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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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head thy sword shall pearce thine owne heart Goliahs owne sword shall sunder his head and bodie Haman shall hansell his owne gallowes the Madianites that little feared to be slaine by the Israelites shall be slaine one by another For it is iust with God saith Paul to render tribulation to those that afflict his Saints that as they secretly hatch mischeife against the godly so the Lord should secretly deuise and prepare righteous iudgement against themselues And surely many a man there is that carrieth secret plagues about him some in his inward estate some in his outward some in his bodie some in his soule some in himselfe some in his with which he strugleth and toyleth and turneth himselfe to many causes and meanes of his harmes and it may be to some sinnes as causes but neuer espie this curse passed from the mouth of God against his mallice toward good men and so toyleth himselfe altogether in vaine Were these things written in the hearts of men how could it be but they should stand in awe and dread with wicked Balaam who otherwise was willing inough to curse where God hath blessed 3. Let vs learne to see our inbred hatred of good men at least our want of loue vnto them and seeing it bewaile it and bewayling it reforme it Let our louing affection cause vs to ioyne our selues to their societie among whom good is to be gotten Obiect Oh but this is a toyle indeed if we goe amongst them they are so precise we may not take the least libertie we must speak of nothing but Scripture matters Ans. If thou hadst the life of Christ working in thee and that delight in God which beseemeth a sonne or daughter of God it would be thy meate and drinke to meditate speake and spend thy thoughts and time in holy things and thinke such times happily gained from thy vanitie yea from thy lawfull calling or if thou didst fauour the things of the spirit as thou doest the things of the flesh that which is indeed the freedome of a Christian would not be such a yoke and burthen the spirit of Christ would make thee willing thus to spend thy time and become in no company neither idle nor vnprofitable and much lesse vaine or licentious and take this withall that gracious words are neuer vnwelcome but to a gracelesse heart Obiect But I see no such good in their meetings Ans. Thou maist want wisedome to draw it out of them or else thou seest it not because thou wantest eyes as the soudiers sought Christ euen in speaking vnto him or else they seeme simple and weake men as the Church is blacke but comely the sunne lookes vpon them and their infirmities falls and afflictions make them outwardly appeare as the tents of Kedar and vpon these thine eyes gaze altogether yet as the Church is glorious within so are the members in respect of sanctitie and ornaments of the soule which weighed in thy ballance are found very light I exhort therefore all those that would encrease in grace that they linke their soules to such as feare God so Dauid made himselfe a companion of all them that feared the Lord and the next words seeme to include the reason and which keepe thy statutes the statutes of the Lord are in their hearts in their mouthes before their eyes and in their hands This will keepe them from entring into the way of the wicked and from beeing so easily plucked away with the error of the wicked But to such as would faine be acquainted with an hellish life before hand let them frequent other companies then this where God is not present nor his spirit nor his loue but the spirit of mischiefe of swearing swilling vncleannes and all hostillitie against God where in stead of men are Deuills incarnate in whose minds a● in a shop Satan is euer framing and forging vnholy and vncleane thoughts and desires and according to the abundance of their hearts their mouthes speake lewd things and their hands act all manner of wickednesse hardly canst thou come neere them but they will infect thee but keepe with them and thou wilt be like them thy bodie is not fitter to receiue the infection of the plague from a person that hath a plague sore running vpon him then thy soule to be deadly poysoned and infected by such societie Wise The Papists out of their vulgar translation abuse this word to improoue the marriage of Ministers and most improperly turne and translate it chast or continent whereas the word properly signifyeth a man of a sound minde that is prudent circumspect one that carrieth a continuall consultation within himselfe for the guiding of his whole course in such moderation as wisedome may appeare in his speeches gestures countenance and whole life Besides that the Apostle requireth the selfe same vertue of married wiues 1. Tim. 3.11 and of all young men of what profession soeuer whom I hope they meane not to debarre of marriage How wise and circumspect a man the Minister need to be will appeare if we consider either the workes of his calling or his person and place it selfe For the former what wisedome is required of him who is to vtter the word of wisedome whereby both himselfe and his people should be made wise to saluation and so to speake this word as becometh him to speake that in nothing he may be blamed what a wise steward must he be that must giue euery seruant within the house of God his owne portion and that in due season how experienced had that man need to be who is as Gods owne mouth to separate betweene the pretious and the vile how circumspect and warie least his people beeing as lambs among wolues should fall into the aduersaries hands and beeing be guiled by words of humane wisedome so peruerted And for the latter their verie persons and places require euen the wisedome of serpents to walke circumspectly as persons watching vnto euery step where they meane to set their foote 1. Because they are lights set vpon hills the eies of the world are vpon them euery thing in them is marked as they are eyes to espie other mens manners so are other mens eies much more vpon them either for imitation or calumniation 2. A sober and circumspect carriage not onely shutteth the mouth of the enemie who seeketh occasion to blaspheme the glorious Gospel and through the sides of the Minister to smite Christ himselfe but remooueth a iust scandale whereby many are contented to abide without the Church namely the dissolute and disordered course of the teachers of religon which maketh euen the religion taught by such stinke and become loathsome to numbers who gladly lay hold of such occasions to be of no religion at all and therefore if women must so walke as that by their honest conuersation others may be wonne ought not men much more and yet most of all Ministers 3. Such a wise and graue carriage getteth reuerence
of his owne gifts why hath God giuen me learning wealth aduancement surely for some good ende in the Church or common wealth and how dangerous a thing is it to peruert Gods ende in giuing his gifts And further from hence let him that would take a compendious way to entertaine the Ministerie alwaies behold with one eie the end of it for otherwise it will often seeme harsh and intolerable flesh willingly abideth not the handling of the Minister oh no meddle not with mine eies my deere and tender sinnes the bodie abideth not the pulling out of eies or cutting off of hands and feete so as let the Minister come to saw or feare a desperate member there is such reluctation and opposition as maketh a whole parish too little for the Minister and people The cause of all this is they consider not this end of the Ministerie If they could thus reason for this end is this man set here to be the watchman ouer the house of Israel to sound a trumpet against the sinnes of Iudah to redresse our disorder to plant Gods graces amongst vs to beate downe sinne superstition ignorance profanesse then should we not here such gracelesse speaches as Corah and his companie vtter against Moses the man of God Who made him a controller he is very busie to meddle with such and such things which concerne him not come let vs smite him with the tongue and much a doe is there to keepe Zidkiahs fist from Michaes face Whereas if they could thinke them the Ministers of God for their wealth as the Apostle speaketh of the Magistrate or if they could conceiue them to haue the watch of their soules committed vnto them either of these arguments by the iudgement of the spirit of God would be strong inough to enforce reuerence vnto their persons and obedience vnto their doctrine Now to the dutie and office of Titus the Apostle reduceth all his labour to two heads 1. the reforming of things that remaine 2. the appointing of elders in euery citie In the order of which precepts the Apostle sheweth that the way to plant Gods ordinances is first to redresse and remooue such disorders as make most opposition for Dagon and the Arke will not stand together but one will fall downe on his face As it is in the naturall bodie so is it in the Ecclesiasticall if there be a predominancie of some peccant humour that must necessarily be first purged out before any meanes can be to purpose vsed to breed good blood and humours Neuer did any of the kings of Iudah any great matter for the establishing of true religion till they had rooted out Idolatrie and broken downe the altars and groues of their Idols Asa tooke a right course to bring the holy vessels and things dedicated to the Lords house into the temple when he broke his fathers idols tooke away the Sodomites put downe his mother Maacha from her regencie for her idols and burnt them by the brooke Kidron See the like in Hezekiah 2. Chron. 31. who gathered all Israel to breake downe altars cut down groues cast downe the high places and then made the diuisions of the Priests and Leuites according to their ministerie in the Temple Of Iosiah see c. 34.1 ad 8. Yea Iesus Christ the wisdome of his father could not nor did establish any thing vntill in his first sermon he had reformed the grosse expositions and Pharisaicall glosses whereby they had corrupted the law teaching the same truth with our Apostle that the redressing of disorders is but a way and meanes of planting the Lords ordinances Vse We pray that Gods kingdome may come euerie where and that the Lords ordinances onely may take place in his Church now that this may be effected we must also pray that he would ouerthrowe the man of sinne and disperse the mists of darkenes in all countryes which trouble the shining brightnesse of the Gospel that the whole bondwoman may be cast out which standeth against the right of the right heire that the head and tayle of Antichrist may be cut off and that no stumpe of Dagon may remaine to keepe out the institutions of Iesus Christ. For the former of these two It will first be asked what power Titus had to controle disorders in this Iland and if he had any whether it did not derogate from the power of the ciuill Magistrates Ans. Titus had a ministeriall power which no more derogated from the soueraigne power of the Magistrate then if the Gospel were now established in it againe would it weaken the power of the Venetians in whose hands now it is nor no more then the power of the Gospel doth weaken the states and scepters of Christian Princes which indeede are stablished by Christs scepter The reason is because the power of the word and sword of the magistrate and Minister are of a diuerse nature for although both of them haue their power from God and one generall scope which is the good of men yet in them is it farre different 1. In their obiect The one hath power ouer all men and all the things of men The other hath power ouer all men but onely in the things of God The one bindeth the outward man his bodie goods life conuersation the other the inward man his soule conscience and spirit of which God onely is the Lord the one ordereth causes Ecclesiastiacall according to the w●●d the other onely may execute them 2. In their manner of commanding The ciuill power may command obedience to it selfe in it owne name as hauing vnder God the power in himselfe but the ecclesiasticall or ministeriall power is not in the person of the Minister but in Christ neither can he command obedience to himselfe but vnto Christ nor come in his owne name but in Christs as being not his Leiftenant as the Magistrate nor his vicar for as he is Mediator he hath not any but his Minister only 2. the ciuill power may absolutely compell the outward man but the ministeriall can onely perswade and exhort 3. In their meanes of enforcing The ciuill hath the vse of the sword to arrest imprison make warre execute the sentence of death vpon malefactors the ministeriall can only either by admonition cure or excommunication cast out the obstinate offenders and esteeme them as Publicans and heathens The weapons of this warfare are spirituall as doctrine exhortation admonition reproofe good life c. This latter then while Titus exercised he encroached not vpon the ciuill Magistrates power nor weakened but strengthened it Christ himselfe although the rightful King of the Iewes would not so much as devide an inheritance but subiected himselfe to all tributes and hard sentences and yet all his life and death was nothing else but the establishing of his owne scepter one of these powers is the ornament and muniment of the other and therefore let none commit Moses and Aaron together but esteeme it as a sweet
torments of hell namely the endles wrath of his father vnder which his Church had otherwise beene subdued for all eternitie So as for the time the Sonne of God and Lord of all was deiected vnder all creatures and held vnder the most accursed death that euer was seeing the sinnes of all his bodie lay most heauily vpon him vnto both which branches of his obedience if you adde the voluntarinesse and freedome of both the whole will appeare most perfectly meritorious to which purpose because nothing can merit to which any man is bound the Scripture saith that he paid that which he neuer tooke and so was not bound to any such paiment Doctr. 1. Seeing Christ must giue himselfe to redeeme vs it implyeth a wonderful bondage and tyrannie of sinne ouer vs before that Christ wrought our libertie Hence doth the Scripture speake of regenerate persons as seruants of sinne seruants of vnrighteousnesse seruants of corruption we read also of the wages of sinne of the hire of vnrighteousnesse which Balaam loued of beeing sold vnder sinne and of wicked men selling themselues to worke wickednesse as Ahab and others which is nothing else but a voluntarie putting of a mans selfe vnder the will and power of sinne and thus he that committeth sinne that is giueth himselfe vnto it is the seruant of sinne To this purpose also we heare the Apostle often speaking of the raigne and dominion of sinne in the mortal bodie and of the lawe of sinne in the members rebelling against the law of the mind and of the lawe of euill which is euer present with the best But who is it that feeleth not within himselfe the wofull fruites of this captiuitie how are we bound hand and foote in chaines of darkenesse further then the sonne by setting vs free hath enlarged vs how are wee stript starke naked of our cloathes of innocencie and holynesse further then we are wrapped in the garment of this our elder brothers righteousnesse how seruill are we and at the becke of euerie sinne euerie temptation euery lust and suggestion further then the sonne hath rescued vs out of the hands of such hard Lords who seeth not this tyrant thrusting himselfe by force or fraude into his best holds so to shoulder out the right owners who perceiueth not this tyrant seeking himselfe onely and careth not for blood and murther but raigneth vnto d●●th in so many as he hath subdued who findeth not this tyrant ouerturning all lawes and constitutions and making his owne will his onely lawe to the which whosoeuer are subiected what slauerie can be compared to theirs If we consider the Iewes oppression in Egypt for 400. yeares together euen when their taskes were most encreased If the vnmercifull intreatie of them in Babylon when strange Lords had rule ouer them 70. yeares If the cruell and bloodie persecution of Antiochus of which Daniel prophesied that before it neuer was the like nor should be after it If the miserie of the Turkish gally slaues yet is there no miserie no bondage to this For there the enemie was externall here within a mans breast and bowels there the losse was outward of goods lands libertie or life but here of Gods image his fauour the soule life eternall there might they in time looke to change their Master or to flie or with the ende of their liues at the least to ende their miserie but here no man can flie except he can flie from himselfe nor ende by death but beginne rather his bondage in comparison of what it was before And whereas there is no other bondage wherein a man cannot at least wish his freedome here men will not beleeue they are in such snares but reioyce in them and are neuer so merrie as when they are strengthning their bonds vpon themselues of which thraldome if we would more distinctly conceiue in one word thus it is Originall sinne inthralls vs to actuall preceding actuall sinnes to consequent as iust punishments of the former present sinnes are presidents to other men and so we are intangled not onely with our owne but other mens transgressions also By all these we are liable to death both temporall and eternall which entred into the world by sinne hence commeth the torment and sting of a guiltie conscience hence is the sinner haunted with the horror of Gods dreadfull iudgement and the best fruit of the best mens sinnes is shame and sorrowe euen where God raiseth vp to repentance Vse 1. Note hence the miserable estate of such men as are out of Christ in whom sinne yet raigneth for these are chained in ignorance rebellion contempt of God and his word are snared with manifold lusts bound hand and foote alreadie and nothing remaineth but the casting of them into the fire for they are yet in their sinnes which one word sinne saith Luther comprehendeth Gods euerlasting wrath and the whole kingdome of the deuill And yet examples there be in the world of such who by all Gods arrowes and plagues sent against them cannot come to see their miserable bondage to and by sinne the which if it made Paul who was in Christ an auncient beleeuer to crie out Oh miserable man who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death what cause haue such to exclame vpon themselues as most wretched whose bonds are not loosed as Pauls but binding them euerie day surelier then other ouer to destruction Vse 2. Seeing by sinne we put our selues vnder such slauerie as both it selfe and Satan plaie the tyrants ouer vs we must take that counsell Let not sinne raigne in your mortall bodie but daily seeke and striue to expell the tyrant and if that will not be done aime at the weakning of his forces obseruing these directions 1. Take from him his most dangerous weapons by subduing thy owne corruptions which are his Sampsons locks wherein his greatest strength lyeth 2. Banish all his freinds abetters alliance as all appearance of euill and occasions such wicked companie counsell idlenesse c. which are sinnes supporters 3. Preuent the wiles and policies of this tyrant for he is of a serpentine creeping and insinuatiue nature sinne hath many fetches for it owne fortification as false ioyes false feares false pleasures false profits by these meanes if we take not great heed it will come within vs and we shall be too weake to close with it If the Apostle Paul confesse that sin seduced him how had we weaklings need to furnish our selues with serpentine wisedome against the deceitfulnesse of sinne 4. Neuer offer conditions of peace with him be not content that he haue a little roome in thy heart as many because they cannot be without sinne make small matters of such grosse sinnes as the spirit will not dwell with and they contētedly forbeare to disease thē but arme thee against the beginnings stoppe the occasions and passages But if for want of watchfulnesse he haue made some entrance and encroched on thee stay
sense of much loue in forgiuing many sinnes doth greatly constraine and enforce double thankefulnesse all which I haue spoken that no man be discouraged otherwise then to lead him through his course with constant humilitie for his estate past if for the present he finde a change but rather breake forth into the magnifying of that maruelous power of God and that free grace of his who is the moouer and perfecter of our whole saluation The 2. point in this description of the person of Titus is the title of relation my sonne according to the common faith that is my son not whom I haue begotten according to the flesh but to the faith namely both to the gift of faith for Paul was his spirituall father by whose meanes and ministerie he was conuerted as also to the doctrine of faith not to beleeue and professe it onely but also become a teacher of it Which doctrine is called the common faith 1. because the matter of it is common to Paul Titus and all the elect 2. the manner of propounding it in which they did mutually consent is common to all beleeuers 3. in regard of the common obiect which is Christ and all his merits which belong to all the faithfull 4. in respect of the common profession of it it beeing the badge of euery Christian. 5. of the common ende of it which is saluation the ende of euerie beleeuers faith Out of this title note two lessons 1. That Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers to beget children to God 2. That faith is one and the same in all the elect Doctr. 1. That Ministers are spirituall Fathers to beget children to God appeareth in that the Hebrew phrase not onely stileth them by the name of fathers 1. who indeed are so properly by the way of blood naturall generation 2. neither onely those who are in a right descending line though neuer so far off 3. neither onely those who adopt others into the roome and place of children 4. but those also that are in the roome of fathers either generally as all superiors in age place or gifts or more specially such as by whose counsell wisedome tendernes and care we are directed as by fathers who in these offices and not in themselues for sometimes they be inferiours otherwise become fathers vnto vs. Thus was Ioseph an inferiour called a father of Pharaoh that i● a counseller Iob for his tendernes and care called a father of the poore Schollers of the Prophets called sonnes of the Prophets Elisha saith of Eliah my father my father and Iubal was the father of all that plaie on harpes But much more properly is the Minister called the father of such as he conuerteth vnto the faith because they beget men vnto God as Paul did Onesimus in his bonds in which regeneration the seede is that heauenly grace whereby a diuine nature is framed the instrument by which it is conueied is the word of God in the Ministerie of it The mother of these children of God is the Church which conceiueth them in her wombe which trauelleth of them and bringeth them into this spirituall world which bringeth them vp in her bosom and nourisheth them at her brests first with the milke of the two Testaments and after with stronger meate till they be strong men in Christ. Obiect Matth. 23.9 Call no man father in earth and God is the onely father of spirits Hebr. 12.9 Ans. The place doth not simply and absolutely forbid the calling of any man father for then had the Apostle sinned in calling himselfe the father of the Corinths and Timothie and Titus his sonnes yea the Lord himselfe goeth before vs in example in giuing this title not onely to the fathers of our bodies but all superiors besides in the first commandement But the scope of that place is 1. to condemne the ambitious seeking and boasting in the titles of father doctor c. 2. to teach that no man should depend vpon any other as the principall efficient cause of his birth either naturall or spirituall for God is properly the father of vs all not according to our spirituall birth onely but euen our naturall also for he formeth in the wombe he bringeth out of the wombe and in him we liue and mooue and haue our beeing and what Ministers or fathers of our bodies act herein they doe it as instruments by whom the Lord worketh True it is that the Lord hideth his worke by instituting such meanes as haue in them some shew of inherent power to produce such effects and for their further reuerence ascribeth to these instruments his owne work and his proper titles of fathers sauiours yet is no man for this to ascribe the principall power of begetting him whether in the flesh o● in the faith to any man otherwise then as a subordinate meanes vnder God that the whole praise of the worke and of our life naturall and spirituall may be ascribed vnto the God of life and the spirits of all flesh Thus we see how Ministers are fathers and so to be accounted Vse 1. No man can be saued in an ordinarie and visible Church where the Ministerie of the word is setled but by a second begetting and birth for that which is borne of flesh is flesh and therefore he must haue another father besides the father of his bodie for no spirituall father in earth none in heauen euery child borne into the world hath a father although many sonnes of the earth know not their father examine thy heart am I born into the Church who was my father and here what a number of the sonnes of the earth earthly and base minded men and women professing themselues to be the sonnes and daughters of God know neither father nor mother besides those of their bodies and conceiue no more of this heauenly birth then Nicodemus who although Christ himselfe taught the doctrine of regeneration yet asked how could those things be for what is that which is generally taken and rested in as the new birth and deceiueth the most men and women in the Church surely the repressing of wickednes of nature that it breake not out into excesse of riot and perhappes not the restraining only but the reforming of some grosse vice or vices which may be and generally are where is no renewing nor birth into the Church Iudas so liued as no man could say blacke was his eie but yet was a deuil out of which example we euidently see that euen the supernaturall decrease and restraint of vice in the reprobate is farre from the new birth of the elect Let him then that would not be deceiued in this waightie matter looke he be renewed that he be a new creature a new man compleat in all his parts for as the soule is whole in euery part of the bodie so is the beleeuer renewed in euery part that although there be no lust but may assaile him yet none shall dwell
2. More specially by grace of those who are adopted and renewed by grace and thus God is properly our father in heauen and no man is to be called father in earth Secondly when God is personally called father then it is to be taken for the first person and this title is giuen principally to the first person in Trinitie 1. because he is the Father of the second person the word by nature and by eternall generation 2. because he is Father to Christ in respect of his manhood not as to other men by nature or grace of adoption but by personall vnion the humane nature subsisting in the person of the word 3. because from both these followeth that by Adoption he becommeth the father of all the elect beeing members and making vp the bodie of Christ. And this is the respect wherein God is tearmed Father in this place both because it hath relation to the second person here nominated as also because in prayer we must repaire to God the Father in Christ our head and Mediator And our Lord Iesus Christ Christ is Lord in himselfe as God and Lord ouer all blessed for euer both in that he giueth essence and susteining to all things as also possesseth all things and ruleth euen the most powerfull and glorious of all creatures and is called Lord of the Angels much more ouer the Deuils themselues Againe he is our Lord 1. as Mediatour we beeing his inheritance giuen him of his Father 2. as a Redeemer purchasing vs beeing captiues and thralls to Satan 3. as a head of his Church quickning and gouerning the whole bodie of it whether militant or triumphant 4. in regard of his power and dominion for to him all power is committed in heauen and in earth who hath put all things vnder his feete in him we hold all things as in capite and to him we owe all homage and subiection in all obedience both actiue and passiue Quest. But how can Christ be a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant Ans. Christ considered in the office of Mediatourship is after a speciall manner a seruant of his Father and so his Father calleth him for my seruant Dauids sake and Behold my seruant because he faithfully serued him in the worke of redemption in that he was made man came into the world fulfilled the law prayed vnto his Father and was made obedient euen to the death yet all the while of his seruice he remained a Lord in himselfe and by his seruice became the Lord of his Church redeemed ones in a speciall manner Our Sauiour There is no other name giuen but this Obiect The Father and the holy Ghost saue also Answ. Although all outward workes of the Trinitie which make for our comfort and saluation are vndeuided as beeing one and coworking yet in performing them we must obserue an order among them the Father is the fountaine from whom the Sonne for whom as a meritorious cause the holy Ghost by whom we communicate of all blessings so all three saue but the Father by sending the Sonne the Sonne by paying the ransome the holy Ghost by applying it so all create redeeme sanctifie yet obseruing this order and manner of working when the workes are more personally attributed vnto them creation is ascribed to the Father not excluding the sonne and holy Ghost redemption to the Sonne and sanctification to the holy Ghost Which order is rather here to be obserued because our Apostle expresseth it in his prayer for these graces when he craueth them both from the Father and the Sonne not excluding the holy Ghost whereby we are taught how to direct our suits also namely that the Father by the Spirit through his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ would enrich vs with grace and the fruits of it Obiect But there are other sauiours as Ioshua and other Iudges and Kings yea Prophets and Ministers are called sauiours Ans. 1. These all were men and as men saued But of Christ it is said Behold our God he shall saue vs. 2. Some of them as Iudges were typicall sauiours sauing 1. the bodies 2. of one people the Iewes 3. from temporall death and oppression but Christ saueth the bodies and soules of all beleeuing Iewes and Gentiles from hell and condemnation 3. Others as Prophets and Ministers are onely ministeriall and instrumentall sauiours not properly onely for sundrie causes the worke of the efficient is ascribed to the instrument whom the Lord vseth in publishing this saluation but Christ alone saueth by meriting and paying the price and bringing home to the heart this redemption Obiect But we haue yet sinne in vs and therefore are not saued from it Answ. We are saued euen for the present from the wrath and poyson of it in part for euer from the damnation of it so as the strength of it is gone This is the meaning of this salutation which beeing a prayer sheweth vs both of what kinde our salutations ought to be in which we would testifie our loue to whom we write namely to wish them the best blessings as also in what manner not sending formall salutations without feeling abstracting curtesie from conscience but they must proceede from a religious and reuerent affection of the heart for euery prayer ought to come from the heart and as hauing God himselfe a witnes of the truth of the spirit in such wishes as Rom. 1.9 and Phil. 1.8.9 Now the principall lessons in this prayer are two 1. That the free and euerlasting grace of God in Christ is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall 2. Peace is the fruite of the grace and mercie of God Doctr. 1. The grace of God is the whole sufficiencie of his people the first middle and last cause of euery good thing conuaied vnto them or issuing from them not once did the Lord enforce this point vpon his owne people teaching them by things temporall their spirituall estate and condition Deut. 7.7 The Lord set his loue vpon you and chose you not because you were moe in number for you were the fewest but because he loued you cap. 9.4.6 Say not in thine heart because of my righteousnes the Lord hath giuen me this good land for thou art a stiffnecked people and were they not yet further off from meriting and procuring to themselues spirituall blessings and that heauenly Canaan and euerlasting rest prepared for the people of God and if we consider our condition before this grace be reueiled and shine vpon vs are not we in our blood when the Lord first couereth vs with his skirts and no eie but his pitieth vs he calleth vs with Adam out of our thickets when we runne from him and are hiding our selues then finding vs when we would not be found Vse 1. To confute the Popish doctrine which depresseth this grace of God and endureth not that the castle of a mans saluation should be altogether founded without
hand of God or with the Pharisie to be seene of men or in which our owne respects prouoke our zeale whether glorie fauour credit wealth or any other by-end verily we haue already our reward Now what a necessarie attendant this right ordered zeale is to our good workes and what great reason the Lord hath to require it will appeare by the fruits and effects of it which are such as make the workes we doe not good only but glorious And because zeale is a mixt affection of loue and anger therefore at one time it hath respect both vnto the good worke it selfe as also that which is contrarie and produceth effects of loue to the former and properties of hatred against the latter The effects of zeale against euill are 1. a great hatred of it with a care and diligence to preuent it or if that cannot be it causeth an inward greefe and vexation of heart for the euills it cannot reforme thus was the righteous soule of Lot vexed for that he could not redresse and this greefe giueth often testimonie outwardly of it selfe in sighs and teares as Dauids eyes gushed out with riuers of teares because men kept not the word and Ieremie wished his head a fountaine of teares to weepe for the sinnes of the people yea it is a marke of such as are marked for the Lords that their zeale prouoketh them to mourne for the abhominations of the rest 2. As anger pursueth the obiect of it so doth zeale hunt out and reforme euill where it hath calling and power and that most earnestly Examples we haue in Nehemiah who reprooued smote and pulled off the haire from the beards of the Sabboath-breakers In Phineas who beeing stirred vp extraordinarily slew Zimri and Cosbi in their filthy fact In our Sauiour himselfe who in great zeale whipped out of the Temple the buyers and sellers giuing this reason because the zeale of his Fathers house consumed him And although it properly feedeth vpon the sinne Reu. 2.6 Thou hatest the doctrine of the Nicolaitans Psal. 15. I hate the workes of them that fall away yet it disliketh euen the persons so farre as they are agents in sinne for thus farre this grace carried both the Prophet and the Angel of the Church in both those places Reu. 2.2 Thou canst not forbeare them which are euill and Psal. 15. In whose eyes a vile person is contemned so Salomon Prov. 28.4 those that keepe the law set themselues against the wicked but yet so as it carrieth with it such sympathie and compassion that it can quickly turne it selfe into praiers for the offender The effects of zeale for good are 1. It preserueth in the heart a fitnesse and preparednes to euery good worke required of euery beleeuer 2. Tim. 3.17 Secondly it exciteth diligence and hast in the things we doe it abandoneth idlenesse slothfulnes and delaies by which occasions of well doing are often cut off the zeale of Dauid made him prepare diligently for the Temple zeale in the Magistrate causeth in him diligence throughout his gouernment zeale in the Minister maketh him like Apollos of whom we read that being feruent in spirit he taught diligently the way of God zeale and feruencie in priuate men causeth them to shake off slothfulnes in their duties and remooueth in all conditions the curse which is denounced against the man that doth the worke of the Lord negligently most fitly therefore doth the Apostle combine those precepts Rom. 12.11 Not slothfull to doe seruice feruent in the spirit seruing the Lord. Thirdly zeale causeth continuance in well doing which is also required in euerie good action as well as in prayer it contenteth not it selfe with one or two good actions but is plentiful in them and bringeth the partie possessing it to be rich in good workes and to shine light somely therein yea it maketh a man hold out and keepe a constant tenor in good courses and that as well in aduersitie as prosperitie so as he is neither choaked by preferments as verie many nor discouraged by distresses as not a fewe Fourthly zeale setteth such an high price vpon the glorie of God and performance of conscionable duties that it causeth the partie to attempt and goe through though with neuer so much difficultie whatsoeuer he seeth himselfe bound vnto it hardneth the face like brasse against dangers and losses the losse of the world is in his iudgement gaine yea all things are losse and dung so as he may winne Christ this alone yeeldeth ioy in the spoyling of goods by this can a man hate father and mother in comparison of his obedience be contented to be hated of all men for well doing in which case the losse of freinds is but light This zeale for God maketh a mans libertie small in his eye nay in standing out in a good cause his life will not be so deare vnto him as the finishing of his course with ioy yea he can reioyse to be offered vp vpon the sacrifice and seruice of the Churches faith as Paul And which is yet much more the zeale of Gods glorie will so burne in the heart as it can carrie a man so farre beyond himselfe as that he shall neglect his owne saluation and wish to be accursed yea and blotted out of the booke of life if God may be more honoured by the one then by the other What be the things then which zeale will not forgoe for Gods honour and mens saluation when as things most precious are parted with yea and cast away in comparison as vile will it sticke to be at a little labour or charge for the saluation of men when it willingly will part with possessions freinds preferments fauour libertie and life yea bodie and soule for God and his Churches causes By all that hath bin said may be concluded how aptly the spirit of God requireth zeale to good works which not onely as we haue seene hateth watcheth against pursueth and reformeth euill but prepareth inciteth continueth in good and will not be driuen from it by any meanes Vse By this doctrine many may see and challenge themselues of want of zeale in religion yea of religion it selfe For 1. a number there are who thinke it well and enough to giue a countenance or some shewe to religion and sometimes they can speak to a good cause but so coldly and so warily as if they would not heare that voice of the damsell which would as much terrifie them as once it did Peter surely thou art one of them which imputation they would take as hainously as the Iewes did the speach of the blind man will ye be also his disciples here may be wisdome of the flesh but little zeale or feruencie of the spirit here is policie but pietie scarse euer a whit 2. Others walke so indifferently betweene the Protestants and Papists that a man cannot tell what to make of them other then such as neither worship
fountaine not of the Deitie alone but of all diuine actions and good things whatsoeuer and the Son reneweth as the Mediator and meriter of it But it is here ascribed to the holy Ghost because he is the immediate and next applyer of it to the conscience and therfore is more properly said to renew And yet wher I say that in regard of the other persons he doth more immediatly applie this grace it must not be so conceiued but that he ordinarily doth worke it by meanes vnto the which also often the Scriptures ascribe the worke of renewing As 1. the Ministers are his instruments by whome he begetteth men vnto God so Paul I haue begotten you by the Gospel that is ministerially 2. The word and Sacraments are outward meanes which the Spirit vseth to the same purpose And the word is hence called the immortall seede of regeneration and baptisme called the washing of regeneration in the words before because the Spirit in these outward meanes washeth and regenerateth 3. Faith is the inward meanes which the holy Ghost working and exciting in vs vseth by it to bring home to our hearts that which properly reneweth vs Act. 15. by faith he purifieth our hearts Thus we see how both the Father the Sonne the Spirit the ministers the word and Sacraments and our owne faith renew vs and how in their seuerall senses they are to be truly and plainly conceiued Doctr. 1. All the worke of inward grace in or out of baptisme is from the holy Ghost The thing that giueth force vnto washing by water is the renewing of the holy Ghost and this is regeneration indeede 1. Pet. 3.21 Baptisme saveth but not the washing of water but the interrogation of a good conscience that is the answer of a beleeuing heart acknowledging these sacraments to be seales and pledges of the righteousnesse of faith and that inward baptisme which indeede saueth Act. 2.38 Amend your liues and be baptised euery one in the name of Iesus Christ for remission of sinnes but all this will not serue the turne vnlesse the promise following be made good and ye shall receiue the gift of the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6.11 Such were ye but ye are washed ye are iustified ye are sanctified but by what meanes by the waters of baptisme No they will not serue to iustification or sanctification but by the spirit of our God and if we would see this truth of both the Sacraments in one place we haue it propounded 1. Cor. 12.13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one bodie therefore not the water but the spirit setteth vs into the bodie of Christ by baptisme and wee are all made to drinke into one spirit and therefore the efficacie of the cuppe in the supper is to be ascribed to the spirit of God which spirit when he withdraweth himselfe we may truely say of the water in baptisme as the Apostle speaketh of the blood of bulls and goates that they cannot take away sinne The true materiall cause hereof is the blood of Christ the holy Ghost inwardly applying it vnto the soule and so inwardly indeede baptizing and washing the conscience Vse 1. This doctrine further ouerthroweth that Popish doctrine that the water in baptisme carrieth in it a force and efficacie of washing and sanctifying the soule And as for all those figures which Bellarmine produceth to this purpose we shall in few words see them conclude directly against himselfe Out of Gen. 1. The spirit of God mooued vpon the waters he concludeth that as the waters concurred necessarily to the making of all naturall things so the waters of baptisme necessarily concurreth to the conferring of the grace of regeneration in this second creation But who seeth not that these waters were dead without the spirits moouing and who seeth not that the spirit it is in baptisme which regenerateth and not the element vnlesse a bodily thing could properly worke vpon a spirituall 2. As for that in Gen. 7.17 The waters bare vp the Arke whence he concludeth that as the waters had a proper power to saue Noah and his familie euen so the waters of baptisme properly saue Besides the generall answer that similitudes prooue nothing but illustrate could Bellarmine if he had looked into the text so boldly haue detracted from the glorie of God which saith that Noah found grace in the sight of the Lord Gen. 6.8 with thee will I stablish my couenant verse 18. that the Lord bad him goe into the Arke cap. 7.1 that he shut him in the Arke 16. that he remembred him in the Arke and brought him out of the Ark cap. 8.1.16 all is ascribed vnto the grace couenant commandement hand and remembrance of God and not to the water and if Noah had beene saued by the clemencie of the waters and their power of sauing Noah was mistaken when he built an altar to the Lord vers 20. for hee should haue built his altar to the waters And if we would follow here the Iesuite we might make him wearie of his comparison If we should say 1. that the waters of the flood did for euery person and creature that they saued drowne a million therefore the waters of baptisme for one they saue drowne and damne a number which will not stand with their deuise of opus operatum 2. Noah was found righteous before he entred into the Arke cap. 7.1 and therefore both children and men of yeares may be sanctified before baptisme whence will follow that children of beleeuers dying before baptisme haue right both to the kingdome of heauen and Christian buriall vpon earth 3. It is said Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah prepared the Arke not which saued but to the sauing of himselfe and his houshold and that by faith he was made heire of righteousnesse without which faith neither the waters nor the Arke had done him any good and therefore neither without faith do the waters of baptisme saue or regenerate Lastly a poore reason it is of a Cardinal that because Moses or Noah is saued out of the waters therefore the waters saue him A third instance is in the waters of Iordan which saith he truly healed Naaman and was no seale of the promise and euen so the waters of baptisme truly confer grace But the truth is that water had no such power of healing of and in it selfe but only at that time in that institutiō and from the word of God which appeareth euen in Naamans indignation who neuer knew any more vertue or power in it then in Arbanah or Pharphar Againe Naaman being healed acknowledged not the vertue from the water but from God and therefore professed that he would henceforth neuer worship any other then the God of Israel and if it be lawfull for any Sophister from euery resemblance to conclude what he pleaseth why concludeth he nor for he may aswell that we must be baptised seauen times ouer for Naaman must wash seauen times ere he be cleane In