judge a little better of a thing then worse then it is Always provided this be understood not of palpable notorious foul evils nor of continued courses in sinning for what good or charitable construction can a man make of these Therefore such say foolishly when being informed hereof they Reply Oh ye must not judge what can be judged of this case but onely that there may be Repentance It s a fault in Ministers and others that will extenuate foul sins in bad persons and wicked livers in the mean time aggravating a
though it be but in small matters yet he will hold it out though the other be never so peremptory till in conclusion they fall flat out this is nought in small matters it were better to yield so in Dealings Covenants Bargains Bonds men will have their right herein right may be extream wrong always provided that we give not away anothers right especially Gods Moses would not yield an hoof yet most men are stiff in their own will yield enough of Gods right as they will not suffer their Servants to play one hour in the week day but for the Lords day they will suffer them therein to play as much as they will 3. Whereas love does no hurt to any Whence comes all the hurt and mischief in the world Stabbing Fighting Quarrelling Railing Reviling Scolding Crying all the defiling of mens Wives Children Servants So for Oppression Bribery Thievery Cousenage false Weights deceitful Wares So Slandering Defaming Backbiting Mocking All these abound in the World I am sure they come not of Love it was never at the doing of them and those that will so readily provoke one another by words and deeds they care not how are far enough from love 4. For being provoked O Lord be merciful to us who can bear any thing but taunt for taunt quip for quip he shall have as good as he brings is common with every one How do men stand upon every small trespass Hence the innumerable Contentions and Suits in the Land thousands in a year for meer trifles wherein ten times as much is spent then is sued for which is a shame for England having had the Gospel of Peace so long Oh mens stomacks be up straight all their blood in their faces or looking as pale as ashes or secretly practising to revenge hand on the Dagger straight straight on the top of the house fly in our Neighbors face by and by so little love is there to forgive till Seventy I may say till Seven times so short Spirited as we can bear nothing and that which is worse if we have once taken up a displeasure it s not easily laid down but Sun after Sun Moon after Moon yea Year after Year it continueth quickly provoked hardly pacified especially truly It may be we live not in open enmity yet in secret grudging the heart not sound but ready to break out upon every occasion can abide nothing but Revenge which is fearful 5. Where is communicating of Spiritual good things Parents bring up their children brave but how few Catechize Counsel and Instruct them pray with or for them So for Servants They give them Meat Drink and Wages with work enough on the six days little caring how they spend the Lords day neither instructing them examining them or drawing them to hear the Word or Read and Pray What love call you this shew you not as much to your Beasts So for our Neighbors who admonisheth them that be out of the way do we not rather let them run on talking of their Infirmities behinde their backs and spreading them to their grace Nay do not many yea most rejoyce thereat what consolation to the heavy who takes it to heart how few are able to comfort fitly but utter vain idle if not more hurtful words to to such nay many rather laugh and jest at heavy conscienced persons every man saith Is he is Brothers keeper Nay alas so far from communicating Spiritual grace to them which they ought or to call one another to go to the house of God as they rather use all means by jesting at them troubling them c. to discourage them yea how many have given lewd and wicked counsels to others to the dishonor of God For outward things how backward are most from giving any more then they needs must What contentions at making of Rates For lending where is this but rather as if God had never given precept for it or as if it were like a Statute repealed which is of no use so is this duty That cursed Trade of Lending upon Usury hath eaten up and banished out of the Countrey this Christian duty of free lending What rich man hath almost at any time any thing to lend Some are so grim and austere as a poor man dares not speak to them for such a thing Some put so much to Usury as they neglect their Trading set none a work nor have ought to lend at any time but rather borrow and if a poor man happen to do any work for them they cannot pay him in a good while they are so bare for as soon as any money comes in it must out straight to Use as if it would burn a hole in their Cupboard if it lay there two or three days or a week Others are ever Purchasing and are ever in debt and will be then wrangle at Rates grudge at this and that are never fit to lend such bring a curse upon themselves willingly which is to borrow when as they might else lend Others are so miserable that though they have wherewith yet will not lend So for Neighborly dealing inviting visiting c. Love is very cold Here I may adde That there 's a great deal of counterfeit love Pot-companionship and joyning in vanity a deal of fawning crouching conguing c. a great deal of self-love making others faults great and their own small or none nay sometimes extenuating and making light of the vertues of others highly esteeming their own being ready to provoke and wrong others but bearing nothing straight provoked seeking their own in all their dealings and courses so making sure for themselves without regard to their Neighbors These be the times Now let every man examine himself and see how it s with himself in these who findes not himself ready to take things at the worst and have we not often done so when as afterward having heard that it was nothing so but quite otherwise we have been put to shame and forced to say for our own excuse We heard or thought it had been so The like might be particularized in the rest 3. The causes of the want of love 1. Want or weakness of Faith when our Savior taught his Apostles this Duty they said Lord encrease our Faith Assurance of pardon makes us forgive 2. Pride whereby men think highly of themselves meanly of others think they may speak or do any thing but that others may say or do nothing to them Onely by Pride comes contention but humbleness causeth love Pride makes men think themselves so wise and good as every body should say as they say and yield in all things to them when they do not they break the peace as Haman with Mordecai Pride cannot endure a reproof therefore could not Herod abide John Ahab Elijah and Micaiah Pride makes men think so highly of themselves and meanly of others that they will not bear any wrong but take the least in scorn 3. Covetousness this makes
of the Moral Law and the uttermost extremity of it which of the unbeliever is exacted but on the behalf of Believers is taken away by Christ so that though in them there be many wants yet God in Christ Jesus will accept the will for the deed he will accept of their hearts and of the truth of their actions pardoning their infirmities Hence it is that now they flee not from the Law as a cruel Tyrant but come thereto as to a Schoolmaster to instruct them in Gods will 4. We are freed from the Ceremonial Law whereof the Sacraments Sacrifices Rites Purifyings c. were meer shadows till the body came So from bondage in all things indifferent as meats drinks days and the like which were rudiments serving for the minority of the Church There is now no indifferent thing we are bound in for Religions sake or from which we are to abstain for conscience sake much more are we freed from all mens Traditions which serve not to binde the conscience wherewith notwithstanding the Church of Rome endeavoreth to hold people in base and deadly bondage as the Scribes and Pharisees of old and that for Conscience and Religions sake The Kingdom of God is not meat nor drink neither if we eat are we the more acceptable or if we eat not the less 1. This is a wonderful consolation to every Christian whoso can prove themselves Believers they are the onely happy persons in the world they onely are free Art thou such a one be of good comfort there 's no condemnation to thee though thou hast been stung with sin yet seeing thou hast had grace to look up to Christ Jesus thou art cured Christ hath dyed for thee thou shalt not perish but have life everlasting Who shall lay any thing to thy charge Christ hath paid thy debt to the uttermost farthing when therefore the conscience of thy sin troubles thee with the danger thereof and the Devil pursueth thee with temptations O then look up to thy Surety stick to him he hath perfectly discharged thee Though there be a Hell wide and large and the burning thereof as it were fire and much wood which the breath of the Lord as a River of Brimstone doth kindle and wherein thou hast deserved to have thy portion yet there thou shalt not come Christ hath given a discharge for every one that believeth in him Thou art humbled the Spirit of God beareth witness to thine that thou art Gods and thou findest in thy self the fruits of faith be of good comfort God can as soon deny himself as that thou shalt perish O what cause have we to thank God for Christ Jesus and all the means whereby we came to faith and to be Christians we can have no curse in this world crosses for good are no curses death shall do us no hurt yea turn to our especial good Art thou a Believer then art thou no longer the Servant of sin to be at the command and follow it in the lusts thereof though thou canst not do as thou wouldest yet having thine understanding enlightened thy will and affections reformed and thine heart changed c. thou hast a blessed freedom a pledge indeed of that perfect freedom thou shalt have in Heaven yet labor every day to be more freed from the bondage of thy corruption and set at liberty to serve God And is it not a wonderful comfort that we may offer up Spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ and that we are enabled in some measure to do the will of God and that with delight and that our works though imperfect and done in weakness yet being done in Truth are accepted of God who hath compassion on us as a father on his son He that is indeed a true Believer is the onely free person in the world so free as nothing can make him otherwise let him be bound with sickness with poverty with imprisonment let him be tyed hand and foot let him be chained about the neck to a prison wall c. yet is he free free from sin and damnation free from the bondage of the Devil is a conqueror over temptations hath a free minde to serve God and even then with Paul and Silas and the three children can sing and laud his name O praise God for this walk thankfully and joyfully love the word and search it where these blessed prerogatives and priviledges be enrolled It s a great fault we rejoyce no more herein especially considering the price that our freedom cost 2. For them that cannot prove themselves Believers O let them labor to have a part in this freedom Rome had great priviledges therefore many sought and that with great sums to be free of it When the Jews were freed from Hamans conspiracy and had the Kings favor many become Jews O so me thinks many should desire to become Christians that they may partake of this freedom which is more to be desired then the whole world Till you be freed by Christ you are in woful bondage When the Son shall make you free then shall you be free indeed till which time you are bound indeed and that in a fearful maner the curse of God follows you whithersoever you go or ride you go not over a stile but you may break your neck get up on your horses but you may receive some deadly blows to send you to Hell take tools in your hands but you may mischief your selves thereby you may be swallowed up as Korah drowned as Pharaoh burnt with fire from Heaven as Nadab and Abihu eat up with worms as Herod Being unbelievers you have no warrant to the contrary every minute you hang over the pit of Hell for whom it gapeth You are also slaves of the Devil at his command and do base work for a woful master whose wages will be accordingly But this the world will not believe they dream not of Spiritual bondage neither consider that their hearts are fast locked in unbelief were they sensible hereof they would seek by all means to be rid of the same they would be afraid even to sleep this night lest Hell should catch them ere they awoke lest their souls should be fetched from them being in this condition O never be quiet till you know your selves freed by Christ to this end humble your selves confess your deadly bondage bewail it to God cry for pardon rest not till you receive a gracious answer never leave waiting on God in his Word and craving his Spirit till he change your hearts and make you free whence will spring peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost What are Riches Wit Civility yea the gifts of Knowledge Utterance and hearing of the Word with joy and the like without this This is to be known by Faith especially But how do most content themselves to hold the hope of Heaven by sleight conceits of their own rather then seek by sound
them occasions of sinning cease therefore to be wicked else shalt thou never cease to be miserable Be not afraid of their terror neither be troubled To comfort them in their sufferings for Christ he removes the enemy of constant and patient suffering namely Fear Be not saith he afraid of their terror neither be troubled that is Either be not afraid with the fear of ungodly men and such as have no hope in God who in the very least danger are altogether dismaid as the words in Isa. 8. 12. whence these seem to be taken do imply or Fear not the things wherewith they seek to afright you the Apostle using the words but to his own sense Fear not their faces big looks threats prisons censures and tortures neither be dismaid at them fear is an enemy to constant suffering as a coward can be no true Soldier and therefore are we often diswaded therefrom This hindred Nicodemus from coming unto Christ by day and multitudes from confessing him even for fear of the Scribes and Pharisees made Peter deny his Master and because of this in all alterations of Religion most turn with the time And would not many be more forward in goodness then they are if it were not for fear of displeasing O strive against this fear and be couragious so were Daniel the three Children the Apostles Moses the holy Martyrs c. Their Faith overcame their fear we need not fear men or what they can do to us for God will stand by us we must fear him fear to sin against him for unbelievers and fearful they shall have a fearful portion such as fear man more then God flye from the stroke of a childe and fall into the hand of a Gyant from a straw to a sword Verse 15. But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear HEre 's the true means of constant and patient suffering even faith resting it self confidently on God But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts We sanctifie God or his name as it s in the first petition of the Lords prayer not when we adde any holiness thereto which is holy beyond comparison but when we acknowledge and give that holiness which belongs to it Particularly herein we sanctifie the Lord in our hearts when we believing his faithfulness in his promises do thereupon rest on him in time of our troubles and this is to glorifie him Faith is the mother of constancy in suffering I know thy faith and thy patience Be thou faithful unto the death c. By faith those worthies mentioned in Heb. 11. did undergo all their sufferings This is the victory that overcomes the world The want of faith makes the world flye from God and his cause weakness of faith causeth fear to overflow us as in Peter and Cranmer as soon as we see some trouble to arise then are we ready to say with Peter O Master we perish If we do believe our selves to be the Lords and that our cause is just and good and that he hath all power in his hand and that none can stir further then he pleaseth and that he will strengthen his servants to endure and after this transitory life translate us unto life everlasting O this will encourage us indeed Labor we therefore for a good stock of Faith now in this time of peace and let us in our daily tryals reproaches and afflictions exercise the same and make good use of it If in these we can give glory to God by depending on him we may trust our Faith will not fail us when greater tryals shall befal us to believe God of his Word is to give glory to God as on the contrary to faint tends to his dishonor and as to believe on him is great ease to our selves so not to believe but faint very troublesom And be ready always to give an answer c. He proceeds to another duty as a fruit of the former trust in God exhorting us in token of our Faith in God that we be ready with courage to acknowledge and make confession of our Faith to those that shall demand a reason thereof This we must be ready at all times to do and so often as we shall be called thereto and to all men that have authority to call us and to any that shall demand it with a desire to learn or whensoever and wheresoever we shall see it meet and requisite so to do as the Spirit of God will direct his servants where when and to whom yet so as we do it with courage meekness and godly reverence Our duty then is not onely to believe the truth of God in our hearts but we must be ready outwardly to make profession thereof and confess the same with our tongues when God shall call us thereunto Abraham Isaac and Jacob walk'd as Pilgrims here on earth professing themselves Gods servants and Joshua professed That he and his would serve the true God Accordingly must we both by our speeches and actions declare whose servants we are so walking as that men may see we are not ashamed of God or his Word and way whatsoever others do most do yea rich and wise men do the great ones of the world do yet do we thus walk daring do no otherwise and not caring who know our carriage and behavior and though they scoff at it as scruplous too strict and precise and call us fools for our labor and ask us Why we do not thus and thus as we see most men do yet need not we be dismaid as being warranted by the Word of God So in all Companies we must make known what we are If we hear any rail at goodness speak ill of good duties oppose any part of Gods truth reproach the professors of Religion whether unknown or known unto us we must take the cause in hand standing for the defence of Gods truth and servants If by our timely answer any good may come to the Gospel we must not through our silence betray the same but if we be among scorners and dogs we must shew our dislike by departing from them Thus must we do being in company with prophane ones so if we be among Papists or other adversaries to the Truth we must have the zeal of God in us so if it be in the times of persecution that we be called forth by Magistrates or their authority we ought not to flinch nor be ashamed or afraid but shew what our Religion is what our Faith and Hope giving a Reason thereof out of Gods Word or if they demand us about any point of Religion we must in the defence of Gods cause speak our consciences freely Thus if the Jews or Turks should call us to know through whom we did hope look to be saved we must
good work 117 Verse 18 19. 1. THe third reason of the foregoing Exhortation 118 2. A man may know himselfe redeemed 119 3. Redemption presupposeth bondage and slavery ibid. 4. There 's a way whereby to come out of our bondage 120 5. The whole life of an unregenerate man is vain 121 6. Children readily follow the evil example of their Parents ibid. 7. Whom we are here to understand by fathers ibid. 8. Popish Religion stands in patches 122 9. Parents must give their children good example ibid. 10. To follow the example of our Ancestors is no sure rule 123 11. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage ibid. 12. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 125 13. Christs blood the true price of mans redemption 126 14. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb 129 15. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear 131 Verse 20 21. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 132 2. Christ was ordained before the world 133 3. The world shall not always continue 135 4. Christ how manifested ibid. 5. God is constant and unchangeable ibid. 6. Gods promises are unchangeable 136 7. Christ was then exhibited when God decreed he should so be ibid. 8. What God hath decreed shall be in dwe time accomplished 136 9. Three differences of times and why this called the last 137 10. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done ibid. 11. We now live in the latter end of the last times ibid. 12. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world 138 13. What we are to do that others may think well of us ibid. 14. We cannot believe in God but by the Son ibid. 15. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand 139 16. The benefits which they reap that believe in Christ ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHere there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love 140 2. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love ibid. 3. There 's uncleanness in us both in soul and body 142 4. Where there is sanctification of the soul there is also sanctification of the body 143 5. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing ibid. 6. Why the Word is called Truth ibid. 7. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification 144 8. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty ibid. 9. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works ibid. 10. What love is ibid. 11. The properties of love 146 12. Two caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magigrate 147 13. There 's little love in the world 148 14. The causes of the want of love 150 15. The effects of the want of love 151 16. Reasons inciting to the duty of love 152 19. The fruits of love must accompany the profession thereof 153 20. Brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections ibid. 21. Love must reach to all ibid. 22. How we ought to love the wicked 155 23. Love must be without faining ibid. 24. Love must be mutual 156 25. The properties of pure love 157 26. A Christians love must be earnest 158 27. Love must be constant ibid. Verse 23. 1. NO unregenerate person can truly love 159 2. Such as are born again must needs love ibid. 3. What Regeneration is ibid. 4. The Lord the Author thereof 160 5. The Lords will the cause thereof 161 6. Without Regeneration all things else we have are nothing ibid. 7. Regeneration of absolute necessity 162 8. The effects of Regeneration 163 9. A regenerate man is not the same he was before ibid. 10. A regenerate man groweth by degrees 164 11. Why men grow no faster in goodness ibid. 12. A caveat for such as complain they do not grow 165 13. There 's no perfection here in this life ibid. 14. Regeneration cometh not by nature 167 15. Gods Spirit by the Word changeth mans heart ibid. 16. Gods Word is the instrumental cause of our conversion 168 17. God doth not always tye himself thereunto ibid. 18. The Ministers of the Word are appointed of God the instruments to convert souls 169 19. Whence it cometh to pass that the Word worketh Regeneration 170 Verse 24 25. 1. VVHerein mans life may be compared to grass 171 2. How to be prepared for death 172 3. The glory of a carnal man but a vain thing 174 4. Nothing in an unregenerate man can abide the Lords examination 175 5. Gods Word the means whereby to live for ever ibid. 6. The Word by preaching made the instrument of Regeneration 176 7. The Word ought to be preached in every Congregation 177 8. The Word must be so preached as that it may be avouched to be indeed the Word of God ibid. CHAP. II. THe Coherence of this Chapter with the former with the sum thereof and of the first three Verses 179 Verse 1 2 3. 1. REgeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together 180 2. There 's no perfection to be attained unto here ibid. 3. To be is a Christian a work of great difficulty 181 4. Under those here named all other corruptions are included ibid. 5. Most of the corruptions here named are inward 182 6. That 's nought which is forbidden in Gods Word ibid. 7. What malice is with the difference between it and anger 183 8. What we are to understand by guile ibid. 9. Guile is to be avoided as well in smal as great matters 184 10. What Hypocrisie is 185 11. What Envy ibid. 12. What evil speaking ibid. 13. The Word of God cannot thrive in an unsanctified heart 186 14. Our desire toward the Word must be earnest ibid. 15. Our desire toward the Word must be constant 187 16. Our desire toward the Word must be impartial 188 17. Ministers must have store of milk for their spiritual children and store of love and much patience ibid. 18. The Word why compared to milk 189 19. Nothing sweeter to Gods children then the Word 189 20. The Word is the common food of all Christians ibid. 21. The Word why called sincere ibid. 22. Why Christians are to desire after the Word 191 23. Christians must daily grow in grace ibid. 24. Such as finde the Word powerful for their Salvation do the more desire it and affect it 192 25. Christ is sweet to a Christian and sweetens all that he hath 193 26. Christ is every way bountiful to his ibid. Verse 4 5. 1. VVHerein Christs bounty doth appear 194 2. A comparison between the Temple of Jerusalem and that which Christ maketh of all that believe in him ibid. 3. Christ why compared to a stone ibid. 4. To believe in Christ which is to come to him is a great priviledge ibid. 5. Christians must come to Christ 195 6. Christ the foundation that bears up his Church 198
be dismaid and dead as it were on the nest Through this they can even in Prison with Paul and Silas sing Psalms as through this the Martyrs endured the fire Daniel and the Three Children went cheerfully to suffer This also makes a Christian lively to serve God and in every duty to praise him as David Open thou my lips saith he namely with assurance of thy love and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise So to do good to others as being fitted to teach them as well the way of Gods justice against sin as the way of his mercy to them that repent yea hereby we shall be fit to every good duty I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge mine heart namely by the perswasion of thy love and by thy Spirit and the hope of Salvation It s a fault in Christians that they be no more cheerful in this hope but lumpish and soon daunted in afflictions a fault I say that we are no more active and lightsom in Gods business Let every one then labor for it till this we are not alive our soul never prospers nor sees good day This even this is the beginning of life and the first step to eternal life Would any man live and be cheerful and see good days and have that which might keep him from being daunted in adversity persecution death at the day of Judgement let him by all means get this Without this mens hopes are vain their stout courage will fail them in those times when God shall frown It s Faith onely which will carry a man through all things Hereby he shall have a heart to serve God yea both do and suffer the greatest things for him and his sake According to his abundant mercy The moving cause of this benefit of our calling to Faith and hope is Gods mercy nay hit abundant mercy The cause of all the good that ever came to us or ever shall come is no other but onely free favor Why did he elect us before the world but onely of his undeserved love According to the good pleasure of his own will not for works we had done it was before the world not for any we were like to do as who do none till he work them in us So also Why redeemed he us when we were all fallen into condemnation even for his meer mercy was there any thing in us could deserve it when we were utterly unable to do any good nay when his utter enemies why also hath he called us Did we or could we do any thing before our calling to deserve it We were not onely unable to think a good thought but serving the Devil with all our power walking in our lusts after the Prince that ruleth in the children of disobedience See our case in Ezek. 16. both in respect of our Parents sinners and our selves or any thing we can do Nay to cut the throat of all conceit of any merit less or more before or alter he saith His abundant mercy So that a little mercy such as is in man or some reasonable store as in Angels would not serve the turn nor was sufficient to save us or move the Lord to call us to this hope but an abundant deal of the mercy of God which is infinite Was it a small matter that moved God to chuse thee to Salvation rather then thousands of others or was it a small mercy to give us his onely Son to save and deliver us by suffering all the wrath due to us What Not his Servant nor his Friend but his Son his only begotten Son the wisdom of the Father the Image of the invisible God the engraven form of his Person to stoop so low as to become man nay in that base estate to be despised of men to be hated spitted upon mockt shamefully Crucified and he that knew no sin to stand in the stead of most vile sinners and so to be dealt with and that for us no friends but enemies no good persons but vile and wretched ones Was a little love enough to bring this to pass Oh no but a love without measure without example never such another even that any Father gave his only begotten Son to save traitors and enemies It was wonder that the Father did not rather suffer all mankinde to perish then to give his only most blessed Son to suffer the least of these indignites And it was no small love of Iesus Christ that moved him to leave the glory of the Father and stoop to the estate of a man and all his infirmities save sin and to endure all these tortures of men and his Fathers wrath especially It was no small love that made him give us his heart-blood when he shed a few tears for Lazarus the Jews said Behold how he loved him but having shed his blood for us what may we say So also is it a small measure of mercy to call us to the hope of Salvation from our wretched estate when we went on in sin and minded no good nay all evil It must needs be a great deal of mercy to move God to think well to us when we went on madly in our sins and did fight against him so also to forgive so many and horrible offences as we had committed no marvel though David craved the multitude of Gods mercies If they were not infinite our sins could not be forgiven for our sins come as neer infinite as number can make them then to cloath such wretches with the righteousness of his Son then to forget and forgive all that is past and take us into favor and make us here heirs of all his promises and priviledges and of life eternal hereafter who will not admire it Is not this abundant mercy to work this hope in us whom he might have justly condemned and when he might also have been glorified in our condemnation as he was in Pharoahs Plagues So also to adopt us for his children men adopt that have none of their own God had a natural beloved Son men adopt their kinsmen God us nothing of his kin yea his enemies men adopt for some good quality we had no such thing to move God was it not a great deal of mercy that moved God to call Paul that ran a persecuting of him in his members to forgive Mary Magdalen Manasses c. So every one of us What were we when God called us Must not we say that it was abundant mercy that ever we were called forgiven and saved They that have had their part in this abundant mercy must be stirred up to abundant thanksgiving saying with the Psalmist What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me We must testifie our love in ●ealous obedience all the days of our life shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called us out of darkness into his marvellous
themselves equal with him two vile ends for the maner also there are great odds God effects it thus He makes man an holy and happy creature gives him a commandment to exercise his obedience gives him power to obey useth reasons to have him take heed of breaking it threatens death thereupon onely leaves him to himself and to the Devils temptations yet sufficiently armed to resist him onely follows him not with new grace which he was not bound to do Who can finde any fault in this The Devil effects it by alluring and tempting them to do that which God forbade and that by his vile lyes Adam and Eve they believe the Devil and break the Commandment of their Creator Who can herein lay any thing to Gods charge or have cause to complain Hath the Devil nothing done but what he perswaded to Hath Adam and Eve nothing done but what they voluntarily without any compulsion yielded unto Have their Posterity Neither for 1. The godly they are restored to a better condition in Christ then they lost in Adam 2. The wicked they are never punished till they have justly deserved it by their own sins therefore it s without cause to complain So is God just Man and the Devil to be condemned What! shall they be blamed for doing the will of God for doing that which he had decreed They aymed at no such end but to fulfil their own lusts therefore are they justly to be blamed 1. This setteth out the exceeding goodness and mercy of God thus graciously to plot a remedy so soon which no man could have done God like a Father did plot and forecast for us If we had been left without a remedy or must have shifted for one it had gone ill with us Now as this should make us love the Lord for his goodness and care so what a comfort is this to poor souls that seeing their misery desire above all the world to be delivered out of the same Shall these miss of it if they seek it of God with humble heart If the Lord had this care of his Church ere it was will he suffer it to want any thing now that is if it seek it of him Did the Lord ordain a remedy before the world was was he so careful and now will he not bestow this remedy on all that truly desire it Will a Father be so provident to lay up corn and necessaries into his house before there be need of them and when need is and the children call and cry for bread will he deny it them 2. This should marvellously provoke all to labor for their part in Christ Was he fore-ordained of the Father and did he come and suffer and shall we not lay out for him O monstrous carelesness and unthankfulness yet how few seek him how few seek him aright Few seek him as a Savior fewer as their Lord and King most so coldly as that they shall not obtain such a benefit as this 3. This sheweth that as God ordained some to Salvation before the world which was the cause of ordaining Christ so this was most free for what could we do to move him before we were before the world was No as God sent his Son into the world of his meer mercy so he ordained him of the same 4. If Christ were thus ordained then he is no new Savior but the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world by whom all the Fathers have been saved Abraham saw his day and believed therefore none needs doubt or fear to trust in him He that believeth in him shall never be confounded nor make haste O that the Jews and Turks would believe this but they will one day be confounded with shame and make haste to seek another Savior when their former shall fail them 5. Lay for Christ ere thou lay a foundation for the world let him be first sought after Till we have Christ neither our persons nor works please God nor have we right to the things of the world nor any promise of blessing Before the foundation of the world As the foundation of the world was laid so it may and shall be unlaid and pull'd down and that by him that laid it The time will come when the Elements shall melt c. when the earth with all the works therein shall be consumed with fire As all things here be frail and of no continuance or certainty but subject to many alterations so the world it self that hath worn out many generations of people it self shall have an end already waxeth old Trust not to it it will deceive all that do It s like a great round Bowl whereon if a man should offer to stand it would roll away and lay him under feet if not break his back Too too many break themselves with the world onely Heaven lies foursquare But was manifest He is manifested three ways 1. By the Word and Sacraments 2. By his coming in the flesh 3. By his last coming to Judgement Here the second is chiefly meant for he was revealed in all Ages to our Forefathers in the Word and Sacraments but yet not so evidently and clearly as in our times in these last times wherein he was made manifest in the flesh Note here 1. The constancy and unchangeableness of the Lord who as he Ordained Christ before the world so he sent him in due time into the world The Lord is not as man that he should lye or repent his purposes are unvariable and his promises most certain and sure he wants no power to effect his Decrees and Purposes No length of time could make him alter or fail neither the wretchedness of the Age that he came in which was wofully corrupt when even they that bare the Name of the Church were defiled in Judgement and Conversation God notwithstanding would accomplish his purpose So it is with every one whom he elected before the world he will not lose one but in time afford them effectual means for Faith and Repentance no length of time no mans badness shall hinder this work The Lord had decreed to call and make his Covenant with Abraham and yet what was he but a blinde Idolater till God called him What also Paul who notwithstanding was ordained from his Mothers womb nay before the world to be a special instrument in the Church 1. This may comfort godly Parents over their children that be yet uncalled they may have hope they be in the compass of Gods election and so that God will one day have mercy on them Oh but they be thus and thus bad It s grievous indeed but that shall not hinder if they belong to Gods election Shall the wretchedness of man make the faith of God of none effect nay let God be true and every man a lyar wheresoever God hath any elect ones he will finde them out and remember them
men contend for trifles Oppress use false weights and sleights as also hinders from inviting and meeting together 4. Envy at the thriving and wealth of others about them or equal to them as Labans sons did at Jacob Cain that Abels Sacrifice was better regarded then his Esau that Jacob was blessed and Ismael that Isaac was the son of the Promise 5. Frowardness and shortness of spirit breaks love very often for angry words stir up strife 6. These very days of peace make men grow hollow and strange and to set little one by another As when Sheep see a Dog they run all together so trouble makes men to make much one of another whereas its otherwise in peace These be woful causes 4. The effects of this want of love are lamentable every where both in Church and Commonwealth O what woful breaches and contentions what wrongs and enmities So in Families so among particular persons how break they out to the dishonor of God yea sometimes Professors one with another to the shame of their Profession the interrupting of their Prayers or either the hindring of themselves from the Sacrament as many a time it is or slubbering it over and coming with festred hearts and so depriving themselves of the benefit thereof nay provoking the Lord by their unworthy receiving Seeing these things be so O let every one of us finding our selves faulty humble our selves crave mercy and labor to be reformed herein To this end learn we to pluck out of our hearts those noysom weeds that this precious plant of love may grow We must strive against infidelity and labor for more faith In humbleness of minde we must labor to esteem every one better then our selves we must labor for a moderate affection to outward things setting more by peace then them we must also avoid envy We have more then we could have look'd for Is our eye evil because our Masters is good we must also cease from frowardness and be gentle and meek and labor we that this love to our brethren may shew forth it self in all good fruits as in judging the best departing from our right not provoking or being easily provoked but forbearing and forgiving Alas we have need that others should forgive us for who lives and is not subject to offend God forgives us many and great debts and shall we catch our neighbor by the throat God bids us ask forgiveness on no other condition but to forgive our offenders and there 's no better sign that a man is forgiven of God then to shew mercy to men none can be assured of that but they will forgive Let us therefore from the sea of compassion that God sheddeth out upon us let fall some drop thereof on our neighbors and not seek revenge which every bad man yea beast can do but pass by offences which is the glory of a man Besides revenge is the Lords Office and to revenge is indeed to resist the Lord without whose Providence nothing is done this kept David from revenging himself on Shimei Not to revenge is always the best way for us and the worst for him that wrongs us There 's no dealing with a man that commits his cause to God more safe to anger a Witch then an Innocent meek spirited man that hath his recourse to God thou hadst better deal with one that will take revenge on thee to the uttermost To this end keep we out anger if we can if not yet let it not rest in us as it were sowring in our hearts Let not the Sun go down upon it This indeed the world accounts a base thing but its honorable it makes us like God Neither must we labor for this a little or some few times but for a long skirted love that will cover even a multitude of offences And let our love shew it self in giving Spiritual and Temporal things for God gives to good and bad and makes us but Stewards of that he gives us that we may dispense the same yea the more we give the more we have as which encreaseth by giving and for Temporal things the high-way to thrive therein is to be merciful as to beggary to be pinching 5. The general reasons inciting to this duty of love 1. God requireth it of us who is love and if we perform it we do not so much serve our Neighbor as please God who takes it as done to himself If we neglect it we neglect not our Neigbor onely but God who takes himself wronged in this point 2. We are all one flesh and all have some part of the Image of God upon us But for the people of God 1. We be members of the same body The members of the Natural body not onely hurt not but help each other else quickly would the body be brought to confusion 2. Brethren not Natural ones but a better Brotherhood a nearer Bond Now between Brethren there must be no contention and it were a shame for such to contend 3. Both the Word requires it and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper calls for and puts us in minde of it 4. No better Argument that we are in the light love God are Christs Disciples and translated from death to life then this 5. The beauty of a Christian is love he 's the best Christian who loves most whose lips feed most whose branches spread widest 6. As it brings us much peace to our conscience and will comfort us not a little on our death-bed that we have not lived to our selves but to be useful to many especially to Souls so it procureth us love in the places we live in and in the Church of God where we have a good name No man is well beloved though he have good things in him if he be not loving Oh say they he is a good honest man but a harsh Censurer Contentious and so hasty that no man can tell how to speak to him he is a strait man no man is the better for him by counsel encouragement admonition so for other things But if a man be full of love Oh it shall procure him love again he shall be commended while he lives and mourned for when he dyes as they wept for Dorcas but a proud churlish close man he shall live without being desired and dye without being mourned for Many would have Love and Good-will and Credit but will not seek this way to procure it they live closely to themselves neither being useful or any way liberal to their Neighbors let them never look for it Many care not so they may scrape all to themselves for their good name let it go whether it will but these are bafounded and its a curse so to live Thus in general In particular Touching the love to the Children of God which is here chearfully called for consider we both the duty and the maner how it s to be performed For the duty it self it
the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever THis duty of love is of such use and we so untoward to it and so hard a thing for us to love as we ought that it s urged with a Reason True it is so and no more then needs for the spirit that is in us lusteth after envy The Reason is taken from the grace of Regeneration bestowed upon them They were born again and therefore were to shew the fruits thereof as in other things so in this of love Where might be noted 1. That such as are not born again cannot love no more then men can gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles or pour Wine out of a Bottle full of Vinegar but as Grapes are gathered of the Vine so must love come from a Regenerate man not otherwise 2. That the Regenerate man must needs love therefore they that declare no love but hate their Brethren the people of God especially shew they be not born again nor of God But I proceed to the words Being born again Here 's occasion offered to speak of the grace of Regeneration Touching it consider briefly these particulars 1. What it is to be born again It s to be made new creatures to be cast in a new mold to have the corrupt Image of Sin which we have by Nature and wherein we were conceived and born put off throughout and the contrary good one wherein we were at the first created put on to have the understanding enlightned with distinct knowledge of God the heart bowed to the obedience of God c. new thoughts desires speeches actions In the new Creature all things must become new Thus it s done to all that were elect before the foundation of the world They are changed up and down from a good state by Creation to a bad in Adam from thence to a good one in Christ by grace here in expectation of glory hereafter For the wicked they are changed from good to bad and there remain the same but still worse and worse for ever we should give God thanks that made us so good at first be humbled to see our base and woful state now and seeing there is help never to be quiet till we recover our first condition 2. That the Lord is the Author hereof he takes away the stony heart and gives a new heart an heart of flesh It s his work onely nor Man or Angel can change the heart to work a deadly hatred of that which by nature we love as our lives and to love and take delight in those courses duties companies which sometimes were as a Prison Alas the best Paul and Apollos cannot often even of their Children or very Friends not a few remain unconverted though haply in the mean time God bless their labors to convert many others Yea if an Angel should take a man and carry him to Heaven and shew him the Joys thereof and thence to Hell and shew him the Torments thereof yet this would not convert him neither all Mercies Afflictions or Plagues of Egypt It s a great work of God and so great as if all things were not possible to him he could not do it It s a greater work then the Creation of the World In that there was no opposition in this much we have not onely no aptness to good or to be wrought to goodness but a violent opposition against it there but to make the things here both to put out the corrupt nature and to put in the contrary good then he made all of nothing now he makes good of nought As its easier making a thousand glasses then the setting together one that is broke so it was easier to speak quo ad nos for all things are alike easie to God to make the world then to repair the broken Image of God in man It s a miraculous work of God greater then any miracles that Christ or his Apostles wrought our Saviors several miracles upon the bodies of men are all done in the conversation of a sinner sight restored to them that were blinde and darkness it self hearing to the deaf speech to the dumb feet to the lame Devils cast out yea many for the Devil possesseth us and all our Parts and Members Hearts Hands Eyes Tongues Feet c. as any Captain holds a Castle and hath it at command Thus it s a wonderful work of God to see a mans Soul and Life his wit will desires affections and all altered from black to white It was a wonder to see the Criple go and for him that was born blinde to see but it s more marvel to see a man converted for whereas God gave power to work all these miracles the raising of the dead not excepted to men this of regenerating is his own onely If we finde it ascribed to Ministers as Paul is said to have begot Onesimus and as a Father the Corinthians we must not conceive as if it were not proper to God onely but know that it is for that God would keep them the instruments by whom he works from contempt A good Husband or Wife may be a good means each to other but have no power of themselves Adam could easily cast away himself but none could restore him but God onely as a Childe of half a year old may break a glass which all the men in the Town cannot set together again It s wrought of God by uniting us to Christ by Faith through his holy Spirit which works this alteration when pardoning our sins past he taketh away the guiltiness and punishment thereof in his death Let all that can prove it give all glory to God for so unspeakable a mercy even that when they were going headlong to destruction when as vile as any he yet called them passing by thousands which yet lie in their sins And for them that can prove no such thing let them not delay nor put off to the last as the fashion is as though it could be dispatcht in a trice or with a wet finger but seek it both earnestly and quickly in the means appointed Why do men think they shall repent on their death bed rather then now Is it because the pain or fear of death will make them Alas all the Plagues in the world cannot change a man without God and will God be near to work then Nay he that was rejected in health and life will more likely cast off in death and if he will not bless his Word will he work in the end by other means This is little better then Sauls practise to go to the Devil when God would not help him 3. That the Lords own will is the moving cause hereof As he Elected freely and gave Christ of his love so this Nothing in us could move him hereto but whom he elected before the world those doth he of the
places where you live and in all good Works Disallowed indeed of men Here 's shewed how this foundation is esteemed both of Men and God He first speaks of men and that by way of prevention No marvel you speak of Christ to be such a Foundation might they have said we are sure when he came into the world a number cared not for him would none of him and those none of the fools or simple ones but Wise Politick Learned Clerks True saith he but what then yet I have that which will weigh it down namely that he is chosen of God and precious to him and them that shall believe on him Disallowed he was indeed of men They called him the Carpenters Son a Samaritan Wine-bibber deceiver They would have no other King but Caesar never left him while they put him to death with them Barabbas was meeter to live then he What was the cause or how should they disallow him when it was so plain that he was the Christ foretold by the Prophets who came at the same time in the same place and after the same maner whose Life Preaching and Works did well declare him so to be what might be the cause hereof They looked for one that should come as an earthly Prince to deliver them out of the hands of the Romans but his Kingdom was not of this World They looked also for one that should have upheld their Customs Law and Traditions but the date of them was out See by the way what it is to have an old conceit setled in ones brain O how hardly is it removed Again How came they to this height of disallowing him at the first of ignorance and blindeness but after of malice so men grow when they desire not to amend and see the Truth from one degree of wickedness to another The Jews disallowed him and do to this day though the hand of God be heavily upon them according to their own Imprecation His blood be on us and our children whose case is most fearful So is the case of all others that disallow him whereof there be multitudes among us Why nay all we allow him O most of Pharisees disallow him and will perish Yes most among Jews and Turks but all we shall be saved unless it be here and there an adulterer or horrible drunkard c. Consider that of four sorts of grounds Professors three are naught O most among us disallow Christ while they will not come to him embrace him as their Savior and renouncing all evil take up his yoke as their Lord most amongst us allow a kinde of Christ but not a true Christ They allow a Christ that will save them though they never be humbled though they live still in their sins but Christ is no such Christ will save no such O let all such look to it that will not come to Christ as he hath appointed you think the Jews Judas and the Soldiers have a fearful account to make so they have and how shall they appear before Christ at the day of Judgement but even thousands in our Parishes are in no better case that break his bonds and despise the offer of his blood Such are all Apostates that have profest the name of Christ and fall away all fearful ones that deny him out of fear and all that will not embrace him being offered Disallowed Was not this no ill sign of Christ that he was disallowed O no Even that may be disallowed of men which yet is allowed and highly accounted of of God nay the more Spiritual any thing any course any person is the more and the sooner will the world disallow him and it For they be carnal therefore savor the things of the flesh not of the Spirit they be in darkness therefore care not for the light The more Spiritual any thing is the higher is it out of their reach Those courses and persons that be carnal the world allow well of four hundred false Prophets maintained at Jezabels Table good Micaiah and Elias abused of those that wandred up and down in sheep-skins and goat-skins the world was not worthy yet did not the world think them worthy to be among them but thrust them among the wilde Beasts Others also were racked as the vilest Malefactors yea our Savior himself was so accounted so the Apostles men wonder at them as at a thief Hence learn 1. That we are not to esteem the worse either of our selves or others because of the worlds mislike many be so weak that if they see the most and especially any great ones or any learned cry down a man or an action c. they are carried away and open their mouthes wide against them but if that might have gone currant Christ himself had been naught we must not go upon any such rule but examine whether they be allowed of God or not if they be then are we not to regard what the world saith The world wil prefer Barabbas to Christ call evil good and good evil There 's no more heed to be given thereto then to be judged of a blinde man concerning colours As they that have sore eyes cannot abide the clear light and Sun-shine so cannot the wicked abide that which is pure and Spiritual yea the things that they highly allow are abominable in the sight of God 2. That they which disallow that and those whom God alloweth are in a miserable condition they cross God and he will cross them The time shall come when they shall finde by woful experience that he disalloweth them when they shall be glad and desire to be in the number of those whom they have most despised but to no purpose Ye also as lively stones are built up Now of the rest of the building that is reared upon this Foundation Every Believer is a stone of this building a lively stone and all together make up a spiritual House for the Lord to delight in as many stones go to the making up of a material House Now in that Christ is compared to the Foundation and believers to stones built on him it sheweth the near conjunction that is between Christ and them as stones are joyned to the Foundation by morter so are believers to Christ by the Spirit Accordingly he is compared to a head and the Church to the body he to the Vine and the Church to the Branches Such an Union is between Christ and Believers as is between the husband and the wife no more twain but one bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Before a man have Faith he is as a dead stick or stone by Faith he is united to Christ which is signified by these and the like speeches eating Christs flesh and drinking his blood which is to believe in him shewing that as the meat we eat is turned into our substance and nearly
must settle 3. It teacheth us to search the Scripture laboring by all means that the Word of Christ may dwell in us plentifully that so we may be grounded If we hear God speaking in his Word we must sit down by it all mouthes must be stopt if not we must not be carried without it Again He alleageth the Old Testament as Christ and the other Apostles did for the Old was the same in substance with the New and of the same Authority Further In that he nameth not the place nor the Prophet it sheweth their skill and rebuketh our ignorance that have not the book of God clasped against us as in Popery but open if we can take our time for the place it self it s alleaged with some alteration of the words though not of the sence 1. He leaves out a word or two and takes that which fitteth his purpose 2. He turneth these words of the Prophet He that believeth shall not make haste into these He that believeth on him shall not be confounded The Prophet sets down the effect the Apostle the cause for unbelievers being ashamed it makes them run up and down in their misery for some other help seeing themselves disappointed and deceived The occasion of that promise there was to comfort the good in respect of the great threatnings against the bad and contemners namely that they should not be destroyed and cast off among the rest and that the wicked might not scorn them and think all Gods promises made to them fallen to the ground Behold This being a word to stir up attention implieth that What the Lord saith he doth He is true of his word the Almighty and who cannot be hindred He saith not Such a stone shall be laid but Behold I lay it whereby he confirms the good and puts them out of doubt who by reason of the threatnings were grown weak fearful and in doubt Here see our infidelity in Spiritual things especially if we see any things against us such was Zacharias So was not Abraham he looked not to carnal lets but rested on Gods Word had enough that God spake it so should we If we have any promise of Gods mouth we should be of good comfort and believe and not be dismaid at our sins and unworthiness Come unto me saith our Savior all ye that are weary and laden and I will refresh you c. What promise more comfortable and yet many seeing their sins and danger cannot be comforted and perswaded But we must give God the glory to believe him on his word and know that nothing can make him break promise or change his minde either any hinder him from performing what he hath promised I lay It s God that layes the Foundation of his Churches Salvation All the Men and Angels in the world cannot lay one stone in this building unto this Foundation Though God use the Ministery of his servants Men to this purpose yet its God that by his Spirit makes them fit and couples them hereto therefore much less could they lay this corner stone Paul saith he laid this Foundation By Preaching the same to the people not otherwise That Foundation which God had laid before the world and appointed to be Preached that he taught to the people and that was all he did If God gave Christ generally for his Church then for every humble soul that seeth his need of Christ and cometh with an heavy heart to him and desires him above all the world assuredly he will give him to such In Sion That hill in Jerusalem is put for the Church whereof it was a type and because the Gospel was first preached there Christ there revealed and from thence conveyed into all nations far and wide so that now by Gods mercy we have him no less preached unto us then the Jews had and have also our part in him as largely O unspeakable mercy A chief corner stone A chief stone a foundation stone This is the principal point in this first part of the Verse but of this on the fourth Verse where was shewed That he is not a stone as others be in the building but the foundation on which they are all built which sustains and holds them together there being no other foundation but he This the Papists overturn and that both in respect of his Kingly Prophetical and Priestly Office For his Kingly Office which is to rule over the consciences of his subjects by his Spirit and to have power to make Laws to binde their consciences they take it from him for with them the Pope may also make Laws of his to binde the conscience as much as any of Christs and doth and may repeal some of his at his pleasure For his Prophetical Office which is to be the onely Teacher of his Church and to reveal all his Fathers minde in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles this they take away by adding as if the Word were altogether imperfect unwritten Verities and mens Traditions which say they are of absolute necessity to be obeyed to Salvation For his Priestly they abolish both parts of it 1. His Sacrifice All sufficient and once offered on the Cross for all by their blasphemous Mass wherein they offer Christ daily as they say as a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the quick and the dead 2. His Intercession wherein they joyn many Saints with him What Salvation can there be for such le ts pray for and keep our selves far from them Elect Christ is chosen of God to the work of our Redemption and furnished for it therefore make we choyce of him for our portion wo to them that refuse him He that believeth on him shall not be confounded Hereby is meant a true particular justifying Faith Such as have this shall not be ashamed or seek at any time as confounded or deceived of sufficient help and Salvation therefore he shall never be put to make haste to seek any other The true Believer shall never be confounded but finde enough in Christ to satisfie him to the full to deliver him from all evil and make him partaker of all Happiness Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption and enough to make his minde peaceable and quiet and to stablish him against all that his own conscience or any yea the Devil himself can lay to his charge but he findes enough to answer all at large As Thou art a sinner and hast deserved Damnation and God is just R. I grant all but I have a surety able enough who hath born all Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It s God that justifieth c. His heart is fixed he believeth in the Lord In his life he hath that wherein he may quiet himself and never be to seek but may draw new life and grace from Christ to enable him to
I le look after no other he will do his good will and I can desire no more of a man The like might be instanced in a Physitian for our body nay a Shepherd or a Keeper for our Cattel Nay will men take it well if such as through want of skill have spoiled their work should say Why we did our good will and you can have no more But will you not say You should not have taken it in hand except you could have done it If I had known it I would have sent it five miles or sent five miles for a Workman rather then had my Stuff spoiled Thus there is no end of devices that the Devil hath to put in mens heads to keep them from regarding the word and matters of Salvation nay that people will seek out for themselves even to wrong their own souls And this is one main cause why so few people be saved because none so simple but he can finde a shift nor none so worldly wise but he can suffer himself to be held back by one of these or the like hinderances In our earthly journeys we love smooth and plain way and finde fault with the contrary but as if the way to Heaven were too plain men seek out blocks to lay in their own way but all these things will no more serve their turn when God shall come to judge them then a Breast plate of brown Paper against a Musket-shot For alas they be but devices and false causes in stead of the true For the very reason indeed that people have no minde to Religion is because it crosseth their humor 1. Discovering their sins which they would have still hid and rebuking them 2. Striving to pluck them from their sins wherewith being in love they are unwilling to part 3. Laying duties upon them which they have no minde to stoop to but count it a being tyed and shortened to yield obedience to the same which is indeed the main reason and true cause If it were not for such and such things will they say we would you should know we would be as forward as the best Well let us as many as have been thus foolish learn to be wiser and devise no blocks No though we meet with some things otherwise then ought to be let not that make us fall out with Religion In worldly things people be so eager as if they have a minde to a thing it s no small matter shall beat them off as from a Lease Farm Purchase or Bargain but in Heavenly things not a cause but a shadow of a cause will keep men back O how happy might we be here in England and in these parts if we were wise that have the Gospel so graciously Preached unto us Many Nations have it not and they cannot be happy and we have it and yet through our own froward hearts deprive our selves of the benefit thereof If we have been weak le ts labor to be strengthened against these and lift up our feet over these logs that the World layeth in our way neither rest we content therewith as too many are In our ordinary ways if any Lewd and Drunken Companions in the Night should tumble Logs or lay stumbling Blocks to stop our passage by horse or foot we finde great fault and that justly but we are content to have Logs laid in our Spiritual way lest we should be happy And le ts labor to strengthen others and help them over and let none of us be any longer hindred hereby much less let there be a mischievous heart in any of us to lay them in others way to hinder them but go on our selves roundly in the way to Salvation and help as many others forward as possibly we can Notwithstanding these lets we must not be loth to enter this way but labor to bring our hearts to this to see and confess and forsake our sins and be content in every thing to be ruled by the Word And what thankfulness owe we God that have passed over these Blocks and are in our way to Heaven whereas so few scape them It was of him alone O pray we him to help us also against all those that yet remain Being disobedient Here he proceeds to shew the bad estate of unbelievers They are disobedient to the Word of God which is given them for a rule and light to guide them to Salvation And this is indeed the very Reason of their much stumbling at the Word because men have no minde to be ruled by it They think it tyes them too short therefore they have no minde to stoop to it therefore they are willing to take any occasion against it for if men had a minde it s not those idle pretences should keep them from it as in worldly things we see The lesson we learn from hence is That God hath therefore left his Word amongst us not that we should onely hear it or make an outward profession thereof but that we should take it as our Rule and Law to guide us and in all things make Conscience to yield obedience thereto what it forbids to count as a cursed thing what it commands to esteem as holy and good and necessary to be obeyed This is that which God evermore requireth in his charges This keeping is not a Legal Observation which no flesh can attain Christ hath fulfilled that perfectly for us but an Evangelical which is when believing in him that hath done it perfectly we do our unfeined endeavor constantly to be obedient thereto and that 1. In one thing as in another having with David Zechary and Elizabeth respect to all 2. Freely and not by constraint not as Pharaoh let Israel go 3. Not outwardly but inwardly with the heart and minde ayming at Gods glory 4. Constantly and to the end Yet more particularly 1. We must not give good words onely but follow Christ as the Apostles who forthwith at his call left all to wait on him 2. Our obedience must be shaped after Christs willing in all things to do Gods will as do also the Saints and Angels in Heaven 3. It must be like Abrahams as he left his Country and all when God called contrary to all temptations and that readily and simply without reasoning or indenting so must we forsake our sins though never so natural and never excuse it thus It s my nature my Predecessers have done so I have been long accustomed hereto He left his Countrey so natural to him and that in his age We must obey against all temptations of Profit Pleasure Ease Father Mother Wife Children though all these hang about our necks we must yet readily obey 4. Throughly not as the Devils who if they must needs out of the man yet would tarry in the coast The obedience of the wicked is like their Fathers the Devil it s but in part as the Devil entred into the Swine so they will tarry in some sin
to our selves or the use of any lawful means If he set open the door then we may go out but not break away but be content so long here to stay as God shall see meet The world cannot abide to think of death or of the day of Judgement would buy them off yea but to be deferred with much money an ill sign nay many of Gods Servants be much to blame some so addicted to the world as not willing to part with it O ye be of little faith It s base that any thing here should take up our affections from longing to be with our true Inheritance Nay thus some Christians are held lingring indeed and that for wife and childrens sake especially namely to see them brought up and kept from evil courses seeing often the contrary through the want of Parents the wrack of many children As for the most part this argueth weakness of faith in Gods providence especially if their desire be excessive for God can provide for them without us moderately to desire life for this cause or only to do God some other service is tolerable always provided that it be the love of nothing here below that detaineth our affections but that we so esteem of the world and all that is in it as we see no cause in it why it should take up our hearts and make us linger here The causes that should make us desire to be hence should be sin and the desire to be with God sin to chase us hence and the love of God and Heaven the excellency of that place and state should allure us thither Some desire to be gone but it s most ignorantly and desperately for its onely because they be in trouble full of pain have many crosses Thus many make away with themselves others impatiently wish to be gone poor mad fools not knowing what is a coming onely looking to be eased of the present grief O our poor folly also and the earthliness of many of Gods people that are not wearied hence by sin and by their corrupt nature and continual spring of sin that they cannot be rid of but annoys them daily and continually Therefore God is pleased to send them sorrows and pains and with a week or fortnights pain they are made willing to dye that were not so before A great fault of sundry Christians that have their hands and heads so full of business as they cannot desire to be gone nay had need of a twelve-moneths warning to set their matters right This is not Pilgrim-like they may hap not have a week therefore so walk as you may ever be willing to be gone and be ever of this minde that to be gone is most happy and most to be desired 10. Pilgrims the nearer their Journeys end they are the gladder So ought Christians that have passed many years and are grown old to thank God highly that now their salvation is nearer then when they first believed it that they would not their time were to begin again and that they were yong again c. but thank God they draw nearer the shore where they shall arrive at the Haven of rest Ancient Christians near their end have this advantage that they have almost past the Pikes yong ones know not what remaineth for them yea every day a Christian at night should thank God that hath brought him safely one days journey nearer his end then in the morning Many think they grow old too soon too fast if they could make their years stand still as Joshua's Sun they would be glad Verse 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation VNto the former Exhortation of purging the heart he adds this of looking to our outward behavior and conversation among men namely that it be honest good godly and every way such as may not onely not be offensive but may be of good example yea to the very wicked that though for a time they speak evil of us as our nature is to do of every one that differs from us thinking our own courses still to be best yet at last they looking more narrowly and seeing our constancy in well-doing may be enforced to think well of us and whensoever God shall touch their hearts with his grace they may glorifie God and say This is the onely true way of worshiping God and thank God for it and all the means that have brought them to the sight of it The parts are two 1. The Exhortation 2. The Reasons thereof The Exhortation is to godly life and that is inlarged by the circumstance of persons or company before whom namely the Gentiles that is the Idolatrous Wicked and Unbelieving The Reasons 1. That they may be prepared to their conversion by beholding our good life which is set forth by the contrary in former time namely their speaking ill of us 2. That they may glorifie God which is set out by the time namely when God shall please particularly and in a special maner to bestow his grace upon them so that by our innocent godly life led among the wicked we shall provide for our own credit their good and Gods glory which is the thing we should chiefly aym at in all our actions Here observe we first our Apostles order He begins at the right end as a wise Builder he lays a good Foundation then builds on it as a skilful Chyrurgion he first purgeth out dead flesh then heals which else would heal and break out again Reformation if ever if be good must begin at the heart No man can have a good conversation whose heart is Unregenerate and Unsanctified for from the heart proceeds the life if sin and lusts be nourished there they will break out as fire hid in straw or dry wood for our bodies are as apt to execute as our hearts to broach evil For one to purge the Channels and leave the Fountain foul were to lose his labor for one also to pull off the tops of the weeds and leave the roots still were to no purpose The heart must be washen kept cleansed from inward lusts else no godly life 1. This confutes the Papists that talk of good conversation and yet regard not the heart either seek after true justifying faith whereby to purge the same 2. This shews and rebukes the folly of those that think to frame a good life as civil persons and yet never knew the corruptions of their hearts nor what Faith means that purifieth the heart nor make Conscience of their inward lusts Hence it is that they shamefully deceive themselves especially in the first Table and in the sight of a true Christian that can tell what belongs to good conversation Numbers think upon occasion they will never do as they have done but promise great amendment as upon
of other in prosperity and adversity for body and soul and this is for the continuance and increase of love True it is the Husband may be absent from his Wife either by the commandment of his Prince being imployed in any service whether in Church or Commonwealth or upon his own necessary affairs as Merchants and Marriners or upon meer necessity as many dwelling in one place do yet work in another yet must not he fail in his absence to pray for her to keep himself chaste to have her as it were still present with him sending to her as often as he can and returning as speedily as he may Also if any contagious disease should be they may with mutual consent part for a while It must be matter of weight must keep them any time asunder not any unkindeness yea though both be willing to dwell asunder For whom God hath joyned together no man must sunder And as they may keep in one house so one bed and board must hold them therefore it is that she is said to lie in his bosom and Let her breasts satisfie thee at all times 1. This condemneth all unlawful parting 's of Husband and Wife as of the Jews which put away their Wives when they took dislike of them by giving them a Bill of divorcement This came of the hardness of their hearts but was not so from the beginning Of sundry in our times which live asunder as have been married yong through some sinister respects of their Parents or rashly or inconsiderately though come to years of discretion which afterwards they have disliked neither party loving the other according to Gods Ordinance of those Husbands that idly give themselves after marriage to travel to see Countreys and Fashions thus exposing as well themselves as their Wives to Satans temptations Of those that for the most part haunt Inns Alehouses and Taverns Gusling Gaming and Whoring being but seldom at home If the Husband is to leave Father and Mother much more such places to cleave to his Wife Of those which following their Recreations and Pleasures put all upon their Wives chiding them for whatsoever is done amiss by Servants or others those prove cruel taskmasters to their Wives like Pharaoh's to the Israelites were it not better for such their businesses being over to read confer and lovingly converse with their Wives and should not their company be better to them then all companies in the world 2. This condemneth those that part boards the Husband being either so proud as he thinks his Wife not good enough to sit with him at Table or she so unquiet that he eats by himself each Hog in his own Trough yea and beds too and that either continually or upon discontent for some time or upon surliness and overmuch coyness when the Husband will not be troubled with the childes crying c. as if he were not sometimes to bear such marriage troubles but lay all upon his Wife 3. This condemeth the marriage of Children who must be kept asunder many years This comes from the excessive haste of Parents which dare not trust God for a marriage rich enough till they come of years but thus prevent the Lord Such think they work wisely but for the most part it s but foolishly They think thus to build their houses but for the most part it proves their ruine such seldom loving one another According to knowledge Husbands must be men of understanding and knowledge in the Scriptures and grounds of Christian Religion that they may do good to their wives and whole family They are the head therefore must be able to guide the eye therefore must see If the eye be dark all must needs be dark as the oyntment on Aarons head ran down on his beard and thence to the skirt of his garment their knowledge must be exercised for the good of their wives and the meanest in their family They must be men of knowledge 1. To instruct them in the ways of God to pray with them and especially when through weakness or sickness their wives have been forced to stay at home to inform them of such Points as were publikely delivered by the Preacher 2. To comfort them in their heaviness of minde affliction of body loss of children and the like and that from the Word of God being able to asswage the bitterness of their grief 3. To advise and counsel them for the best 4. How to admonish and reprove them They must not do it without cause nor when there is cause in an ill maner before company or with carnal bitterness but rather in the terms of the Scriptures and in love 5. When to yield to their requests or perswasions Herein Adam Sampson and Ahab failed but Job in rebuking his wife shewed he was a man of knowledge 6. To bear with their weaknesses and infirmities meet to be born with 7. Not prescribing them to do any unlawful or unreasonable thing whether on the Lords day or at other times as to say They are not within when they are within c. 8. Not keeping such a number of Dogs as may be both loss and continual vexation to their wives or removing up and down till they have wasted all they have Thus bad wives may be brought on to goodness and good wives made better 1. This condemneth the common abuse of this Land How few husbands be men of knowledge able to instruct comfort advise govern or admonish their wives how few able to pray with them repeat a sermon to them or comfort them in any of their heavinesses Hence it is that they burthen their wives with needless things Hence many women of some good parts and towardness matching with such Worldlings and Ignorants have been undone Hence so many jars and contentions in families How many wives would perform their duties if their husbands would go before them in performing theirs O what evils might be avoided if husbands had but discretion but most are void of understanding cannot give a reason of their Faith cannot pray in their families scarce give thanks for their meat check and discourage their wives from goodness if they have any inclination thereto Alas in these days if they get a little hair on their faces and their portion into their hands they think themselves fit to marry though they have neither wit nor understanding or if they stay some years it s to get goods to set up with not that they may be furnished with knowledge Parents enquire after wealth and how their daughters shall live but do not much regard their living with men of knowledge 2. This condemneth the Papists which forbid the Layety to read the Scripture But where 's knowledge to be learned if not by them It s enough with them that their Priests have knowledge yet must not they marry 3. For those that are married and have failed herein let them redeem the
and prophane persons excuse themselves from embracing Religion but this shall not serve their turn There is odds indeed and no marvel For we know in part and believe in part But wherein is the difference not in the grounds of our Religion but in matters of Ceremony and Circumstance So far as the Ministers of the Church of England agree let them embrace believe and obey and it shall be sufficient to bring them to Heaven as for the things about which they differ they little concern them we are to desire God that these controversies were at an end and that we may be all of one minde about these things till which time we are to desire that there might not be such Separation of affections for these things but as both may be saved and be good Christians that be of either of both mindes so there might be a consent and agreement and not one rent asunder in affection from another for as it were extream uncharitableness for any to judge any for these things whom they see to live godly and Preach diligently so to censure those over sharply that are not altogether of the same judgement This doth much hurt for as it was said The war of Hereticks is the peace of the Church so it is now too true That the contention of the Church is the peace and increase of Papists among us Hereby also many fall to Brownism and sundry no doubt hereupon shake off all care of Religion and are little better then Atheists Some there are even also amongst private Christians that having somewhat better gifts of wit and memory and some more knowledge then others fall to curious questions and maintain strange and singular opinions as That they can discern Spirits and in an hours talk with a man know certainly whether he be a childe of God or not c. whereby they draw parties to themselves fall into wrangling and strife with such as oppose their fancies becomes strange unto them discharge them behinde their backs whence the godly are grieved and prophane ones take occasion to exclaim against the profession of Religion yea their Ministers become ill thought of as teachers of such Novelties Such are of a proud Spirit as who take up Opinions not grounded in the Word and maintain them also to the breach of unity and love If any scruple arise in our mindes we are in humility to resort to those whose lips are appointed to preserve knowledge For unity in civil affairs or outward conversation We ought to be of one minde in every good thing in our families and places where we live husbands and wives neighbors with neighbors must be like-minded one towards another according to Christ Jesus any other is a conspiracy no true agreement In Towns men ought to joyn together to suppress evil persons and places and set up goodness so much as in them lies where two or three thus consent there is God in the midst of them But in most places men set themselves to cross one another and Baal hath them which plead for him and against God and goodness as if one Horse were set at the one end of the Cart and another at the other end and each put to draw they would trample the ground tire themselves and do no good to the owner so is it in many Towns where dissention beareth sway nothing is done to the glory of God or good thereof And for particular persons and neighbors they must be of one heart and live lovingly together not offering occasion of offence nor readily embracing any but forgetting forgiving and passing by injuries not giving place unto wrath nor suffering the Sun to go down thereon We are brethren members also of one body we must live like Lambs one with another O how good and comely a thing is it thus to live but alas how do men wrangle and contend for every trifle Welfare Abraham he would rather yield to Lot then contend we are his children if we follow his steps What a shame is it that they which are baptized with the same Baptism profess the same Faith and say that they are guided by the same Spirit should yet be at strife and variance O fie upon it How do these stain their Prayers hinder themselves from the Sacrament How canst thou look God in the face who thus break his Commandments Hereof pride and covetousness are the main causes Take we heed to these duties that living in peace the God of love and peace may be with us Having compassion one of another Another vertue required is to be of like affection each to other in their prosperity rejoycing with them and desiring the continuance thereof as in their heaviness to be grieved yea we are to rejoyce in their prosperity though we our selves were in affliction to rejoyce I say whether in respect of the Church in general or of the particular Members thereof Such shal not prosper that have ill will to Sion that envy the prosperity of the Church nor such as are envious at the good estate of particular Christians or Ministers their welfare credit peace liberty nor such as have an ill eye at their Neighbors thriving in wealth credit gifts or any other blessing Through the Devil justly stiled the envious man as being the author of envy they become thus envious What shall we have an ill eye because God is good what is this but to finde fault with God How was envy punished in Cain in Esau in the Edomites c. It s a work of the flesh which God cannot away withal nay we are not to envy at the prosperity of the wicked for they shall pay full dearly for it Naturally we are addicted hereunto but we ought to hate it and strive against it And for them whom God blesseth above others they must walk very warily in all humbleness and care to do good and kindely use their Inferiors else they put them upon a temptation of envy whereas on the other part people will say His wealth and place is well bestowed on him he is loving affable doth good c. And as we are to rejoyce with them that do rejoyce so must we mourn with them that mourn we must help to bear their burthen we must pity them in our hearts pray for them visit them and otherwise relieve them if need be we must not be altogether for our selves as those who were not born for our selves alone In the natural body if one member suffer the rest suffer with it much more should it be so in the spiritual If the foot get a thorn in it the back bows down to it the eye looks upon it the hand searcheth it the heart grieveth the tongue complaineth should not we be thus affected at the hurt of our fellow-members Our head is a living feeling head and accordingly we should be feeling
counsel of Daniel to Nebuchadnezzar even that they would break off their sins by repentance O turn ye why will ye dye acknowledge I beseech you all your rebellions and treacheries against God and that you have deserved hereby to be cut off entreating yet for pardon and mercy through Jesus Christ Turn to God with your whole hearts and learn to know that sin is odious bringing dishonor to God and destruction upon your selves O shun all evil little and great shun it at all times in all places how gainful or pleasing so ever and whosoever commands it or whomsoever you see practice it together with all the appurtenances and occasions of the same Means to evil may be these 1. Labor to understand the ten Commandments and so what is good and what is evil 2. Labor for faith which purifieth the heart from evil even the assurance of Gods love to us which may work in us love to his Majesty and so an hatred of all evil 3. A sanctified heart the inseperable companion of true faith 4. Attend on Gods ordinances publikely the Word and Sacraments and in private use meditation conference prayer c. 5. Watch and pray that we enter not neither be led into temptation 6. Make we a Covenant against evil as Job and David 7. Call to minde the fearful wrath of God and the wages of sin and the examples thereof on many both in Scripture and our own experience as also the hour of death when it will trouble us and lie heavy on our conscience and the day of Judgement when and where we would be loath to meet with it 2. This also rebukes them that eschew some evil but not all nor at all times or in all places Being commanded what will they not do What not for profit pleasure preferment The sins of their complexion and trade they will in no wise leave they run upon things because lawful though they cannot use them lawfully If they can sin secretly they make no conscience thereof 3. This may serve for instruction with rebuke to most Christians and to us that be most ancient professors that though we have a general purpose against evil yet we neither hate it so deeply nor shun it so carefully as we ought nor are so much humbled when we have been overtaken and have fallen thereinto as we ought we complain of our crosses but grieve not so much that we have fallen into sin If one should threaten to run at us with a naked sword or shoot at us whensoever he could finde an opportunity we would be wary and watchful upon our going abroad having an eye in every corner c. O do we thus against sin which watcheth but an opportunity to do us mischief If we would thus do we should not be so often overtaken as we are we should see better days scape numbers of crosses have more peace to our consciences more joy in our death and a freer passage to Heaven But alas we judge even that which is a great evil to be but a little one it pleaseth us if we have any colour for the same as that we have but once committed it that others do so and so c. Thus do we prophane the Lords-day despise his Ministers and run upon all sorts of evils 4. This affords consolation to all such as do indeed eschew evil and that out of an unfained hatred thereof rejoycing in nothing more then when they prevail against it grieving at nothing more then when they are overcome thereby such do indeed love God such fear him in truth and so are beloved of God and shall be everlastingly blessed these shall live happily here in joy and bliss hereafter O go on in this Christian course though the world hate you because ye do not as they do though they call you precise fools because ye dare not swallow such goblets as they do yea though hereupon ye pull danger upon your selves yet must ye eschew evil and so let us It s no matter though we have the worlds frown as long as we have Gods favor and what if we shall miss many a sweet morsel of profit pleasure and promotion if we be free from the gripes and vexations of conscience and the wrath of Almighty God they that now have their sweet meat would one day vomit up their morsels if they could as Judas did who though he rid himself of the money yet could not be rid of his wound of Conscience nor of the Judgement of God upon him were they ever the worse or had they any cause to grieve that they had not a share with him in the thirty pieces And do good This necessarily followeth on the other No man can have his heart truly nor aright set to do good whose heart is not first purged of the love of all evil for they cannot stand in one heart and at once and that man that lives and bears himself in the practice one sin never did good aright in his life neither ever pleased he God Who can serve God in one thing that serves the Devil in another This may serve to rouse up some that fain would do well and many good things they do but some one old accustomed sin which they know is a sin they cannot leave Well there 's no hating sin it will not do well the end will not be good it s but to be almost Christians Some will say Such a Preacher hath prevailed much with me and done me much good but as long as one known sin is lived in all is nothing worth to Salvation It s true a childe of God through strong temptations may be overcome of the same evil which he hates but he both covenants against it is careful that he may not fall into it having fallen he is much grieved He that is not grieved but doth again upon the next occasion fall to it is indeed in a grievous condition Thus from the order To do good is sometimes taken in a strict sence for the performance of the works of mercy whether for body or soul or both Here more largely for that good we are to do to our neighbor enemies that do us hurt or yet more largely for whatsoever God hath commanded in his Word Whose will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and makes that good which he requireth Whosoever would see good days here and hereafter must set himself in body and soul to the obedience of Gods will in doing good No other shall be saved good is the way leading to this end To come to this end we must walk in this way Reasons 1. It s good and amiable of it self as the Lord is 2. God commands it who is our Soveraign Lord and King Thou shalt do thus and thus saith he often throughout the Scriptures for I am the Lord thy God 3. All promises in Scripture of good things here or
8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. as from the first so far forth as its a punishment and piece of the curse and the nature of it is changed to believers for whom Christ hath dyed it s become a Serpent without a sting yea a blessing as being hereby freed from sin and not before Hereby the soul is let out of the prison of this body into the liberty of Gods Servants and put into the possession of life Hereby also the body is freed from all toils labors infirmities and pains waiting in the Grave for an happy and glorious resurrection In which respect death is termed a sleep an advantage to the Saints and is better in the day wherein they were born So from all forerunners hereof which are curses plagues and punishments in body minde goods and name all which Christ hath born what crosses we meet withal they are to further our Sanctification and Salvation but not punishments for sin or parts of Gods judgement as they be to the wicked 2. We are hereby made partakers of all good God is reconciled to us which is more then to have our sins and punishments quite removed yea and sheweth us the light of his countenance not as David who though he staid his wrath from Absolom at his return home to Jerusalem yet was not fully reconciled to him of two years The Creatures also are at peace with us The Angels become Servants and ministring Spirits for our good in life to direct us protect us comfort us c. and at death to carry our souls to Heaven so all other Creatures the very Devils and wicked men shall do us no hurt we have also right and title to this life we lost it in Adam but have it restored in Christ. 3. Hereby he conveyeth power into the hearts of all that believe in him to enable them to dye unto sin and to mortifie their lusts more and more This is a singular comfort to all that believe in Christ who onely partake of the benefits of his death we need not fear Hell condemnation nor any enemy of our Salvation nor any curse or punishment in this life all shall be for our good we need not fear the first death but rather have cause to desire it O the happiness of such God is at peace with them all Creatures in Heaven and Earth are their friends they have right to whatsoever they have little or much therefore may they rejoyce O happy that ever we were born what pains soever we have taken to come to the knowledge of Christ Jesus by whom we obtain such unspeakable things whatsoever the world esteemeth of believers they are the onely happy persons in the world yea we shall have power to mortifie our strongest corruptions and lusts fear it not beg it and use the means if all these be put together O how happy is a Christian who can value his riches On the contrary they that have not their part in Christs death are most miserable their sins are not removed they lye under them so under the curse of God in this world and the world to come so in danger of the first death which will rend the soul and body asunder that the soul may be cast out into Hell so also of the second O that such would labor for their part in Christ Christ came into the world Christ is now Preached and offered unto us men be in a woful case and are told of it and yet how few regard to embrace Christ how few customers hath Christ one would think that all that hear of Christ should be heartily glad of him and embrace and flye unto him but alas most men for profits pleasures or love of their vile lusts are content to let go Christ and he lies as a dead commodity and they that bring him to the world be unwelcom and so indeed few have part in Christ. The consideration hereof might make us mourn for our sins the cause of Christs death might be a corrasive to eat our sin and make it odious to us might make us serve God zealously and faithfully all our days yea to suffer for his sake and rather to dye with the Martyrs then any way to dishonor him and besides to labor to finde the vertue of Christs death working mightily in us the death of sin and sinful lusts Thus of his death But quickned by the Spirit Now of his Resurrection His body and soul that had been sundred were by the power of his Godhead reunited and he made alive so continuing with his Disciples until his ascension into Heaven Touching it consider that it was so the Reasons thereof the place maner and time with the benefits flowing from thence and the duties thereupon to be performed That Christ rose again is so plain that none needs doubt thereof The Angels that rolled away the stone the Soldiers that watched the Sepulchre Mary Magdalene and the other Mary that came to see the Sepulchre the two Disciples going to Emmaus the eleven Disciples being together c. all were witnesses hereof So his appearances were many as to Mary Magdalene then to her and that other Mary then to two Disciples going to Emmaus then to them all save Thomas then both to Thomas and the others another time to Cephas another time to seven of them at the Sea of Tiberias as at another to Five hundred Brethren at once so when he was to ascend he was taken up in the sight of all those there present all which are so many evidences of his Resurrection Reasons 1. That it might appear he had fully discharged our debt 2. Because being the Son of God and Author and Lord of life it had been unmeet nay it was impossible he should be held under of Death 3. By reason of the second part of his Priesthood which was yet to fulfil One part was to offer himself a Sacrifice Propitiatory to God for the sins of his people this he did by his death now the other is to make intercession for his Church and to apply the vertue of his death to those for whom he dyed This he could not have done if he had not risen again The maner When they had rolled a great stone to the door of the Sepulchre sealed it set Soldiers to watch yet he rose They could as well have hindered the rising of the Sun in the Firmament as his rising An Angel was sent that caused a great earthquake and rolled away the stone c. No counsel or strength can hinder the work of the Lord. Place The same where he was laid which was by Gods providence to avoid cavils in a new Sepulchre hewen out of a rock wherein never man had been laid Time It was the third day early in the morning on the first day of the week the third day as was foretold by Christ himself for he was buried the evening before the Sabbath and rose
or others they should disdain that this outward and base sin should thus insult and prevail and Goliah-like defie the host of Israel O if we had Davids spirit to set upon it and knock it down it would be easily done if all would joyn hands But whereas some have put down Alehouses other Justices to gratifie some friends have set them up again and are so cold and remiss herein that few drunkards come to any punishment Belike they have no leisure no zeal for God neither will afford him any help against the mighty But though these and their Officers were faulty yet if housholders would bestir themselves and put on Joshua and Davids resolution the number of drunkards would not be so great as it is but if one put away such a servant another is presently ready to entertain him O what a goodly Church and Comon-wealth should we have if housholders would do their duties throughly Revellings Gluttony This is an abuse of our meat God of his abundant mercy hath left us the use of his Creatures and that not herbs only as before the flood but the beasts fishes fowls c. marvellous varieties out of his three great store-houses and that not onely for necessity but also for delight as well in the plenty as variety of them Those he hath appointed us to receive in due time measure and maner with thanksgiving in a sober and temperate sort as becometh Christians Contrary hereto is the sin of gluttony which is committed in respect of the quality quantity and time For quality namely when people be too nice curious and dainty in their fare and are never satisfied herewith and give themselves to devise new found dishes cates and sawces so fulfilling the lusts of their flesh a common fault in great Towns and Cities Most are a great deal more careful herein then to please God and more angry if it be not to their tooth then for any sin against God It s good to have things cleanly and wholsome but not curious There are some also that this way exceed their ability being too much given to belly-cheer whereby want creepeth upon them and theirs men and women must be content and do as they may Some will not be restrained by the Civil Magistrates command but even in their health will follow their appetite whereas we ought to obey the Magistrates commandment our health giving us leave for conscience sake Conscience I say not of the meat that were a Doctrine of Devils but of the commander whom we ought to obey For the quantity when men exceed measure and eat more then doth them good or makes them fit for the business God sets them about there are some beastly monsters that of set purposee at in a bravery more then two or three men yea for a wager will eat so much a goodly glory to their shame wherein a hound will match them some such God hath branded Others there are that at feasts and such times forget themselves and by variety of meats are beguiled this is the fault of feast-makers occasioners of gluttony who provide too excessively and curiously costly and dainty dishes when men are filled with wholesome and sufficient food before It s good there should be plenty according to every mans ability that so the poor may be remembred and some variety too to shew Gods bounty and because all love not alike but overmuch costliness is not meet That which in the end of feasts is oftentimes wastfully spent would go a great way with the poor and much comfort them if the charges were employed this way But many that stand not at many shillings this way would grudge at as many pence to give to the poor It s a good feast where the poor are remembred It s also a great fault in Guests to be tolled on further then is meet whatsoever provocations there be they hereby hurt both their bodies aud souls But especially those are blame worthy that make the Sabbath day a Feasting-day quite contrary to all good order and reason that 's a Feasting day for the soul but if the body be overmuch pampered the soul shall fare the worse we are therefore sparingly to eat that day especially till night as being to go about spiritual duties whereunto we are so unfit in the performance whereof through excess of food we become sleepy and drowsie which is most unseemly and wicked in Gods service therefore as when we serve God extraordinarily we fast altogether so when ordinarliy we must be very temperate and sparing For the time It must not be at unseasonable hours as either too soon before men have done God some service or been about some good business nor so late as when men should be at rest such banquettings junkettings and late Suppers be not for strength but for lust sundry servants be wanton in this kinde watching their unseasonable times when their masters and dames be forth or asleep This as its a sin in it self so doth it many times bring on other wickednesses Wherein we have offended either way le ts repent making conscience for the time to come O what woful Creatures are we that cannot tell as wise as we think our selves what how much or when to eat Gods Word must be our rule and we must suffer our selves in all things to be guided thereby Banquettings Drinkings that is needless excessive or untimely bibbings when there is no cause This is here condemned as a lust of the Gentiles because else they that are addicted hereto would have been at defiance with them that had spoke against this and told them they were not drunk might do thus and thus Many upon every idle occasion be bibbing and sucking and love to sit with the pot in their hand telling a tale and then they think themselves as wise as a great Counsellor But do they become hereby more fit for Gods service Doth this tend to Gods glory nay hereby become they not often drunk ere they be aware To stir you up to sobriety 1. Finde that you have right to the Creatures else you can have no comfort in the use of them but shall answer for them Carry your evidences to the Lords Lawyers who can clearly resolve you There are none more bold to take and that excessively the Creatures of God then they that have least right to them 2. Knowing that we are heirs to these and so that they be sanctified to us on Gods part by the Word we must on our parts sanctifie them to our selves by prayer and thanksgiving O how many swinishly go to meat and drink and have not God in their thoughts not make mention of him except it be by swearing to prophane and abuse his holy and glorious name 3. Use them soberly and temperately as in Gods presence so as our eating may be to make us fitter for the service of God and the work of our calling and so may be
thy felf as lay hold on Christ for Salvation If any man speak c. Whoso is in the Ministery ought to Preach no gift makes a man a Minister allowed of God but the gift of preaching even to be able to open the Scriptures soundly and apply the same wisely to the peoples edifying How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard saith the Apostle and how shall they hear without a preacher and how shall they Preach except they be sent That is gifted and quallified by God for the place even being able to do that which is apt to convert souls which no gift else can do but that of preaching the Word The Scriptures read are but as a goodly Carpet folded up together but by preaching the beauty thereof appeareth This our Savior enjoyned his Disciples and the same did the Apostle Paul require of Timothy 1. This rebukes those which howsoever having an outward calling they stand in the room of Ministers and therefore their actions are not to be counted void or nullities run before they are sent are blinde watchmen Messengers without an errand dumb Dogs as Idols having mouthes but speak not c. 2. This rebukes a number of silly people which conceive it sufficient if their Minister be but a Reader We have a very honest man will such say true he cannot preach but he doth his good will and we can desire no more of a man and a very fellow-like man he is c. But if it happen they have a godly Preacher what is their note then we have a Minister I would we had never known him some say he is learned and he preacheth indeed but he is so troublesome he hath spoiled our Town quite we were all as quiet as could be till he came but now there is such finding of faults and bringing up new Orders as we cannot tell what to say a good many of the best of the Parish will do what they can to remove him c. Thus the world loves reading Ministers They say of Schollars they be the most conscionable They care not how little they have for their money but its true also of a number of silly miserable people They can have no more of a man then his good will they say But they would not say so of a Carpenter or any Workman or Servant they hire if they do not the business they are set about they would have others Let him speak as the Oracles of God That is both Preach the very Truth and Word of God and as its meet or as it becomes the Word to be handled Ministers must Preach the Word of God they must not deliver any thing to their people but that which they have received of God So did both the Prophets and Apostles they stand in Gods room and are to bring his Message neither must they deliver any word whereof they may not truly affirm Thus saith the Lord This is the Word of the Lord Nothing else feeds the soul other things are poyson or chaff yea we may answer for what we say before God upon our salvation or damnation 1. This reproves divers as namely such as by their erroneous Doctrine destroy souls they give in stead of an egge a scorpion and for food poyson Such as by telling strange and forged miracles of this and that Saint endeavor to uphold one lye of Popery or other Such as teach mens traditions or their own devices and opinions contrary to Gods Word Such as wrest the Word of God and discourage the hearts of the godly and strengthen the hands of the wicked making their Text speak what God never meant Such as Preach Gods Word but so mingled with mans inventions as they Preach not Gods Word but their own fancies Thus many stuff their Sermons with Authorities of men as of Heathen Poets Philosophers Historians and that in strange tongues which though turn'd into English yet what a loss of time what a breaking of the peoples attention must there needs be hereby what thrusting upon people mens authority use indeed may be made of those in private and humanity serves as well as an handmaid to Divinity but its Gods Word onely which can stablish the Conscience If we use them publiquely the same must be done sparingly to special purpose on some special occasions as when we have to do with Atheists c. and not to the common people 2. This may instruct people that they hear nothing at least receive nothing but the Word of God My sheep hear my voyce saith our Savior and a strangers voyce they will not hear Therefore they must be able to try what they hear we must not be like children carryed about with every wind of doctrine Solomon counts it the property of a fool to believe every thing if we should in stead of being fed we might be poysoned we must with the Bereans search whether the things we hear be so and so they were neither curious nor captious yet they would receive nothing but the truth A man may tell money after his own Father not because he thinks he would deceive him but because he may be deceived we take not upon us to have dominion over your Faith that you should believe whatsoever we say because we say it but if it be not according to Gods Word take it but upon exchange All that we hear and Ministers deliver must be according to the Scriptures which is the rule and touchstone and when people have knowledge and can try what we ●each we should be far from being angry and saying It was never merry world since every Taylor and Shoemaker could talk so much of the Scriptures and finde faults with mens preaching would we have the peoples eyes out True the Papists cannot abide it in the people but tell them They must believe as their Ministers believe c. This is as bad a sign in them as may be But alas we have cause to complain of peoples ignorance it were even just with God to let them fall into the hands of deceivers as having got no knowledge all this while Ministers must preach as it becomes the Word of God even with all reverence and authority with all courage and boldness yea so as that they declare by their lives that they believe it to be Gods Word even by being first in the practice thereof and obedience thereto 1. This serves to reprove divers as namely those that mingle tricks and conceits to tickle the ear and are all in their Inkhorn terms riming and running on the letter c. together with those that have itching ears and delight in such things It s a sign of a sickly ill disposed stomack to whom the wholesom food of the Word is not sweet except it have some such strumpetly sawces Those that through sear keep back Gods counsel not revealing his whole will those that live daily in
perswade to rejoyce in persecution because its a blessed thing and who would not rejoyce in that that will make him happy and though he instanceth in one kinde and that which may seem no great persecution yet he is to be understood of all others whatsoever That such shall be blessed he proveth because thus to suffer is an argument that the Spirit of God even the glorious Spirit resteth on them who howsoever on the adversaries part he is blasphemed and ill spoken of yet is glorified by them that suffer patiently and joyfully for Christs sake Here then besides that suffering for Christ we are happy we may be induced thus to suffer for him for that his Spirit resteth on us so doing and hereby also he is glorified In the words we have a proposition and the confirmation thereof If ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are ye There 's the proposition This may seem to be but a slender thing to be reckoned among persecutions and that which may be easily born No it s that which many have found harder to bear then loss of goods blows yea death it self Some which have suffered torments couragiously and indured the loss of all with joyfulness yet have almost sunk under slanders and ill tongues David much complains of his adversaries that they made Songs of him that they spake words like the prickings of a Sword and like sharp Arrows Sampson could not endure to be mockt of the Philistines had rather pull down the House on himself and them Job also complains of such Ishmaels mocking of Isaac is termed a persecution The most ingenuous mindes can hardliest bear reproaches Here note 1. That a good name is a tender thing which is and ought to be dear to us As we are forbid thus to wrong others so the Lord appointed those to be severely punished which should so do 1. This rebuketh those that make no account of a good name though it be better then good oyntment but live so badly as they pull an ill name on themselves some indeed would yet have a good name though they deserve the contrary but they must first win it and then wear it Such as are desperate and care not what men say of them it s a sign they are so bad as no man can speak worse of them then they deserve These cannot be discredited 2. It condemneth those that care not how they raise lyes spread tales of their Neighbors and seek their discredit or rail on them and revile them they do worse then if they stole away their goods or wounded their bodies for the name is more tender and dear and hardlier cured and recovered if it be wounded or lost they that give themselves over hereto are fools neither are they Citizens of Sion Such are as a Maul and a Sword and a sharp Arrow and such was Ziba See 2 Sam. 16. 3. 2. That railers mockers and slanderers of Gods Servants are persecuters David in the person of Christ complaineth of such Such also are they that revile them by the name of hypocrites precise fools humerous singular fantastical Puritans c. I mean those that revile the true Servants of God who for their zeal are often thus dealt with whom those slanderers would no less smite with the hand then they do with the tongue if times did but bear them out They would be no less forward to hale before Magistrates cast into Prison c. 1. Let them that have been and be such repent hereof as of persecution else with Ishmael they shall be cast our and as they be worse then Balaam so shall they speed worse 2. Let all others avoid this as a fearful sin for it s to be like the Devil the accuser of the Brethren who shall answer for this at the last day 3. For those that be railed on are slandered or have lyes devised against them let them know they are Martyrs before God and suffer persecution which is an honor let them bear this patiently and go on constantly and not be discouraged and there 's good hope they shall bear greater persecutions if they come which else in likelyhood they cannot 3. That it hath been an usual custom in the world to reproach revile and slander Gods Servants for their godliness Sore eyes cannot abide the light and there 's an enmity between the seed of the Woman and the Serpent and when other weapons have failed them they have used this of their tongue whereby indeed they prevail much to the disgrace of Religion 1. Being so now we must not think it strange for the Devil is now as malicious as ever and hath instruments as fit for his turn as ever If now endeavoring carefully to serve God we be counted proud fellows factious Enemies to the State c. we must not be too much disquieted were not the Prophets the Apostles Christ himself thus reputed we are not too good to go hand in hand with them it s a piece of our livery to be thus dealt with 2. When we hear any reports against Gods Servants know them well ere we believe them we should else condemn the innocent even Christ was slandered for a Conjurer and Traytor and the Apostle Paul for a pestilent fellow yet who were more freer who more wronged 4. That such as are reproached for the name of Christ are happy I say for the name of Christ or for being true Christians believing in Christ and serving him for not the punishment but the Cause makes a Martyr How can this be will some say and what blessedness can there be in being railed upon and slandered why thus saith our Apostle and he knew what he said having learned the same of his Lord and Master whom he heard so speak It s a blessed thing to be a Christian washt in the blood of Christ reconciled to God whom the Angels protect who is the heir of Gods promises and blessings here and of eternal salvation hereafter Even an Emperor without this is but as a man in great jolity to night that must to execution to morrow But to be railed on for being a Christian is a greater blessedness a special honor Its honor to be a Princes Servant but to be about him and to have the guard of his own person and to stand in his defence against an Enemy or to be called forth to justifie his lawful Title is far greater Again It s a blessed thing to be willing and able to suffer for Christ flesh and blood cannot we might have been of the persecuters or of them that regard no Religion at all or to suffer any thing for it or making profession of Religion should yet shrink from it rather then suffer for its Cause Therefore to suffer for it is a blessed thing which is to us a token of Salvation 1. Therefore we must not onely
in my minde But I will not spend any time to approve or disapprove the one more then the other but speak something of both as in some such cases is not unusual nor amiss when both may very well stand and it be difficult to say which is the true meaning of the place this or that For the first The duties of people towards their Ministers laid down in the fifth commandment stand in these four things 1. They must reverence them for the dignity highness and excellency of their Calling in which respect they are termed Angels Stars the light of the world Gods Ambassadors 2. They must yield obedience to them in their Ministery 3. They must willingly allow them a sufficient maintenance that they may wholly without distraction attend on their souls 4. They must pray for them both that their Ministery may be fruitful and that they may long continue amongst them of those the second is the principal Namely that People must submit themselves to the Ministery of the Word in the mouths of their Ministers as we stand bound to preach so do you to hear and obey For Blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it that are doers as well as hearers God hath not appointed us to Preach in vain but for the conversion of people The Ministery is ordained to work faith to convert souls it was the peoples request with promise to hear and do God hath yielded and sanctified it to be the onely ordinary means not reading not preaching by an Angel even the foolishness of Preaching by the hand of men to save them that believe If Ministers must be called to an account for Preaching shall not the people how they have profited and if a wo to us if we preach not is there not to them if they repent not For this cause our Savior upbraided those Cities wherein his mighty works were done not because they would not entertain him nor hear him as the Gadarens but because they repented not we have done you no good nor have you heard well till you have repented and be converted till you have obeyed from the heart the form of Doctrine delivered you The Law humbleth the Gospel wo●●th Faith both bring to a reformed new and godly life we hear aright when we go away pricked in our hearts Till then there 's no good wrought on us as appears by the Prophets complaints Isaiah 49. 4. and 53. 1. Jer. 6. 10. else no mark of Election faith being a demonstration hereof we make sure our Election by our effectual calling The Apostle also termeth the Thessalonians Elect of God because the preaching was not to them in word onely but in power and they received the word in much affliction and became followers of us c. and that they received his preaching not as the word of man but as it is indeed the Word of God not to hear and obey is rather a mark of reprobation as in Eli's Sons If we be Christs sheep we hear his voyce in the Ministery and follow him O what an excellent harmony would this make if Ministers preach faithfully and the people become converted and then built up in all obedience thereby 1. Then this rebuketh the woful contempt of the world at most hands for how few yield obedience thereto look in all Towns how many ignorant persons that have no knowledge neither will have any give their mindes to none but pul in their heads that they might not see the light that would glister in their faces who so blinde as he that will not see These are far from conversion This is condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkness rather more then light So how many prophane persons that live in some known sin though some more outragiously then others as in Drunkenness Whoredom Malice c. That hear not though the Charmer charm never so wisely and do even stop their ears God knocks at the door of their hearts but they will not open his Ministers cry out against their sins yet they rush on every one after his own hearts lust and hateth to be reformed having a pardon brought and offered them if they would come in they stand out What will become of these having refused to hear a gracious voyce offering mercy they shall hear a fearful voyce denouncing judgement not hearing a voyce calling them to him they shal hear a voyce commanding them from him and as he called and they refused so shall they call but not be heard or regarded What shall these have to say for themselves Their iniquity shall stop up their mouth How many civil persons are there also that be not converted if they so continue they shall perish unless they be born again truly humbled planted into Christ obey in all things not in the duties of the second Table onely giving men their due but of the first also giving God his they cannot be saved What should I speak of worldlings that are so glued to the world as they savor not at all of Heaven or heavenly things no such thing can enter into their hearts either they hear not the Word at all or the thorny cares of the world quickly choak that seed What of Hypocrites some professing outwardly and yet living in some known sin others not so bad that yet fall far short having gone some steps and hoping that all is well These were never as yet truly humbled and so not converted so had not that that accompanieth Salvation these hear but not aright Every man therefore must examine himself how he hath heard and whether the Word hath been a means of his true conversion and whether he make conscience to submit himself to the precepts thereof They that can prove themselves thereby converted how comfortably may they go on walking in obedience thereto Contrarily the care of others is dangerous for think not that our preaching will go away unregarded or that it s no matter how you have heard Oh! Preachings and Sacraments be dangerous things life or death can do a great deal of good or as much hurt to them that obey its Salvation but to the disobedient it s the savor of death unto death This is a fearful sin in this Land and the cause of all our plagues by reason whereof we may fear worse Remember the wo pronounced against Chorazin and Bethsaida 2. This may be for exhortation to all that as they come and hear so to submit themselves and pray God to make his word effectual by his Spirit So shall God be glorified if of Lyons we become Lambs If won from Satan to God The Ministers shall rejoyce as having the greater Crown The Angels in Heaven will rejoyce having new fellow Servants yea God himself will rejoyce the Father as having a new Son Christ as having another member the Holy Ghost another
of our Ancestors is no sure rule Use. Pro. 10. 19. Doct. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage Reas. 1. Psal. 24. 1. Psal. 50. 10. Reas. 2. Reas. 3. Reas. 4. Prov. 6. 35. Reas. 5. Pro. 11. 4. Ezek. 7. 19. Zeph. 1. 18. Reas. 6. Psal. 49. 7. Reas. 7. Use 1. Acts 8. 20. Use 2. Mat. 4. 9 10. Heb. 11. 25. Use 3. Iob 1. 11. Doctr. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 2 Pet. 3. 10. Use 1. Pro. 23. 5. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Iames 2. 5. Use 2. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Prov. 10. 15. Iob 31. 24. Use 3. Use 4. Doctr. Christs blood the true price of mans Redemption Rom. 5. 19. Phil. 2. 8. Acts 3. 15. 20. 28. Isa. 53. 5. Acts 4. 12. Rev. 13. 8. Heb. 13. 8. 10. 14. See Rom. 3. 25. Eph. 1. 7. 1 Pet. 2. 24. 1 Iohn 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. Object Sol. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Heb. 10. 29. Use 5. Simile Iohn 3. 16. Use 6. 1 Cor. 6. 2● Simile Use 7. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb. Iohn 1. 29. Isa. 53 7. Isa. 53. 9. Iohn 8. 46. Mat. 27. 4 24. Luke 23. 41. See Heb. 7. 26 27. Object Sol. Isa. 53. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. Use 1. Use 2. Iohn 21. 15 16 17. Eph. 5. 15. Iob 31. 35 36. Luke 1. 6. Dan. 6. 5. 1 Sam. 12. 3. Use 3. Rom. 8. 17. Mat. 18. 15 21. Object Sol. Obser. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear Ier. 26. 20. Acts 24. 5. The prevention of an Objection Acts. 1. 4. Doctr. Christ was ordained before the world Gen. 12. 3. 3. 15. Rev. 13 8. Iohn 6. 27. Eph. 1. 4. Object Sol. Object Sol. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Ioh. 3. 16. Use 4. Rev. 13. 8. Ioh. 8. 56. Rom 9. 33. Use 5. Mat. 6. 33. Ioh. 6. 27. Obs. The world shall not always continue 2 Pet. 3. 10. Use. Christ how manifested Heb. 9. 26. Doctr. God is constant and unchangeable Acts 13. 48. Use. 1. Use 2. Acts 11. 29 30 Psal. 76. 11. Gods promises are unchangeable Neh. 1. 9. Use 1. Use 2. Obser. Christ was then exhibit it when God decreed that he should so be Gal. 4. 4. Doctr. What God hath decreed shall be in due time accomplished Acts 16. 6 7. Mat. 10. 5. Mat 28. 19. Rom. 11. 25. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Three differences of times Why this called the last time Obser. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done Heb. 1. 1. Use. Doctr. We now live in the latter end of the last times Use 1. Use 2. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world Use. What we are to do and how to carry our selves that others may think well of us Doctr. We cannot believe in God but by the Son Reas. 1. 2 Cor. 4. 4. Heb. 13. Reas. 2. Iohn 14. 6. Eph. 3. 12. Heb. 10. 19 Iohn 17. 3. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Obs. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand Phil. 2. 9. The benefits which those reap that believe in Christ Doct. Where there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love Use 1. 1 Cor. 13. 6. Iudges 9. 23. Use 2. Prov. 16. 7. Acts 14. 15 16 19. Doct. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love 1 Ioh. 1. 1 Ioh. 4. 12. Use 1. Use 2. 1 Ioh. 5. 1. Psal. 15. 4. Psal. 16. 3. 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Use 3. Obser. There 's uncleanness in us both in Soul and Body Gen. 6. 5. Matth. 15. Isa. 1. 16. Iam. 4. 8. Rev. 3. 17 18. Use. Iohn 3. 5. Mat. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. Psal. 15. 2. Obs. Where there 's sanctification of the soul there 's also sanctification of the body Doct. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing Ioh. 15. 3. 17. 17. Iohn 15. 5. Acts 15. 9. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. 1 Sam. 15. 22. Ier. 25. 12 1● 2 Thess. 1. 8. 1 Pet. 4. 17. Why the Word is called Truth Iohn 17. 17. Iames 1. 18. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Heb. 13. 4. Doct. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification Acts 11. 21. and 16. 14. Use. Rom. 8. 7. 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. Obs. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty Use. Obs. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works Eph. 2. 20. Iam. 1. 18. Use. What Love is Gal. 5. 22. 1 Tim. 1. 5. See Psal. 41. 9. 55. 13. Mat. 10. 21. See 1 Ioh. 3. ●7 Iames 2. 14 15 16. Rom. 13. 10. Luke 10. 34. ● Tim. 5. 4 8 16. Gal. 6. 10. Rom. 12. 10. and 13. 8. Col. 3. 14. Rom. 13. 8. Gal. 5. 13 14. Psal. 133. 1 Cor. 13. 1 2. The properties of love 1 Cor. 13. 4. Gen. 45. 5. Mat. 17. 27. Gen. 13. 8. See M. Perkins Christian Equity Rom. 13. 10. See Mr. Perkins cases of Cons. 1. 3. cap. 3. pag. 135. 1 Cor. 13. 5. Mat. 6. 12. Two Caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magistrate 1 Cor. 6. 7. Simile Mat. 5. 42. Deut. 15. 10. Acts 4. 37. 2 Cor. 9. 7. Prov. 3. 28. Obs. There 's little love in the world 1 Sam. ● 14. Iohn 2. 20. Exod. 10. 9. Mat. 24. 12. 2 Tim. 3. 2. The causes of the want of love Luke 17. 4 5. Prov. 13. 10. Eph. 4 2. The effects of the want of love Use. Mat. 18. 26 28 Pro. 19. 19. 11. Mic. 7. 18. Prov. 10. 12. Pro. 11. 24 25. Reasons inciting us to this duty of love Isa. 58. 2. Gen. 13. 8. 1 Cor. 6. 6. Ioh. 13. 34 35. 1 Ioh. 3. 14. See Pro. 10. Acts 9. 39. Rom. 12. 16 17. Obser. The fruits of love towards our brethren must accompany the profession thereof Obs. The doing of brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections Love must reach to all Object Sol. Object Sol. Luke 10. 33. Object Sol. Object Sol. Matt. 5. 44. Rom. 5. 10. Note 1 Ioh. 5. 1. 3. 14. Zech. 2. 8. Use 1. Gal. 6. 10. Use 2. 1 Iohn 3. 14. ibid. 10. Psal. 15. 4. 16. 3. Gen. 27. 29. Num. 23. 8. How we ought to love the Wicked Gen. 13. 8. See 1 Cor. 6. 8. Iohn 15. 19. Doctr. Love must be without fainng Rom. 12. 9. 1 Iohn 3. 18. Use 1. Psal. 28. 3. Gen. 3. 5. Mat. 4. 3. Use 2. Iames 5. 17. Obs. Love must be mutual Acts 20. 35. Obser. In love there must be a community Iames 2. 1. Prov. 22. 2. Iames 2. 5. Gal. 5. 22. 1 Tim. 1. 1. The properties of pure love 1 Cor. 13. 6. Gen. 25. 28. Mat. 5. 46. Use. Lev. 19. 17. Prov. 13. 24. Simil. Mat. 16. 22. Obs. A Christians love must be earnest 2 Cor. 9. 6. 1 Pet. 4. 8.