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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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men Ama tanquam aliquando osurus yet it may have its use considering how wicked and uncertain men are But true Religion inclineth a man to a setled and fixed way of love to those that are fit subjects thereof The Scripture speaketh of a love to all men and of a brotherly love which is upon more peculiar and holy respects Now truly if we speak in a moral sense onely we may take up Solomon's complaint Prov. 20. 6. Most men will proclaim their own goodnesse but a faithfull man who can find Men will talk and boast and professe much love and kindnesse but as it was in David's time so it will be in all ages Psal 5. 9. For there is no faithfulnesse in their mouth their inward part is very wickednesse they flatter with their tongue Hence is that Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But why is there such hypocrisie dissimulation and falshood in mens hearts and tongues It is because there is so little true godliness for that maketh a man sincere and of a single heart both towards God and towards man If then Paul was so afraid of being thought a light and inconstant man any was this sheweth what gravity constancy and faithfulness of spirit we ought to walk even to men in the world godliness and Religion teacheth us these things whereas to be double-hearted double-tongued cannot consist with a man that is made a new creature Labour then to inform thy self of the extent of Religion how farre godliness will put forth its self not onely in religious duties towards God but righteous just and faithfull actions towards man Now that we may have such plain and faithfull spirits consider the aggravation of this sinne in our civil actions to be yea and nay to be inconstant and changeable And First This is directly contrary to the glorious nature of God whose image ought to be stampt upon us we are to be like God in our holinesse Now how often doth the Scripture proclaim this glorious property of God that he is unchangeable that he is faithfull in his Word and promises And truly this is the comfortable support of our selves for it 's not any worth in us but Gods faithfulness in his promises that preserveth us to eternal glory Thus he is called a faithfull Creator 1 Pet. 4. 19. so faithfull is he that hath called us 1 Thess 5. 24. If God were not faithfull in his promises even when we have unfaithfull hearts how miserable would our end be It 's Gods faithfulness not our own we are to depend upon Now the children of God they are to have this Image of God established upon them to be faithfull as he is faithfull There is no yea or nay with God See this notably affirmed Numb 23. 19. God is not a man that he should lie neither the sonne of man that he should repent hath he said and shall not he do it So 1 Sam. 15. 29. The strength of Israel will not lie or repent for he is not a man that he should repent The Scripture maketh it a necessary property to a man to lie and to repent unlesse he be assisted by grace For such is the weaknesse and ignorance of his understanding that he cannot fore-see things and therefore must necessarily alter his resolutions and then so corrupt is his heart that as there are several objects to entice him so accordingly he transformeth himself but God is infinitely wise and infinitely holy and therefore there is no shadow of change in him Oh then be in love with this glorious Attribute of God and according to a creatures capacity do thou imitate it Shew forth the Image of God in this thing that thou art even a man and wilt not lie wilt not sinfully change thy words and promises I say sinfully because we are so apt to be ignorant to mis-judge of things to be deceived in what we resolve of that many times it is our wisdom and duty to be of another mind and to take up contrary resolutions to what once we pitched upon of which more in its time Secondly Endeavour after such constancy in words and life because as it is a great sinne against God so it 's an heavy reproach and scandal to Religion It thou shouldest study to do the Devil service and to promote his Kingdom so as to have Religion stink in the nostrils of all men thou canst not take a more compendious way then to lie to deceive to be unjust to make no conscience of words and promises This is to betray godliness to the scorn of all wicked men You see that even the most holy men that are that walk in a most tender conscientious regard to all their words and works yet cannot scape the censure of men in the world that they are hypocrites that they are lyars that they have no truth in them Oh then what a woe will be pronounced to thee who should give just occasion for such men to blaspheme the holy calling wherewith we are called When one by his apostasie and inconstancy had betrayed the true Religion of Christ he was afterwards troubled in heart for it he could have no rest in his spirit thought himself unworthy of any Church-communion and therefore cried out Calcate me insipidum salem Trample upon me as unsavoury salt If then thou wouldst have Religion honoured the Gospel well spoken of look to thy self in these things let no lie no falshood no deceit be found in thy words and dealings For if there be presently Religion is wounded then the carnal ones rejoyce this is their godliness this is their Religion Certainly a godly heart cannot but bleed exceedingly if at any time he hath in this way been so overtaken as to make men think the worse of godliness wherers on the other side to be true righteous and faithfull in all thy wayes as it is an ornament to Religion so it maketh thee have an awe and a reverence in the consciences of the most profligate persons Thus because John was a just man therefore even Herod the King did reverence him Mark 6. 20. John was both just and holy and this wrought reverence Thirdly It is a great sinne to be thus rash and inconstant because hereby a man maketh himself unfit for Gods service either in Church or Commonwealth such an unfaithfull man can never do any good but be scorned and reproached as one Bishop was called Euripus in antiquity for his inconstancy and mutability and this was the great reason why Paul doth with so much earnestnesse and affection take this calumny off from himself for this would be a special means to bring his person and Doctrine into contempt if there had been just cause to judge him such a mutable man Paul's preaching would never have done good more as we hear him saying at another time Gal. 2. 18. If I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressour Thus it always falleth out that a man of
himself to any humane Society he must be aut Deus aut Bestia It is applicable here he must be made even like God that needeth no growth of grace yea that is above all duty or homage to God or else a very beast one that hath no sense or feeling about a God and his Worship The syonymous names also to a Church doth evidence this They are called Christs body now it 's necessary for the members of the body to be joyned together else there cannot be that mutual help and furthering of one another They are also called an House and a spiritual Building wherein they are to be as living stones and such must be close and well compacted together Secondly From the communion of Saints which is a duty so often prescribed in Scripture such as to watch over one another to provoke one another to comfort and rebuke if need be Now how can this be if Saints be dispersed from each other Thirdly From the Officers and Ordinances which Christ hath commanded that do necessarily inferre Church-Assemblies For Pastors and Teachers are appointed to preach the Word to be constant therein And how can that be if there be not publick meetings Fourthly The Sacraments likewise do not they seal not only a communion with Christ but also with one another So that it would be a sacrilegious violation of Christs command for a man to receive the Sacrament alone The Protestants do justly condemn those Private Masses in Popery as ridiculous and contrary to the Institution of that Sacrament Fifthly The examples of Christians who upon their conversion are recorded to joyn themselves to the Church and they continued together praying and breaking of bread Yea in the Old Testament we see still there was a constant publick meeting to worship God and David professeth his joy in those solemn meetings as also his resolutions To praise God in the great Congregation And certainly as by these solemn meetings God is more honoured therefore the glorified Saints in Heaven are said to be a Church Heb. 12. 23. so God hath promised to such meetings an higher degree of his presence He delights to be in the Assembly of his Saints So that these publick meetings are for our spiritual good as well as Gods glory Though this be so yet there may be some Cause that may justly excuse us As First Publick and violent persecutions as have been many times in Gods Church then they have not been suffered to have either publick or private meetings Heb. 12. The Apostle mentioneth such times when he speaks of some Of whom the world was not worthy of yet were not allowed a place in the world but were as so many beasts chased up and down living in dens and holes of Rocks Thus it was also once with David when banished out of Judea though this was a sad affliction and he doth in several Psalms bewail his exile from the Ordinances more than any temporal mercy whatsoever neither his countrey or outward accommodations do sit so upon his heart as that I cannot enjoy God in his Ordinances as I have done So then though they were not actually in any Church-communion yet because of their desire and wish they were to be as accounted of it Secondly It may so fall out that there be such a malice and poison in the hearts of those that do govern and rule in the Church that they will excommunicate and cast out those that are true believers from the Church and will not let them have any Church-society Now in such cases if the godly cannot obtain any publick Church-priviledge which yet they desire this will lie on those that cast them out Luke 6. 22. John 16. 2. Our Saviour tels the Disciples it shall be their portion They shall be cast out of the Synagogues separated from company even as they did a blind man healed confessing Christ whom yet Christ met and encouraged This then is no new thing Yea Bernard complained in his time Heu Domine qui sunt in Ecclesiâ primi sunt in persecutione primi Thirdly If there be such a general and universal pollution that a Christian at least for the present knoweth not what Church to joyn to where he can have communion without partaking of gross Idolatry It 's a Rule avouched in the Canon-Law Causa non separatio facit Shisma Those that would not bow their knee to Baal in Elijah's time were not Schismaticks for there was a just cause to refuse such Idolatry if then it be truly with a man as it was in supposition with Elijah that he is left alone Idolatry hath filled the whole Church visibly in such a case though that be hardly to be seen he is to abstain from Church-societies till God make way for it For then it is as if a Christian should by some accident be cast upon a Countrey of Infidels and Pagans as some Christians have been there cannot be had any Church-society at all Lastly The Church of God in the primitive times when many Heathens and Infidels were converted had this custome which I find commended by most and that was before the Church would receive such converted Heathens into an actual Communion with the Church they took time to instruct them and to try whether they were fit for that Sacrament or no and when they were prepared then they received them These were called Catechumenoi and Competentes They were truly members of the Church as the Protestants maintain against Bellarmine only they had not as yet the actual admission into it This custom in Antiquity of admitting none to Baptisme but such as were instructed doth hold by proportion for the Lords Supper likewise Seeing now that all are baptized in their Infancy and whether Parents have done their duties or that they have sufficient knowledge to come to a Sacrament may justly be questioned when we see so much gross ignorance in the Christian Religion abounding every where Therefore in Antiquity there was Ecclesiastical Confirmation which was to make search and trial about the knowledge and sufficiency of such who had been baptized and if found duly qualified then they were confirmed Such care did they use in Antiquity about those that were admitted to Church-society insomuch that Casaubon a man of famous learning saith It had been well in the Church of God if men had laid aside many unnecessary disputes and endeavoured to bring in that holy and godly order the primitive Church had especially about the Lords Supper And Calvin speaking of this custom of Confirmation before it was so horribly depraved by after ages and made a Sacrament wisheth it were brought into the Church of God again as that which would make parents more diligent who now think the institution of their children doth not belong to them neither would there be such ignorance and rudeness in people as now thereis Insti● lib. 4. c. 19. Sect. 13. In these cases a Saint without Church-communion may be excused But then
comparatively to the cause and glory of Christ And this makes it so difficult to suffer This hath made the Apostates that have many times been in the Church This hath filled the hearts of many with woe and wounds implacably For their childrens sake for their lives sake they deny Christ and a good conscience and how can it be otherwise while Earth is dearer than Heaven when we esteem the favour of men more than the favour of God This hath proved bitter wormwood to many at last Lastly To suffer for Christ there is required pure and holy motives To lose all for Christs sake out of meer conscience that this is the only cause why we are in any trouble We may read both in sacred and prophane Histories how men have suffered even death it self only for vain-glory All Aristotles vertuous men they were ambitious and vain-glorious men The very Heathen could make it Laudum immensa cupido as well as Amorpatriae We would think it a madnesse to lose comforts and life for an airy bubble of windy glory yet many have been thus transported not only Philosophus but Haereticus est animal gloriae vanissimum If then it 's not Scripture-grounds but ambitious vain-glorious principles that make thee to suffer Christ doth not will not provide sugar for thy bitter pils Thus have we seen what is required to suffer for Christ Oh the difficulty of this duty No wonder so much seed hath withered away when the scorching Sunne of persecution did arise No wonder Christ hath many Swallow-friends that endure with him the Summer time onely No wonder few are lovers of Christ for Christs sake As Alexander had more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the Bees that follow for the honey-pot only Now to all these we must adde this Caution A Christian that suffereth for Christ though he have not those qualifications in a perfect degree but find corruption opposing every one of them He must not therefore cast away his confidence for we can no more suffer perfectly for Christ then do perfectly for him and if our gracious works cannot justifie us no more can our gracious sufferings Martyrdom is not meritorious Though we shed our bloud for Christ yet the blood of Christ must cleanse that duty also The Martyrs died only in resting upon Christ for salvation and no wonder the godly heart finds more imperfections in his sufferings more carnal fear and impatience then in other duties because this is the hardest service Christ doth ever put his upon What else is to be said in this point will come in in the next particulars SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comforteth those who suffer for him 2 COR. 1. 5. So our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe second absolute Proposition in the Text is That our comfort aboundeth by Christ. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred by some Exhortation but more generally and fitly Consolation Though this be spoken in the singular number and afflictions in the plural yet this is to be understood collectively as a treasure that hath all kind of comforts in it not one or two but all Therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here repeated again aboundeth which is to be understood partly repletively it filleth the hearts of those that do suffer for Christ and partly diffusively it extends also to the comfort of others And then you have the cause of all this By Christ Christ who is the cause of their sufferings is also the cause of their comfort As from the same root proceedeth both the Rose and its pricks Thus from Christ the same Fountain cometh both bitter and sweet Were not this added who would suffer for Christ who would lose all for him but Christ hath so ordained it that these sufferings are advantagious to us and though we lose in the retail yet we gain in the bulk and whole Observe That as our sufferings are for Christ so by the same Christ are our comforts Though he strike with one hand yet he supporteth with the other If David said to the Priest who fled to him many of them being slain at No● by the bloudy cruelty of Saul Stay with me I am the occasion of your deaths thou shalt fare as I fare How much more will Christ own such who suffer for him saying Depend upon me for I am the cause of all the reproaches and cruel usages you meet with in the world But to explain this Let us consider In what respects comforts may be said to abound by Christ And First Efficiently He being the same with God is therefore a God of all consolation Yea Christ as a Mediator he is sensible of our temptations knoweth our need and wants and therefore the more ready to comfort Christ that wanted comfort himself and therefore had an Angel sent to comfort him is thereby the more compassionate and willing to comfort us Thus you may read Christ and God put together in this very act 2 Thess 2. 16 17. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation comfort your hearts Paul here prayeth that both Jesus Christ and God the Father would comfort them Christ therefore not only absolutely as God but relatively as Mediator is qualified with all fitnesse and fulnesse to communicate consolation he is the fountain and head as of grace so of comfort Secondly We are comforted by Christ Meritoriously he hath merited at the hands of God our comfort for without Christs death and atonement we were no more subjects prepared for comfort then the damned Angels Had all mankind with Dives begged but for a drop of comfort such was the gulph between God and us that it could not be obtained So that by Christ a way is made for our consolation Christ did not only obtain the communication of the holy Ghost in the gifts and graces thereof So that as by Christ the Spirit of God is given to the Church as a guide to teach and lead into all truth as the sanctifying Spirit and use of all holinesse So he is also as the Comforter who giveth every drop of consolation that any believer doth enjoy Though therefore joy and comfort be in Scripture attributed to the holy Ghost as the appropriated and applying cause thereof yet this is wholly because of the merits of Christ And therefore we may pray for comfort upon the same grounds as we doe for holinesse They are both the fruits of Christs death Lastly We are comforted by Christ Objectively that is in him and from him we take our comfort As Christ is called Our righteousnesse because in and through his righteousnesse we are accepted of in him we are compleat So Christ is our comfort because in him we find matter of all joy though there be troubles and vexations from the creatures though the Sunne and Moon be turned into bloud all powers
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
upon the truth and then to be immoveable whereas the doubting and divided mind is never satisfied and flieth from one thing to another never having any rest If then thy saith be true believe as thou hast done if thy worship of God be according to his will continue to do as thou hast done and so if thy life be according to Gods command never change it thou canst not do better onely be sure thy foundation be truly laid and then abhorre all temptations and opinions that would bring thee to doubting for here will be no end thou will be in daily restlesse thoughts of soul Hence the Apostle James saith A double-minded man is unstable in all his wayes Jam. 1. 6 7. He is like a wave tossed up and down in the Sea Oh how unfit and unable are such to confesse the truth before a crooked generation to give witnesse to it by the losse of the dearest comforts they doe enjoy when they do not know whether it be Gods truth or mans errour that they plead for Now you may ask What are the causes procreant of such lightnesse and inconstancy The first is Ignorance when we are not able of our selves to judge what is the truth of God but receive it wholly from trust by tradition This traditional Religion receiving things meerly from men and because of their authority must needs make men change as that changeth Solomon hath a full expression to this The fool believeth every word but the prudent man looketh well to his going Prov. 14. 15. The more ignorant then a Ministry is the more credulous it is and so is like the materia prima ready to receive different formes and shapes when a mans faith is wholly borrowed and he liveth by another mans faith not his own when he shutteth his own eyes and will onely see by another mans then he must call black white and white black as often as those will have him do so upon whom he doth depend If then it be a shame for a private Christian not to live by his own faith and to resolve all into an implicit belief of others Is it not much more an hainous sinne in Ministers who are to be guides and to lead others Secondly An affectation of singularity and vain-glory in a Minister may make him to be Yea and Nay He seeth that by holding and preaching the old known way he shall not be much admired and therefore as people runne in multitudes to new sights so they do to such who bring unheard of opinions This hath been one of the chiefest causes of all the heresies and errours that ever have been in the Church they have been weary of the accustomed Manna they have like the Athenians been alwayes enquiring into what new thing is brought forth And hereupon as pride in apparel doth alwayes bring forth new fashions so pride in Religion new opinions And hence it is that men affect new words new phrases new expressions yea and new Doctrines all which causeth a mutability and change Now surely if a man ever did find the lively power of the truths of God he once professed upon his own heart when he should at any time be invited to taste of new wine he would say the old is better When Peter knew that with Christ alone was eternal life then he saith Whither shall we goe John 6. 68. Or to whom shall we goe We cannot be better than we are Now the other Disciples had not fully tasted of the good Word of God they depart from Christ and never follow him more We may say then to all those unstable soules who wander from one opinion to another and so from truth to falshoods many time Why doe ye leave the Fountain to go to the Cisterns Why do ye leave the fatnesse of the Olive and the sweetnesse of the Vine to go to the Briar Thirdly Another cause of changeablenesse is Love to profit to earthly greatnesse and worldly advantages There is none addicted to this but he must be Yea and Nay often and often again Must not the shadow alter often sometimes longer sometimes shorter sometimes streight and sometimes bowed down because it wholly followeth the body and hath its dependence thereon So it is here when men regard Religion only for politick and self-seeking ends then they must be hot and cold they must be bitter and sweet as their interest requireth This hath alwayes made Ecebolius's in the Church onely it were well if at last they would bewail this carnality this inconstancy as Ecebolius did throwing himself down before the Church gathered together crying out Calcate me insipidum salem This made one Bishop be sirnamed Euripus for his frequent compliances and accommodations of himself that thereby he might be advanced Lastly Another cause though external is The example of others When an whole Church or an whole Nation becometh Yea and Nay then it is very difficult to be immoveable To be onely Athanasius when the whole world is Arrian that is difficult We are apt to think that multitude is patronage enough for any inconstancy Though we judge the usages in Religion superstitious yet we are ready to say as he did Eamus ad communem errorem Hence it is that we read some Nations have received the Popish Religion and then after that Protestantisme and so change them mutually again Now unlesse a man be bottomed upon divine Motives he cannot be Lot in a Sodome he cannot be like that River that emptieth it self into the brackish Sea and yet keeps its own sweetnesse Not to turn when all turn argueth there must be some strong principle within some life within else the dead fish would be carried away with the stream The conclusive particular to clear this whole Discourse and which will antidote against the Objection at first mentioned is this We must distinguish between the Essentials of Religion and External formes thereof which are mutable and changeable It may be the same Essential Religion sull though the form of administrations may alter even as it is the same man still though he wear change of garments This is on purpose mentioned to discover the ignorance of those who charge levity and inconstancy upon the Ministers of the Gospel because they use not the same publick Liturgyl nor administer Sacraments in the same order and forme as was formerly Yea some are so farre scandalized as to think this is the removing of the Protestant Religion but all this is built upon a false foundation as if Protestant Religion were built upon Church-formes of administration For if that were so then there would be many Protestant Religions because several Protestant Churches have alwayes had several formes of administration some more pure than other though all retaining the essentials of Religion Religion then is the same still and the Ministers of the Gospel are the same still we have also the same way still to Heaven and the same Christ our Mediatour though
ordinary Pastours succeed the Apostles in what they had as ordinary viz. to preach the Word and dispense the Sacraments Lastly Though thus admirably qualified yet they did not convert all before them But many resisted their Doctrine many grew enemies and opposite to them Insomuch that all but John were put to violent deaths It 's then no wonder if ordinary Pastors do not reform a whole Congregation if they be hated and opposed for can they expect to be better than the Apostles Do not then think with your selves if we had such as the Apostles to preach to us immediately called of God and that could confirme their Doctrine by miracles then we would presently submit This is but deceit and hypocrisie And certainly though the Apostles be taken from us yet we have their Doctrine Paul speaketh by his Epistles to us still We need not with Austin wish to hear Paul preaching SERM. V. The Divine Call of Church-Officers is clearly to be knowne and faithfully to be improved What advantages will follow upon a true Call both to the Officers themselves and the People 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. VVE have considered Paul under the second adjunct attributed to him viz. his Apostleship Paul an Apostle whereupon we treated on the Office of the Apostles We proceed to a second Observation For whereas Paul doth therefore mention his Call to that glorious Office thereby to be received with greater reverence and authority as also to encourage himself against those false Apostles who used their utmost endeavour to bring him into reproach with the Corinthians We may thence observe this That it is of great consequence both to the Ministers of God and the people to be fully informed of that Divine Call which the Officers of the Church have towards them That they who preach may be able to say We come in the Name of the Lord to you It is not we that have obtruded our selves but God that hath invested us with this Office over you And they also who hear may say We esteem of you as the stewards of God we receive you as Embassadors from the Lord to us To pursue this first Consider that there are many large disputes both in old and later writers about the Call of Church-officers As the truth it self is subject to many difficulties So the perverse disputes of men have made it more intricate and intangled onely this we may observe That the several parties which are in Religion that hold any Ministry or such an Office at all and that by Divine Institution for some deny such an Institution they still monopolize and appropriate the Call to themselves with them onely is the true Church with them only are the true Officers of the Church And no doubt that way of Religion which can say with them only is the true Call and the true Church-officers and the right administration of Ordinances doth infinitely excell all other waies For Gods promise and success doth accompany only his own Officers and his own Ordinances As the people of God will not hear a stranger but flee from him so neither will God go along with such strangers It 's only to his Apostles and their Successours that he promiseth to be with to the end of the world Therefore that Church who can upon just grounds say that with us are the true Officers with us are Christs institutions punctually observed no doubt but with them is Christ present and with them is the Kingdom of Heaven This was the great advantage Abijah pleaded in his Remonstrance against Jeroboam who had devised a new Ministry and a new worship 2 Chron. 13. 9 10 11. Where he pleads That in Jerusalem was the true succession of Priests and there was the charge of God kept and that therefore God himself was with them To have therefore a true Call is of so great concernment that all pretend to it The Papist chargeth the Protestant That their Ministers have no true Call The Protestant returneth the same charge to them The Brownist he saith neither Papist nor Protestant have true Calls Yea and the Protestants themselves because of their different opinions in Church-Government have also different opinions about the Call of Church-officers So that it being of such consequence no wonder if the Devil keep up this controveesie as much as may be in the Church especially if he pursue this designe to make the world believe That the faithfull Ministers of God have no true Call for this is to strike at the very root of all Hence it is also That in the several ages of the Church there have been false Prophets and false Apostles Yea our Saviour Mat. 26. saith There will be also false Christs and the Apostle saith The Devil transformeth himself into an angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. But my intent is not at this time to dispute the Nature of a Ministers Call and how you may discern it from false Calls when you may conclude the Minister you live under hath a true Call For all this will be more properly handled towards the the end of this Epistle when the Apostle is compelled to plead his Call against those that questioned it In the second place It 's not enough to plead a Call and that a true one unless there be also a faithfull improving of it unless the Office be executed according to the institution of it Paul doth not glory in the meer Title and Office of an Apostleship but supposeth also his faithfull dispensation of it Yea he was so carefull herein that he professeth He knew nothing by himself viz. of negligent and ill administration in this Office 1 Cor. 4. 2. Yea he saith That he kept his body lest while he preached to others he himself should become a reprobate 1 Cor. 9. 27. Judas was an Apostle yet he had little cause to boast in that Office seeing he was a Devil at the same time Grant therefore that some may make it clear that they have a Call from God yet if they are not faithfull and diligent therein the greater will be their condemnation be Suppose the Pope could prove which yet he can never do that he doth succeed Peter and that in Universal Jurisdiction yet if he did not succeed likewise Peter in his Doctrine in his diligence and life he were inexcusable and well did the Painter draw Peter with too red a colour as blushing at the enormities of his Successours So that two things go to make a compleat Officer in the Church his Divine Call and his faithfull administration thereof and this later is necessary because without diligence therein he cannot expect that promise and assistance of God which otherwise would be communicated unto him These things premised let us consider what are the great practical concernments which will follow those who have a true Call of God And First For the Officers themselves there are these encouragements 1.
our works and giving all to the grace of God who worketh according to his own purpose and will Oh what coals of fire will this be in thy bosome To think why doth God do this to me What moveth him Is God necessitated to it Can he not do otherwise Would he be unjust if he did it not And this further will be aggravated when we consider the mercy comparatively with others that want such if for spiritual mercies we compare them with the damned Angels that are utterly cut off from the least crum of any spiritual mercy though so noble and excellent creatures may not this astonish thee And if thou sayest These are not of the same nature with thee How many are there of the same flesh and bloud in the same vicinity where thou livest of the fame calling and profession yea of the same parentage and yet they are forsaken by God and left to their natural deserts whereas he hath pitched his favour upon thee to justifie sanctifie and at last to glorifie thee Certainly thou art a stock and a stone if such discriminating mercy as this doth not affectionately possess thee In the last place The universality of the mercies thou enjoyest will much heighten in the consideration of them All that thou seest thou hearest thou eatest thou feelest yea thou thinkest and apprehendest is a mercy There is nothing within thee without thee or about thee but it is a mercy To hear is a mercy to see is a mercy to think without madness and distraction is a mercy Every thing that is not hell is a mercy to thee All the creatures as Psal 8. the Sunne the Sturres the beasts of the field are wholly mercies if then a man set himself to meditation after this manner will he not find the goodness of God like Ezekiels waters To ascend higher and higher till they come over his head But to finish at last this Subject take notice of the encouragements to this duty of a thankful blessing and praising soul that so if thy heart at last be throughly raised up to this duty thou mayest praise God for this truth that provoketh thee to praise him And First The more thou blessest God the more wilt thou have cause to blesse him For to the thankfull heart God multiplieth his mercies as many times because thou doest not take notice of his goodness to thee or lookest upon his mercies as a debt to thee or thou takest the mercies God hath given thee and usest them as weapons against him therefore he taketh away thy mercies from thee to make thee prize them the more whereas to the soul that taketh every mercy as the hen every drop of water and immediately looks up to Heaven that will take up every fragment that nothing be lost As thou blessest God declaratively God will bless thee really Christ will bless thee as he did those few loaves by multiplying of them Secondly Consider this is all thou canst do to God for all his several mercies What doth God require of thee after all that he hath done for thy soul and body Is it any thing else but to magnifie his name to give him the glory of it And this doth not at all adde unto the greatness of God he is not made the more perfect and blessed in himself by all the glory thou givest to him So that indeed it is the greatest glory that thou art capable of that God will accept of blessing from thee that he will own praises out of thy mouth that he doth not rebuke thee as Christ did the Devils when they confessed He was the Son of the living God Thirdly This blessing and praising of God will keep thee in a joyfull active and fruitfull way Those that sing at their work dispatch it with greater facility And thus it is the soul filled with cordial thankfulness to God doth more for God then many others who are clogged with dejecting and discouraging thoughts See whether the cause of all thy heaviness yea the prevailing of lusts and passions upon thee be not want of chearfull blessing of God The joy of the Lord is our strength Lastly Consider the example of David how unwearied he is in this work never thinking that his soul doth enough herein and therefore because he cannot discharge this duty to his desire he calls upon all the creatures of the world almost to help him therein yea the very Ice and Snow and such inanimate creatures how much more Angels and men must joyn with him to praise God In Austin's time some were named Deo gratias certainly we should so abound in this duty that it may be truly said unto God as Psal 22. Thou inhabitest the praises of Israel SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God And how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ THe Duty of Blessing with the Object of it being dispatched let us now come to that Amplification and Illustration which the Apostle ufeth in describing of it And The first is From a personal and relative respect The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Even the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That particle is by way of interpretation and explication What he meaneth by God viz. That he doth not take the word as it is often absolutely for the essence of the Divine Nature as common to the three Persons but relatively and in the distinct personality of the first Person and therefore said to be The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ For the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Stephanus observeth may be rendred by Et sed tunc etiam c. as the subject matter requireth The Apostle doth in other places delight to use this expression Rom. 15. 6. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Ephes 3. 14. In which places the Apostle seemeth with much affection and cordial enlargement to make mention of this relative Title in God the Father for this is the treasure of our comfort herein are all our mercies contained that we and Christ have the same Father he by Nature and we by Grace So that we are not to consider of Gods paternal relation to Christ as a speculative doctrinal truth but as practical and the ground of all consolation to us Hence John 20. 17. Christ by way of comfort tells them He ascends to his Father and their Father And indeed without Christ we cannot behold him as a Father but as a severe and dreadfull Judge Only when we say this Doctrine of the Fathers relation to Christ a Sonne is so full of comfort you must not understand it absolutely and nakedly as the second Person in the Trinity but as assuming the humane Nature into a Personal Subsistency Therefore he saith The Father of Jesus Christ which is the description of his Person in both his Natures So that we must not look upon the Sonne as the second Person alone in
That spiritual comfort comes alone from God is plain because the Spirit of God is called the Comforter We cannot have one drop of heavenly consolation till Gods Spirit infuse it into us If the children of God could have comfort when they will would they walk so disconsolately and cry out of their dark troubled souls as they do but then even earthly comfort to take delight in the lawfull contentments God doth allow us to take delight and joy in these corporal mercies this is also from God Eccles 2. 24 26. Eccles 3. 13. Eccles 5. 18. You see the Wiseman affirmeth it often That a man cannot take any joy or delight even in those lawfull things unless it be given him of God All comfort then of all sorts ariseth from him But let us consider the way or manner of Gods comforting For as it is a great and profitable Question to examine How God doth convert and sanctifie so also how he doth comfort And First You must lay this foundation That God doth comfort two wayes either immediately when he doth by himself work upon the soul Or mediately when he comforteth by such means as he hath appointed thereunto Let us then in the next place consider What are those immediate workings of God upon the soul whereby he maketh the heart joyfull For David Psal 4. saith God had put more joy into his heart then any man can have in the abundance of all temporal mercies And First Therefore God doth comfort by illuminating and opening the understanding and opening the understanding to know and see the grounds and reasons of comfort And certainly this is of great conducement to have the heart comforted when the understanding is rightly convinced of the grounds of comfort For as the dark night is apt to beget fears and terrours so darkness in the understanding is a great cause of all that terrour and disconsolateness which Gods own children may many times lie under So that as God in conversion and humiliation for sinne begins with conviction upon the heart so also in consolation and comfort The great impediment to a godly mans comfort is want of spiritual knowledge and conviction about the causes of comfort As it was with Hagar in the wilderness she sate weeping for her child and gave over all as desperate till God opened her eyes and made her see a fountain Thus the broken heart judgeth it self in a wilderness destitute of all comfort seeth nothing but matter of despair and damnation till God enlighten the understanding about comfortgrounds in the Gospel As for example when the Spirit of God enlightens us to receive comfort it giveth us the eye salve 1. To look upon Christ revealed in the Gospel as the full cause and ground of all our comfort as well as on sinne Generally the people of God in the first workings of the soul look upon nothing but their sins behold nothing but sinne but God will not let them alone in this agony he enlightens them further that they shall see Christ as well as sinne the Gospel as well as the Law he giveth them eyes to behold the brazen Serpent when stung Hence the Spirit of God John 16. 9 10. doth not only convince of sinne but of righteousness also The Devil he indeed moveth in those troubled waters of thy soul and would keep thee off from Christ as the Disciples did the blind man but the Spirit of God will not leave the soul in these wounds in these straits but doth carry him up from the mount of cursing to the mount of blessing And certainly the wise men could not more rejoyce to see the starre than the godly heart doth to behold Christ after the storms and tempests in his soul Hence the Apostle Gal. 1. calleth it The revealing of the Sonne in him This then we are inabled to do by God not only to know sinne in the terrour and sting of it but also Christ in his fulness and excellency How was Paul affected with this 2 Cor. 2. 1. I desire to know nothing but Christ crucified This therefore is a special work of God to make us look with both eyes to make thee see sinne as well as Christ and Christ as well as sin 2. As God doth convince the soul of Christ what a full and glorious Saviour he is so also in the second place Of our duty to receive him and to lay hold on him And this is a further step to comfort when God doth so farre open the eyes as to see not only a full and sufficient Christ but also that it 's a duty in particular to apply this Christ and to rest upon him for comfort and salvation This is a further discovery still Paul said Gal. 2. Who gave himself for me and loved me And Thomas said My God and my Lord. It is one of the blessed truths discovered in the Reformation out of Popery That it is not our duty to believe in the general onely that Christ is a Saviour but to rest on him also for the pardon of my sinnes That this is the Faith that justifieth That this is most acceptable and precious unto God That unbelief not only in the general but as it faileth in this particular in not applying in not appropriating Christ to the soul is that which will damn a man Oh then what blessed and comfortable light is that which God bringeth into the soul when he shall make thee see that though a sinner though burdened though unworthy yet it 's thy duty to go to Christ to be eased That he commands thee with that woman not only to touch the hem of his garments but to lay hold on Christ himself This particular faith is that which the soul is hardly convinced of Though others may draw nigh to Christ yet may I But he cometh at last to be perswaded of this truth 3. God comforts by enlightning the mind that a comfortable joyfull life arising from peace with God is a most acceptable thing to God that it brings honour and glory to God and that on the other side to walk heavily and in a dejected manner is to dishonour and reproach God That God doth not only look to our gracious walking but also to our comfortable walking and that we demonstrate the Kingdom of Heaven to be begun in us in joy as well as in mortification Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse and joy in the holy Ghost You see Joy as well as Righteousnesse The children of God they are not quickly perswaded of this they think such as they are may not walk comfortably It 's not for them to rejoyce but at last they come to see that they were sinfully kept up by slavish fears and servile dejections that the Kingdome of God requireth Consolation as well as Sanctification Thus you see the first general way how God comforteth viz. by enlightning the mind Secondly and principally God comforteth By preparing and fashioning the heart by making it
And the Fontal Cause of all who is said to be God Of this later we have said enough already We shall therefore at this time dispatch the former That comfort by which the Apostles themselves were refreshed by that did they revive others even those that were farre inferiour to them both in gifts and graces So that as by the same Sunne both the rich and the poor do see one finds the sweetness of the light as well as the other Thus also by the same grounds of comfort that any godly man may be supported all may be Observe That those grounds of comfort which revive the heart of one godly man may also do another That which is wine to make glad the heart of Paul will also exhilarate the hearts of others who believe in Christ That which is honey to one cannot be gall to another This truth hath its great practical use And First Let us consider That there are general grounds of comfort for all the godly in all their tribulations and there are special particular ones The general grounds of comfort are such that all the godly may make use of at all times be they Jew or Gentile bond or free eye or foot in the body of Christ there is no difference no exemption this fountain is set open Neither is it like the pool of Bethesda wherein the first only that stept in could be healed for here all are invited to drink first and last and that abundantly There are Catholicon comforts that let our diseases be what they will be these are proper to cure us There are some promises so full of general comfort for every condition that they are made for the meridian of every godly man Let us give you some summary draught of them As 1. That all afflictions do come from the love of a Father to such as believe So that although they be grievous to flesh and bloud and have a bitter taste yet they come from a sweet root These thorns do grow upon a vine These bitter streams come from a sweet fountain Now this ground of comfort belongs to all that have an unfeigned love to God Canst thou make out thy evidence of being in Christ Is thy name to be found in the book of life Then this comfort thou mayest apply to thy self be thy condition or quality what it can be thou mayest boldly take this cordial and it is as proper for thee as a David or Paul any of those who are pillars in godliness Heb. 12. 6. For whom he loveth he chasteneth So that you see here is such an argument of comfort that every member of the body of Christ may use 2. Another general ground of comfort is The end and fruit of afflictions As they come from Gods love so they are to subdue sinne to bring us nearer to God Hence afflictions are compared to the fire that purgeth away the dross to winnowing that driveth away the chaff to pruning that cuts off the luxuriant branches and makes the other branches more fruitfull They are given by Christ the wise Physician of our souls as heavenly physick and admirable remedies to crucifie to sinne and to quicken to righteousnesse If God denieth thee such outward comforts thou desirest know that this very denial is for thy good and darest thou say Lord let me have them though they damn me Let me not be afflicted though it will do me good Quid ●…sit v●l prosit novit medicus non egrotus Thus the Apostle Rom. 8. All things shall work together for the good of those who love God The Apostle also speaketh notably of these afflictions in respect of the issue of them as well as of the original whence they flow Heb. 12. 9 10 11. where a three-fold advantage is said to come by them 1. By yeelding to the Father of Spirits chastising us we live Tribulations therefore are the way to make us live spiritually here and eternally hereafter If it were not for afflictions thou mightst die and be damned They have prevented much sinne They have been like a file to the iron to get off the rust They have been like the plowing and harrowing of the ground to fit thee to bring forth fruit And 2. God is said to chastise us for our profit which is expressed to be That we might be partakers of holinesse Tribulations then are very profitable and advantagious things though flesh and blood can hardly say so It may be thy afflictions have done thee more good than all the mercies thou ever hadst And therefore under every exercise examine What profit have I got Wherein am I made more holy And then 3. At the 11th verse after the grievous and burdensome way of them for the present afterwards they will yeeld a peaceable fruit of righteousnesse The chastening doth but seem grievous and that for the present but afterwards it makes more holy which is said to be the peaceable fruit of it The soul that raged and fretted finding the benefit begins then in a peaceable quiet manner to blesse and praise God for it This is a General comfort Every godly man may say this belongs to me in my afflictions as well as to any other 3. Not to be too large here The benefits and heavenly advantages which come from Christ being ours these also are comforts in common There is no fiery sword to keep out of this Paradise Rom. 8. Doth not the Apostle conclude those great priviledges of Justification of Perseverance in that state of conquest over all spiritual enemies and that from such general grounds as all the people of God may claim to it Because Christ died and because Christ is risen because he hath given us Christ and how then not with him all things else Is there any believer so weak so contemptible that Christ did not die for and rise for Is there any to whom the Father hath not given Christ If so you see that what comforted Paul may comfort you It is a vain Position of Papists that Paul speaketh so assuredly in that condition because of an extraordinary revelation that he had that Christ was his for he grounds his perswasion upon those general arguments which belong to every godly man Christ then and his presence with all his benefits is a cordial to every believer This Sunne of Righteousnesse ariseth with healing in his wings to the least believer as well as the greatest The The Dwarfe as well as the Gyant may hold this pearle in his hand But In the second place besides such general comforts which are as some say of Manna answering all dainties and was to every mans palate that which he most delighted in There are special and particular comforts for special and particular temptations So that as every disease needeth a peculiar remedy so every temptation a proper comfort And therefore that special comfort will not serve one in his temptation which doth another in a different one And hence
ability which a man hath to do any thing and some distinguish it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Right or Authority The one they call Potentia the other Potestas The one is Natural the other is Moral Many a man hath a power to do a thing when yet he hath no right or authority to do it But in the Scripture we may observe these words promiscuously used for one another yea sometimes they are put together as signifying the same thing Luke 4. 36. 1 Cor. 15. 24. In the Scripture we find this word often used for that power to work miracles yea and miracles themselves are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 2. 22. Rom. 15. 19. Sometimes the word is applied to Angels because of their great strength and power 1 Pet. 3. 22. In Heb. 6. 5. we have an expression of the powers of the world to come which some are said to have tasted of but what that is is greatly controverted As to our purpose we may take notice from the Scripture of a two-fold power 1. The power of God which is put forth in us by his grace which we receive and partake of and so in that sense may be called our power viz. objectively yea and in some sense subjectively though not efficiently Ephes 3. 20. According to his power which worketh in us Again saith Paul I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me Phil. 4. 13. 2. There is our own humane and natural strength what we can do by our selves only Now the Question is Whether Paul mean that this affliction was above even his divine strength or that measure of grace and power which God had given him So that if the Lord had not come in with extraordinary supply and more than wonted grace this trouble had overcome him Or whether he mean only of his natural strength and power So that his meaning should be as a man he could not bear it though as a Christian he did It is very probable that both these are included So that neither the natural strength Paul had nor that divine strength which usually he enjoyed could have carried him through that difficulty Now to this expression which Paul useth in the Text we have another place in Paul which seemeth directly and in express words to contradict this it is 1 Cor. 10. 13. There hath no temptation taken you but what is common to man but God is faithfull who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able c. There Paul saith God will not let his people be tempted above what they are able And here Paul speaketh the contrary He is troubled above what he is able How can this be reconciled Some untie this knot from the difference between temptation and affliction There is no temptation say they befalleth the godly above what they are able but there may some trouble and affliction For it is a temptation when it doth induce us into sinne and maketh us to offend God Therefore we pray God would not lead us into temptation but it may be an affliction even when it is so farre from being a temptation that we do thereby more exercise and put forth our graces Thus say they it was with Paul It was an affliction above his strength but not a temptation above his strength For at that time Paul kept up his graces his faith and patience were made more illustrious as file getteth off rust I cannot say this is solid enough For the Text therefore though Expositors go several wayes yet I shall pitch on this as most probable The former part of the verse is a reason of that good exhortation and necessary to every one which he had given before Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall Why Because there hath no temptation as yet taken hold of you but such as all men are capable of An humane temptation that is little short and attemperated to mans strength or what is usual amongst men As the rod of a man And Isa 8. 1. The pen of a man Rom. 6. 19. I speak after the manner of men ye have not yet been afflicted for Christianity Nero hath not yet commanded the Christians to be vexed and tormented for the faith you professe Like that expression Heb. 12. 4. Ye have not yet resisted to blood So that they had just cause to walk humbly and to be afraid of falling because God had not put them yet upon any hard tryals for Christs sake What they hitherto suffered was such as other men though not Christians did endure as well as they But lest this should deject too much as if the time were coming when their persecutions should make them Apostates he giveth them this wine to comfort their hearts with This gracious promise which every Christian should call his promise a continual Antidote a daily Cordial God is faithfull c. where every thing ingredient to it is of admirable comfort God is faithfull It belongs to the faithfulness of God to preserve you he hath taken you for his and therefore his dishonour would be more than thy losse if thou shouldst perish No husbandman will lay a greater burden upon his beast than he can bear Shall man be pitifull to beasts and not God a gracious Father to his children The Artificer or Refiner likewise he will not suffer his gold to lie longer in the fire than the drosse will be purged away and shall not God so faithfull regard his children under their burdens Again He will not suffer you to be tempted No Devil no wicked man in the world can go further than God suffereth Further Not above that ye are able He knoweth your strength he knoweth what will hurt you he knoweth the time when he must take off the affliction Therefore the issue will be comfortable He will give to escape 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some make it a Metaphor from the souldier who escapes out of the warre with victory and conquest Others from one who is shut in in some place so that he is compassed about but at last finds a way to get out Yea the issue is not only to escape but God will so plentifully come in upon us as that we shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more than suffer more than bear As a strong man that is not only able to carry his burden to such a place he is commanded but further also if need require Thus the godly have no more laid upon them than they can bear by this promise yea they can more than bear it how then was Paul's above his strength The Answer is That this promise is to be understood of the final issue of any affliction though for the present they may seem even to sink under it They cry out they cannot hold they cannot bear any longer yet God doth secretly support and at last will give them strength not only to bear but more than bear even to glory and rejoyce in it And thus
although we are to presse after perfection in this grace as well as any other yet none can attain to such a constant setled and fixed frame of heart in trusting in God that in no temptation or at no time he should ever be moved and cast down with diffidence Who can express greater trust in God than David doth at sometimes yea would think this mountain can never be moved as Psal 112. 7. which indeed is spoken of every godly man He will not be afraid of evil tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord Psal 56. 3. at what time I was afraid I will trust in thee Yea in many Psalms did he so farre proclaim his confidence in God that by the event it seemeth that this did regenerate into self-trusting for which God did for sake him sometimes and leave him in darkness But as confident as he is in God sometimes you have him at other times as much dejected and without comfort or support Though therefore thou prayest and mournest after this blessed grace which if perfectly enjoyed would put thee into Heaven while on earth yet look to be often in conflicts sometimes trusting and sometimes distrusting till God should make thee perfect in Heaven where there is no more ground for fear sorrow or any diffidence Let the Use be to humble the children of God under all those distrustfull and despondent thoughts they labour with What are become of Gods mercies of old Where are thy former experiences Let such as never knew the name of God that have no interest in Christ or his promises let such I say like Judas and Cain go up and down with perpetual tremblings and anxiety of heart but thou dishonourest God and the promise and that holy calling by which thou art called while thou art tormenting thy self with cares about future things Matth. 6. 36. It is made the Gentiles sinne an Heathenish sinne How then cometh it about that Christianity hath taught thee no better Who may walk confidently and with quiet spirits though the Earth be removed into the Sea if thou mayest not Aristotle giving Characters of confident men Rhetor. lib. 2 do among others hath these two particulars 1. Such are confident who have great power and might or have friends that are so Now is there any greater than God Is there any mightier than he 2. Those are confident saith he that are well-affected to religious and divine things And is it not thus with thee Art not thou carefull to observe the commands of God Art not thou tender about his worship and his glory Indeed sinne and contempt of holy things that must needs emasculate and take away all courage but thy faithfulness to God may make thee assured of his faithfulness to thee SERM. LXXIX How we are to relie upon God and yet make use of requisite Means too 2 COR. 1. 11. You also helping together by prayer for us that for the gift bestowed upon us by the means of many persons thanks may be given by many on our behalf THe Apostle having commemorated the goodness and power of God in his deliverances attributing all to his mercy he doth in this verse declare what helps and means were likewise to be used for the accomplishing thereof For he that trusteth in God alone for any deliverance doth also diligently use those appointed means which God hath commanded Neither doth the goodness and power of God to do any thing for us disoblige us from a carefull attendance to those wayes wherein the mercy is to be obtained In that therefore Paul having expressed his assurance of present and future deliverance doth also excite and exhort them to pray for him we have 1. A Demonstration of the nature of that confidence which was in him it was divine and genuine not presumption which separateth end and means from another 2. Here was an Evidence of his humility and modesty For though a Saint in the highest forme farre excelling others is gifts and graces yet he earnestly desireth the prayers of those that are inferiour to him The Text therefore is a further amplification of his deliverance 1. From the Means used to obtain it Piscator calleth this prayer Causam adjuvantem but that expression is too big The Churches prayer is a means not a cause prevailing in the behalf of others 2. From the End which is Thanksgiving by others as in time is to be shewed Let us consider the Means specified in the Text and therein we have the Means it self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is emphatical You also implying that neither Gods promise or his power would procure this mercy alone without their prayer Besides the goodness of God on his part there must be prayer on their part The word in the original for helping is emphatical being twice compounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This word doth denote the Service and Ministry of those who are under us and so it doth imply that the Church doth owe as a debt unto their spiritual guides earnest prayer for them Though the Ministers be their servants in some respects in respect of the end of their office as all Governours are yet they are their servants in other respects by way of obedience to their word and constant prayer for them But then there is the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added which doth denote not onely their effectual prayers but their concord and agreement therein and that in their publick and solemn Assemblies Again the word signifying to work and labour doth denote what the nature of prayer is that the soul labours therein is fervent full of agonies which sheweth that the customary formal prayers of most people are not worthy of the name there is no labour or fervency of the soul therein In the second place You have the way how they laboured by prayer The meaning of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be spoken to afterwards They did not labour by using friends to sollicite the Magistrate in Paul's behalf for there was no hope from them but they made their addresses to God Lastly Here is the Subject 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You helping together It is an honour Paul puts upon them by this expression and thereby also commendeth their duty to them of praying for them Several Observations are contained in this particular As First Whereas we see Paul resting alone upon the goodnesse and power of God for his deliverance yet not excluding but rather desiring the prayers of the Corinthians as a necessary means to have this also obtained Observe That it is a Christians duty not to separate from or oppose the grace and power of God to the duties and means he also hath required Not to say because it 's Gods grace and Gods work therefore I will sit down and do nothing Now on the other side God commands me to pray to work therefore it is not the grace of God but my duties that do justifie and save me
you had what gifts and enlargements you had what not what remarkable external duties you have done for God but with what sincerity and singlenesse of heart all this hath been performed Therefore meditate on this lesson as it were every day be studying of it to know all the practical mysteries about it And as the Husbandman before he can sow his ground with corn must cut up the roots and bushes which are in the way so do thou That thou mayest the better set thy self upon this duty of pressing after sure knowledge in this great matter remove first All those impediments and hinderances that keep thee from exercising thy self therein and they are these First A self-fulnesse and presumptuous security that thou art already in a good estate This is the condemnation and eternal ruine of many a mans soul he will not so much as put it to the Question Whether he be in a state of grace and salvation or no he will not so much as entertain one doubt about it No this is the way to bring him in despair by this means he may have trouble and disquietness of conscience he cannot live so jollily and securely as he doth Therefore whatsoever Gods word or the Ministry speaketh though never so terribly about the deceitfulness of mans heart that we delude our selves taking that which is like grace for true grace they matter it not they will perswade themselves that their souls are in a good estate and none in the world shall make them question it Of all the men in the world such secure confident spirits have the most cause to doubt and fear Never to doubt or search into thy heart and to compare thy self with the Rule is a very ill signe To take all for granted thus concerning thy soul and never to commune with thy own heart is a great argument that thou art rotten in the foundation Doth not the Wiseman observe it as a general Rule Prov. 16. 2. The wayes of a man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord pondereth the heart Though thou sayest with the Church of Laodicea Thou art rich cloathed and wantest nothing yet God knoweth thou art poor cursed and miserable God knoweth otherwise by thee then thou doest We charge it upon the Church of Rome that she is incurable because of this principle she holdeth That she cannot erre For if she would yeeld that if she would grant happily for so many years they have been grosly deceived then there would be some principles to proceed upon to reform them So it is if we meet with a man that confesseth his heart is deceitfull his condition may be very miserable though he hath applauded himself thus many years if I may be found out not to have laid a good foundation about the work of grace I would gladly be convinced of it It is the great desire of my soul not to be deceived about the nature of grace in me There are fearfull and sad instances of hypocrites and temporary believers therefore I would gladly be informed Whether I came not too short as yet Whether there be not a more excellent way then I have attained unto This man is not farre from the Kingdom of Heaven this man is in a way to be secured But the self-righteous man that supposeth himself good it is the first principle with him that he will never suffer to be questioned this man is remediless as to humane appearance Such a presumptuous man in practicals is like an Heretick in doctrinals and so after the first and second admonition we may even reject knowing that he doth willingly damne himselfe Be sure then to take heed of this rock at which so many have split themselves A second cause that must be removed is A prophane carelesse spirit whereby men do not at all matter their souls nor in what relation they do stand in towards God If their bodies be well if their worldly affairs prosper then they say Soul take thy ease But as for their spiritual condition whether God be reconciled or an enemy whether yet they have been ever taken off that natural and cursed estate they were born in they never look after it Oh foolish and brutish man If the Spirit of God shall once convince thee of thy sinfull and dangerous estate of the curses of the Law which may fall upon thee every moment then thou maist have no rest day or night till thou obtainest some assurance herein The third cause is The over-greedinesse and importunate minding of our earthly businesses We rise with the world in our heart and go to bed with it in our heart so that we never set time apart seriously to think how it is with us Hence come those constant delayes and procrastinations promising our selves we will after such and such businesses are over set our selves to the examination of our wayes but still the work is not done our dayes passe away our hearts grow more hardned and indisposed every day till at last death unexpectedly seizeth upon us and then we would gladly have oil when it is too late then with Esai we cry out for a blessing with tears and bitterness but we come too late How comfortable on the other side is it for a godly man dying to say his soul hath been set in order long before he hath not his evidences now to seeke The knowing of his heart hath beene all his study in his life time Satan can object no new thing which he hath not already thought upon Lastly There is another cause in the other extream which is to be removed if we would arrive to this certainty and that is To shake off all despairing and discouraging thoughts as so many vipers fastened upon thee This valley must be exalted as well as the other mountains levelled Paper too much wetted as well as foul receiveth no characters So the heart sinfully dejected and disquieted is indisposed for assurance as well as the presumptuous one For this reason we need the Spirit of God to seal us and to confirm us yea we need Gods Spirit more in this work of confirmation then of illumination Darkness and ignorance is sooner removed out of the mind than unbelief and diffidence out of the heart Do ye not see it thus often with the children of God who are very tender in respect of illumination are very quick and Eagle-eyed in respect of conviction are wonderfully ingenuous to find out all the secret pollution and guile of their souls But then for assurance and confirmation in the grace and favour of God towards them they are exceedingly fearfull and very weak Therefore the believer must look upon slavish and disquieting fears as adversaries to his peace as well as presumptuous and secure thoughts These impediments being thus rolled out of the way the next thing he hath to do is to awe his foul with those Commands of God that require us to get a certain knowledge of
Chap. 3. he sheweth their folly by many convincing and piercing arguments in falling off thus from him and Chap. 4. 15. puts them in mind that they had other thoughts of him once Paul was once a blessed man and his preaching blessed preaching Where is the blessedness you once spake of Yea he saith their affections were so vehement and hyperbolical That they would have pluckt out their eyes their dearest and tenderest part and have given them him if this could have done him good yet how quickly did these boiling affections turn into ice They will receive other mens doctrines rather than his And if we see the Apostles of Christ that had their call immediately from him that were furnished with a large measure of the Spirit and inabled to do such wonderfull miracles before their eyes may come to be contemned and vilified and that by their own people who had once so highly honoured them No wonder if ordinary Pastors and Officers do often meet with such entertainment in the world Yea was it not thus with Christ himself Did not he find the grosse mutability of the people when one while they honour him crying Hosanna and at another time Crucifie him If they do thus to the green tree will they not much rather to the dry And shall the servant be above his master To inlarge this Consider First That it is an imbred corruption in all inferiours to be mutable and changeable to their Superiours Wise men do observe this mobility in the people even to their best Governours so unthankfull and ingratefull are people by nature Is not this plain in Moses What a faithfull Governour had he been to the people of Israel like a tender father he even carried them in his arms God had honoured him exceedingly before their eyes working many miraculous mercies for them by his means yet how often did they murmure against him which was a great sinne because as Moses telleth them Exod. 16. 8. Your murmurings are not against us but the Lord. Yea they are ready to fall off from Moses and to make themselves a Captain that they may go again into Aegypt Thus the people also dealt with David when they were in bitterness of spirit for the losse of their wives they spake of stoning David Among the Heathens there are plentifull examples of this unthankfull mutability Camillus and Themistocles with others which made the latter say when they had cast him off after all the good service he had none for them That they did with him as beasts doe in a storm runne to a tree to shelter themselves and when that is over they fall a browzing on it and breaking the boughs thereof How many of their famous Worthies have the Heathens banished most ingratefully and then in their necessities intreated them to come again Which made one wise Roman say when perswaded to enter upon some publick design for the common good but dangerous deny saying Why should wise men venture themselves for fools The Athenians were impetuous to put Socrates to death and after he was dead then they were grieved and impatient till they had destroyed those that were the Authors of it Now if it be thus in civil affairs no wonder if there be more changeableness and more ingratitude in Church-matters For in the faithfull discharge of our spiritual office there we directly oppose the natural inclination and love of men to their sinfull pleasures we deal chiefly with the inward man and the matter we propound for the Doctrine of it to be believed is wholly transcendent to their humane apprehensions and the goodness of it is altogether supernatural Yea contra-natural take man in his sinfull naturals Hence it is that spiritual governing is far more difficult than civil men being more willing to receive what maketh for their bodily good and welfare then for their souls and spiritual estate Secondly This inclination to changeablenesse and mutability in matters of Religion hath greater temptations in rich and famous Cities than in villages and small parochial places Now Corinth as you heard was a famous and rich City eminent for trading yea and for earning and gifts Hence Paul doth in none of his Epistles so much debase the wisdome of the world indeavouring to exalt Christ above all things as in his Epistles to these Corinthians and it seemeth they did a bound with many excellent gifts and abilities as the Apostle many times witnesseth Now this was their snare and temptation this made them proud of their knowledge this made them admire gifts more than grace this caused them to make parties and factions some cried up one teacher some another So that their wealth and gifts did prove a great temptation to them and by this means Paul came to be undervalued Thus it falleth out many times in great and populous places where are variety of Ministers and of gifts and a people raised up in knowledge and wealth it is very hard for them to keep in a constant real esteem of sound and soul-saving truths but with the people of Israel to be weary of Manna to desire even garlick and onyons above it The Gospel was at first preached and planted in Cities and their Churches were first constituted it being a long time ere the little villages in the Countrey did receive the Christian faith Hence to this day say some we call Heathens Pagans à pagis from villages because they did last of all receive the Christian faith But then they have this advantage that they are freed from those many temptations that are in the Churches of Cities for they having not many Officers nor hearing variety of gifts are not so tempted to be alwayes lusting after some new thing as in the fore-mentioned places yet for all this they have the same corrupt inclination and if they have not the temptation brought to them they will seek out for the temptations and hence many villages are quickly poisoned with corrupt and erroneous wayes For the Devil he goeth up and down roaring to seek whom he may devour whether in Cities or villages Now let us consider of the Causes which make such a change and alteration and that many times in those who are very good or at least apparently so And 1. This ariseth from the ficklenesse and inconstancy that is in many men There are few that profess Religion that do obtain to a sound mind that are well rooted in the first principles of Religion They content themselves with general and confused apprehensions and therefore can speak of those things which yet they have no clear understanding about Now how can such straws and feathers as these but be blown away with every wind of doctrine It is the Apostles expression Ephes 4. 14. implying that it is childishness levity want of a serious weighty and solid judgement that maketh us leave the faithfull Ministers of God and greedily run after false teachers 2. An overhasty and unadvised receiving of the
22. How miserable are such a people who rejoyce in the greatest judgment that can befall them Rejoyce not in this but weep and mourn rather when those who should deal faithfully with thee do flatter and seduce thee daubing with untempered morter For God will destroy both such Prophets and such a People Thirdly We are to rejoyce in the spiritual success and prosperity of their work It is very sad to hear those complaints in the Scripture Who hath believed our report and All the day long have we stretched out our hands unto a rebellious people To have much rain fall upon the ground and nothing but bryars and thorns coming up thereupon When therefore we shall finde that God makes the Ministry a savour of life and not of death unto many this ought greatly to rejoyce us when thou findest it to be a mighty word upon thy own heart or upon the hearts of others wherein we ought to be exceeding glad For Is there any greater mercy can befall thee than to have the Word thus a converting and saving Word to thee Thou mayest admire thy Pleasures thy profit thy lusts and judg them sweet But know that the Saving efficacy of the Ministry upon thy soul will be the blessedness indeed that shall endure for ever and therefore when you hear men praise a Ministry admire that examine what is the spiritual good they have found thereby what Reformation what a change hath it made The Apostle telleth these very Corinthians 1 Cor. 5. 6. that their glorying was not good why so because they did not purge out the old leaven They did not cast out that wicked person from amongst them now all this while they gloryed in their able Teachers they magnified the wisdome and Eloquence of many that preached amongst them but saith he your glorying is not good where is the holy Order the godly Discipline the spirituall Reformation that you should have attained unto by the Gifts and Ministry of your Teachers This alone will cause us truly and solidly to rejoyce Use of Instruction How impossible is it for men upon true and spiritual grounds to rejoyce in the Ministry unless they have felt some special efficacy upon it in their hearts They may glory in the parts in the Eloquence in the abilities of men but not for the spirituall success of the work In Popery they will have their people glory in their Church-Officers because of the external pomp and stateliness they live in and so they become reverenced for their outward glory But this is wholly unsuitable with the Scripture-glory and the Scripture-rejoycing for this alone will make thee praise God if thou hast found his Ministers to be the happy Instruments of grace and peace to thy soul SERM. CIII Of the Rejoycing a faithfull Minister hath in an Obedient people 2 COR. 1. 14. That we are your rejoyeing as you also are ours in the day of the Lord Jesus THere remaineth the Second part of the Doctrine to be dispatched which is The Ministers rejoycing upon good grounds in his people For you heard how happy and blessed a thing it was when there was cause for a mutuall and reciprocall rejoycing in one another between Minister and People For God many times upon wise ends doth divide those who should be conjoyned sometimes he sends faithfull Embassadours to a froward and rebellious people as God in Ezekiel that the people were bryars and thornes to him and that he did dwell among scorpions yet he must not be afraid or dismayed at their lookes though they were a rebellious house Chap. 2. 6. Now what comefort could Ezekiel have from such a people They were so many bryars and thornes scratching and tearing of him so many scorpions that had stings and what danger was it to dwell with such Sometimes again there may be a godly and holy people highly prising the means of grace and yet God set over them dumb or wicked Pastors that are Idols and no shepherds Now when this is so their is little rejoycing in one another and if Jehoash the King of Israel 2 Kings 13. 9. compared an unequal Warr to an unequal and unfit Marriage the thistle in Lebanon with the Cedar in Lebanon which proved destructive immediately for the wilde beast in Lebanon came and trode down the Thistle How much more now is this true in this spiritual relation When an Ignorant or prophane Minister is over a gracious people then the Thistle is married to the Cedar but but this cannot hold long for the Devil which is like the wilde beast the roaring Lyon he will come and devour all so that what the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 6. 14. may well be applyed here Be not unequally yoaked what communion hath light with darkness It is then very uncomfortable when a Godly people hath an unfaithfull Minister or a faithfull Minister an ungodly and a froward people This will make him sadly to bewail his condition crying out with Isay Wo unto me for I dwel among men of polluted lips Isay chap. 6. 12. This maketh him like Lot to torment his righteous soul by seing and hearing the wickedness of those he dwelleth amongst 2 Pet. 2. 8. This is a bitter and sad Persecution as it were thou dost not onely persecute a Minister by the malicious opposition and violent courses against him but even thy ungodly life that thou wilt not be reformed that thou wilt not hear and humbly receive the word of God this maketh them grieved and wearied in their work This is a perfecution of their righteous souls as Jeremy said chap. 13. 17. If you will not here it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride Thus the wickedness and ungodly wayes of a stubborn people are the very heart-breaking of a godly Minister while they deride and scorn his soul mourneth for them while they revile and reproach him maliciously he giveth himself to prayer for them Even as it is with some tender Father who hath a Son grievously distracted and bereaved of his wits while he rageth and raveth at his Father while he miscalleth him and striketh at him The Father stands by sadly affected weeping and praying for his childe that he might be brought to his sound minde again Thus doth a godly tender Pastor mourn over a wicked scornfull and rebellious People But let us proceed to shew Wherein a faithfull Minister of Christ hath cause to rejoyce over his people And first When they are a teachable and learning people very tractable and ready to receive Instruction This is a great joy and Incouragement There are many who as they are sottishly ignorant in matters of Religion so they will continue obstinately therein They are not desirous and hearkning after knowledg that say with those in Job 21. 14. unto God Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Now it is for want of a true knowledg of God that iniquity and profaneness doth abound every where
thy faith that doth not make thee watch and pray against this day Why doest thou not with Hierome thinke that every moment thou hearest that Trumpet sounding in thy eares Arise and come to judgement Oh be diligent in doing the Lord For blessed is that sarvant whom his Master shall finde him so doing Whereas if thou art doing the Devils worke he will at that day come and demand thee he is mine I challenge him for my owne though I never died for him though I was never crucified for him yet he obeyed me rather than Christ therefore I require my owne Call then to any of the creatures and thy friends and see if they can helpe thee when God shall say Depart ye cursed Will any say Lord he shall not goe I will deliver him I will rescue him I will make an atonement for him No but he must for ever perish and none can help him SERM. CVI. Of the Encouragements a Minister hath from the hopes of doing good to a people 2 COR. 1. 15. And in this confidence I was minded to come unto you before that you might have a second benefit AT this Verse the Apostle taketh an happy occasion for a transition to his Apology or defence against that crime charged upon him by the false Teachers Non saltat saith Cajetan he doth not leap falling upon this matter abruptly but the transition is very genuine Paul it seemeth had promised to come to those Corinthians but for weighty reasons he deferred his coming hitherto The false Teachers they waiting for all advantages to calumniate him did upon this accuse him with levity and inconstancy that with him was yea and nay that he did purpose according to carnal respects accommodating himself to time and outward advantages Now the Apostle is very zealous and vehement in vindicating of himself herein It is true Piscator doth begin this Apologetical Discourse at the 12th Ver. but it seemeth more genuine to make the beginning of it at this verse Estius doth well observe that while Paul was speaking in the commendation and praise of his Conversation he did use the plural number joyning others with him to avoid envy but when he cometh to this Apologetical part being charged with a heynous crime he useth the singular Number and speaketh of himself onely In the words we may take notice First Of Pauls Resolution 2. The Motive of it 3. The Time 4. The End And 5. The Manner how it was to be executed In the Verse following his Resolution is set down in these words I was minded to come unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifieth such a Resolution and purpose that was made upon good advice and deliberation It was not a rash suddain or presumptuous Decree but made upon good grounds though afterwards he had cause to change his minde From this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some say the word Bulla is derived as being his wise decree and purpose but seldome is there either wisdome or righteousness therein 2. There is the motive in this confidence viz. which was mentioned before of their mutual rejoycing in one another whereby he was perswaded that he might do much good amongst them we have spoken of the word already This he speaketh to shew that the motive of his coming to them was wholly out of love and desire to do them good 3. The Time when and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before some make it a trajection as if it did belong to his mind and purpose he had before determined others to his coming to him as if this coming should have been long before but there is no great matter in either construction though Beza and Grotius go the former way If you say Did the Apostle then change his mind did he alter his purpose if so would not this call in question all his Apostolical Doctrine To this we are to answer in the prosecution of his Apology at the 23d verse he there plainly telleth them what was the cause that made him forbear his comming not any levity or inconstancy in him but their sinfulness It was that he might not execute that Apostolicall severity amongst them as they deserved of which in its time Lastly There is the End of his coming which is wholly spiritual That you might have a second benefit It was for their good not his own Let us consider the Motive in this confidence of your kindness and love as also of my doing good to you I purposed to come to you Observe That where a Faithfull Minister hath good hopes and confidence of doing good to a people there is great encouragement of abiding with such Thus it was with these very Corinthians God in a Vision to Paul Act. 18. 10. commanded him to stay at Corinth and not be afraid which he did a year and half longer then usually he did any where and the reason is Because there was much people in that City to be gathered to God Oh how rejoycing is it to a Faithfull Minister when he seeeth God hath converting work edifying work for him to do amongst such a people Thus you have also Paul resolved upon his tarrying at Ephesus 1 Cor. 16. 9. and why so A great and effectual door is opened to me He did see a likelihood of much spiritual good to be done and this made him willing to abide there To affect our hearts with this truth consider First That all people both by nature and custome have a door fast bolted against the entrance of the Word So that it is as great a miracle for Christ by the preaching of the Gospel to enter into the hearts of Hearers as it was when he came in to his Disciples the doors being shut yea here is a door upon a door a bolt upon a bolt There is first their native corruption and by this they are dead in sin So that our Preaching is like hooting into the ear of a dead man should not the spirit of God change and prepare the hearts of Hearers This is the inward door and then there is an outward door which is Custome and Continuance in sinning and this also hardeneth against the Ministry Therefore people are to tremble under this contrariety to their own spiritual good Remember that as you have a door shut now against the Gospel so God will one day have a door shut against you in the Kingdome of Heaven so that although you shall cry Lord Lord open to us yet it cannot be granted you Luke 13 25. As much intreating as we make to you now to receive the Lord Christ so much will you one day use that Christ would receive you Now we knock and cry and importune that you open the doors of your heart and then you shall howl and cry to Christ to open the doors and gates of Heaven Secondly Because men are thus shut up against the Word hence it is that neither any tractableness or supposed probity in any people nor
temporal life and loose a spiritual life Fourthly Whereas sinnes according to Divines are distributed into sinnes of the heart of the tongue and of the hand Cordis oris operis Lying is a sinne of the tongue So that as by the tongue we come to know the disease sometimes of the body that is within so by the tongue we may discerne a sinfull wicked heart A lying tongue doth argue a deceitfull heart So that as the pureness and foulness in the fountain doth quickly empty it self into the streams Thus as the heart is either holily or sinfully affected so it emptieth it self into the tongue and hands Hence in the fifth place All those who would abstaine from the way of lying must study the spiritual government of the tongue Nature indeed hath inclosed it with lips and teeth but Grace must have a more powerfull and predominant curb over it The Apostle James doth notably speak of the sinfulnesse of the tongue James 3. 6. calling the tongue though a little member yet a world of iniquity an unruly evil full of deadly poison Certainly the Apostles zeal discovered in that Chapter against a sinfull tongue should make us with much diligence watch against it especially in that it is so unru y that no man can tame it Now among many sinfull evils of the tongue this of lying and falshood is not the least So that he who hath an holy meek just and faithfull tongue is called by the Apostle a perfect man vers 2. not but that he hath still much imperfection in him onely we are so apt to sinne by that to offend by that What is in the heart is so quickly in that that the Christian hath arrived at a great proficiency in godlinesse who hath this power over his tongue Hence David as sensible of this work above his own strength maketh his earnest addresse in prayer unto God Psal 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth and keep the door of my lips Grace must be the spiritual porter to watch the mouth else such sins will come out thereat that will both greatly offend God and man Hence in the sixth place That this government of the tongue against lying or any other sin may be attained unto it is necessary 1. To cleanse the heart that is the original and source of all evil and therefore it is in vain to heal the outwards unlesse the inwards also be first purged Therefore David in the fore-mentioned prayer addeth another Petition to the former Psal 141. 4. Incline not my heart to any evil thing Therefore when Solomon had first given that counsel Chap. 4. 23. To keep the heart with all diligence then he speaketh of the duties about the eyes hands and feet No man can in an holy manner keep his tongue from lying cursing and swearing with other sinnes thereof unlesse he first endeavour that the inward frame of the heart be made pure and holy The old man must be put off and the new man put on as the Apostle speaketh and then we lay aside the way of lying In the next place Let us consider what are the causes of lying of yea and nay I doe not mean the general ones for the Text nameth them to be inconstancy and a corrupt heart but the particular ones And 1. Some have a strong inclination and peculiar propensity to it they love and delight in telling of lies Yea this lying disposition is noted to be the property of some Countreys as the Poet said of the Cretians They were alwayes liars Titus 1. 12. which witnesse the Apostle saith is true And no wonder at this for the same Apostle maketh it the quality of every man by nature and that wherein he doth oppose God whose Attribute is truth God is true and every man a lyar Rom. 3. 4. Seeing then the nature of man is thus prone to it and some have a more peculiar inclination to it no wonder if lyes as well as oaths do make a Land mourn Do we not see it in children how they are more forward to lie than to speak They come both together only lying seemeth more natural A second cause of lying is want of dependance upon God as if he would not fulfill his promises without our lies and unlawfull means that we use In this Rebecca failed Genes 27. 6 7. though she knew of Gods promise to Jacob yet because Isaac's affections were set upon Esau the elder brother she saw no visible way how the promise should be accomplished therefore she used lying and dissimulation but though she got the blessing for her sonne yet many sad afflictions did befall both her and Jacob thereby 3. Another cause is The captivity and bondage that we are in by nature to Satan for he being 〈◊〉 lyar from the beginning we imitate him and follow our father in this particular This our Saviour telleth the Jewes John 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil when he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own for he is a lyar and the father of it Mark that the father of it implying that by the Devil we are sollicited and tempted to lies and if there were no other consideration but this it were enough to make us with David Psal 119. 163. To abhorre the way of lying because it cometh from the Devil we thereby demonstrate the Devil to be working in us to move our tongues And truly the name of a lie is a very reproachfull thing How hardly can men endure the name of it who yet are constant in the practice of it So that the reproach especially the cause from whence it cometh may perswade us to leave it off which is hell it self we shall then quickly hear every man speaking truth with his neighbour 4. An inordinate desire of profit and gain doth many times put men upon lying They wil● commend and praise that which in their conscience they know to be bad and all to get a little profit Thus Ananias and Saphira they lied to Paul and all to reserve a little profit to themselves Lastly A sinfull and immoderate fear that many times provoketh to lying It was thus with Abraham and Isaac about their wives they lied to save themselves out of dangers And although David did abhorre the way of lying yet we see him in several exigencies degenerate from his principles It is true in case of a mans life to choose rather to die than to tell a lie must needs be an argument of heroical grace in a man but we see in Peter how difficult it is to abstain from lies when thereby we can preserve our selves out of danger So that if at any time we find the godly overtaken with this sinne we must not from thence conclude the lawfulnesse of it but rather bewail our pronenesse thereunto For if those that are godly in an eminent manner are thus apt to fall what shall the little Trees do
did all was new their service new their Doctrine new but the iniquity and the corruption of the times made it appear to be so And indeed Popery is properly the great Novellisme for the Popish Doctrines the Popish Worship began to creep in when the Churches of Christ began to degenerate from their Primitive Institution The change then that is many times in the face of Religion which doth so offend many is not indeed so but in appearance Those truths of God were formerly professed in the Church only an Eclipse did arise which obscured the light of the Sun As then the Sun is not changed after an Eclipse we do not see a new Sun thus it is also with the truths of Christ the Reformers do not bring new truths only the darkness is dispelled and we see them which were long before It is with us as with men whose heads are distempered we think such and such things run round whereas indeed it is a distemper upon us and it is a signe that we have been corrupted when old truths seem new to us 4. We may therefore truly conclude that antiquity and consent are inseparable properties of a true Church That Church which retaineth Doctrines of the greatest Antiquity and which doth agree with the Primitive Apostolical Churches that must needs be a true Church for truth is alwayes alike That cannot be true Doctrine in one age which is not in another though men are apt to be changed by the times they live in yet Gods truth cannot be When therefore the Papists bring antiquity and consent as notes of a true Church we deny they can or are to be called notes because it is not Antiquity barely but antiqvity in the true Doctrine nor Consent meerly so but consent with the Primitive Churches Doctrine So that True Doctrine is properly the note of the Church only we add that Antiquity and Consent with the Primitive times do inseparably follow the true Doctrine Now the ground of this certainty and equality of the truths of Christ is because they are Gods truths Christs truths if they were the truths of mens making then they might alter and change as they please then it might be formed reformed and transformed into all the shapes that mens Interests could put them upon then truth might alter according to the climates customes and advantages of men then truth might be one thing at Rome and another thing at Constantinople then we might say such things were truth in one age and ye the contrary truth in another Popery was truth in Queen Maries dayes and Protestantisme in Queen Elizabeths And truly some men are so Atheistical or self-seeking that they account truth as the Apostle said some did godliness even outward gain and therefore when such an opinion is gainfull then it is truth but when not so then it is Heresie Use of Instruction How odious Instability and Inconstancy is in matter of Religion whether it be in private Christians or publick Officers It plainly discovereth that not the truth of Christ but some other uncertain motive prevaileth with thee either thy profit or thy applause or the times or customes or the Lawes of the Land or some other mutable respect doth work upon thee and if so then thou canst not but be a reed shaken with every winde of Doctrine Thou art then but as an Instrument of musick making no other sound nor no longer then thou art breathed into Profit will make thee a Papist profit will make thee a protestant profit will make thee an Heretick How contrary is such a fickle temper to the nature of Faith which is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Use 2d of Instruction How false that position is of some Papists That the Church may make Articles of Faith and that the Authority of the Church maketh the Authority of the Scripture at least towards us So that the Scriptures would have no more authority then Titus Livius or Aesops fables in respect of our duty to believe were it not for the Churches Authority No less blasphemous is that other comparison of another Papist resembling the Scripture to a nose of wax If so then no wonder if they make what truths and what religions they please then we may call it the Popes truth the Churches truth and not the truth of God It is a ridiculous passage of a Papist Ford against Taylor saying that it is probable the Church will make that Opinion about the immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary to be an Article of Faith As if the Church could make that necessary to be believed if we would be saved that was not alwayes so Why may she not as well make a new Bible set up a new Christ as they establish a new Article of Faith SERM. CXXIV Of Gods Promises to man 2 COR. 1. 20. For all the Promises of God in him are yea and in him amen unto the glory of God by us THis Verse is a further confirmation of the constancy and immutability of the Lord Christ and so by consequence of Pauls doctrine For that Christ is unchangeable he proveth in that all the promises which God hath made they receive their fullnesse and complement in him and so are therefore true because fullfilled both in him and by him This is the Apostles sence in this assertion which Calvin doth well call memorabilis sententia c. a memorable sentence and one of the chiefest Articles of our Religion for herein is all our faith and confidence seated that in Christ God maketh his gracious promises to us by whose efficacy and impetration they be accomplished so that a promise is fullfilled not because of any worth or dignity in us but because of of the fulnesse and worth that is in Christ 1. The words may be taken as an entire Proposition wherein we have the subject and predicate with the amplification of it from the finall cause The subject is described from the nature of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 promises 2. From the universality and extent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all promises as many as are made 3. From the efficient cause the promises of God 4. The predicate are yea and are amen in him Of which in their order Let us begin with the Subject 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the promises many times in the plurall number at other times in the singular for indeed the covenant of grace is but one large promise or an ocean emptying it self into many streams yet sometimes called promises because of the many things both spirituall and temporall that are particularly promised by God the summe whereof is contained in that great promise or Magna Charta of the Church I will be their God and they shall be my people or else it may be promises in the plurall number because of the frequent repetition and reiteration of the grand promise of Christ to the Church Now the word promise is sometimes used for the
but predictions yet the very tenour of them doth evidence it Now these do not suppose but work all conditions and qualifications in us for other mercies for it would be absurd to say God promiseth to give us faith if we do beleeve or to renew and change our wils if we will These absolute promises then are the executions of his decrees of grace and salvation upon the Elect. But then there are conditional promises and such are the promises of pardon to the beleever of eternal glory to him that is godly only you must know that they are conditions only in a large sence they are more properly called qualifications and determinations of those who are thus to be justified and saved faith indeed in our justification hath a peculiar notion of being an instrument or supernaturall means to lay hold on Christ and is not to be called a condition when we speak exactly You see then that there is no ground for licentiousnesse and dissolutenesse to venture all upon the gracious promises of God for they are determined and specified by such qualifications who shall have either pardon here or salvation hereafter Only you must know that when we call them conditionall promises the meaning is not as if we had power of our own to fullfill these conditions and so the promises remain suspense till we perform them no these conditions we are enabled to accomplish by the grace of God they are his gifts as well as our duties so that there are no conditions required of us which also we are not enabled unto by the grace of God that all may glory in Gods grace and not in themselves and therefore God hath appointed an order between his gracious gifts this god●nesse is for happinesse holinesse is for glory faith is for justification and if we speak exactly we cannot so well say Gods promises are conditionall as the things promised may be conditions to one another by Gods appointment Lastly There may be good reasons assigned why God is pleased thus to promise he might have given and never have made any promise at all but before he is pleased to bestow the actuall benefits he is pleased to give us many sure and gracious promises that he will do such things for us in time The reasons may be First Because hereby God would exercise our faith and teach us to live upon him only for when we cannot see any possibility in second causes when they with Sarah have a dead womb yet because of Gods promise we shall keep up our hearts as Abraham did Why is it then that the promises of God are in no more esteem and request with us were it not for them how many times might thy heart break Yea to put our faith to greater experiment hence it is that though he hath promised such things yet his providences seem to crosse all and after Gods promise as it was in the Israelites deliverance all things seem to be more unlikely than before A second Reason for I shall instance in no more may be to teach us humility and thankefulnesse acknowledging Gods promise alone to be the fountain of all the good we enjoy by the promise we are regenerated by the promise we are justified by the promise we are glorified we are what we are only by the promise hence all the godly are said with Isaac to be the children of the promise Gal. 4. 28. by the promise we had our spirituall being and by the promise we are Preserved in it but this deserveth more improvement SERM. CXXV A further Discovery of the Nature and Sorts of Gods Promises 2 COR. 1. 20. For all the promises of God are in Christ Yea and Amen c. OUr work is to enlarge more upon this usefull and necessary subject viz. The promises of God And In the first place we may give in divisions of the Promises or the distribution of them as there are Legal Promises and Evangelical Promises the ignorant confusion whereof hath caused much mischief in the Church of God The Legal Promise is nothing but the Covenant of works contained in that expression Do this and live For as they are cursed who continue not in all things that the Law requireth So again they are blessed and eternal life is promised to all such who perfectly obey the Law of God By this promise God dealt with Adam And although God never transacted with man when fallen by this way of promise yet he was pleased to have the Doctrine of the Law in its full perfection manifested to the people of Israel but in an Evangelical intention that so the Israelites being humbled under their utter impotency and inability ever to performe it might make their earnest applications unto Christ for help and succour For what was impossible by the Law through our weaknesse Christ made possible through his obedience Now this Legal Promise the Jewes generally attended unto neglecting the Evangelical consideration of promises in Christ The promises to works made unto Adam are not intended in this Text they were not Yea and Amen seeing there was no need of a Mediator if Adam had not fallen onely now all the promises of grace become firme and sure in him But naturally we regard the Legal promise more than Evangelical What labour did the Apostle shew to bring the Jewes off from the Covenant of works And whence is that Pharisaical and Popish principle of self-righteousnesse but because we trust in our works and not in the promise So that it is an excellent proficiency in Christianity when persons are taken off from being Legal to be Evangelical when they doe not slavishly relie upon their works done but filially depend upon the promise The Apostle doth excellently and at large declare the difference between these two Galat. 3. and 4. Chapters It is strange that any should desire to be under the Law rather than the promise yet all Pharisaical Justiciaries are propense that way What is this but to desire to be under a curse and perpetual malediction Whereas the Evangelical promise is like the City of refuge to the pursued malefactour It is better than Jonah's gourd against the scorching heat of Gods wrath because of sinne for no worme can arise and consume this So that the Evangelical promise being wholly of free-grace God thereby pardoning us freely sanctifying us freely justifying us freely is like the Land of promise flowing with milk and honey It 's to 〈◊〉 is promise that every humbled sinner must look as the Israelites stung did upon the brazen srepent Let therefore the people of God look more to the promise without them They poreupon their own hearts they perplex themselves with many doubts and feares but if thou didst consider what an Evangelical Promise meaneth this would be like oyle poured into thy wounds when temptations aggravated by Satan have left thee not so much halfe dead as halfe damned In the next place Promises are divided in respect of their
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of