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A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

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tempt inwardly but also to annoy and hurt the bodies of men outwardly see what cause we have daily to commend both our Souls and Bodies unto God's Protection desiring him to keep us from the Power of Satan and not to suffer him to tyrannize over our souls or bodies c. Use 4. Be thankful to God for restraining the Devil's Power that he cannot use it where and when he list This is God's great Goodness and Mercy to us For if God did not hold him in he is both able and willing to tempt and assault our minds violently thrusting us forward into all kind of sins and also to hurt and destroy our bodies as he did Job's Children Mark 3. 27. No man can enter into a strong man's House and spoil his Goods except he will first bind the strong man Dec. 19. 1619. and then he shall spoil his House Observ 2 OBserv 2. In that our Saviour doth here resemble himself unto one that is stronger than the strong man and able to bind him that is Satan We are taught that our Saviour Christ is of greater Power than Satan and able to vanquish and over-rule him at his pleasure yea to spoil him of his Goods and Armour that is to take from him the use of his Power and to drive him out of that possession which he holdeth in men So Luke 11. 22. 1 Joh. 4. 4. Greater is he that is in you than he that is in the World Therefore Revel 20. 1. An Angel came down from Heaven having the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand And he laid hold on the Dragon on that old Serpent which is the Devil and Satan and bound him a thousand years c. And Revel 12. 7. Michael and the Dragon fought c. but the Dragon that is the Devil was foiled of Michael that is of Christ who cast him out c. Therefore also we read in the Evangelists how our Saviour Christ cast many Devils out of the possessed though they were most unwilling to go out and sometimes they prayed him not to torment them nor to cast them into the deep all which shews the Power of Christ to be far greater than the Devil's Power Reas Reas Christ is true God as well as Man and so he hath an uncreated infinite Power whereas the Devil's Power is created and finite c. Use 1 Use 1. Here is comfort to the Faithful against Satan's Power Christ being stronger than he is able so to curb and restrain him that he can do nothing against them but what he suffereth him to do now He will not suffer him to do any thing that may be for their hurt that is for the hinderance of their Salvation He may suffer Satan to vex and trouble their bodies for their greater tryal and he may and doth often suffer him to assault and molest their minds with his inward temptations and that sometimes very violently and forcibly but certain it is he will never suffer him wholly to prevail over them They being by Faith built on Christ the Rock Hell-gates cannot prevail against them Satan may molest and trouble them for a time but Christ Jesus shall at length tread him under their feet Joh. 12. 31. The Prince of this World shall be cast out Christ came of purpose to throw him out yea he came to destroy him and all his cursed works 1 Joh. 3. 8. How great Comfort is this to the faithful How should it incourage us to go on constantly in fighting against Satan seeing we are sure of Victory over him through the Power of Christ Therefore let not any Child of God or true Believer fear his Power or his mighty Assaults overmuch but remember that greater and stronger is he that is in them then he that is in the World Vse 2 Use 2. When we feel the strong and powerful Temptations of Satan go unto Christ Jesus by Prayer for help against him Desire him to rebuke him and to restrain his Power and not to suffer him to tempt thee above thy strength Desire him also to give thee some of his strength to resist Satan and to vanquish him For of thy self alone thou can'st never do it Satan's Power cannot be vanquished but by a greater Power which is in Christ alone therefore seek to him for it Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Scope and drift of our Saviour in using this comparison is to shew that the Devil cannot be cast out of those that are possessed of him but by a stronger Power than his own is Hence gather that it is a very hard matter to rescue and deliver those from Satan which are under his Power very hard to cast him out of his Possession which he hath gotten in men onely Christ can do it How hardly is he cast out of the bodies of such whom he possesseth How loath is he to forgoe his Possession This we heard before Chap. 1. Ver. 26. So also where he hath any hold and possession in the hearts of men he is with great difficulty cast out thence yea this is harder than the former Thus it is with the wicked that live in sin and go on in it impenitently they are under Satan's Power and Tyranny and he holds Possession in their hearts Ephes 2. 2. 2 Tim. 2. ult They are taken captive of him at his Will as in a Net c. And therefore very hard it is for them to be freed from that bondage Satan will not easily let go his Prisoners and Slaves that are under his Power No way to rescue them but by a greater Power even by the Divine Power of Christ himself Use 1 Vse 1. See what is to be done of those that are under Satan's Power and in whose bodies or minds he holds any possession They must seek unto God and unto Christ Jesus to be delivered from his Tyranny As the Israelites being in bondage under Pharoah cryed to God to be delivered so have all that are in bondage under Satan need to cry to God in Prayer to be set at liberty Onely Christ Jesus can bind Satan the strong man and cast him out of his hold Go to him therefore for deliverance This is the best course to be taken in the case of bodily possession with the Devil as we heard before And so also it is the onely course for such whose hearts are possessed by Satan they must go unto Christ desiring him to shew his Divine power in dispossessing Satan Use 2 Vse 2. See further by this that the work of Repentance and the Conversion of a sinner is a very difficult work because the wicked and unregenerate are under Satan's power who holds a possession in their hearts and minds and he will bestir himself with all his might before he will be driven out of it How foolish then are they that think it an easy matter to Repent and to come out of the snare of the Devil and therefore presume to
with his sickness it brings the whole body out of due frame so it is with sinners in their natural estate lying in their sins all the powers and faculties of soul and body in them are distempered and brought out of that due frame and order in which they should be and in which man's Nature was at first created And sin is the cause of this Distemper 2. A sick Person is disabled and made unfit by sickness for Action and Employment especially when the Disease continueth long so the sinner by nature is unfit and unable to perform any spiritual Action in right manner unable to pray to meditate to hear the Word c. 3. A sick man is not able by his own power to cure himself or to give health to himself but God onely can do it so much less can the sinner cure himself of sin or raise himself out of that sickness to spirituall health See Psal 103. 3. 4. Lastly sick Persons are in danger of death Sickness it self if it continue will ar length cause death and the dissolution of soul and body so is it with all sinners in their natural estate if they continue so they are sure to dye eternally and therefore they are said to be already dead in trespasses and sins Ephes 2. 1. And sins are called dead works because they bring forth death in the end if they be continued in Vse 1 Use 1. See the misery of all unregenerate Persons in their natural estate being yet uncalled they are dangerously distempered and infected with the Disease of sin yea with many sins Many that have sound and healthy bodies yet have sick souls even sick unto death Such must think of this and be humbled and labour speedily to come out of this fearful estate Use 2 Use 2. See the Nature of sin It is the spiritual sickness of the soul which distempereth and hurteth it more than any Disease doth the body yea it causeth a spiritual Distemper in the whole man It disableth a man for all spiritual Actions and Employments and which is worst of all it causeth eternal death and destruction of soul and body if it be not repented of in time This should move us to abhor all sin and to take heed of it as we do of the worst and most dangerous sicknesses of the body Vse 3 Use 3. Have pity on such as lye and live in their naturall estate uncalled being dangerously sick of sin Afford them the best spiritual help and Physick that we are able for the healing of their Souls Shew them the danger of their sickness that is of their sins and the Remedy against it which is Repentance and wish them to use it perswade them especially to go to Christ by Faith who is the onely Physitian to cure sin But of this more in the next Observation Observ 2 Observ 2. Christ Jesus is a spiritual Physitian to cure men of their Sins therefore he calls himself by the name of a Physitian in this place by way of resemblance unto bodily Physitians and the like resemblance is made elsewhere as Luk. 4. 18. He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted c. Isa 53. 5. With his stripes we are healed And ver 4. He is said to have born our griefs or Sicknesses that is our Sins which are our spiritual Sicknesses See also Revel 3. 18. Here consider two things further 1. How Christ doth heal and cure sinners 2. Whom he do●h heal Touching the first Christ healeth and cureth men of their sins two wayes or by a twofold spiritual remedy or Medicine The first is his own pretious bloud that is the merit and vertue of his death and sufferings by which he making satisfaction to God for our sins did free us from the guilt of them thus he cureth us of them in respect of the guilt and this is done perfectly in this life The second spirituall remedy is the powerfull and effectuall operation of his Spirit by which he killeth and weakneth the corruption of sin so that it raign not in us Thus he cureth us of the corruption of sin but this is not done perfectly in this life but in part onely for the corruption of sin doth still remain in us in some degree during this life onely it is so subdued and mortified in us by the Spirit of Christ that it cannot so raign and bear sway as it doth in the wicked Touching the second thing to be shewed namely What persons they are whom Christ cureth Answ Not all sinners but first Such onely as have Faith to apply Christ and the merit of his death and suffering to themselves by which Faith also they receive and apply to themselves that Spirit of Christ by which the corruption of sin is mortified in them 2. Such as feel their Spirituall Diseases So Luke 4. 18. Use 1 Use 1. Matter of great comfort to such as feel their sins and do unfeinedly desire to be eased of them let them know that there is a Spirituall Physitian that is both able and willing to cure these their Spirituall Diseases if they seek to him It is a great comfort to a sick person to know of a good and able Physitian near at hand so as he may be had and procured to cure him Much more is it a comfort to the humbled sinner to know that Christ is sent of God to be our Spiritual Physitian to heal us of our sins and that there is no Spirituall sickness or disease of sin in us but he is well able to cure and heal us of it Besides he knows all our diseases c. Vse 2 Vse 2. Seek to Christ Jesus in the spirituall sickness and diseases of our Souls to be healed of them all Labour by true Faith to apply to thy self the bloud of Christ and the merit and vertue of it which is as a soveraign salve or Medicine to heal thy Diseased sick Soul and Conscience of the guilt of all thy sins withall pray unto him to heal the Corruption of thy Nature and to mortify and kill it in thee more and more by the work of his Spirit So much of the first reason by which our Saviour Christ proveth against the Scribes and Pharisees that it was lawfull for him to company with publicans and sinners Namely because they being Spiritually Diseased with sin had need of the Society and help of the Spirituall Physitian Now follows the second reason drawn from the end of his comming into the World set down 1. Negatively where he shews to what end he came not Not to call the Righteous 2. Affirmatively shewing to what end he came viz. To call sinners to Repentance I came not to call There is a twofold calling of Christ with which he calleth men The first outward onely by the Ministery of the Word by which he inviteth men to come out of their sins and to turn unto him offering Grace and Salvation unto them in the outward menas The second is When
upon Satan's Possession and have bound him as it were and spoiled his goods that is taken from him that Power and Tyranny which he before exercised over the body of him that was possessed and seeing I have also cast him out of his own House that is out of the party possessed hence it may appear that I have done all this by a greater Power than the Power of Satan is even by the Power of my God-head Here note the parts of this Similitude 1. Our Saviour likeneth Satan to a strong man well armed and furnished with weapons to defend himself and his House in which he dwelleth 2. He likeneth himself to one that is stronger than that strong man 3. He resembleth the Party that was possessed with the Devil to the House of the strong man in which he holds Possession 4. He resembleth the Power of Satan unto the goods and weapons of the strong man 5. Lastly the casting out of Satan by Christ unto the entring into the strong man's House and binding of him and spoiling of his House c. Observ 1 Observ 1. Satan being likened to the strong man this teacheth us that he is a Creature of great Strength and Power Luke 11. 21. compared to a strong man armed 1 Pet. 5. 8. A roaring Lion Ephes 6. 12. The Devils are called Principalities and Powers c. in respect of their great Power which they exercise in the World 2 Cor. 4. 4. God of this World Revel 12. 3. A great red Dragon having ten Horns For the clearing of this Point four things are to be briefly shewed 1. Wherein this Power of the Devil is manifested 2. What kind of Power it is 3. Whence he hath it 4. Wherefore God giveth him such Power Touching the first his Power is shewed chiefly in these things 1. In working upon the insensible Creatures as the Air Earth Waters c. Ephes 2. 2. called The Prince that ruleth in the Air because he hath power to work upon it by stirring up Tempests of Thunder Lightning Winds c. See Job 1. 16. and 19. So also it is likely he can use means to shake the Earth or some part of it and to trouble the Waters c. 2. In working upon those sensible Creatures which want Reason as the Beasts of the field Birds Fishes c. He is able to enter into them and to move and work in them Thus he entred into the Serpent Gen. 3. and into the Herd of Swine c. 3. In working upon the bodies of men He hath power to enter into them and to move in them to carry them from place to place as he did the body of our Saviour Christ setting him on a Pinnacle of the Temple He hath also power sometimes to hurt and annoy the bodies of Men and Women and to vex and torture them with pains c. and to strike them with Diseases as he did Job's body with boyles Job 2. So he bowed a daughter of Abraham Luke 13. And we read in the Evangelists how many strange things the Devil in those times wrought in and upon the bodies of the Possessed sometimes tearing or rending them sometimes casting them into the fire or water sometimes causing them to cry out and to foam at the Mouth sometimes striking them dumb and deaf c. 4. In working after a sort upon the minds hearts and affections of men in tempting them inwardly and solliciting them to sin by inward suggestions Not that he can work directly upon the Mind or Will for that God alone can do but he doth this partly by the outward senses representing evill Objects to them and so conveying evill thoughts to the mind and partly by insinuating himself into the Fancy or Imagination and so by the Imagination affecting the Mind and consequently the Will with sinfull thoughts and affections Joh. 13. 2. The Devil put it into the heart of Judas to betray Christ Act. 5. 3. Satan filled the heart of Ananias c. Thus also he stirred up David to number the People And these sinful thoughts and desires the Devil doth not onely stir up in men but he hath power also to follow them very forcibly as he did in Judas who so soon as Satan entred into him went out presently to do the Fact Joh. 13. 30. and Ephes 2. 2. Thus we see how the Devil sheweth his great Power Touching the second thing viz. What kind of Power it is which he hath we must know it is not an absolute but a limited Power He cannot do what he will but what God permitteth him to do he is potestas sub potestate a power under another Power He could not afflict Job without leave from God nor so much as enter into the Swine without Christ's sufferance As the Sea hath bounds set c. Touching the 3d. thing From whence the Devil hath his Power From God onely who gave unto him in his first Creation great Power and Strength which Power howsoever it is in some respect impaired by his Fall and therefore it is not so great now as the power of the good Angels yet it doth still remain very great and is augmented by his irreconcileable malice to Mankind Touching the fourth thing to be shewed namely Why God doth give such Power unto Satan The Reasons are these 1. That his own Divine Power might the more appear in subduing Satan 2. For the tryal of his own Children as we see in Job's Example 3. For the executing of his heavy Vengeance and Punishment on the wicked by Satan Use 1 Use 1. This shews the Folly and Ignorance of such who make leight of the Devil's Power Tush they say He cannot hurt us we care not for him c. But take heed of contemning his Power securely For although he be not able to hurt the Souls or hinder the Salvation of God's Children yet is his Power very great so as he may by God's permission not onely assault the minds of men with violent Temptations but also greatly hurt their bodies Therefore set not so leight by him Though he do not appear visibly c. God's Children have no cause to fear him but the wicked Use 2 Use 2. See what a dangerous warfare we are called to go through in this life fighting against Satan so puissant an Enemy And withal how careful we had need be daily to arm and fortify our selves against him with that whole spiritual Armour of God Ephes 6. whereby to withstand his powerfull assaults and temptations especially to get unto us 1. The Shield of Faith to quench his fiery Darts c. 2. Learn to use the Sword of the Spirit that is the Word of God against him by alledging and applying it to answer his Suggestions as our Saviour did 3. To use continuall Prayer unto God seeking spiritual strength from him by which we may stand against Satan Matth. 26. 41. Use 3 Use 3. Seeing the Devil may have Power by God's permission not onely to
In hearing it with due reverence and attention of body and mind 2. In hearing it with understanding so as to conceive those things aright that are taught The want of this is the cause that many who hear are not converted by hearing See Matth. 15. 10. and Matth. 13. 19. 3. In applying the Word by faith not onely believing in general the Precepts Promises Threatnings c. but making particular application of them to our selves Heb. 4. 2. The Word did not profit them because not mingled with faith in them that heard it 4. In framing heart and life to the obedience of the Word This is the right hearing so to hear that we do obey the Word therefore hearing is sometime put for obeying in the phrase of Scripture Jam. 1. 22. Be doers of the Word and not hearers onely c. Quest 2 Quest. 2. How is the hearing of the Word a means to work repentance Answ Answ Not of it self alone but by vertue of the Spirit of God wherewith he hath promised to accompany his own Ordinance in the preaching and hearing of his Word Esay 59. ult But the preaching and hearing of the Word is the outward instrument by which Ordinarily God doth confer his Spirit Gal. 3. 2. Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by hearing of faith That is by hearing the doctrine of faith which is the Gospel Act. 10. 44. Use 1 Use 1. Reproveth those that neglect the hearing of the Word preached when they might hear it letting slip the opportunities of hearing it no marvail if such remain in ignorance unbelief and other sins seeing they willingly neglect that Ordinance of God whereby they should be called and brought out of their sins and turned unto God Use 2 Use 2. Let all who have hitherto lived in their sins and would for time to come forsake them and be brought to God by true repentance let all such I say become diligent and conscionable hearers of the Word This is that Word which is able to convert the soul yea to save it This is that Word which being rightly preached and heard is able to change the heart and to make sinful men become new creatures Hear it therefore upon all occasions and be swift to hear it But especially look thou hear in right manner with Attention Understanding Faith c. Thus if thou hear the Word thou shalt find it powerful to change thy heart and to turn thee from thy sins to God If any means will do it this is most likely sanctified of God to that end c. Doctr. 2 Doctr. 2. In that this is mentioned here as a just Judgment of God upon the wicked that they should not have grace to turn from their sins unto God we may learn That it is a grievous Judgment and punishment of God upon any to be left of God in their sins and in such hardness of heart that they cannot repent and turn from them Esay 6. 10. Make the heart of this people fat c. lest they understand with their heart and be converted c. Examples of this we have in Cain and Judas and other wicked Reprobates Especially in Pharaoh to whom this plague of a hard-heart unto which God gave him up was worse and more fearful than all the other Plagues sent upon him Reas 1 Reason 1. This is a spiritual Judgment upon the Soul and Conscience which is far worse than all outward temporal punishment upon the body goods c. Reas 2 Reason 2. A hard and impenitent heart makes way for all the other Plagues and Judgments of God both in this life and after this life for so long as men continue hardened in their sins and turn not from them they cannot be pardoned and so long as their sins are not pardoned they are under the wrath of God and subject to all curses temporal and eternal Rom. 2. 5. After thy hardness and heart that cannot repent treasurest up wrath unto thy self c. Reas 3 Reason 3. It is usually the punishment of heynous sins as Rom. 1. 28. Use 1 Vse 1. See the blockish security of those who lying under this heavy Judgment of an impenitent hard heart do not feel or once complain of it but go on pleasing themselves in their wicked course But as in bodily Diseases those that are dangerous and yet are not felt to be so are in that respect the more dangerous as in a frenzy or dead Palsie c. So this spiritual disease of a hard heart the less it is felt the more fearful and incurable it is Use 2 Use 2. Pray unto God above all temporal Plagues and Judgments to keep from us an impenitent heart not to leave us to our own hearts to harden our selves in our sins as he suffered Pharaoh and as he suffereth many wicked ones If there be cause to pray to God to keep us from the danger of fire and water and from bodily Diseases Famine Sword of the Enemy c. much more cause to pray against hardness of heart the cause and forerunner of all Judgments This is that sin that keeps all other sins from being pardoned Take heed of it therefore and use all means against it of which see before Chap. 3. Verse 5. It is not sin simply but impenitency in sin that condemns the wicked c. Use 3 Use 3. Such whom God hath brought to repentance should be thankful c. Doctr. 3 Doctr. 3. Further from the word Turn we may observe the nature of true Repentance and wherein it consisteth chiefly viz. in a turning from sin and forsaking it and turning unto God by a new course of life But of this see before upon Chap. 1. Verse 15. And their sins should be for given That is the guilt and punishment of them remitted of God and not imputed Psal 32. 1. Observ Observ In that the forgiveness of their sins is mentioned as a consequent of their repentance and turning from sin we gather That forgiveness of sins belongeth onely to such as truly repent and turn from their sins therefore these two Repentance and Remission of sins are often in Scripture joyned together and usually repentance is set in the first place to shew that it must go before else forgiveness cannot follow See before Chap. 1. Verse 4. where this Point was handled Verse 13. And he said unto them Know ye not c. Our Saviour having in the two former Verses instructed and taught his Disciples both the reason why he thought fit to interpret the Parable unto them as also why he spake in Parables to those without Now before he lay down his Exposition of the Parable he reproveth his Disciples for their ignorance in that they understood not his Parables and this he doth the more to stirr them up to an earnest desire to have them opened and to make them the more attentive to his Exposition of them Know ye not That is Understand ye not This Parable Viz.
sin we may so judge of their practise as there is apparant cause So much of the place whither the Meat which is eaten goeth not viz. That it entreth not into the Heart Now to speak of the place whither it goeth 1. Into the Belly Which is as we know that part of the Body which contains the Bowels and Entralls of Man which are the Receptacles or Vessels receiving the gross superfluous and impure part of Meats which being there turned into Excrements are from thence purged into the Draught Observ 1 Observ 1. The wisdom of God shewed in the frame of Man's Body ordaining every part for necessary ends and uses as the Belly to receive the Meats which are eaten and to purge away the superfluities of them into the Draught 1 Cor. 6. 13. Meats for the Belly and the Belly for Meats There is not the meanest or basest part of the Body but is created for necessary use and such as tends to the good of the whole 1 Cor. 12. 21. The Eye cannot say to the Hand I have no need of thee nor again the Head to the Feet c. Nay much more those members which seem more feeble are necessary c. Use 1 Vse 1. Admire and magnifie this wisdom of God shewed in the very naturall frame of our Bodies and in the necessary ends and uses for which every part and member serveth Vse 2 Use 2. See how it should be in the body of the Church there should be no unprofitable Member but even the meanest should so live as to further the good of the whole See 1 Cor. 12. 25. Observ 2 Observ 2. See here that howsoever the Belly serveth for necessary use in Man's body yet it is for such use as is base and vile in comparison of most of the other parts of the body for the Belly is as it were the Sink of the body which receiveth the impure and gross superfluities of our Meat and turneth that to Excrements and so purgeth them away into the draught Therefore in this respect it is one of the basest and most contemptible parts of the body which I note to shew the vile and base sin of such as serve their own bellies as all intemperate Gluttons and Drunkards do whose chief care and study is to please and satisfy their bellies with Meats and Drinks and for this end will spare no time cost or pains Phil. 3. 19. Whose End is Damnation whose God is their Belly c. See also Rom. 16. 18. These serve and worship as their God one of the basest and vilest parts of their own bodies as if they were born for no other end but to eat and drink c. which is a most brutish kind of life Use Use Learn to detest such swinish Intemperance Gluttony Drunkenness Remember how base a thing it is to serve the belly and to make it our God which of it self is the sink and puddle of the whole body c. It was a base kind of Idolatry in the Aegyptians to worship brute Beasts as Oxen Goats Crocodiles yea Cats and Doggs as it is reported of them by learned Writers So for a man to make his Belly his God c. So much of the first and immediate place within the body whither the Meat which is eaten goeth viz. To the belly Now to speak somewhat also of the more remote place without the body to which the Meat goeth From the belly into the draught Observ Observ See here the end and issue of all Meats and Drinks received into the body As they pass to the Belly first so they stay not there but are from thence expelled into the Draught or place of Excrements This is the end and issue of all Meats and Drinks though never so delicate and costly c. yet they come to the Belly and from thence are sent out into the Draught though not the whole substance of Meats and Drinks for some part turns to Nourishment and is united with the Substance of the whole body yet a great part of all Meats and Drinks have this end Joh. 6. 27. Meat that perisheth Vse 1 Use 1. This discovers the folly of Papists putting Holiness in some kind of Meats above other as in Fish above Flesh and putting difference in Meats in regard of Religion and Holiness as if one kind were more holy than another whereas all Meats though never so different in kind or nature when they enter into the body yet in their issue go to the same place even to the Draught Vse 2 Use 2. See also how foolish and base a thing it is for any to set their heart upon Meats and Drinks taking thought what to eat what to drink c. Mat. 6. making this their chief care or one of the chiefest how to please and content their intemperate appetites with delicate Fare costly Wine c. All which though not wholly yet in a great part must go out into the Draught and Dunghill Let this move us to moderate our selves in the use of Meats and Drinks putting the Knife to our throat c. as Solomon adviseth Prov. 23. 2. and take heed of setting our heart upon such perishing things Though we may use them as good Creatures of God in themselves for our Nourishment and moderate refreshing yet if we consider the base and loathsom end and issue of them as they come from our bodies how great madness is it to be in love with them c. It followeth Purging all Meats In the original Text this is directly spoken of the Meat it self which entreth into the body but it is to be understood with relation to the passage or conveyance of Meat out of the Belly into the Draught and so the sense is that this is a means serving to purge the Meats themselves and consequently the body also into which they are received from that impure and gross part of them which is turned into Corruption and Excrements that so this foul Corruption may not be a burden or annoyance to the whole body Observ Observ See here the natural Impurity and Uncleanness of our bodies being not onely impure in themselves but also turning part of the Meat we eat into Corruption and filthiness which must be purged into the Draught or else the health and life of the body cannot be maintained The cause of this natural Uncleanness of Man's body is Sin the Corruption whereof being in every one by Nature is such and so foul that it doth pollute and infect not onely the Soul but the Body as we shall see afterward more plainly For before that sin entred into the World by Adam's Fall there was no such foulness or corruption in Man's body c. Vse 1 Vse 1. This may teach us how unfit it is to pamper and make too much of our bodies being so impure and loathsom within as they are turning the very Meat we eat into filthiness and corruption c. Vse 2 Use 2. This should pull down all
Pride conceived in respect of the natural feature comliness or complexion of the body Think what a foul Sink of Corruption is in our bodies naturally which must be purged daily It were enough to humble us if we consider that our bodies are but dust and earth but this is more that they are foul and filthy earth See Judg. 3. 22. Use 3 Vse 3. See how willing we should be when God calleth us to death to lay down and put off this corrupt and foul carcase of ours that it may return to the Earth ● and withal what cause we have to long for the general Resurrection in which our vile bodies shall be changed and made like to the glorious body of Christ Phil. 3. 21. Mark 7. 20 c. And He said That which cometh out of the Man that defileth the Man May 5. 1622. IN the two former Verses our Saviour shewed what is not the cause of spirituall Uncleannesse before God Not the Meat which entreth into Man's Body which He also confirmeth by a Reason taken from the place whither Meat eaten goeth Not to the Heart but to the Belly and so into the Draught c. Now from the 20th Verse unto the 24th he sheweth what is the true cause of spiritual Pollution what it is that maketh a man Unclean before God namely that which cometh out of a man even the sin that cometh from the heart This Point of Doctrine our Saviour teacheth his Disciples here And 1. He doth propound it briefly and generally Ver. 20. 2. He doth more largely and particularly open and unfold the same Ver. 21 c. That which cometh out of the Man that is The Sin or Sins which come from within a Man that is from the Heart or inner Man taking their beginning there and from thence flowing forth and spreading to the outward Man and to the outward Conversation That this is the sense of the words appeareth plainly by the words following in the next Verse where it is said that From within out of the Heart proceed evill thoughts c. Defileth the Man that is Maketh the Person spiritually unclean foul and loathsom in the sight of God See before Ver. 18. Observ 1 Observ 1. That sin is the true cause of all spiritual Uncleanness of the Person before God This is it that makes the whole Person both Soul and body foul and loathsom in God's accompt Hence it is so often called Filthiness as Prov. 30. 12. Ezek. 36. 25. 2 Cor. 7. 1. Jam. 1. 21. to shew that it is the onely cause of all spirituall foulnesse and filthinesse before God Hence also it is that the Wicked are in Scripture resembled to such things as are most foul and loathsom as to unclean Lepers to the Black-Moor Jer. 13. 23. to filthy Swine to Doggs c. Zephan 3. 1. Wo to her that is to Jerusalem that is filthy and polluted c. Reasons Reasons 1. It is most opposite to the pure and holy Nature of God Psal 5. 4 5. Thou art not a God that hath pleasure in Wickedness c. Thou hatest all Workers of Iniquity Hab. 1. 13. Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold evill and canst not look on Iniquity c. 2. It makes men like unto the Devil that foul and unclean Spirit as he is called in Scripture causing them to bear his Image Therefore Judas is called a Devill Joh. 6. 70. As God's Image stands in Holinesse and Righteousnesse so the Devill 's in Sin and Wickednesse Now that which makes a man most unlike God and most like to Satan must needs make him foul and loathsom before God 3. It makes the best Actions and Duties performed by such as live in sin to be abhorred of God See Isa 1. 13 14 15. Note that when we say Sin makes the Person unclean before God this is to be understood of sin in its own nature as a breach of God's Law and so far as it is lived and continued in without Repentance not as it comes to be repented of and so to be pardoned in Christ to some Persons for so it defiles not the Person but of it self it doth c. Use 1 Use 1. See how loathsom and detestable all sin should be unto us and how we should shun it as we do things most foul and loathsom yea much more than any other thing that is filthy and unclean there being nothing in the World so foul and filthy as sin is no Leprosy or other loathsom Disease of the Body no Dung or Filth of the Earth no venemous Creature no brute Beast so unclean and filthy as sin is in it self Other Uncleanness may defile the Body or make a Man loathsom to men but sin defileth Soul and Body and makes the whole Man odious and detestable before God Oh then how should we detest it Rom. 12. Abhorring evill c. the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to hate it like Hell Ephes 5. 3. Let not Sin be once named among you c. Jude ver 23. Hate the Garment spotted by the Flesh Shun not onely manifest and gross sins but abhor all occasions of sin yea all appearance of evil c. Remember this when thou art tempted to sin how odious it is unto God how foul in his sight making thee more loathsom before Him than any outward filthiness can be to men and let this consideration keep thee from yielding to the temptation yea cause thee to abhor all motions of Sin c. Think how wary we use to be of defiling our bodies with outward uncleanness How do we shun the Infection of the Plague and other noisom Diseases How do we fly from Toads Snake● and other foul and venemous Creatures yea in our Meats and Drinks how curious are we If but a little Uncleanness be in our Cups or Platters we are ready to loath our Meat c. And shall we not much more loath and abhor sin and fly from the Infection of it What folly and madness is this to be so wary of defiling our Bodies yea our Garments with a little spot and in the mean time to make nothing of tumbling our Souls in the mire of filthy sins What folly is it to fly the sting or venome of a Toad or Snake which can infect and sting onely the body and not to shun Sin which will poyson the Soul and leave a venemous sting in the Conscience Oh be not thus foolish but learn above all venemous noisome and filthy things to abhor and shun Sin And pray for a Heart to loath and detest it The rather because the true hatred of Sin as it is offensive and odious to God is a speciall Mark and Evidence of a sanctified Heart Vse 2 Use 2. See the wretched and fearful condition of all wicked ones which love and delight in Sin committing it even with greediness and drinking Iniquity like Water as it is said in the book of Job like Swine loving and delighting
trial and proof of his Elect 1 Cor. 11. 19. There must be Heresies that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. The Devil laboureth in all Ages to sow the Seeds of manifold Errours and corrupt Opinions in the minds of men that he may hinder them from believing and embracing the sound truth of God He labours to blind their eyes that they may not see the Truth 2 Cor. 4. 4. Therefore such corrupt Opinions and Heresies are called Doctrines of Devils to shew that the Devil is the Author of them 1 Tim. 4. 2. Use 1 Use 1. To teach us not to think strange or be offended at it though we see it be thus at this day that there are so many different Sects in the Church and so many Heresies and corrupt Opinions holden by men in matters of Religion contrary to the Truth For thus it hath ever been And God hath appointed for just causes to suffer it so to be and so it will be so long as the Devil by God's permission hath Power to blind the eyes of men and to lead them into Errours and Heresies contrary to the true and sound Doctrine or the Word of God Vse 2 Use 2. See the folly and ignorance of such as look that there should be in these times a general unity and consent in Opinion among all sorts in the matter of Religion and because there is not so but there are so many different Sects and Opinions of men opposite one to the other and most of them opposite to the true Christian Religion which we profess therefore some hence take occasion to call into Question the truth and soundness of our Religion and are doubtful what to profess yea some stick not to say they will profess no Religion till there be fewer Sects and Opinions and till they see all agree better In the mean time they think it best to follow their own business and to let matters of Religion alone But let such know that if they expect that all should be of one Opinion in matters of Religion they expect that which never was nor will be while the World standeth And so if they will profess no Religion till all agree in one they will never make any Profession at all and then let them never look to be saved at all For as with the Heart man believeth unto Righteousness so with the mouth Confession must be made unto Salvation Rom. 10. 10. Use 3 Use 3. See what need there is for us to be well and thoroughly grounded in the Knowledge and Belief of the sound truth and Doctrine of God taught in his Word and to have our hearts and minds stablished and settled therein lest otherwise we be seduced and drawn away from the truth and plucked away with some of those manifold Errours which are holden in these times against the truth 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye being led away with the Errour of the Wicked fall from your own stedfastness But grow in Grace and in the Knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ c. If we be not well grounded and stablished in the present Truth and Religion which we profess How shall we be able to hold and maintain it constantly both in Judgment and Practice amidst so many Errours and corrupt Opinions now a-dayes holden against the Truth We had not need to be as Children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men c. as the Apostle speaketh Eph. 4. 4. but we had need to be men of Age and ripe years in Understanding and Judgment able to discern the truth in matters of Religion that are questionable and firmly to hold and maintain the same in the midst of all Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions of men by which it is opposed Observ 2 Observ 2. That Ignorance of the Scriptures is a main cause of the Errours and absurd Opinions which are holden by men in matters of Religion The ignorance and misunderstanding of that one place of Scripture Mal. 4. touching the coming of John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias was the cause of the Errour which the Jews in our Saviour's time held touching the coming of the Prophet Elias to live again upon Earth in Person as we have before heard And so no doubt but their Ignorance in the Scriptures was the main cause of all those other gross Errours which diverse of them held touching the Person of Christ that He was John Baptist or Elias or one of the other old Prophets So also of that heathenish Errour touching the Souls of men that in death they pass into other bodyes and so come to live again upon Earth The like may be said of all other Errours and absurd Opinions of men which have been or which are at this day holden in matters of Religion Ignorance of the Holy Scriptures is a main cause of them Matth. 22. 29. Ye err not knowing the Scriptures c. Thus Chrysostom in his time complaineth Praefat. in Epist. ad Rom. that hence have come innumerable evils even from the Ignorance of the Scriptures Hence have sprung a multitude of pernicious Heresies c. So in our times whence come so many gross and absurd Errours holden by Papists Anabaptists Brownists c. but from Ignorance of the Scriptures So whence come those many foolish and erroneous Opinions of ignorant People in our own Church but from Ignorance of the Scriptures Use 1 Use 1. To condemn the wicked practice of the Church of Rome in barring the common People from the free Use and Reading of the Scriptures and so nuzzling them up in gross Ignorance of the Word of God whereby they are led into all manner of erroneous and absurd Opinions Yea some of them have not been ashamed to commend this Ignorance in the common People affirming it t● be the Mother of Devotion Contra here we learn that it is the Mother of all gross and absurd Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions of men in matters of Religion Use 2 Vse 2. See how dangerous for Christians to be ignorant in the Scriptures Such do lye open to all manner of Errours Heresies and corrupt Opinions being in danger to be infected with the Poyson of them and to be seduced by them easily plucked away from the Truth ready to imbrace any Errour or Heresy though never so gross absurd or foolish as Popery Anabaptism Brownism c. They are like clean Paper upon which one may write any thing So upon such persons being ignorant in the Scriptures any gross or absurd Errour or Hereticall opinion may be fastened or imprinted like Wax which may be Printed with any Seal c. How many such are there even amongst us who are ignorant in the book of God having little or no sound Knowledg of the Scriptures no not of the main and principal points of Christian Religion there taught and set down The Scriptures are as a sealed Book unto them No
man whose very mercies are cruell Prov. 12. 10. On the contrary labour as the Elect of God to put on bowels of mercy c. Col. 3. 12. By this we resemble God Luke 6. 36. Be mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull By this also we resemble God's Children who are said to be mercifull men Esay 57. 1. Observ 4 Observ 4. That it is a most lamentable and grievous misery and affliction for any to have their Bodies given up of God unto the Power and Tyranny of the Devil either to be possessed by him or to be afflicted and tormented or any way abused by him This we may see here in the example of this Party who was possessed with the Devil and given up into his hands his case was most wretched and lamentable It was a grievous affliction to have his body possessed by the Devil that foul Spirit though he had but onely entred into him at time and had not stirred or moved in him to torment him or put him to any pain but that the Devil being in him should rent and tear his body racking and torturing it so grievously That with the very extremity of pain He fomed at the mouth yea that in his fits he threw him to the Ground and made him lye and wallow there foming and gnashing with his teeth and did pine and wast away as in a consumption c. what a lamentable case was this what a pittifull and rufull spectacle to behold And yet this was not all for the Devil also used in his fits to cast him by violence oftentimes into the fire and oftentimes into the Wa-ter to destroy him as is said afterward Neither was this all for besides all this before mentioned the Devil had stricken him both dumb and deaf so as he could neither speak to make known his own misery nor hear o●hers speak to him for his comfort which did exceedingly aggravate his misery And last of all this also did not a little augment the same that he had been so long a time in this wofull distresse even from his Childhood or Infancy as some read it ver 21. he being now a youth or young man of some age or years as is probable so that it is like he was for sundry years in this miserable case So that this example alone is enough if there were no other in all the Scripture to shew to us what a lamentable and grievous misery it is for any to have their Bodies given up of God though but for a time into the power of the Devil to be abused by him But the same may further appear to us by other like examples of such as were possessed in our Saviour's time See before chap. 5. 1 c. See it also in Job's example who though he were not possessed by the Devil yet so soon as God did but give Satan leave to strike him in his Body we see into what a lamentable case he soon brought him smiting him all over with boiles from the sole of the Foot to the crown of his Head So as Job was fain to sit down among the ashes and to scrape himself with a potsheard Job 2. 7 8. Use 1 Vse 1. See the hainousness grievousness of sin how offensive and odious it is to God in that it hath made our Bodies lyable and subject to the Devils Power and Tyranny to be so abused racked and tortured in this lamentable sort Sin is the Original cause and fountain of all this misery to which the Bodies of men are sub●ect in this Life by reason of Satan's Power and Tyranny over them whensoever the Lord doth give up the bodies of any into his Power This wofull misery is come upon mankind as a just punishment for sin and were it not for sin the Devil should never have had any such power or leave from God either to enter into mens Bodies by possession or any other way to afflict and torment them in thi● lamentable manner as he did here unto this child or young man that was possessed This being so it must work and increase in us more and more a true hatred and detestation of all sin both in our selves and others especially in our selves and cause us to shew the same by our care to refrain sin and all occasions of it c. If we have cause to abhorr the Devil as our most malicious and cruel Enemy then much more to detest sin as the cause of all his enmity and of all that Power and Tyranny which the Lord permitteth him to have over mens bodies at any time Use 2 Use 2. See again what cause for us to be thankful unto God for his unspeakable mercy in not giving up our bodies or the bodies of our Children or others which are dear to us into the hands of the Devil to be abused afflicted or tormented by him in such woful and pitiful manner as this party was Especially if we consider the desert of our sins that for them God might most justly deliver up our bodies to Satan's power in this fearfull manner c. How then are we bound to God for not doing this how are we to blesse his Name for that he doth rather correct us with his own hand by bodily Sicknesse or otherwise than give us up into the Devil's hands to be punished c. As it is a token of a fathers love to his child and care of his good that he doth not appoint some cruel or hard-hearted servant to correct his son for his fault but he doth it with his own hands c. So here c. Use 3 Use 3. See also what cause there is for us daily to commit our selves and those that belong unto us to God's special protection praying him to keep us and ours not onely in our Souls but in our bodies from the Power of Satan and not to give up our bodies into his hands to be abused at his Will and Pleasure Seeing it is so grievous an affliction and misery to have our bodies subjected under the Devil's Power pray him to keep us from this wretched misery and not lay this heavy affliction upon us though our sins deserve it Use 4 Use 4. Hence gather That it is a far more grievous misery for any to be in spiritual sub●ection and bondage under the Power of Satan in respect of their Souls and Consciences This is far a more lamentable case than to be in bodily subjection to the Devil's Power And yet thus it is with all such as live in sin and in their natural estate they are under the Power of Satan they are spiritually possessed of him in their Hearts and Consciences he holdeth them at his Will as in a snare 2 Tim. 2. ult He is entred into them as once he entred into the heart of Judas and he worketh in them effectually by his wicked Suggestions and Temptations drawing them to sin and holding them under the Power of it and consequently under the
to our sins which he was appointed to suffer there remaineth no more curse or punishment properly for them to suffer he having drunk the whole Cup of God's Wrath for us we shall not so much as taste of it c. Observ 5 Observ 5. Lastly In that Christ's Sufferings are compared to a Baptism or drenching in deep waters hence gather The greatness and grievousness of those afflictions and punishments which he was to suffer and did suffer for us they are compared to deep waters and he is said to be dipped or drenched in them as David sayes of himself Psal 42. and Psal 88. Esay 53. 5. He is said to be wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities The grievousness of his Passion or Sufferings may appear 1. If we consider what it was which he suffered viz. the heavy wrath and curse of God due to our sins that is to say all those afflictions miseries and punishments which we must otherwise have suffered if he had not suffered for us Esay 53. 4. He bare our griefs and carried our sorrows Gal. 3. 13. He was made a curse for us 2. If we consider the strange effects which the sense and feeling of Gods wrath and curse imposed on him for our sins did cause and bring forth in him as 1. That grievous agony felt in his soul a little before his death which agony was caused partly by the great fear with which he was astonished and partly by that grievoussorrow and heaviness of mind with which he was surprised Mark 14. 33. He taketh with him Peter and ●ames and John and began to be sore amazed and to be very heavy 2. His earnest Prayer that if it were possible that Cup might passe from him 3. His bloody sweat and the sending of an Angel to comfort him Luke 22. 4. His crying out upon the Crosse as if he had been forsaken of God c. Use 1 Use 1. See by this the haynousness of our sins which were the cause of this grievous Baptism with which Christ the Son of God was to be baptized these were the cause of his being dipped and drenched so deep in the Sea of Gods wrath and curse c. which should therefore humble us and break our hearts with godly sorrow for our sins which were the cause of the bitter and grievous Sufferings of Christ the Son of God Zach. 12. 10. They shall look on him whom they have pierced and shall mourn for him c. Use 2 Vse 2. See also the unspeakable love of Christ to us in that he was content for us and our rede●ption to suffer so many and grievous things to be baptized with this terrible and grievous baptism of his sufferings yea he desired it Luke 12. 50. I have a baptism to be baptized with and how am I straitned or pained till it be accomplished Vse 3 Use 3. This must move us to be content to suffer much for Christ in this World even many and great troubles and afflictions if need be To be baptized in the Crosse as it were to be washed and rinsed in these waters of affliction seeing he was content to receive this kind of Baptism for us so should we for him c. Mark 10. 39 40. And they said unto him We can And Jesus said unto them Ye shall indeed May 31. 1629. drink of the Cup that I drink of c. HItherto we have heard our Saviour's first Answer to the Petition of his two Disciples which was more brief and obscure consisting of two parts 1. A Reproof of their ignorance and rashness in preferring such an unfit Petition to him 2. A Question demanded of them Whether they were able to partake with him in suffering the Crosse and afflictions c. Now upon occasion of that Question the Evangelist setteth down a farther Conference between our Saviour and them about the matter in which Conference also is included our Saviour's second Answer to their Petition which is more plain direct and full than the former as we shall see In the words consider two things 1. The Disciple's answer to the former Question moved to them by our Saviour which answer is affirmative For he demanding Whether they could drink of the Cup which he should drink of c They answer that they can 2. Our Saviour's Reply to their answer in which he doth withall give a more direct and full answer to their Petition before preferred to him in these words Jesus said unto them Ye shall indeed drink of the Cup c. But to sit on my right hand c. Of the first And they said unto him We can Although our Saviour did propound the Question to them obscurely in figurative speeches yet they perceiving what he mean● do answer directly affirming That they were able to drink of the Cup of the Crosse c. In which answer there is something good and commendable and something that is evil and discommendable That which is good and commendable is their readiness and forwardness to partake with him in suffering the Crosse which readiness they shew and discover by this that when he asked them Whether they could suffer with him that is whether they were able and fit to suffer with him they do not hereupon shew any ●ign of unwillingness to suffer with him but on the contrary they presently profess their ability to suffer with him whereby they imply also their willingness c. That which is evil and discommendable in their answer is That they discover too much confidence in themselves and presumption of their own strength and ability to suffer the crosse as if they could by their own power or of themselves drink of that bitter Cup when it was nothing so but all the ability they had was from God and from his Spirit strengthening them thereunto In this respect therefore their answer is rash and unadvised when they are so ready to affirm That they are able to drink of the same Cup with him c. Now one cause as is probable of their forwardness thus to profess both their ability and willingness to suffer with him was the earnest desire they had by this means if it might be to obtain their Suite and Petition at his hands Observ 1 Observ 1. From that which is commendable here in the Disciples viz. their readiness and willingnesse to suffer the crosse with Christ c. This teacheth us that we should after their example be ready willing and forward to suffer the crosse and afflictions in this World for the Name of Christ when we are called to it Herein we are to imitate these two Disciples of Christ who here profess and shew themselves forward to drink of the Cup of the Crosse c. The like forwardnesse Peter and the rest shewed also afterward Luke 22. 33. Peter professeth himself ready to go with him both into prison and to death And Matth. 26. 35. they all professed that if they should dye with him they
c. This is one of the principal and most excellent works of Faith which it worketh in us and for us the work of Prayer even such a work as brings much glory to God and singular comfort to our selves c. which should therefore draw our hearts to the love of this exercise and Duty of Prayer more and more causing us highly to esteem of it c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See what is one great cause why we want many good things which we desire and cannot obtain It is because as there is great want or weakness of Faith in us so we are slack and negligent in this Duty of Prayer in calling upon God in our necessities c. Jam. 4. 2. Ye have not because ye ask not This neglect of Prayer is one main cause which hinders good things from us This is true not only of wicked men and hypocrites who have no faith and so cannot pray at all but even of the Saints and Children of God who oftentimes by reason of the weakness of their faith or because they do not so stir up this gift of God in themselves as they should are too cold or careless in the Duty of prayer and so by this means they come short of many blessings and good things which they desire and might otherwise receive from God See then that weare not to blame the Lord as if he were slack to give us the things we desire and are needful for us but we are to blame our selves and our want of Faith and slackness in prayer Here is one main cause that we want so many blessings for soul and body which we desire and might otherwise enjoy What 's the cause that we want pardon of sins at least such a comfortable assurance thereof as we desire It is because we do not so often and earnestly sue to God in prayer for it So what 's the cause we want feeling of God's Favour and Love c That we want strength to resist temptations of sin power and ability to mortifie our lusts c. patience to bear afflictions meekness wisdom to carry our selves c It is because we are too slack in asking these things of God in prayer So for Temporal blessings What 's the cause we want health wealth good success in our Callings and business c. Because we are negligent in seeking to God by prayer c. or if we perform this duty yet not in due manner but coldly sleightly formally without faith and true feeling of our wants c. Vse 3 Use 3. See what to do if we would obtain those things which we desire and stand in need of so far as God seeth fit for us Use the means ordained of God yea the chief and principal means next unto Faith which is Prayer and calling upon God in all our necessities and wants daily and from time to time Be frequent diligent and constant in this exercise To this end labour for Faith and to pray with true feeling of our wants and with fervency of heart and affection remembring that Jam. 5. 16. The effectuall fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much c. Remember and think often of the excellency and necessity of this Duty of Prayer being the only ordinary means for the obtaining of all things needful for us both for soul and body the means to draw down all blessings of God upon us both spiritual and temporal the only way to obtain help comfort and deliverance in all troubles c. See then that if there were nothing else to move us to diligence and constancy in this Duty yet our own good and benefit should move us to it So that as the Commandment of God and his gracious Promise annexed should first and principally move us together with the excellency of the duty in it self so our own daily necessities and continual wants should quicken and stir us up to more and more diligence fervency and constancy in this excellent Duty c. Non melior orandi magister quàm necessitas Luther Observ 5 Observ 5. In that our Saviour directs this Exhortation to his Apostles especially and that upon occasion of their desire to have the gift and power of Miracles further confirmed to them hence gather That as the Apostles had need of Faith in working Miracles so also of Prayer unto God by whose power alone they wrought them and not by their own power as our Saviour Christ did At least sometimes they were to use prayer See Matth. 17. 21. And though our Saviour Christ also himself did sometimes use prayer when he was to work Miracles as ●oh 11. 41. yet that was only as a preparative to the work and not as a means whereby the Miracle was wrought c. for that was by the power of his Godhead And therefore at the very time of working the Miracle he used no prayer but only his powerful Word Verse 43. It followeth Believe that ye receive them These words contain the Condition which our Saviour requireth of his Disciples to be observed in all their prayers that they may be effectual to obtain what they ask The Condition is Faith that is a firm belief and perswasion that they shall obtain those things which they ask of God in prayer Observ Observ One Condition or property required in true prayer that it may be acceptable to God and effectual for the obtaining of those things we desire is this that it be made in faith that is with a firm and undoubted perswasion that those things which we ask shall be granted unto us Jam. 1. 5. If any lack wisdome let him ask of God c. But let him ask in faith nothing wavering For he that wavereth is like a wave of the Sea c. For let not that man think he shall receive any thing of the Lord. Therefore also Jam. 5. 15. true prayer which prevaileth with God is called The Prayer of faith to shew that it comes from Faith and must be made in faith 1 Tim. 2. 8. I will that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without doubting If we must not doubt in prayer then on the contrary we must believe and rest perswaded that we shall obtain the things we ask Reas 1 Reason 1. Without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. For our persons must first be accepted before any duty or service we perform can be accepted of God Now our persons come to be accepted only in Christ and that by means of Faith believing in Him and apprehending his righteousness Now the same Faith perswades us withall that our persons being accepted God will grant the Petitions we ask of him for Christ's sake Reas 2 Reason 2. God hath promised to hear our prayers and to grant our Petitions which we offer up to him in Christ so that we pray in due manner therefore we are to believe and rest perswaded hereof upon his Word and Promise Quest Quest How far forth are we
his temptations First For the Place where he was tempted viz. The Wilderness Of this I have spoken before ver 12. Therefore I do pass it over here and come to the second Circumstance namely The Time how long our Saviour Christ's temptations continued viz. forty dayes The meaning of these words was cleared before Observ Observ In that our Saviour is said not onely to have been in the Wilderness forty dayes but also to be tempted there during that time that is very often within that time Hence we learn what we must look for from Satan namely this That he will assault and try us not onely with one or two or a few temptations and so leave us but that he will follow us with many temptations and assaults one after another yea that he will take all occasions continually to sollicite us to sin We have no sooner withstood him in one temptation but presently we may look for another Our Saviour Christ continually resisted him in all his temptations both within the forty dayes and afterward and yet upon all occasions he assaulted Him again and again So after he had ended those three great temptations mentioned particularly by Matthew and Luke it is said that he left him for a season Luke 4. 13. that is with purpose to return again soon after The temptations of Satan come one after another like the Messengers which came unto job to tell him of his losses Reas Reas The Devil's malice against us is unsatiable and restless therefore he never ceaseth tempting and solliciting us to sin that so he may bring us to destruction He goeth about like a roaring Lion c. Hence he is called the Tempter Matth. 4. to shew that it is his Trade and Profession to tempt and entice us unto sin this he doeth ordinarily and daily We must look therefore that he will be tempting us not once or twice or a few times in our life but that he will be often assaulting us from time to time yea that he will continually be following us with his temptations no truce with him c. Use Use Learn by this to be continually watchful against Satan and never to be secure seeing he is uncessant in tempting let us be so spiritually wise as never to cease watching and arming our selves against him Think not that when we have been once or twice tempted to this or that sin and that we have by God's Grace resisted that then we shall be quiet the unclean Spirit being once cast out will assay to enter in again as we see Matth. 12. Satan being once or twice resisted will still redouble his assaults therefore never be secure but daily and continally look to thy wayes and especially to thy heart keep it with all diligence c. So much of the Circumstance of time How long our Saviour was tempted of Satan viz. Forty dayes Now I proceed to the third thing by which his temptations are amplified namely The outward estate and condition in which he was during the time of his temptations in that he was with the wild beasts Now this is mentioned to aggravate the grievousness of his temptations in that he was assaulted with them in such a forlorn place where he had no help or comfort from men but had onely wild beasts for his companions which were more likely to annoy and hurt him than to help or comfort him any way Now see what we may learn from hence Observ 1 Observ 1. We see here that our Saviour Christ at one and the same time had many troubles and trial upon him for he was in penury and want of bodily food for forty daies space he was also during that space molested and tempted by Satan and besides all this he was at the same time molested with the society of wild beasts which were ready to annoy and hurt him Hence we may learn that God doth sometimes try his own children with many crosses and troubles at once with inward and outward afflictions in their souls bodies friends goods good name c. Jam. 1. 2. Count it exceeding joy when ye fall into divers temptations So 1 Pet. 1. 6. Now ye are in heaviness through manifold afflictions It was a great tryal for David to be so long kept as he was from the Kingdom which God had promised him yet besides this he was at the same time persecuted by Saul and not onely so but forced to fly into a barren Wilderness where he was in danger to dy for want of food Job also was at once afflicted sundry wayes in his body goods children wife and friends yea and in his conscience too Reasons of this dealing of God with his children He doth it chiefly for these causes 1. To humble them throughly in the sense of their own sins which are the procuring causes of all troubles when he seeth that one affliction or a few will not work this through-humiliation then he layeth many at once upon them and those very heavy sometimes Reas 2 2. He doth this for his own Glory the more to magnify his power and mercy in strengthning them to bear so many tryals at once and in delivering them out of all in due time 3. To try and discover their Faith and Patience so much the more Jobi exemplum Use 1 Use 1. Confuteth the blind Judgment of the World and of carnal men who judge those to be wicked men or Hypocrites who are afflicted with many troubles and crosses at once This was the rash censure of Job's friends upon him But if we should thus judge of all that have many and great crosses at once we should condemn Christ himself who at one and the same time was afflicted many wayes as we see here Use 2 Use 2. Think not strange of it if God lay many crosses at once upon us but know this is his usual dealing with his dear Children therefore think it not a sign of his anger against us neither conclude that we are out of his favour because he chastiseth us many wayes at once for he doth this in love to us and for our good Strive then unto patience though the Lord try thee with never so many troubles at once Though thou feel at the same time fightings without and terrors within yet be of good comfort and labour for patience to bear contentedly whatsoever tryals God layeth on thee if he lay much upon thee at once he will give thee answerable strength to bear it onely seek to him in prayer for strength and patience Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour Christ conversed among wild beasts in the Wilderness which were ready to molest and trouble him This may teach us contentedness and patience though we be forced in this World to converse and live among wicked men which are as troublesome and dangerous to live with as any wild beasts therefore in Scripture wicked and prophane men are resembled to wild beasts as lions wolves bears c. See for this Esa
the words imply an ordinary conversing with his Apostles 1 Joh. 1. 1. St. John saith that himself and the other Apostles had heard and seen with their eyes and that with their hands they had handled the Word of life that is Christ Jesus according to his humane Nature which shews how familiarly and ordinarily the Apostles conversed with Christ following him up and down wheresoever he went Quest Quest Did all the Apostles thus follow Christ and converse with him ordinarily Answ Answ Not all but onely the twelve which were first called therefore Paul though an Apostle yet being none of the twelve is exempted from the number of those Apostles that followed Christ and conversed with him before his Passion and Ascension Object Object 1 Cor. 15. 8. He saith that Christ was seen of him Answ Answ He saw him onely in Visions and that at three special times 1. In the way to Damascus Act. 22. as may appear by the speech of Ananias to him ver 14. 2. When he was imprisoned at Hierusalem Act. 23. 11. The Lord stood by him and said Be of good cheer Paul c. 3. When he was caught up into the third Heavens where he heards words unspeakable c. 2 Cor. 12. 2. It is most likely that then also he saw Christ in his Glory Paraeus in 1 Cor. 15. 8. Thus Paul saw Christ sundry times in extraordinary Visions after his Ascension but he did not see him or converse with him before his Ascension in such sort as the twelve Apostles did This therefore was the Prerogative of the twelve to see and hear Christ and to converse with him ordinarily upon Earth Vse Hence gather the truth and certainty of the Doctrine of the Gospel contained in the writings of the Apostles For they living and conversing with Christ heard his teaching and knew his mind and that which they learned of him they either wrote themselves or else delivered it to others to write See Luke 1. 1 2. This consideration serveth to strengthen our Faith touching the truth and certainty of those things which are left written in the books of the New Testament Observ 2 Observ 2. I will make you to be Fishers c. Hence learn that the main thing at which all Ministers and Preachers of the Word should aim in their Ministry is to take men like fish in the Draw-net of the Word that is to draw them out of the Sea of this World and out of their natural estate and to bring them unto God In a word to call and convert men and women unto God and so to save their Souls This is that unto which our Saviour Christ did chiefly ordain and appoint his Apostles when he called them to that Office that they should become fishers of men that is that they should labour in nothing so much as in this that by their Preaching they might gain Souls unto God So Luke 5. 10. Christ tells Peter hereafter thou shalt catch men shewing what was the thing he should chiefly labour in for the time to come even to take mens Souls in the Draw-net of the Word This also was Paul's chief aim and drift in all his Ministry even to win men unto God 2 Cor. 12. 14. I seek not yours but you and 1 Cor. 9. 22. I am made all things to all men that I might by all means save some The words may be understood not onely of his private conversation but also of his Preaching and Ministry that in it he did conform himself so far as he might to the different dispositions of men that so he might gain them unto Christ Shewing what is the main scope which Ministers should shoot at in their Ministry even the gaining of Souls to God or the taking or catching of mens Souls as it were in the Net of the Word preached Use 1 Use 1. This is for the reproof of such Ministers who in the Exercise of their Ministry aim and seek rather after their own gain profit credit or preferment in the World than at the winning of their People to God they fish more for Benefices and Church-livings than for the Souls of men Use 2 Use 2. This must teach the People to shew themselves ready and willing to be caught in the Net of the Word preached and by it to be drawn out of the Sea of the wicked World and out of the deep Waters of their own sins and corruption in which they ly and live by Nature And to this end all sorts must be admonished diligently to repair to the places where the Net of the Word is cast forth and laid by the Lord's Fishermen As ever thou desirest to have thy Soul caught and taken in the Lord's Draw-net which is his Word so be careful to come unto the Net and to the place where it is cast out else thou canst not be taken in it and yet if thou be not taken in it and drawn by it out of the Sea of thy sinful estate thou canst not be saved Be not then slack to come to this Net of the Word that thou mayest be taken in it Happy are all they that are caught in it c. Observ 3 Observ 3. See here the excellency of the Calling of Ministers in that it hath so excellent an Object about which it is conversant namely the gaining of Souls to God by Preaching This is to be Fishers of men Hence is it that they are said to save others as 1 Tim. 4. ult Take heed to thy self and to thy Doctrine continue in them for in doing this thou shalt both save thy self and them that hear thee Now there is no work more excellent than the saving of Souls See Jam. 5. 20. Which shews the excellency of the Minister's Calling in that it is conversant about so excellent and precious a work as the gaining of Souls to God Other Callings are conversant about mens bodies and goods or outward estate but the Office of Ministers is to labour in saving Souls Use 1 Vse 1. To encourage Ministers to do the duties of this excellent Calling with diligence and faithfulness they cannot labour too much in so worthy a Work they should think no pains too great to save one Soul This is more than to save a thousand mens bodies from drowing or burning c. Use 2 Use 2. What cause then have the People to have their Pastors in singular love and esteem for their works sake as Paul warneth 1 Thes 5. 12. We love the Physitian that useth means to save our bodies c. Mark 1. 17 ad 21. And I will make you become Fishers of men c. Nov. 22. 1618. Observ 4 IN that the Ministry of the Apostles is compared to the trade of Fishermen which is a painful trade Luke 5. 5. Observat 4. Hence we may gather that the Calling of a Minister is no easy Profession but laborious and painful The Fisherman hath no need to be idle but to be much imployed either in
But of this afterward This malice of the Devil against the Souls and Bodies of Men hath bin ever since the Beginning and it is not abated but increased in time so that it is now greater then ever it was Rev. 12. 12. Vse 1 Vse 1. See God's goodness and mercy in limiting and restraining the Devil's malice against us so as he can do no more than the Lord permits him to do If God did not restrain him he would not onely hurt but utterly destroy the Souls and Bodies of all Men and Women in the World Such is his malice that if the Lord did not bridle him and as it were put his hook into his Nostrils to hold him back he would not onely murder our Souls by drawing us into all kind of sin but he would also in a short time murder our Bodies by some means or other he would find wayes enough to do it either by overthrowing our houses down on our heads as upon Job's Children or by setting fire on them and so burning up them and us together before we be aware of it or by conveying poison into our meat and drink c. Any of these wayes the Devil would soon make away with us if the Lord did not hold him in and restrain his malice against us Let us think well of this mercy of God shewed to us daily and hourly and be stirred up to shew true thankfulness for the same It is his mercy that we are not destroyed of Sathan every Day c. Vse 2 Vse 2. Remember this when the Devil tempteth us to any sin under pretence of friendship or kindnesse promising much profit or pleasure by it if we will yield to his wicked suggestions be assured That howsoever he pretend our good and proffer us kindness as he did to Eve promising that she should be like God if she would eat of the forbidden Tree yet the truth is he alwayes intendeth hurt and mischief to us whatsoever he makes shew of he seeks our destruction Believe not then his deceitfull perswasions when he would draw us to commit sin If a man knew one that carries malice in his heart against him he will not believe him though he speak him fair and promise him many good turns so the Devil being a deadly professed enemy to our Bodies and Souls seeking the murder of them Let us not believe him or yield to his suggestions though he promise never so much profit or pleasure by sin The Devil's kindnesses are viscata beneficia Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this unclean Spirit entred into the body of this man and possessed it abusing it at his pleasure We see that the Devil by God's permission may have great power over the bodies of men to abuse them and to afflict and torture them with pains diseases c. And this he doth sometimes by conveying himself into the bodies of men which he can the more easily do being of a spirituall nature and substance and so possessing the bodies of those in whom he is he doth move them and often put them to great pain torture Thus he abused the body of this party here mentioned and of many others that were possessed in our Saviour's time So Stagirius a Monk was possessed in Chrysostom's time Sometimes again he doth by God's sufferance afflict mens bodies without possessing them or entering into them So Act. 19. 16. as when he useth means to strike them outwardly with some disease distemper or infirmity as he smote Job's body with boyls and Luke 13. 16. He bowed the body of a Daughter of Abraham that is a believing Woman for the space of eighteen years together nay he may be permitted of God to kill the bodies of men as of Job's Children Quest Quest. Why doth the Lord permit the Devil to have such power over mens bodies Answ Answ For His own Glory 1. To shew his Power in over-ruling Sathan and using him as an Instrument by which to work his own Will 2. To shew his Justice the wicked men punishing them by this meanes for their sinnes Thus Cyprian Serm de lapsis writeth of some in his time that were possessed with Devils for prophaning the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper Jansen Harmon Evangel pag. 161. Col. 1. C. Tertullian mentions one taken with a Devil at a Stage-Play Centur. Magdeb. Cent. 3. Col. 142. 3. He may do it also sometimes to shew his Mercy in chastising his own Children for their sins that he may by this meanes humble them and cause them to renew their Repentance Vse Vse See what cause we have daily to pray unto God for his Protection against the power of Satan that he may not have his will to tyrannize over our bodies 〈…〉 Let us not forget daily to commend not onely our Souls but our Bodies to 〈◊〉 protection and defence intreating him in mercy to keep and preserve us from the power of Satan and not to suffer him to abuse or afflict our bodies at his will Mark 1. 23. And there was in their Synagogue a man with an unclean Spirit and he cryed out c. Dec. 20. 1618. Observ 3 FRom the Attribute given to the Devil in that he is called an unclean Spirit we further learn this that those Wicked Spirits of Hell are most impure and filthy Creatures therefore they are so often in Scripture called unclean Spirits as Matth. 12. 43. When the Vnclean Spirit is gone out of a man c. and in many other places Now they are unclean in three respects 1. In regard of that great corruption and depravedness of Nature wherewith they are now tainted by reason of their apostacy from God Jude v. 6. They kept not their first Estate but falling from God they were justly deprived of all that purity of Nature which they had by Creation and in stead thereof they are now defiled with a most impure and sinful nature and disposition therefore the Devil is called The evil One Mat. 5. 37. yea Wickednesse it self Eph. 6. 12. 2. In regard of actuall sins with which they daily and continually pollute themselves as malice lying murder and the like John 8. 44. 3. In regard of their continuall desire and endeavour to pollute and defile all the other Creatures of God especially to infect mankind with the contagion of their own sin this they do by continuall tempting and entising men unto sin Use 1 Use 1. See then whom they do resemble who live in the 〈◊〉 of sin defiling themselves with impure and filthy sins as pride covetousness adultery drunkenness and such like the more they defile themselves with these or the like sins the more like they are unto the Devil himself that impure Spirit See Zach. 13. 2. They bear his Image not the Image of God which stands in holiness Take heed then how thou live in any known sinne lest defiling thy Soul and Body with it thou become like the Devil that unclean Spirit Use 2 Use 2. See the foul
but also being in them he can frame and utter an audible Voyce and such as may be understood So here and afterwards Chap. 5. 7. and at other times See Acts 16. 17. So also he can utter a Voyce in other living Creatures which he enters into as he did in the body of the Serpent Gen. 3. Not that the Devil can give an immediate power of speech either to Man or to any other Creature but he doth it by help of some naturall causes or means which he makes use of to this purpose And when he speaketh in any Creature it is in such a Creature as hath some natural abilities and fitnesse either to speak or to utter some kind of imperfect Voyce c. See Perk. Discourse of Witchcraft Chap. 1. Sect. 4. Now to speak more particularly of the Words which the Devil here speaking in the party possessed did utter to our Saviour In which consider three things 1. The Devil beginning now to feel the Divine Power of Christ opposing him doth intreat our Saviour to forbear troubling or disquieting him and his fellows Let us alone 2. He doth expostulate with our Saviour 1. About the Cause of his molesting him and his fellows What have we to do with thee thou Jesus c. 2. About the end of his coming Art thou come to destroy us 3. He doth make a fained and hypocriticall confession of Christ I know thee who thou art c. Touching the first Let us alone Some take the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used here in the Original Text to be onely an Adverb of crying out and therefore they translate it Ah what have we to do with thee c. But it is rather to be taken as a Verb of the Imperative Mode signfying as much as Let us alone The Devil intreats our Saviour to forbear troubling or molesting him or his fellows that is other wicked Spirits which now possessed the bodies of other persons by casting them out of their holds Observ Observ How loth and unwilling the Devil is to forgo his hold or possession which he hath gotten in the bodies of Men at any time very loth he is to be dispossessed c. Therefore here he makes suit unto Christ to let him alone c. And to this purpose also tend the words following which he further useth to our Saviour viz. To move and perswade him if it might be not to cast him or his fellows out of their Possessions Hence also it was that this and other wicked Spirits did so much struggle against the Power of Christ when he was about to dispossesse them See more of this afterward upon Ver. 26. and Chap. 5. 7 8. It followeth What have we to do with thee c. The wicked Spirit doth expostulate the matter with our Saviour about the cause of his molesting him and his fellows and he seems to complain against Christ and to accuse him at least indirectly as if he dealt injuriously with him and his fellows in going about to cast them out seeing they had nothing to do with him that is they did not meddle against him neither had any way justly provoked or offended him q. d. what Cause is there in us why thou shouldest trouble us and go about to dispossesse us seeing we meddle not with thee nor have done thee any wrong c See 2 Sam. 19. 22. the like Speech used by David to Abishai in like sense What have I to do with you ye sons of Zerviah that ye should this day be adversaries to me What Cause is there in me or have I given you why ye should shew your selves enemies to me in molesting me and by provoking me against Shimei c. Thou Jesus of Nazareth This was the usuall name then given to our Saviour by the common People among the Jews The reason whereof was 1. Because his Mother the Virgin Mary dwelt there Luke 1. 26. And there she conceived him in her Womb it being a City in Galilee There also both she and her reputed Husband Joseph lived afterward for which cause it is called their own City Luke 2. 39. 2. There also our Saviour Christ did live and was brought up-under and with his Parents during the time of his private Life untill he was about thirty years of age Hence it was That he was commonly called Jesus of Nazareth and not for that he was born there 〈…〉 born at Bethlehem Matth. 2. Now some do further thin● 〈◊〉 the Devil gave this title now to our Saviour in policy thereby to nourish the common People in that error which they held concerning Christ that he was not the true Messiah because he was of Nazareth whereas the Messiah was to come out of Bethlehem See Joh. 1. 46. and Joh. 7. 52. But this I leave as uncertain although it is not altogether unlikely Observ Observ The Devil here pretends that he did not meddle with our Saviour nor had any way provoked or offended him and therefore implyes that our Saviour dealt injuriously with him and his fellows in going about to cast them out yet all this was false for 1. It was a just offence to our Saviour that these wicked Spirits did enter into Mens bodies to possesse and abuse them at his pleasure 2. It was therefore no wrong at all unto these Devils that our Saviour went about to dispossesse them Here then we see and learn that the Devil is a lyar and a false accuser of others He sticks not here at least indirectly to belye our Saviour and falsly to slander and accuse him as if he dealt hardly and unjustly with him and his fellows in going about to dispossesse them withall pretending but falsly that they had not provoked him or given him any cause thus to proceed against them All was false and herein the Devil shewed himself not onely a lyar but a slanderer and false accuser even of Christ himself c. So he falsly accused God himself unto Eve Gen. 3. and he falsly accused Job unto God Job 1. 9. And Rev. 12. 10. He is called The accuser of the Brethren c. yea he hath his name from slandering and false accusing for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a Slanderer and as his name is so is his nature as was said of Nabal c. Use 1 Vse 1. This must teach us not to believe the Devil when he suggesteth wicked thoughts to us either against God's Justice Mercy Providence c. or against our Brethren and perswades us to ●ntertain such thoughts Remember that Satan is a lyar and slanderer both of God and Men and therefore such thoughts coming from him we are not to believe or give any credit at all to them Use 2 Use 2. Beware of the sins of lying and slandering or false accusing for these are the Devil 's proper sins and the more any is given to them the more like they are to him c. Mark 1. 24. Let us alone What have we to do with
him to be God and consequently to be the Messiah We therefore must here learn to embrace Him and believe in Him as in the onely Saviour of Mankind seeking Salvation in none other Use 3 Vse 3. This is also matter of great comfort to the faithful to consider that Christ being God as well as Man and having all Divine Power in his hands is therefore able perfectly to save and deliver them from all evils and miseries of Soul and Body and able also to confer on them all good things necessary for this life or that which is to come Trust perfectly in this all-sufficient Saviour c. Observ 5 Observ 5. In that our Saviour by his Divine Power cleansed and cured this Leper of his bodily Leprosy Hence we may gather that he is also the onely spiritual Physitian that is able and willing to cure the spiritual Leprosies and Diseases of our Souls that is our sins if we come unto him by the Prayer of Faith as the Leper did Luke 4. 18. He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted The Leprosy of the body which reigned among the Jews was a Type of Sin which is the Leprosy of the Soul and our Saviour by curing this and other dangerous Diseases did shew himself to be that spiritual Physitian also which came into the World to cure the faithful of their sins which are the sicknesses of their Souls This may appear Matth. 8. 17. where the Evangelist from the bodily Diseases cured by our Saviour doth gather that he is that Person of whom the Prophet Esay foretold that he should bear our spiritual Infirmities that is our sins Isa 53. 4. The Reason hereof may be this Sin is the originall and procuring cause of all bodily Diseases therefore our Saviour by curing bodily Sicknesses did shew and declare that he came also to cure mens Souls of their sins And hence is it that we read so often that at the same time when he cured the bodyes of such as were diseased he did also pardon their sins upon their Faith and Repentance Quest Quest How doth Christ Jesus cure the faithful of their sins Answ Answ By a two-fold Soveraign Medicine The first is his own Blood that is the merit of his Sufferings and Obedience effectually applyed to the Conscience of the Sinner whereby he healeth him of the guilt of his sins procuring the pardon of them at the hands of God The second is the Power and Efficacy of his Spirit by which as by a sharp Corrasive he so eateth out as it were and wasteth the Corruption of Sin that it bear not sway in the faithful and withal worketh in them the Grace of true Holiness Vse Seek to Christ not onely in our bodily Sicknesses but chiefly in the Sicknesses of our Souls that is when we feel our sins and the guilt of them lying on our Consciences or the Corruption of them prevailing in us In these cases go to Christ by the Prayer of Faith earnestly entreating him to heal thee of thy sins both of the guilt of them by his Blood effectually applyed to thy Conscience by Faith and also of the Corruption of sin by the Power of his Spirit mortifying and weakning it in thee more and more Mark 1. 43 44 45. And He straightly charged him and forthwith sent him away And saith unto him See Mar. 21. 1618. thou say nothing to any man but go thy way shew thy self to the Priest and offer for thy cleansing those things which Mosescommanded for a Testimony unto them But he went out and began to publish it much and to blaze abroad the matter insomuch that Jesus could no more openly enter into the City but was without in Desert places and they came to Him from every quarter IN these Verses are set down the Consequents which followed upon this Miracle which our Saviour wrought upon the Leper The Consequents are two 1. A straight Charge or Commandment given unto the Leper by our Saviour ver 43 44. 2. The Disobedience of the Leper unto that Charge Ver. ult Touching the Charge of our Saviour unto him it is two-fold 1. Negative Wherein he sheweth what he should not do forbidding him to make the Miracle known 2. Affirmative Shewing what he should do viz. go shew himself to the Priest and to offer for his cleansing the things commanded by Moses for a Testimony unto them He straightly charged him viz. not to publish the Miracle as appears by the words following Quest Quest Why did he so straightly enjoyn him to conceal it Answ Answ Because he foresaw and knew that he would be too forward to make it known Therefore He did not barely forbid him but charged him in threatning manner as the Greek word implyeth not to publish it See thou say nothing c. His meaning is not that he should keep it onely to himself and that he should not at all make it known to any for our Saviour knew that it was fit his Miracles should be known that by them his Divine power and the Truth of his Doctrine might be manifested to the World and therefore we read that at another time He was willing a Miracle of his should be made known Mark 5. 19. Go home to thy friends and tell them c. But our Saviour's purpose here is to restrain him 1. From publishing this Miracle rashly or unadvisedly and in indiscreet manner 2. From revealing it to such Persons as were likely to cavil or take exceptions at it 3. From publishing it at that time being unfit and unseasonable Quest Quest Why was it an unseasonable time Answ Answ 1. Because our Saviour was yet in the state of his Abasement and was so to continue till the time of his Resurrection and his Divine Glory was to be manifested by degrees till then and not all at once See Matth. 17. 9. Vide Jansen Harm Evang. cap. 34. pag. 189. 2. Because the People were too much addicted to the Miracles of Christ without due regard to his Doctrine therefore if his Miracles should be too commonly known the People would so flock after him to have Miracles that it would hinder his Preaching See Bez● on Matth. 8. 4. and Calvin Harm p. 123. for so it came to pass afterward as we may 〈◊〉 in the last Verse Observ 1 Observ 1. Our Saviour Christ might have purchased great Glory and Fame to himself by the publishing of this Miracle and yet because at this time the publishing of it was like to hinder the course of his Ministry and the Preaching of the Word therefore he would rather have it concealed for a time Hence gather that we should be much more careful and desirous of the furtherance of the Gospel and of the good success of the Ministry thereof than of our own credit or reputation in the World Act. 20. 24. Paul's life was not dear to him in comparison of the fulfilling of his course in his Ministry much less did he respect his credit
unto Christ because of the press hindring them yet they were not discouraged but used means notwithstanding this Impediment to present him unto him to teach us that we must not be discouraged from doing good duties though we meet with impediments to hinder us but we must labour to overcome all difficulties and to break through them rather then omit our Duties Eccless 11. 4. He that observeth the Wind shall not sow and he that regardeth the Clouds shall not reap That is he that will be discouraged with inconveniencies and impediments shall never do good Duties therefore we must not stick at such difficulties or hinderances but break through them rather then be kept from doing any good Duty which lyeth upon us to perform The Queen of Sheba was not discouraged with the distance of place nor tediousness of the journey from going to hear Solomon's Wisdome Zachaeus Luke 19. was not discouraged by the press of people nor by the lowness of his stature from using means to see Christ So the blind man Luk. 18. was not discouraged from crying more and more unto Christ for help though the people rebuked him that he should hold his peace These examples must teach us not to omit good Duties because we meet with difficulties or impediments to hinder us in them True it is That when we should do good we shall often meet with such impediments and hinderance when we should perform Duties of Piety As Prayer Meditation Reading c. we often meet with worldly cares or business or company or the like hinderances but we must not suffer them to hinder us but break through them all So in doing duties of mercy and charity we shall often meet with hinderances as in visiting the sick in relieving such as are in want c. yea we are very apt in such Cases to make many vain excuses and to feign to our selves more difficulties and Impediments then indeed there are like the sloathfull who saith There is a Lyon in the way c. Prov. 26. 13. But we must learn to leap over all such stumbling blocks and to break through all hinderances rather then omit such Duties of mercy Mark 2. 5. When Jesus saw their Faith He said unto the sick of the Palsy Son thy Sins be Forgiven thee April 18. 1619. VVEE have heard of the Actions performed by the friends of the sick as preparatives to this Miraculous cure Now followeth another speciall Action of our Saviour Christ which was also a Preparative to the Miracle namely the spirituall curing of the sick party of his Sins which he did by pronouncing the pardon of them unto him And this Action of Christ is further amplified 1. By the cause moving him thereunto He saw their Faith 2. By the manner it was in loving sort calling him Son 3. By the event which followed ver 6 7 8 9. When Jesus saw their Faith This is to be understood both of the Faith of the friends of the sick who brought him to Christ and also of the Faith of the Sick party himself for our Saviour would not pronounce pardon of sins to him upon the Faith of others if himself had not been a Believer Further By Faith We are to understand a true justifying Faith apprehending Christs speciall mercy towards them for the pardon of their sins and withall trusting on his power and goodness for the obtaining of this Miraculous Cure Quest Quest How did our Saviour Christ see their Faith which is an Invisible Grace in the Heart Answ Answ He might see it two wayes 1. Inwardly in the Heart of the sick party as being God and so knowing the Heart 2. Outwardly by externall fruits evidences of it as by their pains taken to bring the Sick party to Christ and by his willingness and forwardness to be brought as also by his patient bearing of this sickness By these and the like outward fruits of Faith our Saviour did perceive their Faith Son He gives him this Title no doubt to shew his loving affection and good will towards him and thereby to incourage and comfort him being cast down as is probable with the sense of his Sins therefore Mat. 9. 2. our Saviour said Son be of good chear c. Thy Sins are Forgiven c. Upon thy Faith and Repentance which I discern to be in thee I have pardoned thy Sins and do assure thee therefor from my own mouth Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour first assure him of the forgiveness of his Sins seeing he was brought to him to be cured in body of the Palsy Answ 1 Answ 1. To shew that he came not onely or chiefly to be a Physitian for the body to cure mens bodily diseases but principally to cure mens Souls of their Sins 2. To shew that Sin is the Originall cause of all bodily diseases and consequently that in sickness the best way to find ease and deliverance is to seek pardon of sins Observ 1 Observ 1. Here then we are taught that in time of bodily sickness the onely way to have ease and deliverance is to seek first to have our sins pardoned and to be assured thereof in our Conscience we should be more carefull of this by far then to have the sickness it self removed So was David as we see Psal 32. and Psal 38. So Hezekiah Esay 38. 2. Reas Reason Sin is the procuring and deserving cause of all bodily pains griefs and diseases Lam. 3. 39. Man complatneth for his Sin 1 Cor. 11. 30. For this cause for the Sin of profaning the Lords Supper many are weak and sick among you c. therefore when our Saviour had cured him that lay diseased at the Pool of Bethesda he bad him go away and sin no more least a worse thing come to him Joh. 5. 14. Though God in laying sickness on his Children doth not aim at the punishing of their sins but at other ends as the tryall of his Graces in them as their Faith Patience c. as in Job and at other good ends yet this is true that sin is the Originall and procuring cause of all sicknesse which come upon the Godly and the Wicked so as if there were no Sin in them they should never feel sickness Now then seeing sin is the cause of all sickness therefore in sickness our first and chief care must be to have our sins pardoned and the Guilt of them removed because otherwise we cannot look to have our sickness removed or to find ease and comfort in it Object Object Some are delivered out of bodily sickness before they have timely repented and so before their sins be pardoned So 2 Kings 8. 10. there is a promise made to wicked Benhadad that he should recover of his disease on the contrary some there are whose sins upon their repentance are pardoned and yet God holdeth them still under sickness Answ Answ 1. Though the wicked whose sins are not pardoned are sometimes delivered out of bodily sickness yet this deliverance
brings no sound ease or comfort to them because the evill of sickness or the sting of it which is sin and a Guilty Conscience remains still to afflict and torment them 2. Though some of Gods children whose sins are pardoned are yet holden still under some sickness yet this sickness is sanctified to them so as it turns to their Spirituall good and they find ease and comfort in it because they feel Gods Love towards them in the midst of it Use 1 Use 1. This condemns the foolish and preposterous practise of carnall men who in time of sickness take wrong courses to find ease and deliverance Some are so grosse as to send to Wizards which work by the help of Satan that they may have ease Others seek onely to the Physitian for recovery of their bodily health but not to God for pardon of their sins which was the fault of Asa though a good King 2 Chrom 16. 12. Others in sickness send for their friends and Kindred or for merry company to confer with and to pass away the time but in the mean while they seek not to God for pardon of their sins without which all the former helps are miserable comforters as Job said of his friends Use 2 Use 2. See what to do first and cheifly in any bodily sickness if we desire ease comfort and deliverance Seek to God for pardon of our sins that the guilt of them may be removed and our Conscience eased This being done the sting of sickness is taken away and the sickness it self shall be either removed or sanctified to us Labour most to remove that which hurts us most viz. our sins the causes of our sickness Quest Quest What must we do in time of sickness that God may pardon our sins and ease our Conscience of the guilt of them Answ Answ 1. Get a true sight and feeling of them and to this end take a view of our hearts and lives in the looking-Glass of the Law of God Rom. 3. 20. 2. Labour to be truly humbled with godly sorrow and remorse for our sins Joel 2. Rent our hearts c. 3. Confess our sins to God with an unfeigned purpose of reforming our lives for time to come Prov. 28. 13. He that confesseth and for saketh his sins shall find Mercy Isa 55. 7. Let the wicked for sake c. 4. Sue unto God earnestly in Prayer to pardon our sins in Christ and to give us a comfortable assurance hereof in our Conscience Be more earnest with the Lord for this than for the greatest good in the World and we shall find that he will answer us in due time with comfort and will shew mercy to us in the pardoning of our sins through Christ See Isa 65. 24. Also the Examples of Manasseh and of the Prodigal Son whom his Father met half-way as he was returning c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour here doth take upon him by his own Power and Authority to forgive the sins of the sick of the Palsy we learn that he is true and very God of himself equal with the Father and the Holy Ghost because it is a power and prerogative peculiar to God alone to forgive sins Isa 43. 25. I even I am He that blotteth out thy transgressions for my own sake and will not remember thy sins Object Object Ministers of the Word are said to forgive sins Joh. 20. 23. Answ Answ Not in their own Name or by their own proper Power but because in the Name of Christ and by that Authority which they have from him they do declare pronounce and apply forgiveness of sins to the penitent ministerially not judicially So much of this special Act of Christ in curing the sick party of his sins which was a Preparative to the curing of his body which followed afterward Now in the next place to speak of the cause moving Christ to pronounce pardon of sins to him He saw their Faith Not onely the Faith of the Friends of the sick but also the Faith of the sick-party himself as was before shewed Quest Quest Why doth the Evangelist mention the Faith of his Friends seeing every Believer is justified and hath his sins pardoned upon his own Faith onely and not upon the Faith of others Answ Answ This mention of the Faith of his Friends is to be referred chiefly to that which follows ver 10. c. namely to the curing of his bodily Disease And so the meaning is that by seeing his Faith and the Faith of his Friends Christ was moved to bestow a double benefit on him the one was the pardon of his sins the other was bodily Health the former he was moved to bestow on him upon his own Faith the latter partly upon his own Faith and partly upon the Faith of his Friends that brought him thither Where by the way we may note That God doth sometimes bestow temporal Blessings of this life as bodily health and the like upon one man for the Faith and at the Prayer of another as Jam. 5. 15. But not to insist on this Observ 1 Observ 1. Our Saviour did not pronounce Forgiveness of Sins to the sick but upon the sight of his own Faith This teacheth us that none can be Partakers of Remission of sins but such as have true Faith in their Hearts to believe and apply the same Luke 7. 48 50. Act. 13. 38 39. Paul saith to them of Antioch To you is preached the Forgivenesse of Sins And by Him all that believe are justifyed from all things from which ye could not be justifyed by the Law of Moses Hence it is that in Scripture we are so often said to be justified by Faith Reas 1 Reas 1. Promise of Salvation is made to Believers Mark 16. 16. Now Forgiveness of sins is a part of Salvation Reas 2 Reas 2. Faith is the onely Grace whereby we apply Christ to our selves and all the benefits which he hath purchased for us Joh. 1. 12. Now Forgiveness of sins is one special benefit purchased by Christ therefore it cannot become ours any other way but by Faith For the more full conceiving of this know that the sins of the Elect may be said to be forgiven two wayes 1. In respect of God's purpose and Decree and so they are pardoned from Eternity and long before they come to believe 2. In respect of God's actual Donation or bestowing of this benefit in which he doth apply it unto his Elect and so their sins are not pardoned till they have Faith to apply this benefit to themselves For in this actual Donation or giving of this benefit there are two hands as it were required The first is the hand of God whereby he giveth pardon of sins in Christ to his Elect which hand he ordinarily reacheth out to us in the Ministry of his Word and Sacraments The second is a hand on our part to receive and apply to our selves that which God offereth and reacheth out to ous
That is Instituted and ordained of God So Psal 118. 24. This is the day which the Lord hath made c. For man That is for the good benefit and profit of mankind And not man for the Sabbath The externall keeping of the Sabbath is not the main or chief end of Mans Creation Object Object Man was created to Worship and serve God and to this end serveth the Sabbath therefore it may seem that man was created to keep the Sabbath Answ Answ We must put difference between the substance of Gods Worship and between the Circumstances of it which are but helps and furtherances to it as the time the place the manner c. If we speak of the substance of Gods Worship it is true That it is one main end of Mans Creation but if we speak of the Circumstances of it they are not properly the end of mans Creation but onely accidentally and so far as they are helps and furtherances to his Worship and Service Now the Sabbath is but a Circumstance of Gods Worship and therefore in that respect it is truly said not to be the end of Mans Creation This for the meaning Doct. 1 Doctr. 1. The first and main point of Doctrine here taught us is this That one main end of the first Institution of the Sabbath day is the good and benefit of man that man might reap good by keeping it There are two main ends of Instituting the Sabbath The first in respect of God and that is his own Glory which he aimed at in the first place in ordaining that day The second is in respect of man and that is mans good and benefit and this is the main end next unto his own Glory which the Lord aimed at in the Institution of the Sabbath Therefore Gen. 2. 3. and Exod. 20. 11. he blessed the Sabbath day that is he ordained it as a means to procure and bring a blessing on the Heads of those that Conscionably keep it which shews that God aimed at the good of man in ordaining the Sabbath For the further clearing of this point we must know that the Sabbath was Instituted of God for a twofold good of man 1. For his Spirituall good and benefit That by the Religious exercises of that day as hearing the Word receiving the Sacrament Prayer c. Man's Soul might be builded up in saving Knowledg Faith and other Spiritual Graces and so by this means the Salvation of man might be furthered therefore God hath appointed on that day many sorts of spirituall Duties some publick some private as Hearing Reading Praying Meditation c. all which tend to this end to the furtherance of the Soul in Grace and consequently to further the Salvation of those that Conscionably perform those Duties 2. The Sabbath is ordained for the Temporall good of mans body and outward Estate and that in two respects 1. That so men might have some time wherein to rest from the bodily labours of their particular Callings for this is for the good of mans body it tends to the maintenance of the strength and health of it when it hath some respite from labour upon one day in seven whereas without this rest mens bodies could not continue long in health and strength but must needs be wasted and worn out with overmuch labour Deut. 5. 14. The seventh day is the Sabbath c. In it thou shalt not do any Work thou nor thy Son c. that thy Man-servant and Maid-servant may rest as well as thou 2. The Sabbath was Instituted for the Temporal good of Man in a further respect Namely that by the conscionable keeping of it the blessing of God may be procured upon mans body goods and outward Estate Therefore Temporal prosperity is often promised in Scripture to such as keep the Sabbath Esay 58. 13. If thou call the Sabbath a delight c. I will cause thee to ride upon the High places of the Earth and feed thee with the Heritage of Jacob thy Father c. Jer. 17. 24. If ye bring no burden on the Sabbath day but hallow the Sabbath c. then shall there enter into the Gates of this City Kings and Princes sitting on the Throne of David c. and this City shall remain for ever Use 1 Use 1. See the exceeding goodnesse and love of God unto mankind in that he aimed at our good as well as at his own Glory in Instituting the Sabbath He hath made it for us as well as for himself He hath appointed the Sanctifying of it to be a means of good to us aswell as of Glory to himself This magnifieth his Love and goodnesse towards us in that he doth tender our good and happiness next unto his own Glory in Instituting the Sabbath And not onely in this but in all other his speciall Ordinances God hath respected our good together with his own Glory and he hath appointed them aswell for our good as for his Glory So in ordaining the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments he hath respected the good and Salvation of Men Ephes 4. 11. He hath given Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints and for the Edifying of the body of Christ So he hath appointed civill Magistracy and the Authority of Kings and other Governours of the Common-Wealth for the good of Mankind Rom. 13. 4. The Magistrate is the Minister of God to us for good See also 1 Tim. 2. 2. So God hath ordained the state of Marriage for the good of Man Gen. 2. 18. It is not good that man should be alone I will make him a help c. In a word God hath made and ordained all Creatures for the good of Man that they should be usefull and profitable to him yea the very Angells themselves the most excellent of all Creatures are appointed of God for the good of man Hebr. 1. ult All Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them that shall be Heirs of Salvation Here then we may well break out into that Speech of David admiring Gods goodness towards us Psal 8. What is man that thou art mindfull of him c. Let us stir up our selves to true and unfeigned thankfulness to God for his unspeakable kindness to us respecting not onely his own Glory but our good and happiness and Salvation in all his Ordinances and Creatures And let it move us to shew our love to him again by our Conscionable care of serving him and of yielding all Obedience to his Will Use 2 Use 2. See by this what great cause we have to make conscience of sanctifying the Lord's Sabbath duly seeing the sanctifying of it is ordained of God for our good both Spirituall and Temporall Therefore as we respect our own good the good of our Souls and Bodies and of our outward estate as we desire the Blessing of God upon all these and as we desire in all these to thrive and prosper so let us conscionably keep the Sabbath Day Holy If the
healed in Body as we see that Woman did who had been twelve years Diseased with an Issue of bloud Mark 5. 27. She came in the presse behind and touched His Garment c. So should we in all outward and bodily miseries presse unto Christ by earnest prayer for help and deliverance 2. But much more in all our Spirituall miseries and inward distresses of mind and conscience as in the feeling of the burden of our own sins and of God's wrath we should go unto Christ by Faith yea we should presse unto him by Faith labouring to lay hold on him and on the merit of his Sufferings for the pardon of our Sins at least to touch Him by the hand of our Faith This is the onely way to find ease and comfort Use 1 Use 1. This reproveth such as being in distresse and affliction take wrong Courses to find ease and deliverance Some being in outward affliction as bodily Sicknesse or the like fall to murmuring and repining to impatient words and behaviour thinking so to ease themselves but this is the way to increase their own torment of Body and Mind and to make the burden of their own Cross heavier than it would be Others are worse who in such Cases stick not to seek help from Witches or Wizzards and what is this but instead of going to Christ for help to seek to the Devil for it See Levit. 20. 6. it is said of such If any turn after such as work with Spirits and South-Sayers to go a Whoring c. I will set my face against that Person and cut him off This was Saul's sin when God had cast him off he went to the Witch of Endor that is to the Devil for help 1 Sam. 28. Again others there be who in time of inward trouble of conscience when they feel the burden of sin lying on their conscience and the wrath of God terrifying them instead of going to Christ by Faith betake themselves to merry Company or to vain Sports thinking so to find ease but this is not the way This course may for the present stop the mouth of thy accusing conscience but it will not take away the sting of it nothing will do this but the bloud of Christ applyed by Faith Use 2 Use 2. In all miseries and troubles outward and inward take the right course and use this as the best remedy Go to Christ Jesus for help go to Him by Faith and by Prayer yea presse unto Him by earnest prayer and labour to lay hold on his Power and Mercy and on the merit of his Sufferings by a true and lively Faith at least to touch him though it be but by a weak Faith Thou shalt find vertue to come from him to give thee ease and comfort in all distresses Let no impediments therefore hinder thee from going to Christ in such Cases presse to him through all difficulties let not the greatness of thy misery or multitude of thy sins keep thee back nay rather these must drive thee to Christ And the more to incourage thee to go to him consider how he calleth all unto him that travel c. promising to refresh them Matth. 11. 28. and Joh. 6. 37. Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out Observ 2 So many as had Plagues Observ 2. Hence gather That all Diseases of the Body are Fruits of Sin sent of God upon Men as scourges for sin 1 Cor. 11. 30. For the sin of prophaning the Lord's Supper many were sick c. Joh. 5. 14. Sin no more lest a worse c. Therefore Mark 2. 5. when our Saviour was about to cure the sick of the Palsy he first pronounced forgiveness of sins to him to shew that his sins were the cause of his Disease Lam. 3. 39. Man complaineth for his sins c. Reas God doth not chastise or punish those that are innocent but such as deserve it by their sins otherwise he should be unjust And although he doth not alwayes aym at the satisfying of his justice in punishing sin when he layeth sickness upon men for sometimes he layeth it upon his own Children for other ends as for the tryall and exercise of their Faith and Patience c. as we see in Job's example yet it is true that in all Diseases and Sicknesses laid upon Men Sin is still the originall and procuring cause so as if there were no sin in them they should never feel Sicknesse Use 1 Use 1. To cause patience in bearing every Sickness contentedly seeing it is the Fruit of our Sins and comes justly upon us God do thus no wrong in so scourging us therefore submit to this hand consider thy Sins have deserved Hell fire if God free thee from this an Christ be well content he should lay a short tryall on thee by Sicknesse yea be thankfull to him for dealing so well with thee See Mich. 7. 9. I will bear the wrath of God because I have sinned c. Vse 2 Use 2. In all sickness of the body search out our sins the causes of our sickness and be humbled truly for them acknowledging them and craving pardon for them in Christ This is the way to find ease and comfort and deliverance if God see it good for us Sin being removed the sting of sin is removed and then the sickness it self also shall be removed or sanctifyed to us This course David took Psal 32. See before Chap. 2. ver 5. Use 3 Use 3. See by this the heinousness of sin and how offensive it is to God in that it causeth him so sharply to chastise men and to scourge us with these whips of bodily Diseases c. Ver. 11 12. And the unclean Spirits c. Here is set down the second sort of Miracles wrought by our Saviour namely his powerful subduing of the Devils in such as were possessed In the words consider two things 1. The Behaviour of the Persons possessed or of the Devils in them set forth in two things 1. Their falling down before our Saviour Christ 2. Their crying out and confessing him to be the Son of God 2. The Carriage of our Saviour towards them ver 12. He rebuked them sharply that they should not utter Him Unclean Spirits that is the Devils being in those that were possessed with them and they are called Unclean to shew their nature in that they are wholly polluted with the filth and corruption of Sin and thereby to put difference between them and the good Angels which are clean and pure Spirits as we heard Chap. 1. Ver. 23. Fell down before Him in token of their subjection to him and to his Divine Power which he made them to feel for he compelled them to it withal it is likely that they fell down before him in way of supplication to him entreating him not to torment them by casting them out for so they used to do at other times when our Saviour went about to cast them out as we heard Chap.
unfeignedly unthankfull unto him for this his mercy and goodness Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Devill 's being in this party possessed did cause him in his mad and frantick fits to cut wound his own body with sharp stones We may hence observe That it is the Devil's property to cause men to offer violence and to do hurt and mischief to their own bodies Thus he tempted our Saviour Christ to cast himself down headlong from the Pinnacle of the Temple that he might hurt and mayhm his own body Thus also it is the Devill that tempteth some desperate persons to lay violent hands upon themselves and wilfully to take away their own bodily lives as did Saul Ahitophel and Judas Hence the Devill is said to be a murderer Joh. 8. 44. And Abaddon and Apollyon that is a destroyer Revel 9. 11. because he seeks the hurt and destruction not only of the souls of men but also of their bodies Use 1 Use 1. Let this unnaturall sin of hurting and shewing cruelty to our own bodies be far from us yea let the very thought of it be far from us Remember who it is that tempteth men to this sin of self-murder and of hurting and mayming our own bodies It is the Devill that murderer of souls and bodies who thrusteth men forward unto it Learn therefore to detest all kinds and degrees of self-murder And consider that it is the worst of all kinds of Murder The light of nature abhorreth it Ephes 5. No man ever hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it c. And Solomon saith A good man is mercifull to his Beast How much more to his own body Use 2 Use 2. See what to judge of the practice of Popish Fryers cruelly whipping and scourging themselves in way of satisfaction for their sins This practice is from Satan not from God who never required it at their hands Observ 3 Observ 3. Observe here the woful and miserable condition of this party possessed with Devils in that the Devils being entred into him and having gotten possession in him did abuse him in such vile manner not only torturing his body with pains but also terrifying his mind and distempering it with frenzy causing him to behave himself as a mad-man in going naked in crying out day and night and cutting himself with stones Now this teacheth us That it is a great and fearfull misery for any to be subject to the power and tyranny of the Devill He is a most cruell and unmercifull Tyrant to those over whom he hath any power and the case of such as are in bondage under him is most wretched and miserable worse then the case of the Israelites being in subjection under Pharaoh's Task-Masters and worse than the case of those that are in bondage under the Turk at this day or under any other cruel Tyrant upon Earth This is true both of those that are in bodily subjection and of those also that are in spiritual bondage under the Devil Touching the first sort which are those over whose bodies the Lord suffers the Devil to have power whether it be to enter into them and to possess them or otherwise to afflict them we see how miserable their case is and how unmercifully the Devil tyrannizeth over them This is plain by this example which we have in this Text and Mark 9. 18. in him that had the dumb spirit of whom it is said that the Devill did tear him and make him foam and gnash his teeth and pine away And Verse 22. oft-times he cast him into the fire and water to destroy him c. This also we see in Job over whose body so soon as the Devill had power given him of God he presently smote him with boyls from the sole of his foot to his crown Job 2. 7. Touching the second sort namely such as are in spirituall bondage under the Devill as all wicked men are their case is much more wretched and miserable For the Devill hath them and holds them as in a snare and leads them captive at his own will 2 Tim. 2. ult He entreth into their hearts by his wicked suggestions as he did into the heart of Judas and he worketh in them effectually and powerfully by his temptations Ephes 2. 2. thrusting them forward into all kind of fearful and dangerous sins thereby seeking as a roaring Lion to devour their souls that is to bring them to utter destruction yea causing them to destroy their own souls by such sins so far as lyeth in them And in so doing he doth them much more hurt and dealeth much more cruelly with them than if he did afflict and torture their bodies never so much or cause them to hurt or wound their own bodies as he did here to this party possessed Thus then we see what a fearfull misery it is to be subject to the power of Satan Vse 1 Use 1. This should move us to pity those that are in subjection and slavery under the Devil whether it be in bodily or spiritual subjection Have compassion on them in their misety as we pity the gally-slaves and prisoners living in slavery under the Turk Such as are under Satan's power are much more to be pitied Who could have looked on this party possessed without pity And we are not only to pity them but to shew our pity by using the best means we can to have them delivered from this miserable servitude especially by praying earnestly unto God to set them free Use 2 Use 2. Such as are under Satan's power and tyranny either in their bodies or in their souls and consciences must use the means to come speedily out of their misery and woful estate If God should give power unto the Devil over the bodies of any in these times to possess them or otherwise to afflict them as he may do and doth sometimes in this case they ought to seek to God by prayer that they may be delivered from the Devil's power and not only to use their own prayers but to crave the extraordinary prayers of the Church in their behalf So also those that are in spiritual thraldom of soul conscience under the Devil they must use all means to be delivered they must cry unto God by prayer to deliver them even as the Israelites did being in bondage under Pharaoh And they must diligently frequent the publick Ministery which is the ordinary means to deliver them If one be taken prisoner by the Turks What means and friends are used to ransome him How much more shouldst thou use all possible means to be delivered from the power and tyranny of the Devill which is far more fearful and cruel then the Turkish tyranny Labour therefore to see and feel thy wofull bondage under Satan and use all means to be freed from it Cry unto God day and night to set thee free and to assure thee by faith that thou art redeemed and delivered by Christ Jesus from this spiritual bondage
grow into dislike and hatred of him and his doctrine because he gave the Devils leave to enter into the Swine And even so we see it came to pass for when they saw their Swine drowned they grew into such dislike of our Saviour that they would have him depart out of their Coasts as we shall see afterward Observ Observ In that the Devils could not enter into the Herd of Swine without asking leave of Christ we learn That though the Devill have great power to do hurt to men and other creatures yet it is no absolute but a limited power he is potestas sub potestate a power under another power that is under the power of God by whom he is so limited and restrained that he can do nothing without leave and permission from him Thus we see that he could not touch or hurt Job in his body or goods further than the Lord gave him leave Job 1. 2. Chapters As the Lord hath set bounds and doors for the Sea to keep it in that it overflowes not the Earth Job 38. 10. so also he hath set the Devil his bounds which he cannot pass See Revel 20. 1. Use 1 Use 1. This is for the great comfort of the faithful against the power and malice of Satan Though he have power to tempt them unto sin and that sometimes with great violence and force and though he may have power also to afflict them outwardly in their bodies or goods as he did Job and to stir up great troubles against them yet his power is not absolute but limited by the Power of God and of Christ Jesus so as he cannot do what he list against the faithful but so much only as the Lord suffers him to do If he could not without leave from Christ enter into the Swine much less can he do any thing against the bodies or souls of Gods Children without leave from God And it is certain the Lord will never suffer him to hurt them simply that is to say to hinder their salvation He may give him leave to afflict their bodies and to stirr up great outward troubles against them to try and exercise them and he may also give leave to him inwardly to assault their minds and hearts with forcible and grievous temptations but he will never suffer him to tempt or try them above their strength but will give an issue that they may at length escape from it neither will he ever suffer the gates of Hell that is the power of the Devil to prevail against their salvation Though he desire to winnow the Saints yet c. Luke 22. Use 2 Use 2. Seeing the Devil can do nothing without Gods permission let us daily pray unto the Lord to restrain his power that he may not do us that hurt in our bodies or souls or otherwise as he desireth especially that he may not prevail against us by his sinfull temptations We are taught in the Lords Prayer to pray That the Lord will not lead us into temptation c. that is that he will not give us over to the power of Satan to be overcome of him when he tempteth us but that he will restrain his power and not suffer him to tempt us above our strength So much of the twofold Request of the Devils unto our Saviour Now followeth his yielding to the latter of the Requests in the beginning of the 13 Verse Incontinently he gave them leave to enter into the Swine Quest Quest Wherefore did he permit them to have their will in entring into the Swine and in drowning them in the Sea Answ Answ Not to satisfie their wicked desire or to give them any contentment but rather for these Reasons 1. To shew his power over them and that they could not do this without his permission 2. That by this means it might plainly appear how great a number of Devils was in the party possessed in that being cast out they entred into so great a number of Swine being about 2000 and carried them all headlong into the Sea and consequently that this miracle of casting out such a multitude of Devils might appear to be the greater 3. That by this means the fame of the miracle might spread the further 4. To try the affection of the Gadarens towards him whether they would prefer their Swine before him and to lay open their profaneness and covetousness in that they would rather part with Christ then with their Swine 5. Lastly That he might justly punish such a profane people for their profaneness and wickedness by suffering the Devils to destroy their Swine Observ Observ Here then we learn That the Lord sometimes for just causes doth suffer the Devill to have his will in doing such hurt as he desireth He suffered him here to destroy the Gadarens Swine He suffered him to afflict Job in his body goods and Children most grievously He suffered him to possess the bodies of many in our Saviour's time He suffered him to bow the body of a believing woman for 18. years together Luke 13. 16. So also the Lord suffers him often to hurt men not only in their bodies or goods but also in their souls and consciences by his wicked suggestions and temptations drawing them to sin as we see in the examples not only of Judas and of Ananias and Sapphira but of David himself 1 Chron. 21. 1. Quest Quest What are the causes for which God doth thus suffer the Devil to have his will in doing so much hurt Answ Answ The causes are two especially 1. To shew his Wrath and Justice against the wicked punishing them justly for their sins by this means and using the Devil as an instrument to execute vengeance on them This might be one reason why many were possessed in our Saviour's time 2. He doth this for the good of his Children partly chastising them by this means for their sins and so humbling them and causing them to renew their repentance partly exercising and trying their faith patience and other graces which are in them and so causing these graces to shine forth the more clearly in them as we see in the example of Job Use When Satan is permitted of God to hurt or afflict our selves or others any way we must not look only at him who is the instrument but chiefly at the providence of God by whose permission Satan hath such power to do hurt and in this case we must acknowledg and magnifie either the just Judgment of God on the wicked or else his goodness and mercy to his Children in turning all the malice and power of Satan to their good and to the furtherance of their salvation Thus did Job Chap. 1. When his Goods and Children were taken away by the Devil's means he said The Lord had taken them c. Mark 5. 13 14. Then the unclean spirit went out c. Octob. 8. 1620. HItheirto of the Circumstances of the Miracle and of certain Antecedents which went immediately before it
of the ordinary means sanctified of him for the recovery of health Let them know That as God forbiddeth us to kill that is to take away or hurt our own or others life so on the contrary he will have us to use the means of preserving life and health and that such as wilfully neglect those means are accessary to their own sickness and death And whereas they say God shall be their Physitian they must know that as God is the author and preserver of health so he doth it orninarily by means which who so willingly neglect cannot expect health and recovery from God Observ 2 Observ 2. In that it is further said of this woman that she was so careful and desirous of health that she was content to suffer many things of the Physitians and that she spent all she had upon Physick to recover her health hence gather That the health of our bodies should be dear and pretious unto us we should so highly esteem it that we should be content to do and suffer much for the preservation of it and for the recovery of it in time of sickness we should be willing to suffer hard things and to use such means as are painful and tedious for the health of our bodies We should also prefer it before worldly wealth being content to part with that for the recovery and maintenance of our health as this woman did See Job chap. 2. ver 4. Reas 1 Reas 1. Bodily health is a special furtherance and help to us in the service of God and in the performance of the duties of our Callings and the want of it is a great hinderance to us therein Reas 2 Reas 2. Health of body is such a blessing of God as maketh all other outward blessings of this life more sweet and comfortable to us and without which they are all uncomfortable and tedious unto us worldly wealth honour friends children yea life it self is uncomfortable without health of body Use 1 Use 1. See what cause then for us to honour the Physitian and his Calling and to accompt well of the means of Physick in time of sickness seeing it is sanctified of God for our good and for the preserving of health and life which should be so dear to us Use 2 Use 2. This reproveth such as shew too little respect of their bodily health Though all desire health yet all use not the means Some are careless of the means to preserve it as good Dyet Physick and the like means Some would willingly have health but they will not do or suffer any hard things for their healths sake yea though they be advised to it by the skilful Physitian yet if he prescribe them strict Dyet or sharp Physick the nature of their Disease requiring it they will not endure it These discover great folly in prefering their present ease and contentment before their future good and preservation of their bodily health Others again though they desire health yet prefer their worldly goods and wealth before it so niggardly and covetous that they will not be at the cost bestow Physick upon themselves in time of sickness All these may learn of this diseased Woman in this Text to make more pretious account of this great blessing of God the health of their bodies Use 3 Use 3. This doth also much more condemn such as use means to hurt and hinder the health of their bodies as bad dyet surfetting drunkenness c. by which many dangerous noysome and incurable Diseases are bred and ingendred in the body as Burning-Feavers Dropsies Pleurisies c. Insomuch that we may well think thut such Intemperance killeth more than the Sword Use 4 Use 4. If the natural health and welfare of our bodies should be so dear to us much more pretious should the spiritual health of our souls be to us How careful should we be to use all means for the obtaining and preserving of it How careful to seek to spiritual Physitians First and chiefly to Jesus Christ who came to heal the broken-hearted we should therefore seek to him by true faith and repentance that by him we may be cured both of the guilt and corruption of sin that it raign not in us Then also we are to seek spirituall help and advice from the faithful Ministers of Christ whom he hath appointed as his Deputies to prescribe us spiritual Physick for our souls out of his Word Again how willing should we be to receive and take hard and tedious Physick for the health of our souls when it is prescribed us How willing to take the painful Physick of repentance and mortification of our sinful lusts How willing to swallow many bitter pills and potions of inward sighs groans and heart-breaks for our sins that we may be cured of them There be some who for the health of their bodies will take every moneth in the year almost a potion or pill or some unpleasant Physick And shall not we be content to take hard Physick for the spiritual health of our souls Again in the last place seeing the health of our bodies should be so dear to us that we should prefer it before our worldly substance as this woman did how much more should we prefer the spirituall health and salvation of our souls before all this worlds goods remembring what our Saviour hath said What shall it profit a man to win the whole world and to lose his soul Matth. 16. 26. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that she was never the better but rather the worse notwithstanding she had suffered so much of many Physitians hence we learn That although Physick be a special gift and blessing of God and not to be neglected in time of sickness when the case requires it yet it is not of it self available to recover health and preserve it or to cure diseases without the blessing of God giving vertue to it It is only an outward means whose vertue and efficacy is wholly from God without whose blessing upon the use of it it may be so far from doing good and healing the body that it may hurt and distemper it more as we see in the example of this woman As it is in Meats and Drinks though they be ordained of God for our nourishment yet they do not nourish without his blessing therefore if he break the staff of our bread that is take away the strength and vertue by which it should nourish then we may eat and not be nourished So it is in Physick though it be ordained to heal the body yet it cannot do good without the blessing of God giving vertue to it to heal Vse 1 Use 1. See the reason why Physick doth not alwayes help the sick it is because God doth alwayes give vertue to it to heal and cure the diseased he doth not alwayes see it good for the sick party to be recovered no reason therefore to contemn the means though it be not alwayes available c. Use 2 Use 2.
Devil sets them awork c. Use Use Pray unto God to restrain the rage and malice of the wicked and to deliver us from evill and unreasonable men 2 Thess 3. 2. It followeth But she could not Here is shewed the cause which hindred Herodias from accomplishing her bloody purpose against John namely her unability to do that she desired One reason whereof is shewed in the next Verse because Herod kept John from her c. But the main and principal reason was this That God himself did by his power and special providence so restrain the power and malice of this wicked woman that she could not as yet have her will against John though afterward she had as we shall hear Observ Observ Though the wicked bear deadly malice oftentimes against God's Saints and Servants yet the Lord doth by his power and special providence restrain their malice and power that they cannot alwayes do that hurt and mischief unto Gods Servants which they desire to do Sometimes indeed he permitteth them to annoy and hurt his servants in their bodies goods and outward estate for the greater and more through tryal of his servants and for other just causes but he doth not alwayes suffer them so to do but often restraineth and bridleth their power and malice so as they cannot have their wills against his servants Thus the Lord restrained the power and malice of Saul that he could not take away the life of David though he sought to do it Thus he bridled the malice of Haman against the Nation of the Jews that he could not root them out though he laboured to do it Thus he bridled the rage and malice of Sennacherib King of Assyria against God and his people 2 King 19. 27. I know thy rage against me Therefore I will put my hock into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips c. Use 1 Use 1. Comfort to the faithful Servants of God against the fury and rage of their most malicious and deadly enemies They cannot do what they list against them but that only which the Lord suffereth them to do and he will suffer them to do nothing but that which shall in the end turn to the good and salvation of his servants Though they may hate and persecute them even unto death yet not a hair of their head shall perish without the Will of God See Matth. 10. 29. Use 2 Use 2. Be thankful unto God for his goodness and mercy to his Church and People so restraining the malice of the wicked that they cannot do them so much hurt and mischief as they would If they might have their will the Devil and wicked men would root out all the faithful servants of God from the earth It is therefore the Lord 's infinite mercy and goodness to us that we are not consumed and cut off from the Land of the living by such wicked instruments of Satan Mark 6. 20. For Herod feared John c. July 15. 1621. IN the former verse is shewed that Herodias bearing inward grudg against John would have killed him but could not effect her bloudy purpose Now the Evangelist in this verse mentioneth a special reason why she could not kill him and what hindered her namely this that Herod himself who had cast John in Prison yet did so fear and reverence his person because he was a Holy and Just man that he would not suffer Herodias to put him to death but kept him alive for a time notwithstanding all her rage and malice against him And withall the Evangelist mentioneth not onely this speciall favour and kindness shewed by Herod unto the person of John in keeping him safe from Herodias for a time but also the good respect and liking which he shews to his Doctrine in that he heard it gladly and obeyed it also in part This is the sum of the verse More particularly and distinctly consider in it three things 1. Herod's fearing or reverencing of John's person 2. The ground or motive of it Because he knew him to be a just and holy man 3. The manifestation of it by the effects 1. Toward his person keeping him from Herodias 2. Toward his Doctrine or Ministry 1. In hearing him 2. Hearing him gladly 3. Doing many things General Doctrine from the whole Verse In that Herod did so many good things and yet was but a wicked man we may hence gather That one may go very far in Religion and Christianity and yet not be truely Religious nor a sound Christian but remain an Hypocrite and wicked man Herod had many good things in him and he did many good things and yet neither had enough nor did enough to prove him a good Christian He bare a kind of love and liking and reverence to Johns person and Doctrine being willing and desirous to hear him and ready to obey him in many things and not onely so but he shewed him special kindness and mercy in keeping him alive and safe when Herodias would have killed him and yet all this while Herod remained but an Hypocrite and wicked man which shews that one may go very far in a shew of true Religion and Grace and yet be void of it See also for proof of this Hebr. 6. 4. and Luke 8. 13. See also what hath bin said before of this point upon Mark 4. 16. But more particularly to open this point here There are three sorts of good things which may be found in a wicked man or Hypocrite which yet are not sufficient to prove him a sound Christian The first respecteth the mind and understanding The second the Heart and affections The third the outward life and Conversation Touching the first the mind and understanding a wicked man may be enlightened with a good measure of knowledg in the Word of God and the Doctrine of it so as to be able to speak and discourse readily of it to others yea to Preach it to others as Judas did Hebr. 6. 4. such as commit the sin against the Holy Ghost are enlightened with knowledg So Hebr. 10. 26. and 2 Pet. 2. 21. Some know the way of Righteousness and yet fall away c. Touching the second which is the Heart and affections a wicked man may have his heart moved and stirred with some good affections as a kind of love and desire to the Word of God and a kind of joy and delight in it for a time See for this Hebr. 6. and Luke 8. 13. and here in the example of Herod So also a wicked man may be affected with a kind of love and reverence to Gods Ministers and to other good men as we see also in Herod here He may also have some other good affections as a kind of love and desire after Heaven and Salvation such as was in wicked Balaam wishing to dye the death of the Righteous c. and Hebr. 6. 5. They are said to taste of the powers of the World to come Again a wicked man may be affected
this end they must walk wisely and religiously toward their Children being careful to train them up in instruction and information of the Lord Eph. 6. 4. and to go before them by holy example This is a great means to move reverence in their Children toward them And they must take heed on the other side of foolish vain and loose behaviour before their Children especially when they are young lest this breed contempt c. Mark 7. 10. And who so curseth Father or Mother let him dye the Death Mar. 17. 1621. THe third Duty of Children to Parents is obedience Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord c. So Col. 3. 20. This obedience consisteth in sundry things But especially in these five 1. In submitting to Parents instruction and teaching As Parents are to bring them up in good nuture and instruction so Children are to yield themselves willingly and gladly to be instructed shewing themselves teachable Prov. 13. 1. A wise son heareth his Fathers instruction Contrarily Prov. 15. 5. A fool despiseth his Fathers instruction See also Prov. 1. 8. 2. In obeying the Precepts and Will of their Parents in things lawfull and indifferent Jer. 35. The Rechabites being forbidden of their Father to build Houses plant Vineyards or drink Wine c. obeyed therein and are commended and rewarded of God for their obedience Isaac shewed obedience to his Father Abraham in suffering himself to be bound and laid on the Altar for a Sacrifice Our Saviour Christ himself was also subject to his Parents Luke 2. 51. 3. In submitting patiently to the Reproofs and Corrections of Parents and in being carefull to reforme the faults for which they are either reproved or corrected yea though they should reprove or correct unjustly yet Children ought not to refuse or rebell against them Though this seem tedious and against stomack yet seeing God requires it Children must shew obedience even to unjust reproof and correction Touching Reproof Prov. 15. 5. He that regardeth his Father's reproof is wise Et contrá Prov. 13. 1. Solomon makes it the property of an undutifull scorner not to hear his Father's rebuke Therefore every good Child must thence learn on the contrary to hear and obey their Parents rebukes Numb 12. 14. The Lord saies thus of Miriam If her Father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven Dayes By which Speech he implyeth That if a Parent shew a signe of displeasure against the Child for any fault it is fit the Child should not onely take it patiently but shew himself also ashamed thereat Touching Correction Hebr. 12. 9. We have had Fathers of our Flesh which corrected us and we gave them reverence c. A Duty of Parents to correct Children when there is cause therefore Childrens Duty is to sumbit unto it as being for their own good A means through the Blessing of God to reform vice and sin in them yea to deliver their Souls from Hell Prov. 23. 14. 4. In yielding to their Parents Will and Appointment for choyce of their Particular Callings As Parents are to take order and see that their Children live not idly without a Calling but that they be trained up in some honest and lawfull Calling wherein to do good in Church or Common-wealth So Children are willingly to be guided by Parents therein and to take upon them that Calling which their Parents appoint them unto so that it be a lawful Calling in it self and they fit for it Our Saviour himself therein submitted to Joseph and Mary living under them in the Trade of a Carpenter Mark 6. 3. So the Patriarchs were Shepheards by the Appointment of Jacob their Father So David before he was called to the Kingdom was a Keeper of Sheep by the Appointment of Jesse his Father See 1 Sam. 16. the 11th Verse compared with the 19th 5. Lastly The Obedience of Children stands in being directed and ruled by their Parents in the matter of their Marriage when they come to years fit for Marriage and are willing or desirous to en●er into that estate The choice of a fit Husband or Wife being a very serious and weighty matter and such as doth very nearly concern the good of the Child therefore in this matter all Children are to be guided by their Parents and not to presume without their Will and Consent to enter into the state of Marriage Parents by the Law of God have power to dispose of their Children in Marriage 1 Cor. 7. 38. The Father is said to give his Virgin in Marriage Deut. 7. 3. Thou shalt not give thy Daughter to the Canaanites c. Exod. 22. 17. There is a Law that he which defloured a Maid should marry her but not without her Father's Consent Isaac at the Age of forty years was at his Father's choice for a Wife And so Jacob was sent by Isaac his Father to Laban's House or Family to take a Wife thence Gen. 28. 2 Sam. 13. 13. Thamar saith to her Brother Ammon The King will not deny me to thee The Heathen knew this by the light of Nature See Gen. 34. 3. in Sichem It is also decreed by all Laws Civil Canon c. The Papists require it Concil Trid. Reas 1 Reas 1. Children are a part of the Goods and Substance of their Parents over which they have power to dispose of them as of other of their Substance Exod. 21. 7. The Jews might by the Law sell their Children to become Servants to others according to the Custom of those times And it seems that the Devil took this for granted that Job's Children were part of his Substance and Possessions and therefore having power given him over his Goods and Possessions he slew his Children Psal 127. 3. An heritage of or from the Lord. Reas 2 Reas 2. By Marriage Children are called to leave their Parents after a sort Gen. 2. 24. For this cause shall a man leave his Father and Mother c. Therefore it is fit that this leaving of Parents should be with their consent Reas 3 Reas 3. By Marriage the power of Parents over the Child is in some sort passed over to the Husband or Wife and is it fit it should be so passed over without Parents consent Here two or three Questions are needful to be briefly resoved Quest 1 Quest 1. Whether a Parent may urge or compell his Child to marry against the Child's Affection Answ Answ He may not because without free consent of the parties to be married there can be no lawful Marriage this consent being of the Essence of Marriage yet a Parent may command or require his Child to marry in some case and the Child ought not without weighty and just cause to refuse Quest 2 Quest 2. May a Parent restrain or keep his Child from Marriage Answ Answ He may keep him from this or that Marriage in particular with such or such a Party for some just cause but not from Marriage in generall
case of Conscience supposed by the Scribes and Pharisees touching Children's relieving Parents in their necessity The Case or Question is whether if a Child had sworn or solemnly vowed not to help his Parents he were tyed to help them 2. Their Resolution of the Case or Question by their Doctrine viz. That in this Case the Child was not tyed to relieve his Father or Mother but was free from sin in refusing to do them Good Touching the first Observ 1 Observ 1. See here how great sins and abuses raigned among the Jews in our Saviour's time as open profanation of the name of God by unlawfull and wicked Oaths and Vowes binding themselves by such Oaths to the committing of sin and omission of necessary Duties commanded in the Law of God as the relief of their own Parents I say these grosse corruptions were now raigning amongst this People being not onely practised by the Common sort but also allowed and maintained by the Scribes and Pharisees the Teachers of the Church and yet for all this God had his Church at the same time even amongst these wicked Jews And therefore our Saviour Christ notwithstanding these great corruptions in Life and Doctrine did not separate himself nor command his Disciples to separate from this Church of the Jews in respect of communicating with them in the publick Ordinances and Worship of God as the Ministery of the Word c. But He and his Disciples usually resorted to the publick Synagogues of the Jews yea He commanded his Disciples to hear the Scribes and Pharisees sitting in Moses Chayr Matth. 25. Which manifestly proveth That there may be a true Church of God even in such places where some yea many grosse sins and corruptions do raign and bear sway and that there is no warrant for any to separate from a particular Church because of such abuses and corruptions in it Which therefore condemneth the practise of the Brownists separating from our Church because of the Corruptions in it c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Learn here that it is the property of wicked and ungodly persons such as these Jews here spoken of to vow and swear unto things evil and unlawfull as to the omission of some necessary Duty commanded of God or to the commission of any sin forbidden of God in his Word This is to bind themselves by an Oath to the dishonouring and provoking of God by sin which is a most wicked practice being a gross and hanious abuse of an Oath or Vow and a high degree of taking God's name in vain for which he hath said he will not hold such guiltlesse See more of this Point before Chap. 6. 23. Use Use See the grievous sin of such as stick not to vow or swear sometimes to do that which is in it self a sin as to be revenged on enemie c. or on the other side to swear or vow the omission of good Duties as that they will not have dealing again with one that hath wronged them that they will never do good to their Enemy that they will not come to such a Church or hear such a Preacher again because he hath perhaps touched their conscience for some sin which they will not forsake Yea though one should in sudden passion of anger make such a Vow or Oath yet would not this excuse it from being a most hanious sin Observ Observ 3. In that it was wrath and anger conveived against Parents as it is most likely that moved the Children thus wickedly to swear that they should have no profit by them Hence observe How great and dangerous a sin rash anger and wrath is in that it is the Cause of other hainous and grievous sins as of dishonour and open contempt of Parents yea of vowing and swearing not to do them Good c. These weregrievous sins yet it seems that these wicked Children made nothing of them when they were once inraged with anger against their Parents for some discontentment given Prov. 29. 22. A furious man aboundeth in transgression Full of anger full of sin Especially this is true of extream and outragious anger which is nothing else but a short fury or madnesse as the Heathen man could say Prov. 27. 4. Wrath is cruel and anger is outragious Experience shews what grievous sins this raging anger is often the Cause of Is it not the Cause of wicked cursing swearing and of bitter rayling at others Is is not the Cause many times of contention quarrelling fighting wounding yea of actual murder Was it not so in Can's anger Gen. 4. See Prov. 26. 18. Yea how have some good men been overcome of this raging passion and by it thrust forward to very grievous sins See this in David who being suddenly inraged against Nabal vowed his Death and the Death of all his Family 2 Sam. 2. 5. In a word what sin almost is so grievous but one that is thus inraged with furious anger is ready to fall into being tempted to it in his anger Such a one is a fit subject for the Devil to work upon and he may at that time in the midst of his rage fasten any sin upon him and drive him head-long into it Reason Reason This furious passion doth exceedingly distemper the whole man both inward and outward It distempers the mind bereaving a man of all judgment and use of reason for the time It distempers the memory making him forget himself and his Place and Duty to God and Man yea it expelleth all thought of God and of good things As it distempers the inner man so also the Body and every part and member of it making them fit Instruments of sin c. Use Admonition to all to take heed of this hurtfull and dangerous sin of anger and especially of furious wrath being the Cause of so many other grievous sins and laying a man open so wide to the Devil's temptations Especially beware of custom in this sin which is exceeding hardly left If all occasions of sin must be shunned then this as one great occasion Remedies against sinfull anger 1. Remove the causes and occasions of it as pride of heart self-love waywardness niceness and curiosity in small and tryfling matters needless prying into the lives of others familiarity with angry persons Especially labour to mortify the sin of pride in our selves c. 2. Labour by all means to resist and stay the first motions of sinfull anger arising in us either by lifting the heart to God desiring his Grace to repell this passion or by calling to mind some place of Scripture condemning this sin or by departing out of the company where we are if there be no other way Howsoever it be be sure in this case not to be sudden in doing or speaking any thing in the midst of our passion but stay a time till the mind be settled and in better temper Take heed of multiplying words c. 3. Often think of the hurtfulness and dangerousness of this sin being
unto them c. This hath been before observed Observ 2 Observ 2. It is just with the Lord to deprive such People and Persons of the means of Salvation who contemn the same and make not good use of them while they do enjoy them See this also before observed I proceed to the occasion of the Miracle which was a twofold Work of Mercy performed by the Friends of the Deaf and Dumb man viz. Their bringing him to Christ and their beseeching Christ to Cure him by putting his hands on him Where 1. Consider the person unto whom they shew mercy described by his present Misery or Affliction laid on him by the hand of God being Deaf and having an Impediment in his Speech 2. The works of Mercy which they performed toward him in bringing him to Christ to be cured and beseeching Him c. One that was Deaf Whether he were born Deaf is not expressed and it is rather likely That this Deafness was accidentall coming upon him either through Age or otherwise laid upon him by the hand of God For if he had been born Deaf then he must needs also have been altogether Dumb whereas it is not said That he was altother Dumb but that he had an impediment in his Speech Some think he was striken of the Devil with this Deafnesse and impediment of Speech But if it were so it is likely the Evangelist would not have concealed it Had an Impediment in his Speech Or a difficulty of speaking It is likely it was not a small or ordinary Impediment or difficulty of speaking such as is in those that have stammering Tongues or are slow of Speech but rather a great and extraordinary Impediment which so hindred him that he could not utter any plain words so as to be understood of others but onely a confused noyse or sound of words Object Object Ver. 37. The People say of Christ That he made the Dumb to speak Answ Answ 1. It is spoken vulgarly after the common manner of Speech whereby such as have a difficulty of speaking are said to be dumb 2. Or else because our Saviour at that time Cured others that were altogether Dumb as may appear Matth. 15. 30. Now this Deafness and difficulty of Speech is mentioned as a great misery and affliction and so it was For 1. By this means he was deprived of outward communion and fellowship with God by prayer and hearing the Word of God 2. Deprived also of that comfort and benefit which otherwise he might have had by the society of Men and especially of the society of God Observ 1 Observ 1. See here the cursed Fruit and Effect of Sin which hath brought such evils and miseries upon man's Body as Deafness Dumbness Blindness c. Sin is the Root and originall Cause of these infirmities and miseries unto which man's Body is subject since the Fall of Adam Sin is that which provoketh God thus to deprive some of the use of their Naturall senses as Hearing Seeing Feeling Smelling c. As Death entred into the World by Sin Rom. 5. 12. So all Diseases and Infirmities of man's Body For before the Fall of Adam our Bodies were not subject to any such Infirmities neither should they ever have been if Man had not sinned against God Hence it is That our Saviour when he Cured such as were Diseased in Body did also pronounce forgiveness of Sins to them upon their Faith as to the sick of the Palsy Chap. 2. And for this Cause also when he Cured that impotent man which lay at the Pool of Bethesda Joh. 5. He bid him go away and sin no more lest a worse Infirmity or Disease should come upon him And 1 Cor. 11. 30. For this Cause that is for the sin of profaning the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper many are weak and sick c. Luke 1. 20. Zachary was stricken dumb for his unbelief Object Object Joh. 9. 3. It is said of the blind man That neither he nor his Parents had sinned c. Answ Answ Our Saviour there speaketh not of the Originall and procuring Cause of his blindness which was sin but of the speciall end which the Lord aimed at in afflicting upon him that Disease or Infirmity of Blindnesse which was the manifestation of the work of God that is of the divine Power and Glory of Christ's God-head in Curing him miraculously Vse 1 Use 1. Learn to grow in hatred and detestation of Sin which is so offensive to God provoking him thus to punish and chastise men in their Bodies with such Diseases and Infirmities as Deafnesse Dumbnesse c. This must move us to hate all sin yea the very occasions of it even the Garment unspotted c. Jude ver 23. And shew our utter hatred by our care and conscience to shun it in life and practise Remember the cursed Effects of it that it doth not onely bring Death and Destruction upon the Soul but it is also the Root and Cause of all miseries diseases and infirmities of the Body making our Bodies lyable to all manner of such Infirmities and Maladies and capable of them This is that which provoketh God to take away from some the use of their Senses and Speech and the use of the limbs and parts of their Bodies As the Magistrate or Civil Judge sometimes proceedeth against some kind of Malefactors being guilty of grosse and notorious Crimes causing such to lose their Ears or to have their right Hands cut off or Tongues to be cut out of their Heads as the manner is in some Countries So the Lord in Justice proceedeth against men for sin c. See then that sin is the most hurtfull and pernicious enemy to Soul and Body poysoning and infecting both killing and destroying the Soul maiming the Body depriving it of the use of naturall Sense Speech c. and in the end bringing Death upon it Therefore as we desire and wish the good of our Souls and Bodies take heed of Sin c. Vse 2 Use 2. See what use to make of such Judgments and Chastisements laid upon men in their Bodies when we see or hear of such as are stricken with Deafness Dumbness Blindness with losse of their limbs or of the use of them c. Look not onely at these outward miseries in themselves but above all take occasion to think of Sin the Root and Cause of them all Look at these infirmities and miseries as so many Badges and Tokens of God's wrath and justice against Sin And hence take occasion to meditate of the hainousnesse of Sin provoking God thus to Chastise men in their Bodies For although the Lord do not alwayes lay such infirmities and miseries upon men as punishments to satisfie his Justice and Wrath as he doth upon the Wicked but sometimes for tryall of his own Children yet it is true that Sin is alwayes the first Originall and procuring Cause or the deserving Cause of all such miseries c. Use 3 Use 3. See
crosse Use 2 Use 2. Labour for hearts to be affected with grief for the sins of others that when we see or hear God to be dishonoured and offended we may shew our love to him and our zeal for his Glory by mourning and grieving for such sins whereby He is dishonoured To this end labour more more for the true love of God and for true hatred of all sin in our hearts then we cannot but be grieved for it especially for those sins that are most heinous and offensive to God as swearing profaning of the Sabbath Drunkenness Fornication c. which are the common and reigning sins of the times which when we consider and think of seriously what cause have we to wish our eyes a fountain of tears c. as Jeremy did Again Let us labour for true love to the Souls of others then we cannot but grieve for their sins which are so h●rtful and dangerous to them c. We may not sigh against others Jam. 5. 9. but we ought to sigh for the Sins of others Use 3 Use 3. If we ought to grieve and sigh for others sins then how much more for our own sins every one of us How should our hearts smite us for our own sins by which we have so much offended God Yea how should our hearts be broken and melt with godly sorrow which causeth Repentance unto Salvation never to be repented of Here should our sorrow for sin begin first at our own Sins taking them to heart and deeply sighing and mourning for them and then we cannot but mourn and grieve also in the next place for the sins of others whether they be friends or enemies Remember then and look to this that first and principally thou sigh and grieve for thy own sins and then for others withal If there be cause to sigh deeply for others sins how much more deeply for our own If there be cause of shedding rivers of tears for other sins then have we need of a Sea of tears to be powred out for our own So much of the action or gesture of our Saviour that he sighed Now to speak of the manner of it In his Spirit Observ Observ It is not enough to make outward shew of grieving for others sins but we ought truly and from the heart to be affected with sorrow for them 2 Pet. 2. 8. Lot vexed his Soul c. So Jeremiah Chap. 13. ver 17. saith My Soul shall weep in secret for your Pride So our Saviour here sighed in Spirit for the sins of these Pharisees Vse 1 Vse 1. Reproof of such as can say they are sorry for the sins and falls of others which they see or hear of when yet they are not truly grieved from the Heart and Soul for them though they formally use such words of course Nay some are worse who will speak of the sins of others to their disgrace making shew of sorrow for them when the truth is they are rather glad thereof because they are their Enemies whose disgrace they seek and therefore rejoyce at their Fall and yet stick not to say and pretend that they are sorry for them What is this but gross lying and dissembling Take heed of it therefore and see that we do not only pretend grief for others sins which we see or hear of but that we be indeed grieved in Heart and Soul for them Vse 2 Vse 2. And if our sorrow for the sins of others must not be in outward shew only but from the Heart and Soul then also our sorrow for our own sins ought much more to be from the Heart and to begin there Joel 2. Rent your Heart and not your Garments Now followeth the second thing in the manner of our Saviour's sighing He sighed deeply Observ 1 Observ 1. The heinousness and grievousness of Sin in its own Nature and how highly offensive to God and hurtful and dangerous to the Sinner in that it was matter of so great grief unto our Saviour causing him to sigh yea to sigh or groan in his Spirit deeply for it More particularly the heinousness of Sin may appear by these Reasons 1. From the Object of it being an Offence and Provocation to the infinite God 2. By the fearful and dangerous Effects of it pulling down the wrath and curse of God upon men in this life and after this life and being the true cause of all miseries temporal and eternal unto which Man's Nature is subject Rom. 6. ult the Wages of Sin is death So all other miseries are the Wages of it Rom. 2. 8. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish upon every Soul that doth evill 3. By the difficulty of making satisfaction to God's Justice for it and taking away the guilt and punishment of it in that it could by no other means be done but by the bitter death and sufferings of Christ Jesus the Son of God who must dy and suffer the wrath of God in Soul and body which made his Soul heavy to death and caused him to sweat drops of Blood or else sin could not be taken away This doth wonderfully aggravate the heinousness of it Use 1 Vse 1. See the profaness of such as make so leight a matter of sin trifling and dallying with it as if it were no such heinous matter Prov. 10. 23. It is a sport to a Fool to do mischief and Prov. 14. 9. Fools make a mock of Sin So do many now a-dayes at some sins as swearing drunkenness fornication c. But what a wretched thing is this to make leight of that which is so heinous and highly offensive to God so dangerous to the Soul of the Sinner and so hard to be forgiven and taken away Wilt thou jest with that which was matter of deep sighing unto Christ and should be so to thee Wilt thou laugh at that which should cause thee to mourn and weep Dost thou make so leight of that which made the Soul of Christ heavy to death and forced drops of Blood from his body Take heed thereof c. Use 2 Use 2. Learn so to esteem and accompt of sin as it deserveth as a matter most heinous grievous before God highly offensive to his Majesty and most pernicious to our Souls as a matter of sorrow and grief not to be thought upon without sighing yea deep sighing c. Learn thus to accompt of all sin whether our own or others sins especially our own So far we must be from making leight of sin in our selves or other that we should not think of it without grief nor without loathing and detestation We should also fear and tremble at the very motions of sin when we are tempted unto it Mark 8. 12 13. And he sighed deeply in his Spirit c. Octob. 20. 1622. Observ 2 Observ 2. IN that our Saviour did so deeply sigh and shew so great sorrow for these Pharisees in regard of their obstinate persisting in Unbelief and their malicious tempting him
Quest 1 Quest 1. How could he be killed or put to death being the Son of God Answ Answ He was put to death according to his Humane Nature as He was Man 1 Pet. 3. 18. Put to death in the Flesh Yet he that dyed was God and that at the very time of his death for the personal Union betwixt the God-head and Man-hood of Christ was not dissolved but continued still even in the instant of his Death and after it Quest 2 Quest 2. What kind of Death was our Saviour to be put unto Answ Answ To the death of the Cross that is to be crucified or nailed alive to the Cross and there to hang until He was dead This appeareth by the History of the Evangelists who do particularly declare the manner of his crucifying Joh. 3. 14. As Moses lift up the Serpent in the Wilderness so must the Son of Man be lifted up that is upon the Cross at the time of his Death Now the reason why He was to suffer this kind of death was this that it might appear that he was made a Curse for us by imputation in taking upon him the guilt and punishment of our sins Therefore he was to dy the death of the Cross which was an accursed kind of death not only in the Opinion and accompt of men but even by the Law of God as appeareth Deut. 21. 23. and Gal. 3. 13. where it is said that Christ was made a Curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Quest 3 Quest 3. Was our Saviour to suffer nothing but bodily pains at the time of his Death Answ Answ Yes He was withal to suffer the wrath and curse of God due to our sins in his Soul yea the pangs of the second death such as were answerable and equivalent to the very pains of Hell which was the cause that He so cried out upon the Cross My God My God Why hast thou forsaken me Matth. 27. 46. Quest 4 Quest 4. Wherefore or to what end was He to be slain or put to death and to suffer withal the Curse of God in his Soul Answ Answ 1. That by this means He might make satisfaction to God for our sins and the sins of all God's Elect People and so might free us from the Guilt and Punishment of our Sins both temporal and eternal Rom. 4. 25. He was delivered to death for our Offences c. 1 Cor. 15. 3. He dyed for our Sins according to the Scriptures 2. That by death He might destroy the Devill that is vanquish his Power and Tyranny which He had over us by reason of our sins and so deliver us from the same Heb. 2. 14. 3. That He might take away the Sting and Curse of bodily death and free us from the same 1 Cor. 15. 55. Quest 1 Quest 5. How could Christ's bodily Death and his Suffering of God's Wrath for a short time satisfie God's Justice for the eternall punishment due to our Sins Answ Answ Because it was the Death and Sufferings of him that was not onely Man but God Acts 20. 28. This dignity of the Person Dying and Suffering gave infinite vertue and efficacy to his Death and Suffering For it was a greater matter for the Son of God to Dye and Suffer God's Wrath though but for a little time than for all Men and Angels to have suffered it for ever Now follow the Uses of this Doctrine touching Christ's Death Vse 1 Vse 1. In that Christ must be killed or put to Death even ro the Cursed Death of the Crosse and that for our sins to satisfie God's Justice for them Hence we are taught the cursed nature and effect of sin in it self in that it is the meritorious and procuring cause of Death it brings forth Death as the proper fruit and effect of it Rom. 6. 23. The wages of Sin is Death And Jam. 1. 15. Sin being finished bringeth forth Death Therefore also Sins are in Scripture called dead Works because they do of themselves naturally bring forth Death This we see in Christ who though he had no sin of his own yet because he took on him the guilt of our sins by imputation he became subject to Death and was of necessity to be killed or put to Death and not an ordinary Death but to the cursed Death of the Crosse yea he must also Suffer the very pangs of the second Death in his Soul and all for Sin See what a deadly thing sin is being the Originall Cause and Fountain of Death even of Temporall and Eternal Death both which it doth necessary bring either upon us or upon Christ for us Learn by this to fear and talk of sin as the most deadly and dangerous evil in the World as we naturally fear and shun Death so much more sin the cause and Fountain of Death And to this end labour more and more for true hatred of all sin in our hearts that we may detest it as we do Death yea as we hate and detest Hell it self Rom. 12. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to hate it like Hell How do we hate and abhorr poyson because it is deadly How do we fear and shun deadly Diseases as the Pestilence c Much more cause is there to hate and avoid sin which is more deadly to the Soul than any poyson or disease to the Body Think of this when thou art tempted to any Sin that it will bring Death of Soul and Body c. Prov. 14. 12. There is a way which seemeth right unto a man but the end thereof are the wayes of Death Use 2 Vse 2. See the unspeakable love of Christ to us manifested in this That he was content and willing to suffer Death for our Redemption yea the shameful Death of the Crosse together with the infinite Wrath and Curse of God accompanying the same Joh. 15. 13. Greater love than this hath no man that a man lay down his Life for his Friends Rom. 5. 7. Scarcely for a Righteous man will one dye c. But God commendeth his love to us in that while we were yet Sinners Christ dyed for us This must draw our love to Christ again c. Of this see before where I spake of Christ's willingnesse to Dye and Suffer for us Use 3 Use 3. The Death of Christ doth afford matter of unspeakable comfort to all true Believers and that three wayes 1. Against guilt of our Sins and the fear of God's Wrath and Curse due to them all which being fully satisfied for and taken away by the merit of Christ's Death there is now no condemnation to us being in Christ Rom. 8. 1. We may now say with the Apostle ver 33. of the same Chapter Who shall Condemn It is Christ that Dyed c. Christ by his Death hath paid a Counter-price to God's Justice for all our Sins and so fre●d us from the guilt and punishment due to them He hath freed and delivered us
wayes especially 1. In Opinion and Judgment by condemning it and themselves for it as guilty of God's Wrath and Curse Rom. 7. 24. Paul calls it a body of Death 2. In Heart and Affection by hating loathing and detesting this natural corruption of the whole Man Rom. 7. Paul hated the evill which he did therefore much more his natural corruption being the cause and fountain of that evil 3. In life and practice by labouring daily to have this corruption mortified in us as by Prayer and by the Word of God applied Col. 3. 5. Mortify your members which are on Earth c. and Eph. 4. 22. Put off the old Man which is corrupt c. Reasons Reasons 1. Christ Jesus our Head and Saviour did deny himself for our sakes He contemned and rejected his own life and laid it down for us He renounced also his own humane Will so far as it differed from the Will of his Father submitting it wholly to the Will of God in the Work of our Redemption therefore all that will be his true Disciples must herein follow him 2. Nature is a great enemy and hinderance to every Christian in doing the Will of God and consequently in following Christ especially corrupt Nature Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God c. 3. Such as will be Christ's Disciples must wholly give up themselves in obedience to the Will of Christ But this they cannot do unless they first renounce and forsake themselves and their own Will Use 1 Vse 1. See by this how hard a matter it is to be a good Christian and true Disciple of Christ in practice Though it is easy to make Profession hereof yet how hard and difficult to be such a one indeed Esse Christianum grande non videri Hieron This may appear by the difficulty of this one Christian Duty here required of all that will be Christ's true Disciples viz. The denial of themselves that is the utter contemning rejecting and forsaking of themselves and their own Nature and of all that is in them by Nature so far as it may be a hinderance to them in following Christ How hard and difficult a thing is this to practise So difficult that it seems to the natural man impossible and so it is indeed without the Grace of God enabling us to do it It is a hard matter for a Christian to renounce the World with the profits and pleasures of it hard to forsake Houses Lands Goods Wife Children c. hard to leave a Man 's own Country as Abraham did But this is above all difficulties for a man to deny and forsake himself and to go out of himself to hate his own life to put off himself and his own Nature to renounce his own Reason Will and Affections and to crucify them c. Oh how hard a thing is this to practise It is a hard duty which our Saviour enjoyneth Matth. 5. 29. that if our right Eye offend us we should pluck it out if our right hand we should cut it off and cast it from us c. But this is much more difficult for the whole Man to be cut off from himself for a man to forsake and part with himself c. If we were onely to put off and change our Skin with the Snake yet this were both difficult and dangerous How much more then to put off and change our whole Nature How hard for the Black-moor to change his Skin and the Leopard his Spots much more for a natural man to deny himself and his own Nature c. Never can he do it of himself without the speciall Grace of God See then that it is not as some think an easy matter to be a Christian as if no more were required but to be outwardly baptized to make outward Profession to come to Church c. Do not so deceive thine own Soul Thou must deny thy self thou must utterly renounce and forsake thy self c. And if this one duty be so hardly practised How hard is it to perform both this and all other required Therefore make off security and work out Salvation with fear c. Vse 2 Use 2. To convince many not to be Christ's true Disciples what ever they professe because they never yet practised this duty of denying themselves that is of rejecting and forsaking themselves and their corrupt Nature c. So far are many from this That they know not what it meaneth but it is a very Riddle and a Mystery to them Others are so far from renouncing and forsaking themselves and their own Nature that they highly esteem of themselves and are in love with their own Natures pleasing themselves therein puffed up with pride because of natural parts c. So far also from mortifying and crucifying their sinful Lusts that they take care to satisfy them So far from denying and renouncing their own carnall reason and corrupt wills that they are wholly wedded and addicted to them c. How unfit are these to be Christ's Disciples How far from following him by true denyall of themselves Some again deny their corrupt Nature in some things but not in all Some carnall Lusts they renounce but not all c. Contra Col. 3. Mortifie your Members c. that is all the parts of the old man and body of sin Use 3 Use 3. To stir up all that profess to be Christ's Followers to the conscionable practise of this Christian Duty of contemning renouncing and utter forsaking of our selves and our corrupt Nature and all that is pleasing to it so far as it is or may be any hinderance to us in following Christ and in seeking his Glory and being obedient to his Will A duty hard and difficult but most excellent and necessary so necessary that without it impossible it is to be a good Christian impossible to follow Christ as a true Disciple without this denyall of thy self The first Lesson to be learned in the School of Christ If thou wilt follow him and serve him and be obedient to his Will thou must forsake not onely the World and thy Goods Friends c. but thy Self and go out of thy self thou must renounce thy own Reason Will Affections and crucify them Thou must contemn and despise thy self and be out of love with thy self and thine own Nature yea thou must hate thy self and thine own Life yea thy own Soul and Body in comparison of doing the Will of Christ Labour every one to practise this excellent Duty in some measure The more hard it is the more care and pains to be bestowed in it The difficulty must not discourage us but quicken our diligence and pains c. Helps to the practise of it 1. Labour to see and feel the corruption of our own Nature how great it is and how opposite and contrary to the Will of God hindering us from obeying it and from following Christ This will humble us and teach us to deny and renounce our selves
countervail or make amends for 2 Joh. 8. ver Look to your selves that we lose not those things which we have wrought but that we receive a full reward that is the Reward of eternal Life and Salvation of our Souls whereby the Apostle implieth that to lose this Reward of eternal life is a great loss even the greatest that may be for which cause he warneth us to look well to our selves that we bring not this great loss and dammage upon our selves So Hebr. 4. 1. Let us fear lest a Promise being left us of entring into his Rest that is into that eternal and heavenly Rest of our Souls in God's Kingdom any of you should seem to come short of it Let us fear c. which shews it to be a grievous loss to come short of Heaven A matter to be feared greatly Reasons Reasons 1. The salvation of our Souls is a great and inestimable Blessing more worth than all this World ut supra dictum Ergo To lose this must needs be a great and invaluable loss Revel 3. 11. Christ saies to Philadelphia Let none take thy Crown from thee 2. He that loseth eternal life and the Salvation of his Soul doth lose God's favour and all Communion with God for ever he is for ever seperate from God 2 Thess 1. 9. The Wicked in Hell shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord c. Now to lose God himself and to be for ever seperated from his favour and presence must needs be an incomparable loss 3. He loseth Christ and is seperate from him Mat. 25. 41. 4. Such as lose eternal life are also seperated for ever from the society of the blessed Angels and Saints in Heaven and deprived of all Communion with them which must needs be an unspeakable loss Luke 13. 28. There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and you your selves thrust out Use 1 Vse 1. See by this the fearful security and hardness of heart with which many are possessed who though they be in danger of this great and invaluable loss of their own Souls yet are not sensible of it or of the greatness thereof but make leight of it Such are they who live and go on securely in their sins without Repentance whereby they do as much as lies in them destroy and cast away their own Souls and yet have no feeling of their own misery and fearful estate their hearts not touched with any fear of this great and fearful loss of their own Souls nor with any grief and sorrow for the same but they go on carelesly in a sinful course spending their daies in carnal mirth and jollity as if they were in a good and safe estate as if they were in no danger at all to lose their own Souls Other worldly losses they are sensible of as loss of Goods Friends worldly Preferment c. But as for the loss of their Souls whereof they are in so great and apparent danger by continuance in sin this they have no sense or feeling of they fear it not they suspect it not they grieve not for it much less have they care to prevent this fearful and dangerous loss of their Souls Though this loss be never so imminent and ready to come upon them though their Souls be almost in Hell already yet they go on without sense of this danger But the less sensible they are of this loss of their own Souls the greater and more certain is the danger they are in the less sensible of their misery and wretched estate the greater is their misery which should move us therefore to lament and pity the state and condition of all such secure and impenitent Sinners who thus endanger their own Souls and hazard the loss of them by continuance in sin If we pity the case of such as suffer some great worldly loss as the loss of some dear friend by death or the loss of their houses or goods by Fire or by Theeves c. because they are like to be undone by this means Oh how much more ought we to pity and lament such as are in danger to lose themselves and their own Souls for ever c. Let us be affected with the woful case of such and not onely pity them but shew our pity by praying for them that God may open their eyes to see their own misery and danger which they are in and ●o make them sensible of the great and incomparable losse of their own Souls which they are like to bring upon themselves if they continue in their Sins that the serious consideration hereof may move them to speedy Repentance Use 2 Use 2. To shew the folly and madness of such as do adventure this great and invaluable loss of their own Souls for the gaining of small matters Such as adventure to commit Sin and so hazard the Salvation of their Souls for the gaining of a little worldly profit or for the enjoying of some short pleasure or delight Such as deny Christ to save bodily life c. Such as stick not to lye swear forswear or to deal falsly and un●ustly so it be to enrich themselves Such also who will profane the Sabbath by buying and selling of wares or otherwise for a little worldly gain and profit How foolish are these to adventure so great a loss as the etern●l loss of their own Souls for so small a gain and advantage as i● to be gotten by the temporal profits and pleasures of this life Penny-wise and Pound-foolish He were a foolish Merchant who would venture the lo●s of a thousand pounds for the gaining of some small trifle not worth a thousand pence So here c. There is no comparison to be made between the price and value of our own souls and the value of these earthly and temporal profits and pleasures of this life There is no proportion between the invaluable and infinite loss of the one and the small and trifling gain of the other Object Object Though we commit Sin for worldly gain c. yet we purpose to repent and so to save our Souls Answ Answ This were somewhat if it were in thine own Power to repent But it is nothing so God must give it thee and he may justly deny it thee if thou sin presumptuously Take heed therefore c. Besides if thou do repent yet how bitter and grievous will the remembrance of thy Sin be unto thee Use 3 Use 3. Teacheth us to be wise and careful above all things to prevent this great and inestimable loss of our own Souls and to take heed we bring it not upon our selves either by neglecting the means of our Salvation as the Ministry of the Word Sacraments Prayer Practice of Repentance c. or by using means to dest●oy and cast away our own Souls as by the practice of sin living in it or by yielding
hinderances but also to use all helps and means to further us in the performance of holy and spiritual exercises as Prayer Meditation Reading Hearing c. Our Saviour here did not onely withdraw himself from company but made choice of the fittest and most convenient place where to pray with his Disciples and to manifest his Glory to them that the opportunity of the place might be a furtherance to himself and them in those heavenly exercises Now if our Saviour had need thus to do much more we c. to take the fittest time and place also to use due Preparation before we set about such holy duties and Watchfulnesse in performing them See before on the Ver. 46. of the 6th Chapter Reason Reason We are of our selves very unfit and untoward to all spirituall Duties and therefore had need to use of all good helps to further us in performance of them Use See the cause why many perform holy and religious Duties with so little fruit and comfort because they are not carefull to use all good helps and means to further them therein c. Mark 9. 2 3. And he was Transfigured before them And his Raiment became shining c. April 23. 1626. NOw followeth the Transfiguration it self 1. Generally and briefly propounded together with the persons before whom or in whose sight it was done He was Transfigured before them 2. More particularly amplified by one speciall Adjunct or Circumstance of it The shining and perfect whiteness of his Garments which whiteness is amplified 1. By comparison to Snow 2. By comparison to Cloth purged and whited by the Fuller's Art He was Transfigured Or transformed and changed in the figure or shape of his Body the former shape which he had before was altered and changed into a far more excellent and glorious shape or figure Luke 9. 29. As he prayed the fashion of his countenance was altered And Matth. 17. 2. His face did shine as the Sun Now touching this Transfiguration or change of his shape some things are to be remembred for the better conceiving of it 1. That it happened while he was at prayer Luke 9. 29. 2. That it was not a change or alteration of the nature or substance of his Body as if that were turned into a Spirit or spiritual substance for it remained still a true humane Body with the same nature and essentiall properties which it had before but it was onely an alteration of the outward quality and condition of his Body that is of the colour shape or outward form and visage of it from that which it was before that whereas before it was of an ordinary colour and outward shape like the bodies of other men now it became most excellent bright and glorious to behold even as bright as the Sun c. 3. That although this change was not in the essentiall form or substance of Christ's body yet it was a true real and sensible change and alteration of the quality of his body and not in imagination or in shew and appearance only Luke 9. 29. It is not said The fashion of his countenance seemed to be altered but it was altered And ver 32. The Disciples saw his Glory Therefore it was visible c. 4. That although this wonderfull change and alteration appeared chiefly in his face as being the most conspicuous part of his body yet it is probable That it was more or less throughout all the outward parts of his Body and from thence the brightness and glory was derived to his Garments shining through the same as is said afterward 5. That this change was not perpetual or long to endure but for a short time onely though it is not expressed how long that is to say during some part of that time in which Christ and his three Disciples were abiding in the Mount for this Glory ceased before they came down again from the Mount Object Object Matth. 17. 9. Called a Vision Answ Answ Yet it might be really done as Acts 10. 3. Before them That is in the presence and sight of those three Disciples before mentioned c. viz. Peter James and John It followeth Ver. 3. And his Raiment became shining c. This is added the more to amplifie and set forth the excellent brightness and heavenly Glory of Christ's body in which he now appeared to the three Disciples Brightness and Light are in Scripture put for heavenly glory and happiness 1 Tim. 6. 16. So also the colour of white Therefore the Angels used so to appear Contrà blackness and darkness signifies misery of Hell which was so great that it shined through all his Garments making them also to shine most bright and to appear perfectly white as the Snow and whiter than any Fuller upon Earth can make any Cloth with Water and Fulling-Earth Note that this perfect whiteness and glittering was not in the Garments of themselves but in the body of Christ and thence derived to his Clothes c. As the Sun which enlighten the Ayr. Quest 1 Quest 1. How or by what means was this perfect whitenesse and brightnesse caused in the Body and Garments of Christ Answ Answ By the divine Power and Majesty of his God-head now manifesting it self extraordinarily for the time not onely in his humane Soul as at other times but also in his Body and Garments Before this time the Glory of his God-head did hide and cover it self under the vail of his humane Flesh or Body even as the brightness of the Sun beams is sometimes covered under a dark Cloud but now this Glory of his God-head did for a time extraordinarily and wonderfully shew and manifest it self outwardly even to the bodily sight and view of the Disciples Object Object 2 Pet. 1. 17. He received this Glory from God the Father Answ Answ As he was Mediatour he received it from the Father but as God he had it in himself c. Quest 2 Quest 2. Whether did the Disciples now see the God-head it self or divine Nature of Christ Answ Answ Not so for the God-head cannot be seen with bodily eyes Joh. 1. 18. but they saw an outward sensible effect of the God-head or a true symbolicall Sign and Representation of it viz. the outward brightness and glory which appeared in his Body and Garments and especially in his Face A symbolicall sight like that of Moses when he saw the back parts of God Exod. 33. 23. Quest 3 Quest 3. Wherefore or to what end was Christ now transfigured and the shape of his Body and Garments thus gloriously changed before his three Disciples Answ Answ 1. To prove and manifest the Truth of his God-head and that he was the Messiah and to confirm their Faith therein For which cause also that heavenly Voice was uttered from God the Father at the time of this Transfiguration of Christ This is my beloved Son hear him ver 7. 2. The better to arm them against that scandall or offence which they might take
and compassion toward his Child as appears by his manner of speaking to Christ so he shewed his care in bringing him to Christ and making sute to him to dispossess and heal him See before on the 26th Verse of the 7th Chapter Use 1 Vse 1. For reproof of such unnatural Parents who are not so affected with the outward miseries of their Children as they should be neither are they careful in using means for their relief and help but let them alone in their miseries neglecting the means appointed of God for their Childrens good Some are so hard-hearted as to see their Children lye sick and in pain and will scarce be at the trouble and cost to send to the Physitian for them nor to the Chirurgion when their Children are lame or impotent c. Others can see their Children to be in want of necessary Food or Rayment and have little care to provide for them as is fit and according to their ability and means Yea some Parents are worse who in stead of using means for the help and relief of their Children in such miseries do add affliction to the affliction of their Children by unjust provoking and grieving their Children in their sickness weakness c. How unnaturall are such Parents Worse than brute Beasts in this respect Let such know that this want of natural Affection is condemned by the Apostle Rom. 1. 31. among the sins of the profane Heathen and therefore should be far from Christians Vse 2 Use 2. If Parents ought to be affected with the bodily Afflictions of their Children and to use the best means for their help and relief therein then how much more in their spiritual Miseries and Necessities c. Se chap. 5. 23 24. Now followeth the Motives and Reasons which the father of this child useth to move our Saviour to take pitty of his child And 1. He alledgeth the lamentable affliction and misery in which his child now was being possessed with a Devil which misery of this child he further amplyfieth and layeth open to Christ in the verse following by relating the particular manner of the Devils taking and tormenting of his child by fits and at certain times Who hath a dumb Spirit His meaning is That he was bodily possessed with an evil Spirit or with a Devil which was entred into him and held possession of the powers of his body See before chap. 1. 23. how the Devil is said to enter into Men Which also had stricken the child with dumbness depriving him of the use of his Speech for which cause he was called a dumb Spirit And ver 25. he is called a Dumb and Deaf Spirit which shews That this evil Spirit being entred and having gotten possession in the body of the child had also stricken it both Dumb and Deaf Matth. 17. 15. He is said to be lunatick now lunatick persons are such as are stricken in their senses or taken with some kind of frenzy or madnesse at certain times of the Moon whence they are called Lunaticks from the latine word Luna signifying the Moon and such lunatick fits do proceed from the distemper of the blood and naturall humours of the Body Hence therefore it may be gathered That this child was not onely possessed with a Devil which made him both Dumb and Deaf but also that he was distempered with a lunacy or kind of madness which took him by fits at certain times of the Moon and was caused partly by the distemper of the natural humours of the hody and partly by the Devil's power stirring up and working upon those humors of the Body Now followeth the Points of Instruction in which as also in those that are to be gathered from the residue of the History of this Miracle I purpose to be the more brief because many of them I have had occasion before to speak of in handling the like Miracles of our Saviour Observ 1 Observ 1. That the Devil by God's permission hath Power really to enter into the Bodies of mankind that is to say into the bodies of Men Women or Children and to hold possession in them working and moving in them at his Will and Pleasure yea in the Bodies of good men and women and of the children of such So he entred into the body of this child and held possession in it So in the bodies of many others especially in our Saviour Christ's time and in the dayes of the Apostles in which times the Lord did permit and suffer the Devil to have this Power more commonly and ordinarily than now he doth and that for speciall cause that there might be the more occasion for our Saviour Christ and his Apostles and some others also who had the gift of working Miracles to exercise shew forth the same in the casting out of Devils from such as were possessed and that for the confirmation of the Doctrine of the Gospel And although this possession of mens bodies by the Devil was most frequent and usuall in those times of our Saviour Christ and the Apostles yet in the Times and Ages succeeding even unto this Day the Devil hath sometimes had and exercised this Power over the bodies of men by God's permission as may appear in Histories of the Church See before upon chap. 1. ver 23. Use Use See what cause for us to be thankfull unto God for that he hath appointed us to live in this age of the Church in which this Power of the Devil is much restrained so as he doth not so commonly exercise and shew it as heretofore and for that the Lord hath hitherto kept us and ours from this Power of the Devil not giving up our bodies to be possessed of him Especially we shall find cause to be thankfull to God for ●his mercy if we consider that our sins do deserve that he should even now give up us and ours to this Power of Satan as he did so many of the Jews in our Saviour's time our sins as are great as theirs c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this evil Spirit which was in the Child is called a dumb Spirit because he had stricken the Child with dumbness depriving him of the use of his Speech Hence we learn That the Devil hath Power by God's permission not only to enter into the bodies of men or children and to possesse them but also being in them to annoy and hurt the powers and faculties of nature in them hindring the operation and working of them he hath power to strike them in their bodily senses and to deprive them of the use of them and their Speech c. But of this there will be more fit occasion to speak afterward ver 25. It followeth Ver. 18. And wheresoever he taketh him c. Here the father of this possessed and lunatick child doth further lay open unto our Saviour the wofull misery and affliction of this child by relating the particular manner and circumstances of the Devil 's taking and
wrath and curse of God He deals with the Souls and Consciences of such as he did here with the body of this possessed young man He carries them headlong to the practice of sin and so doth cast their Souls into the fire of Hell even as he did violently throw the body of this party into the Fire and into the Water And as he did re●● and tear the body of this party with grievous pains causing him to fome and gnash his teeth c. So doth he rack and torment the Consciences of wicked men with inward gripings and terrours and makes their Consciences to fome and gnash within them as it were And as he did deprive this party of his bodily senses striking him both dumb and deaf So doth he bereave the wicked of their spiritual senses striking them with spirituall dumbness and deafness c. so as they can neither pray nor speak a word to God's Glory or Edification of others nor yet hear God speak unto them by his Word as they ought c. See then the wofull misery of all such as are thus spiritually possessed of Satan and under his Power in their Souls and Consciences which should move all such to labour for a true feeling of this their own lamentable condition and to use all means speedily to be delivered from this spirituall Power of Satan especially to come duly to the publike Ministery of the Word which is the ordinary means to cast down the holds of sin in them and to deliver them from the Power of Satan c. And it should also move us to pitty and pray for such If we should see one bodily possessed by the Devil and so tormented as this party was would not our bowels yearn Much more then c. See before chap. 5. 1 c. Mark 9. 18. And I spake to thy Disciples that they should cast him out and they could not March 4. 1626. HItherto of the first Argument or Motive used by the father of this possessed young man to move our Saviour to shew mercy on him taken from the lamentable misery in which he was Now follows the second Motive from the unability of the Disciples to cast the Devil out of him notwithstanding that he had sought unto them to do it I spake to thy Disciples The reason why he first sought to the Disciples was because Christ himself was at that time absent And they could not Hence it is probable That they did attempt the casting out of the Devil but could not do it c. The cause of this unability in the Disciples was partly their own Weakness of Faith Matth. 17. 20. and partly the Unbelief of the Father and of the Nation of Jews especially of the Scribes and Pharisees in the following Verse Observ 1 Observ 1. That although the Apostles of Christ had the extraordinary Gift and Power of working Miracles conferred on them by Christ for the sealing of their Doctrine as we heard before Chap. 6. 7. yet they could not exercise this Power at all times whensoever they would but then onely when it was expedient when it made for God's Glory and Edification of the People and when they were thereunto moved by special instinct Sometimes it was not expedient neither did it make for God's Glory that they should exercise the Power and Gift of Miracles and sometimes also they were hindred by their own Unbelief or by the Unbelief of others from working those Miracles which they attempted as at this time they were as appeareth Matth. 17. 20. and in this Chapter afterward Hence also we may gather by the way That this Gift of working Miracles was not any Power or Vertue inherent in their own Persons for then they migh● have exercised it at all times when they would but it was the divine Power of God and of Christ himself which did work in them and by them as by Instruments So Peter professeth plainly Act. 3. 12. Why look ye on us as though by our own Power we had made this man to walk c. But ver 16. The Name of Christ had made this man strong c. See before Chap. 6. 7. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples were hindred and disabled by their own Unbelief and Weakness of Faith that they could not at this time work this Miracle in casting the Devil out of the possessed party we learn that Unbelief or Weakness of Faith is a sin very hurtful and dangerous to the true Saints and Servants of God hindring and depriving them of most excellent priviledges and benefits which otherwise they might enjoy So here the Disciples by their Unbelief deprived themselves for a time of that rare and extraordinary gift of working Miracles utterly disabling themselves for the exercise thereof More particularly the Saints of God do by their Unbelief hinder and deprive themselves of two sorts of benefits or priviledges 1. Of inward and spiritual priviledges which concern the good of their Souls and the life to come as of the comfortable feeling of God's favour and of that measure of inward peace of Conscience and spirituall Joy which they might and should otherwise enjoy if they had more strength of Faith Hence it is that David sometimes felt so little inward peace and comfort and on the contrary so great inward trouble and discomfort within himself as he complaineth Psal 42. and Psal 77. The cause hereof was the Weakness of his Faith even as himself implyeth plainly Psal 77. 10. when he saith This is mine Infirmity Thus also it wa● with Jonah Chap. 2. ver 4 7. being in the Whale's Belly through Weakness of Faith his Soul fainted within him for a time and he thought himself to be cast out of God'● sight 2. The Saints of God by Unbelief do oftentimes deprive themselves of those outward and corporal benefits and priviledges which otherwise they might enjoy as of that measure and degree of outward peace and prosperity God's Protection and Blessing in things of this life which they might otherwise en●oy yea they may and do sometimes wholly deprive themselves of these or some of these Blessings through their own Unbelief Numb 20. 12. Moses and Aaron by their Unbelief deprived themselves of the great benefit of coming into the promised Land of Canaan to dwell in it And Isa 7. 9. the Lord threatens his People the Jews that if they would not believe his Word and Promise given for their deliverance from their enemies they should not be established that is they should not enjoy the benefir of outward security and safety from those enemies but should be deprived of the same See also Joh. 11. 40. Exemplum Marthae Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Father of this possessed young man having first brought his Son to the Disciples to be dispossessed and they not being able to help him yet did not forthwith despair of help nor yet give over the use of further means but hereupon made sute unto Christ
from the beginning Rev. 9. 11. called Abaddon and Apolly●n which signifieth a Destroyer much more true of the Devil This deadly malice he sheweth both against the Bodies and Souls of men seeking the utter destruction of both 1. He seeks to destroy and murder the bodies of men by temporal or bodily death so far as God doth permit and suffer him as here he did to this Child and to Job's Children and Servants Job 1. 2. He seeks also and that principally the eternal Destruction of mens Souls and Bodies together in Hell He seeks nothing so much to cast their bodies into the Fire or Water to burn or drown them as he doth to cast both their bodies and souls into the fire and pit of Hell there to be burned and drowned everlastingly And this he doth by his wicked and sinful suggestions and temptations labouring continually to entise men unto sin and so to bring them to eternal destruction 1 Pet. 5. 8. As a roaring Lion c. He is called The Tempter 1 Thes 3. 5. Use 1 Use 1. See what cause there is for us to be watchful at all times against this our deadly Enemy the Devil and against his Temptations walking circumspectly in all our wayes and carefully looking to our selves that we give him not the least advantage to tempt and draw us to sin and so to the destruction of our Soul and Bodies The more he seeketh to do this the more watchful must we be over our selves the more wary of giving him any advantage against us Ephes 4. 27. Give not place to the Devill that is Give him no advantage or occasion to draw us to sin by his Temptations which may be done many wayes as by yielding to the first motions of any sin arising in our hearts and not resisting them at first or by casting our selves upon the occasions of sin as evil Company Idleness c. or by negligence in good Duries or by loosnesse in our outward Carriage thereby discovering the inward Corruptions of our hearts and so laying our selves open to Satan our deadly Enemy All these take heed of and look to thy self in all thy wayes that thou give no advantage to the Tempter to tempt thee to sin and so to murder and devour thy Soul as he desireth and seeketh by all means and at all times and at all places He goeth about as a roaring Lion Therefore look to him and to thy self and all thy wayes especially to thy heart that thou keep it with all diligence as Solomon exhorteth in the Proverbs See thou be daily armed against him with Faith Prayer the Word of God c. If thou didst certainly know that thou hast an Enemy which did seek thy bodily life and did ly in wait secretly to murder thee How wary and fearful would it make thee to be where thou becomest how thou ca●●iest thy self thou wouldst carry some weapon about thee c. How much more cause hast thou to walk circumspectly at all times in all places seeing it is so certain that Satan the deadly Enemy of thy Soul and Body lyeth in wait continually to tempt thee to sin and so to devoure thy Soul in eternal destruction See 1 Pet. 5. 8. Use 2 Use 2. This should teach us not to hearken or yield to the faire or friendly perswasions of Satan whereby he e●tiseth us to sin under pretence of good Will as he did to our first Parents by suggesting to our minds the Profit Pleasure or Content which sin will bring to us For whatsoever he pretend the Truth is he doth intend nothing else but the devouring of our Souls He is a Liar and a Murderer from the beginning Therefore trust him not though he seem to speak never so faire to thy heart c. See in Ver. 23. of the first Chapter Use 3 Use 3. See what cause there is for us daily to commit our selvs and such as belong to us unto God's special Protection by Prayer that he may keep us from the power and malice of this our deadly Enemy which daily goeth about and laboureth to destroy and Murder our Souls and Bodies Observ 2 Observ 2. Though the Devil had often cast this Child into the Fire and Water desiring and seeking to destroy it yet it appears that he could never do it the Lord restraining his Power and preserving the Child from destruction Hence we learn that although the Devil's Power and Malice against Mankind be very great yet it is limited and restrained by the over-ruling Power of God so as he cannot do so much hurt as he desireth but so much only as the Lord suffereth him See before Chap. 5. ver 12. Vse 1 Use 1. To comfort the Godly against the malice and power of Satan c. See before the 12th Verse of Chap. 5. Vse 2 Use 2. This should also cause us to bless God for his Goodness and Mercy in curbing and restraining the Power and Malice of Satan that he cannot do us so much hurt and mischief as he would If he might have his Will he would not suffer us or ours to live an hour but would use some means to murder us and to destroy our Bodies he would devour our Souls c. How then are we bound to God for restraining his power See Chap. 1. 23. Now followeth the third part of the Answer of the Father unto Christ's Question or Demand viz. The renewing of his former sute unto Christ for his Son that he would shew mercy on him and help him out of that misery But if thou canst do anything c. Having further declared and laid open unto Christ the misery of his Child in that the Devil had so often cast him into the Fire and Water c. Now suddainly he breaketh off all further discourse touching that matter as being tedious and grievous to him to speak or think of and as one that was impatient of further delay and desirous to have his Son speedily healed if it might be he now takes occasion to renew his earnest Sute and Prayer unto Christ saying But if thou canst do any thing c. Now in that he speaketh thus doubtfully touching Christ's Power If thou canst c. this was out of the Weakness of Faith For although he was not quite destitute of Faith but had some Seed thereof sowen in his heart by which he did in some measure believe and had some perswasion of Christ's Power and Ability to help his Child for otherwise he would never have brought his Child to him nor made any sute at all to him to cast the Devil out of him yet notwithstanding it appeareth by these words as also by that which followeth Ver. 24. that this his Faith was as yet very weak and feeble being joyned with much doubting and wavering Quest Quest What was the Cause or Occasion of this Weakness of Faith and doubtfulness in him touching the Power of Christ Answ Answ There might be sundry occasions of it As
never so dear to thee thou must suffer as it were the cutting off thy hand foot c. Which being so that the practice of Christianity is so hard difficult and painfull it must not discourage any from setting about it but on the contrary encourage every one to labour and take pains about it Use 3 Use 3. For Exhortation To stir us up to the conscionable practice of this duty viz. to labour and strive to cut off and separate from our selves those things which are most near and dear to us in this world so far forth as they are or may be occasions of sin unto us First and principally let us labour in resisting and mortifying those sinful lusts and affections of our hearts which are most natural and most delightful and pleasing to us and which we are so loth to part with Use all means to cut off this near and dear occasion and cause of sin Pray unto God by the power of his Spirit to mortifie and crucifie in us these sinful lusts which are so dear to us and use all other means to resist and subdue them more and more to cut off those hands and feet of thy corrupt heart and to pluck out this eye of thy heart that it offend thee not So also thou must make conscience to cut off and separate from thee all outward occasions of sin which are never so dear to thee though as dear as thy hand foot yea as thy right hand c. And though it be as painful or grievous to thee to part with them as to part with thy right hand or right eye c. yet must thou rather part with them and utterly reject and forsake them than be occasioned by them to sin against God or to be hindered in obedience to his Will In this case thou must part with all profits and pleasures of this life though never so sweet unto thee Thou must resist even unto blood in striving against sin c. And to this end labour and pray for grace to deny thy self and thy corrupt Nature and all that is near or dear to thee in this world else thou wilt never be able to part with these as thou must do c. Vse 4 Use 4. If we must remove and separate from us those things which are so near and dear to us in this world and so necessary and useful to us as our hands feet eyes if they be occasions of sin to us then much more ought we to be willing to part with such things as are lesse dear to us and lesse necessary and useful c. such as we may better spare and be without as superfluous profits pleasures c. Observ 3 Observ 3. The practice of Mortification in resisting and refraining sin and the occasions of it is not an easie work but hard difficult and painful Compared here to the cutting off of a member of the body c. not done without great pain and grief called crucifying of the flesh dying to sinne circumcising of the heart c. Use 1 Use 1. See the cause why so few true mortified Christians are to be found so few truly dead to sin having the power of sinful lusts killed and crucified in them and shewing it in life by refraining sin and the occasions of it It is because it is so hard difficult and painfull a matter c. so contrary to Nature c. Use 2 Use 2. See the folly of such as think it easie to refrain sin and occasions and to resist their own lusts c. they think they can do this at any time when they will Therefore they defer Repentance c. But take heed of this for thou wilt not find it easie when it comes to point of practice but most hard and painful and even as the cutting off thy right hand c. Therefore set about it speedily The sooner the better and more easie to be done c. Mark 9. 43. It is better for thee to enter into life maimed c. Nov. 18. 1627. NOw followeth the second thing contained in the words viz. The reason of the Admonition whereby our Saviour inforceth it in these words It is better for thee to enter into life maimed c. The Reason is twofold or hath two branches The first is taken from the benefit and good that will come unto a Christian by cutting off and avoiding occasions of sin This will be a means to further him to the attainment of life everlasting the greatnesse of which benefit is amplified by comparison to the lesser good or benefit of enjoying those things which are dear to us in this life Better to enter into life maymed halt or having but one eye than to enjoy both hands feet c. and to come short of eternal life The second is taken from the contrary evil and danger which is like to ensue if a Christian be not careful to cut off such occasion● of sin in that by this means he shall be in danger of going to Hell after this life the greatnesse of which evil and danger is set forth by comparison to the lesser evill of being deprived of such things as are dear to us in this life Better it is to be maymed halt c. than to go to Hell that is it is a lesse evil to lo●e or be deprived of such things as are as dear to us in this life as our hands feet c. than to go to Hell c. See the meaning of the words before explained Now follow the Instructions 1. From the first branch of the Reason Better to enter into life c. Observ 1 Observ 1. There is an eternal life and state of glory to be enjoyed by the Saints of God after this life in heaven This is presupposed here And it is an Article of our faith c. Vide infrà post 3. Observ Observ 2 Observ 2. The great benefit and good that cometh of being careful to keep our selves from sin and the occasions of it in that it is a means to further us toward the attainment of eternal life and salvation in God's Heavenly Kingdom Our Saviour doth upon this ground warn every Christian here to take heed of the occasions of sin because it is better by so doing to enter into life or into the Kingdom of Heaven as it is Ver●e 47. than by not doing it to be in danger of Hell-fire Whereby he plainly implyeth That this carefull shunning of sin and avoiding occasions of it is a means to further Christians to the attainment of life eternal in God's heavenly Kingdom Though we do not by refraining sin or the occasions of it merit eternal life yet this is one means appointed of God whereby we are to come to eternal life viz. by a conscionable care to keep our selves from sin and the occasions of it Rom. 8. 13. If through the Spirit ye mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live 1 Pet. 3. 10. He that will love life
doth reprove and condemn the profanesse of such as do speak evil of the sex of Women calling them necessary evils or by the like unfit and reproachful names which is nothing else but to speak evil of Gods work of Creation who made them both male and female and consequently to controll his wisdom shewed in the Creation which is no better than a degree of blasphemy Observ 3 Observ 3. Seeing God is the Creator of both Sexes of Mankind both male and female hence we learn That both sexes ought to glorifie and serve God their Creator in this life by the conscionable practice of all such duties of obedience as he requireth of them not only men but women must do this and not only women but men both sexes alike As God hath created both male and female of Mankind so he will be obeyed and served by both this being the end of their creation Therefore Psal 148. 12. both young men and maidens are exhorted to praise the Lord their Creator and Deut. 31. 12. The Lord commands by Moses that when the Law should be read both men and women should be gathered together to hear it and to learn to obey it See 1 Cor. 11. This shews that neither sex must think themselves exempted from the duties of Gods true worship and service in this life neither the male nor female sex neither men nor women under any colour or pretence whatsoever but both alike and equally are bound in conscience to glorifie God their Creator by those duties of obedience and service which he requireth of them And for either of them to deny this obedience and service to God is in effect to deny him to be their Creator and themselves to be his creatures which is wicked Atheism Observ 4 Observ 4. Seeing God in the first creation of Mankind did make two distinct sexes that is to say the male and female sex distinguished one from the other hence we may further learn That it is a great sin for any to go about to confound these two sexes which God would have distinguished and which himself did distinguish in the first Creation of them Now these Sexes may be confounded sundry wayes As for example By the practice of that unnatural sin of Sodomy practised by the wicked Sodomites from whom it took the name and by other of the profane Gentiles as appeareth Rom. 1. 26. Also by confounding the outward habit and apparel of both sexes as when men do puton and wear womens apparel or women mens apparel which is abomination to the Lord Deut. 22. 5. Or when men and women do so disguise themselves with strange fashions of apparel that it is hard to know and discern men and women asunder by their apparel and habit Now as the creation and distinction of both sexes was the work of God from the beginning so this confusion of them is the invention and practice of the devil which hath been the cause and fountain of manifold grosse sins and abominations committed in the world Which must therefore teach us to abhor and detest this practice of Satan and all occasions and means which tend to the bringing in or maintaining of this confusion of sexes which God will have to be distinguished Mark 10. 6 7 8. But from the beginning of the Creation God made them male and female c. Febr. 24. 1627. THese words do contain the second part of our Saviour's last and full answer which he made to the Pharisees Question touching divorcement In which he proveth the unlawfulnesse of such divorces as were permitted by Moses by the near Union which is betwixt man and wife by Gods Ordinance from the beginning for the shewing whereof he layeth down the first Institution of Marriage Concerning which he sheweth four things 1. The Time when Marriage was ●nstituted From the beginning of the Creation 2. The Author of it God himself 3. The means of instituting it which was by creating Mankind both male and female 4. The speciall Decree of God which he set down and pronounced immediately upon the creation touching the near Union that should be between man and wife in the married estate That a man should leave his father c. Of the three first I have formerly spoken Now followeth the fourth which is the Decree or Sanction of God touching the near Union between married persons For this cause c. These words our Saviour alledgeth out of Gen. 2. 24. where we find them uttered by Adam immediately after that the Lord had created the woman and brought her unto him to be his Wife Now our Saviour here alledgeth them as spoken or uttered by God himself as appeareth Matth. 19. 5. the reason whereof is because Adam in uttering them did speak prophetically and by speciall instinct and motion from God So then the words contain in them God's own Decree and Ordinance set down and pronounced by Adam in the Name of God touching the near Union that should be between married persons c. Of which Decree or Sanction of God there are three parts The first is touching the ground or cause of that near Union that should be between Man and Wife implyed in the first words For this cause The second is Touching the duty of married persons which they owe one to another in respect of that near union betwixt them implyed in these words A man shall forsake his father c. The third is Touching the union it self which should be between man and wife in the married estate They should be two in one flesh c. Of the first For this cause These words as they are uttered by Adam through the immediate instinct of God himself Gen. 2. 24. have relation unto that which goes before in that place namely to that near union or conjunction which Adam affirmeth to be between him and Eve his wife in regard of the manner of her creation being made of his own body even of a rib taken out of him in which respect he saith she was bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh c. Verse 23. whereupon he inferreth the words here alledged by our Saviour Therefore or for this cause q. d. seeing this woman which the Lord hath given to be my Wife is taken out of my own body and so in regard of this manner of her creation is so near unto me that she is even a part of my self therefore it is the Ordinance of God that from henceforth there shall be a most near and strait union between every man and his wife in the married estate Observ Observ That the Union betwixt man and Wife in the Married estate is grounded upon that union which was between man and woman in their first Creation in that the Woman was first created and made out of the body of the man in respect whereof she was as a part of him and so most nearly united unto him And this is one reason why it is said afterward that man
in the same family or house further then they are willing so to do or further then they may well and conveniently do it without hinderance to them either in Marriage-duties or in the advancing of their own estate either Spiritual or Temporal for as we heard before this is one respect in which the husband is to forsake his Parents in comparison of his Wife viz. in respect of his habitation c. Observ 4 Observ 4. In that married persons are to forsake their Parents in regard of being exempted by marriage from that power and jurisdiction of Parents to which they were subject before this teacheth us how fit and equall a thing it is therefore for children not to enter into the married estate or to make choyce of husbands or wives without the consent of their Parents had thereunto especially to their first marriage For since by marriage the child is to be exempted from the Parents power and jurisdiction and is dismissed as it were from his Parents family is it fit that this should be done without the knowledg and consent of Parents themselves Therefore as God hath ordained that children when they marry shall forsake their Parents to cleave to their Wives so not to do this without their Parents consent Therefore in Scripture Parents are said to give their children in marriage 1 Cor. 7. 38. The father is said to give his Virgin c. and Deut. 7. 3. Thy daughter thou shalt not give unto his son viz. to the son of the Canaanite nor his daughter shalt thou take unto thy son And this might be proved further by other places of Scripture And it is confirmed by all good Laws of men Which therefore shews the great sin of such children who presume to make up secret Marriages or Contracts without the consent of Parents c. No blessing from God to be expected on such marriages but his curse rather as usually it cometh to passe Mark 10. 7 8. For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother c. March 2. 1627. NOw followeth the second Duty of married persons here required viz. cleaving to their own Wives and Husbands that is keeping themselves most nearly and inseparably joyned to them c. Doctr. Doctr. That married Couples ought to keep themselves most nearly and inseparably joyned unto each other in the married estate the husband to his wife and wife to her husband Rom. 7. 2. The woman which hath an husband is bound by the Law to her husband so long as he liveth c. So is the husband to the wife Quest Quest How are married couples to be joyned and so to keep themselves inseparably each to other Answ Answ By conscionable practice of all marriage-duties one to another but especially these 1. By the duty of most near and entire love whereof we heard before having their hearts glued to each other firmly and inseparably 2. By faithful and chast communicating of their bodies each to other 1 Cor. 7. 4. The wife hath not power over her own body but the husband et contrà This is called the bed undefiled Heb. 13. 4. 3. By the duty of cohabitation or dwelling together in the same house 1 Pet. 3. 7. Husbands dwell with your Wives according to knowledg c. So also is the wife to dwell with her husband 1 Cor. 7. 12. Though one of them be an unbeliever yet they are to dwell together and not to separate from each other Neither is it enough for man and wife to dwell together in one house but they are to desire and seek most near and familiar society together in the house and that upon all occasions excepting where is some weighty and just cause of separation or absence one from the other for a time and that by mutual consent Vse 1 Use 1. To reprove such husbands and wives as do not thus cleave inseparably one to the other by mutual performance of marriage duties but on the contrary do divide and separate themselves from each other either in heart and affection by withdrawing their love and growing into hatred or dislike of each other or else by outward separation of bodies not keeping themselves to each other but giving way to adulterous thoughts c. or in respect of habitation and dwelling How unfit is this and contrary to Gods Ordinance Great is the sin of such husbands and of such wives as do give the first cause of such separation and much have they to answer for unto God if they repent not of this sin Vse 2 Use 2. To exhort married couples to make conscience of this duty of mutual cleaving to each other that is of keeping themselves most nearly and inseparably joyned one to the other by conscionable practice of all marriage duties each to other especially by mutual love and faithful communicating their bodies and by dwelling together and mutual rejoycing in each others society c. As there is a most near union between them in respect of the marriage-bond as we shall see afterward so must they labour to maintain and preserve this union by mutual and conscionable practise of such marriage-duties whereby they are to cleave inseparably one to the other in the married estate It followeth And they twain shall be one flesh c. The third and last part of the Sanction or Decree of God pronounced by Adam at the beginning Gen. 2. 24. touching marriage and married persons viz. touching the near and strait union that should be between all married couples that they should be two in one flesh and this part of Gods Decree or Ordinance touching Marriage is not onely alledged out of Gen. 2. but repeated urged and further confirmed by our Saviour's own sentence and testimony when he saith So then they are no more twain c. They twain That is the husband and the wife being inseparably joyned to each other in Marriage The word twain or two is not in the Hebrew Text Gen. 22. 4. but is added hereby our Saviour onely for explication sake being necessarily implyed though not expressed in that place of Genesis shall be one flesh Shall remain so nearly united together by the marriage-bond that although they are two distinct persons in themselves yet in respect of marriage they shall be but as one man and so to be esteemed and taken So then they are no more twain c. These are our Saviour's own words which he addeth in way of further ratifying and confirming the former Decree of God touching the near union betwixt man and wife and that for the more plain and evident convincing of the Pharisees who went about to justifie unlawful divorces practised among the Jews contrary to this Decree of God Observ 1 Observ 1. See here what a strait and near union and conjunction there is by Gods Ordinance between man and wife in the ●arried estate so strait and near that they are as two persons in one or as one man made out of two
this reason contains in it the end of Christ's coming into the world which was not to be ministred unto but c. Where 1. Consider the Person that is said to have come Himself whom he calleth the Son of Man 2. The end of his coming set down 1. Negatively shewing wherefore he came not not to be ministred unto 2. Affirmatively wherefore he came to minister And this latter is confirmed by mentioning one special kind of Ministery or service which he came to perform which was the giving of his life c. The Son of man This Title he gives himself in respect of his humane nature to shew the truth of it But having often had occasion before to speak of it I will not here insist on it Came viz. Into the World To be understood of his first comming in the flesh when he was Incarnate taking our nature upon him being first conceived in the Womb of the Virgin his Mother and afterward born and brought forth into the World in the appointed time Not to be ministred unto Or to be served or to have service done unto him by others Quest Quest How is this to be understood seeing he was Ministred unto and had service done to him in and after his first comming both by his Disciples who attended as servants on him as also by others as by those Religious Women who ministred to him with their substance Matth. 27. 55. yea the Angels ministred to him at his birth and afterward at other times Answ Answ The words are not to be understood simply and absolutely as if he had not come at all or in any sort to be ministred unto but comparatively not so to be ministred unto or attended on by great retinue of servants or followers to do him service as earthly Kings Princes or other great men are wont to be attended and served such as he spake of before ver 42. He came not into the World as an earthly Prince or great man of state to be gloriously attended upon and ministred unto by many servants c. But to minister Or to do service unto others in humility and love by submitting himself to do the Office and duty of a servant unto others doing all duties of love in way of procuring and furthering the good and Salvation of mankind Quest Quest How and when did he thus submit himself as a servant for the good of men Answ Answ 1. In his life time while he lived on earth by his readiness to do good to the Souls and bodies of men To their Souls partly by his publick Doctrine and Ministry amongst the Jews for which cause he is called the Minister of Circumcision Rom. 15. 8. and partly by his private Instructions Admonitions and Exhortations of others To the bodies of men he did good upon all occasions by his Miraculous healing of the sick raising of the dead and casting out of Devills from the possessed as also by other ordinary duties of love which he performed to others especially to his own Disciples as by washing their feet and wiping them with his own hands Joh. 13. 2. At the time of his death by dying and suffering the wrath and curse of God due to the sins of men thereby to work their Redemption and Salvation as is shewed in the words immediately following Observ 1 Observ 1. Christ's Kingdome is not of this World Joh. 18. 36. not earthly or temporal accompanied with outward pomp and glory but spiritual and heavenly He came not as an earthly King honourably attended c. Zach. 9. 9. Vse Use We are not to imbrace Christ or profess the Gospel in hope of worldly preferment c. Observ 2 Observ 2. The manner of Christs first comming into the World in his Incarnation or comming in the flesh he did not come in outward pomp and state as an earthly King or great man to be honourably attended by many servants and followers but on the contrary in a poor low and mean estate not to be ministred unto but rather to minister to others In the form of a servant The poor and mean manner of Christs birth and comming into the World is recorded by the Evangelists viz. that he was born of mean Parents and in a mean place which was Bethlehem and not in any great or fair house of that Village but in a common Inn yea in the stable of the Inn and was there fain to be laid in a Manger in stead of a Cradle c. Reasons why he came into the World in this poor low and mean manner and not in outward pomp and glory 1. That the Scripture might be fulfilled which foretold this Psal 22. Esay 53. 2. Joh. 18. 36. 2. That from this low and mean estate he might afterward be advanced to so much the higher glory Phil. 2. 7. He made himself of no reputation c. Therefore ver 9. God hath highly exalted him c. 3. That there might be the more manifest difference between his first comming in the flesh and his second comming to Judgment Therefore he came at first in low and mean manner but shall come at the last day in wonderfull glory and majesty 4. That by his own example and practice he might sanctify the poor and mean estate unto the faithfull in this life that it might be good and comfortable for them Use 1 Use 1. For the comfort of such good Christians as are of poor and mean birth and of mean estate in this World So was Christ himself our head and Saviour He came not into the World as a great man in pomp and state neither did he live in the World in any great rich or honourable condition but in a mean and contemptible estate having not where to lay his head c. not so much as a house of his own to dwell in c. And he hath sanctified this poor and mean estate to all the faithfull c. Use 2 Use 2. Seeing Christ Jesus the Son of God was born and came into the World not in any outward state or glory but in a low and mean manner not to be served but to serve c. this should teach us not to affect or desire worldly greatness as great Wealth Honour or high places in this World but to be content with a low or mean estate if God see it good for us and rather to desire this then the other that so we may come after Christ our head and be herein like unto him Observ 3 Observ 3. But to minister See here how far Christ Jesus the Son of God did humble himself for the good and Salvation of mankind even so far as not onely to take mans nature upon him but in it to become a Minister or servant unto men after a sort for their good not refusing to do the meanest offices and duties of love unto men while he lived on earth in way of procuring and furthering the good and Salvation of the Souls and bodies of men
Phil. 2. 7. He took on him the form of a servant yea not onely the form but the office of a servant or Minister so far forth as was needfull for the good of men and especially for the good and Salvation of the Church Luke 22. 27. I am amongst you as he that serveth Vse Use This must teach us after Christs example to practice the like humility towards others especially towards our brethren and fellow Christians submitting our selves as Ministers and servants to them in love not refusing to do the meanest duties of love to others in way of procuring and furthering the good and Salvation of their Souls and bodies If the Son of God refused not to become a servant unto men the Creator to the Creatures c. how much lesse should we think much to become servants to our brethren in love Joh. 13. 14. If I your Lord and Master have washed your feet ye also ought to wash one anothers feet c. Mark 10. 45. And to give his life a ransome for many July 19. 1629. IT followeth And to give his life c. In these words our Saviour further proveth that he came rather to Minister or serve others then to be Ministred unto or to be served by instancing in one special kind of Ministry or service which he came to per●orm for men viz. the giving of his life a ransome for many First to open the meaning of the words Where are three things to be considered 1. The special service which Christ came into the World to perform for us or for mankind To give his life for us 2. The end for which he gave his life To be a ransome for us 3. The persons for whom he gave his life as a ransome For many To give his life Or his Soul A metonymy of the cause for the effect The Soul which is the cause of life being put for life it self Now this phrase of giving his life doth imply a free and willing laying down of his life and p●rting with it Aransome Or price of Redemption whereby to free and deliver such as were in captivity and bondage before under sin and Satan For many This is not to be understood of all mankind but of the true Church which are the elect or chosen people of God appointed to Salvation in Gods eternal purpose and in time effectually called and indued with Faith to believe in Christ and so to apply the merits of his death to themselves These are said to be many because they are so in themselves though in comparison of the Reprobate they are few Now follow the Instructions from the words And first from the first thing contained in them which is the special kind of Ministry or service which Christ came into the World to perform for us viz. the giving of his life for us Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this was one main end of Christs Inca●ation and of his first comming into the World in our nature that the might give his life or lay it down for us by suffering death which otherwise he could not have done this teacheth us the great necessity of his Incarnation and comming into the World and how great a benefit the same was unto us in that it was the means which made way to the death of Christ and consequently to the work of our Redemption The necessity appears in that without this Incarnation he could not have dyed or suffered for us And the greatness of this benefit of Christs Incarnation or comming in the flesh appears by this that it made way to the work of our Redemption by the death of Christ Phil. 2. 7. He took on him the form of a servant c. And being found in fashion of a man humbled himself to death c. Hence it was that at the birth of Christ when he came first into the World the Angells themselves did appear and in solemn manner praise God for this benefit of Christs Incarnation Luke 2. 13. How much more are we bound to be truely thankful to God for this great and unspeakable benefit of Christs Incarnation and comming into the World for whose sakes it was that he was Incarnate and came into the World As it is in the Nicene Creed Who for us men and for our Salvation came down from heaven c. This must stir us up to bless God and to shew our true thankfulness for this great benefit by reforming our lives and giving up our selves in obedience to God all the dayes of our life This is not to be done at one time of the year onely as at the time of Christs Nativity when we keep the memory of it but at all times of the year c. Observ 2 Observ 2. See how far Christ the Son of God did abase himself as a Minister or servant to us and for our good and Salvation even so far as to give his life and to suffer death for us which was the greatest Ministry or service which he could possibly perform for us Phil. 2. 7. He took upon him the form of a servant c. And he humbled himself to the death of the Cross c. Thus he became our servant not onely in his life time but in and by his death also which was the greatest service that could possibly be performed for us Vse 1 Use 1. See by this the great and unspeakable love of Christ to us and earnest desire of our Salvation in that for the accomplishment thereof he so far abased himself as to serve and minister to us not onely in his life but in his death by giving his life for our Redemption c. This was the highest degree of Christs love to us and most excellent service of love which he performed for us Joh. 15. 13. Greater love then this hath no man that a man lay down his life c. To stir us up to thankfullness c. And to this end to labour for true feeling of this love of Christ in our hearts c. Pray with Paul Ephes 3. Especially now we come to the Lords Table c. Vse 2 Use 2. This should cause us willingly to submit our selves to do this service unto Christ which he hath abased himself to do for us viz. to give our lives for him that is for the profession of his name and truth if need be as he hath done for us Thus did the blessed Martyrs Revel 12. 11. They loved not their lives unto the death in giving testimony to the truth of Christ Use 3 Vse 3. See also how far we should submit our selves as servants to our brethren for Christs sake so far as to give our lives for them if it be to procure the good and Salvation of their Souls 1 Joh. 3. 16. Observ 3 Observ 3. From the manner of speech To give his life We learn that Christ Jesus the Son of God did freely and willingly part with his life and lay it down for us He gave his
Christ Jesus the Lord can turn and change their hearts and Minds as he did the hearts of those whom he called and converted being on earth as of Zacheus Mary Magdalen c. And as he turned the hearts of others after his Ascension as of Saul Act. 9. and of Lydia and the Jaylor Act. 16. Therefore though we see some men yet to live in ignorance and profaness of life we should not be out of all hope of them but rather use all good means to further their conversion as instruction admonition prayer c. proving if at any time God will give them repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. Use 3 Vse 3. This may comfort a good Christian in two cases 1. When he is opposed by malitious or wicked enemies which obstinately set themselves against him and that for well-doing If it be thus with thee that thou art opposed by obstinate and malitious enemies which molest trouble and vex thee from time to time yet be not discouraged but bear it patiently and contentedly remembring That Christ Jesus the Son of God whom thou servest and whose Name thou professest hath power over the hearts and minds of all men turning them as the Rivers of water and therefore can turn and change the minds of thy most malitious enemies to become thy friends and he will do it if thou conscionably serve and please him Prov. 16. 7. When a man's wayes please the Lord he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him 2. This may also comfort a good Christian which is in outward poverty and want and hath none for the present to help or relieve him yet Christ Jesus can and will in due time incline and move the hearts of some to help thee yea perhaps of such as are yet most backward that way For he hath all mens hearts in his hands Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the owner of the Colt and those that were with him did so readily and willingly let the Colt go so soon as they were but told that Christ the Lord had need of him hence learn by their example That we ought readily and willingly to part with any thing we have in this world for Christ's sake and unto him whensoever he requires it of us or doth stand in need thereof In this case we are to deny him nothing but to yield him whatsoever we have or enjoy in this world when he stands in need of it or hath use ●or it and doth shew himself so to have Quest Quest Doth Christ Jesus the Son of God now stand in need of any thing which we have or enjoy in this World Answ Answ Not simply in respect of himself or his own Person as if he were any way defective without us for he is in himself most perfect full and compleat but he may be said to stand in need of such things as we have when the case so stands that by parting with any thing we have we may honour and serve him any way by advancing his Kingdom and glory or by furthering the Gospel or by doing good to others especially to the Church of Christ c. In this case Christ may be said to stand in need of those things which we possess in this world as of our Goods Lands Houses yea of our bodies and lives c. when there is just cause or occasion for us to part with these for the honour of Christ Therefore he hath need of our goods when there is cause and occasion for us to give or lend to the poor especially to the Saints of God and houshold of faith For in so doing we lend unto the Lord Prov. 19. 19. Therefore we are readily and willingly to do it So when there is occasion for us to give to other good uses as to the Church or maintenance of the Ministery c. Then Christ hath need of our money c. So he hath need of our houses when there is occasion for us to receive and entertain in them such as fear God he hath need of our Apparrel when there is occasion for us to cloath the naked of our meat and drink when there is occasion to feed the hungry and give drink to the thirsty So Christ hath need of our Goods Lands yea of our Bodies and Lives also when he calls us to part with these for the profession of the Gospel as he did the Martyrs and therefore in this case if it should befall us we ought willingly to part with all for Christ yea there is a necessity hereof if we will be Christ's true Disciples Luke 14. 33. Whosoever he be of you that forsakes not all he hath he cannot be my Disciple Again Christ Jesus hath sometimes need of our friends children c. and that is whensoever he thinks good to take them from us by death in which case we must therefore be content to forgo them because the Lord hath need of them c. Reason Reason By this we shew true love to Christ when willing to part with any thing we have for his sake Matth. 10. 37. Luke 14. 20. Use 1 Use 1. See what to think of such as profess Christ and the Gospel and yet are not willing to part with the things they possess in this world for Christ's sake and when he hath need of them and requireth them so to do Though Christ send to them by his Ministers telling them That he hath need of their money and wealth to give to the poor or to the maintenance of the Ministery c. yet they refuse to part with it they will not give or lend it to Christ or if they do it is unwillingly with grudging c. It must be wrung from them c. no true Disciples of Christ as it is to be feared neither do they bear true love to Christ for then they would think nothing too dear for him c. Use 2 Vse 2. To stir us up to this willingnesse and readinesse to part with any thing we possess in this world for Christ and when he hath need of it denying him nothing which we have but giving and lending all or any thing we have to him who hath denyed us nothing which we stood in need of but hath given himself for us and to us to redeem and save us being lost in our selves and that not being desired of us but of his own accord yea when we were his enemies c. Therefore we owe our selves to him and all we have c. Vse 3 Vse 3. See how unfit for us to set our hearts upon things of this world which here we possess and enjoy as goods lands money friends or life it self seeing we must willingly forgo these whensoever the Lord hath need of them which we can never do if our hearts be glued to them Therefore labour daily to be crucified and dead to the world and so to use all earthly things as if we used them not 1 Cor. 7. Now further Verse 7. in that
up and provoking Peter to this rashnesse and presumption and therefore our Saviour might also call him Satan to shew that herein he was an Instrument of Satan being set on work or stirred up by him to give him this pernicious Counsel Observ 1 Observ 1. That good intentions and meanings will not serve to justify or excuse unlawful Actions Peter's intent and meaning was good in rebuking Christ and disswading him from his purpose of Suffering yet for all that our Saviour sharply reproveth his Fact Saul's intention was good in taking upon him to offer Sacrifice in Samuel's absence yet this excuse served him not but he is sharply reproved by Samuel for that Action 1 Sam. 13. 13. Thou hast done foolishly thou hast not kept c. So Chap. 15. ver 21. he pretended a good meaning in himself and the People for the justifying of his Sin in sparing the best of the Amalekites Cattel for Sacrifice yet that excuse served not So Uzzah had a good intention in staying the Ark when the Oxen did shake it yet that excuse him not for notwithstanding his good meaning the Lord smote him with present death for that sin 2 Sam. 6. 7. So those that rashly did publish the Miracles of Christ wrought upon them contrary to his Commandment they might have a good meaning in it yet that excused them not from sin Reason Reason God requires that in all our Actions we do not onely aim at a good end but also have good warrant from his Word for the Action it self we must not follow our good meaning but his Will Deut. 12. 8 32. Rom. 12. 2. Use 1 Use 1. To convince the folly of such as have nothing to plead for excuse of their unlawful and unwarrantable Actions or rash Speeche● but their good intention that they meant well and this they think sufficient to justify themselves Here we see the contrary That a good meaning is not enough to justify or make good our Actions further than we have ground and warrant for them out of the Word of God He will not be served with good meanings but by obedience to his Will revealed in his Word This is the Rule we are to walk by and not our own Will purpose or good intention There be many in Hell which had good meaning c. Vse 2 Use 2. For admonition not to rest in good intentions or meaning in our Actions as if this would bear us out in them but first to see that we have good ground from the Word of God for them otherwise we may sin grievously notwithstanding all good meanings We must in every action not onely aim at a right end but withal have a good ground and warrant for the lawfulness of the action it self else it is no action of Faith and so it must needs be a sin Rom. 14. at the last Verse We must not onely mean well but do well that is be sure our Actions be justifiable by the Word of God else we can have no comfort in them though our intention be never so good which shews also how needful it is for every one to have competent Knowledge of the Will of God revealed in his Word for the guiding of us in all the actions of our life and therefore to come duly to hear the Word and to search the Scriptures in private that we may prove what is the good and acceptable Will of God Rom. 12. 2. Mark 8. 33. And when He had turned about c. Sept. 4. 1625. Observ 2 Observ 2. THe duty of such as are in Authority over others and have charge of them not to let them alone in those sins or corruptions which they take notice of to be in them but to admonish and reprove them for the same Our Saviour here taking notice of the sin of Peter his Disciple doth not wink at it but plainly and sharply reprove it in him So at other times when He discerned either him or his other Disciples to be faulty He used to reprove them as we have often heard before See ver 17. hu us capitis So ought all that have Authority and Charge of others Souls to reprove such sins as they take notice of in those of their Charge Especially this concerneth Ministers of the Church not to wink at the sins of their People committed to their Charge but duly to admonish and reprove the same both in their publick Ministery and also in private as occasion is offered Touching our publick Ministery it is one main part of the execution of it to reprove sin in our People Esay 58. 1. Cry aloud c shew my People ●heir Transgression c. 2. Tim. 4. 2. Preach the Word reprove rebuke c. So also in private it is the duty of Ministers to admonish those of their Charge and reprove sin in them Acts 20. 20. Paul at Ephesus taught them not onely in publick but in private from House to House testifying Repentance both to ●ews and Greeks which he could not do without reproving their Sins Now as this Duty concerneth Ministers so also all others that are in place of Government and have Charge of others as Magistrates Parents Masters of Families c. Ephes 6. 4. Parents to bring up Children in admonition of the Lord. So also Masters to reprove sin in their Servants as Elisha did his lying Servant Gehazi 2 King 5. 26. Reas 1 Reas 1. Such as have Char●e of others are bound to use all good means to reform sin in those of their Charge Now admonition and reproof duly given is one speciall means sanctified of God to this end Matth. 8. 15. If thy Brother trespasse against thee go and tell him his fault c. If he hear thee thou hast gained thy Brother A means to bring the Offender to sight of his sin and to work remorse and repentance Reas 2 Reas 2. If such as have Charge of others do let them alone in their sins and not admonish them they become accessary to those sins and guilty of the blood of their Souls if they perish in them for want of admonition See Ezek. 3. 18. True not onely of Ministers but of Parents Masters c. who neglect to warn their Children and Servants of sin Use 1 Use 1. To condemn the great neglect of this necessary Duty in many that have Charge of others who are not careful to reprove sin in those of their Charge but let them alone to go on in them without Reformation c. The fault of many Ministers that they do not reprove sin in their People in publick and private but think it enough to instruct them in their Duties as if it were not as necessary a part of their Ministery also to reprove sin c. No marvail if the People living under such Pastors be profane and loose in Life given to swearing drunkennesse profanesse of the Sabbath A main cause hereof i● the Minister's neglect to reprove such sins in them How will such
Pastors clear themselves from being guilty of the blood of Souls if the People perish in their sins for want of admonition Again as this duty is much neglected by Ministers ●o also by many Parents and Masters of Families c. who let their Children Servants and those of their Family run on in known sins without reproving or admonishing them One great cause of such profaness and wickedness now adayes raigning in many Children and Servants that they are given to swearing lying breaking the Sabbath filthy speaking disobedience to Parents and Masters c. Parents and Masters are the cau●e who do not reprove such sins in those under their Government Much have they to answer to God not onely for their own sins but for sins of their Children Servants c. Guilty of their Blood if they go on still and perish in such sins wherein they have suffered them without Reproof Let them fear lest God punish both them and their Children and Servants for such sins remaining unreformed through their default How did he punish good Eli for not reproving his wicked son so shar●ly as he should have done Vse 2 Use 2. Admonition for all that have Authority and Charge over others to make conscience of this Duty of reproving sin in those of their Charge as Ministers Parents c. Though this be a Duty which bindeth all Christians in some Cases yet especially such as have special Charge of others c. Consider the Reasons before alledged c. Now because it is no easie but a hard Duty to perform aright and so as to do good therefore here some rules are to be observed in reproving sin in others especially in those of our Charge See these rules before prescribed ver 17. hu us capitis Use 3 Use 3. If it be the duty of such as are in Authority and have Charge of others to reprove sin in those of their Charg Then this also teachech all that are under the Charge and ●overnment of others willingly to suffer the Word of Reproof and to submit thereunto and to make a holy and right use thereof shewing themselves ready to reform what is amisse yea to be glad and thankful to such as reprove them If David being a King c. Psal 141. 5. Observ 3 Observ 3. Though Peter were a Disciple and holy Apostle of Christ and consequently very near and dear to Christ even as the other Disciples were as appears in that He calleth them His Friends Joh. 15. 14. yet He doth not forbear to reprove and that sharply Hence we may learn That such as have a Calling to reprove sin in others ought not herein to spare or forbear their dearest Friends but to reprove them and that sharply c. Our Saviour used often at other times to reprove sin not onely in Peter but in the other Disciples also though He loved them dearly So Job did not forbear to reprove his Wife though dear to him Job 2. 10. Paul sharply reproved the Galathians Chap. 3. 1. and yet they were as dear to him as Children to a Mother Chap. 4. 19. So He rebuked Peter to his face though His fellow Disciple Gal. 2. 11. Reason Reason It is a duty of love and therefore to be performed toward our dearest Friends Levit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy Brother in thine heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy Neighbour c. q. d. Though he be thy Brother or Neighbour beloved of thee yet thou must not spare or let him alone in his sin but reprove him Prov. 27. 6. Faithfull are the wounds of a Friend that is the sharp reproofs of a Friend Therefore a faithfull Friend is to shew his faithfulness by giving such wounds to his Friend when there is cause Vse 1 Vse 1. See how faulty some are in performance of this Duty of reproving sin in others Some deal partially being forward to reprove and tax the faults of their Enemies but as for their Friends and such as they affect they can pass over and wink at greater faults in them and never admonish or reprove them for the same yea though they be such as they have a Calling to reprove being of their Charge as their Children Servants or others under their Government yet they suffer sin upon them without Reproof like unto Eli 1 Sam. 3. 13. and David 1 King 1. 61. They are loth to reprove sin in their Friends for fear of offending or displeasing them lest they make their Friends become their Enemies But let such take heed how under such pretences they neglect so necessary a duty of love as Christian Admonition and Reproof is How did God punish David and Eli for this The more love we profess to any the farther we should be from winking at their faults and especially from flattering and soothing them therein and the more careful should we be to deal plainly and faithfully with them by Reproof Use 2 Vse 2. See also that one Christian friend should be willing to be reproved by another when there is cause and not to take it amisse but in good part as a token of true love and not of hatred c. Mark 8. 33. And when He had turned about c. Sept. 11. 1625. Observ 4 Observ 4. SEE how far we ought to be from hearkening to the Counsell of such as go about to hinder us from our duty or to entise us to sin so far That we are to shew utter dislike and detestation of the same and of the persons that give us such Counsell Yea though they be our near Friends and though they do it under some fair pretence yet if they go about by their Counsell either to hinder us in doing good or to entise us to evil we are utterly to re●ect their Counsell yea to abhorr and detest the same Prov. 19. 27. Cease my Son to hear the Instruction that causeth to erre from the words of Knowledge Our Saviour detested the Devils counsell perswading him to Worship Him Matth. 4. 10. Acts 21. 13. When Paul's Companions and the Bre●●r●n of Caesarea advised and besought Him not to go up to Hierusalem because it was foretold by Agabus That He should there Suffer great Troubles Paul utterly rejected their Counsell yea reproved them for using such persw●sions to him in a matter which he knew to be contrary to the Will and Appointment of God So our Saviour detested Peter's Counsell c. Thus when any go about by evil Counsell either to entise us to evil or to hinder us from good Duties we are to reject and detest such Counsell and those that give it yea though they be our Friends and do it under a good pretence Reason Reason By this we are to shew our true love to God and zeal for his Glory viz. by abhorring the Counsell of such as go about to draw us away from God or to entise us to sin against Him Vse 1 Use 1. To reprove such as are so far from detesting such