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

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in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie and cap. 11.35 who gaue vnto him first that he should recompence Hence 1. vve conclude that if God should choose to saluation for any thing in man it could not be but man should be the first in his owne election and God should come after him yea it would ouerturne all the order of God in his most wise proceeding and would place his second grace before the first for whereas the first grace namely the election of such as the Father is to giue vnto the Son by him to be saued in all good order should precede the second whereby such as are elected before all time are in time giuen to the Sonne called iustified graced glorified and so saued The Popish doctrine of Gods foresight of faith or workes placeth this latter in Gods counsell before the former Secondly election is of grace Rom. 11.5 There is an election of grace but if it were of foreseene workes it were at least partly of desert and then should it follow 1. that it could not be of grace any way because not of grace euery way ver 6. 2. that all our owne reioycing should not be excluded Rom. 3.27 3. that if the Apostle should aske againe who separated vs our answer might be we partly separated our selues Thirdly our Apostle Eph. 1.4.5 affordeth vs three grounds more 1. from the time of our election which is before the foūdation of the world before we had done either good or euill or were in the world to doe it 2. In that he maketh our workes effects of election and therefore cannot be causes of it he hath chosen vs in him not because he foresaw that wee would be holy but that we might be holy and vnblameable as in cap. 2.10 we are his workemanship created to good workes and because it might be said that yet God might foresee who would receiue grace and who not and consequently who would vse the same aright in ordering their liues The third conclusion in the 5. verse affirmeth that God respected nothing out of himselfe or in vs past or to come but according to the good pleasure which he purposed in himselfe as Beza readeth it he choosed vs to partake of his grace Fourthly I would aske a Papist whether if the Lord did foresee any thing to bring vs to saluation by whether that was not the couenant of grace rather then the couenant of workes by the which neuer was or could any man be saued 2. In case God did foresee any worke which should be answerable to either of those couenants of grace or workes whether himselfe should not be the bestower of that grace and worke so as still not the worke if there were any but his grace shall be the first moouer 3. Whether God should be mooued if by workes by those before conuersion or after if they say by those after conuersion euen these saith the Prophet are as a stained clout If by those afore which their doctrine seemeth to tend to affirming that our vnregenerate wills haue a power to consent and coworke with Gods will and to prepare themselues to iustification then our text controlleth them which saith there was no such works at all which could mooue the Lord to take any pleasure in vs. Nay we were sinners saith Paul when God chose vs and such sinners as are described in the former verse blinded in mind rebellious in will and disordered in our whole conuersation Which shal serue for the ouerthrowe of all workes either preparatorie or foreseene or which any other way may obscure the free grace of God in our election and saluation Vse 1. To be sober minded and wise to sobrietie in the matters of Gods counsell inquiring into no reason further then his will which is euer iust although the thing may seeme strange and dazle our weak eyes the which one point would cut off many controversies and needles questions of sundrie diuines who in their platformes of election and reprobation will allowe the Lord no further libertie then themselues can deuise reason of for one the foresight of some good for the other of some euill which cannot but bring in an vniuersall reprobation because all are the sonnes of wrath by nature and God seeth them not out of this condition in themselues besides that the Lord shall be tied to conditions whereas he will haue mercie where he wil and whom he will he will harden 2. This doctrine is a ground of true humilitie for when all saluation from first to last is acknowledged to be of grace altogether out of our selues it shutteth all presumptuous mouthes who would gladly be sacrificing to their owne nets And this seemeth to be the Lords end in stablishing his free couenant that his people might remember and be ashamed and neuer open their mouth any more How carefull is he to take all such arrogant speaches out of their mouthes Deut. 7.7 and 9.5 Say not because of mine owne righteousnesse hath the Lord giuen vs this land and much lesse the heauenly Canaan and telleth them plainly that they were the least and worst of all people before the Lord put the difference betweene them and others And the whole Scripture sheweth how he hath set his affection on such as were still the most vnlikely and in all outward respects least commendable the youngest for most part when the first b●rne seemed to carrie away all the priuiledge Abel before Caine Iacob before Esau Ephraim before Manasseh Ioseph and Dauid before the rest of their elder brethren his manner was alwaies and is to hide that from the wise which he would reueale to babes by foolish things to confound the wise and by weake things the mightie and why 1. in regard of himselfe because his good pleasure was such no other reason but his owne will mooued him 2. in regard of vs that no flesh should reioyce before him 3. Hence we haue also a ground of thankefulnesse when we heare of such a free choise and that the Lord enquired not what we were or what we were worthy of but loued vs before we were or the world was when nothing could be conceiued either preuenting or meeting this goodnes of God And indeede neuer can we come to see the bottomelesse sea of this grace vnlesse we behold it in this gl●sse which our Apostle setteth before our eyes of our free election and saluation meerely by grace the which once if we come to behold how can we but magnifie his grace confesse his name feare to offend him tender all obedience vnto him yea in way of loue and thankefulnesse giue vp our selues to liue and die in his seruice who hath so freely so highly advanced vs vndeserued loues are great binders It is in the mouth of euerie man towards them of whome they haue receiued vndeserued good turnes I can neuer make such a man amends for such or such fauours and yet this boundlesse loue
three respects 79 Some wants in the Church to be borne with for 3. causes 83 Rules whereby a man may be kept vnreprooueable 6. 94 Why the Popish Church resisteth the marriage of Ministers 3. reasons 97 Rules to be obserued in beholding the examples of the Saints 2. 108 In designing men to offices the first respect must be had of the place and then of a fit person reas 3. 123 Ministers called Gods stewards for 3. causes 124 Faithfulnesse of Ministers standeth in 3. things 125 The wisedome of the Minister standeth in 2. things 126 Such as come neare vnto God in profession must be carefull to bewtifie it for 3. reasons 130 Great schollers must be taught by meaner then themselues for 3. reasons 132 Meditations to bridle rash anger 4. 138 Practises to the same purpose 4. 139 Arrowes of Gods wrath shot against drunkards 4. 143 Directions to avoid couetousnesse 151 Filthy lucre brought to 3. heads 152 Symptoms of an heart infected with couetousnesse 4. 156 Meditations to bridle couetous desires 4. 158 Practises to the same purpose 3. ibid. Reasons to be hospitable to strangers 3. 164 Reasons to be readie to distribute 4. 166 Meanes of temperance 2. 180 How some things are difficult in the Scriptures 3. Rules 192 Rules to know whether we haue beene as fit to learne as the word to teach 3. 195 Notes of him that resisteth the truth 3. 200 False teachers deceiue mens mindes 4. waies 209 Properties of errour 3. 210 Professors not so well fenced against errour and seducers prooued by 4 reasons 211 Sundrie vses of circumcision both Ciuill and Diuine 213 Three sorts of plaine reproouers condemned 216 Popish teachers the right successors of Iewish prooued by three reasons 217 Why God suffereth seducers in the Church 2. reasons 228 Seauen witnesses wherby the Lord condemneth the wicked and hypocriticall professors of the Gospel 240 Cautions in vsing humane allegations in sermons 3. 243 Truth in speach vrged by sundrie reasons 247 Reasons to mooue to diligence in our caling 4. 254 An honest calling a schoole of Christianitie 3 reas 255 Reasons against intemperance 3. 257 Rules of direction against intemperance 3 ibid Ministers must patiently beare a froward people for three reasons 260 To be kept from spirituall sicknesse three meanes 268 Reasons to vse those meanes 4. 269 Iewish fables what and why so called reasons 272 Rules to preserue vs from beeing turned from the present truth 4. 280 Men sanctified in part called pure for 4. reas 282 Reasons to mooue to puritie in heart and life although the world scoffe at it 5. 284 Euery thing good in the creation 4. wayes 286 All impuritie in the creature commeth two waies 287 A thing in it selfe good or indifferent is spoyled in the doing three wayes 288 A thing good in it selfe is rightly vsed by the presence of 3 vertues 291 No man may vse any of Gods creatures without leaue and thankesgiuing 297 Sundrie rules to discerne how men offend against the 3. former vertues in 1. meats 299 2. Garments 301 3. Riches 302. 4. Sports 303 A man may not aske more wealth in praier then necessaries reasons 3. 303 Rules of direction by which a man may comfortably turne himselfe to the vse of any creature 305 Seauen maine differences betweene the godly and the wicked 314 Foure markes of an hypocrite laid downe in the text and largly prosecuted 320 The hypocrite fitly resembleth a stageplayer from whom he hath his name in 4 properties 327 Triall of such as professe they know God but doe not by 4. notes 327 Two sorts of hypocrites 329 Word called wholesome doctrine for sundry causes 333 Duties of hearers of the word prosecuted 4. 335 Meanes of practise of the former duties 339 Soundnesse of faith standeth in 4. things 348 Soundnesse of Loue standeth in 5. things 355 Soundnesse of patience standeth in three things 358 Patience necessarie for euery Christian but commended specially to old men for 4. reasons 358 Foure points for women to meditate vpon 365 False accusing committed foure wayes 367 Rules to auoide the sinne of false accusing 4. 369 Men yeeld themselues slaues to the creatures 4 waies 371 The husbands dutie towards the wife wherin it standeth 380 The offices of motherly loue 4. 382 Meanes of preseruing chastitie 388 Reasons to mooue vs to the care of not stayning our profession 399 Rules to be obserued that we staine not our holy profession 6. 402 Reasons moouing young men timely to order their waies 4. 405 Foure helpes to further young men in the former dutie 407 Reasons to enforce yong men to sobryetie 4. 410 Meanes of practise of the former grace of sobrietie 411 Reasons to stirre vp the men of God to the care of their liues 4. 415 Means to attaine an vnblameable life 416 Sundrie motiues to seruants to shew all good faithfulnesse 432 The Gospel called the doctrine of grace 4 reasons 433 The holy doctrine of God adorned 2 waies 434 Maine differences betweene the law and Gospel 437 A man may know whether he receiue the grace of God in vain or no by three notes 438 How to entertaine the Gospel aright 443 The light vnder the Gospel farre clearer then theirs vnder the lawe 4. reas 446 A triall whether we receiue the light by 3. notes 449 Motiues to entertaine the light whilest it is with vs 6. 450 Fiue sorts of men that refuse the light 451 Lusts called worldly for two reasons 456 The Commandement is possible to the beleeuers 3 waies 457 Vngodlines is branched into 4 heads 458 Lusts are to be resisted for sundry reas 463 Rules and motiues for the practise of sobrietie 469. Righteousnes 471. Piety 473 Hope called a blessed hope 3. reasons 480 Christ called a mightie God 3. reas 481 To the true waiting for Christ 3. things required 484 The qualities of the sound expectation of Christ 4. 485 The effects of the same expectation 4. 486 Motiues vnto it 4. 489 Circumstances gathered out of the historie that Christs passion was voluntarie 5. 504 To receiue Christ and his merits wee must doe 3. things 509 Christ redeemed his Church from the captiuitie of sinne 2. wayes 510 Sinne must be dealt with as a Tyrant in 4. resemblances 513 Christ purgeth his people 2. wayes 517 Meanes of our purging 5. 519 Motiues to vse the former meanes 6. 521 The Church is Gods peculiar sundrie waies 523 Rules to be set before their eyes that intend Gods glorie 2. 525 Three vertues must attend zeale to guide it aright 529 Effects of zeale in the effecting of good things are many 531 Fiue sorts of men discouered to want zeale 532 Why men remember not good things heard 3. causes 542 The Lord maintaineth the Magistrates authoritie 4. wayes 555 Notes of him that is readie to euerie good worke 3. 563 Rules of practise to set vs forward in euerie good worke 3. 565 Cases in which a man may speake the euill he knoweth by his brother 4.
order our wayes according to his word 2. The second rule is that as euerie peculiar serueth to the praise of the owner so we must frame our liues and actions to the praise and glorie of God whose we are This is the reason of the holy Ghost Psal. 135.3 4. Praise the Lord oh sing praises vnto the Lord for the Lord hath chosen Iacob to himselfe and Israel for his cheife treasure Whence it followeth that whatsoeuer practise would tend to the dishonour of God ●e must resist and withstand in our selues and others And thus the Lord chargeth his people that they should be so far from associating themselues with the wicked people that liued neere them in their idolatrie that they should breake downe their altars and cut downe their groves and images and resist them euen from this same ground because he had chosen them to be pretious vnto himselfe So that if any sinner shall mooue and wooe vs vnto any vngodly practise we must reason the case with our owne hearts I may not doe any such thing as may dishonour God or my profession let others doe thus and thus I may not doe so I am the Lords peculiar and must liue to his glorie which I cannot doe if I withstand not such motions as whereby his glorie is hazarded and hindered and thus also maist thou iudge of thy selfe whether thou beest the Lords if thou seruest not the times nor mens lusts nor fashionest thy selfe to mens humors but liuest vnto the Lord thou art the Lords Vse 4. Hence is afforded a motiue to loue the Church and shew all kindnesse to the members of it euen because it is the Lords heritage and because the Lord is not vnfaithfull to forget the worke and labour of loue shewed to his Saints yea be it but a cuppe of cold water it shall not loose a reward seeing the Lord accounteth it as done to himselfe The Philippians supplied Pauls necessities and Paul promiseth them that his God should supplie all their necessities On the contrarie woe shall be to them ●hat wrong by word or deed or wrighting the least of these little ones who are so deere to the Lord as the apple of his eye Let the scorners and enemies of good men remember that in Ier. 2.3 Israel is as a thing hallowed vnto the Lord all they that eate it shall offend euill shall come vpon them saith the Lord. If the King should set himselfe to raise and aduance some one man whom he affecteth aboue all other were it safe for any subiect to pick and cull out that person to wrong and disgrace aboue any other ● and yet thus do they that of all other wrong and oppresse Gods Church and deare children who in the end shall know that the Church is an heauie stone to lift at against which neuer man heaued but with the certaine perill of his owne life Men may dip their tongues in venome and their pens in poyson and keepe the garment of such as stone Steuen but the Lord will avenge the cause of his poore ones his peculiar ones he will not alwaies hide his face nor hold his peace Zealous of good works Here is another ende of Christs sanctifiyng his Church that euerie member of it should ardently endeauour in all good and goodly conuersation Where the Apostle seemeth to answer a secret obiection for it might be said if Christ haue thus redeemed purged and washed vs and so made vs his owne peculiar what neede we more or what further remaineth for vs to doe neither wanted there Libertins in those dayes that from the appearing of grace cast off all yoakes and thought they might doe what they listed But the Apostle telleth such that Christ neuer washed redeemed nor powred out his grace vpon any but such as thereby were wrought to forwardnes and cheerefulnesse in all well-doing And here not to speake of the nature and necessitie of good workes because that treatise is to be referred to a fitter place three things are to be obserued First note that before the Apostle speake of good workes we heare of redemption and purging and washing and of a peculiar people that must doe them for indeede the best workes are so farre from iustifying and purging that none can be good before the party be iustified and purged A leper or polluted person in the law might not touch or attempt any thing for whatsoeuer he touched became also vncleane so while the whole man euen the minde and conscience the fountaines from whence all the actions issue are polluted how can any thing streaming from thence be cleane and pure vnlesse we will say that one fountaine at once can send out sweete water and bitter or controll holy Iob who saith that no man can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse Good works must beginne from that we are iustified but we beginne not to be iustified because they went before The whole scope of the Epistle to the Romanes is to prooue that no man can by workes be iustified before God the verie first proofe of which conclusion is fetched hence because all are vnder sinne and depriued of the glorie of God and so beeing euill trees cannot bring forth good fruit and much lesse in this state of sinne vnwashen and vnpurged can be zealous of good works without me saith Christ ye can doe nothing namely no good thing till a man therefore be set into Christ he cannot possibly turne his hand to any thing that is truely and formally good no more then a sient can bring forth fruit which is not set into a stocke or a branch which is not set into the vine Secondly note that whosoeuer are iustified and sanctified they must needs bring forth good workes for else Christ should be frustrate of his end in those for whom he gaue himselfe Eph. 2.10 We are his workemanshippe created to good workes We must first be his workmanship before our selues can be good workmen but beeing once his new creatures then can we neither be idle nor 〈◊〉 occupied but conuersant in such good workes as himselfe hath ordained we should walke in In experience we see a man planting good trees in his orchard not that they should be barren or laden with bad fruit but to furnish him with store of good fruit and in the Scriptures we see what recompence the good husbandman expecteth for setting and dressing purging and pruning his vine namely that it should bring forth much fruite Is this the end of our redemption from the hands of our enemies that we should serue him that hath redeemed vs in holinesse and righteousnesse all our daies are we purged to be a chosen generation and a peculiar people that we might set forth the vertues of him that hath called vs out of darknesse into his meruelous light hath the Lord separated vs vnto his owne vse not only to glorifie himselfe in vs but after a speciall manner to
hand of God or with the Pharisie to be seene of men or in which our owne respects prouoke our zeale whether glorie fauour credit wealth or any other by-end verily we haue already our reward Now what a necessarie attendant this right ordered zeale is to our good workes and what great reason the Lord hath to require it will appeare by the fruits and effects of it which are such as make the workes we doe not good only but glorious And because zeale is a mixt affection of loue and anger therefore at one time it hath respect both vnto the good worke it selfe as also that which is contrarie and produceth effects of loue to the former and properties of hatred against the latter The effects of zeale against euill are 1. a great hatred of it with a care and diligence to preuent it or if that cannot be it causeth an inward greefe and vexation of heart for the euills it cannot reforme thus was the righteous soule of Lot vexed for that he could not redresse and this greefe giueth often testimonie outwardly of it selfe in sighs and teares as Dauids eyes gushed out with riuers of teares because men kept not the word and Ieremie wished his head a fountaine of teares to weepe for the sinnes of the people yea it is a marke of such as are marked for the Lords that their zeale prouoketh them to mourne for the abhominations of the rest 2. As anger pursueth the obiect of it so doth zeale hunt out and reforme euill where it hath calling and power and that most earnestly Examples we haue in Nehemiah who reprooued smote and pulled off the haire from the beards of the Sabboath-breakers In Phineas who beeing stirred vp extraordinarily slew Zimri and Cosbi in their filthy fact In our Sauiour himselfe who in great zeale whipped out of the Temple the buyers and sellers giuing this reason because the zeale of his Fathers house consumed him And although it properly feedeth vpon the sinne Reu. 2.6 Thou hatest the doctrine of the Nicolaitans Psal. 15. I hate the workes of them that fall away yet it disliketh euen the persons so farre as they are agents in sinne for thus farre this grace carried both the Prophet and the Angel of the Church in both those places Reu. 2.2 Thou canst not forbeare them which are euill and Psal. 15. In whose eyes a vile person is contemned so Salomon Prov. 28.4 those that keepe the law set themselues against the wicked but yet so as it carrieth with it such sympathie and compassion that it can quickly turne it selfe into praiers for the offender The effects of zeale for good are 1. It preserueth in the heart a fitnesse and preparednes to euery good worke required of euery beleeuer 2. Tim. 3.17 Secondly it exciteth diligence and hast in the things we doe it abandoneth idlenesse slothfulnes and delaies by which occasions of well doing are often cut off the zeale of Dauid made him prepare diligently for the Temple zeale in the Magistrate causeth in him diligence throughout his gouernment zeale in the Minister maketh him like Apollos of whom we read that being feruent in spirit he taught diligently the way of God zeale and feruencie in priuate men causeth them to shake off slothfulnes in their duties and remooueth in all conditions the curse which is denounced against the man that doth the worke of the Lord negligently most fitly therefore doth the Apostle combine those precepts Rom. 12.11 Not slothfull to doe seruice feruent in the spirit seruing the Lord. Thirdly zeale causeth continuance in well doing which is also required in euerie good action as well as in prayer it contenteth not it selfe with one or two good actions but is plentiful in them and bringeth the partie possessing it to be rich in good workes and to shine light somely therein yea it maketh a man hold out and keepe a constant tenor in good courses and that as well in aduersitie as prosperitie so as he is neither choaked by preferments as verie many nor discouraged by distresses as not a fewe Fourthly zeale setteth such an high price vpon the glorie of God and performance of conscionable duties that it causeth the partie to attempt and goe through though with neuer so much difficultie whatsoeuer he seeth himselfe bound vnto it hardneth the face like brasse against dangers and losses the losse of the world is in his iudgement gaine yea all things are losse and dung so as he may winne Christ this alone yeeldeth ioy in the spoyling of goods by this can a man hate father and mother in comparison of his obedience be contented to be hated of all men for well doing in which case the losse of freinds is but light This zeale for God maketh a mans libertie small in his eye nay in standing out in a good cause his life will not be so deare vnto him as the finishing of his course with ioy yea he can reioyse to be offered vp vpon the sacrifice and seruice of the Churches faith as Paul And which is yet much more the zeale of Gods glorie will so burne in the heart as it can carrie a man so farre beyond himselfe as that he shall neglect his owne saluation and wish to be accursed yea and blotted out of the booke of life if God may be more honoured by the one then by the other What be the things then which zeale will not forgoe for Gods honour and mens saluation when as things most precious are parted with yea and cast away in comparison as vile will it sticke to be at a little labour or charge for the saluation of men when it willingly will part with possessions freinds preferments fauour libertie and life yea bodie and soule for God and his Churches causes By all that hath bin said may be concluded how aptly the spirit of God requireth zeale to good works which not onely as we haue seene hateth watcheth against pursueth and reformeth euill but prepareth inciteth continueth in good and will not be driuen from it by any meanes Vse By this doctrine many may see and challenge themselues of want of zeale in religion yea of religion it selfe For 1. a number there are who thinke it well and enough to giue a countenance or some shewe to religion and sometimes they can speak to a good cause but so coldly and so warily as if they would not heare that voice of the damsell which would as much terrifie them as once it did Peter surely thou art one of them which imputation they would take as hainously as the Iewes did the speach of the blind man will ye be also his disciples here may be wisdome of the flesh but little zeale or feruencie of the spirit here is policie but pietie scarse euer a whit 2. Others walke so indifferently betweene the Protestants and Papists that a man cannot tell what to make of them other then such as neither worship
point if we looke seriously and vnpartially into many of our sacrifices and oblations to God and men may we not accuse our selues as the Lord once did his people Yee haue snuffed to offer the thing which was good and haue offered the torne and lame and sicke nay many of vs snuffe at these last and worst If the best and most religious action would charge many a one but with a matter of tweluepence such is their readines to any good worke that it shall lie in the dust and although God hath giuen them abundance of outward things to the end that they might be meanes of performing many a good worke yet still they plead want of abilitie whereas if they were as willing as able they would become rare patternes of welldoing But herein they shew themselues what euer they professe forgetfull of this precept and destitute of this grace which quickly and vpon euery iust occasion findeth it selfe called into practise and finding it selfe so called standeth not so much vpon abilities but worketh the will to the abilitie yea and beyond in iust occasion not that we call any man to the cracking of his estate or to the exhausting of the fountaine of his liberallitie for we need not but we would haue them to know that God maketh them able to giue before they be able to cast away as much as they giue and hurt them not and calleth them to distribute before their owne pleasures and lusts be serued seeing this precept requireth the departure with and forgoing of that which is often sweete pretious yea and necessarie for our selues Let vnconscionable men think well herof who can contentedly throw away at one cast or game at cards or dice more then willingly they would sow in pence to the poore all the yeare long Hauing now seene the necessitie and notes we will shortly set down some rules of practise for the better setting vs forward in this dutie First get into thy soule the conscience of this commandement accounting it worthie of all thine obedience beeing so often vrged in the Scriptures and made in the end of the former Chapter the end of Christs purchasing of vs. This reason drawne from the feare of God preuailed so farre with Iob that thence he was mooued to vse mercifulnesse to all sorts of men for Gods punishment was fearefull vnto me and I could not escape his highnesse Secondly Take euery opportunitie of welldoing while it is offered for else the opportunitie may be cut off from thee or thou from it This is the Apostles rule Gal. 6.10 While we haue time doe good vnto all That is take the present occasion of doing all the good thou canst 1. in regard of thy selfe performe the principall and maine dutie know the day of thy visitation slacke not this thy tearme-time but get the oyle of faith knowledge of God and obedience to his word that thy lampe may euer be shining to the glorifying of thy Father which is in heauen in one word forget not while thou hast time to giue all diligence to make thine election sure 2. In regard of others if now thou canst doe them good in soule or bodie delaie it not Prov. 3.28 Say not to thy neighbour goe and come againe to morrow and I will giue thee if now thou hast it and what knoweth any man whether this may be the last day wherein he can doe good to himselfe or others Thirdly Goe yet one step further to seeke and watch occasions of doing good and be glad when thou hast obteined them that so thou maist euer be furthering thy reckoning We read of the Patriarchs Abraham and Lot how they sate at their doores watching to entertaine strangers that they espied them a farre off runne out to meete them and most earnestly entreated them to abide and refresh themselues shew thy selfe herein the sonne of Abraham And would to God Christians were a little quicker not only in taking but seeking occasions of exercising the duties of mercie and loue for there is more in it then the seruing of euery begger at doore who the most of them liue in the breach of Gods commandement and in a course against all good order they might bethinke them of many poore and carefull Christians some labouring vnder pouertie some vnder debt some vnder sicknesse some vnder temptation some vnder one burden some vnder another whose necessities ought to be inquired into and so occasions sought of releeuing Christ himselfe in his members the want of this inquirie is the cause of much vnfruitfulnes Here I might free our doctrine from that Popish imputation challenging it as an enemy to good works but of that we shall more fully speak in the 14. verse Vers. 2. That they speake euill of no man The speciall precepts which are to be performed to all Christians are propounded 1. negatiuely 2. positiuely The negatiue requireth the good abearing 1. of the tongue That they speake euill of no man 2. of the hands no fighters The affirmatiue layeth bridle vpon the affections but soft shewing all meeknes to all men For the first The word is a rule not only of doing well but of speaking well also and condemneth aswell vnbridled speaches as disordered actions and frameth aswell the tongue to euery good speach as the hand to euery good worke and therefore fitly is this precept induced vpon the former instructing beleeuers that as they must be readie to euery good worke so also must they as readily exercise their tongues in sutable speaches abandoning all hurtfull language tending to the disgrace or iniurie of any man seeing these two may not be diuorced in him that would dwell in the Lords Tabernacle who must be both a worker of righteousnesse and a speaker of the truth in his heart and no slaunderer of his neighbour Psal. 15. Quest. The Apostle seeming to prohibit all euill speaking whether is it not lawfull to speake the euill we know by another so we speake nothing but truth Answ. It is neuer lawfull in any vncalled to speake it But if question be when a man is called I answer that God giueth a man calling in diuerse cases 1. When any man is publikely called before a magistrate to testifie of a fact for the clearing of some truth and execution of iustice and now to speake the truth is to strengthen sinews of humane societie 2. Priuately when a truth is called into question betweene man and man and cannot otherwise be cleared then by rubbing some old sore especially if in such a case a mans owne credit be hazarded and cannot otherwise be saued 3. When a man counselleth and aduiseth with another how such a man may be recouered out of such an euill or else admonisheth the partie himselfe both which are so far from intending his hurt that they tend to his amendment 4. For the preuention of such hurt as may arise to some other by a scandalous and wicked person in which
in your callings and seuerall conditions of life then look abroad into the field of my Church and there you shall not want wherein to employ your strength counsell exhortation mercie loue zeale diligence and all the graces yee haue Neither is it harder to set Christians on worke then to hold them vnto it The profits and pleasures of this life call them often from the speciall busines of Christianitie because they enquire not whether in such seuerall actions they seeke God or themselues What am I a beleeuer I should in euerie action glorifie God testifie my faith beautifie my profession edifie my brethren I ought to winne the ignorant bring on the weake or at least stoppe the mouth of the enemie who will be readie to say You may see what a slight excuse will serue any of them all to misse a sermon what a slight profit will make them forget themselues their father whom they professe and their Fathers house what a slender busines will interrupt and breake off for the time their family duties what a trifle will make them at oddes and suites with others yea themselues for they can be as contentious as any other Alas am not I a Christian a beleeuer am I not called to better things haue I not promised better should I make the deuill glad his instruments reioyce Gods spirit sad his children heauie should I occasion profane ones through my sides to wound all my profession should I open a Papists mouth or harden him against the truth should I cast backe weake ones by such fruites in me a professor should I cast off the care of my brethren and bring shame on all my fathers house Haue I faith or are these the fruits of it would it not rather be fed still in the ministerie would it not vpon all good occasions be working by loue can a beleeuer be so slacke so heauie so idle so secure so couetous so contentious so scandalous as I am oh I must looke better to the matter When I first entred into the wayes of God I said I promised I would looke to my waies I would not offend in my tongue in my hand in my eye in my life and conuersation and by Gods grace hereafter I will pay these vowes to the Lord in the sight of all his people Now for watching opportunities seeking occasions of doing good we feare them we flie them we avoid charitable motions and repute it our wisdome not to heare them selfe loue and selfe ease slaieth our profession deadeth our faith and burieth our loue to God and to men can working faith be so idle or beleeuing persons so workles or trees of Gods orchyard so fruitles shall greene leaues make vs good trees or good words good Christians Let vs pull out our hands out of our warme bosomes and fall to worke and leaue idle iangling It would bee more for the honour of God and his Gospell if professors would either doe more or say lesse practise something like or professe nothing at all Where is the communion of Saints become when doe professors meet together to edifie themselues by godly conference when enquire they one of an other where is a poore christian either sicke or in other distresse that we may gather him a little releefe were not such a fellowship as this likest vnto the purest Primitiue Church in the dayes of the Apostles themselues and were it not now fitter for beleeuers then liue so priuately minded as many as though we could not be religious vnles as of olde we cloister our selues like Monks liuing within our priuate wals feeding vp our selues storing vp for ours but forgetting Iosephs affliction And surely what is the cause we see not such a comfortable communion but because those that beleeue in God are so heauie vnto good workes the richer sort which should be as great wheeles to set forward the poorer either looke bigge vpon them or for other employments haue not so much leasure as they their own ploughs must forward whatsoeuer become of Gods and the poorer sort want both meanes and example Doctr. 3. In that the Apostle willeth Titus to affirme these things deliuered and addeth this as a reason because they are good and profitable we obserue that Ministers in their teaching must haue respect to these two things 1. That they deliuer true sound and good matter in it selfe 2. That it be profitable for the hearers First it must be true and sound else are they not of Gods sending for whom he sendeth he furnisheth with a word of truth as on the contrarie Satan is a lying spirit in the mouthes of seducers Now then is it true when it is deuided aright and then deuided aright when it is truly and properly grounded on the place whence it is raysed as also when it is truly and rightly applied Ayming 1. to please God and not men or the times 2. to beate downe sinne and not open a doore to libertie or licentiousnesse 3. to comfort and encourage such as walke vprightly and not make the hearts of those heauy to whom the Lord speaketh peace Let the doctrin be neuer so true if it be misaplied it ceaseth to be Gods who alwaies speaketh to the heart of his children Secondly it must be profitable as well as true For 1. euery thing in the Church must be done to edifie and consequently spoken also 2. All assemblies are appointed for the profit and for the better of the Church 1. Cor. 11.17 3. The commandement is to deliuer nothing but what may breed godly edifying 1. Tim. 1.4 and not to striue about words to no profit 1. Tim. 2.14 bounded with a threatning that the Lord will come against such Prophets as seeke out vaine things and such as bring no profit to his people Ier. 23.32 4. examples Paul professeth of himselfe that he kept nothing backe which was profitable Act. 20.20 Nay the Lord hims●lfe setteth himselfe a worthy example hereof to all teachers and preachers Isa. 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which ●eacheth thee to profit and leadeth thee the waie thou hast to goe Vse 1. It is not inough that a Minister be a great scholler but hee must be a true teacher too Many a learned man is a false Prophet wherof we haue pregnant example in the Church of Rome in whom we see the speach true that in Gods matters the greatest clearks are not euer the wisest men It is obserueable also in the Scribes Pharisies and Rabbies of the Iewes that depth of learning hath not alwaies the truth cheyned vnto it but that the Lord according to his accustomed manner working in and by weake things often reuealeth more sauing wisdome to some poore contemned humble soule then to all the great clearks who may otherwise professe that they haue the very key of knowledge which is not spoken that any should hence be emboldned to contemne so excellent an ornament as lea●ning is but only to shew that the Lord
566 Euill speaking ranged into the sundry ranks of it 567 Meanes to avoide euill speaking in 5. rules 571 Cases wherein a man may contend and strike 5. 573 Rules to avoide the sinne of Quarelling 5. 577 The fruits of Christian equitie 4. 579 Necessi●ie of Christian equitie in sundrie points 581 Three things in the description of Christian meekensse 584 The vse of Christian meekenesse in three points 586 Motiues to meeknesse 3. 587 Notes to discerne the change of a mans selfe by 592 The corruption of the minde standeth in 3 degrees 594 Foure main properties of folly most natural to the naturall man 597 The deceit of the heart putteth forth it selfe in sundry vngodly practises 602 Fiue seueral sorts of men in seuerall paths and neuer one of them in the right 605 Grounds out of Scripture against the Popish doctrine of freewill 5. 613 Notes to trie a mans present happinesse by 632 Essentiall parts of a Sacrament three 639 Baptsme the lauer of regeneration fowre wayes 641 Baptisme hath 4. vses in them that beleeue alreadie 644 The congregation must stay the Baptisme for fowre reasons 647 Sixe things considered in the description of regeneration 648 Notes to tr●e the truth of our regeneration 5. 656 Graces of the spirit compared to waters in three things 658 The spirit is said to be powred out in three respects 658 Of barrennes of heart three maine causes 663 Sundrie consolations to those that are heires of life 677 Rules to helpe vs to forwardnesse in good works 5. 687 People that come to heare the word must pray for 4. things 691 Vses of Genealogies in the Scriptures 694 Reason to auoide curiositie in Gods matters 4. 699 To make an heretike 3. things required 701 Meanes to avoide heresie 5. 705 Two degrees of Excommunication 707 Excommunication how far it stretcheth in 4. points 709 Reasons why we are to avoide excommunicate persons 710 Excommunication must not be inflicted for trifles 4. reasons 713 Gods children must imitate their heauenly Father in vsing great patience euen to the worst for 4. reas 721 Open and obstinate sinners must be avoided for fowre reas 722 The benefit of a good conscience in 5. particulars 725 Non residencie condemned by many reasons 727 Faith doth fiue things to the producing of a good worke 734 Many necessarie vses of good workes referred to their seuerall heads 736 Conditions of Christian fruitfulnes 5. 740 Reasons to prouoke Christians to fruitfulnesse 4. 741 Lets and hinderances of fruitfulnes 743 The ordinarie salutation added to euerie Epistle for 5. reasons 750 An other briefe Table of the most of the Questions resolued in this Commentarie HOw and why Pauls name was changed 3 Why Pauls name is prefixed before his Epistles 5 How farre a man is bound to set his name to his writings 5 How a man may knowe that he hath faith 15 How could God promise any thing before the world began 30 Whether God can change his will 33 Whether there he chance or fortune 45 How Christ is a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant 68 How Christ is called a Sauiour seeing the Father and holy Ghost saue also and we reade of sundrie other Sauiours 69 Whether the wicked haue more peace then the godly 73 What power Titus had to redresse disorders in Creta 78 What and wherein consists the difference betweene Ciuil and Ecclesiasticall power 79 How it is in the power of ministers to haue fait●full children 109 Why in the care of the family the first precept concerneth the children and not the wife ibid. How far anger is forbidden in a Minister 134 How farre it is lawfull or vnlawfull for a Minister to vse wine 140 Whether good men onely must be loued and not euill 168 Whether the Scriptures be perfect without tradition 190 Whether the Scriptures be obscure 192 How false teachers vse to deceiue mens minds 209 How may the mouths of heretikes bee stopped 220 Whether a man can be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point 225 Why God suffereth seducers among his people 228 Why Paul calleth Epimenides a Prophet 235 How the Prophets of God were distinguished from those of the Gentiles 236 How the knowledge of God is ascribed vnto the natural man 239 How farre we may alleadge humane testimonies in sermons 242 Whether any kind of lie be lawfull 246 What are meant by Iewish fables 271 Who are meant in the scriptures by pure persons 281 How any thing may be said to be pure or impure 287 How all things are pure to the pure 291 Whether recusant Papists may be compelled to Church seeing it doth offend thē 293 Whether a man with safe conscience may eat flesh at times prohibited by the Magistrate 294 Whether can any Magistrate make lawes to bind conscience ibid. How we can stand to our Christian libertie if we suffer the Magistrate 〈◊〉 restraine vs in it ibid. Whether a man may pray for more wealth then necessaries 303 How any Minister may attaine the ende of his calling 334 Why it is no needeesse precept to exhort younger women to loue their husbaands and children 376 Whether the wife may dispose of her husbands goods without his consent 399 How may a man carrie himselfe that the word of God be not euill spoken of 402 How seruants must please their masters yet not be man pleasers 426 How farre Christ is said to die and giue himselfe for all men 507 How the short death of Christ could free from infinite and eternall euills 510 Whether Magistracy be now lawful against Anabaptists 545 Whether Mordecai did wel in denying Haman reuerence 553 Whether Naboth did lawfully denie king Ahab his vineyard ibid. Whether the people might warrantably resist Saul in rescuing Ionathā his sonne from death 554 Whether Ioab did well in numbring the people at Dauids commandement ibid. Whether hee did well in slaying Absolon against his commandement ibid. How God can be said to be so good and a louer of man seeing so many vessells are prepared to destruction 624 How we can be said to be saued already seeing we carry about vs the body of sinne and death 628 Whether grace 〈◊〉 tied to the sacrament 640 What is the ●aith of infants 643 Whether the water in baptisme carrieh in it a 〈◊〉 and efficacy of washing the 〈◊〉 where Bellarmines instances are examined 650 What is meant by iustification and what by grace in the controuersie betweene the Papists and vs. 665.666 c. How faith is said to iustifie vs. 671 Whether there be any teachers among vs that teach any thing saue the truth 690 How the Apostle condemneth genealogies of which is such necessarie vse in the Scriptures 694 Whether priuate Christians may avoide an open notorious sinner before the Church hath cast him out or what t●ey must do in this case whilest the church winketh at such a one 712 Whether heretikes may be put to death seeing the Apostle onely commandeth to auoide them ibid.
2. More specially by grace of those who are adopted and renewed by grace and thus God is properly our father in heauen and no man is to be called father in earth Secondly when God is personally called father then it is to be taken for the first person and this title is giuen principally to the first person in Trinitie 1. because he is the Father of the second person the word by nature and by eternall generation 2. because he is Father to Christ in respect of his manhood not as to other men by nature or grace of adoption but by personall vnion the humane nature subsisting in the person of the word 3. because from both these followeth that by Adoption he becommeth the father of all the elect beeing members and making vp the bodie of Christ. And this is the respect wherein God is tearmed Father in this place both because it hath relation to the second person here nominated as also because in prayer we must repaire to God the Father in Christ our head and Mediator And our Lord Iesus Christ Christ is Lord in himselfe as God and Lord ouer all blessed for euer both in that he giueth essence and susteining to all things as also possesseth all things and ruleth euen the most powerfull and glorious of all creatures and is called Lord of the Angels much more ouer the Deuils themselues Againe he is our Lord 1. as Mediatour we beeing his inheritance giuen him of his Father 2. as a Redeemer purchasing vs beeing captiues and thralls to Satan 3. as a head of his Church quickning and gouerning the whole bodie of it whether militant or triumphant 4. in regard of his power and dominion for to him all power is committed in heauen and in earth who hath put all things vnder his feete in him we hold all things as in capite and to him we owe all homage and subiection in all obedience both actiue and passiue Quest. But how can Christ be a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant Ans. Christ considered in the office of Mediatourship is after a speciall manner a seruant of his Father and so his Father calleth him for my seruant Dauids sake and Behold my seruant because he faithfully serued him in the worke of redemption in that he was made man came into the world fulfilled the law prayed vnto his Father and was made obedient euen to the death yet all the while of his seruice he remained a Lord in himselfe and by his seruice became the Lord of his Church redeemed ones in a speciall manner Our Sauiour There is no other name giuen but this Obiect The Father and the holy Ghost saue also Answ. Although all outward workes of the Trinitie which make for our comfort and saluation are vndeuided as beeing one and coworking yet in performing them we must obserue an order among them the Father is the fountaine from whom the Sonne for whom as a meritorious cause the holy Ghost by whom we communicate of all blessings so all three saue but the Father by sending the Sonne the Sonne by paying the ransome the holy Ghost by applying it so all create redeeme sanctifie yet obseruing this order and manner of working when the workes are more personally attributed vnto them creation is ascribed to the Father not excluding the sonne and holy Ghost redemption to the Sonne and sanctification to the holy Ghost Which order is rather here to be obserued because our Apostle expresseth it in his prayer for these graces when he craueth them both from the Father and the Sonne not excluding the holy Ghost whereby we are taught how to direct our suits also namely that the Father by the Spirit through his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ would enrich vs with grace and the fruits of it Obiect But there are other sauiours as Ioshua and other Iudges and Kings yea Prophets and Ministers are called sauiours Ans. 1. These all were men and as men saued But of Christ it is said Behold our God he shall saue vs. 2. Some of them as Iudges were typicall sauiours sauing 1. the bodies 2. of one people the Iewes 3. from temporall death and oppression but Christ saueth the bodies and soules of all beleeuing Iewes and Gentiles from hell and condemnation 3. Others as Prophets and Ministers are onely ministeriall and instrumentall sauiours not properly onely for sundrie causes the worke of the efficient is ascribed to the instrument whom the Lord vseth in publishing this saluation but Christ alone saueth by meriting and paying the price and bringing home to the heart this redemption Obiect But we haue yet sinne in vs and therefore are not saued from it Answ. We are saued euen for the present from the wrath and poyson of it in part for euer from the damnation of it so as the strength of it is gone This is the meaning of this salutation which beeing a prayer sheweth vs both of what kinde our salutations ought to be in which we would testifie our loue to whom we write namely to wish them the best blessings as also in what manner not sending formall salutations without feeling abstracting curtesie from conscience but they must proceede from a religious and reuerent affection of the heart for euery prayer ought to come from the heart and as hauing God himselfe a witnes of the truth of the spirit in such wishes as Rom. 1.9 and Phil. 1.8.9 Now the principall lessons in this prayer are two 1. That the free and euerlasting grace of God in Christ is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall 2. Peace is the fruite of the grace and mercie of God Doctr. 1. The grace of God is the whole sufficiencie of his people the first middle and last cause of euery good thing conuaied vnto them or issuing from them not once did the Lord enforce this point vpon his owne people teaching them by things temporall their spirituall estate and condition Deut. 7.7 The Lord set his loue vpon you and chose you not because you were moe in number for you were the fewest but because he loued you cap. 9.4.6 Say not in thine heart because of my righteousnes the Lord hath giuen me this good land for thou art a stiffnecked people and were they not yet further off from meriting and procuring to themselues spirituall blessings and that heauenly Canaan and euerlasting rest prepared for the people of God and if we consider our condition before this grace be reueiled and shine vpon vs are not we in our blood when the Lord first couereth vs with his skirts and no eie but his pitieth vs he calleth vs with Adam out of our thickets when we runne from him and are hiding our selues then finding vs when we would not be found Vse 1. To confute the Popish doctrine which depresseth this grace of God and endureth not that the castle of a mans saluation should be altogether founded without
1. To mooue such as are separated to the ministerie vnto the diligent reading of the Scriptures to redeeme that time which they haue or may otherwise spend in reading filthie lewde and wanton bookes superstitious pamphlets Machiauells blasphemies or Popish errors and heresies vnlesse it be 1. with sound and setled iudgement able to discerne right from wrong truth from falshood and 2. with this end either more to detest them in themselues or fore warne others of them and thus the wise marriner neede not leaue the sea if he can avoide the rockes But let a Timothie or Titus hold him to this booke he shall hence haue supply of wisedome to saue himselfe and others or what wouldst thou wish besides wisdome for thy calling wouldst thou be fitted to exhortation deceiue not thy selfe philosophie cannot fit thee onely the word of God worketh in all the parts and powers of the soule minde will and euerie affection by Philosophy thou maist enforme the vnderstanding although but darkely in the things of God but did that euer reform● or alter any mans heart reade then this booke teach this and thou shalt ransacke the affections yea and consciences of the hearers Or else wouldst thou haue a dexteritie and facultie in the quicke resoluing of doubts studie this truth be readie in it and thou shalt finde truth manifesting both it selfe and the contrarie And seeing this is the onely euerlasting veritie it will much more make the mightie to ouerthrowe whatsoeuer is contrarie vnto it Finally wouldst thou haue eloquence added to all these former abilliments without which they could not be but obscure then studie this truth of God and thou shalt feele it framing thine heart and so ministring speech yea thou shalt speake out of the fulnesse and abundance of thy heart graciously nay it will be with thee in thy measure as it was with the Apostles thou canst not choose but speake the things thou seest and knowest 2. To confute the Popish teachers who contrarily 1. teach that the Scripture beeing so hard and obscure as they say it is may be wres●ed abused by heretikes at their pleasure and that no man can be fitted vnto these duties especially the latter of conuiction of error fully by the euidence of Scripture it selfe except he borrowe some helpe and force elswhere namely from the expositions and voice of their Church And 2. in deciding their controversies of religion according to the former position they ●lie from the word vnto Bishops Fathers Councels Decrees and Popes But to the first we answer that although we are not to neglect much lesse despise the light and direction of godly mens expositions and iudgements nor such truthes as are receiued by the true Churches of God yet without them by considering the nature of the things themselues the conference of places the knowledge of tongues the suitable correspondence of the parts of the context we may come to attaine the true meaning of the place controuerted by that be able to convince withstand all gainsayers And to the latter their practise is contrarie vnto Christs and his Apostles as we haue shewed As also the practise of the auncient Churches since as may appeare by that memorable course of Constantine the Emperour who commanded the Fathers met together in the Nicene Councel about 362. yeares after Christ to referre the great controversie then in hand against the Arrians to the decision and determination of the Scriptures Which godly course Augustine backeth who liued not past 40. yeares after when he affirmeth that it was an auncient order of disputing to haue present the books of holy Scripture and to stand to the triall thereof If this was an auncient order of disputing in Augustines dayes surely the contrarie Popish practise is but a nouel●ie and we iustly presse them to antiquitie Vers. 10. For there are many disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers of minds cheifly they of the circumcision 11. Whose mouthes must be stopped which subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake The coniunction for sheweth that the words following containe a reason of the matter preceding namely why the Minister should be a man so qualified with able parts both to maintaine the truth and confute the falshood The reason is drawne from the description 1. of teachers in these two verses and 2. of hearers in the 12. The teachers are described by three arguments 1. from their indefinite number there are many not two or three who are easily set downe but many 2. By their adiuncts which are two 1. They are disobedient or refractarie such as will not submit themselues to the true doctrine and discipline of the Church 2. they are vaine talkers that is such as beeing giuen to ostentation and vanitie contemne the studie and deliuerie of sound and profitable doctrine and search out words and matters of wit and applause both of them of more sweetnesse vnto the flesh then soundnes vnto the soule and spirit 3. By their most dangerous effects and these also are two 1. Their deceiuing of minds for which vngodly practise he especially brandeth them of the circumcision that is either by metonimie the Iewes themselues circumcised or else Gentiles Iudaizing embracing Iewish opinions mixing the Law and Gospel Moses and Christ circumcision and baptisme together making indeed an hotchpotch of religion by confounding things that can neuer stand together The 2. effect of them is their subuersion of whole houses that is they poyson and infect whole houses yea and where the grounds and foundation of religion hath beene laid they ouerturne and ouerthrowe all This last effect is declared by two arguments 1. from the instrumentall cause of it and that is by their false doctrine teaching things which they ought not 2. from the finall cause of it that is couetousnesse for filthy lucres sake Now these teachers beeing so many so dangerous and hurtfull their mouthes must needes be stopped Which is a common conclusion set betweene the two verses as hauing reference vnto them both as a common remedie against all the mischeife which any way may be let in by them and therefore those that are to be admitted into the Ministerie must be of abillitie to stop their mouthes For there are many disobedient Doctr. 1. In that the first thing taxed in these false teachers by the Apostle is disobedience we learne that disobedience commonly is the ground of false doctrine For 1. it is iust with God to giue vp those to errors and delusion that receiue not the truth in the loue of it for wheresoeuer it is receiued in loue obedience cannot but be yeelded vnto it 2. The nature of sinne is euer to be excusing it selfe and is loath to be crossed although neuer so iustly but studyeth how to defend it selfe as long as it can euen by wresting the Scriptures and by taking vp one error for the maintenance of another 3. The tenour
of their mouthes and sparkles of fire leape out the smoke they send out is like a seething pot or caldron 4. As the spirit of truth is a peaceable and meeke spirit so neuer shall a man finde a bitter spirit conscionably vtter pure truths neither indeed will truth Gods darling dwell with such And what lowder lie then to charge Gods children with damnable heresies Let all antiquitie be searched and we shall finde three things which must concurre to make an heretike 1. The broching of something contrarie to the Articles of faith 2. A departing from the Church vpon it with profession of drawing Disciples 3. After solemne admonition a stiffnesse in such error and faction None of which if they can be found in such as to whome all are imputed Let euery man iudge whether such boldnesse in any man deserue not more open reprehension and censure whereby such might learne at length to spare the credit of such who are so farre beyond the reach of their enuie as that they iustly pittie their weaknesse and solly and not with them attempt any more the discouering of their fathers nakednesse which were a good way to couer their owne Vse 3. Let none looke to be spared in the Ministerie if they will be incorrigible no not great ones If any people might looke to be spared surely they of the circumcision might beeing a people of such prerogatiues But 1. Paul preferres the Churches good aboue their credit 2. As God hath no respect of persons no more hath his word 3. When great ones are more seuerely taxed inferiours will feare the more Doctr. 2. Note further who are to be reputed the chiefe plagues of the Church and the archseducers of the world euen they of the circumcision that is such as ioyne the lawe with the Gospel and works with faith in the act of iustification for they ●each such doctrine as abolisheth from Christ and maketh him profit nothing and that in such manner as men can hardly shift or auoide them for they slily glide into the extraordinarie commendation of that the Scripture also commendeth and attributeth too much vnto that which the Scripture ascribeth somewhat vnto As for example Circumcision in the prime of it was an ordinance to seale the righteousnesse of faith and for a time was worthily in such reputation as that death is iustly threatned against the neglect of it be it in Moses himselfe These seducers taking hence occasion goe one step further and will haue it a meritorious cause of saluation and consequently will not haue it dated when the Lord hath expired it but albeit the bodie hath appeared the shadowe must remaine The Popish teachers at this day are the iust heires of these seducers as appeareth in these particulars the Iewish teachers would professe and teach Christ but not alone for he must be ioyned with Moses and all the former rites and all these with Christs merits must be iumbled to iustification Euen so Popish seducers sit with Antichrist in the Church of God and professe Christ but together with Christ they must merit something themselues and so make themselues debters to the whole law And further they make the works of grace almes prayer fasting contrition yea their owne rites and traditions obserued meritorious causes of saluation for they promise life eternall to masses indulgences auricular confession vowes pilgrimages c. and so tread in the verie steppes of these seducers 2. Againe as the Iewish teachers dealt with circumcision so doe the Papists with our Sacraments which because by diuine institution they are signes and seales of Gods mercie and faithfull couenant they turne them into physicall not conduits but causes not containing onely but conferring grace euen by the worke wrought 3. Further as the Iewish teachers lead their disciples to stand vpon outward shewes and prerogatiues as that they were sonnes of Abraham had receiued the law circumcision in their flesh and were distinguished into diuerse famous sects as Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Essees c. The verie same things in effect doe Popish teachers force men to stand vpon as false antiquitie fained succession dissembled chastitie hypocriticall orders as of Francis Dominicke Benedict and an hundred more according to whose rules whosoeuer walke mercie and peace they pronounce vpon him such cannot faile of life euerlasting but as for beleefe in the Sonne of God seeking life by that means it is the least of their labour Thus doe they with those seducers publish lies and dreames of their owne hearts that Gods people may forget his name that is the grace and mercy of God in Iesus Christ. Vse 1. This point letteth vs see how pernicious and dangerous the Popish doctrine is which whosoeuer holdeth and maintaineth is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Paul is not more confident in any thing then this that the ioyning of any thing with Christ as the matter of our righteousnesse is the cutting off of a man from Christ Gal. 5.3 Behold I Paul say and testifie that if yee be circumcised that is with opinion of righteousnes by it or confidence in it for else at this time the worke of circumcision hurt him not that kept himselfe from confidence of righteousnesse by it Christ profiteth you nothing so we testifie truely against the Papists that so many of them as will be iustified by the works of the lawe are fallen from Christ. Now because their doctrine teacheth this and he is not an absolute Papist that beleeueth it not we truely conclude that it is a doctrine leading from Christ and the absolute Papist hath no part in Christ. Obiect Doth not Iames make a cooperation of faith and works Ans. Yea but not in the act of our iustification nor in the matter or worke of our saluation but onely in the declaration of the sinceritie of our faith and truth of our conuersion which by fruits of righteousnesse we shew to be voide of hypocrisie so as let faith and works ioyntly concurre in the approbation of our iustification but in case of making vs righteous before God away with the works of the law if thou meanest to haue part in Christ these will neuer stand together here let Moses die and be buried and let no man euer knowe where he was laid to raise him againe This point shall be clearer when we come to those words of our Apostle Wee are not saued by the works of righteousnesse which we had done In the meane time dare Paul affirme of the lawe of Moses Gods owne lawe that he that holds vnto it to be iustified by it is fallen from Christ what would he haue said of their desperate and irrecouerable fall who looke for iustification out of their owne traditions vowes inventions the drosse and chaffe of their owne deuises of all which the Lord will say who required these things at your hands Let vs beware of dogges the propertie of whom is to returne to their vomit
inconueniences which necessarily follow his aduersaries false positions Now alas how farre are readers and dumb men from this one part of the dutie of a Minister how dangerous are they in their places seducers may come and doe with open mouthes into their parrishes they cannot stop their mouthes nay in truth they are as the keyes to open them and vnlocke them Well were it or much better with our Church if Theophylactus his rule were obserued that he who in some competencie could not doe these things should neither be admitted nor permitted in the Ministerie Vse 2. Hence we further see that it is rather to be wished then hoped that all Ministers should be of one minde and accord in the truth and at peace among themselues For seeing it is the constant condition of the Church to haue many daubars with vntempered morter many vaine talkars deceiuers of mindes enemies to the crosse of Christ and the libertie of it what must now in this case all the world sit still and be at rest must Christs Ministers be silent and the Pastors haue neuer a voice to driue awaie wolues from the Lords foldes must hurtfull doctrine be winked at and suffered still to creepe in to the destruction of many No no there must now be opposition and strong dissention among the Ministers themselues Ieremie must set himselfe as well against Preists as Princes and people The Ministerie of the Apostles did spend much of it selfe against the false Apostles that serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Christs owne Ministerie though the Prince and author of all our peace bent it selfe most against the cheife teachers of that age who sought glorie and praise of men and thus must his faithfull Ministers tread in his holy steps If Paul had not strongly opposed himselfe against many learned teachers Act. 15.2 where had the saluation of the Church of that age laid Let men learne therefore to be wise hearted and get knowledge whereby they may rather iudge of doctrines then take offence at the diuersitie of iudgements and practises of Ministers But if any one be sunke downe so deepe that he voweth to beleeue none of them all neither will follow any religion till they be all agreed among themselues to him I will say that this rocke was laid to breake the necke of his soule vpon and a fearefull signe it is that Christ himselfe is to him a stone to stumble at For came not Christ to make debate in the earth came he not to send fire desiring nothing more then that it should be kindled came not he with his fanne in his hand to diuide betweene the chaffe and the wheate the which shall neuer be wholly seuered till the haruest And meanest thou to be a looker on till the wheate and chaffe become one or hast thou well ridde thy selfe by beeing till then iust of Gallio his religion who cared nothing for these things I assure thee who wilt looke on whilest other contend for the faith thou shalt be a looker on too whilest other goe into heauen and haue lesse to doe in that businesse then thou desirest because thou desiredst it not when thou mightest yea when thou wast gratiously invited and desired to enter Which subuert whole houses In these words is contained the second dangerous effect of these false teachers declared by two arguments 1. by the instrumentall cause namely false doctrine for they teach things which they ought not 2. by the ende of it for filthie lucres sake The danger appeareth in three things 1. in that they subuert that is quite ouerturne the saluation of men 2. they subuert houses in the plurall number 3. whole houses The first of these sheweth that these deceiuers not onely shake men in the foundation of religion but vtterly ouerthrowe them and doe as a man who not onely beates downe a windowe or a bay or the side of an house but diggeth vp the foundation or as one who not only loppeth a tree or heweth it down by the ground but diggeth it vp by the roots and quite supplanteth it so doe these deceiuers quite destroy the faith of men and turne it vpside downe that is not onely lead men away from the simplicitie of the Gospel but wholly and altogether from euerie part of the sauing truth Thus is the word vsed among the heathen whereby they expresse such a raging of the sea as casteth vp and causeth to floate that filth and mire which lay at the bottome Quest. But how did they ouerturne mens faith and saluation Ans. By teaching iustification by circumcision that is the works and rites of the lawe But will some say could this beeing but one point subuert all I answer that fundamentall truthes are such and so linked and knit together as breake one and many fall yea some are such as being denied all of them fall to the ground A man that pulleth downe an arch of the Church endangereth the whole but yet the Church may stand but he cannot digge vp the lowest stones of the foundation but all commeth to ruine Of these the Apostle mentioneth two like the two pillars which Sampson pulling downe the whole house fell the one that of the resurrection which beeing denied all preaching and all faith is in vaine the other is this of seeking righteousnes elsewhere then in Christ who is Iehovah our righteousnesse for this makes grace no more grace and Christ to haue died in vaine Whence by the way note the dangerous estate of such as liue and die essentiall members of the Church of Rome who by their doctrine of merit and iustification by works are subuerted and plucked vp by the rootes and turned of their saluation Quest. But if this be so whether may a man be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point of religion or in such a one as by consequent raseth the foundation Ans. The things which all Christians are bound to beleeue may be reduced to two heads The former are such principles as make the rule of faith so neerely touching the matter of saluation as that a man cannot be saued vnlesse he knowe and beleeue them for all will confesse that he that must be ordinarily saued must in some measure knowe the causes the matter the obiect the manner the end and meanes of it If God I say ordinarily saue him he must knowe the platforme of Christian religion As for example 1. God in vnitie of dietie and trinitie of person for vnlesse he knowe God in Iesus Christ there is no life euerlasting 2. himselfe in the guiltines and vnder the curse of sinne seeing Christ came to call none but sinners to repentance and hunger after the meanes of deliuerance for the waters of the well of life are giuen onely to such as thirst after them 3. The meanes as that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sinne and consequenly that the Sonne of God must take the nature of
deliuered from that for then the light would discouer them so as the simplest could scarce lie open vnto them and therefore they must first insinuate themselues and then by addition and sowing of their owne both depraue and denie the truth 2. The verie nature of error beeing the child of darkenes is to flie the light and as the adulterer watcheth for the twilight so doth he that adulterateth the truth Vse 1. Not needing to applie this doctrine against the Iesuites who like so many swarmes of frogges and locusts are sent out of the bottomles pit and creepe euery where into houses especially ignorant corners to beguile the simple Let it teach vs this wisedome to know whom we admit into our houses Many dangerous men there are of corrupt mindes who dare not nor will speake again●● a doctrine deliuered to a mans face nor before such as can iustifie it but behinde a preachers backe can traduce it and before the weake and simple offer impeachment vnto it of these there are not a few who whether they be Popishly or profanely addicted must be wisely discouered and remitted for their entertainment to such as themselues 2. We must in our priuate houses cleaue to truthes publikely deliuered and beware least any deceiuer defeate vs of such a treasure The Lord might free his Church in an instant of all seducers but he suffereth such hurtfull men 1. to trie the faith of his and their loue to the truth whether they will abide with him in temptation 2. to rouse vs out of securitie that the more gins and snares are laid for vs we might be the more circumspect for thus the Lord left the Cananites in the Land vndestroied to exercise his people for which with other endes he seeth it meete that these tares should growe together with the wheate vntill the haruest 3. As these wicked ones are suttle to corrupt the truth and disperse their errors namely by infecting and subuerting houses so should we on the contrarie learne to be wise in our generations and know hence that the way of fortifying and spreading the truth and banish error is by instructing and enforming our houses And surely truth will neuer flourish in the Church and in publike till it be more heartily and with better welcome entertained in families We wish good lawes and by Gods blessing many there are for the Church but were there none to our hands euery Christian should be a law to himselfe and all that is within his gates Let vs make good orders and obserue them in our families and thus our houses shall become Churches And by whetting the truth vpon our children and seruants they shall be able to teach their families after vs and so we shall propagate the grounds of true religion euen to after ages The third point of the danger is that they subuert whole houses not one or two persons in the houses but whole houses Where note the infection of error which is therefore compared to a gangrene or running tetter which let it take any one part and destitute it of heate and vitall spirits it proceedeth on vnto all and no way is there to cure the person but by cutting off the member Our Sauiour Christ calleth the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisies leaven for the spreading of it So also if the error be in manners let Peter dissemble a little and a number will fall with him yea and Barnabas also will be drawne into the dissimulation Vse 1. Teaching Masters of families to become more wary of themselues for on them dependeth the good estate of the whole family if they be ouerreached the whole family is seduced if the deuill hold in his power the Master of a familie he knoweth little good will be done in that house except the Lord preserue some Ioseph in Potiphars house or some Saints in Neros court to iudge and condemne the rest both here at the great day 2. They must be watchfull ouer their families to keepe Popish and prophane persons out of doores least they corrupt the rest We know little what mischeife a little leauen doth but the deuill knoweth well inough and therefore he seeketh to thrust into euery societie and familie some wretch or other not to hinder good things only but to spread euill and mischeife that if he can Christs owne companie shall not be without a Iudas W●ll knoweth he that one swearer one drunkard one contemner of God and his word will doe more mischeife in an house then many religious persons can doe good Let heads of families not take their seruants hand ouer head not caring what their seruants are or are not so they will be droyles and drudges but for their owne sake for their children sake and for the more prosperous successe of all their businesse make such choise of their seruants as they may truely say with Ioshuah I and my house will serue the Lord and with Ester I my maids will fast 3. When Satan or his Ministers goe about priuily to bring vs out of tast with the word or the preachers and professours of it be wise to espie his malice betimes and timely preuent him for otherwise he will speedily subuert thee and thy house for he doth his mischeife by degrees and if thou yeeldest thy selfe but a little to harken to his whistle God in iustice may yeeld thee wholly and thy house to delusion Thus haue we seene the dangerous effects of these false teachers which beeing so great must encrease the true Ministers 1. diligence Act. 20.28 2. faithfulnesse against them Gal. 2.11.14 Now we come to the declaration of this latter effect by the instrumentall cause false doctrine and the finall which is couetousnes or filthy lucre Teaching things which thy ought not that is either impious doctrines which derogate from the glorie of God extenuate the merit of Christ or else loose and licentious doctrine rather giuing patronage to corrupt manners then any way improouing them And all these they teach for filthy lucres sake Doctr. Where the heart is set vpon gaine it will haue falsehood to feed it True it is in all sorts of men and callings which is here said of false teachers filthy lucre and falsehood are inseperable companions The Prophet Micha telleth vs that the Preists that teach for hire and the Prophets that prophecie for mony while they bite with their teeth that is while they haue to bite and feed vpon all is peace to the feeders but if a man put not into their mouthes that is satisfie not their appetite and desire they prepare warre against him as if he were an enemy to God and man The like affirmeth Ezekiel of the false Prophets who polluted the Lord among his people for handfulls of barly and peeces of bread would sew pillowes vnder euery armehole by which type they signified ease and prosperitie to the people and made vailes for euery head
this any idle promise or God not so good as his word No surely for he was in daily derision euery one mocked him hee heard raylings and reproaches of many on euery side yea and which was his cheifest greefe his word was a reproach and derision to the profane so that he was euen determining to speake no more in that name But how did he vphold himselfe in this temptation But the Lord is with mee like a mightie gyant therefore my persecutors shall be ouerthrowne Obiect But for all this good men are preuailed against exposed to reproach wants imprisonment banishment and death it selfe Answ. As the Apostle speaketh of themselues they were killed but not ouercome so the enemie preuaileth against the person of a poore man and Ieremie himselfe may sticke and starue in the dungeon but neither against his faith and constancie and much lesse against his doctrine and the truth which beeing strongest of all shall preuaile against them to their confusion so are the Saints in suffring made conquerers Vse 2. Let none be discouraged if any times bring opposition to good Ministers as though it were a strange and vnvsuall thing if some one age onely should bring forth such a monstrous birth it would be more burdensome but no age is barren yea not fruitfull herein as might be made plaine in all historie Neither may any conceiue worse of the religion whose teachers are opposed by great ones for whereas men loue their owne deuises and what man affecteth not the child of his owne braine neuer were any so maligned by men as the Lords owne inventions Vse 3. Euerie hearer must set to their hands to helpe their teachers and euerie way to strengthen them against their withstanders I meane not by outward strength and power but especially by their prayers that they may be deliuered from euill and vnreasonable men and preach the word boldly which was both the commandement of the Apostle Paul 2. Th. 3.1 the practise of the Church for Peter Act. 12.5 ad 12. And further in that we stand not for nor to our selues but for the truth and Gods people they must by other incouragements be helpes to the truth for if the captaine be in fight is it meete that the common souldier should stand onely idly looking on nay his safetie they must account theirs and striue for him as for themselues if he suffer they must suffer with him as knowing that if the Pastor be smitten the sheepe are like to be scattered Notably doth the Apostle vrge this dutie vpon the Philippians wishing them to continue in one spirit and one mind fighting together in the faith What doth the Apostle proclaime armes or stirre them vp to contention yea surely but such a one as becommeth the Gospell of peace he would haue them them to fight not one against an other but one with an other yea all of them with one minde Neither with a cruell fight with carnall weapons as one enemie against an other but with such a fight as they heard in him and saw in him alas he was fast inough bound to the peace for he was then in bonds at Rome for the Gospel he fought by suffering so must they by their prayers for him by their patience by all manner of ministerie to the Saints in trouble shewe that they partake and fellow-feele in the afflictions of the Gospel Doctr. 2. Those that oppose themselues to good Ministers and men are euer speaking euill and opening their mouthes with reproaches against them and their godly courses Moses was charged and that not in corners but to his face that he tooke too much vpon him whereas hee was vnwilling to vndertake all that the Lord laid vpon him It went currant in court and countrie that Elias troubled all Israel Amaziah accuseth Amos to the king that the land is not able to beare all his words Diorrephes not onely withstood the Apostle Iohn but pratled against him Quest. But what is the reason of all this haue they any cause giuen them Ans. The reason is partly positiue in themselues partly negatiue in the other In themselues 1. the malice of their heart is such as cannot but continually out of the abundance thereof set their tongues a worke the fire within sendeth out such smoake abroad 2. With this malice is ioyned exceeding pride and swelling which mooueth them to seeke the raising of themselues although with the fall of others and make the reproach of others as a ladder for themselues to climbe by for this ende did the false Apostles account of Christs Apostles as the filth and offscouring of the world that is most base and abiect persons 3. With this malice and pride is ioyned exceeding subtiltie and pollicie in their generations well knowe they that they haue gotten euer more conquest by the stroaks of their tongues then of their hands and seldome haue they failed of their purposes For 1. hauing a notable facultie to insinuate into great mens fauours as Rehum and Shimsai they would not hinder the kings tribute nor see the kings dishonour they make no bones of letting fall two or three vntruthes in a fewe lines to the king for what hinderance had it beene to the kings tribute what impeachment of his honour to haue builded the Temple and established Gods true worship in Ierusalem but thus got they their purpose by insinuation and lyes which by their owne force they could not doe 2. As they can coyne of their own so they haue a notable dexteritie to depraue euen innocencie it selfe Is it not wonderfull that the famous harbenger of Christ then whome in his time a greater was not borne of women no nor yet Christ himselfe could so carrie themselues but that the one must needes be counted a demoniake and the other a glutton drunkard and friend of sinners Who then can looke to escape and if they hereby obtaine not their whole purpose yet loose they not all hauing learned that cursed rule of Machiauel that if they speake their pleasure some ill conceit will sticke in the mindes of men which will be worth their labour Now the negatiue reason in good men themselues why their withstanders speake euill of them is set downe 1. Pet. 4.4 Because yee runne not with them to the same excesse of riot therefore speake they euill of you dissimilitude of manners causeth the vngodly by all meanes banish the faithfull out of the world they may seeke a newe world for themselues to liue in if they will if they should walke in such courses as the Apostle Peter reckoneth vp in the 3. verse of the cited chapter and in such a blacke darkenesse as did not reprehend theirs they could well enough giue them the right hand of fellowship but if men will be so precise as that the high way cannot hold them they cannot away with such singularitie Vse 1. Take here a note of a false religion which
carefull inough to preuent and seeke out for helpe against the diseases which threaten the bodily death of their children and seruants take vp some care to remooue that euerlasting death which this euill threatneth and will certainely bring if in due season it be not repressed Teach thy child and traine him in the Scriptures from a child teach thy seruant the trade of Christianitie and godlinesse for thou art no lesse bound to deliuer him the principles of this calling as the particular to which he is bound vse good meanes to get them the light of knowledge opposed against this blindnesse of mind worke vpon their wills to breake them from the follies and vanities of youth opposed to this rebellion of will bring them at least to outward conformitie in their conuersation opposed to this generall deprauation of manners these things they will not forget in their age or if they do the perill is their own thou hast done thy duty one thing remember thy seruants thy children are all poysoned and haue need of some present antidote Verse 4. But when the bountifulnesse and loue of God our Sauiour towards man appeared 5. Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the holy Ghost 6. Which hee shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour 7. That we beeing iustified c. Our Apostle hauing so largely described the miserable condition of man in his naturalls whose whole temper we haue seene to be such as carieth him to all rough and gracelesse courses he now setteth by it a liuely description of a new condition vnto which those who are good in Gods sight are called and this he doth in these foure verses in this order First by the principall efficient cause of it which is the bountifulnesse and loue of God fitly opposed to that hardnesse and vnmercifulnesse of men which was the ground of feircenes in their speaches and behauiours God was not so feirce against man but when we were in that miserable condition as he is the fountaine of all goodnes in himselfe so his gentlenes and philanthropie streamed out and the glorious beames of his grace shined out vpon vs through his Christ ver 4. Now this principall efficient is illustrated 1. by the time when 2. by remoouing the contrarie things which whatsoeuer they may seeme are so farre from beeing causes as they are rather diametrally opposed namely the workes of righteousnesse which we had done that is the verie best and floure of our workes which indeed had no righteousnesse here was no such thing concurring to the helping of vs into this estate but his meere mercie saued vs which assertion of Gods free mercie is inserted and repeated againe to take downe the arrogancie of some presumptuous spirits in those dayes This he doth in the former part of the 5. verse Secondly by the instrumentall or ministeriall efficient cause which helpeth vs into this change and new condition and this may be conceiued either proper and that is the renewing of the holy Ghost or typicall and sacramentall and that is the lauer of regeneration By which some vnderstand Baptisme in a larger sence including all the gifts necessarie to saluation as it is taken Ioh. 3.5 and 1. Pet. 1.3 because the verse following casteth eye to such places of the old Testament which speake not of the effusion of sacramentall water but of the plentifull powring out of such graces of the spirit as were prophecied to be in abundance conferred to the Church of the new Testament as Ezech. 36. I will powre out cleane waters Ioel. 2. I will powre out of my spirit that is the waters of grace vnto a new life But I will not leaue the high way where I may as I take it more conueniently goe in it I will speak of this lauer of regeneration in the stricter sence taking it for the sacrament of Baptisme for so I shall not confound things which the text seemeth plainely to distinguish the whole former sence beeing expressed in those words and the renewing of the holy Ghost as after in prosecuting them we shall see Thirdly this new condition is amplified by the finall cause of it and this ende is twofold 1. nearer hand namely our present iustification That by his grace we beeing iustified that is accounted righteous 2. more remote and further off but annexed and inseperably tyed vnto the former namely our future glorification when we shall be manifested to be heyres of life eternall which yet is not so farre off vs but that we haue sure hold of it by hope So as the whole carriage and meaning of these 4. verses seemeth to be this Howsoeuer formerly we were in our old estate lost in wandring and vagrant courses yet after that the most free loue and good will of God our Sauiour whose sole mercie alone mooued him in his sonne to embrace vs through the preaching of the Gospel did more clearely shine out then not of any workes of righteousnesse which we had done for what could we then doe but of his meere mercie he saued vs and to this purpose he powred vpon vs his holy spirit to the renewing of vs and the purging of our consciences from all the impuritie of them of which inward purging that lauer of Baptisme is a signe and representation wherein he doth not sparingly and drop by drop besprinkle our consciences with those pure waters but abundantly and with a liberall hand sheddeth them and powreth them ou● vpon our soules through Christ our Sauiour All which our good God hath done for vs that we might obtaine righteousnesse and all spirituall graces attending it and so might be led to the fruition of that glorie which he hath alreadie put in our hands by faith and hope which shall not make vs ashamed In the principall efficient we are to speake of three things in order 1. of this loue and bountifulnesse of God which is the positiue cause of our saluation 2. The time when it appeared vnto vs But when the bountifulnesse and loue of God towards man 3. The remoouall of a supposed cause not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but by his mercie he saued vs. In the first we must first distinguish these two words bountifulnesse and loue of God towards man The former noteth rather that natiue nesse which is in or rather which is his owne nature who is goodnesse it selfe and readie to be implied to the good of the creature The latter a communicated and participated goodnesse vnto others as a streame issuing from the former fountaine for it is said to be such a goodnesse as hath appeared And whereas the goodnesse of God shineth out in and to all his creatures not only in creating them all verie good but in the daily ordering and preseruing of them this is not such a generall goodnes but more speciall and
deserued or good things which we would abuse or els positiue and these either generall and more common as giuen to elect and reprobate such as the gift of tongues learning prophecie miracles c. or more speciall whereby onely they that are to be saued are distinguished As namely that first and eternall grace of election and that second grace whereby such as are elected and giuen to the Sonne are in due time by effectuall vocation iustification and sanctification lead vnto glorie and saluation All these are of his grace whome Peter calleth the God of all grace But there is yet another grace of God which is no gift infused into vs but resideth in God himselfe which is his free fauour and grace by which he loueth and accepteth his elect in Christ his beloued and this is the first and cause of all other subsequent graces Which is both to be distinguished from the former because the Scripture doth alwaies distinguish them in the doctrine of iustification Rom. 11.6 If of grace then not of workes and more plainly chap. 5.15 much more the grace of God and the gift by grace hath abounded to many As also must be applied to this text not only 1. because it is the proper sense of the word in all such places as treat of the iustification of a sinner before God but 2. because the Apostle by mentioning of grace againe secludeth all that prevision of works formerly mentioned which might be motiues vnto God for the bestowing of his grace that all causes and occasions of the free grace of God out of God might be excluded and 3. to free the text from that corruption which by Popish doctrine is fastned vpon it For how doth the Papists wind themselues when they meete with this and such like places that with them they may hold their blasphemous doctrine of iustification by workes and humane satisfactions you shall haue the latter Iesuites affirme the same thing verie confidently with the Apostle that we are iustified freely by his grace as though they were of his minde and of ours and as if no difference were betweene vs in this maine matter which I dare say if we were agreed in we should not long dissent in any matter of great moment but they speake in their owne sence and retaine a tricke of their mentall reservation which both destroyeth the text and ouerthroweth the foundation of religion For 1. by Iustification they meane not that compleat righteousnesse of Iesus Christ which the Lord imputing vnto vs accepteth vs in but a kind of righteousnesse which God putteth into vs to make vs iust which is nothing else but a physicall change of the heart from euill to good or a motion from iniustice to righteousnesse at the first imperfectly begunne and needeth a second iustification to eke it out 2. By Grace they meane nothing lesse then this fauour of God in Christ accepting his elect but certaine gifts of grace bestowed of fauour or habituall graces of faith hope and charitie which are daily perfected by the daily exercise of them And what is this els then to say that we are iustified that is made iust before God by the inherent righteousnes which he bestoweth vpon vs the which righteousnes not of Christ but of our owne infused into vs not imputed vnto vs doth formally iustifie the sinner in the sight of God But this evasion 1. offereth great violence to the text wherein as we haue heard the Apostle opposeth these two grace and good workes as his vsuall manner is in all those places where he handleth this doctrine as in the seat of it and it is to be marked that what the Apostle here calleth grace he giueth three titles vnto it in the former verse all of them without our selues and peculiar vnto God himselfe 1. bountifulnesse 2. loue 3. mercie and not only this place but sundrie such paralel places shew plainely that by grace cannot be meant any thing infused into vs but only a free fauour in God accepting vs as righteous 2. Tim. 1.9 Who hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes marke by the way that exclusiue but according to his owne purpose and grace giuen vs but when before the world was Let now any man of common sence say whether this grace whereby we are saued be any gift of grace infused vnto vs vnlesse it could be infused before the world was or we were in it Secondly this conceit confoundeth two distinct things namely our iustification and sanctification which the Apostle distinguisheth 1. Cor. 6.11 and Rom. 5. are noted two things which befell vs by Adams sinne 1. the guilt of that sinne 2. the natiue corruption or pronenesse and propensitie to any other sinne as a iust punishment of the former and accordingly he distinctly noteth two things that by the second Adam are restored vnto vs the former is freedome and absolution from that guilt which is our iustification before God and the latter is the repairing of Gods image which is called regeneration which is here imperfect but shall be hereafter raised to that legall righteousnesse from whence we fel implying vnto vs that as we must retaine the distinction betweene the guilt and corruption of sinne so also must we betweene the freedome from the one the other which this popish interpreattion confoundeth Thirdly this interpretation of the phrase by the Romish teachers maketh the iustification of a sinner faile against those two maine rules which in Scripture are ascribed vnto it 1. whereas the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the law Rom. 3.21 this shall be false for the law reuealeth that righteousnes which is by inherent qualities gifts of grace or the habit of loue 2. whereas the iustification of a sinner is by a righteousnesse which satisfieth the iustice of God such a righteousnesse as this cannot doe so for our best inherent righteousnesse is mingled with corruption is verie imperfect farre from that which the lawe requireth and 〈◊〉 from that which God accepteth who neuer accepteth but such as bring perfect righteousnesse either of their owne or of the Mediators All which I haue propounded for the right interpretation of this phrase because it nippeth in the head all that Popish deuise of iustification by workes so derogatorie to this Apostolicall iustification by grace as they can no sooner be reconciled then can fire and water light and darknesse and that abandoning such tricks of mens braines we might come to conceiue the truth of this fundamentall doctrine as the Scriptures haue taught vs to conceiue of it Doctr. The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer but that which the Lord imputeth and accepteth through his sonne For 1. the Apostle here speaking of renewing of beleeuers inwardly and in truth yet ascribeth not their righteousnesse thereto but attributeth it wholly vnto grace And if we speake of the righteousnesse of a