Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n death_n sin_n sting_n 2,094 5 13.1353 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 38 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

from that eternall Wrath to come and from the Power of the second Death And not onely so but from all Temporall Afflictions as they are punishments properly or penall satisfactions for sin so as now they are but fatherly Chastisements and Tryalls sent upon us for our good c. 2. Against the Power and Tyranny of Satan which he doth exercise over us in our naturall estate as we are out of Christ and that by reason of the guilt of our Sins For so long as we are in the guilt of our Sins we are lyable to the Wrath and Justice of God and consequently we are under the Power of Satan as the Executioner of God's Justice But now Christ having by his Death taken away our Sins and made satisfaction to God's Justice by the same means he hath also delivered us from the Power of the Devil so that now he hath no longer any such Power over us to execute God's Wrath upon us as before he had He hath no such Power to execute God's Wrath and Justice upon us for our Sins as he hath over the wicked God may use him as an Instrument to afflict us for Tryall as he did Job but not to execute his Wrath and Justice upon us for Sin Before he had Power of Death Temporall and eternall and to infflict it as a Curse not so now 3. Against the fear of bodily Death in that Christ by his Death hath taken away the guilt and punishment of our Sins and so pulled out the sting of Death and abolished the Curse that did before cleave unto it So that now we need not fear Death as the wicked and such as are out of Christ have cause to do but willingly imbrace it as a Blessing and passage to Life eternall Revel 14. 13. We know that an Adder or Snake so long as the sting remains in it is to be feared but if we be sure the sting be once pulled out it is no longer to be feared c. So it is here Christ having by his Death taken away the guilt of our Sins and reconciled us to God he hath by this means plucked out the sting of Death for us that we may now no longer fear it as a Curse but entertain it joyfully and comfortably as the Saints of God have done as Simeon Paul and the holy Martyrs c. See then here one main ground and comfort in Death and against the terrour of it even the consideration of Christ's Death who dyed for this very end to deliver us from the guilt of our Sins and so from all slavish fear of Death Hebr. 2. 15. Vse 4 Use 4. Seeing Christ was killed or put to Death for our Sins This ought to teach and move us to labour daily to dye unto Sin and to have the Power of it crucified and killed in us by vertue of his Death applyed to our Consciences by Faith and by his Divine Spirit Rom. 6. The Apostle urgeth this at large and many wayes upon us Ver. 3. Know ye not that we are baptized into the Death of Christ c And Ver. 6. Our old man is crucified with him that the body of Sin might be destroyed c. and ver 10 11. This is one end of Christ's Death That by the Power and Vertue of it sin might be killed in us Labour therefore more and more to feel this Divine Power of his Death as a strong corrasive to eat out and consume the corruption of sin and all sinfull Lusts in us daily c. Mark 8. 31. And he began to teach them c. Aug. 14. 1625. OF our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his Passion ye have heard Now followeth the foretelling of his Resurrction That after three Dayes he must rise again Quest Quest Why did he foretell his Disciples of his Resurrection as well as of his Passion Answ Answ 1. To prevent that offence which otherwise they might have taken at the hearing of his Death and Sufferings lest the hearing of it should make them begin to doubt of the Truth of his ●od-head which they had before confessed therefore to strengthen their Faith he tells them that though he should Dye and Suffer yet he should rise again by the power of his God-head within three dayes 2. To comfort them also against that sorrow and heavinesse which he knew they would conceive at the hearing of his Death c. Observ Observe the order of Christ's two-fold estate of humiliation and exaltation that was to go before this He was first to be abased by Dying and Suffering and then to be exalted by rising again Luke 24. 26. Ought not Christ first to Suffer and so to enter into his Glory Phil. 2. 8. He humbled himself and became obedient unto Death c. wherefore God also highly exalted him c. See also 1 Pet. 1. 11. Use 1 Vse 1. See how it must be with all the Faithfull members of Christ even as it was with Christ the Head They must be conformable to Him As he was first to be abased in the World by suffering Reproach and Contempt and Death it self at the hands of Men so must every Believer in Christ first be abased by manifold Sufferings by great Contempt by many Troubles and Afflictions yea by Death it self before he can be advanced to the Glory of the Life to come As Christ our Head was consecrated through Affliction Hebr. 2. 10. so must we through many Tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Acts 14. 12. Therefore Revel 1. 9. St. John writeth thus I John your Companion in Tribulation and in the Kingdom c. First in Tribulation then in the Kingdom of Christ This therefore we must make sure Accompt of before hand to suffer Afflictions and Abasement in the World yea Death it self if we will attain to heavenly Life and Glory Therefore let us prepare our selves before hand for it if we desire to be Glorified with Christ we must first Suffer with Him If we will be advanced with Him we must first be abased with Him in this World If we will rise again to Life and Glory with Him we must first be content to Dye with Him c. We must first wear a Crown of Thorns c. See Rom. 8. 17. Vse 2 Vse 2. To comfort the Godly and Faithfull against all Abasement which they meet with in this World against all Afflictions and Reproaches which they Suffer and against Death it self These are the way by which Christ himself passed and entred into Glory yea all the Saints of God have gone thi● way before us to heavenly Glory Therefore no cause to be discouraged but to rejoyce being assured that after humiliation God will exalt us c. Now followeth to speak more particularly of the words In which two things are contained 1. The Resurrection of our Saviour which he foretelleth He must rise again 2. The Time when AfterAfter three Dayes He must rise again Viz. From the Dead And this is
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
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.
the greatest that ever was in that he being the Son of God equal with the Father and Holy Ghost and being the Lord of Glory from everlasting did in time so far abase himself as to become Man by taking on him our vile and base Nature and that into the unity of his Person that so in this our Nature he might dye and suffer for us c. That he should come from Heaven and be made Flesh and live upon Earth as Man in the true shape and fashion of a Man yea in the form of a Servant as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 2. and yet all the while be the Son of God and Lord of Glory Behold here is the greatest humility and abasement that ever was of any person which is for our Example to teach u● to humble our selves before God and one towards another as the true Disciples of Christ Phil. 2. 5. Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ c. Labour therefore for this Grace of true humility after Christ's Example Matth. 11. 29. Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart The more humility the more like we are unto Christ The very character and mark of a true Christian as on the contrary Pride is the mark of a wicked Man and a Hypocrite such as the proud Pharisees were yea it is the character of the Devil 1 Tim. 3. 6. Therefore pray and labour for true humility that thou mayst be like unto Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. Cloath or deck your selves with humility c. This Grace should adorn the whole life and behaviour of a Christian strive therefore to shew it forth in all our carriage before God and one towards another abase your selves for the good of others Gal. 5. 13. The rather because it is a Grace so necessary for a Christian that without it a man is not fit for the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be converted and become as little Children ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Luke 3. 5. Every Mountain and Hill must be brought low c. Humility is all in all in a Christian The first second third thing c. as Austin saith Use 3 Use 3. By this we may see how and by what means we that are by nature so far separate and estranged from God by our Sins may come to have accesse unto God and Communion with him namely by means of Christ's humane Nature which he hath taken upon him to the end that he might in it dye and suffer for our Sins and so reconcile us to God Ephes 2. 8. By him we have access unto the Father that is by Christ incarnate or made man 1 Tim. 2. 5. There is one Mediatour between God and Us even the Man Christ Jesus that is Christ the Son of God being made true Man that in our Nature he might reconcile Us to God This he could never have done if he had not become true Man and the Son of Man as here he calls himself Therefore without this humane Nature of Christ we could never have had fellowship with God or peace with Him For by nature we are enemies to God and he to us and our sins are as a Wall of separation to keep us from him Onely by Faith in the mediation of Christ incarnate and made Man we come to be reconciled and to have entrance to God and into his favour By nature God and We are far estranged and divided asunder yea there is an infinite distance between Us But in Christ's humane Nature we meet together and have near Communion Of our selves by Nature we dare not so much as look towards God and his Majesty who is a consuming fire to Sinners yet in Christ being made Man we may by Faith behold the Face and Glory of God with unspeakable joy and comfort Let us then labour thus to do In our prayers let us set the Man Christ Jesus or Christ the Son of Man before us and between God and us and through him alone look at God and call upon him with confidence to be heard yea in all our thoughts of God set Christ incarnate between Him and Us Look at God through the Humane Nature of Christ in which we come to be reconciled to God and without which there is no comfort to be found of us in God but the least thought of him out of Christ God and Man breeds horrour and amazement Use 4 Use 4. Comfort in all afflictions and miseries of this life which our nature is subject to in that Christ partaking in the same Nature and having had experience of the Infirmities of it is the more able and willing to help and succour us Hebr. 2. 17. Hebr. 4. 15. If one come to visit a man that is sick of a grievous disease who hath himself formerly been afflicted with the same disease he will shew more compassion than 20 others who have not felt the like So here c. Observ 2 Observ 2. That although Christ Jesus was the Son of God yet he dyed and suffered for us not as God but as Man or in his Humane Nature Therefore himself saith here The Son of Man must suffer c. 1 Pet. 3. 18. Christ suffered for our sins being put to death in the Flesh Phil. 2. 8. Being found in fashion of a man He humbled himself and became obedient unto death c. For this cause it was necessary as we heard before that he should become Man that he might in this our Nature dy and suffer and that God's Justice might be satisfied for sin in the same Nature which offended Note two things here for the understanding of this Point 1. That though Christ died and suffered according to his humane Nature onely yet this his humane Nature was personally united with his God-head and so remained at the very time of his death and sufferings whence it follows that though he did not suffer as God yet he that dyed and suffered was God at the very instant of his death and sufferings 2. That though He suffered onely in his humane Nature yet He is our Mediator according to both his Natures as God and Man in one Person In his Humane Nature He dyed and suffered and wrought the Work of our Redemption But his God-head did sustain his Man-hood in all his Sufferings and gave vertue and efficacy to the same to make them meritorious for us See Heb. 9. 14. and Act. 20. 28. Use 1 Use 1. To strengthen our Faith in the merits and vertue of Christ's Death and Sufferings assuring us that God's Justice is satisfyed and we are thereby justifyed and freed from our sins and the Curse of God due unto them in as much as Christ hath not onely suffered the wrath of God and punishment of sins but hath suffered it in our Nature which He took upon him that is in his humane Soul and Body So that now the price of our Redemption is paid and God's Justice
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
for so the words may be translated See Scultet Observat in Matth. Cap. 48. Now although this Reprehension of Peter thus given by him to Christ did proceed from a good intent and meaning and partly from his love and good will to Christ his Master as there is no doubt being loath and unwilling to hear of Christ's Death and Sufferings yet neverthelesse in this Action of reproving Christ he did greatly sin and offend as is plain by that sharp and severe reproof which our Saviour gives him for it in the Verse following Quest Quest How or wherein did Peter offend in this reproving of Christ Answ Answ 1. In taking upon him to blame or find fault with Christ himself whom he had so newly confessed to be the Son of God whence he should have concluded That he that was the Son of God could not erre or be faulty either in doing or speaking any thing amisse Therefore in that he did not stick to blame and charge Christ as faulty this was great rashnesse folly and presumption in him He should rather have further questioned with Christ touching that which he doubted of or he should have dealt with him by way of humble intreaty and not by way of reproof 2. In opposing his own Opinion and Judgment against the expresse words of Christ For whereas he had directly affirmed that he wa● to suffer many things yea that he must Suffer c. notwithstanding all this Peter sticks not to affirm the contrary This shall not be unto thee whereas he should have rested absolutely in the bare words of Christ This savoured of naturall pride c. 3. In giving perverse and evil Counsell ●o our Saviour perswading Him not to Do and Suffer that which he had affirmed that He ought to Do and Suffer viz. To go up to Jerusalme c. Such Counsell as if it had been imbraced the work of our Redemption had been hindred Quest Quest What were the Causes of this grosse fault and sin of Peter Answ Answ 1. His ignorance in the Mystery of Christ's Death and Sufferings and of the causes and reasons thereof For although Christ had now plainly told him and the rest of the Disciples that He must Dye and Suffer yet Peter neither could nor did yet conceive how it could stand with the truth of Christ's God-head and excellency of his Person to Dye and Suffer so many and grievous things 2. Another cause was that grosse Errour of the Jews then holden with which the Apostles also were tainted That the Messiah should have an Earthly Kingdom accompanyed with outward Glory and Prosperity which therefore Peter could not see how it could stand with that great abasement by Dying and Suffering which our Saviour foretold them of See Matth. 20. 21. in the sons of Zebedee And Acts 1. 6. 3. A naturall loathness and unwillingness which was in Peter as also in the other Disciples to hear of the Crosse and Afflictions which they might well think would be occasioned to them by the Death and Sufferings of Christ their Master 4. Too much carnall love and desire of Christ's bodily presence which made him loath to hear of his being taken away by Death c. Observ 1 Observ 1. That the best Saints of God in this Life are tainted with sinfull Infirmities and Corruptions with many and great Corruptions Peter himself an Apostle of Christ yea one of the most eminent Apostles for Zeal and other Graces yet how many and great Corruptions did he discover in this one Action of reproving Christ at this time See this Point handled before Chap. 3. Ver. 31. Quest Quest Why doth the Lord suffer such corruptions to remain in his Saints and Children after their effectuall Calling Answ Answ For these Reasons 1. To humble them in the sense and feeling of these corruptions and to keep them from being puffed up with Pride in respect of the Graces in them 2 Cor. 12. 7. Lest he should be exalted above measure by Revelations a Thorn was given him in the Flesh c. 2. That they may have matter in themselves with which to be continually exercised in fighting and striving against their corruptions and infirmities 3. To wean them from the love of this World and of this present life and to stir up in them a longing after the life to come in which they shall be perfectly sanctified and freed from this body of sinfull Corruption Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man Who shall deliver me c Observ 2 Observ 2. That Ignorance in some main Points and Doctrines of Faith for a time may stand with sanctifying Grace in such as are effectually called or that such as are effectually called and sanctified may for a time be ignorant in some main and principal Doctrines of Faith and Christian Religion As here Peter though a chosen and sanctified Apostle yet was ignorant of the Doctrine of Christ's Death and Passion as appeareth by his blaming of Christ for affirming that he must dy and suffer So likewise the other Apostles were ignorant of this Doctrine and of his Resurrection and so continued long time after this as may appear Luke 18. 34. yea till the very time of the fulfilling of them as we have heard before See more of this before Chap. 4. 10. and afterward Chap. 9. 10. and Joh. 20. 9. Vse Use Comfort to such Christians as are yet but weak in Knowledge so that their hearts be upright and that they make conscience of practising those things they do already know God will in due time reveal to them a greater light of Knowledge in all Points and Doctrines needful to Salvation He will by his sanctifying Spirit lead them into all necessary truth so that they conscionably use the means to grow in Knowledge The Apostles themselves were for a time ignorant of sundry main Doctrines of Faith but afterward they were clearly revealed to them Observ 3 Observ 3. ●n that Peter took our Saviour aside to reprove him thereby shewing a reverent respect to his Person although he otherwise greatly offended in the Reproof it self this is commendable in him And hence we may learn how to carry our selves if at any time we be to give a Christian Admonition to our Superiours viz. to do it with due respect and reverence to the Person in regard of his preheminence above us 1 Tim. 5. 1. Rebuke not an Elder but entreat him as a Father c. Though we may admonish a Superiour of a fault in some Cases yet not in the same manner as we do an inferiour or equal but with a reverent regard to his place and dignity we are in this case to minister such an admonition in such manner and with such Circumstances as may stand with the dignity and place of the Person admonished Mark 8. 33. But when He had turned about c. Aug. 28. 1625. IN the end of the former Verse ye heard of Peter's carriage toward our Saviour upon the hearing of that Prophecy
c. Hereby our Saviour implyeth that after they had seen this Transfiguration they should taste of Death in the time appointed of God This he presupposeth whence we may learn that even the faithful Saints and Servants of God are subject to bodily death and shall at length in their due time taste and have experience of it As they cannot by before the time appointed of God so when that time cometh they must and shall certainly taste of Death This is true of all the Saints and faithful even of the best and most excellent Christ's own Disciples yea the most eminent and chief of them for Grace as Peter James and John who are here particularly meant must at length come unto Death Joh. 21. 19. Our Saviour foretells Peter of his Death and the manner of it And 2 Pet. 1. 14. he prophesies of his own Death Shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle even as our Lord Jesus hath shewed me Touching the Death of James we read Acts 12. 2. that Herod put him to Death And touching John although some have erroneously imagined that he should not dye at all but remain alive till Christ's second coming grounding this their errour upon those words of our Saviour Joh. 21. 22. yet that the contrary is true may appear not onely by the words of John himself ver 23. of the same Chapter and by our Saviour's words in this place but also by the testimony of sundry antient Writers of the Church who report that he dyed and was buried at Ephesus about a hundred years after the Birth of Christ Now as it is true of these three Disciples of Christ here spoken of that in their due times they tasted of Death So is it also true of the rest of Christ's Disciples and of all the Saints of God mentioned in Scripture that as they lived unto the time appointed of God so when that time was come they dyed or tasted of Death So all the holy Patriarchs Prophets religious Kings of Israel and Judah lived and dyed c. So all the Saints in the new Testament Esay 57. 1. The Righteous perisheth and mercifull men are taken away c. viz. By Death they are taken away from the Earth Reas 1 Reas 1. Bodily Death is the common condition appointed of God for all men to pass thorough Hebr. 9. 27. It is appointed unto men that is unto all men once to dye Therefore it is appointed for the Saints of God as well as others Job 30. 23. I know that thou wilt bring me to Death and to the House appointed for all living Reas 2 Reas 2. The Saints of God are tainted with the corruption of sin as well as others Therefore they as well as others are lyable to Death as the wages of sin Rom. 5. 12. Death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Object 1 Object 1. Joh. 8. 51. If a man keep my saying he shall never see Death Answ Answ It is to be understood of eternal Death not of Temporall Object 2 Object 2. Henoch and Eliah dyed not but were taken away from Earth to Heaven extraordinarily Hebr. 11. 5. Henoch was translated that he should not see Death Eliah taken up to Heaven in a fiery Chariot c. 2 King 2. 11. Answ Answ These were extraordinary and speciall Examples to whom the Lord for speciall causes did vouchsafe this Priviledge which therefore makes nothing against the general and ordinary course which God doth take with all other his Saints viz. To bring them unto Death and to cause them to taste of it every one in their time Object 3 Object 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. We shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed Answ Answ That change of the Saints found alive at Christ's second coming shall be in stead of Death unto them Quest Quest why doth not the Lord abolish Temporal Death as well as eternal unto his Saints and wholly free them from the former as well as from the latter seeing he hath Power so to do Answ Answ The Lord will have Temporal Death to remain and that his Saints and Children shall taste of it as well as others for these Reasons 1. That they may be conformable to Christ their Head who first tasted of Death and so was Crowned with Glory Hebr. 2. 9. 2. To humble them the more in the sense of their sins which are the meritorious and procuring cause of Death in them 3. The Lord hath thought it fit that as Sin brought Death into the World so Death should carry Sin out of the World That his Saints should be freed from all remnants of sinful corruption by means of Death Use 1 Use 1. For admonition to the Saints and Faithful as well as others to make accompt of Death and to prepare and fit themselves to undergo and taste of it make a vertue of necessity Seeing they must dye therefore daily prepare to do this great and last work of a Christian Job 14. 14. All the Dayes of my appointed Time will I wait till my change come Object Object The Saints and Faithful cannot but be fit and well prepared for Death Therefore this admonition is needless c. Answ Answ There are Degrees of fitness and preparedness for Death And though all true Believers are in some measure prepared for it yet because this their preparation is mingled with much weaknesse and imperfection therefore they have need daily to fit and prepare themselves for Death in a farther degree and measure Quest Quest How is this to be done Answ Answ 1. By frequent and often meditation of Death and of the necessity of it by God's Ordinance c. Deut. 32. 29. Oh that they were wise that they would consider their latter end This is called numbring of our Dayes Psal 90. 12. So teach us to number our Dayes c. make Death present to us by meditation before it come 2. By often meditation of those Grounds of comfort which the Word of God affordeth to the Saints against Death As 1. The Death of Christ whereby he hath satisfied for their sins and so taken away the sting and curse of their Death so as now it is not hurtful to them nor to be feared at all 1 Cor. 15. 55. O Death where is thy sting c 2. The blessed estate and condition of the Saints immediately after Death resting from their Labours c. Rev. 14. 13. Their Souls carryed by the Angels into Abraham bosom c. 3. The Resurrection of our Bodies which we hope and certainly look for at the last Day c. 3. By daily renewing their Faith and Repentance that so they may be more and more assured of the pardon of their sins and peace with God in Christ and so that they shall dye in the Lord c. Use 2 Use 2. A motive to us to be willing to dye and to encourage us thereunto whensoever the Lord shall call us to it seeing Death is such a condition and
Originall sin and so lyable by nature unto the Wrath and Judgments of God Psal 51. 5. David confesseth That he was shapen and conceived in Iniquity by his Mother Rom. 5. 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's Transgression c. that i● over Infants and young Children who had not actually sinned yet were guilty of Originall sin and defiled with it And this we see by daily experience to be true in that Infants and young Children as well as elder People are chastised by the hand of God with bodily sicknesses and pains and with Death it self which shews them to be tainted with guilt and corruption of sin which makes them lyable to such Judgments of God Quest Quest How come young Children to be thus tainted with sin and so lyable to God's Wrath and Judgment Answ Answ By reason of Adam's Fall and Transgression by which he made both himself and all his Posterity guilty of sin and lyable to the curse of God and so from Adam this corruption of sin and lyablenesse to God's Wrath is derived to all mankind by naturall Birth or Descent by which means even Children and Infants do receive it from their Parents So Rom. 5. 12. By one man sin entred into the World and Death by sin c. Vse 1 Vse 1. See by this the cause why young Children or Infants have need of the Sacrament of Baptism to be administred to them viz. because being naturally defiled with Guilt and Corruption of original sin and liable to God's wrath and Judgments they have therefore need to be washed and purged from their sins by the Blood of Christ sealed by the Water in Baptism c. Which therefore ought to stir up all Parents to be careful to procure this Sacrament for their Children and that in due time not delaying it too long for worldly respects c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See what cause for Parents to be humbled and repent not only for their own sins but also for the sins of their Children confessing and craving pardon of them in Christ that so they may be forgiven them and that by this means they may be delivered from the Wrath and Curse of God at least from eternal Wrath and from temporal Judgments so far as is good for them that they may either be with-holden from them or sanctified unto them to work for their good Use 3 Use 3. This should also move Parents to use all good means whereby the natural Corruption of sin may come to be mortified in their Children and purged out of them more and more and whereby the contrary work of Grace may be wrought in them that as they have been Instruments of their natural Birth in sin and so made them Children of Wrath so they may be the means of their Regeneration or new Birth To this end they ought to be most careful to train them up religiously in the true Knowledge and Fear of God using all means to reform sin in them and to further the Work of Grace in them as frequent Instruction Admonition due and moderate Correction c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Lord did lay this heavy Affliction upon this Child being very young even in his Infancy as is probable whereas he passed over and spared many other not onely Children but elder People who were as much and more polluted with sin the cause or reason of this the Lord's dealing is secret neither is it expressed here by the Evangelist as being known to God onely From whence therefore we may learn thus much that the wayes and proceedings which God doth use with men in executing his Judgments upon them in this life are oftentimes secret and hidden from us in respect of the Causes and Reasons of them We neither do nor can alwayes know or comprehend the Causes or Reasons moving the Lord to execute such or such temporal Judgments upon men or Children in this life but the causes are many times secret to us and known onely to God himself Rom. 11. 33. How unsearchable are the Judgments of God and his wayes past finding out So far as the Lord doth manifest the causes and reasons of his Judgments upon men either in his Word or by his Works and by the outward events which happen we may know them but because he doth not alwayes so manifest them therefore they are not alwayes known to us but sometimes secret and unsearchable Note here that this is not to be understood of the original or meritorious cause of God's Judgments for that is alwayes known to be sin but especially of the final causes or ends which the Lord aimeth at in such Judgments These are oftentimes secret and unsearchable unto us Use Use This teacheth us not too curiously to search into the causes reasons or ends which the Lord aimeth at in those temporal Judgments or Chastisements which he inflicteth either upon us or others in this life especially if they be strange or unwonted Judgments but we are rather to admire and religiously to adore them and withal to endeavour to make a holy use of them For this we must know that although the causes of God's Judgments are sometimes secret yet are they alwayes just and therefore we must hereof rest assured without curious searching after the secret wayes of God remembring what is said Deut. 29. 29. Secret things belong unto the Lord our God c. Such secret things are the wayes and dealings of God in respect of his Judgments which he often inflicteth upon men in this life and therefore not too curiously to be pryed into by us or rashly to be censured or spoken of but rather in religious silence to be adored and reverenced The Lord doth many times inflict strange and unwonted Judgments and Afflictions upon Men Women and Children in this life such as we can give no probable reason of why the Lord should so deal with them rather than with others here then we must remember not to be curious in searching after the secret causes and ends which the Lord aimeth at in such Judgments but to rest in his most just proceedings in all his Judgments making the best and most religious use of them unto our selves Mark 9. 22. And oft times it hath cast him into the fire and into the Waters to destroy him but if thou canst do April 29. 1627. any thing c. NOW followeth the further declaration and amplification of his Child's misery by acquainting our Saviour into how great perils and dangers of death the Devil had often brought the Child by casting him into the Fire and Water to destroy or kill him Observ 1 Observ 1. The deadly hatred and malice of the Devil against mankind in that he desireth and seeketh not onely the hurt and annoyances but also the utter ruine and destruction of those over whom he hath any Power See Chap. 1. Ver. 23. Joh. 8. 44. A Murderer
abuses offered them Think of this you that are guilty of this sin thou that hast any way wronged or abused the Saints and Servants of God or any one of them whether in word or deed And examine whether thou hast been truly humbled and repented of this grievous sin if not see thou do it speedily lest the Lord do strike thee in his wrath with some grievous Judgment in this life or else reserve thee for the Judgment of Hell if thou repent not of this sin Repentance is the only way to prevent and escape those Judgments which God hath in his Word threatned against this sin of offending his Saints and Servants c. Use 2 Use 2. To comfort the true Saints and Servants of God when they are wronged or abused by profane or wicked men in this world and cannot right their own cause or have it righted by others let them know That although the Lord suffer this for a time for tryall of his yet he will at length take their cause into his own hands and will not onely deliver them but be revenged on their enemies Psal 125. 3. The rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous c. With this the Apostle comforteth the Thessalonians 2 Epist Chap. 1. Ver. 6. Use 3 Vse 3. See by this that there is no cause for us to envy or fret at the outward prosperity of wicked men in this world who are enemies to God's true Church and faithfull servants c. But on the contrary there is cause to pity such in regard of the Wrath and Judgments of God which are to come upon them hereafter for this their sin of hating persecuting and abusing the Saints of God c. Observ 2 Observ 2. The grievousness of that Judgment and Punishment which the wicked and reprobate shall suffer in Hell after this life in that it is said here by our Saviour That it were better for one to have a mill-stone hanged about his neck and to be drowned in the Sea than to be guilty of the sin of scandalizing the Saints of God and so by this sin to bring upon himself that eternall Judgment and Punishment in Hell which shews that the punishment of the damned in Hell shall be far more grievous than any bodily punishment in this life yea than death it self yea than the vilest and basest death worse than for a man to be drowned in the Sea with a Millstone about his neck c. For all punishments torments and miseries of this life are but short and for a little time whereas that punishment and torment of the wicked in Hell is everlasting and shall never have end Besides all torments and miseries of this life do touch the body onely or chiefly whereas the torments of Hell shall seize both upon the souls and bodies of the damned Matth. 10. 28. Fear not them which kill the body c. but rather fear him that is able to destroy both soul and body in Hell This shews that the damnation and punishment of the wicked in Hell is ●uch more fearfull and grievous than any bodily death which can be suffered in this world at the hands of men Vse 1 Use 1. See the wofull misery of all wicked and impenitent sinners living in their sins without repentance who must suffer this fearfull and most grievous punishment in Hell for their sins What cause for such to weep and howl for the miseries that shall come upon them How should this t●rrifie such and move them to repentance What cause for us to lament the case of such If we pity such as are to be hanged drowned or burned c. Oh how much more such as live in sin and are going the high-way to Hell Pray for such and use all means to gain them to repentance that so they may be delivered from the wrath to come Vse 2 Use 2. Seeing the torments of Hell are worse than any bodily death or punishment of this life this teacheth us how much we ought to fear and shun all sin even so much that we should rather suffer any bodily punishment yea death it self yea the worst kind of death than to commit sin because sin being committed and lived in will bring a worse kind of punishment even eternal death of soul and body in Hell This must cause us to resist sin even unto blood as it is Hebr. 12. 4. So did the Martyrs c. Mark 9. 43 44 unto ver 49. And if thy hand offend thee c. Octob. 28. 1627. IN the former verse our Saviour disswaded from the sin of giving offence unto true humble Christians by threatning a grievous Judgment against those that offend any such by any wrong or abuse offered to them Now in these six Verses next following he prescribeth a remedy against that and all other sins viz. to avoid occasions of sin From this kind of scandall our Saviour's purpose is to disswade his Disciples in this place Therefore he doth here admonish and warn his Disciples and that with great earnestness carefully to shun and avoid such things as may be any occasion of sin unto them and to remove and take them away yea though they be such things as are most dear unto them even as their Hand Foot or Eye c. And the better to perswade them hereunto he sheweth them both the good and benefit that will come unto them by this carefull avoiding and taking away of such occasions of sin as also the great danger which will ensue on the contrary if they do it not First I will clear the meaning of the words and then speak more particularly of the matters of Instruction contained in them If thy hand offend thee By hand we are to understand here not the hand of the body so called in proper sense but any thing which is as near and dear unto us in this World as our hand is yea as our right hand Matth. 5. 29. So also afterward ver 45. and 47. by the foot and eye understand whatsoever is as dear to us as our foot or eye A figurative speech one sort of things near and dear to us viz. these naturall parts and members of our body being put for all other things near and dear to us Offend thee Or cause thee to offend or be any occasion unto thee of stumbling and falling into sin and so of being hindred in thy Christian course So that our Saviour speaks of another kind of offence then that he spake of in the former verse There of offence given to others by offering outward wrongs c. Here touching offence which we our selves take by occasions of sin Cut it off That is remove and take it away or separate it far from thee though it be as much pain or grief to thee as to have thy hand cut off So ver 45. and 47. A metaphor from Surgeons who to save the whole body being in danger cut off some one member It
1222 Cautions concerning it 1223 The heart must be free in it 1224 Children God sometimes makes them a Curse 1114 Should be nurst by the natural Mother 1115 Christians must be like them 723 724 657 673 Christ's Love to them 725 We should pray for them 725 They are naturally tainted with Sin 624 Their Duties to Parents 407 410 They should not curse their Parents 411 They ought to help their Parents 74 416 Christ 1224 1230 He rules the Devils 65 70 Why the Devil professed his Knowledge of him 67 253 Why Christ rebuked the Devill for confessing him 69 The Authour and Subject of the Gospel 3 Efficacy of Ordinances from him 26 Obedience due to him 58 92 110 Why the Devill adored him 253 Faith unites to him 285 God's Love to him 33 586 Christ the chief Teacher 370 417 587 591 713 1033 All ought to hear him 588 His Enemies 163 390 1028 1029 1030 1058 1085 1377 He is true God 4. 24 76 98 His Dignity 7 24 31 599 912 We must forsake all for him 28 58 271 He resembles the Dove 31 The ground of Ged's Love to us 34 Why he was nempted forty dayes 38 39 His Love to us 39 127 467 468 531 636 656 756 782 1311 1332 1335 He is Lord of all the Creatures 42 246 378 He governs the Church 46 47 His Kingdom 47 818 1027 1550 1564 His Power 60 89 245 366 378 497 663 813 815 1247 1649 His Holiness 68 His Mercy 76 100 247 356 384 461 489 496 His spiritual presence 82 He is a spiritual Physitian 89. 115. 147. 276. 279. 463 Why he would not have the People to flock to him 93 How he saw their Faith 97 He takes notice of our Graces 99 He knows the heart 104. 1247 When on Earth he could pardon 106 One end of his coming to convert Sinners 117. 118 Difference between his Disciples and John's 119 He is a spirituall Bride-groom 122 His humune Nature 131 515 580 829 1040 1147 1309 He hath Power over the Sabbath 132 His Miracles 135. 280 His Friends 145 Why he chose Judas among his Apostles 155 He was subject to our Infirmities 160. 1309 We should seek the Knowledge of him 190 His diligence in the Ministry 238. 501. 694 He was subject to humane Passions 241. 356. 474 Why he returned into Galilee 267 Why he asked Who touched him 281 Why he sometimes published and sometimes forbade the publishing of his Miracles 281 He comforts the humbled 284 He is Lord of Life and Death 294 His Humiliation 300. 1370. 1389. 1417. 1409 Why in Prayer he looked upward 365 He is a spiritual Pastor of Souls 369. 1290 What he prayed for in the Mount 372 In him a two-fold Will. 440 Misery of Man without him 457. 1261. 1267 His Humility 496. 656. 797. 798 He is the true Messias 510. 572. 1406. 1409. 1447 He was called of God 510. 661 His fore-knowledge 513. 1057 His Sufferings 513. 516. 518. 520. 521. 601. 602. 788. 799. 932. 1202 1240. 1246. 1253. 1258. 1290. 1303. 1306. 1310. 1323. 1329. 1381. 1485. 1506. 1508 His Resurrection 523 Why he fore-told his Passion 525. 602 We must imitate him 534. 535 His Glory 562. 569. 580. 567. 1408 Those that follow him must suffer 538. 769 His Transfiguration 563. 566. 569 His Divinity 584. 593. 538. 1024 Why his Divinity was not published in the time of his Humiliation 592 His Patience 620. 1451. 1452 His Wisdom 730 812 It was not his Work as Mediator to confer worldly honour 791 Why he came poor into the World 797 Necessity of his Incarnation 798 He dyed not for all 800 How he received Power from God 824 We should pray for his Kingdom 825 His Long-suffering 833 His Incarnation 908 910. 911 Reverence due to him 912 Causes of his Death 923 He is a Corner-stone 934. 935 His Exaltation 937. 1024. 1147. 1658 He was revealed in the Old Testament 959 He exalted not himself 1022 His Glorification 1025. 1026 1410 Many false Christs 1064. 1065 Contempt of him dangerous 1075 1120 His Prophetical Office 1134 He gave Alms. 1217 We must ask Counsel of him 1243 We should entertain him 1247 His Obedience to the Law 1249. 1382 His Sorrow 1251. 1308 1309 His Meekness 1251. 1451. 1452 Why he fore-told the Treason of Judas 1252 How we may be guilty of his Death 1261 All benefits flow from his Death 1269 Why he prayed 1305 His Fear 1398 His Trayer 1317. 1319. 1321. 1324 How could he pray against his Suffering since it was decreed 1321. 1322 Whether his sensitive Will was contrary to the Will of his Reason 1330 A two-fold Will in him ibid. His apprehension by his Enemies seems strange 1369 His Innocence 1398. 1466 Why he made no Answer to the Allegations against him 1402. 1406 How he is the Son of God 1407 What it is to deny him 1424. 1428 His Death 1443. 1492 He is a King 1448 His Work of Redemption 1385 His Humiliation 1468. 1480 He is the true Sin-Offering 1433 He was numbred with Transgressors 1463 It is honourable to bear his Cross 1486 His Love to Mankind 1494. 1530. 1611 His Poverty 1496. 1558 All his Sufferings were ordained by God 1507. 1521 Why he dyed 1542 For whom he dyed ibid. Why Miracles were wrought at his death 1546 How we may honour Christ 1562 Why he rose the third day 1577 His Presence 1605 His Apparition 1613 He is Lord of all men 1652. 1653 Causes of his Ascension 1655. 1656 The ends of his Exaltation 1659. 1660. 1661 How he makes Intercession for us 1659 Why he was baptized 1632 Church Personall succession of its Pastors no certain Mark of its Truth 1396 It may be amongst its Enemies ibid. Christ was not to abide with it on Earth 1191 Christ's care of it 901. 902. 903. 906. 930. 607. 1122. 1192. 1193. 1295 Ministers are Door-keepers of it 1196 It s weighty Affairs should be done carefully 1244 God warns it of troubles 1076 Those that are excluded out of it are odious to God 1103 It is sometimes in great troubles 376. 1121. 1126 God mitigates his Anger against it 1122 God's care of it in time of trouble 1124 It is Catholick in respect of place 1157 The sure estate of it 1170 It is like a House 1188. 1189 On Earth it is in a warfaring Condition 1189 Christ is Lord of it 46. 47. 926. 1190 God is alwayes present with it 976 It is hard to reform it 603. 835. 837 Covetousness dangerous in it 837 Not to be reformed without a Call 840 Rules concerning its Reformation 828. 840 No man should take up an Office in it without a Call 875 God plants Churches 895 It is like a Vineyard 896 God furnisheth it 899 God expects it should be fruitfull 900. 913 How Christ upholds it 935 All Attempts against it are vain 146. 936 It is often tainted with Cōrruptions 600 Gods care of its Reformation 601 It may ordain outward Ceremonies 401 The proper Priviledges
natural sleep so is it much more easy with God by his Almighty power to raise the dead at the last day 3. As after natural sleep the body and outward senses are more fresh and lively then before so likewise after that the bodies of the Saints being dead have for a time slept in their Graves as in beds they shall awake and rise again at the last day in a far more excellent estate then they dyed in being changed from corruption to incorruption from Dishonour to Glory from weakness to power from natural to Spiritual bodies as the Apostle sheweth 1 Cor. 15. 42. 4. As in natural sleep the body onely is said properly to sleep not the Soul the powers whereof work even in sleep in some sort though not so perfectly as when we are waking so in death onely the bodies of the Saints do dye and lye down in the Graves but their Souls return to God who gave them Eccles 12. 7. and they live with God even in death and after death 5. As sleep is sweet to them that are wearied with labour and travel Eccles 5. 12. so also death is sweet and comfortable to the Faithfull being wearied and turmoiled with sin and with the manifold miseries of this life therefore some have even desired death as Eliah 1 King 19. 4. and Paul Phil. 1. Object Object Death is bitter and painfull even to the godly Answ Answ True in it self it is so But 1. The pains of it are mitigated and sweetned to them by the comfortable feeling and apprehension of Gods love and mercy in Christ and by the assured hope of eternal life which they conceive in the midst of death The sting of their death is pulled out because they feel their sins forgiven and themselves at peace with God in Christ 2. Though the pangs which accompany death may be bitter yet death it self is sweet to them in that it freeth them from all sin and misery and passeth them to a better and Heavenly life So much of the Doctrine Use 1 Use 1. Seeing death is but a sleep this affordeth an Argument to prove to us the general Resurrection of the bodies of all that dye If they do but sleep in their graves then there shall be a time of awaking them out of that sleep See 1 Cor. 15. Use 2 Use 2. Terrour to the Wicked and Reprobate dying in their sins Seeing death is but a sleep hence it followes That their bodies must be hereafter awaked and raised out of their graves at the last day and united again to their souls that both Souls and Bodies together may be cast into Hell-Torments for ever It were well for such if their souls and bodies might utterly perish and be abolished by death as the souls and bodies of brute Beasts but it is not so For their Souls after death go into Hell-Torments and though their bodies for a time go to the Earth yet at the last day they must whether they will or no be raised to the end they may together with their souls be cast to Hell Vse 3 Use 3. To encourage and comfort the godly against the fear of death Remember that death is to them but a sleep yea a sweet and comfortable sleep to such as dye well and in the Lord. If thou dye in Christ thou fallest asleep as it were in his Arms and then shalt thou have a most comfortable waking at the last day thy body shall then be awaked never to sleep again nor to have any more need of sleep nor yet of any earthly comforts as meat drink c. It shall also awake far more fresh lively and vigorous and in a far more excellent condition then it fell asleep in death Fear not then to fall into this sweet sleep of death when thy time shall come What weary Traveller or Labouring man is not willing when night cometh to lye down in his bed and there to fall asleep till next morning that he may be fresh again to labour So what good Christian wearied with the labours and troubles of this life and with this tedious warfare and pilgrimage which here we pass thorough should not be willing and joyful when the night of death cometh to have his body go to the grave as into a soft bed there to sleep and rest till the Day of Judgment that then he may awake fresh again c Know then if thou be a good Christian and hast thy sins forgiven end dyest in Christ death is no death but a sweet sleep to thee c. Thy body shall not be abolished or perish by death but only fall asleep that it may at length be awaked again in a far more excellent condition then it was in when it fell asleep thy vile body shall then be changed and made like unto the glorious body of Christ himself as the Apostle speaketh As for thy Soul that shall not sleep at all no not in death but shall for ever wake and live with God Vse 4 Use 4. To comfort us in the decease of Friends dying well and in the Lord. If we can be so perswaded of them then is there no cause at all of mourning but of rejoycing and thankfulness rather for them that after their tedious Pilgrimage in this life and after all the toylsome labours and miseries of it they are at length fallen into so sound and sweet a sleep and that they now rest in their beds that is in their graves Never did they before in all their life sleep so sweetly never was any bed so easie and comfortable to them as the grave Cease then our mourning for them Weep not for them but for our selves in regard of our loss of their Christian society and especially for our sins the procuring cause of that loss And yet even in mourning for the loss of our Christian friends we must beware of excess that we mourn not as those without hope but remember That though they are gone before us yet we have not utterly lost them Prae-misimus non amisimus If we be careful to live and dye well as they have done before us we shall meet with them again and enjoy them at the last day in the general Resurrection When our Friends whose company we desire are fallen into a natural sleep though we cannot then converse with them yet we hope we shall when they are awake again So think of our Christian friends departed this life though now while they sleep in their graves we have not their company yet when they awake at the last day we shall have it again and much more comfortably then ever we had in this life Mark 5. 40 c. And they laughed him to scorn c. Jan. 21. 1620. THe Evangelist from the 38. Verse to the 41 setteth down the Accidents which fell out in the house of Jairus immediately before our Saviour wrought the Miracle there 1. That our Saviour coming to the house found there a great stirr and
horrour and fear in Judas his conscience after he had betrayed him the very remembrance of it was most terrible to him to think upon Matth. 27. 4. Reason Reason The consideration of the innocency of God's servants doth greatly aggravate the haynousness of their sin who any way wrong them or hurt them and so striketh their conscience with the more terrour Use 1 Use 1. See how God's Servants may dismay their enemies The best way to daunt and discourage them is to walk in holiness and innocency of life Labour to shew forth this innocency Nothing is so terrible to the wicked as the innocent and holy lives of Gods Saints whom they maliciously oppose and persecute Use 2 Use 2. Beware of offering wrong to any innocent and holy Servant of God lest thy conscience terrifie thee for it Their innocency will be terrible to thee to think on whether they be living or dead Mark 6. 14 c. And he said that John the Baptist was risen c. Jun. 3. 1621. Observ 2 Observ 2. IN that Herod's guilty Conscience maketh him to fear that John whom he had put to death is risen again we may observe that this is one effect and property of a guilty Conscience to disquiet and vex the Heart with great terrors and fears yea of tentimes with vain fears when there is no cause so to fear There is a spirit of servile fear accompanying every guilty Conscience Job 15. 21. A dreadfull sound or a sound of fears is in his ears that is in the ears of the wicked Isai 57. 20. The wicked are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest c. No peace to them c. Deut. 28. 65. The Lord threatneth to give the wicked a trembling Heart And Levit. 26. 36. to send faintness into their Hearts that the sound of a shaken leaf should chase them Thus it was with Cain his guilty Conscience made him fear lest every one that met him should slay him Gen. 4. 14. So Prov. 28. 1. The wicked flee when no man pursueth Reason Reason The Conscience guilty of sin doth apprehend God's wrath and just Judgment due unto sin and this cannot but breed great terrours in the Heart See this in Adam Gen. 3. See it also in Foelix Act. 24 25. Use 1 Use 1. See the miserable and uncomfortable estate of all wicked ones living in the guilt of their sins without Repentance They can have no true peace or comfort in their Consciences but must needs be from time to time pursued and vexed with great terrours and fears And though all the wicked do not for the present feel these terrours because the Consciences of some are asleep or dead and benummed so as they have no feeling of the guilt of sin yet hereafter when God shall awake their Consciences they shall feel grievous terrours and even a Hell in their Consciences Think of Cain what a Hell he lived in by reason of his guilty Conscience continually terrifying and tormenting him What comfort could he take in any thing in the World See then that the estate of the wicked in this life is not to be envyed but pittied rather though they enjoy all outward prosperity and live in never so much outward mirth and jollity yet so long as they feel inwardly the terrours of a guilty Conscience they are miserable Vse 2 Vse 2. See the cursed fruit of sin which maketh the Conscience of the sinner guilty and so breedeth and bringeth forth such fearfull terrours which are the beginnings of Hell in the Conscience Let this make all sin odious unto us Had Cain known what terrours his sin would breed in him he would have feared to commit it So Herod c. Use 3 Use 3. See what to do if we would be freed from such servile fears and terrours of Conscience as the wicked are vexed and pursued with This will never be till the Conscience be cased of the guilt of sin and be at peace with God Never rest then till this be done To this end 1. Labour truly to feel thy sins and the hainousnes of them and to have thy Heart broken with godly sorrow for them 2. Then acknowledg them to God and earnestly sue for pardon of them in Christ 3. Labour by Faith to apply the merit of Christ's bloud to purge thy Conscience from the guilt of thy sins for this onely will do it Then being justified by Faith thou shalt have peace towards God and Peace in thy Conscience Observ 3 Observ 3. Herod having put John to death wrongfully his Conscience did accuse and trouble him for this sin after he had committed it even after the death of John and it may be this was some good space of time after his death though it is uncertain how long Hence then we learn That sin once committed doth lye heavy upon the Conscience of the sinner accusing and troubling it yea long after it is committed Gen. 4. 7. The Lords tells Cain thus If thou do not well sin lyeth at the door that is the guilt of sin will lye at the door of thy Conscience to accuse and trouble thee afterward Gen. 42. 21. The sin of Joseph's Brethren in selling him into Egypt troubled their Consciences long after Job in his elder years was troubled in Conscience for the sins of his youth chap. 13. ver 26. So David also Psal 25. 7. Remember not saith he the sins of my youth c. So the sin of Judas lay heavy on his Conscience after the committing of it even so heavy that it forced him to hang himself And the like fearfull effect it sometimes bringeth forth in others who have committed great and grievoussins Use 1 Use 1. See a great difference between sin as it offereth it self to the sinner in time of the temptation and as it commeth to the Conscience afterwards In time of Temptation it doth perswade and allure the sinner by profit and pleasure but afterward being once committed it doth accuse the Conscience and put in endictments against the sinner to condemn him before the bar of Gods Judgment See then the deceitfulness of sin and Satan in tempting us promising pleasures and profits to us when they sollicite us to yield to them but hiding from us the cursed fruit and effect which will follow namely the sting and torment which sin will leave behind it in the Conscience Think well of this when thou art tempted to sin that which now promiseth pleasure or profit will indeed accuse and trouble and torment thy Conscience afterward it will be bitterness in the end though for the present thou may think it sweet Prov. 23. 31. Look not on Wine red c. At last it biteth like a Serpent and stingeth like an Adder Believe not therefore the perswasions of Satan c. Use 2 Use 2. Take heed of committing sin though never so much tempted and allured to it by Satan or by the World or our own corrupt nature remembring this that the
length told David plainly that he was the man Note that this plain and direct manner of reproving is then especially to be used when we are to deal with obstinate offenders which are much hardned in their sins and hard to be reclaimed such have most need to have their Consciences throughly convinced by such plain reproofs But on the other side if we be to deal with such whose Consciences are more tender and tractable we may use sometimes a more close and covert kind of admonishing and reproving as either by a general alledging of the words of Scripture whereby the sin is condemned and leaving them to the party himself to apply to his own Conscience or else framing our reproof in the manner of an exhortation or instruction thereby implying an oblique or indirect reproof which is the course prescribed by Paul in reproving an Elder 1 Tim. 5. 1. Rebuke not an Elder but intreat him as a Father Yet we must alwayes be careful to use so much plainness in reproving as may serve sufficiently to discover the sin reproved unto the Conscience of the offender and to convince him thereof by the Word of God Quest Quest Whether a Minister in publick reproof may speak personally Answ Answ Not so that should be done in private not in publick See Matth. 18. 15. Object Ob●ect 1 Tim. 5. 20. Them that sin Rebuke before all c. Answ Answ He speaks of publick crimes whereof they were publickly convicted See Beza Use Use This shews the fault of such as deal not plainly enough in admonition and reproof of others Some are afraid of displeasing those whom they should reprove and therefore are loath to deal plainly They speak too generally and darkly and too far off as if they were not willing to touch the Conscience of the Offender Such must remember that Christian reproof is Spiritual Physick or Chyrurgery Now if the Physitian or Chyrurgion be afraid to come near or touch the Patient how should he cure him If he dare not touch the sore how shall he launce it and heal it So here c. We must therefore not go about the bush when we should admonish others of sin but in love and meekness tell them of it plainly so as to convince their Consciences especially being to deal with such as are hardned in their sins the more hard they are to be reclaimed the more plainly and throughly we should deal in reproving such Jude 23. Verse Others save with fear pulling them out of the fire If we see one in present danger of burning we do not think it enough to go round about him and look upon him as if we were afraid to touch him or speak to him but we go directly to him and pull him out of the fire So here c. So much of the Reproof Now followes the Effect which it wrought in Herodias Verse 19. Therefore Herodias had a quarrell against him c. Or Laid wait against him as some translate it but the other Translation is better for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie to bear an inward grudg or quarrell against another See Beza on this place and Varinus in lexico And would have killed him Or desired to murder and put him to death by some means or other The cause of all this her malice and malicious practise against him was his plain reproof of Herod and her for their incestuous marriage which made her fear to be divorced c. Observ 1 Observ 1. Here we see that it is the property of the wicked and impenitent to be so far from repenting of their sins when they are reproved for them that they take occasion thereby to hate and persecute such as reprove them and oppose them in their sins Thus Ahab hated Michaiah because he did not prophesie good but evil concerning him 1 King 22. 8. So Ahab and Jezabel hated Elijah and persecuted him seeking his life because he plainly reproved their sins 1 King 19. Thus the Scribes and Pharisees and other Jews hated our Saviour Christ for reproving their sins Thus the Jews hated Stephen Act. 7. 54. See also Amos 5. 10. Reas 1 Reasons 1. Joh. 3. 20. Every one that doth evil hateth the light c. that is the light of the Word of God and consequently all such as hold out this light of the Word to discover and convince their sins Reas 2 Reas 2. They do love and delight in their sins Job 20. 12. Wickedness is sweet in their mouths they hide it under their tongues They spare it and forsake it not but keep it still within their mouth Ephes 4. 19. They give themselves to sin with greediness or with greedy desire And therefore they must needs hate such as reprove their sins or go about to hinder them in the practise of them Use 1 Use 1. See by this and take notice of the great corruption and miserable blindness that is in us by Nature causing us to hate and persecute such as would do us good even the greatest good that is to say save our souls by reproving our sins that we may repent and be saved What wretched unthankfulness is this What wilful blindness thus to be offended at those that would open our eyes This shews that we love darknesse more than light Joh. 3. 19. This shews that we are by Nature in a dead sleep of sin in that we are so unwilling to be awaked As it is with one that is very drowzie and heavy asleep he is angty at every thing that wakes him if one do but jogg him or hold the light of a candle before him c. So it is with a sinner by Nature sleeping in sin he is apt to be offended at such as would awake him by reproof and admonition yea apt to hate and persecute such most maliciously Let us bewail this great and fearful corruption of nature that is in men which makes them so to hate and persecute their best friends even such as seek their greatest good and are sent of God unto them to admonish and reprove them for their sins and to bring them to repentance and to pull them out of the snare of the Devil yea out of the fire of hell that they may be eternally saved Is not this wretched blindness and madness to hate and persecute such as would do them so much good It is the part of a frantick person to be so far from taking the Physick given him by the Physitian to cure him as to be angry at him that gives it and to overthrow and break the glass which holds it and not only so but to fly in the face of the Physitian and to lay violent hands upon him So it is a spiritual madness or frenzie thus to hate and persecute our spiritual Physitians the Lords faithful Ministers and others sent to cure us of our sins It is the manner of wild Beasts Lyons Bears c. to be ready to fly in the faces
with men and that they may be well accounted of in the world if they come in company they will do as others do though it be never so unlawful or wicked which they do that so they may be well spoken of and accounted good fellowes kind men c Such forget what is said Luke 16. 26. Wo to you when all men shall speak well of you Well let us look to it that we do not so hunt after mens favour and commendation as to purchase it with shipwrack of conscience Such credit with men is dearly bought which is purchased with the loss of God's favour and wounding of our own Conscience Mark 6. 27. 28 29. And immediately the King sent an Executioner and commanded his Head to be brought and Sept. 16. 1621. he went and beheaded him in the Prison And brought his head in a Charger and gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell gave it to her Mother And when his Disciples heard of it they came and took up his Corps and laid it in a Tomb. HItherto we have heard the Occasions and Preparatives going before the beheading of John Baptist Now the Evangelist setteth down the Fact it self Ver. 27. And the Consequents of it Ver. 28 29. Touching the beheading of John the Evangelist mentioneth three things especially 1. The time when Herod caused him to be beheaded Immediately 2. The manner and means of effecting it He sent an Executioner and commanded his Head to be brought and he went and beheaded him 3. The place where In Prison From the Circumstance of time Observe The diligence and forwardness of the Wicked in committing sin c. Of this before Ver. 25. Touching the manner of executing this Cruell murder of John He sent an Executioner The word in the Originall signifieth one that was of the King's Guard which was near about him one of his ordinary Followers whereby it seems that it was the custom of Kings and great Rulers in those times to imploy some one of their Guard or ordinary Followers and Servants in doing such executions of Death upon Malefactors In Prison This shews how cruelly and unjustly Herod dealt with John in Commanding him to be put to Death presently and that in the Prison it self where he lay bound so that he neither came to his answer in any publick place of Justice nor was suffered to plead his own Cause or speak for his innocency neither had he in the Prison any of his Disciples or others present with him to Minister any comfort to him at his Death Observ 1 Observ 1. See here how the Faithfull Ministers of God are often rewarded in the World for their Faithfulness in their Ministery they are for this Cause not onely hated of the Wicked but most unjustly and cruelly used yea persecuted even unto Death Of this before Ver. 17. Observ 2 Observ 2. From the joynt consideration both of the manner of John's beheading and of the place where he suffered in that he was beheaded as a Malefactor by one of the Kings Guard and that in the Prison after a most vile base and ignominious sort Hence observe That God doth sometimes permit his dear Servants not onely to be put to Death by the Wicked but even to base and ignominious kinds of Death Thus Stephen was stoned to Death And Hebr. 11. 37. some were stoned some sawed asunder some slain with the Sword So we read in the Histories of the Church of sundry kinds of reproachfull Deaths suffered by the Martyrs both in the Primitive Church and afterward in latter times And our Saviour Christ himself suffered the most ignominious and accursed Death on the Crosse Use 1 Use 1. See then that we are not to judge any to be wicked or out of favour with God because they dye some base and ignominious kind of Death Such as have lived well and in the fear of God cannot but dye in the favour of God and be happy after Death whatsoever kind of Death they dye Psal 116. 15. Pretious in the sight of the Lord is the Death of his Saints Though the World and wicked Men think basely of such when they dye because somtimes they are put to base and reproachful kinds of Death as to be Stoned Beheaded Burned c. yet the Lord doth not so think of them but hath them in precious accompt Vse 2 Use 2. Comfort to the Faithfull if God Call them to suffer any vile or opprobrious kind of Death Let them know they are never the lesse in favour with him never the more miserable never the further from Salvation because they dye in such a base manner but they are most blessed and happy if they live well and dye in the Lord what kind of Death soever they dye though never so ignominious or contemptible in it self Revel 14. 13. Many of God's dear Children have dyed such kinds of Death The basest Death that is to a good Christian is no other but a passage to Heaven to a better and eternall Life So much of the beheading of John Now follow the Consequents of it which are two especially 1. The Ignominy and Disgrace offered unto his Head being taken off The Executioner brought it in a Charger and gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell to her Mother Ver. 28. 2. The honour done to the Corps of John by his own Disciples When they heard of his Death they came and took up his Corps and laid it in a Tomb. Touching the former of these It is said The Executioner brought his Head in a Charger This was a most cruell and bloody Fact not onely to cut off the Head of John but also to bring it in a Platter as a Dish to help to furnish Herod's Feast and that presently after it was cut off even before it had done bleeding as is likely This I say was a most cruell and unmercifull Fact and it was a bloody and ruefull Spectacle to behold And he gave it to the Damsell and the Damsell c. This also shews the cruell minds and hard hearts of Herodias and her Daughter in that they are so far from being moved with any pity towards John after he is Beheaded that they delight themselves with the beholding of his Head yet bleeding afresh in the Platter yea they make a scorn and derision of his Head being thus brought in at the Feast and given from one to another Observ 1 Observ 1. See here how fearfull a thing it is for any to be hardned in fin and to be given over of God unto it as Herodias and her Daughter were such are so far from being touched with the feeling of sin or with any remorse for it that they can even delight themselves with sin yea with the fowlest and most hainous sins making but a sport of them But of this I spake before Ver. 25. Observ 2 Observ 2. Further we may here observe that it is the property of the Wicked to exercise cruelty not onely against
Multitude This he did first that he might not be hindered by their presence from withdrawing himself to Prayer Into a Mountain What Mountain is not expressed by the Evangelists but it was some Mountain or Hill in the Wilderness of Bethsaida not far from the place where Christ had wrought the Miracle of the Loaves Quest Quest Why did he retire himself into this Mountain Answ Answ Because it was a solitary place fittest for private prayer therefore that he might with more freedom and quietness and without distraction pray he withdrew himself thither To pray Here some Questions may be moved Quest 1 Quest 1. How is Christ said to pray unto God seeing himself was God c. Answ Answ He Prayed 1. As Man and in his Humane Nature Vide infrà Ver. 41. 2. As Mediator and Intercessor between God and Man And so he prayed according to both Natures though in Humane Nature onely Quest 2 Quest. 2. Had he any need to pray in regard of himself Answ Answ As God he had no need for so he could not want any thing being the Fountain of all perfection and of all good things But in respect of his Humane Nature he had need to pray and did pray even for himself The reason is because he did partake not onely in our Nature but in the Infirmities of our Nature such as were meerly naturall and without sin as Hunger Thirst Weariness Pain Grief c. therefore he had need to pray for supply of strength to bear and overcome these naturall weaknesses Thus Hebr. 5. 7. He is said to have prayed with strong cryes and tears to his heavenly Father when he was troubled with naturall fear of Death Note that he had no such cause or need to pray for himself as we have no need to pray in regard of any sinfull infirmity or corruption c. Vide Bezam Homil. 5. de Pass p. 88. Quest 3 Quest 3. Why did he now give himself to Prayer Answ Answ Thereby to prepare himself to the working of those great Miracles which follow viz. His walking on the Sea and stilling the tempest of the Wind c. Quest 4 Quest 4. What was the matter of his Prayer Answ Answ Uncertain because not expressed In generall we may be sure that it was most excellent and heavenly far beyond the prayers of all men that ever were are or shall be In particular it is probable that among other things he prayed 1. For strength and assistance to be given to his humane nature for the better performance of all Duties of his publick Office and Ministery as he was Mediator 2. For a blessing upon his Ministery that his Preaching and Miracles might be more and more effectuall for those ends unto which they were ordained of his heavenly Father viz. for the calling and confirming of the Elect and for the convincing and condemning of the Reprobate c. 3. He gave thanks for the good which had bin done hitherto by his Doctrine and Miracles 4. He prayed for his Disciples that they might be confirmed in Grace and for the People that they might profit by his Teaching and Miracles These things and such like no doubt were the matter of our Saviour Christ's most divine and heavenly Prayer at this time Observ Observ General In that our Saviour being to pray is so careful to remove all hinderances as the Company of the Disciples and of the Multitude and to use all good helps and furtherances as the privateness of the place c. Hence we may gather that Prayer is a Duty not easily performed but hard and difficult to perform in due manner Of this see before Chap. 1. Ver. 35. Particular Observations follow First from the Circumstance of time When he had sent them away Observe That before we give our selves to Prayer we should carefully remove such things as may hinder us in the Duty Our Saviour being to pray privately first sends away his Disciples and the multitude c. So we being to pray must remove all that may hinder us As 1. Worldly cares and thoughts of earthly things 2. Inordinate and distempered Passions of Anger Wrath Malice Envy c. 1 Tim. 2. 8. Pray lifting up pure hands without wrath c. Mark 11. 25. When ye stand and pray forgive c. 3. All kind of sins and sinful Lusts must be cast off and laid aside by true Repentance As David Psal 26. 6. saith he would first wash his hands in Innocency and then compass God's Altar So must we c. Psal 66. 18. If I regard Wickedness in my heart the Lord will not hear me Joh. 9. 31. God heareth not sinners Therefore Isa 1. 15. God would not hear them though they made many Prayers because their hands were full of Blood The more difficult to pray well the more care to remove all these impediments Vse 1 Use 1. For reproof of such as are not careful as they should be to prevent such hinderances in Prayer Some go to Prayer with heads full of worldly business and cares of this life Some with hearts and minds distempered with Passions of Wrath Bitterness Malice c. Some with guilt of some sin or sins lying on their conscience not yet truly repented of No marvail if such pray without Feeling without Fervency without Comfort How should they pray aright when no care to prevent hinderances of this excellent Duty In vain do they worship God drawing near him with their lips their heart being far from him Isa 29. Nay further such Prayers are hateful and abominable to God a high Prophanation of his Name for which he will not hold them guiltless Use 2 Use 2. See then that before we give our selves to this exercise of Prayer we do as our Saviour here did that is remove all that may hinder send away the multitude the multitude of worldly cares and thoughts that are apt to swarm about us and in our heads at such times send away also and shake off all distempered Passions and sinful Lusts c. Let none of these troublesome companions stay with us when we should set our selves apart to pray unto God c. It followeth He went into a Mountain because it was a private place where he might be freest from Distractions c. Observ Observ We have need to use all good helps and means to further us in the Duty of Prayer If our Saviour Christ though he had a most admirable gift in Prayer above all men that ever were and to whom it was nothing so hard as to us c. yet had need to use the best helps as the privateness of the Place and silence of the Night c. How much more have we need to use all possible helps to further us in this Exercise Now the helps are these especially 1. Make choice of the best and fittest times and places for private Prayer when and where we may be most free from outward occasions of Distraction and Hinderances Thus our
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
the good and benefit not onely of Jews but Gentiles to be a Temporall and Spirituall Saviour and Deliverer of the Gentiles as well as the Jews to deliver them from all misery especially from sin and from the power of Satan c. For this was implyed also by the deliverance of this Woman's Daughter from being possessed of the Devil Luke 2. 31. Christ is called the Salvation prepared of God before all People A Light to enlighten the Gentiles and the Glory of his People Israel For although Christ himself did not in his own person preach the Gospel to the Gentiles because the due time for calling them was not yet come neither did he as yet generally extend his saving Grace towards them yet by his mercy vouchsafed to this Woman he did before hand shew and declare That the Gentiles should afterward be more generally called and brought to believe in him and so reap the benefit of Salvation by him The like we may gather from the example of the Centurion Matth. 8. As the Sun before it arise in the Morning doth cast up some beams of his light above the face of the Earth so Christ Jesus the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4. before he was to shine forth by the full brightness of his Grace to the Gentiles did first give some hope hereof by letting some beams of that his Grace shine to some few of the Gentiles Vse Use This is for the comfort of us who are of the Gentiles to assure us that if we labour by true Faith to imbrace and believe in Christ we shall be partakers of the saving benefits of his Incarnation and death as well as the Jews He hath broken down the partition-wall Ephes 2. 14. Yea these benefits of Christ do now more peculiarly belong to us than to them in that they are and have been a long time rejected of God and cast off for their infidelity and contempt of Christ and we which are Gentiles are by the unspeakable mercy of God ingraffed into the Church in their room and stead as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 11. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this Woman having formerly lived in profane Gentilism was by the Mercy of God called out of that blindness and profaness to believe in Christ and shewed her Faith thus by coming to Christ for her afflicted Daughter we may observe that the Lord doth sometimes effectually call and work true Faith and saving Grace in such as have formerly lived in greatest Ignorance Blindness and Profaness of life Thus Abraham was called to the true Knowledge of God and indued with Faith whereas before he and his Parents had lived in gross Blindness and Idolatry Josh 24. 2. And we have sundry Examples in Scripture of such as have been called out of heathenish Ignorance and Profaness and indued with true saving Faith as Rahab the Harlot of Jericho Naaman the Syrian Ruth the Moabitesse the Centurion mentioned Matth. 8. Cornelius Act. 10. c. To this purpose also is that Prophecy Isa 9. 2. The People that walked in Darkness have seen a great Light They that dwelt in the Land of the Shadow of Death upon them hath the Light shined Reason Reason The Lord doth this to magnify and set out the riches of his Grace in calling and shewing Mercy to such as are by Nature plunged in the deepest misery See Ephes 2. 4 5. Vse Vse To teach us not to despair of the Calling and Conversion of such as yet live in greatest blindnesse and profaness yea though they be such as live out of the visible Church as Jews Turks Pagans Hereticks Papists c. though they yet live in Aegyptian darkness of Ignorance and in grossest Profaness Superstition or Idolatry without God without Christ without the Word of God c. yet God may hereafter call them or some of them out of this their misery and shine to them by the light of his saving Grace in Christ He that at the beginning caused Light to shine out of Darkness is able to send the light of his Word and Spirit where yet there is nothing but black and thick darkness of Ignorance Sin and Profaness Therefore let us pity and pray for such People and Persons as do yet fit in spiritual Darkness and in the Region of Death desiring the Lord to shine unto them by the light of his Grace c. So much of the Description of the Person which made sute unto Christ In the next place I am to speak of the occasions or causes moving her to make her sute to Christ The first whereof was the great Affliction laid upon her Daughter being possessed with an unclean Spirit Where we have two things expressed 1. The Affliction it self Her Daughter was possessed of a Devill 2. A Description of the Devil by his Nature or Property An Unclean Spirit Whose young Daughter had an Unclean Spirit that is Was bodily possessed by a wicked Spirit or Devill which was entred into her body holding possession there and grievously afflicting and tormenting her as may appear Matth. 15. 22. Now this was a most heavy and grievous trial and affliction both to the Daughter and to the Mother for she could not but out of natural Affection be greatly touched with fellow-feeling of this misery of her Daughter and so much the more because her Daughter was young and little and so the more weak and unfit to bear so grievous an Affliction therefore her bowels of pity could not but yearn the more towards this her little Daughter And this is the more probable because naturally the Affection of Mothers to Children of their own Womb is known to be so exceeding great and vehement being greater usually than the affection of Fathers Besides this Affliction was in it self extraordinary and very heavy and grievous It had been a grievous thing if her little Daughter had been taken and visited with some dangerous Sickness or Disease in her body but for her to be possessed of a Devil yea to be grievously racked and tormented of the Devill in her body this was a far more grievous and heavy case yea this was no doubt more grievous to her than it would have been to see her Daughter taken away by death She might justly wish her rather dead and buried if it were the Will of God than to be so given up of God to the Tyranny of the Devil to be so tormented of him Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Woman being a Believer in Christ was tried and exercised with this heavy Affliction we may learn that the Lord useth to lay very heavy and grievous afflictions and troubles upon his own Children and Servants Psal 34. 19. Many or great are the troubles of the Righteous Heb. 12. 6. The Lord scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth that Phrase implyeth a sharp and grievous Chastisement How many Examples have we of this in Scripture Time will not suffer to mention half of them therefore only to touch a few in
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
Riches Matth. 5. 6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse for they shall be filled Rev. 21. 6. I will give to him that is athirst of the Fountain of the Water of Life freely When Moses lifted up the brazen Serpent in the Wilderne●s which was a Type of Christ's being lifted on the Cross Joh. 3. Such as had but a weak eye-sight yet by looking upon that brazen Serpent were cured of the sting of fiery Serpents So though a Christian have but a weak eye of Faith to look at Christ crucified yet being true Faith it is sufficient to receive and apply all the saving benefits of Christs death to himself Use Great comfort to such Christians as feel and complain of the weaknesse of their Faith no cause for such to be discouraged For if their Faith be true and sound the small or weak measure cannot shut them out from Christ's benefits but it is sufficient to give them interest in all yea to give them actuall possession of Christ himself So ready is he to communicate himself and his benefits to us that he suffereth himself to be received and enjoyed even of such as have but a very weak and feeble hand of Faith to lay hold on him For as a weak hand is a true hand and may truly lay hold upon that thing which it reacheth after so our Faith though very weak and feeble yet may be true Faith and truly apprehend Christ to Justification and Salvation A man may draw Water out of a deep Well or Fountain with a small Bucket or other Vessel so may we draw Waters of Life out of Christ the Fountain of Life and Salvation though the Vessel of our Faith be but small c. Yet we must not rest content with a weak Faith but labour for increase daily The property of true Faith is to grow c. Mark 8. 23 c. And he took the blind man by the hand c. April 3. 1625. OF the occasion of this Miracle ye have heard versu priori viz. 1. Our Saviour's coming to Bethsaida 2. The bringing of the blind man unto him 2. Their Sute or Request made to Christ for him Now the next principall matter set down by the Evangelist is a speciall preparative used by our Saviour before the working of this Miracle viz. His taking of the blind man by the hand and leading him out of the Town Quest 1 Quest 1. Why did he thus lead him out of the Town before he cured him and not rather work this Miracle in the Town that so the whole Town might have taken notice of it Answ Answ Some think the reason was because the People of this Town had formerly shewed such incredulity and unthankfulness in rejecting Christ's Doctrine and Miracles and not profiting by them therefore he now refused to work any more Miracles there But then it is likely That he would not have come again at all unto this Town nor have wrought this Miracle near unto it Therefore I take the true causes to be these 1. To avoid all shew of Ambition and desire of Vain-Glory 2. To prevent the concourse and flocking of the Multitude about him which might have been a disturbance and hinderance to him in working the Miracle therefore that he might with more freedom and lesse distraction proceed in the quiet and orderly wo●king of it he withdrew the blind man out of the Town into some more private place Quest 2 Quest 2. Why did he take him by the hand and lead him himself and not appoint others to lead him as he might have done Answ Answ 1. To shew his goodnesse and mercy towards the blind man and how ready willing and forward he was to cure and heal him 2. To shew his Humility that he did not proudly scorn or disdain him in his Misery and Affliction but was content to abase and submit himself to do any mean Office in way of helping and relieving him Observ 1 Observ 1. That in all Actions and Duties which we take in hand and perform we ought to be far from Ambitious desire and seeking after Vain-glory and praise from Men. So was our Saviour Christ as we see here and at other times Joh. 5. 41. and Joh. 8. 50. I seek not mine own Glory c. Herein we must imitate Him Gal. 5. ult Let us not be desirous of Vain-glory c. 1 Thess 2. 6. Paul professeth that he sought not Glory from men in his ministry Yea we are to shun all shew and appearance of such Ambition and desire of Vain-glory in our Actions Reas 1 Reas 1. This ambitious seeking of our own Praise is a main hinderance to the conscionable seeking of God's Glory and Honour which ought to be the main scope of all our Actions Reas 2 Reas 2. It is a fruit of Pride and therefore a sin to be abhorred and taken heed of Reas 3 Reas 3. The property of Hypocrites is to hunt after Vain-glory as the Pharisees Matth. 6. 2. Reas 4 Reas 4. It cannot stand with true Faith Joh. 5. 44. How can ye believe when ye receive Glory one from another c. where Pride and Ambition raigneth in the Heart there can be no truth or soundnesse of Faith For Faith causeth us to deny our selves and to give all Glory to God c. Object Object Phil. 4. 8. If there be any Vertue or Praise think on these things c. Answ Answ 1. By Praise understand such things as are Praise-worthy as religious and vertuous Actions These we should be carefull and diligent to perform that so we may deserve most praise and commendation from God and Men not that we should ambitiously hunt after Vain-glory or Praise from Men especially from the common multitude c. 2. Not all seeking of Praise condemned so it be just and for well-doing But seeking Vain-glory which is 1. When we seek praise for evil things or for good things that are not in us 2. From unfit persons as the profane sort or multitude 3. When we onely or chiefly seek our own praise and not God's Glory principally Use Use For admonition to us to beware of this ambitious hunting and seeking after vain-glory and praise of men in our Actings especially in good Duties as in Duties of God's Worship as Preaching Prayer frequenting Sermons Reading c. So also in works of Mercy as giving Alms to the Poor c. Take heed of seeking our selves and our own glory in performance of these and the like Duties lest we be like the hypocriticall Pharisees and those Rulers mentioned Joh. 12. 43. Who loved the praise of Men more than the praise of God If it be so with us we have our Reward as our Saviour saith of the Pharisees Matth. 6. Contrà see that in all our Actions we seek God's Glory chiefly and principally and that we be much more carefull to approve our wayes and works to God then to Men. This is the way to have true comfort
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
mortify these carnal lusts 2. Attend diligently and conscionably upon the Publick Ministry of the Word which is the Sword of the Spirit to slay these carnal affections in us more and more Heb. 4. 12. It is a quick and powerfull Word sharper than any two-edged Sword c. 2 Cor. 10. 5. Mighty through God to cast down Imaginations c. and to bring into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 3. Give our selves more and more to the private study and meditation of the Word of God the better to mortify these carnal Lusts and Affections Psal 1. Ama scientiam Scripturarum carnis vitia non amabis Hieron Use 4 Use 4. See what cause for the best Christians to watch over themselves and especially over their hearts in regard of the occasions of Sin seeing their hearts and minds are in part carnal and so apt to be affected with carnal things pleasing to corrupt Nature How careful had we need be to keep our hearts with all diligence Prov. 4. 23. and to avoid all occasions of being drawn away to love and liking of earthly and carnall things Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour here alledgeth this as the cause of Peter's loathnesse and unwillingnesse to hear of Christ's Death and Sufferings and consequently of those troubles which were like to come upon himself and the other Disciples at the time of his Suffering viz. because he did savour of carnal and earthly things Hence learn what is one main cause why we are by nature so loath and unwilling to undergo and bear the Cross and Afflictions namely because we naturally savour of carnal things that is of such things as are pleasing to corrupt Nature and to Flesh and Blood Now Nature desireth outward ease rest and peace and therefore abhorreth and shunneth the Cross and troubles Peter was unwilling to hear of suffering troubles because his heart and mind was too much set upon the thought and desire of earthly and temporal things pleasing to Man's Nature So the other Disciples also they dreamed of an earthly Kingdom of Christ which as they thought should be accompanied with outward peace and prosperity as we see Matth. 20. 21. and this was a main cause of their unwillingness and backwardness to hear either of their own or of Christ's Sufferings Therefore Mat. 26. 41. our Saviour admonishing his Disciples of their unwillingness to suffer troubles tells them the cause viz. the weakness of their Flesh because corrupt Nature desired ease quietness and freedom from the Cross and they were too much tainted with this natural corruption and savoured of it which made them so loath to undergo troubles Use Use Teacheth us what to do if we would be willing and ready to bear such crosses and troubles as it shall please the Lord to to try us with then labour first to have our carnal and earthly Affections mortified in us more and more to be be less carnal and earthly minded to savour less c. Labour to have hearts withdrawn from too much care love and desire of earthly things pleasing to corrupt Nature So long as our hearts and minds are too much upon these carnal things so long as we savour the things that are pleasing to Man's corrupt Nature we shall never be willing to bear crosses for Nature it self abhorreth the crosse and suffering of troubles Therefore first thou must labour to have this corruption of Nature mortifyed in thee Thou must learn to deny thy self that is thy own corrupt Nature Will Affections Desires and then thou wilt willingly take up thy Cross So in the following Verse of this Chapter Whosoever will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross c. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that our Saviour here makes such an opposition between savouring of things of God and savouring of things of Men We may further learn That one of these is an enemy and hinderance to the other that is to say the minding of carnall and earthly things pleasing to our corrupt Nature is a main enemy and hinderance to us in the minding and affecting of things spirituall and heavenly which are pleasing and acceptable to God Rom. 8. 7. The carnall mind is Emnity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Phil. 3. 19 20. The Apostle makes an opposition between minding of earthly things and having of our Conversation in Heaven to shew that the former is a hinderance to the latter So also Col. 3. 2. Set your affection on things Above and not on things on Earth Gal. 5. 17. The Flesh lusteth against the Spirit c. and these two are contrary c. Use 1 Vse 1. See the cause that many are so little affected with things spirituall and heavenly viz. because they mind and affect earthly and carnall things over much Vse 2 Vse 2. See how dangerous a thing it is to have our hearts and minds too much affected with carnall and earthly things pleasing to corrupt Nature as with love and desire of earthly profits pleasures and contentments or with love of sin and desire of satisfying our sinful Lusts This cannot but be a main hinderance to us in the loving desiring and seeking after things spirituall and heavenly as in seeking God's Glory in doing his Will and in seeking our own Salvation with the means of it And the more we affect and savour of these carnall things the less we must needs savour of spirituall and heavenly Therefore take heed of this dangerous Sin of affecting loving and desiring of earthly and carnal things of this World c. Pray daily unto God to keep us from it and to mortifie these carnall Lusts in us Observ 4 Observ 4. See here a difference between such as are spirituall and such as are carnall between the regenerate and the unregenerate the former do savour the things of God that is spirituall and heavenly things they do chiefly mind and affect these things Contrà the latter sort do savour the things of men that is earthly and carnall things which are pleasing to corrupt Nature c. Peter so far as he was spirituall did savour the things of God but so far forth as he was carnall the things of Men as in this particular of disswading Christ from Suffering c. So that in one and the same person of Peter diversly considered we may take notice of this difference between the spirituall and carnall man Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the Flesh do mind the things of the Flesh but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit Joh. 3. 31. He that is of the Earth is Earthly and speaketh of the Earth Vse Use By this mark of difference we may examine our selves and come to know whether we be spirituall or carnall Look what things we most savour of look what things our hearts or minds run most upon and are most taken up withall ordinarily and daily
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
Life c. Remember that if we will be Christ's Disciples we must hate our Lives c. No cause to be in love with this Life being so vain and transitory yea so wretched and miserable full of Troubles c. Use 3 Use 3. To examine our selves whether we be truly willing and content to part with our Life for Christ c. Are we content to part with all things of this Life c Use 4 Use 4. To move us every one to prepare and arm our selves before hand for the practise of this Duty viz. to part with our own bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and his Gospel if we shall at any time be called so to do as we know not but we may Though now we enjoy our Lives in peace together with the free profession of Christ and the Gospel yet Times may alter and God may call us to hazzard our Lives yea to lose them for the Name of Christ as the Martyrs did c. Therefore good wisdom it is to provide for the worst that may come and to fit and stirr up our selves before hand to lay down our Lives for Christ's sake and the Gospel's if we be called to it And so much the rather we had need thus to prepare forasmuch as this is so hard and difficult a matter to put in practise c. Vide supra the second use of the general Doctrine from this Verse Therefore labour daily to fit and prepare our selves to take up our Crosse in Death and by Death as well as in our Life time for the Name of Christ c. That we may be the better prepared use these Helps 1. Pray unto God daily to fit and prepare us to this great and difficult work if he shall call us to perform it Seek to him for spirituall strength to enable us for Christian courage and resolution of Heart that we may not be dismayed with fear of Death but that we may be able to vanquish this fear which is so natural to us and willingly to lay down our Lives for the Name of Christ c. 2. Labour for true Faith to be assured of the pardon of our Sins and of God's love and favour in Christ Then the sting of Death being taken away we shall not fear it but willingly Suffer it for Christ c. 3. Get true love of Christ in our Hearts This will constrain us to professe his Name and Gospel even with losse of our Lives To this end labour for true feeling of his infinite Love shewed to us in laying down his Life for us c. 4. Labour to be well grounded in the certain hope of the Resurrection of our bodies unto Life at the last Day 5. Lastly Look at the Reward of eternal Life promised But of this afterward in the next Observation Use 5 Use 5. If it be our Duty to lose and part with our bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and the Gospel how then much more to part with all other things of this Life which are but accessaries to it as Goods Lands Houses Liberty Country Friends Children c. See Luke 14. 26. And ver 33. Whosoever he be of you th●t for sakes not all he hath he cannot be my Disciple Mark 8. 35. For whosoever will save his Life c. Dec. 4. 1625. Observ 2. SUch as are content to lose and part with their Temporal Life for the profession of Christ and of the Gospel shall receive the Reward of eternall Life after this Matth. 10. 39. He that loseth his Life for my sake shall find it Joh. 12. 25. He that loseth his Life in this World shall keep it unto life Eternall Revel 2. 10. To the Church of Smyrna Be thou faithfull unto Death and I will give thee the Crown of Life If such as forsake House or Lands or Friends for Christ's Name shall hereafter receive the Inheritance of Eternal Life Matth. 19. 29. much more such as forsake Life c. Caution Caution Though they shall receive the Reward of Eternal Life yet they do not merit or deserve the same at the Hands of God by suffering Death for Christ's sake and the Gospels as Papists teach that the Martyrs do but this Reward shall be freely given them by vertue of God's Promise in Christ It shall not be given for the Dignity of Martyrdom or for the merit of Suffering but because the Martyrs are in Christ shewing their Faith in Him by suffering for his Name and Gospel Reason Reason Such as lay down their Lives for Christ do thereby honour Him and his Truth Therefore He will honour and reward them not onely in this Life but especially after this life with Eternal Life and Glory hereafter Vse 1 Use 1. See the happy and blessed estate of such as Suffer Death for the Cause of Religion that is for the Name of Christ or for profession of the Gospel That which is spoken in generall of such as suffer Persecution in this World for the Name of Christ Matth. 5. 12. the same is true of such as Suffer Death for the Name of Christ or the Gospel That great is their Reward in Heaven They are sure to be partakers after this Life of that eternall Life and Glory of God's heavenly Kingdom If they be blessed and happy who suffer smaller Afflictions and Trialls in this Life for the profession of Christ and the Gospel As 1 Pet. 4. 14. If ye be reproached for the Name of Christ happy are ye c. Then much more blessed are they who suffer Death it self the greatest of all outward Trialls for Christ's sake and the Gospels If they be blessed which dye in the Lord Rev. 14. 13. because their Works that is the Reward of their Works doth follow them then much more happy are those which dye not onely in the Lord but for the Lord. The World doth use to judge them miserable who suffer Death of the Body though it be for Christ's sake c. because such are deprived of the benefit of this present Life and of all Earthly things here enjoyed but the Word of God doth call and accompt such to be most happy and blessed because in stead of this Temporal Life they are made partakers of a heavenly and eternal Life in God's Kingdom Therefore let us so esteem and accompt of all the holy Martyrs who have thus suffered Death for Christ's Name and Gospel that they are most happy and blessed in their Life and Death yea whatsoever kind of Death they dyed though never so painfull c. This hinders not their happinesse but they are now Crowned with eternal Life and Glory as the Reward of their Suffering Therefore great cause have we to bless God for the Faith constancy and patience which he gave to the Martyrs in suffering Death for the Name of Christ and for Testimony of his Truth in that they are by this means translated out of this wretched Life and made partakers of so blessed
a condition in God's heavenly Kingdom Vse 2 Vse 2. See here a forcible motive to move and encourage us willingly to suffer Death or to part with our bodily Lives for the profession of Christ and of the Gospel if at any time we shall be called of God unto it Consider the excellent and blessed Reward promised to us for so doing viz. the Reward of eternal Life and Glory in Heaven after this Life ended An eternal weight of Glory A Crown of Life shall be given us So we shall gain much more then we lose by losing this Temporal Life we shall gain eternal Life This losse shall be no losse to us but the greatest gain that may be If to dye any Death be a gain to the Saints Phil. 1. 21. then much more to dye for Christ or the Gospel No Death indeed but an exchange of Temporal Life for Eternal of Earthly for Heavenly A gainful exchange as of Copper for Gold c. We lose not our Lives but lend them to the Lord for a time to receive them with advantage Think well of this excellent Reward of eternal life promised to such as lay down and lose their Temporal lives for Christ's cause and the Gospel's that it may encourage us to do it willingly if God call us thereunto Moses in suffering Affliction with God's People had respect to the recompence of Reward Hebr. 11. 26. So must we if we would willingly suffer Death for the Name of Christ or for the Gospel we must look beyond Death at the joy set before us as Christ did Hebr. 12. 2. This will make us willingly to part with this Life and to imbrace Death for Christ's sake c. When Stephen was ready to Suffer Death for the Name of Christ he looked up stedfastly into Heaven and saw the Glory of God and Jesus standing on the Right hand of God So must we by Faith labour to do c. This will comfort and encourage us against Death and cause us willingly to lay down our lives for Christ c. Thus have the Martyrs comforted themselves at the time of their Death with the hope of eternal life which they expected after this Life Mr. Bradford to his fellow Martyr Be of good comfort saies he we shall have a merry Supper with the Lord this Night c. Saunders kissing the Stake said Welcome everlasting Life John Noyes kissing the Stake also said to his fellow Martyrs We shall not lose our Lives in this Fire but change them for a better and for Coals have Pearls c. Observ 3 Observ 3. Our Saviour doth not say Whosoever shall lose his Life c. But whosoever shall lose it for my sake c. Here we are taught That it is not simply the suffering of Death or of any other affliction which hath the Reward of eternal Life promised unto it but it is suffering in a good cause which shall be so Rewarded Not all that suffer shall be partakers of eternal Life but such as suffer for well-doing for professing Christ and the Gospel and for giving testimony to the Truth of God 1 Pet. 4. 16. If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God c. Matth. 10. 39. He that loseth his Life for my sake shall find it Martyrem facit non poena sed causa Cyprian Though a man could suffer not one but many Deaths yet if it be not in a good Cause as in way of well-doing and for the keeping of a good conscience he is never the nearer to eternal Life 1 Cor. 13. 3. Though I give my Body to be burned and have not love it profiteth me nothing that is if I do it not out of true love to God and Man and to a right end as for the glorifiing of God by constant profession of his Truth or otherwise Use 1 Vse 1. See what to judge of such as suffer Death in evil Causes or for evil ends as either for vain-glory as the Heathen to shew contempt of Death and Fortitude of mind or in defence of errour or sin as Hereticks Donatists Papists c. No promise of Reward to such c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See that if we would by suffering Afflictions or Death it self gain eternal Life it is not enough that we suffer but we must see it be in a good Cause as in the cause of Christ or of the Gospel for profession of the Truth or otherwise for the keeping of a good conscience This is the main thing to be looked to in Suffering The matter is not what we Suffer but for what cause and to what end c. Observ 4 Observ 4. For my sake and the Gospel's In that our Saviour joyneth these two together Himself and the Gospels as one and the same cause of loving Life and of Suffering Death Hence we may gather That to Suffer Death for the Gospel of Christ is to Suffer it for Christ himself And that these two causes of Suffering Death are one and the same in effect and substance neither can they be divided or severed one from the other He that loseth his Life for Christ's sake loseth it for the Gospel's and he that loseth it for the Gospel's loseth it for Christ's Therefore our Saviour here joyneth these two together as one and the same in substance For my sake and the Gospels So Revel 2. 13. To the Church of Pergamus Thou holdest fast my Name and hast not denyed my Faith in the dayes wherein Antipas my Martyr was slain among you c. My Name That is The profession of Me. My Faith That is My Doctrine of Faith Reason There is a near affinity and special relation between Christ and the Gospel and that in three respects 1. In that Christ as He is God is the Authour and efficient cause of the Doctrine of the Gospel It is not a Doctrine devised by Men or Angels but proceeding from God the Father Son and Holy Ghost as from a Fountain 2. In that Christ as Mediatour doth reveal this Doctrine from the bosom of his Father See Joh. 1. 17 18. 3. In that Christ is the main substance and matter of the Gospel which is contained in it The whole Doctrine of the Gospel is concerning Christ directly or indirectly either concerning his Person and Office or concerning the Benefits we have by Him or the means of applying Him c. Use Use To be a motive and encouragement unto us willingly to lay down our Lives and to suffer Death not onely for Christ's sake but also for the profession of his Word and Gospel to seal and confirm the Truth of it even with the loss of our Lives if we shall be called so to do as the Martyrs have been To encourage and move us hereunto let us know and consider That in laying down our Lives for the Gospel we do lay them down for Christ himself whose Gospel it is and who is himself not onely the Authour and Revealer but
at his Crosse that is at this Death and Sufferings whereof he had a little foretold them as we heard Chap. 8. ver 31. lest they should think he dyed of weakness or willingly and not rather because it was the Will of his Father that he should suffer for man's Redemption therefore he now manifested his divine Power and Glory of his God-head to shew that he was as well able if he would and if it might stand with the Will of God his Father to save himself from Death as he was to manifest his heavenly Glory at this time in this wonderfull manner Therefore no cause for them to take offence at his Sufferings or thereupon to doubt of his Person whether he were the Son of God and true Messiah but that they ought undoubtedly to believe him so to be notwithstanding his Death and Sufferings which must after be fulfilled For though he should dye and Suffer yet not unwillingly or of weaknesse but to fulfill the Counsell and Will of God his Father touching man's Redemption And besides though he dyed yet should he not remain in Death but raise himself by the Power of his God-head c. 3. To confirm their Faith touching the certainty of his glorious coming to Judgment at the last Day and of that heavenly reward which he would then give them for all their sufferings for his Name and so to comfort them against the Cross c. 4. To comfort them with hope and assurance of that blessed state of the Saints in Heaven after this Life in which they should more perfectly see his Glory Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Glory of Christ in his Transfiguration was revealed to him and to the three Disciples while they were at prayer in the Mount as we have heard we may observe and learn The excellent Fruit and Benefit to be reaped by being conversant in the duty of prayer This is a speciall means whereby God doth reveal himself and his Glory to his Saints and a speciall means whereby the Saints of God do usually attain to a more clear sight and knowledge of divine and heavenly things Hence it is That we read in Scripture that the Lord hath so often revealed himself and his Will in speciall and extraordinary manner to such as have been exercised in prayer as to Damel Chap. 9. ver 21. while he was speaking to God in prayer the Angel Gabriel is sent to him to touch him and to inform him both of the deliverance of the Jews out of Captivity and of the Coming and Death of the Messiah c. So Acts 10. 3. Cornelius being in prayer had an Angel sent to him c. So ver 9 10. Peter at prayer fell into a Trance and saw Heaven opened c. So Acts 9. 12. while Paul was at prayer Ananias was sent to him to put his hands on him and to open his eyes and to baptize him And experience may teach this unto the Saints of God that prayer is a speciall means to obtain from God the sight and knowldge of his Glory and of his heavenly Will and that the Lord doth never so clearly and comfortably reveal himself and his glory to them nor the knowledge and experience of things spirituall and heavenly as he doth by means of prayer and oftentimes in the very time of their prayers Use Vse To encourage us to be frequent and diligent in this excellent duty of prayer upon all occasions not onely in publick or in company with others but also in private Ephes 6. 18. Pray alwayes with all manner of prayer c. that so by this means the Lord may be pleased to reveal himself and his glory and his heavenly Will to us more and more that by frequency and constancy in this holy exercise we may come to have nearer communion with God and to see his Glory yea to partake in it after a sort in this Life As Christ by prayer received this heavenly Glory from his Father which made his face to shine as the Sun So by this holy and heavenly exercise we shall be in some sort tranfigured or changed into that glorious Image of God by it we shall obtain more and more heavenly Wisdom and Knowledge of God which will make our faces to shine as the face of Stephen did like the face of an Angel Acts 6. 15. or as the face of Moses after he had been with God in Mount Sinai Exod. 34. Eccles 8. 1. The wisdom of a man maketh his face to shine c. True of heavenly Wisdom which is obtained by prayer Jam. 1. 5. Not that we are now to expect such extraordinary Visions or Revelations from God in prayer or that Angels should be sent in visible shapes to us as they have been to many heretofore in the beginning of the Church but because the Lord doth still reveal Himself and his Will and his heavenly Glory to his Saints in and by this holy exercise of prayer To quicken and stirr us up unto it Observ 2 Observ 2. From this brightness and glory of Christ's Face and Garments which appeared in his Transfiguration we may have a manifest proof and evidence of his God-head or divine Nature that he was not onely true Man but true God in one and the same Person For this outward Glory of his humane Body was nothing but an effect and sensible Sign and Token of the divine Essence of his God-head nothing but a little beam issuing or proceeding from the body or sustance of that uncreated Sun viz. the God-head of Christ Therefore as the created Sun in the firmament is known and discerned by the beams of it So here c. As this God-head of Christ was proved by all his Miracles as we have often heard before so also by this his Glorious Transfiguration which may likewise be reckoned amongst his Miracles But having often spoken of this point before I will not here insist on it Mark 9. 3. And his Raiment became shining c. May 7. 1626. Observ 3 Observ 3. FRom this Glory of Christ which appeared in his Transfiguration we may gather the greatness and excellency of that Glory and Majesty which now he hath and enjoyeth in Heaven at the Right hand of God which also he shall manifest in his second coming at the last Day If the Glory which he shewed in the Earthly Mount were so great that it made his Face shine as the Sun and his Garments to become as perfectly white as the Snow and as the Light how much more Glorious is he now being in heaven not onely as he is God but in humane Nature c His face doth now far exceed the brightness of the Sun and of all the Starrs joyned together in one See this Point further opened ver 6. Infra Note here that the Glory of Christ's which was manifested in his Transfiguration is the same in nature and substance with that Glory and Majesty which he hath now in Heaven even
thing contained in the words viz. That Christ is the beloved Son of God This is my beloved Son The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie one that is dearly or entirely beloved Sic Kemnit Harm Lib. 2. Cap. 17. pag. 22. So that hereby is noted out a speciall and singular love of God the Father unto Christ his Son See before Chap. 1. ver 11. Doctr. Christ Jesus the Son of God is in speciall and singular manner beloved of God the Father Esay 42. 1. Behold mine Elect in whom my Soul delighteth Matth. 17. 5. In whom I am well pleased Col. 1. 13. Called the Son of his love Typified in Solomon who was called ●edidiah 2 Sam. 12. 25. which signifies the beloved of the Lord. Now the greatness of this love of God the Father unto Christ may appear 1. By the eternity of it Joh. 17. 24. Thou hast loved me before the Foundation of the World To be understood of Christ not onely as God but as Mediatour because from eternity he chose and ordained him to that Office c. 2. By the speciall Effects of it manifested toward the Person of Christ 1. By conferring on the humane Nature of Christ perfection of all Gifts and Graces above Men and Angels Psal 45. 7. God thy God hath anointed thee with the Oyl of gladness above thy Fellows Joh. 3. 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure to him 2. By committing unto him absolute Power and Authority over all Creatures in the World and especially over the true Church to Rule and Govern it Joh. 3. 35. The Father loveth the Son and hath given all things into his Hands 3. By advancing the Person of Christ unto fulness of Glory with himself in the third Heavens Joh. 17. 24. That they may behold the Glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the Foundation of the World Phil. 2. 9. Use 1 Use 1. See here again the unspeakable love of God to us in giving not onely his Son but his most dearly beloved Son unto Death for our Salvation Use 2 Use 2. See the Ground and Cause of all that love wherewith God the Father doth imbrace his Saints and Faithfull Children in Christ namely that speciall and singular love which he beareth first unto Christ himself Ephes 1. 6. He hath made us accepted in the Beloved that is in Christ who is in speciall manner beloved of God the Father Joh. 17. ult I have declared to them thy Name c. That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them c. that is toward them So that God's love is first towards Christ and then in him and for his sake towards all Believers in Christ See then the certainty of God's love to us if we be true Believers in that it is built upon so sure a Ground viz. His love to Christ which is most certain and cannot fail or cease to be at any time Great comfort to us though in our selves by Nature we are odious to God by reason of our sins yet in Christ we are sure of his love yea of his speciall and singular love such as he beareth to Christ himself so as he may as soon hate Christ or cease to love him as he can hate or cease to love us being so nearly knit unto Christ as we are yea being one with him c. Use 3 Use 3. See what is to be done of all that would be partakers of God's speciall love and favour and consequently be assured of pardon of their sins and eternall life they must labour for true Faith in Christ the Son of his love that so in him and for his sake they may be accepted and beloved of God By Nature we are enemies of God and he our enemy we are odious and hatefull to him by reason of our sins Now there is no way to be reconciled to him and to recover his love and favour but by Christ who is the beloved Son in whom onely he is well pleased with Sinners Labour then for true Faith in Christ that thou mayst in him be accepted and beloved of God To this end labour first to be humbled in the sense of thy sins which make thee odious to God causing hatred enmity between him and thee Then being sensible of thy sins and truly humbled for the same this will drive thee to Christ causing thee to hunger and thirst after his Merits and to strive by Faith to lay hold on him that so in him thou mayst be received into God's love and favour Use 4 Now being thus beloved of God in Christ we are most happy and blessed for God's love in Christ is the Fountain of all good and of all blessings Spiritual and Temporall which come from God to us His love to us in Christ is not barren or fruitless but most fruitful He cannot but shew his love to us continually by doing us good by caring and providing for us all Necessaries for Soul and Body by supplying all our wants we cannot want that is good for us Psal 34. As an earthly Father loving his Child c. Use 4. A ground of Faith to us in all prayers which we make to God in the Name and Mediation of Christ and by vertue of that Intercession which he now maketh for us in Heaven For seeing God the Father doth so dearly love Christ he neither can nor will deny him any thing which he requesteth for us neither will he deny us any thing that is good for us which we request in the Name for the Merits and Intercession of Christ As therefore it is no small comfort to one having a suit to the King if he have a Friend in the Court to speak for him especially if he have the King 's principall favourite on his side So here c. Mark 9. 7. Hear Him Aug. 20. 1626. NOW followeth the second thing contained in these words uttered by the Voice of God the Father from Heaven touching Christ viz. The Precept or Commandment given to the Disciples to hear him Now these words seem to have Relation unto that place Deut. 18. 15. where the Lord promiseth by Moses that he will in time to come raise up unto his Church a great and eminent Prophet like unto Moses and withal requireth that his People should hearken to the teaching of that Prophet yea he threatneth to require it of every one that shall refuse to hear him Ver. 19. Now this Prophet was Christ himself the true Messiah who was a long time after to come in the Flesh and in his own Person upon Earth to execute the Office of a Prophet or Teacher in the Church and therefore God the Father speaking here from Heaven touching Christ willeth the Disciples to hear him thereby implying that he was indeed that great speciall Prophet and Teacher of the Church who was so long before promised to be sent or raised up to teach the Church and therefore seeing he was now
be men of Knowledge and Judgment able not only to teach the Truth but to discover and confute contrary Errours by the Word of God They had need to be like Apollos Acts 18. 24. mighty in the Scriptures and to be furnished also with necessary helps of Humane learning c. It followeth And they have done unto him c. They That is his wicked Enemies especially Herod and Herodias his Wife together with the wicked Jews who no doubt were also consenting to those things which were done unto John Baptist Have done unto him whatsoever they listed They have offered such Abuses Wrongs and Indignities unto him as themselves pleased following herein the sway and swing of their own malicious Wills and outragious Lusts and desiring to satisfie and fulfill the same Quest 1 Quest 1. What things in particular were those which John Baptist's Enemies did unto him for the satisfying of their own wicked Lusts Answ Answ They hated and persecuted him yea Herod caused him to be apprehended and imprisoned as a Malefactor and at last to be beheaded in the Prison on a sudden without being brought to any publike Hearing which was contrary to all equity and justice and all this they did unto him for his faithfull discharge of his Ministery especially for his plain and bold reproving of Herod for his sin of incest in marrying with his Brother's Wife as we have before heard Chap. 6. Quest 2 Quest 2. How is it said They did unto him what they listed seeing all they did was before decreed and appointed of God Answ Answ Because they herein had no respect at all to the Counsell and Will of God but onely to the satisfying of their own wicked Lusts Observ 1 Observ 1. See here what reward the faithfull Ministers of God have usually received in the World and at the hands of Men for their diligence and faithfulnesse in their Ministery even this That they have been hated abused and persecuted even unto Death for the same See before Chap. 6. 17. Observ 2 Observ 2. That the Lord doth sometimes permit the Wicked and Ungodly to have their Wills and to satisfie their own wicked Lusts in abusing his faithfull Servants So here he Suffered Herod and Herodias to do what they listed unto John Bapist not onely in Imprisoning him wongfully but also in putting him to Death being innocent So he Suffered the Idolatrous and wicked Israelites to have their Wills of the Prophets which were sent unto them in putting them to the Sword as Elias complaineth 1 King 19. 14 The Children of Israel have forsaken thy Covenant thrown down thy Altars and slain thy Prophets with the Sword c. So he Suffered the wicked Jews also to abuse persecute the Prophets which were sent unto them even unto Death 2 Chron. 36. 16. They mocked the Messengers of God and misused the Prophets c. And Matth. 23. 37. our Saviour reproveth Hierusalem for killing the Prophets and stoning them which were sent unto Her c. All this the Lord suffered them to do unto his holy Prophets So also he permitted the wicked Jews and Gentiles to have their Wills in abusing and persecuting the Apostles yea and Christ himself even unto Death So Hebr. 11. 36. the Lord suffered the wicked Enemies of his Church to have their Will of those Saints and faithfull Servants of his there mentioned in mocking scourging and imprisoning them as also in putting them to sundry kinds of cruell Deaths Some were stoned some sawed asunder some slain with the Sword c. This also we may see in the examples of the blessed Martyrs in all Ages how the Lord suffered their wicked Enemies to have their Wills in abusing and putting them to Death yea to sundry kinds of most cruell Deaths So in the first ten persecutions under the Heathenish Emperours of Rome so of latter years as here in England in the reign of Queen Mary c. Quest Quest Why doth the Lord suffer the Wicked thus to have their Wills on his Servants in abusing and putting them to Death Answ Answ 1. For the greater tryall and exercise of the Faith and Patience of his Saints by this means So Hebr. 11. 36. They had tryall of cruell mockings scourgings and of bonds and imprisonments c. 2. That by this means the sins of the wicked Enemies of the Church being increased and come to their full measure the justice of God may be the more manifested in their deserved condemnation Matth. 23. 32. Fill ye the measure of your Fathers And ver 34. I send unto you Prophets wise Men and Scribes and some of them ye shall kill and crucify and some ye shall scourge c. That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon Earth from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zacharias c. Here note and remember two Cautions 1. That although the Lord do suffer the Wicked to have their Wills of his faithfull Servants yet not absolutely and simply to do what they list unto them but so far onely as he seeth it to be good and necessary for manifestation of his own Glory and tryall of his Saints and no further 2. That it is to be understood only of the bodies and outward estate of God's Saints in this Life that in this respect the Wicked are permitted to have their Wills of them but not in respect of their Souls or their spirituall estate They cannot touch them here Vse 1 Use 1. To teach us not to think strange or be offended if at this day we see it to be thus that the Lord do suffer Wicked and Ungodly men to have their Wills in abusing disgracing persecuting his Saints and faithfull Servants even unto Death This is no new thing but that which hath been in former Ages Therefore we must not think strange of it nor be at all dismayed therewith but rest in the Will of God who permitteth this for just causes both in respect of his Glory and the good of his Church Yea though this be our own case at any time though the Lord suffer Wicked and Ungodly men at any time to have their Wills of us in abusing mocking slandering persecuting us by Word or Deed yea though he should suffer such to persecute us even unto Death as the Martyrs yet have we no cause to be dismayed but to be of good comfort when we consider that the Lord herein dealeth with us no otherwise then he hath done formerly with others of his most excellent Saints and Servants as the Prophets Apostles Martyrs yea Christ himself Therefore in this case submit to God's Will with patience and contentedness and remember withall for our comfort that though God may suffer the Wicked in some sort to have their Will of us yet not absolutely to do what they list to us but so much only as the Lord thinketh fit to suffer and no more and though they may have some Power over our bodies or outward estate by God's
permission yet none at all over our Souls c. Vse 2 Use 2. See that we are not to judge any to be rejected or forsaken of God though they be much abused disgraced and persecuted by the Wicked in this Life For God often permitteth the Wicked thus to have their Wills of his dearest Saints and Servants in respect of their bodies and outward estate c. And if we should so judge we should condemn the holy Prophets Apostles Martyrs yea Christ himself Observ 3. See here the extream rage and malice of the Wicked against the true Saints and Servants of God in that they do not onely hate them and set themselves against them as Enemies but also do desire and seek to have their Wills of them that is to satisfy their own malicious Minds and Wills in abusing and wronging them all manner of wayes so far as God permitteth them They do not desire or care to do what is just and equall to them but what is pleasing to their own malicious Wills to do even what they list unto them that is to spend the utmost of their malice upon them and against them Thus Herod and Herodias did even what they listed to John Baptist they even fulfilled their own malicious Wills against him and upon him in imprisoning and putting him to Death Psal 12. 4. David's Enemies resolve with themselves that with their Tongues they will prevail against him c. So the wicked Jews though they could all edge no just cause unto Pilate why our Saviour should be condemned and crucified yet to satisfie their own malicious Wills against him they would needs have it done that by this means they might wreck their malice and envy upon him to the full So the persecutors of the Church c. And such is the malice and outrage of the wicked often against the Saints of God that they desire nothing more than to satisfie their own malicious Minds and Wills by offering unto them the greatest wrongs and abuses which they are any way able Vse Vse This should move us to acknowledge and magnify the goodness of God in curbing and restraining this extream rage and malice of the Wicked against his Saints and not suffering it so far to break out as otherwise it would It is God's great mercy to set bounds and limits to this malice of the Wicked which of it self is boundless having no measure For although the Lord do suffer the Wicked sometimes to satisfie their own Wills and malicious Desires and Purposes against his faithfull Servants yet he doth not alwayes suffer this neither doth he at any time absolutely give up his Servants unto the malicious Will of their Enemies but he so limiteth and restraineth the malice of the Wicked that they go no further in shewing the same against his Saints than he doth think good to permit and suffer them Were it not for this mercy of God in restraining the outragious malice of the Wicked they would soon devour and utterly root out the true Church of God from the face of the Earth Let us therefore bless God and be truly thankfull for this his goodnesse and mercy Now followeth the Ground or Reason of John Baptist's coming viz. The testimony of the Scriptures which fore-told it As it is written of him That is As it was fore-told or testifyed before of him in the writings of the Prophets in the old Testament Now these words seem to have relation chiefly to the coming of Elias or John Baptist mentioned by our Saviour in the first words of this verse and not so much unto those things which he had suffered at the hands of his wicked Enemies For we do not read in the Prophets of any expresse mention made of the Sufferings of John Baptist which he should suffer at his coming but his coming we find to be expresly foretold by the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. 5. Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet c. that is John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias c. Observ Observ In that our Saviour here affirmeth that the Prophecy of Malachi touching the coming of Elias or John Baptist was already fulfilled and accomplished that John Baptist was indeed come and had fulfilled his Ministery as was written of him c. Hence gather That the Scriptures are the true and undoubted Word of God and not Men's writings only Inasmuch as the Prophesies contained in them concerning things to come have been truly and certainly fulfilled in their due time though many hundred years after as here the Prophecy of John Baptist his coming before Christ c. So also the Prophecy of Christ's coming in the Flesh and of his Sufferings The Prophecy of calling the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospel The Prophecy of the Jews Captivity in Babylon and of their Deliverance by means of Cyrus King of Persia after seventy years The Prophecy also of the Destruction of Hierusalem and the Temple by the Romans fore-told by our Saviour Matth. 24. All these and many other have been already fulfilled in their due time though long after they were fore-told which is one speciall evidence to prove the Scriptures to be the true and undoubted Word of God indited by his Spirit for none but God himself could fore-tell those things which are fore-told in Scripture and which have been hitherto fulfilled so certainly in their due time This therefore must strengthen our Faith in this main Point touching the truth of the Scriptures to be the very Word of God himself and cause us undoubtedly to believe all things contained in them And in particular it serves to strengthen our Faith touching the fulfilling of those Prophesies of Scripture which are yet unful●●lled as namely touching the calling of the Jews the destruction of Antichrist the generall Resurrection of Bodies and coming of Christ at the last Day to Judgment c. Mark 9. 14 15. And when He came to his Disciples c. Janu. 28. 1626. HEre followeth the second general part of this Chapter containing the History of a great Miracle wrought by our Saviour in curing a lunatick Child and in casting the Devil out of the same Child being possessed therewith This History is laid down from the 14. to the 30. verse of this Chapter In which we have to consider three things 1. The Antecedents or Occasions of this great Miracle which went before and made way unto it ver 25. 2. The manner of our Saviour's proceeding in the working of the Miracle ver 26 27. 3. The Event or Consequent which followed ver 28 29. Of the first The occasions of the Miracle are sundry 1. Our Saviour's returning or coming back to his Disciples after his Transfiguration in the Mount together with some speciall Events or Accidents which happened at his return as that he found a great Multitude with his Disciples and the Scribes questioning with them c. ver 14 15. 2. His questioning with the Scribes touching the
is there in many now adayes Some being so far from shewing speciall and singular love to their own Pastor that they scarce shew him ordinary or common love will scarce do him an ordinary kindness without grudging they carry themselves as strangers to him scarce vouchsafing to speak to him c. others shew love for a time but not constantly so long as they may gain by their Ministery no longer Others instead of love bear hatred and grudge against their Minister because he admonisheth them of their sins So for the other duty of reverence and due respect to God's Ministers how many also fail in this Do not many contemn and set leight by their Ministers even by such as labour amongst them in the Word and Doctrine whom they ought to esteem highly of and to accompt them worthy of all honour c. yet they stick not to think and speak sleightly of them as of ordinary persons yea to despise and reproach them to their faces quite forgetting that of our Saviour Christ Luke 10. 15. He that despiseth you despiseth me c. Let such as are guilty of this sin take notice of it and be truly humbled and repent of it lest otherwise the contempt of the Minister's person do at length and by degree bring them to a contempt and lothing of his Doctrine and Ministery and then little hope will there be of their profiting by the same Observ 2 Observ 2. See here also in Christ's example the duty of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church viz. to endeavour so to carry themselves both in their Doctrine and Ministery as also in their Life and Conversation that they may procure truel love and reverence from their People Thus did our Saviour while he lived on Earth so carry himself both in his publike Ministery and in his whole Life and Conversation that he was both loved and reverenced of the People as here we see So likewise ought all God's Ministers And to this end they must not onely be diligent and faithfull in their Ministery but withall labour to go before their People by the holy example of their own Life and Practice This is the best and onely way to procure both love and reverence from their People and to maintain the authority and credit both of their Persons and of their Ministery which every Minister of God ought most carefully to do 1 Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an example of the Believers in Word in Conversation in Charity in Spirit in Faith in Purity Thus did John Baptist maintain the credit of his Ministery and procure both love and reverence even from Herod himself Mark 6. 20. Herod feared John knowing that he was a just man and an holy c. and heard him gladly It followeth Ver. 16. And he asked the Scribes c. The second speciall or principall occasion of the Miracle following is Our Saviour's questioning with the Scribes about the matter or cause of the disputation between them and his Disciples For he finding the Scribes disputing or reasoning with his Disciples turned himself to them expostulating thus with them What question ye with them That is what is the matter that ye are disputing or debating with my Disciples Some read the words thus What question ye among your selves And if we so read them they are to be understood a spoken both to the Scribes and to the Disciples though chiefly to the Scribes But the former reading seemeth best and fittest and therefore I follow that Now our Saviour did not ask this Question of the Scribes as if he were ignorant of the matter for he knew well enough before he asked what it was which they were debating with his Disciples but for other cause and ends As 1. That he might hereby shew that he took upon him the defence of his Disciples and of their just cause and of the Truth and Gospel it self against the cavils of the Scribes 2. That he might by this Question convince and reprove the Scribes and put them to silence 3. That he might give occasion to the Father of the possessed Child to make suit to him for his Child as he doth verse following and so make way unto the working of the Miracle Observ 1 Observ 1. That we ought to be ready on all good occasions to speak in defence of the truth of God and of his faithfull Servants which profess and maintain the Truth against the Enemies thereof Thus our Saviour Christ at this time was ready and forward to speak in defence of his Disciples and of the Truth it self which the Scribes laboured to oppose and disgrace So at other times when the Scribes and Pharisees cavilled and took exceptions wongfully against his Disciples labouring to disgrace both them and the Gospel it self which they professed our Saviour took upon him their defence and was forward to speak in their just cause So before we heard Chap. 2. 25. when they cavilled at them for plucking ears of Corn on the Sabbath to quench their present hunger Christ spake in their defence c. So in the same Chapter ver 19 c. when they took exceptions at his Disciples for not fasting as John's Disciples did he answers for them In like manner ought we to be ready on all occasions to speak in defence of the Truth and of such as professe the same when we see them and the Truth it self to be opposed by the adversa●ies thereof as by false Teachers Hereticks Papists Anabaptists c. Thus did the blessed Martyrs By this we shew zeal for God's Glory Especially this Duty is required of such as are in publike Place and Authority in the Church as of Magistrates and Ministers of the Church These above all other should be forward to speak in defence of the Truth and of the true faithfull Servants of God which professe it when they see them to be opposed by the wicked Enemies of the Truth 2 Cor. 13. 8. Paul saies We can do nothing against the Truth but for the Truth which shews what is the duty of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church viz. To stand for maintenance of the Truth and therefore to be ready and forward to speak in defence of it when occasion is offered This was co●●endable in Gamaliel though a Pharisee and as yet no true friend to the Gospel when the Apostles and their Doctrine was opposed and persecuted by the High-Priest and Council of the Jew insomuch that they conspired together to put the Apostles to Death for preaching then did Gamaliel stand up and speak in defence of the Apostles although he did not so thoroughly defend their cause as he should have done Acts 5. 34. Use Use For reproof of such as are slack and backward to speak in defence of God's Truth and of his faithfull Servants professing the same when they see them opposed or like to be disgraced by wicked men and in ste●d hereof do by their silence
Miracle and his private Passage with them through the Country of Galilee Ver. 30. 2. The Prediction it self Ver. 31. 3. The Effect or Consequent in the Disciples They understood not that saying c. Ver. 32. Of the first They departed thence that is From the place where he wrought the former Miracle What place in particular it was is not expressed but by the Circumstances of the Story it seems probable that it was in or about the Coasts of Caesarea Philippi whither Christ and his Disciples came Chap. 8. Ver. 27. The Reason of his departure thence now was that he might withdraw himself from the Multitude and be private with this Disciples to instruct them Passed through Galilee This lay between Caesarea Philppi and Capernaum whither our Saviour now went as appeareth in the 33d Verse which was the cause that in going to Capernaum they passed through Galilee And he would not that any man should know it Not that he could or did go so privately that none at all did know or take any notice of his passing that way with his Disciples for that is not likely but that they went as privately as might be at least so as they were not commonly or openly taken notice of Quest Quest Why did he go thus privately with his Disciples through Galilee Answ Answ 1. Lest the concourse and flocking of the People about him for Miracles especially in Galilee where he was so much known should b● a hinderance to him in his intended journey to Capernaum whither he was now going and from thence toward Jerusalem where he was not long after to suffer Death 2. That going thus privately with his Disciples He might be the more free and at liberty to confer● with them and to instruct them privately in those things which were needful for him to teach them and particularly in the Doctrine of his Passion and Resurrection which he took occasion now to teach and fore-tell unto them in the following Verse Quest Quest Why did he not rather teach this Doctrine of his Passion and Resurrection publickly before all the People Answ Answ Because the due time for publishing of this Doctrine was not yet come for this was not to be done till after the fulfilling of his Passion and Resurrection In the words consider two things 1. Our Saviour's departure with his Disciples from the Coasts of Cesarea Philippi as is probable and their passage or journeying through Galilee 2. Their private manner of going so as he would not have it known Of the first Observ That our Saviour was not alwayes employed in the publick duties of his Ministry in Preaching and confirming his Doctrine by Miracles but sometimes he did with-draw himself from the Multitude that he might do good in private by instructing his Disciples comforting and admonishing them as occasion served So here Which must teach Ministers of the Word their duty viz. to be careful not only to do good by their publick Ministry by Preaching the Word and administring the Sacraments duly but also by private Prayer taken in instructing the ignorant as occasion serveth in admonishing the disorderly comforting the distressed c. herein imitating Paul Act. 20. 20. Observ Of the second Observ The wisdom and care of our Saviour to prevent such impediments as might now hinder him either in his intended journey to Capernaum or in the private duty of instructing his Disciples in that to this end he doth not onely withdraw himself from the Multitude and throng of People which was about him before but also is careful to depart and go very privately so as none should know it through Galilee Which should teach us the like Wisdom and care to prevent as much as may be all occasions which may hinder us at any time in the performance of good duties either of our general Callings as we are Christians viz. in duties of Religion towards God or duties of Charity and Mercy to our Neighbour c. See Chap. 5. 37. For this cause we are bid to remember the Sabbath day before it comes so as to prevent all things that may hinder us in sanctifying the day So in all other Christian duties we should be careful before-hand to prevent hinderances In matters which concern our own worldly profit or pleasure we are very careful this way If at any time we do set apart some day or time for the doing of something which is for our profit or pleasure if it be but to go a Journey upon pleasure how careful are we before-hand so to order our business that nothing may hinder or frustrate our purpose when the time cometh How much more careful should we be thus to prevent hinderances when we are to perform any religious or Christian Duties which God requireth of us Now followeth the Prediction it self Ver. 31. in which our Saviour fore-telleth unto his Disciples his future Passion and Resurrection Of this I will here speak but briefly because we had occasion to handle the same more at large before Chap. 8. 31. 1. Of the Prediction of his Passion 2. Then of his Resurrection Of the first He taught his Disciples and said c. Why He did fore-tell his Passion see in Ver. 31. of Chap. 8. Quest Quest Why doth he now again teach them the Doctrine of his Passion and fore-tell it unto them seeing he had done it so plainly not long before as we heard Chap. 8. 31. Answ Answ Because they were so hard to conceive and believe this Doctrine of his Sufferings partly by reason of their naturall aversness from the Cross and partly by reason of that Errour and prejudicate Opinion which they held and was so rooted in them touching the temporal Kingdom of Christ Therefore to wean them from this erroneous conceipt by degrees he doth again and again put them in mind of his Death and Sufferings before-hand Now from this that our Saviour did thus fore-tell his Passion before-hand some general Instructions may be gathered See before Chap. 8. 31. More particularly in this Prediction of his Sufferings consider two things in the words 1. The Person whose Sufferings he fore-telleth viz. Himself described by this usual Title The Son of Man 2. The Passion or Sufferings themselves which he fore-telleth set down in two parts or kinds of them 1. His delivering up into the hands of men 2. His Death That they should kill him c. Of the first The Person The Son of Man See Chap. 8. 31. Of the second The Sufferings themselves He is delivered c. that is He shall certainly be delivered or given up shortly to be falsly accused condemned and put to death as a Malefactor Into the hands of men that is Into the power of wicked men such as the Enemies of Christ were who were the causes and instruments of his Death So the word Men is sometimes taken in Scripture to signify evill or wicked men 1 Cor. 3. 3. Where as there is among you Envying c. are
he was before us It is the Speech of an antient Father Voluit Christus deseri voluit prodi voluit ab Apostolo suo tradi ut tu cum sis desertus à socio proditus ab amico moderatè feras Ambros in Luc. Mark 9. 30 31 32. And they departed thence c. July 1. 1627. THese words contain our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his future Passion and Resurrection to his Disciples where three things have been propounded to consider 1. The occasion of the prediction His departure with his Disciples from the place where he wrought the former miracle and his private passage through Galilee with them ver 30. 2. The prediction it self ver 31. 3. The effect in the Disciples ver 32. They understood not that saying c. Of the first The occasion I have already spoken last day Of the second The prediction itself 1. He foretelleth his Passion 2. His Resurrection Touching his Passion or Sufferings two things to be considered 1. The person who was to Suffer viz. Himself whom he calleth the Son of Man 2. The Sufferings themselves Of the former I spake lately upon ver 9. Touching the latter they are set down by the parts or kinds of them being two 1. That he should be delivered into the hands of Men. 2. That he should be put to Death by them Of the first I spake the last Sabbath Now followeth the second part of his Sufferings foretold viz. His Death And they shall kill him Of this see before chap. 8. ver 31. Now followeth the foretelling of his Resurrection upon the third day which is also handled before chap. 8. 31. To proceed therefore to the 32. ver where is laid down the effect which followed in the Disciples which was two-fold 1. That they understood not that saying That is the Doctrine of Christ's Passion and Resurrection which he taught them 2. That they were afraid to ask him Touching the first See Luke 9. 45. Object Object Matth. 17. 23. It is said They were exceeding sory upon his foretelling his Death Now if they understood not what he meant Why should they be striken with sorrow upon his words Answ Answ No doubt but they understood the words themselves uttered by our Saviour for they are plain and easy to be conceived but they understood not the matter it self throughly that is to say the mystery of his Death how he that was the Son of God and true Messiah as they had confessed him to be should dye or be put to death much less did they conceive fully the mystery of his Resurrection how he being dead should rise again the third day after Quest Quest What was the cause of this their ignorance that they could not conceive this mystical Doctrine of Christ's Death and Resurrection Answ Answ There was a three-fold Cause especially 1. Their natural blindness and dulness to conceive these mysteries of Faith 2. That erroneous and prejudicate opinion which they had conceived and were so much rooted in touching a Temporal and Earthly Kingdom of Christ as we have often heard before 3. Their natural unwillingness to hear of Troubles which they might well conceive would befall them when Christ should Suffer Observ Observ Even the best Christians are by nature and of themselves hard to conceive and understand the mysteries of Faith and Doctrines of the Gospel as touching Christ's Person and Office and our Salvation by him c. Especially such Doctrines as are most contrary to natural reason and our carnal affections as the Doctrine of the Cross c. See before ver 10. of this Chapter and chap. 8. ver 16. Now followeth the second Effect or Consequent in the Disciples They were afraid to ask him Viz. Touching the meaning of his words and of the Doctrine which he had now taught them concerning his future Death and Resurrection Quest Quest What was the cause of this fear in them Answ Answ 1. They feared shame and disgrace by acknowledging their ignorance 2. They feared lest for this their ignorance and blindness in the Doctrine of Christ's Passion and Resurrection they should be sharply taxed and reproved by Christ their Master even as Peter had been not long before for the like ignorance discovered in going about to disswade Christ from Suffering chap. 8. ver 33. And herein they discovered their great infirmity in that they would rather remain still in ignorance then suffer shame or reproach for their ignorance Observ 1 Observ 1. The preposterous fear of getting shame and disgrace by acknowledgment of our ignorance is one great hinderance to the gaining of more knowledge by the instruction of others in things spiritual and heavenly This hindred the Disciples from being further and better instructed by Christ at this time in the mystery of his Death and Resurrection because they were afraid of shaming themselves by acknowledging their ignorance c. And experience shews this to be true in many amongst us who being ashamed to bewray their ignorance by asking profitable questions about matters of Religion or the Word of God either of their own Pastors or of other Christians do thereby deprive themselves of a great deal of Christian knowledge and instruction which they might receive from others But let us take heed of this preposterous and vain fear of shame or disgrace by bewraying our ignorance in asking questions or seeking instruction from others in the things of God and of his Word For the truth is this is no shame at all but a shame it is to continue in ignorance blindness and errours for want of seeking knowledge when we have the means vouchsafed us of God Observ 2 Observ 2. See here how backward loth and unwilling we are by nature to be admonished and reproved for our faults and corruptions yea how backward even good Christians and the Saints of God are to suffer the word of Reproof in that Christ's Disciples were so afraid of being reproved by him for their ignorance that they would rather continue in it than acknowledge it and seek to him for further instruction at this time See 2 Chron. 16. 10. Now if this be true of good Christians such as Christ's Disciples much more of others being void of sanctifying Grace Hence it is That men are so apt to hate and dislike such as reprove their Sins Amos 5. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the Gate c. And for this cause Ahab hated Elijah and Michajah because they told him of his Sins c. And Gal. 4. 16. The Galathians thought Paul to be their enemy because he reproved the corruptions amongst them in Doctrine and Life And experience shews the truth of this how backward and unwilling men are to be admonished and reproved for their sins so backward that many shun the very company and sight of such as have a Calling to reprove them And some refuse to come to their own Pastor if he send for them to admonish them in private of some
5. 28. So ought men to love their Wives as their own bodies c. that is most entirely and inwardly as being a part of themselves The like may be said of the Wife that she is to love her husband as her own body The love between man and Wife ought to be such for quality as the love between Christ and the Church as the Scripture teacheth Now the love between Christ and the Church is a most near and entire kind of love Ephes 5. 25. Husbands love your Wives as Christ loved the Church c. So great was the love of Christ to his Church that he gave himself to death for it to shew how dearly the Husband should love his Wife So it may be said Wives love your Husbands as the true Church loveth Christ which is with a singular love Cant. 2. 5. She is sick of love to him So dearly should the wife love her husband Prov. 5. 19. The husband should be ravisht with the love of his Wife at all times So also should the wife with the love of her husband Now this special entire and singular love between married couples ought to appear and shew it self by the effects of it one toward another As 1. By giving special honour and respect to each other The husband is to yield a kind of honour and good respect to his wife 1 Pet. 3. 7. and much more is the wife to yield special honour and reverent respect to her husband as Sarah did to Abraham calling him Lord c. See Ephes 5. ult 2. By a special and most tender care of each others good being most desirous ready and forward to seek and procure the good of each others Soul and body For thus it is between such as love dearly Ephes 5. 29. Every one by nature nourisheth and cherisheth his own flesh even as Christ doth the Church So should the husband tenderly cherish his wife and the wife her husband 3. By taking special comfort and delight in the society of each other So Prov. 5. 18. Rejoyce with the Wife of thy Youth c. let her be as the loving Hind and pleasant Roe let her Breasts satisfy thee at all times c. So also ought the wife to rejoyce in the society of her husband at all times Use 1 Use 1. For reproof of such married couples as do fail and come short of this entire and singular affection of love which they should bear and shew to each other Many husbands and wives are so far from it that they scarce shew ordinary and common love to their Yoke-fellows in Marriage they shew as much or more love to other friends or kindred then to their own wives and husbands flat contrary to Gods ordinance who will have the husband and wife to be beloved of each other above all other friends whatsoever yea above their own Parents c. with a peerless love Vse 2 Vse 2. See how great is the sin of such husbands and wives who in stead of bearing such entire and singular love to each other do on the contrary conceive and bear hatred against each other and shew it by malicious or despightfull carriage one against another in word or deed as by reviling words or strokes c. shewing bitter wrath and malice in stead of entire and most dear love to each other How great is the sin of such and how much have such husbands and wives to answer for unto God how contrary is this to Gods Ordinance who commands the husband to love his wife and not to be bitter to her Col. 3. 19. And by the same reason also requires and charges the wife to love her husband and not to be bitter to him What a wicked thing is it there to shew bitter hatred where God commands the highest degree of Love let such repent c. Use 3 Use 3. To stir up all married couples to labour for this most near and entire affection of love to each other and to shew it by all fruits and effects of it before mentioned The husband and wife must not think it enough to love one another but must strive to imbrace and mutually to affect each other with a speciall and singular love so to love each other as in comparison of this love to forsake all other friends yea their own Parents though never so dear unto them Now that the husband and wife may thus love each other they must pray unto God daily to work and increase this entire love between them and to unite their hearts most nearly together withall they must often meditate and think of that most strait bond and union which is between them by Gods Ordinance being two in one c. They must also inure and accustome themselves to shew and express this entire love one to another daily by the effects and tokens of it especially by rejoycing in each others society and above all by being carefull daily to joyn together in the Religious duties of Gods worship in the family as Prayer reading the Scriptures c. Use 4 Use 4. See how needfull it is for single persons being to enter into the married estate to make choice of such husbands and wives as they may affect and love with this entire and dear affection even above their Parents c. and that not for a time onely while it is honey-moneth as we say but constantly even untill death which therefore shews how dangerous it is for any aiming at wealth or Parentage or other by-respects to match themselves with such whose persons they cannot truely and entirely affect above all others The cause of great discontentments afterward in the married estate yea upon this oftentimes followeth a most uncomfortable and hellish life between the husband and wife Observ 3 Observ 3. In that married persons are to forsake their Parents in comparison of their husbands and wives in respect of that subjection unto the power of Par●nts whereunto they were tyed before Marriage Hence we may gather that Parents ought not to tye or bind their children after Marriage to such a strait kind of subjection obedience o● service to them as they were tyed unto before Marriage so as thereby to hinder them in Matrimonial duties toward their husbands or wives but they are freely to acknowledg such Children to be by Marriage exempted from that subjection under their power unto which they were tyed before I say to be exempted and freed from that subjection though not wholly or absolutely for they are still bound to obey their Parents in all lawfull things yet so far forth as that subjection is any hinderance to them in the performance of Marriage duties toward their husbands or wives It is therefore a sin in Parents to tye their children being married to any such subjection or service to them whereby they are hindered in performance of marriage-duties toward their husbands or wives Neither can Parents tye or force their children after Marriage to live still with them
wife as well as Adultery Answ Answ Because none other sin whatsoever doth so directly violate the marriage-Covenant and so dissolve the Marriage-bond as Adultery doth Quest 2 Quest 2. What need is there for divorcement to be permitted in the case of Adultery seeing that sinne ought by the Law of God to be punished with death Levit. 20. 10. Deut. 22. 22. Answ Answ Because humane Laws are often too favourable unto this sin not punishing it so severely as they should therefore where that penalty of death is not inflicted through the defect of humane Laws or negligence of the Magistrate there divorce is permitted and may take place if the innocent party desire and seek it by a lawful and orderly course Vse 1 Use 1. See by this the haynousnesse of the sin of Adultery properly so called viz. the incontinency practised by married persons in that it is of force to break and dissolve the most strait and near bond between man and wife c. See before Verse 8. Vse 2 Vse 2. Seeing the Word of God doth not permit or allow of divorcement or final separation between man and wife in any case or for any cause except adultery this should teach every Christian married couple to be the more careful so to live together and so to carry themselves one toward the other by mutual performance of all marriage-duties that they may find true comfort and good contentment in each others society and in dwelling and living together Seeing they cannot nor may not be parted or separated by divorcement for any cause except only for Adultery which breaketh the Marriage-bond therefore how needful for them to labour and pray for such true marriage-love and delight in each other and to make conscience of all duties of love c. that they may not desire to be parted asunder or have cause to desire it Therefore as they ought to be exceeding careful to shun the foul sin of adultery that so the marriage-bond may not be broken but remain inviolable between them so should they be no lesse careful so to live together that they may have comfort in living together c. Use 3 Use 3. Seeing man and wife being once joyned in marriage cannot afterward be separated untill death for any cause except for adultery this should teach such as are hereafter to enter into the married estate to be careful to make choyce of such persons to joyn themselves withall in the married estate as they may truly love and affect and so may live comfortably with them in that estate c. Observ 2 Observ 2. It is unlawful for such as are unjustly divorced that is for any cause except adultery to marry again during the life of their former wife or husband yea It is a great sin so to do even the sin of adultery and they adulterers that practise it So our Saviour here affirmeth expresly Reason Reason They break the Marriage-Covenant and bond by joyning themselves with others besides their own lawful wife or husband and this is adultery Vse Use Hence gather on the contrary That after divorce for adultery it is lawful to marry again especially for the innocent party and for the other too rather than live in fornication c. vide supra Observ 3 Observ 3. Contra Papists committeth adultery against her c. See here that the adulterer sinneth against many persons at once First against himself that is against his own soul and body Then against the party with whom he committeth the sin As also against her husband if she have any living And further as we see here he sinneth also against his own lawful wife by breaking his Marriage-Covenant with her And as this is true of the adulterer so of the adulteress So that this sin of adultery is committed against four or at least three persons at once which shews the haynousness and detestableness of it c. Though single fornication be a foul sin yet adultery is in this respect much more foul and odious Observ 4 Observ 4. And if a woman shall put away her husband c. See here that the wife hath equal power and right with the husband as touching divorcement in the case of adultery that is to say she may as lawfully desire and seek to be divorced from her husband as the husband from his wife for the sin of adultery Provided that she do it in such a manner and with such Christian modesty as becometh a wife being forced or urged in that case to proceed against her own husband for a crime of this nature 1 Cor. 7. 4. The wife hath as much power over her husband's body as the husband over the wifes by vertue of the Marriage-Covenant Therefore in case that Covenant be violated by adultery she hath as much right to be separated from him as he from her by divorcement Mark 10. 13 14. And they brought young children to him that he should touch them and his Disciples May 4. 16●8 rebuked those that brought them c. HItherto of the first part of this Chapter viz. the Disputation of our Saviour in publike with certain of the Pharisees touching Divorcement together with his private Conference with his own Disciples about the same matter Now followeth the second part of the Chapter from this 13. Verse unto the 17. Verse In which the Evangelist recordeth our Saviour's gracious entertaining and blessing of certain young Children which were btought unto him to that end notwithstanding that his Disciples would have hindered them from being brought Where three things are to be considered 1. The fact of those that brought the children to Christ together with the end of it They brought young children to him c. 2. The fact of the Disciples Reproving those that brought them 3. The carriage of our Saviour both toward his Disciples and toward the children 1. Toward his disciples He was displeased with them and warned them to suffer little children to come unto him and not to forbid them yielding a reason a hereof because of such is the Kingdom of God 2. Toward the Children He took them in his arms c. Of the first They Who they were in particular that did this is not expressed by the Evangelist but most likely it is they were the Parents or other nearest friends of the children and it is also probable that they were of the better and more religious sort of people being well-affected to Christ's Person and Doctrine Brought young children to him Or Little children yea Infants as they are called Luke 18. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That he should teach them That is desiring him to touch them or to put his hands upon them as it is Matth. 19. 13. Yet this was not all they desired but that he should also pray for them as appeareth in the same place Matth. 19. 13. And this latter seems to have been the chief end for which they brought their children unto him and for which they
seems to be implyed because the promise was to them and to their children See Perk on Gal. 3. 27. pag. 305. This Truth we are to hold and maintain against the Anabaptists who deny Baptism to Infants because they want knowledg and so cannot have actual faith which is in Scripture required of those that were to be baptized as Act. 8. 37. and elsewhere But to this we answer That where actual faith is required of such as were baptized it is to be understood of those who were of years of discretion at the time of their baptism and so were capable of actuall faith But as for Infants born in the Church it is sufficient to make them capable of Baptism that they are within Gods Covenant as hath been shewed c. And that Infants born in the visible Church have right to Baptism it may further appear two wayes 1. By the practice of the Apostles baptizing sometimes whole Families in which it is most probable that there were some Infants or little children See Act. 16. 2. By the Sacrament of Circumcision in the Old Testament which was by Gods Commandement to be received by Infants the eighth day after their birth Gen. 17. 10. Now Baptism succeedeth in the room of Circumcision in these times of the New Testament Col. 2. 11 12. Therefore c. Here note That though Infants born in the Church have right to Baptism and ought to be Baptized yet their salvation is not absolutely tyed to the outwatd Baptism but they may be saved without it in case they be prevented by death c. Necessitas duplex 1. Praecepti 2. Medii c. By the first Baptism is necessary Not absolutely by the second c. Use 2 Use 2. See that we are not to despise little Infants or Children born in the Church but to esteem well of them and to shew it by our loving and respectful usage of them seeing they belong to Gods Covenant yea to his heavenly Kingdom for ought we know c. Use 3 Use 3. To move Christian Parents to be careful of the Religious Education of their Children that so they may be fit to be partakers of Gods Kingdom seeing they have right to it in regard of Gods Covenant c. Use 4 Use 4. Comfort to Christian Parents when God takes away their Children in Infancy or young age by death they have cause to hope well of them especially if themselves be believers Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour doth not say Of these is the Kingdom of God but Of such c. meaning not only Infants or little Children but such also as do resemble young children in disposition and qualities hence gather that the Kingdom of heaven doth belong not only to young Children born in the Church but also to such as resemble little children and are like unto them in disposition and qualities c. But of this afterward in the Verse following Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the estate of eternal life and glory in heaven is here called the Kingdom of God we are to take notice of the excellency of that estate of glory prepared for the Saints in heaven being compared to a Kingdom and called The Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of heaven in this and many other places of Scripture But of this see before Chap. 9. 43 c. Mark 10. 15 16. Verily I say unto you Whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child May 25. 1628. he shall not enter therein c. OUr Saviour having alledged a Reason why his Disciples should not hinder little children from being brought to him viz. because the Kingdom of heaven belongeth to such that is not only to children but to such as are like unto them c. Now Verse 15. he further confirmeth the truth of that reason viz. That Gods Kingdom belongeth to such as do resemble little children in qualities and properties This he confirmeth by shewing how great necessity there is for every one that would be partaker of Gods Kingdom to become like unto a little child in that none but such shall enter into that Kingdom and this our Saviour avoucheth with his usual kind of Asseveration Verily adding also the weight of his own authority unto it I say unto you the more to confirm the truth and certainty of the matter In the words there are two things to be considered 1. The manner of our Saviour's avouching or affirming that which he speaketh here Verily I say unto you 2. The matter avouched That whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child c. Of the first see before Chap. 3. 28. Of the second By Kingdom of God understand that estate of glory in the life to come which God hath prepared for his Elect. As in the former Verse To receive the Kingdom of God is To be partaker of it after this life Whosoever shall not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child That is whosoever shall not in this life resemble and become like unto a little Child or Infant in qualities and disposition that so he may be fit to be partaker of Gods Kingdom after this life in Heaven He shall not enter therein He shall never be made partaker of that estate of eternal life and glory in Gods heavenly Kingdom Doctr. 1. No●e shall be partakers of Gods heavenly Kingdom in the life to come but such as are first qualified and become fit for it in this life Our Saviour sayes here That whosoever doth not receive the Kingdome of God as a little Child that is whosoever doth not in this life become like unto a little child that so he may be fit to receive the Kingdome of God he shall not enter into it Col. 1. 12. Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in Light Thus it must be with all Christians that desire to be partakers of that heavenly Inheritance they must first be made meet for it in this life Quest Quest How must Christians be qualified and fitted in this life for Gods heavenly Kingdome c Answ Answ By such Spiritual Graces as are requisite to make them fit We must first be partakers of the Kingdome of Grace As 1. By the Grace of Repentance and true Conversion from their sins unto God Matth. 18. 3. Except ye be Converted and become as little Children c. Called Repentance unto Salvation 2 Cor. 7. 10. And Repentance unto life Act. 11. 18. 2. By the Grace of effectual Calling whereby they must be actually separated in heart and in their course and manner of life from this World that is from the profane and wicked and must be joyned to the true Church of Christ and become subjects of his Kingdome of Grace 2 Pet. 1. 10. Give diligence to make your Calling and Election sure c. For so an entrance shall be ministred to you c. Rom. 8. 30.
of these words of the Disciples being astonished with admiration or wondring at Christ's alacrity and sorwardness in going before them to Jerusalem the place of his suffering but we may take both the words to be used by the Evangelist to signify one and the same thing viz. the great fear with which they were amazed or astonished at this time when they followed Christ in the way Quest Quest What was the cause of this fear in them Answ Answ Most likely that the cause was the great perill and danger which they conceived both their Master Christ and themselves also to be in by going up to Jerusalem For 1. They knew that our Saviour had most malicious enemies there which sought his life as may appear Joh. 11. 8. where they disswade him from going into Judaea and so to Jerusalem because the Jews had formerly sought to stone him there 2. They had before heard our Saviour foretell them of his suffering death at Jerusalem Matth. 16. 21. Now although they did not as yet thorowly conceive that prediction of Christ yet they did so far believe his words to be true that hereupon they began now to be stricken with great fear lest his life and their own too should be brought into great danger at Jerusalem whither they were now going At least they feared that some great troubles and distresses were like to come upon them in case that Christ their Master should be put to death as he had foretold them Observ 1 Observ 1. It is a natural Infirmity even in the Saints of God that they are apt to be too timerous and fearful of the cross and of outward troubles and dangers and especially when their lives are indangered Christ's Disciples conceiving now that great troubles and dangers were like to come upon them at Jerusalem whither they were going do begin to be astonished with fear notwithstanding that Christ was with them and did go before them in the way This shews how timerous and fearful even the Saints of God are of troubles and dangers like to come upon them So Matth. 8. 26. when they were in danger of drowning in the water being in the Ship with him in a great tempest they were stricken with great fear Joh. 21. 18. Our Saviour tells Peter that when he should be led forth to execution he should be unwilling to go and to suffer death which is to be understood of his natural will in regard of the infirmity of his flesh which should make him fearful and unwilling to suffer such a violent death as he should be put unto This fear caused all the Disciples to forsake Christ and to fly when he was apprehended Matth. 26. 56. and made Peter follow a far off This also was the cause of Peters denial of him afterward Matth. 26. 41. The Spirit is ready but the flesh is weak This natural weakness of the flesh in fearing outward troubles and dangers and especially death some of the Martyrs did feel at the first and for a time though afterward the Lord strengthened them to overcome it Vse 1 Use 1. See the cause and reason why even the Saints of God themselves as well as others do by nature abhor and shun afflictions and death and are very loath and unwilling to undergo and suffer them It is because they do naturally fear such troubles and dangers through the infirmity and weakness of their flesh and corrupt nature and this fear maketh them so much to shun that which they fear and to be so loath to suffer it Vse 2 Use 2. To comfort weak Christians at such time as they do feel in themselves such timerousness and fearfullness of suffering troubles and of going through dangers and death it self It is no otherwise with them then it hath bin and is with the best Saints of God so far forth as they are in part unregenerate and so have flesh as well as Spirit in them c. If Christ's Disciples having him with them yet were so fearfull c. Vse 3 Use 3. See what need for the best Christians to labour and strive against this natural weakness in themselves viz. this timerousness and fear of the cross and outward troubles and dangers and especially against fear of death c. What need to pray to God to strengthen them and to use all means to resist and overcome this naturall timerousnesse labouring for Faith in Gods mercy and protection the onely remedy c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Though they were amazed with fear yet for all that they follow Christ in the way to Jerusalem which shews that they did not give way to their timerousness but resisted it offering violence to themselves rather then they would forsake Christ or refuse to go with him to suffer which teacheth us that we are not to give way to our natural infirmity and timerousness in times of trouble and danger but we must labour so to resist and overcome it that it may not hinder us in obtaining Christ by following him and taking up our Cross Peter followed though it were far off when Christ was apprehended We must here deny our selves that we may take up our Cross and follow Christ as it is Matth. 16. We must c●ucify our flesh and corrupt nature offering violence to our selves that we may obey and follow Christ in suffering the Cross and Afflictions yea death it self when we shall be called to it Thus did some of the Ma●tyrs when feeling themselves fearful of death at first they did not give way to this timerousness but resisted it and laboured to overcome it by faith So must we in like case the rather because this is the difference between the fear of the wicked and the fear of Gods children in time of trouble and danger The wicked give way to their fear so as to be overcome of it but the Saints of God do not so but resist it by all means labouring by faith and prayer to vanquish it in themselves c. Mark 10. 32. And he took again the Twelve and began to tell them c. Mar. 15. 1628. NOw follow the persons to whom he foretold his Passion and Resurrection His twelve Disciples or Apostles together with the manner and circumstances of his foretelling these unto them 1. He took them apart as is more plainly expressed Matth. 20. 17. 2. He did this again notwithstanding that he had before foretold them these things in private as we heard before chap. 8. 31. and chap. 9. 31. yet now again the third time he doth take them aside to foretell them of the same things Quest 1 Of the first Quest 1. Why did he foretell these things to his Twelve Disciples or Apostles in private Answ Answ 1. Because they were his most familiar friends and nearest unto him and about him and therefore fittest to be made acquainted with such secrets and private matters as these were at this time Joh. 15. 15. I have called you friends for all things that I
and negligent in hearkening to the Word and Doctrine of Christ delivered by himself or by his Ministers yea the best are dull of hearing as the Apostle sayes of the Hebrews Chap. 5. 11. that is hard to conceive and understand the Word and Doctrine of Christ as the Disciples were at this time as appeareth Luke 18. 34. And therefore the best have need to be quickned and stirred up by all means to attend diligently to the Word and Doctrine of Christ whensoever it is taught and delivered to them by his Ministers c. Thus our Saviour here doth stir up the attention of his Disciples by this word Behold c. Of the second The matter it self which he foretelleth to his Disciples Which is two-fold 1. His Passion or Sufferings at Hierusalem 2. His Resurrection c. Of the first three things are set down or mentioned by our Saviour 1. The place where he was to suffer viz. Hierusalem together with their going or journeying thither at this time We go up to Hierusalem 2. The Person who was to suffer which was himself whom he calleth the Sonne of Man 3. The Passion it self or things which he was to suffer which he mentioneth particularly and they may be referred to three heads 1. That which he was to suffer at the hands of Judas the Traytor he was by him to be delivered or to be betrayed unto the chief Priests and Scribes 2. That which he was to suffer at the hands of the chief Priests and Scribes viz. two things especially 1. He should by them be condemned to death 2. He should by them be delivered to the Gentiles that is to Pilate and the Roman Souldiers 3. Those things which he was to suffer at the hands of the Gentiles that is of Pilaete and the Roman Souldiers Which are of two sorts 1. Those things which he should suffer before his death viz. sundry great indignities and shameful abuses They shall mock him scourge him and spit upon him 2. Death it self unto which he should be put by them They shall kill him And then is added his resurrection c. But first to speak of the Prediction of his Passion Touching the Causes or Reasons moving our Saviour to foretel his Disciples of his suffering before-hand see before Chap. 8. Verse 31. The Instructions also to be gathered from hence Vide ibidem Vide etiam Stellam in Luc. 18. v. 31. Mark 10. 33. 34. And the Sonne of man shall be delivered unto the chief Priests and unto the Mar. 29. 1629. Scribes and they shall condemn him to death c. IT followeth To speak of the particulars which he mentioneth in foretelling his Passion And first of the place Hierusalem The chief City of Judea whither he and his Disciples were now going and in the way thither and that to this very end that his sufferings might there be fulfilled very shortly Therefore he now mentions the place to them particularly as he had done also before Matth. 16. 21. together with their present journey or going thither thereby to shew them the certainty of the matter and that the time also was near they being now in their way going thither and that for this end to suffer there And all this the better to prepare and to arm them before-hand against the time when his sufferings should indeed be fulfilled there Observ 1 Observ 1. How far our Saviour was humbled for us in that he did not only suffer the shamefull death of the Crosse for us but also in such an open publike and conspicuous place as Hierusalem in open view of the World Vse Use To make us willing and content to suffer any shame for him though in open and publike view of Men. So did the Apostles and Martyrs Now followeth the second thing The Person who was to suffer Himself whom he calleth the Son of man Of which title see before Chap. 8. 31. Then he telleth of the sufferings themselves And first of that he was to suffer at the hands of Judas the Traytor This is implyed when he tells them That he should be delivered or betrayed for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may also be translated as Matth. 20. 18. unto the chief Priests and to the Scribes This was to be done by Judas Iscariot one of Christ's own Apostles whom he chose to that special Office and Function But our Saviour as it seems did not at this time particularly name Judas unto them or tell them who should betray him but conceals this till afterward viz. till the time f his eating his last Supper with them which was but the very night before he was betrayed And then at that Supper he took occasion as the Evangelists do shew to discover the Tray●or more plainly to them See Joh. 13. Unto the chief Priests and Scribes Vide supra Cap. 8. Ver. 31. There were three sorts of Priests in time of the Law 1. The High Priest as Aaron and those that succeeded him in that Office 2. The Chief Priests which were next in degree to the High-Priest who were called Chief Priests as is most probable because they were the chief and principal of their own Order for 1 Chron. 24. we read of 24 several Orders of Ranks of the Priests instituted by David and these continued thus distinguished till our Saviour's time and afterward as Josephus testifieth Now it is most likely that the chief of every one of those Orders were called the Chief Priests and these are they also as it seems probable who are called in Scripture Priests of the second Order as 2 King 23. 4. Vide Scalig. Canon Isagog 3. The common sort of Priests which were of the lowest Rank or Degree being compared with the High Priest and with the chief Priests Here then we are to understand the second sort of Priests yet so as we are also to include the High Priest which was at this time Caiphas who joyned with the other chief Priests in conspiring against Christ and in covenanting with Judas to betray him unto them Matth. 26. 3. compared with the 14 Verse And to the Scribes These were another sor● of Ecclesias●ical Officers amongst the Jews in our Saviour's time viz. such as were called and appointed to be publike Readers and Expounders of the Law of Moses in their Synagogues whence they are sometimes called Lawyers in the New Testament c. as hath been before often shewed See upon Chap. 1. 22. Chap. 2. 6. and Chap. 7. 1. These also were in the number of those wicked enemies of Christ to whom he was betrayed by Judas and with these chief Priests and Scribes the Pharisees also together with the Elders of the people joyned then selves against Christ as may appear Matth. 26. 3. and Joh. 18. 3. Observ 1 Observ 1. See what every true Christian who is a follower of Christ may look for in this World viz. to be falsly and treacherously dealt withall by others yea by such as are near
the blessed Martyrs c. Vse 1 Vse 1. Teacheth us not to mervail or take offence at it if at this day we see or hear of the like examples of such as are falsly accused and unjustly condemned and that by publike authority for such crimes as they are not guilty of or to such punishment as they have no way deserved c. This is no new thing but that which hath been often heretofore practised by Satan and his instruments against the true Servants of God c. Vse 2 Vse 2. To comfort us if it should come to be our own case at any time to be thus falsly accused and unjustly condemned by others for such crimes or offences as we are not guilty of yea though we should be so censured or condemned by such as are in publike authority no cause for us to be dismayed but to remember the examples of the true Saints of God yea of Christ himself c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Here in our Saviour Christ's example being condemned to death by sentence of the chief Priests and Scribes and by the rest of the Council of the Jews we may see our misery by nature in regard of our sins that by our sins we have deserved to be condemned of God as guilty of death as it is the curse of God that is not only of temporal but of eternal death For Christ when he was condemned to death by the sentence of the chief Priests and Scribes and by the rest of the Councel of the Jews did stand in our stead as our pledg and surety He suffered this for us and not for himself for he was innocent Therefore in Christ's Person we are to behold our selves and in his condemnation by the Councel of the Jews we are to behold the desert of our sins and what is due to us by nature and by the Justice of God viz. eternal condemnation of soul and body Ephes 2. 3. we are by nature children of wrath liable to the curse of God c. Vse Vse To humble us before God in the sight of our sins by which we have deserved thus to be condemned of God as guilty of eternal death How should this humble us and break our hearts with godly sorrow for our sins causing us truly to mourn for them as also to judge and condemn our selves for them that we be not judged of the Lord especially now before we come to the Lord's Supper as the Apostle warneth the Corinthians to do 1 Cor. 11. 31. To this end remember now wherefore Christ the Son of God was condemned to death as a guilty Malefactor viz. to shew our guiltiness before God c. We are the Malefactors who have deserved death c. Observ 3 Observ 3. Hence also Believers in Christ may gather great comfort to themselves and assurance touching the pardon of their sins and freedom from eternal condemnation in that Christ the Son of God was condemned to death for them For to this end was He condemned as guilty of death by wicked men to shew that all the Elect and faithful people of God should for the merit of his Death and Sufferings be for ever absolved by the Sentence of God from the guilt of all their sins and from eternal death So that now there is no condemnation to them being in Christ c. Rom. 8. 1. Mark 10. 33 34. And shall deliver him to the Gentiles And they shall mock him and shall scourge him April 12. 1629. and shall spit upon him and shall kill him and the third day he shall rise again IT followeth And shall deliver him to the Gentiles The meaning was shewed before Observ 1. That both Jews and Gentiles had a hand in the death and sufferings of Christ being instrumental causes and means of the same See Act. 4. 27. which came to passe by God's special providence and permission to the end it might appear that both Jews and Gentiles being by nature wicked and sinful as they shewed themselves to be in putting Christ the Sonne of God to death have need of salvation by Christ and that the salvation of all the Elect whether Jews or Gentiles is free and of the meer grace of God and not at all procured or deserved by any goodness in themselves c. To stir up all to thankfulnesse c. Other Points of Instruction see before Chap. 9. Verse 31. upon those words The Some of Man is delivered into the hands of men Now followeth the persons by whom he should be condemned to death and delivered To the Gentiles viz. The chief Priests and Scribes together with the rest of the Councel of the Jews assembled in the High Priests Hall as hath bin before shewed Here observe sundry points the most of which are against the Papists Observ 1 Observ 1. That such as for their high place and calling in the Church should be greatest friends of Christ and should stand most for him and his Doctrine are oftentimes the greatest enemies he hath So here the chief Priests and Scribes c. See before chap. 8. ver 31. Observ 2 Observ 2. That no calling or office in the Church though never so high or excellent can or doth priviledg men from errour in matters of Faith or practice c. The Calling and Office of these chief Priests Scribes and other Rulers of the Jews was high and excellent in it self yet they erred damnably in condemning Christ to death c. Therefore it is a fond conceit of Papists to hold the Pope or Bishop of Rome to be priviledged from error by his Papal office c. See before chap. 8. 31. Observ 3 Observ 3. That a general Council may err yea such a Council as is gathered and confirmed by lawfull Authority as this whole Council of the Jews consisting of the chief Priests Scribes c. though gathered and confirmed by Authority of the High Priest himself yet erred c. How much more may a Council gathered and confirmed by the Popes Authority err And it is clear that generall Councils even such as have bin confirmed by the Bishop of Rome have erred de facto and the decrees of former Councills have bin condemned by latter Vide Whitaker de Concil pag. 614. c. Observ 4 Observ 4. Personal succession of Pastors and Ministers of the Church is no infallible mark of the true Church For these chief Priests Scribes and other Church-Officers assembled in this Council which condemned Christ had personal succession The High Priest and other chief Priests were the successors of Aaron and of the other ancient Priests and the Scribes and Pharisees sate in Moses his chair succeeding him outwardly in place and office of teaching in the Church and yet these were not the true Church but the enemies of Christ and of his true Church at that time c. Now followeth the third part of branch of our Saviour Christ's sufferings which he foretelleth to his Disciples viz. Those which he was
are odious to God Esay 1. 15. When ye make many Prayers I will not hear your hands are full of bloud that is of bloudy or cruel practises So may it be said of all such as live in wrath malice and revenge against others Their hearts are full of bloud that is of cruel and murdering thoughts and affections c. and therefore though they pray never so much God will not hear them Psal 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Thus do all such as harbour in their hearts the sins of anger malice c. therefore God will not hear their prayers Use 2 Use 2. To stir us up to the practice of this duty of love i● free forgiving of such as wrong and offend us and as at all other times when there is occasion so in special when we are to pray and call upon God if we would be fit to pray and would have God to hear us and g●ant our requests so far as is good for us see we come not to Prayer in wrath malice or grudg against others though they be our enemies and have wronged us but first forgive our enemies and such as have any way wronged us laying aside all malice anger and thought of revenge against others whosoever they be or howsoever ●hey have wronged us else never think thy self in case to pray or that thou canst pray aright or that God wi●● hear or grant thy Petitions in mercy c. Use 3 Vse 3. Seeing this duty of love in forgiving wrongs and offences is required of us whensoever we are to pray or call upon God hence gather That we are not only once in our life or some few times to forgive our enemies and all that wrong or offend us but that we are often yea daily to do this even as often as we are wronged forasmuch as we are daily to be exercised in prayer and calling upon God and without forgiveness of others and laying aside all malice and grudg against them we are unfit to pray at any time c. Some think they are to forgive only when they come to the Lord's Supper or when they are upon their Death-bed but here see the contrary that we are daily in our life-time to forgive enemies and such as wrong us even as often as we come before God to pray unto him yea such as we have already forgiven we must again and again forgive them and that daily even as often as they offend us though seven times in a day Luke 17. 4. yea not only the same persons but even the same offences which we have already forgiven we are daily to forgive that is to labour more and more to forgive them and to purge our hearts from all malice and grudg against the persons c. and daily to keep our selves in the practice of love Motives to the practice of this Duty of love in forgiving enemies and such as wrong us because it is a duty so hard to flesh and blood 1. Consider God's Commandment requiring this of us Ephes 4. 32. Be kind and tender-hearted forgiving one another as God for Christs sake c. And Matth. 5. 44. our Saviour bids us to love our enemies which cannot be without forgiving them 2. Look at God's Example who forgiveth us and others being his enemies by our sins yea there is nothing more proper to God then to forgive sins and offences committed against him Mich. 7. 18. Thi● he doth daily and continually yea infinite and innumerable sins of men c. Therefore herein follow God as dear children and walk in love as the Apostle sayes shewing it by this excellent practice of love in forgiving wrong● and in●uries c. Nihil Deo hominem tam similem reddet quam remissio offensarum Chrysost 3. Look at Christ's Example while he lived on earth how he did forgive and pray for his enemies which abused him and put him to death he was far from bearing malice and from desire or seeking private revenge in his own cause but committed it to God 1 Pet. 2. 23. Follow him as good and true Disciples in thus forgiving enemies and wrongs done to us 4. Look also at the practice of the Saints and servants of God who have done this before us Joseph though so much abused by his brethren who fold him for a slave c. yet he forgave them all and dealt kindly and mercifully with them David though persecuted by Saul and railed upon by Simei a base fellow yet forgave them both and would not seek revenge though he had S●ul in his hands in the Cave c. Stephen prayed for those that stoned him to death Act. 7. ult 5. Consider That it is a special evidence of grace and of a true Child of God freely to forgive enemies and wrongs done to us by others Col. 3. 12. As the Elect of God put on bowels of mercy kindness c. forbearing one another if any have a quarrell against any even as Christ forgave you so also do ye 6. Consider How much and often we offend God yea daily and continually provoke him and yet we desire he should pardon and forgive us Therefore let us forgive our brethren as we would have God to forgive us But more of this afterward 7. Lastly in all wrongs and offences done against us look at God's Providence by which they happen to us and that by them God doth justly correct us for our sins Though men wrong thee yet God doth thee no wrong in chastising thee thus for thy sins Therefore forgive c. This moved David to forgive Simei 2 Sam. 16. Now followeth the extent of this duty of forgiving enemies and wrongs unto which our Saviour here exhorteth his Disciples in these words If ye have ought against any man Where our Saviour extendeth this duty to all enemies and to all wrongs and offences done against them Observ 1 Observ 1. The true forgiveness of enemies and of wrongs and in●uries done to us which is required is to forgive all enemies and all wrongs and offences against us no● some only Luke 11. 4. As we forgive every one that is indebted against us Col. 3. 13. If any have a quarrell against any c. Note That this is to be understood of forgiveness in respect of bearing malice or revenge c. which is alwayes required and in all wrongs c. but not alwayes in respect of seeking remedy or satisfaction for the hurt or damage c. Reas 1 Reason 1. We must so forgive our brethren as to be in true charity and love with all men and at all times which cannot be without a general forgiveness of all enemies and all injuries and offences If any one be not forgiven we are not in charity Reas 2 Reas 2. We would have God to forgive us all our sins not some only Therefore we are to forgive all offences of our brethren against us Use Use See what to