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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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importeth a Letter sent from one to another to certifie their minde so is the worde vsed heere Tim. What meaneth this worde Apostle Silas Generally by it is meant any messenger as Phil. 2 25. more especially one selected of Christ to carrie the message of saluation into the whole world whereof there were twelue to whome Mathias was added in Iudas roome Tim. What be the notes of an Apostle Silas Foure first to bee immediately called by Christ Gal. 3 1. Math. 1 2. Secondly to bee sent with Commission to preach vnto all nations Thirdly to haue seene Christ in the flesh 1 Cor. 1 2. Fourthly to haue a priuiledge to be kept from error in their Doctrine Iohn 16 13. to which may be added the fift to haue the power of doing myracles Luke 9 1 2. Tim. Who was this Paule Silas A Pharisie by profession a Iew by byrth a most wicked persecuter for his practise Tim. How was he changed Silas By the mighty power of Christ who from heauen suddenly altred him and of a persecutor made him a Preacher From whence wee may learne that none dispaire though they be yet in their sinnes or being called haue greeuously falne For Paul sinned fearefully before his Calling and Peter after yet were both pardoned vpon their returning to God Tim. Why did Paul write to the Romaines Silas First because they were many of them his Countreymen according to the flesh the Iewes then dwelling at Rome in great Companies Acts. 28. Secondly because by writing to them hee gaue an instruction common to all within the Iurisdiction of the Romaines which was exceeding large the Romain Empire being then in florishing estate and as it were the Queene and Mistris of the world Tim. Why was this Epistle set before the rest of Paul his Epistles Silas Neither for that it was in time written before all other nor yet for the great dignity of the Romain nation being then Lordes almost of the whole earth nor for the excellencie of the Romain Church which consisting of Gentiles was inferiour vnto the Church of the Iewes who were the Oliue tree others being wilde Oliues nor yet for the length of this Epistle as some haue imagined but for the exceeding worth and vse of the matter handled therein For besides the maine Article of Iustification by faith defined debated and determined there be other questions and points of Christian faith of gteat moment and profit as about the fall of Man the force of Original corruption the restoration of man by Christ of the sweet and manifold fruits of Iustifying faith also of Sanctification of the Crosse and comfort to them which beare it of predestination of the vocation of Gentiles of the breaking off and graffing in againe the Iewes of Good-workes of Maiestracy of Charity of the vse of things indifferent of the diuersitie of Guifts and functions in the Church so as this Epistle was vpon good respect set before the rest as the Key to open the way to vnderstand the other and as a Catechisme or Introduction to our most holy Religion also the most exact and accurat Method of this Epistle did deserue it should bee prefixed For after the 〈◊〉 he defineth Iustification declaring what it is Rom. 1 16. and that is held most artificiall Method which beginneth with definition Also hee expresseth the seuerall causes thereof Efficient 1. Gods grace 2. Materiall Christ Iesus dead and raised to life 3. the Formall our beleefe of the Gospell 4. the Final or end remote the praise of Gods righteousnes the neerest end our saluation Moreouer hee amplifieth our free Iustification by the contrary that wee cannot bee iustified either by workes of Nature or of the Law Cha. 2 3. therefore by grace and faith after the patterne of Abraham Ch. 4. then by the principall and immediate effects of iustifying faith both inwarde peace of Conscience accesse vnto the gracious God ioy hope patience in tribulation experience sence of Gods Loue in the heart Ch. 5. and outward Holinesse of life dying to sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse Cha. 6. by the contrarie operation of the Law which is to reueale Sinne and Wrath Cha. 7. whereas the Gospell freeth from condemnation Ch. 8. by the cause Election by the Subiect Gentiles called and Iewes to be called Ch. 11 by Testimonies Ch. 10. by Examples Dauid and Abraham Ch. 4. And as this Article of Iustification so other points are treated of in a verie perfect order a hath beene partly touched and shall more perticulerly appeare heereafter Tim. Of what kinde is this Epistle Silas It is mixt partly Didascalicall teaching instructing the minde in the truth of the Gospell partly deliberatiue or paraeniticall exhorting vnto Duties of all sortes and constancie in the faith partlie Consolatory comforting against the fear of condemnation and affliction of the Crosse partly Reprehensorie rebuking the Iewes for their infidelitie and contumacie against God and the Gentiles for their immodestie security and pride and both for their debate and carnall aemulation partly Gratulatorie giuing thankes for their obedience to the Gospell and Laudatorie praising their zeale and Petitoric praying for Grace to them and to himselfe Tim. Shew vs now the scope and marke whereat this Epistle aymed Sil. The scope is double the first is remote and further off being common to all the Church in all ages as the more plentiful instruction of al the Saints in the mystery of saluation and secondly the quenching of the flames of contention raised between the two people Iewes and Gentiles and to set a firme peace which is the nearest end CHAP. I. DIAL II. Tim. VVHat is the sum of this whole first Chapter and what are the chiefe Parts thereof Sil. Hauing in the beginning by an Artificiall and elaborate Exordium insinuated himselfe into the minds of the Romanes to make them attent docible and beneuolous receiuers of his Doctrine ad ver 14. toward the middle of the Chapter hee layeth foorth the maine question to wit that al people both Iews and Gentiles are no otherwise to be iustified and saued then by the Gospell being beleeued on which touching the Gentiles he doth demōstratiuely proue from verse 18. to the end of the Chapter the reason is because being transgressors by manisold and gricuous sinnes both against God thorow impiety and men thorow vnrighteousnesse monstrous and vnnaturall they were worthy of aeternall damnation so farre off was it that their woorkes could Iustify and giue them life eternall For the maine points of this Chapter they be foure 1. A salutation to verse 8. 2. The exodium or Praeface making way and entrance to the matter to verse 17. 3. The principall Thesis or proposition touching righteousnesse before God by the fayth of Christ verse 17. 4. The confirmation or proofe from verse 18. to the conclusion of the Chapter this is the effect of the argument brought for probation Gentiles Iewes are to be iustified either by Faith or by Works
depriued of the glory of God and are freely iustified by his grace thorough the redemption which is in Christ Iesus Tim. WHat be the parts of this Text wherein this former Doctrine is more fully opened and illustrated Silas Two First a generall necessity of iustification Secondly two causes thereof the efficient and the matter Tim. What is the meaning of this 23. verse Sil. That all through 〈◊〉 are depriued of the righteousnesse wherein God is most glorified Or thus as some expound it all the elect by reason of their sinfull nature and life are voide and destitute of eternall life which consisteth in the participation of Gods glorie and therefore are depriued of righteousnesse to which belongeth the promise of glory Tim. How proue ye that al men haus sinned Sil. First by the authority of Scripture 1 Iohn 1 6 8. and Iames 4 2. Secondly by common experience because it hath beene seene in all ages that the best men haue sinned as Noah Lot Abraham Dauid Thirdly by the testimony of conscience which doth witnesse vnto euery man that he is a sinner and doth bring dread and feare of iudgement for sinne Lastly the iudgements of God which are so common in the world do tell vs that no man is without sinne which sticketh close to mans nature euer in the godly till the dissolution of nature Tim. How many wayes do men sinne Sil. Not a few but many not one but sundry waies as originally actually by omission and commission against God and man in thought word and deede of ignorance of negligence of presumption secretly openly in matter and in manner in substance in circumstance against Law and against Gospell Tim. What vse make you of this point Sil. It reproueth the Papists which ascribe freedome from sinne to the virgin Mary and also other Heretickes which hold an absolute freedome from sinne in the regenerate euen in this life Secondly it teacheth vs to thinke of other mens sinne with compassion considering our owne Thirdly it serueth to humble all men and to driue them out of themselues to Christ to feeke righteousnesse in him and to bee full of awe and watch seeing there bee so many wayes to misse the marke and but one to hit it Tim. What is meant by the glory of God Silas Some thinke it is the perfect righteousnesse of Christ the imputing whereof to the beleeuers is much to the glory and praise of his free grace and good will But I think it is hereput for eternall life which standeth in the fellowshippe of Gods glory and that this is the meaning may appeare by the worde destitute or depriued which signifieth one that fainteth in a race falleth short of the goale nowe eternall life is the goale of our race the price of the high calling of God Philip. 3. Tim. What vse of this poynt Sil. That through sin wee are most miserable as hauing thereby lost the chiefest thing which is Gods glory in the fruition whereof is all our happinesse which should make vs loue Christ by whome it is restored Tim. What learne we hereby that wee are freely iustfied by his grace Sil. That which mooued the Father to giue his Son to vs was his free fauour Secondly it proueth that faith iustifieth onely for were we iustified by workes but in part we could not be iustified by grace Rom. 11 6. If of works not of Grace Tim. What is the matter of our Iustification Sil. The redemption which is in Christ Iesus by which is meant a deliuery from sinne and misery by the merit and power of Christes bloud shed of which redemption wee haue the beginning now and looke for perfection in heauen Tim. What learne we from hence Sil. First the exceeding loue of Christ giuing himselfe a ransome for sinnes Secondly the exceeding daunger of sinne hauing inthralled vs to Sathan and hell Thirdly the exceeding great duty of thankfulnes we owe to Christ our Redeemer Note that wee are saide to bee iustified freely though Christ laide downe a price and wee bring faith which is an act of our will because God freely gaue Christ and freely workes faith in vs which iustifieth in respect of the obiect Christ and not as it is an act or worke of ours DIAL XIIII Verse 25. Whome God hath set foorth to bee a propitiation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousnes by the forgiuenes of sinnes that are passed Tim. VVHat doth this text set forth vnto vs Sil. All the causes of iustification yet more fully Tim. Shew vs these causes what they be Sil. The efficient cause is God the matter is Christ our atonement the instrument is faith the end is the glory of God in the declaration of his righteousnes Tim What learne ye by this that God is said to set forth Sil That wee must seeke the first and soueraigne cause of saluation not in Christ but in God vpon whose eternall loue it doth depend Tim. What learne we hereof that Christ is saide to bee set forth of God Sil. That the doctrine of the Gospell is no newe thing inuented by men but commeth from heauen beeing a diuine truth Tim. But how many wayes is Christ said to be set forth Sil. Two wayes first by the reuelation and preaching of the gospell wherein things to be beleeued concerning Christ and our saluation are propounded to vs and set before vs. Secondly therein the Spirit of Christ inspireth vs with faith and perswadeth our minds to assent to the things shewed and propounded being good and mostioyfull things Tim. But may not this of Gods setting forth his sonne be referred to predestination Sil. It may so because thereupon dependeth the merit of Christs death Now if yee take it so that God in his predestination decreed to set forth his son then the meaning is thus much that touching our reconcilement to God by the redemption of Christ we must account that this commeth to vs by the onely determination and free purpose of God The reason of which purpose seemeth to be this that God meant to restore the world to his first estate by him by whome it was made at the first Tim. Christ the matter of our Iustification why is he called Our Reconcilement Tim. Because Christ is the true propitiatory as the word heere vsed doth signifie our Propitiatour or Reconciliator for he doth allude to the propitiatory or Mercie-seate of the Law which was a figure of Christ in these three things First out of the Mercy-seate were the Oracles giuen so by Christ we are shewed the Oracles of the will of God as touching our saluation Secondly God was saide to dwell at the propitiatory so in Christ the whole fulnesse of the Godhead dwelleth corporally Col. 2 9. Thirdly there God was made fauourable to the people so is God by Christ alwayes pacified and reconciled to vs Col. 1 18. Tim. Why is Christ our onely reconcilement Sil. Because he is a man free from sinne Secondly
imputation of righteousnes to the beleeuer without workes Tim. Who was Dauid Sil. The Pen-man of the Holy-ghost one of the holie Prophets Tim. What followes heereof Silas That his testimony is to be receiued as the testimony of God because the Prophets wrote as they were moued by the holy Ghost Tim. What meanes he by describing Silas Not a perfect definition but a short and plaine setting before vs of the matter Tim. What is meant by the Blessednesse of the man Sil. The man which is blessed or which may be esteemed and held blessed Tim. What do ye call blessednesse Sil. The happy condition and estate of such as bee in Gods fauour through Christ. Tim. What is meant by imputing Silas To impute is to put a thing into ones account or reckoning it is a word borrowed from Merchants who are saide to impute that whereof they exact a reckoning and account Tim. What is meant here by righteousnes Sil. The exact and perfect conformity and agreement to the will of the Creator which since Adam was found in Christ onely Tim. Why doth he say without workes seeing Dauid speaketh not of workes in that part of the Psalme Sil. It must of necessity bee vnderstood for if this bee the blessednes to haue the righteousnesse and good works of another that is of Christ accounted to vs then a man is righteous and blessed without his owne works Tim. Tea but he meaneth ceremoniall and naturall workes done before our conuersion workes done before faith Sil. Nay not so but he meaneth all workes wherein sin may be committed and therefore more principally works of the moral law because more properly sinne is in them againe Dauid speaketh this euen of himselfe being nowe conuerted and renewed vnto faith Tim. What were we taught out of the testimony it selfe Sil. Sundry things first that there is but one way for all men to become blessed and this is by free pardon Secondly from hence is matter of great comfort for the pore and needy in that the wealthy of the world haue no other true happinesse then that which is common to the poorest beleeuer Thirdly here is matter of great humbling for the mighty and rich in that the poore are equall to them in the chiefest things Fourthly here is matter of great vnity and loue amongst all sorts in that there is but one common saluation or meanes of forgiuenesse of sinnes to the begger and to the king Tim. What is that way of blessednes which is common to all the Saints tell vs-this more plainly and distinctly Sil. Free forgiuenesse of sinnes through faith in Iesus Christ which is expressed heere by three phrases or fashions of speech First remission of sinnes which is a discharge of a debt Secondly couering of transgression it beeing a speech taken from such as hide vnseemely things from the eies of others least they bee offended so our sins by forgiuenes are hid from the eies of Gods iustice Thirdly of not imputing that is not reckoning it to vs or calling vs to any account for it A speech borrowed from Merchants or Creditors who doe put that debt out of the reckoning which they meane to forgiue so are wee saide to haue sinne not imputed as when a creditor of grace and fauour accepteth a debt to be paid accounting it discharged when the party indebted is not able to pay it Tim. What vnderstandeth hee by forgiuenes of sinne more then is expressed Sil. The imputation of Christ his righteousnes which cannot bee seuered from remission of sinnes so heere is a Synechdoche of the part Tim. What was further here noted Sil. That forgiuenes is of all sinnes great and small many and few one and other Secondly that seeing we cannot be free from sinne but by forgiuenesse we should therfore auoyde sinne the more carefully being wary that wee do not that from which we cānot be quitted but by a pardon and least we abuse that mercy which doeth so graciously couer our faults Tim. What other things more were noted out of this text Sil. Sundry first touching blessednesse Secondly touching Gods mercy in forgiuenes of sin Thirdly touching our duty about leauing of sin Tim. What was noted and obserued concerning blessednes Sil. Many things first the causes of blessednes the chiefe working cause is Gods grace or the fauor of God the meritorious and materiall cause is Christ his obedience to death the ende or finall cause is Gods glory the instrument Gods word offering our faith apprehending the Sacraments sealing hence it is written Blessed are they that beleeue blessed are they that heare the word and keep it Secondly the effects of blessedness the effects towardes our selues are forgiuenes of sinnes regeneration peace of conscience ioy in the holy Ghost graces of the new man as knowledge wisedome faith hope loue and patience The effects towards others bee the workes of loue and mercy and all fruits of our labour in our calling hence it is saide Blessed is the man whose sinnes are couered Psal. 32. Blessed are the mercifull and the 〈◊〉 and the poore in spirit Math. 5. Thirdly the degrees of blessednes which bee three first in this life an entrance into a blessed estate by beeing engrafted into Christ through faith to bee 〈◊〉 of him and his benefits of forgiuenes of sinnes and sanctification Secondly the proceeding in it at death when the soule is receiued into glory the body beeing laide into the earth Thirdly the perfection of it in heauen when the whole man shall be glorified hence it is said Blessed are they which dye in the Lord Reuel 14. 13. Blessed are they who are called to the Lambes martage Reue. 19. Tim. What was obserued touching forgiuenes of sinnes Sil. That the Prophet speaking in the plurall number giueth vs to vnderstand that not one or a few nor smal but many and great sinnes are forgiuen the faithfull the reasons hereof are first because otherwise they coulde not bee blessed if one sinne were vnpardoned for they coulde haue no true peace Secondly Christs merits and Gods mercies exceedeth all and be much greater then al the sins of the 〈◊〉 were they all in any one man Tim. What vse of this Sil. Sound consolation to beleeuers in the time of 〈◊〉 for sinne Secondly an instruction for vs to forgiue our brethren whatsoeuer offence against vs when they come and say it repents mee euen as God for Christs sake forgaue vs Ephe. 4. 32. Obserue that our sinnes only hinder our blessednes which shall bee perfect when our sinnes be wholy taken away meane time it is but begun Tim. What were wee to learne as touching our duty about sinne Sil. That before the committing of sinne wee doe take good heed 〈◊〉 that we may not offend so merciful a God as hath forgiuen vs so great a debt Rom. 12. 1. Secondly because sinne being once committed we cannot bee well eased till wee be forgiuen further we learne that after the committing thereof we despaire not
sake he maketh noble or base Eightly Paul saw no other cause of election but the will of God and it is dangerous to assigne that to bee a cause of election which Paul purposely entreating of this matter saw not this is to make our selues wise and him blockish nay our selues wiser then the Holy-Ghost Ninthly if the cause of election were workes or faith or vnbeleefe cause reprobation what need he say Oh the depth or obiect Is their iniquity with God and therefore it necessarily followeth that election is most free and absolute without any dependance vpon them Yet God did not chuse vs to the end without respect to the meanes for his decree concerneth both meanes and the end This is sufficient to stoppe the clamours of the Lutherans Tim. Doe ye thinke so of reprobation that it is free also without dependance on infidelity or ill workes fore-seene Silas In that some are not chosen to life it is without all respect of their vnbeleefe as a mouing cause but in that they are not onely refused but also appointed vnto destruction this is not without reference to infidelity sinne which as it is the proper cause of damnation so it moued God to ordaine to destruction but not to refuse and cast out from saluation for this was done to Esau ere he had done euill Secondly it is written God hardneth whom he will his will then is the high and first cause why men are not saued Thirdly God as a Potter may make vessels to ignominy for his wils sake Fourthly as we were corrupt in Adam God could see nothing in any man saue vnbeleefe and sinne And therefore if these had moued him not to chuse all had beene reprobated then Paul also should haue said that the purpose might remaine according to merite Lastly there is no vnrighteousnesse to cast off and refuse for sinne all will confesse this to bee iust Tim. What is the end or finall cause of election Sil. The vtmost end is the praise of his free grace Eph. 1. 5. hence elect are called vessels of mercy Rom 9 23. The nerest cause is mans saluation to attain eternal life and the final cause of reprobation is the praise of his iustice and the destruction of sinners Tim. What be the effects of election Silas Two First grace in this life as redemption by Christ vocation faith iustification adoption sanctification repentance good works perseuerance in grace Secondly vnspeakable and endlesse glory in heauen Tim. Are men and women elected to both these Sil. They be so for first Iacob and Isaac were chosen to the grace of the promise verse 8. but this comprehends al. Secondly it were absurd to separate the means from the end or end from the meanes Thirdly Scripture speaketh thus Acts 13 48. So many as were ordained to life beleeued Fourthly hec speaketh of election which is a preparation of the Vessell of mercie to glorie and which is ioyned with loue which is a willing of eternal life to men and all things which bring thither Tim. What vse of this point Silas It confuteth the Papists which say it is to grace and not to glory this they attribute to mans merits Secondly it reprooues such as thinke themselues elect to life they wanting notwithstanding the meanes of effectuall calling and good life Thirdly it comforts such as haue the means that they are sure they be elected to the end for meanes and end be linked together Ti. May they perish whō God hath chosen purposed to saue Sil. No they cannot for the purpose remaines firme Secondly God is vnchangeable and his loue is so too Thirdly then God should not be Almightie if he were not able to saue such as hee was once willing to saue Fourthly there would be no sound comfort to the godly except this foundation of God remaineth sure God knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2 19. Tim. May such as be elect know themselues to be such Silas They may know it by their calling therefore is election heere ioyned with calling and before Rom. 8 28 30 because the counsel of election being hid before in the counsell of God is manifested in our calling Tim. What should this teach vs Silas First that such as haue but an outwarde calling by the Gospell ought to hope well of their owne election that it cōmeth of his purpose to saue them by saith Secondly because many are called which be not chosen it should stirre vp all sorts of Christians to examine their owne hearts whether they haue obeyed their Calling hauing their hearts changed from vnbeleefe and loue of sinne to faith and loue and practise of righteousnesse Thirdly let such as yet feele not this calling not dispair for who knoweth what may be tomorrow God calleth and turneth at all houres Mat. 20 1 2. Example in Paul and the theefe c. Tim. What are we to thinke of the election of others Silas First let euery man be most careful of his owne to assure it to himselfe by graces of the Spirit 2 Pet. 5 6 7. Secondly in charitie we are to hope well of all which heare the word and outwardly obey it 1 Thess. 1 6. Leaue to God the iudgement of certainty and the searching of hearts DIAL VII Verse 12 13. It was sayde vnto her the elder shall serue the yonger as it is written I haue loued Iacob hated Esau. Tim. VVHat is the end and scope of these words Silas To declare that the difference betweene one man and another touching grace and eternall life depends onely vppon Gods purpose and election and not vpon our worthinesse or vnworthinesse This is declared by two Oracles of God or testimonies of Scripture The first is taken out of Genes 25 23. The latter is taken out of Mal. 1 2. Tim. What is the meaning of the former place of Genesis Sil. That Iacob the younger brother should be Lord and Esau the elder should serue him Tim. This difference might come by chance or by their own deserts Silas Not so for first it was spoken ere they had done good or euill Secondly by another place of Malachy it is shewed that Iacobs dominion came from Gods loue and Esaus bondage from his hatred therefore it is Gods onely purpose which discerned between them and consequently betweene all other men Tim. But doe these words taken out of Genesis fitly belong to proue Gods eternall election to be the soueraigne cause of eternall saluation in heauen Silas Yea they are so or else Paul being ledde by the Spirit of God would not haue alleadged thē so for it were blasphemy against Christ to say that Paul did alleadge the Scriptures false or vnfitly being an Apostle of Christ who in his doctrine was priuiledged from erring as all other Apostles were Tim. Tell vs then how the lordship of Iacob and seruitude of Esau may proue that for which it is cited men may bee poore and lye in prison and be
predestination whereas God expresly faith that he sheweth mercy where hee will and sheweth not mercy where hee will not these wicked men contend with God and charge him to be cruell and tyranicall when they heare it taught out of Scripture that for his meere will sake GOD doeth reprobate some forgetting thēselues to be vnmatches with God pulling vpon themselues worthily that woe threatned to things formed which striue with their Former Esay 54. 9. Secondly from hence are reprooued such as mislike any of Gods workes as their owne estate or condition of life or of the weather or such like workes of God as they which suppose and sticke not to speake that it had bin better for them that they had been made rich or of more strēgth c. what is this but for the thing formed to picke quarrell or prescribe lawes to the maker Thirdly heere is a warning vnto all the children of God to holde themselues content in all things with that which pleaseth God doe it neuer so much exceede their reason or crosse their affections adoring with reuerence and humility such iudgements of his as they are not able to conceiue the true causes after the example of Iob chap. 1. and of Dauid 2. Sam. 15. 23. Tim. What other doctrine are we to gather out of the 21. ver Silas That the power and right that God hath ouer men as touching their finall ends is absolute and vndependant without any respect at all to any thing or merite in man good or bad either to their sin actuall or originall or to theis holinesse faith and good workes For albeit it is most true that good workes are loued of God and freely rewarded in heauen and there are neuer any condemned in hell but for their sinnes either of birth as in Infants or of life too as in men of yeares which is enough to cleare God of iniustice and cruelty that he neuer executes any iustice vpon his creature but for his foregoing iniquities yet the Apostle when hee lookes backe to the high and soueraigne cause of Gods decree touching mens finall estate hee setteth downe none other but the absolute power and will of God that hee may appoint of euery man as hee pleaseth for God doeth whatsoeuer hee pleaseth both in heauen and earth Tim. How may this doctrine bee gathered from this text Silas The very text giueth power to the Potter to put vpon the pot what forme and vse he will with as good yea and much better reason it standeth that the like power be ascribed vnto God the reason is because there is no proportion betweene God and a Potter who is by infinit degrees inferiour to God Secondly the Potter hath the clay made to his hands but Gods hand made all men and therefore his right ouer men is farre greater then can bee the Potters ouer the Pot which is onely formed and not created by him For as touching God his right is such and so absolute that he might haue made man or not haue made him hauing made him vpright hee might haue brought him to nothing as he made him of nothing and all being corrupt in Adam he might haue reprobated and refused all without any wrong nay most iustly concerning all which none could haue controuled him sithence hee did all this not of any necessity of his nature but out of the liberty of his will and absolutenes of his power which as it is vnsistable so it is vncontroulable by flesh bloud yea by any creature in earth or in heauen the greatest men are vnder another God at least is aboue them but God is supreme and hath none aboue him Tim. But what difference is then betwixt God and such other tyr annicall rulers as for their pleasure sake destroy their subiects as the Muscouians the Turkes c. Silas Yes there is great difference first these Princes made not their subiects Secondly their power is limited by law and conscience or religion they be set vp by God and must raigne for God Thirdly being sinfull men their luste and desire is sinfull whereas Gods will is pure Lastly tyrants respect wicked endes to satisfie their sauadge cruelty whereas Gods purpose in sauing or destroying respects the praise of his 〈◊〉 and mercy most holy and good ends Tim. Tell vs what vse we are to make of this doctrine Silas First it reproues such as make Gods decree of reprobation to depend vppon Gods fort seeing sin in men Tim. What reasons haue we against this Silas First a plaine text verse 9. and 15. Secondly 〈◊〉 abridgeth the absolute will and power of God and subiecteth his will to mens merites Thirdly then all mon being sinners by nature must needs be 〈◊〉 and cast away Fourthly then had there beene an cause to obiect iniustice to God for euery one will confesse it iust to reprobate for originall sin foreseene but without respect of vnworthines to do it argueth iniquity Tim. What other vse of this doctrine Silas It serues to teach all men patience in 〈◊〉 and thankfulnesse in prosperity for seeing all which hapneth dependeth on Gods will it is reason to bee patient if ought fall out not well and thankfull to God if all be well Tim. What other doctrine from this 21. verse Silas That all men are not elect because there are vessels to dishonour Againe the similitude of a pot doeth warne vs of our 〈◊〉 and britle estate howsoeuer strong wee soeme to be yet we are broken asunder very quickly euen as a pot is so one quashed so is man as an earthen vessell which consideration should serue to worke both humility seeing we are so feeble and mortall and watchfulnesse also seeing wee know not when the pot will breake at what houre the thiefe wil come death being euer at our elbowes and the time as vncertaine as the thing is certaine DIAL XIIII Verse 22. What and if God would to shew his wrath and to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath which he hath prepared to destruction Tim. IS the reading of this verse full or is there somthing lacking to perfect the reading Silas There must be a supply of a word or two as thus who shall accuse God or what hast thou to obiect against him Tim. Tell vs now the drife and purpose of this text Silas The purpose is to cleare the counsell of Gods reprobation from al tyranny by rehearsing the true causes reasons why God electeth some and reiecteth others all being equall both by creation and coruption of nature this is the argument Whosoeuer hath absolute right wil doe nothing but vpon good causes and reasons can be no tyrant Such an one is God our celestiall Potter therefore hee is not guilty of iniustice or cruelty though he appoint some to glory and others to punishment eternally for all his endes bee as righteous as his power is soueraigne Tim. Declare vnto vs these finall
the preseruer of man and beast and sustaines all thinges by his mighty worde Heb. 1. 3. Tim. In what meaning is it sayed that all thinges are through Christ and doe consist by him 1. Cor. 8. 6. Colos. 1 17. Silas Not as by an instrument and one inferiour to the Father as the toole is inferiour to the crafts-man as the Arians would haue it who are confuted by this our present text where it is said of God the Father that all things are through him yet he is very God in which sence it is elsewhere of Christ written that all thinges are thorough him as by a working cause or as by the wisedome of the soueraigne creator of the world see Pro. 8. 27. 28. 29. as an Artificer exerciseth his art by his wisedome so God rules all by his Sonne Iohn 5. All iudgement is committed vnto the Sonne Tim. What is the doctrine from these wordes thus expounded Silas That the same God who is the maker of al things is both the ruler and supporter of all things disposing of all things as he will or sustayning them so long as he will for hee doeth whatsoeuer pleaseth him Psal. 115 3. and worketh all things after the counsell of his will Ephesians 1. 11. hence he is called the iudge of the worlde Gene. 18. 25. the King of nations Icr. 10 7. because hee hath all thinges subiect to his direction and becke both within without the Church he turneth the hearts of Kinges as the riuers of waters Prou. 〈◊〉 1. The answere of the tongue is from God Pro. 16 1. and verse 33. Though the lot saith Salomon be cast into the lap yet the disposition is from God and he is tearmed in scripture The God of battell Now if the issue of Lots and warres be through God guided by his prouidence then other thinges that are further off from chaunce and fortune must needes bee ordered by his will Tim. What profite may wee draw from the knovvledge heereof Silas It instructeth Christians to depend on God alone for all good thinges and in the vse of meanes by prayer to seeke vnto him for a blessing for as his goodnesse giues vs the meanes so his prouidence must make it effectuall to our benefite Secondly it exhorteth all men that receiue any good spiritually or bodily thankfully to acknowledge it to come from God and in euill things to bee patient and wel-pleased with God because they are sent of him after the example of Iob 1 21. and of Dauid Psal. 39. Tim. Wherefore doth the Apostle say that all thinges are for God Silas His meaning is that all things are of him and of no other moouing cause and by himselfe none other helping him so they are onely for his owne glorie and for no other end for he made all thinges for himselfe Prou. 16 4. Reuel 4 11. hee predestinateth adopteth and iustifieth men to the praise of his glorious grace Ephes 1 5 6. Hence our duty is to giue him glory in and for all things 1 Cor. 10 30. as the riuers which flow out of the Sea returne thither againe so God is to bee praised for all good things because of him alone they proceed herein true children are discerned frō Bastards who haue no affection toward the glory of God whereas his adopted children make it the scope of all their actions Tim. What may we learne by the last wordes To him bee glory c Silas That all must effect and approoue Gods glorie vpon all good occasions desiring it with all our heartes and gladsomnesse willingly ratifying it which is a very sure token of an adopted childe of God to wish and approoue his Fathers honour with griese to thinke of the hurt done to it by blasphemies and other wickednesse and with much ioy studying how to promote it in their liues and callings by praiers and praises good practises especially where there is this good minde in any measure after the hallowing of Gods name it is a good mark of one who in truth saith O our Father CHAP. XII Exhortation to morall Duties DIALOGVE 1. Verse 1. I beseech you therefore Brethren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God which is your reasonable soruing of God Timotheus SHew vs how this Chapter dooth depend vpon the former Silas In the former Chapters Paul had handled doctrinal points of Faith as Iustification Sanctification Predestination vnto the end of the eleauenth Chapter Heere at the 12. Chapter hee beginneth the next part of his Epistle which is pareneticall or exhortatorie for he exhorteth all Christian professors in the person of the Romanes vnto duties morall in this chapter Secondly vnto ciuill in the next Thirdly vnto charity about things indifferent in the 14. part of the fifteenth Chapters and then descends vnto familiar things Chapter sixteenth Tim. What Method and Order doth the Apostle keepe in this Chapter Silas Hee exhorteth vnto generall duties belonging vnto all Christians affirmatiuely in the first verse shewing what they should do and negatiuely in the second verse warning what they should not do after that from the third verse vntil the ninth verse he perswadeth vnto particular duties which are to be done in respect of some degree or function ecclesiasticall Lastly in the ninth verse hee returneth vnto common duties which appertaine vnto al professors vnto the end of the Chapter Tim. Tell vs what is the sum of this first verse which wee haue chosen for our Text Silas It is an earnest exhortation to stirre vp al christians whatsoeuer with all their power to study and endeauour to leade their liues holily and iustly In this exhortation there are to be noted two things chiefly first the matter which is to become a liuing sacrifice to God This Sacrifice is qualified with fiue conditions and confirmed or vrged with two reasons Of the conditions the first is to be voluntarie in these words the yee present Secondly that it must be of the body that is of the whole man by a Synecdoche Thirdly a liuing one Fourthly holy Fiftly reasonable Now the reasons of the exhortation be two one from the mouing cause Gods Mercies the other from the finall end That GOD may be pleased Tim. What is the other grand or maine thing to be considered in this verse Silas The manner of the exhortation which is by a sweete obtestation I beseech you and by a louing compellation Brethren that is all Christian professors which haue one common faith and religion Tim. What instructions may we take from this milde manner of exhortaion Silas That the Ministers of Christ must not alwayes stand vpon their authority nor alwayes vse seuerity but sometimes deale by milde intreaties and perswasions Philē 8 9 10. For Ministers be fathers who be milde and deale gently Secondly the Spirite of the Gospell is the spirite of loue Thirdly the Children of God being of an ingenuous
others they were perfect in knowledge All knowledge but farre from that perfection which is now and shal be among the celestiall spirits at the last 1 Cor. 13 7 8 c. The third part of their praise is ability or gift to admonish each other being as so many Monitors or masters such as could see what was conuenient to bee done a wise mans part and put others in minde of their duty Tim. What is our Doctrine from these wordes thus expounded Silas That it is a dutie very praiseworthy in a Christian to be able and willing to giue admonition The Reasons hereof are first it declareth our obedience vnto God requiring it Leuit. 19 17. 1 Thes. 5 11. Secondly our charity towards the Bretheren which want admonition whereby they are preserued from sinne and destruction and wonne to righteousnesse and saluation if they hearken and obey Math. 18 15. which made Dauid desirous to seeke it Psal. 141 5. Thirdly it is one of the right and holye vses of our vnderstanding and wisedome in the word to apply it to the warning of others as Col. 3 16. Such then as cannot or list not or care not to admonish others loose a speciall praise bewraying want of the feare of God and of loue to men and such as do admonish let them go forwards the more chearfully the more commendable this duty is which Paul had not so praysed but that it is much to be esteemed and exercised Tim. What are we to learne further from verse 14. Silas That there be two graces behoouefull to them who shall well discharge this duty of admonishing The first is goodnesse the second is knowledge for without goodnesse or integrity of life our admonitions will bee of no force whilst it may bee saide to vs Physitian heale thy selfe and Hypocrite plucke the beame out of thy owne eye Secondly when a man himselfe is blameable he cannot freely and boldly admonish another see Rom. 〈◊〉 21 22. Thirdly he that would haue hope of doing good in reproouing others had neede to be vnreprooucable else what hope hath hee that God will blesse his admonitions The other grace required heereto is a good measure of knowledge to guide vs to see and know wherefore to admonish and when and where and whom and by whom our selues or others and in what maner out of loue and pitty roughly or mildely directly or indirectly openly or priuately and to what end how long till we haue hope that we cast not pearles before Swine and in what words euen in the words of Scripture for they haue most authority and there is no exceptions against them To these purposes it is no meane wisedom will serue therefore Paul requireth in such as shall admonish their Brethren that the word of God dwel richly in them in al that is much and manifold wisedome Col. 3 16. And if to this one duty such and so great skil be needful then iudge what cause there is for Christians to search and study the Scriptures diligently and religiously hauing so many other more waighty offices to do in their generall and particular callings Tim. What vse are we to make of this truth Silas Hence is matter of exhortation both to the admonishers to furnish thēselues with store of knowledge as they may admonish with power and profit And vnto the admonished to take in good worth good warninges from their brethren yea although not alwayes giuen with such wisedome and loue as were meete for God is not bound to set a discreete godlye person aworke to warne thee not alwayes to send an Abigail a Iethro c. but sometime by a poore silly maide or man seruant our Inferiours both in place 2 Kinges 5 3 13. As thou wilt not refuse rich treasure because it comes through fowle hands so cast not away reproof and counsel for the folly or faults of him who giueth it Heare afoole a knaue an enemy if he bring truth and reason as wel as a friend an honest man or a wise man Balaam must heare his Asse else he had dyed for it Tim. But seeing the Romanes were so full of knowledge and goodnes wherfore did Paul so largely and boldly write vnto them as if they had beene very obstinate and ignorant ones Silas He answereth to this obiection in verse 15. that he did it not to teach thē what they knew not but partly to the end to remember them of things they knew already and might forget and partly for his function sake which he setteth forth by the efficient cause Grace because his Apostolicall authority and gifts were of fauour giuen him being a persecutor Vpon these causes he had written not somewhat that is some thing and left out others as necessary by tradition of Church to be supplyed as the great Iesuit dreamed for the Scripture is perfect but somewhat must goe with boldely and then the meaning is that with some liberty and freedome of wordes befitting the grauity of the matter and of my calling Wherein ye see Paul confessed no fault but iustified rather his acte as good for them to bee put in remembrance of necessary things and meet for him being their Apostle and minister therefore Bellarmine vnskilfully vnconsideratly matcheth this with the excuse of the author of the Machabees in his 2. book ch 15 ver 39. Tim. What Doctrines gather ye hence Silas Two the first is that boldnesse admonitions reproofes become well Gods messengers First for the commandement sake Es. 58 1. Cry aloud spare not tell c. Earnestnes and freedome of speech is heere inioyned to Gods messengers Secondly a Messenger is not onely to do his Lords message but in maner and forme as he is required Thirdly if sin like a strumpet be bold to appear why should not Gods Seruants be bold to controule it Fourthly there is great danger if we faile heerein both to the sinner Ezek. 3 18 19. and to the Minister Ier. 1. 17. Speake to them or I will destroy thee It is true the performance of this will cause such as loue and liue in the seruice of sinne to account their reproouers enimies as Achab did Elias and the Galatians Paul and obserue all his wayes narrowly to see if they can haue any occasion or aduantage to accuse or to hurt him as those places can testifie where Ministers do with this holy liberty testifie against euils and sinnes but better to haue all men our enemies then to haue God alone to bee against vs and if we cannot saue others yet it standeth vs vpon to deliuer our owne soules The second Doctrine is that Gods Ministers are Gods remembrancers to put the people in minde For men euen the best are forgotful yea of common and commonly knowne duties by which meanes they run into great euils Did not Dauid in his fury against Naball forgette that he ought not to kill or reuenge till Abigail remembred him And Peter in his feare forget Christes premonition touching the thrice
of the Law But neyther the one or the other be iustifyed by Workes both being sinners which touching the Gentiles is cleared in Ch. 2. and concerning the Iews in Ch. 3. ver 21. therefore Iustification of both is only by beliefe in Christ. Which conclusion is found Ch. 3. verse 22 c. Verse 1 2 3. Salutation 1 Paula Sernant of Iesus Christ called to bee an Apostle put apart to Preach the Gospel of God 2 Which he hath Promised afore by his Prophets in the Holy Scriptures 3 Concerning his Sonne Iesus Christ our Lorde which was made of the seed of Dauid according to the Flesh c. Tim. What things were noted in this Salutation Si. Three things first the person Saluting secondly the persons Saluted thirdly the thing which hee wished vnto them and prayed for Tim. What do ye note in the Person Saluting how is hee described Silas First his Office both by the perticuler that he was an Apostle or Ambassador and generall that he was a seruant of Iesus Christ that is a Minister or seruitor of Christ in publishing his will by preaching the Gospell and not onely a seruaunt as other Christians by common profession secondly by the Doctrine which he taught whereof he entereth into commendation Tim. Whence had he this Office Silas Not by men nor of men but immediately by the calling of Iesus Christ Acts 9 12 3 4. Tim. Wherefore doth he speake of his Calling Silas First in respect of false Apostles who charged him to be an intruder secondly to shew that he had authoritie to teach and that they were bound to obey because he brought a Diuine doctrine and did not offer to teach them by intrusion and vsurpation but by a iust lawfull and diuine vocation Tim. How came he by such a Calling from Christ Silas Not by his owne merits either foreseene or present as Origen thought but by the eternal decree of God who set him apart for that seruice of preaching the Doctrine of saluation as it is heere saide put apart to Preach to wit to the Gentiles Acts 23. which was both from the instant of his birth Gal. 2 15. at the time of his calling to the Apostleship and from euerlasting by an eternall election as Chrysostom and after Peter Martyr affirmeth From whence we learn that our Callings guists and fruits of them dependeth vpon Gods election that all flesh may be humbled before God ascribing to themselues none but all praise to God and free grace from euerie thing which is in them or done by them or to them Furthermore in that by the will and Councell of God his vocation was assigned for Paul and hee sanctified and put apart for it as Ieremy was Chap. 1. 5. long before any manifestation thereof to themselues or to the world let vs heereby be warned neither rashlie to rush into a calling running before wee be sent of God centrary to the practise of Aaron and Christ. Heb. 5. 4. nor beeing sent and called with-draw our selues from our appointed function least we be found to fight against God whiles we would appeare to men to bee shamefast For such an infirmity sake God was angrie with Moyses Exod. 3. and punished Ionas Chap. 1. Paul commended for the contrary vertue his readinesse to obey his calling gal 1. 16. 17. Also Iohn the Baptist. Iohn 1. 7. Tim. By what Arguments or Reasons is the Doctrine of the Gospell commended to vs in this place Silas First by the Effects It is a Doctrin of Ioy and Comfort for so much the word Gospell signifieth as ye would say a good spell or word of good tidings Luke 2. 10. Secondly by the Efficient cause It is reuealed from Heauen of God himselfe and teacheth the Grace of God therefore called the Gospell of God Thirdlie by the Antiquity it was first published and promised by the Prophets Gal. 3. 13. Fourthly by the Subiect and Matter which it handleth and that is the Sonne of God Incarnate and made Man also Sauiour and Redeemer for mans eternall Saluation Lastly by a proper End which is to engender the obedience of Faith in the Name of Christ Verse 5. Tim. What doth this admonish vs of Silas First of the neuer sufficiently loued and praised goodnesse of God who would commit to vs such a doctrine for Quality so comfortable for Authority so diuine for Continuance so ancient for Matter and subiect so very excellent and glorious Secondly of our owne duty towards this Doctrine of the Gospell Tim. What is our Christian duty towards the word of the Gospell Silas First in our Iudgements to approoue it and esteeme it aboue Pearles and most precious and profitable things Secondly in our minds to marke and heed it well Thirdly in our harts to beleeue it Fourthly in our affections to loue it and put our chiefe delight in it Fiftly in our memories to keepe it and treasure it Sixtly with our eares to hearken to it Seuenthly with our mouths to consesse it and speake good of it Lastly to submit our whole man to the obedience and practise of of it in all sincerity and constancy Tim. What other thing doth it admonish vs of Silas Of their error which charge it with nouelty or flexiblenesse according to the wils of men and circumstances of time for it is alwaies one and the same like God the Author and it is very ancient it is no vpstart Doctrine as ancient as mans fall and that is most true which was first as that is false which was latter Tim. What learne we by this that we haue that accomplished and most clearely manifested to vs which was onely promised to the people of the Iewes by the Prophets Silas That as God hath shewed forth towardes vs the more excellent Grace so our contempt and vnthankfulnesse if we endeuour not to walke worthy of that grace wil cost vs deare by pulling heauier Iudgements from Heauen vpon vs. Woe to thee Corazin Mat. 11. 21 c. Also learne that the Gospell promised to the Fathers by the Prophets and performed by Christ at his comming is one in substance Tim. What do ye call the Prophets Silas Men called of God to the Ministery of the old Church and furnished with speciall graces both for Interpreting the will of God set downe before by Moyses in his Bookes and also to foretell the will of God touching future euents and namely touching the exhibiting of the Messias and of the good things to be enioyed by his sufferings 1 Pet. 1 11. Tim. What doth this admonish vs of that the promises of Christ are hid in the Scriptures of the Prophets Silas That there is a great correspondency and agreement for truth and matter of Doctrine betweene the Old and the New Testament though great oddes in the measure of reuelation Hence it is said of one that the Old Testament is the hiding of the New and the New is the opening of the Old Tim. What should
things Sil. First they obtained remission of sinnes Secondly they were made inwardly new and outwardly they liued hohly Thirdly they called vpon God with perseuerance communicating together in prayer doctrine breaking of bread and all holy workes Fourthly they stedfastly put their trust in God Fistly they regarded not riches for they laid the price of their things at the Apostles feete Sixtly they gaue testimony of Christ boldly Seauenthly in his quarrell they bestowed their liues and cheerefully shedde their bloud For proose of all these haue your recourse to the history of the Acts. Tim. How is this righteousnes manifested without the law Sil. That is without the workes of the law or without this that the law be fulfilled of vs for some Gentiles were iustified which knew not the lawe also some Iewes were iustified which regarded not the lawe and though some did both knowe regard and doe it as Nathanael and Zachary yet the obseruation of the law by them was not the cause why they were iustified The law then is an helpe to iustification in somuch as it doth accuse and condemn vs and so driues vs to Christ accidentally as a disease brings to the Phisition but the law of it selfe hath no strength to forgiue sinne and to suggest and work faith into our harts or to enable vs to keepe it perfectly that we might bee iustified thereby Tim. How many wayes hath this righteousnes witnes of the law and the Prophets Sil. Sundry waies First by euident and cleere sentences which prophesied of Christ and of faith that iustifieth Secondly by tipes and figures which went before in the old Testament as the brasen Serpent and Ionas his beeing in the Whales belly three daies also the Paschall Lambe the Rocke the Cloud did shew Christ. Thirdly by Sacrifices Offerings and ceremonies of the law the bloud of Lambs Goates did signifie Christ to be slain for sin Fourthly by the Sacraments as Circumcision and the Passeouer all which doe beare testimony that our righteousnes remission of our sinnes and eternall life are not to bee founde in our selues but to be sought by faith in Iesus Christ. DIAL XII Verse 22. I meane the righteousnes of God through the faith of Iesus Christ in all and ouer all that heleeue Tim. IN what sence is the faith of Iesus vsed here Sil. Not actiuely for that which Iesus had but passiuely for that faith whereby hee is had and receiued Tim. What is the drift of this text Sil. To open and vnsold more at large that which hee spake concerning the righteousnes of God laying foorth first the instrument whereby it is applied vnto vs which is faith Secondly the persons or subiect vppon whome it is bestowed which be all beleeuers without difference of nations Thirdly the efficient and principall cause of righteousnes which is God And fourthly the materiall cause which is Iesus Christ. Tim. What is the righteousnes of God Sil. That which commeth meerly by Gods good guift and maketh vs acceptable to God euen able to stand before God this righteousnesse wee doe attaine through faith which iustifieth obiectiuely because it leadeth to Christ and instrumentally as the hand of the soule to apprehend it therefore it is written the righteousnes of God through faith Tim. What are the kinds of faith Sil. Foure first historicall which is a knowledge of the history and letter or of the doctrine of the Scripture thence called dogmaticall faith Secondly temporarie faith which is a knowledge of the trueth with an assent to it for a time Math. 13. 21. Thirdly miraculous which is a beleefe that by the power of God straunge wonders may be done 1 Corin. 13. 1 2. Fourthly iustifying faith by the which the righteousnes of God is receiued Of this iustifying faith there are two parts the first is a knowledge of the things to be beleeued as Iohn 6. 69. wee know and beleeue Secondly application of them to our selues Tim. How proue ye that there must bee application in true faith Sil. First by the commaundement beleeue the Gospell Marke 16 1 5. Secondly by the nature of faith which is an hand to drawe Christ to vs. Thirdly by the example of Scripture as Dauid Psalme 18 2. Mary Luke 1 28. Thomas Iohn 20 28. Fourthly by reason for howe can Christ profit vs if he be not applied and put on by faith And 5. by the testimony of the learned which teach true faith to be particular with application as Hierom Cyril c. Tim. What actions are required vnto faith Sil. These fiue First approbation of the things beleeued Secondly expetition in an ernest desire of them 3 〈◊〉 apprehension in a fast laying hold of them Fourthly oblectation in delighting my selfe in them Fiftly expectation in looking certainly to inioy them Tim. What be the degrees of faith Silas Three-fold First such a faith which is a true and earnest desire to beleeue the promises of Christ. Secondly a little faith which is a certaine assurance that the same belongs to vs. Thirdly a full perswasion when the heart is strongly assured thereof ioyned with a sure and certaine knowledge of things hoped for Heb. 11 1. Tim. What is the obiect of Faith Silas Christ Iesus in whom wee do consider three things First his person God and Man Secondly his Offices King Priest and Prophet Thirdly his benefits Remission of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reconciliation adoption sanctification eternall life Tim. What are the persons vnto whom God 〈◊〉 Christ with his benefits Sil. All the beleeuers and onely the beleeuers Tim. What thinke ye of the elect Infants are they Beleeuers Tim. Some think them to be iustified by the beleefe of the Church Others thinke it to be by the beleefe of their parents Others by the beleefe of sureties Others by some secret worke of the spirit But I think that they are saued by their owne faith as it is generally written The iust shall liue by his owne faith Tim. But they want knowledge without which there is no Faith Sil. True they lacke knowledge which is by discourse yet they are not altogither without some knowledge such as for their age they are capeable of as appeareth by this that reason is in children though they want the vse of it Also by the example of Ieremy Iohn Baptist and Christ all which had the light of the Spirit in their infancy being sanctified in the wombe Tim. What vse was made of this Sil. That men which haue not true faith should labor to get it seeing no righteousnes is had without it nor saluation but by it Secondly such as haue it should cherish and labour to encrease it by all good means and be thankfull to God for it Thirdly to take comfort to our selues vpon the death of young children seeing God who hath made a Couenant of life with them doeth worke in them to beleeue in him DIAL XIII Verse 23 24. For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are
are not vnder the law he doeth now purpose to auoyde offence and for larger instruction to lay forth the true vse of the lawe both in respect of men vnregenerate and regenerate the vse of the law touching men vnregenerate is threefold First the true knowledge of sin which is shewed vs by the law this is in the seauenth verse Secondly the encrease or irritation of sin in the eight verse Thirdly death or the sence of Gods anger for sin in the 9. verse and other verses following Tim. How doeth the Apostle enter into this treatise to extoll and commend the vse of the law Sylas By a prolepsis or preuention of some thing which might be obiected or alledged against his former doctrine in the fifth verse vnto which in this verse hee doeth make an answere so as the parts of this text be two The first is an obiection moued by way of question in these wordes What shall we say then is the lawe sin The second is a replication or answere in the wordes following God forbid c. Tim. Tell vs nowe the summe of this obiection and from whence did it arise Silas The Summe is thus much Is the Law the cause of sinne For this is the meaning of these words Is the Law sinne that is to say doth the Law beget it bring it forth and leade vs vnto sin This obiection ariseth from this that Paul had taught that the affections of sinne were by the Law verse 5. which some aduersary belike taking hold of it did so wrest it or might so turne it as if hee had taught that the the Law did perswade to sinne and were the proper efficient cause of it which contumelious and reproachfull slander would haue touched God the Author Tim. What instruction may me gather from this part of the Text touching the Obiection Sil. These two First that no Doctrine can bee so sound nor so warily deliuered but malicious personnes will cauill and wrest it to a contrary meaning This proceeds from an hatred they beare vnto their teachers which causeth them that they distaste their doctrine and carpe at it Secondly the Ministers of Christ must bee careful and able not only to propound the truth soundly but to defende it against wicked obiections and cauillations otherwise there is danger least weake and vnstable mindes be peruerted and drawn from the truth by such as speak against it our nature being more prone to suck in error then to receiue the truth Tim. Tell vs now how the Apostle doth answere the former Obiection Sil. Two waies First by infiiciation or denial in these words God forbid which are wordes that vtter a loathing or detestation of such an impiety as to make the Law the cause of sinne as if he should say He was so far from doing any such thing as he did abhorre the motion or thought of any such Doctrine Tim. What instruction haue we from this part of Paules answere Sil. That it is our dutie when wee heare the truth of God depraued not onely to mislike it but to declare that we haue it in detestation and abhomination which serues to reprooue cold and indifferent Christians who can abide to heare the true Ministers of Christ and their Doctrine to be slaundered without any care or greefe like to Luke warme Laodiceans Tim. What is the next and second part of Paules 〈◊〉 Silas By argumentation and sound reason fetched taken from the contrary As thus The Law cannot bee the cause to beget and perswade sinne for that it is the Instrument to discouer it and make sinne knowne vnto vs detecting the deceits and assaults of such an enemie that wee beware of it as Paules Kinsman detected the treason of the Iewes against Paul Vpon which detection of sinne if sinne do the more rage and rebell in vs against the will of God this is not to be imputed to the Law but to our corrupt Nature which growes worse more fierce by that which should restraine and helpe it All this the Apostle proues by his owne example for he confesseth that there were some sinnes which hee knew not to be sinnes till the Law did reueale them vnto him to be so whereof he giues instance in lustes or in the euill motions of the minde suddenly conceiued vvithout the consent of our will of which he saith That had not the Law told him they had beene sinnes saying Thou shalt not Lust hee had not mistrusted them or thought them to be such greeuous matters as to bee offences of God and to deserue damnation I had not knowne lust except the Lord had saide c. Tim. What are wee to learne by this that the Apostle names himselfe and prooues these thinges by his owne experience Silas Two thing first it is lawfull for the Ministers of the worde to report what they haue learned by their owne experience in the matter of sin and saluation this is a great helpe and confirmation of the hearers if it bee truely and discreetly done Secondly this example of Paul directs all men to enter and go downe into themselues to get vnderstanding of their estate and case the reason is because till they come to see and feele howe corrupt and wretched they are through sinne they will neuer be humble nor perceiue what need they haue of Christ but contrariwise they will rather despise and set light by the doctrine of free Saluation by the bloud of Christ as it hapned vnto this Apostle who being a Pharify before he descēded into himself and searched his heart by the light of Gods law he tooke himselfe to be righteous by the workes which he did and not onely neglected Christ but persecuted the doctrine of grace howbeit after the lawe had reuealed vnto him the corruption of his nature and shewed him that his euill desires though not consented to were sinnes and woorthy of death and after that he beleeued and considered this it greatly danted him made him see and feele that al his righteousnesse of workes and ciuill honesty was nothing and that hee was a dead man without Christ. Therefore they are in a miserable case which haue not got the true knowledge of themselues by the law for such cannot nor will not seeke after the grace and health of the Gospell Tim. Now ye haue told vs what we are to learn from the manner of his answere let vs heare what the matter of his answere will teach vs Silas It teacheth vs sundry things the first is a speciall office of the law which is to shew bewray sin vnto vs as by a glasse we come to see the spots of our face so by the law wee come to know our sinnes and as by the light of the Sun we discouer little moates so the light of Gods lawe detects euen the least offences against God or our neighbour this office of shewing sin vnto vs the law performes in sundry
to his Sonne Christ to enioy his righteousnesse and life they must feele their owne death denounced by the law against the desert of their sins for howsoeuer there were in Pauls conuersion somethings extraordinary yet this is ordinary to him with other elect sinners First to be killed by the law in the sence of their sinnes and damnation ere they be made aliue by the grace of the Gospell Tim. Whereto serueth this Silas First to comfort them which haue got a tast of their owne destruction and are troubled and humbled by it such are in a good way to Christ as a corasiue or potion when it smarts workes a good signe Secondly it serueth sharply to reproue such as are forward to draw the promises of life vnto themselues before the lawe hath slayne and wrought a sence of death in them it is all one as if they would haue their wound or sore healed without lanching their disease or sicknes cured without phisick Tim. We haue heard that not the law but sinne beeing irritated by the lawe workes death what would the Apostle haue vs to learne by that Sylas That it brings to open knowledge the malice of our naturall sinnne and prauity which consists heerein in that it doeth abuse perniciously such a good thing as the lawe is to the encreasing of sinne and to the woorking of death This may bee set forth by the comparison of such stubborn diseases as are made the worse by such remedies as are applyed to heale them euen such a vile thing sinne is which taketh occasion to breake out more vehemently by that meanes which was giuen to restrayn it And it is in this sence saide of sinne that it is made by the lawe out of measure sinfull partly because by the knowledge of the law sinne which was hid before doeth now shewe it selfe to bee more grieuous and partly because by the restraynt of the law it doth rage more vnmeasurably Tim. What vse is to be made of this truth Sil. First to be humbled considering that wee carry such a poysoufull thing in our owne bosome Secondly to be very watchfull ouer our owne heart taking diligent heed vnto it least the in-bred venoune break out Thirdly to 〈◊〉 vs to pray vnto God in hearing the Law that our vicious nature abuse it or to the waxing worse thereby Lastly tobe thankfull 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ by whose soueraigne grace this malady is begun to bee cured in vs and shall be perfectly healed at the time of our dissolution by death Hitherto we haue seene three excellent vses of the Law first discouery of sin secondly life and blessednesse if it be obeyed also death if it bee disobeyed thirdly irritation and encreasing of sinne and of destruction this happeneth accidentally and is not of the Law it selfe as the two former DIAL X. Verse 14. For we know the Law is Spirituall Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe or whereunto tendeth it Sylas A reason for to proue why it is not to be reckned as a fault in the law if vpon the knowledge thereof there followes death because the law is spirituall but the Spirit is properly the cause of life and therefore it cannot bee properly the cause of death for one and the same efficient cause cannot by it selfe produce two contrary effects vnlesse it be in respect of a subiect diuersly affected as the Sun hardeneth clay and softeneth waxe Tim. In what meaning is the Law called spirituall Silas First because it is not giuen by men but God himselfe by his Spirit was the inditer of it Secondly because it reacheth not to the outward man onely but to the most inward motions of our minde and will requiring obedience from our very spirits and thoughts yea requiring a spirutually euen a perfect and Angelicall obedience in soule and body Thirdly because this inward obedience of the Law must come from that Spirit which is the author of the Law in these respects it is called spirituall But this property of Spirituall cannot be affirmed of the whole law For the ceremoniall law stood in bodily rites The iudiciall law did respect outward acts Therefore it is meant onely of the morall law the ten Commandements of which it may be affirmed that euery Commandement of it is spirituall striking at the roote and piercing euen the very soule and spirit of a man such is the nature of the world answerable to the nature of God who searcheth hearts and thoughts Heb. 4 12 13. Tim. What benefit are we to make to our selues from hence that Gods Law is spirituall Silas First heere we learne a difference betweene the ciuill lawes of men and the lawes of God the former take no knowledge of thoughts except they be vttered in words and actes the latter doth Secondly one may keepe all the lawes of men and yet be a very vicious and wicked person whereas Gods law teacheth to follow all vertue and to shunne all vice Thirdly it is not enough to conforme a mans selfe to Gods own law namely in outward actions onely without internall obedience Fourthly it reprooues such as thought the Law of Moyses to require no more then externall duties as the Pharisies expounded the Law See Math. 5. Fifthly it prooues to vs that the Law is vnpossible to bee kept of vs who cannot in this flesh attaine such exacte puritie and so reprooues the Papists who teach that we may merite by workes and doe more then the Law commands cuē works supererogatory Sixtly it helps to vnderstand the true meaning of the Law that in the forbidding or commanding of outward workes euill or good God forbids and commands the very first thoughts and desires of those workes Seauenthly it doth admonish all men as they would please God to haue more care about the ordering of the inward motions then of the outward actions Lastly it must warne vs with earnest prayer to craue helpe of God to strengthen vs by his Spirite to giue obedience to the Law in some measure of truth and sincerity Tim. What learne wee by this that the Apostle saith wee know that the Law is spirituall Silas It teacheth vs that this doctrine was not vncertaine and doubtfull but well and publikely vnderstood and knowne in the Church onely Secondly it reprooueth such as liue in ignorance of the nature of the Law which is a dangerous thing for it causeth men to rest content with outward ciuility and honesty of manners with neglect of the inward reformation of the heart which is the maine duty of a Christian as appeareth in the example of Pharisies Mat. 23 throughout Whereas Christians must exceed the righteousnesse of Scribes and Pharisies Math 5 20. and imitate Zachary and Elizabeth Luke 1 6. DIAL XI Verse 14. But I am carnall sold vnder sinne Tim. VVHat is the drift and purpose of this Scripture Silas In these words the Apostle doth confesse and bewaile his remaining natural corruption and so maketh
deeds 1. Thes. 5 17. Nehem. 2 4. Fourthly when they haue spoken or done any good thing they doe not returne the praise of it to God 1. Cor. 10 31. Lastly they are not resolued to suffer reproach and wrong for their profession and well doing Mat 10 37. Luke 14 27. Tim. Now shew vs who may be said to walke after the Spirite Silas Not they who haue some good desires and deeds but they whose course of life and actions for the tenour of them are euermore constantly ruled by the motion of Gods Spirit which they follow as their guide and leader as it is not a faire day wherein the Sunne shineth now and then if there be foule weather in the rest Tim. May not a man slippe and trip in his way sometimes yea stumble and fall and yet be saide to walke after the Spirit Silas It is right so because a spirituall or godly conuersation must not be iudged of by one or a few actions but by the tenour of it and as it holds and is for the most and greatest part otherwise none should be said to walke after the Spirite because there is none that liues and sinneth not Tim. What be the sortes of them that walke after the Spirite Sil. Two Some strong as Abraham Dauid c. some weake as the Apostles of Christ were before the ascension of the Lord. Tim. What be the markes of one that walkes after the Spirite Silas These two First an earnest desire both to know and to walke in the good way Secondly a sincere sorrow for his failing and fals and arising by repentance and the contrary to these fiue before mentioned Tim. What profit comes there of these things Silas First it reprooues such as boast that they are in Christ and yet shewe the contrary by their walking after the flesh Secondly it assureth them that walke after the Spirite that they are the very members of Christ. Finally it teacheth all men that sanctification of the spirite is an vnseparable companion and fruite of our iustification by faith moisture and water heate and fire light and Sun are not more firmely vnited then faith and holinesse DIAL II. Verse 2. For the law of the Spirite of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed or deliuered me from the law of finne and of death Tim. WHat is the drift and purpose of this Scripture Silas It is a proofe and confirmation of the former verse and of the latter part of it as some thinke by a reason taken from the efficient and begetting cause of holy conuersation to wit the Spirite of Christ 〈◊〉 to the faithfull who hauing communion with Christ haue also fellowship with his Spirite But I rather take it to bee the proofe of the former part of the sentence confirming to vs that there is no condemnation to such as are in Christ which is confirmed by this reason because the Spirite of life which is in Christ the head being allowed vnto his members doth quite abolish sinne and death that though sinne remaine in them yet it shall haue no force to condemne them Tim. What then doe you thinke the summe and substance of this verse to be Silas This verse together with the three following is to be expounded of the third part of our iustification to wit of the perfect holinesse of Christs humane nature imputed to vs as the remedy and couer of our most defiled nature of the deliuery of our impure nature by the imputation of Christs sanctified nature Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas The parts be foure First what that is whereby we are freed for the law of the Spirite c. Secondly what manner of thing this freedome is Thirdly to whom it doth belong Mee Lastly from what euils we are deliuered From the Law of sin and death Tim. Come to the words and tell vs what is heere meant by the spirit Silas Some by the Spirit do vnderstand properly the holy Spirit the third person in the Trinitie which gouernes and rules our minds by his inward motions as by a Law Others by it vnderstand the doctrine of faith or of the Gospell which is a Doctrine of the spirit and life Psal. 19 7. 2 Cor. 2. If we follow this exposition the meaning will be thus much that the Gospell or doctrine of faith doth free that is absolue and pronounce mee free from the Law of sinne and death that is from the guilt and condemnation that the Law of Moyses threatneth vnto sinners This then is a very godly exposition but not fit to this text that doth not at al speak of the law of Moyses which is no where in Scripture called the Law of sinne but forbiddeth it and commandeth wholsome and profitable things neyther doth he entreat heere of the efficacy and power of the Gospell and the doctrine of Faith which is neuer called the Law of the Spirit But I iudge Spirit to be put heere for the worke and efficacy of the Spirit to wit for the grace of Sanctification holinesse which is called a Law because it is like to a Lawe hauing power to gouerne and moderate And the word Life is added to shewe that the Spirit which worketh this is no idle and dead thing but a liuely viuifying quickning Spirit being the author both of an holy life and eternall life and that first in Christ the head for his sake and merit in the faithful his members That this is heere meant may appeare by the opposing and setting it against the law of sinne Vnder which must needes be comprehended corruption of nature being contrarie to holinesse Tim. I graunt then that by the spirit of life is meant the holinesse and purity of mans Nature as a worke of that quickening spirit which ruleth by a Law but whether take you it of holinesse inherent and wrought in our own Nature being regenerate or in Christ his humane nature as in the proper subiect Silas I do take this latter to bee true that it is taken of the Sanctification of Christ his nature My reasons be first because it is written not in vs but in Christ the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ. Secondly because Christ his Sanctification meriteth deliuerance from sin not our sanctification which is but a token and testimony of our purchased deliuerance Thirdly by the imputation of Christes sanctification this comfort that wee shall not be condemned is confirmed vnto vs. Lastly if we interpret it of our begun inherent Sanctification we shall further the rotten opinion of the Papists touching iustification by inherent grace See verse 3 4. Tim. What thing is that deliuerance or freedome which is heere spoken of Silas It is the very selfe-same that Iustification is to wit a full and perfect absoluing vs before the Tribunall of God from the whole guilt and punishment of sinne which comes to vs by the imputation of Christs Sanctification The reason heereof is because it is
was such as is the manhood and nature of euery other man Secondly to shewe vs that howsoeuer a naturall eye could see nothing but the forme of a man yet that he had another euen a diuine nature not to be perceiued but by the eye of faith Tim. Why is sin added here and put to flesh Sil. First because humane nature as we beare it is corrupted with sin but Christ tooke it pure without sin Secondly our nature as Christ tooke it though it were free from the contagion of sin yet it was not free from the effects and fruites of sin for he was subiect to hunger thirst cold nakednesse wearinesse and death it selfe which because they are the necessarie consequents of sin therefore are they here called by the name of sin Tim. What is the instruction that ariseth from these words being thus opened Silas That Christ was truely incarnate and made man for our sakes as God taking mercy on lost mankind is the efficient cause of our freedome so his Son sent is the materiall cause of our freedome Tim. Wherefore was the Son of God rather to take humane nature then the nature of Angels Silas Because the purpose of God was to redeeme and saue not the Angels but mankinde which as it doeth expresse the greatnes of Gods loue to man so it must greatly excite and stirre vp mans loue to God for it is very considerable that men and Angels are both sinners yet the remedy was allowed to vs. Tim. But wherefore was the Son of God to take mans nature pure without sin Sil. Because otherwise he could neither haue been made a sacrifice for vs nor righteousnesse to vs for had hee had our nature with the least sin hee could not onely haue bin no Sauiour to vs but himselfe should haue stood in neede of a Sauior and in stead of giuing righteousnesse to others must haue receiued righteousnes from another Tim. But how was it possible to seuer sin and our nature one from the other Sil. Well enough he that seuered them in the first Adam by creation could tell how to seuer them in the second Adam by incarnation as hee will at length seuer them in all beleeuers at their glorification sin being but an accident which may bee separated without hurt to the subiect Tim. What is the vse of this Sil. First to moue vs to blesse God who hath giuen vs a Sauior holy and separated from sin and sinners Secondly to hunger and thirst after the sanctity and purenesse of Christs humane nature seeing wee haue so great need of it to couer our most vnholy and defiled nature the infection whereof alone is enough to condemne vs without this remedy Tim. What was it that Christ did for vs being made man Sil. He did for sin condemne sin in the flesh Tim. What is meant here by condemne Silas Not to punish or exact punishment for sin but to abolish and take away sin at once out of mans nature as the word is vsed 1 Pet. 4. 6. condemnation being put for that which followes it as condemned persons vse to be taken out of the world that they may be no more so is sin from vs by the imputation of Christs perfectly sanctified manhood for though sin remaine in the godly yet it is as if it were not being not imputed as Augustine sayed Quicquid ille non imputare decreuit sic est quasi non fuerat Tim. What is to be vnderstood by this word when he sayth for sinne Silas Some interprete for sin of sin because sin did vniustly set vpon Christ to get him to dye and to bee crucified see Iohn 16 9. Secondly for sin by some doeth signifie for remission of sinnes Rom. 5 6 8. Thirdly some interprete for sin to be a sacrifice for sin 2 Cor. 5 21. but I take it this word for sinne must bee ioyned to the word sent and then it noteth the finall cause or ende for the which Christ became man namely to take away chase and driue sin out of our nature which hee tooke vpon him for this text speaketh of his incarnation and not of his sacrifice and death Tim. What is our instruction then from these last words Sylas This that all true Christians stand in extreame neede not onely of his passion and death in being made a curse or of his perfect obedience in doing the wil of God in his life but of his very incarnation and of his most holy and pure manhood because otherwise it is not possible that euer any beleeuing Christian should be saued but that they should all perish and Christ with whatsoeuer he is or hath as by testimony of Scripture giuen to vs ordained for vs and our Saluation Tim. Why doe ye say sa howe can they perish for whome Christ dyed and for whome he hath kept the law Silas Because none can haue eternall life in Heauen vnlesse they haue the absolute perfect righteousnesse which the law exacteth one principall part whereof is the perfect intregity of our nature our will and reason being conformed and fashioned agreeably to the perfect iustice of God reuealed in his law so as there bee not the least inclination or pronnesse to any euill but a through disposition to euery good thing This full perfection the law is not able as we haue heard to effect worke in vs because it is weake through our corruption wherby we are made vnable to answere it And therefore if we should not finde this perfect righteousnesse and integrity which the law requireth of them that are to liue for euer in the humane nature of Christ and haue it allowed and giuen to such as doc beleeue in him it were vnpossible that any should bee saued because nothing that is vncleane and vnholy shall enter into the new Ierusalem Reuel 21 27. and our nature euen after regeneration and faith it is still defiled by the remainder of sinne Howbeit Christ is not deuided he that hath one part of his Mediatorship hath the whole like a Ladder where no one stale can be lacking Tim. What profit is there to be made of this Silas First it teacheth Christians to be no lesse thankefull for Christs incarnation then for his passion Secondly it serucs to humble euen the godliest that are to thinke vpon their dwelling and remaining sinne for the abolishing whereof God must defcend and bee made man Thirdly it helpes to comfort the weake ones whē they are tempted to doubt of their saluation thrugh the in-bred corruption which they carry about them and prouokes them to sinne against God Let them by a true faith consider of Christ his most perfect naturall innocency that it is no lesse reckoned to them for healing their defiled nature then his obedience and sufferings for remission of actuall sinnes and acquiting them from eternall destruction DIAL IIII. Verse 4. That the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled Silas First it ouerthrowes all Popish additions of mens
and vnregenerate men be enemies to God Silas By this reason because their flesh or corrupte nature neither is subiect to the law of God neyther indeed can be For such coniunction is betweene God and his law as to be enemy to eyther makes vs enemies to both Tim. What is meant heere by not being subiect to the law of God Silas Thus much the not yeelding and obeying the law of God but rather resisting rebelling or rising vp against it after an enemy-like fashion louing and practising that which Gods law forbids and hating and eschuing that which the law of God commands Tim. What will follow of all this Silas That they which are in the flesh that is to say carnall naturall men not renued by the Spirit of God such cannot please God but are voide of his grace beeing vnder death and damnation Moreouer from hence doth follow euen the very quite contrary as namely that the wisedome of the Spirite submitteth it selfe to the law of God being willingly subiect and obedient to it And therefore they which are in the Spirite endued with true holinesse by the worke of the Spirite they do please God and are his friends and be in his fauour free from condemnation and are in the way that leadeth to life and peace This contrariety and opposition the Apostle doth conceale eyther because it was manifest and plaine enough to bee vnderstood or for that the wisedome of the flesh and the wisedome of the Spirit doe not cause death and life after one sort and fashion For the former causeth death as an efficient and meritorious cause deseruing it in strictnesse of iustice the latter causeth life and peace as a way and meanes leading thervnto by Gods mercifull ordinance and as a cause without which no man can euer attaine happinesse in Heauen Tim. Hauing now opened and expounded the Text let vs heare what we are to learne from hence for our profit and vse Silas This present Text serueth and helpeth vs to confute errors to instruct vs in the truth to humble the pride of our nature and to comfort our feeble mindes The errors that are heere confuted are first such as restraine the wisedome of the flesh to sensuality thinking our appetite or sences onely to be enemies to God resisting his law whereas our very reason and will are defiled with sinne and be thereby turned against God and bent against his law Secondly the error of the Papists which condemne marriage of Ministers because it is saide such cannot please God which bee in the flesh Pope Syrtius so concluded and collected from this Text. Thirdly the error of the Manichees which thought that the very substance of the flesh and body was the worke of the Diuell and sinfull because it is written the wisedome of the flesh is enmity with God whereas flesh signifieth not our substance but the vicious quality of sinne cleauing to our substance Fourthly the error of the Pelagians and Papists touching free will of which they teach that it was able to loue God and to bee subiect to his law without grace or at the least being a little holpen by Gods Spirite it could refuse grace or receiue it if it list as the Papists teach whereas indeede our free will is dead in trespasses and sinnes an enemy to God and can no more without grace bee subiect to God to loue and obey his law or beleeue his promises then an enemy abiding so can or will loue his enemy and bee subiect to him Secondly the truths that are heere taught are these First that Sathans malice against mankinde is most extreame in that hee hath poysoned not onely the inferiour partes of our soule but the chiefe and most noble parts euen our reason minde and will yea the whole heart with the contagion of sinne Secondly that all men naturally are in a most wretched and most wofull estate being enemies and rebels to God proudly obstinately bent against him and he iustly against vs to destroy vs with eternall wrath as that subiect must needs perish that hath the King his enemy and that pot must needs be broken that fighteth against the Potter Thirdly this Text serues to humble vs by remembering and beleeuing that we were once in this wretched estate and haue in vs still some wisedom of the flesh rebelling against God Rom. 7 22 23. Lastly this Text serues to comfort vs thus If Christ by his death reconciled vs to God when by sin we were his enemies hee will much more preserue vs being reconciled to him Rom. 5 10. Also Rom. 8 32. The consideration heereof should prouoke all beleeuers to greater loue and thankefulnesse to Christ Iesus the greater his loue appeared in restoring vnto vs the friendship of God which we had lost by sinne DIAL IX Verse 9. Now ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit because the spirit of God dwelleth in you but if any man haue not the spirit of Christ the same is not his Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas An application of the former doctrin vnto the beleeuing and Christian Romanes For that which he before had generally taught of the sanctification of the Spirite and of the desire and study both of spirituall and carnall men hee doth nowe particularly apply it to the Saints at Rome as his manner is The summe whereof is thus much That they which are after the flesh and carnall men sauour the thinges of the flesh wholly minding and caring for thinges that bee carnal and euill and so they with their course of life perish as enemies to God whereas spirituall men minde and care for spirituall and good things pleasing God as his friends and children From whence the Apostle doth gather that seeing the Romanes were not in the flesh but in the spirit spirituall not carnall men therefore they were none of Gods enemies but his friends and children being reconciled vnto him and pleasing him made partakers of his spirit and of his Son and therefore free from condemnation as he had vniuersally taught in the first verse of this Chapter Tim. What may we learn for our instruction from this preceeding and method of the Apostle Silas From hence wee learne the way of cutting and deuiding the word of God aright to be this namely first to propound doctrine generally setting it forth by similitudes confirming it by reasons Secondly to descend to particular applying it to the vse of euery Christian in the assembly for teaching confuting reproouing for exhorting and for comforting this application is the life and soule of doctrine and as a whetstone to set an edge on it it is frequent in scripture Tim. Now shew vs the seuer all parts of this text Sylas The parts bee two first a proposition in these words 〈◊〉 Romanes are not in the flesh it is set foorth by the contrary but ye are in the Spirit Secondly a confirmation of the things propounded by two prooses or
reasons the one is taken from the efficient cause to wit the Spirit of God dwelling in them the second is taken from their communion with Christ whose members they are and therefore cannot be in the flesh but in the spirit Tim. What doth it signifie to be in the flesh Silas It signifies two thinges in Scripture one is to be an infirme and weake man to haue flesh and body and soule as other fraile men haue 2 Cor. 10 3. Secondly to be carnall and vnregenerate as we are all by nature to wit when in all our actions we are all ruled and gouerned by the sence and affection of our nature not yet regenerate by Christ thus it must be taken here Tim. Is there any difference betweene being in the flesh and hauing flesh in vs Silas Yea very much for the most godlie which are most renued yet still haue some flesh and corruption in them being regenerate in part onely as we haue seen out of the 7. Chapter to the Romanes in the example of Paul but to bee in the flesh agreeth to men wholly vnregenerate Tim. Whereunto doth this interpretation serue vs Silas First to reproue such as doe interpret this clause of Mariage as the Pope Syritius did thereby to condemne the mariage of Ministers Secondly it doth admonish vs that it is a danger alwayes to vnderstand the Scripture according to the proper signification of the words for then wee must say that there are men liuing that are without flesh and bone bloud and body because Paul sayth here of the liuing and beleeuing Romanes that they are not in the fleshut is therfore a figuratiue speech to be vnderstood of the corruption of nature in Scripture Dianoia and not To rheton onely must be obserued Tim What is it to be in the Spirite Silas First that the elect though they be borne in sinne yet doe not alwayes abide in the estate of corruption but are translated into the estate of grace being of meere carnall men partly spirituall Secondly though many at once haue both flesh and spirit in them yet none can be both in the flesh and in the Spirite these are such contraries as they cannot stand together Thirdly that it is the essentiall property and most certaine rule of a Christian by al means to auoide the affections of the flesh and in all things to be carried by the Spirit Lastly we are taught by this example of Paul to iudge charitably of such Christians which professe Christ and doe not thinges contrary vnto their profession that they are not carnall but spirituall This is the cannon and rule of Charity which indeed is not so certaine but that it may deceiue because it cannot looke to things within and hypocrites beare a shew of piety without substance Therefore the spirite of discerning spirits is a great blessing the Apostles excelled in it Tim. Come we now to the reasons to proue that they are not in the flesh but in the spirit Sil. The first reason is this The spirite of God dwels in you therefore ye are not in the flesh to walke after it but in the spirit Tim. What is meant here by the spirit of God Sylas The third person in the Trinity called the Holy Ghost and the word God is put personally for God the Father the first person in Trinity of whome the spirit proceedeth so as he is also the spirit of the Son Tim. What doe ye learne by this that he is called the spirit of God Silas That the Holy Ghost doeth proceede from God the Father Iohn 15 26. As also from God the Sonne and therefore he is in the latter part of this verse called the spirit of Christ. Tim. What is signified here by the dwelling of the spirite in vs Silas The word dwelling is taken from men which dwell in houses who doe not onely possesse their houses but command and gouerne all things therein at their pleasure likewise the holy Spirite not onely filles the hearts of the faithfull but also rules and gouernes them enlightening them to know and directing them to do things pleasing vnto God according to the measure of the Spirite For howsoeuer the flesh may rebell yet the Spirite still possesseth the godly and hath the dominion and vpper hand Tim. What doth this borrowed speech of dwelling put vs in minde of Sil. Not onely of the efficacy of the Spirite but of his continuance in the faithfull vnto the end For he is not in vs as a guest to lodge for a night and be gone but as an Inhabitant to dwell and abide in vs euen to the death and for euer Iohn 14 23. The Spirite which I will giue you shall abide with you for euer Therefore they are in an error who thinke that the Spirit of Christ once had can bee vtterly lost Indeed false doctrine and corrupt manners may hinder the working of the Spirite but cannot extinguish the grace of the Spirite Secondly this word dwelling puts vs in minde of the presence of the Spirite in the faithfull that it is not by immensity and infinitnesse of his poweras in other Creatures but by presence of grace and of his healthfull effects Tim. How manifold is the grace of the Spirite which belongeth specially vnto the elect Silas Three-fold First vnion with Christ to bee one with Christ as his members whereof follow vnion with his perfect iustice and all merite Secondly sanctification to be made new Creatures to be able to hate euill and to loue and doe good Thirdly adoption and sealing vp to vs our saluation The Spirit witnesseth to vs that we are the Children of God Tim. What be the effects of the Spirite Silas Sundry but especially two First to leade vs into all truth sufficient to our saluation Secondly to strengthen and comfort our hearts vnder the Crosse. Iohn 14. Tim. What lessons learne we from hence that the Spirite dwels in the faithfull Sil. First the blessed condition of true beleeuers for whom Christ not onely dyed and rose againe iustifying them by faith but also by his Spirit regenerates quickens them to make them liuely members of himselfe Secondly the man which hath in him the Spirite of Christ dwelling cannot follow and obey the lusts of the flesh and they which be such they haue not the Spirite of Christ dwelling in them Lastly as all in the house doe submit themselues vnto the command of the chiefe House-holder so Gods Children are content to be at the direction and after the Spirit in newnesse of life Rom. 8 5 6 9. Tim. Hauing now shewed after what sort we are ioyned to Christ by faith shew vs after what sort Christ by his spirit doth 〈◊〉 himselfe vnto vs Silas First Christ giueth the elect his Spirite to incorporate them into himselfe 1 Cor. 6 17. Secondly the same his spirit doth regenerate them and quicken their soules by grace that they may become his liuelie members Ephes. 2 1 4 5. Thirdly vpon the elect being now
the elect Tim. What doctrine ariseth from these word thus opened Silas That nothing that is in men their thoughts words deeds do not auail any thing to election or saluation in such sort as to be causes to moue God to chuse and saue some and not others this comes not by willing and running out of our merits Tim. Must wee vnderstand this dectrine of vnregenerate onely or of the faithfull also Silas Of all sorts of men both one and the other it is not the desires and deedes of any whereupon their saluation and election depends as vpon 〈◊〉 motiues or efficient causes Tim. What is it then that you iudge of the will and deedes of naturall men Silas Euery man before his new birth hath in him the power of willing euen from his birth the force and power of his will is to will freely euery thing that is euill freely to will some good things for the will cannot bee compelled it willeth freely whatsoeuer it willeth The good things which it willeth are either naturall and ciuill good things that belōg to this life as to eat rest take phisick c. or to resraine the outward 〈◊〉 of vices and to doe the outward actions of vertues yea and in diuine thinges a man hath power naturally to will that which is outwardly to bee done yet so as with this power of willing there commeth the effectuall power of God moouing all things and prolpering that which men do well Tim. Why doth the Apostle say it is not in man that willeth or runneth if it be so Sil. He doth not absolutely deny that men do wil or run or forbid vs simply either to desire or endeuour or doe any thing but he teacheth that God eternally did see nothing that was to bee naturally in man to moue him to elect him to life or that ought which a man doeth or willeth before his new birth is acceptable to God and auailable to saue himselfe Tim. But are we not to iudge otherwise of the workes and wils of 〈◊〉 persons Silas No otherwise as in this regard 〈◊〉 they should haue any stroke in their election to moue God thereunto indeede they please God through Christ because they are the fruites of his Spirite though vnperfect as also they be the way wherein the godly walke towardes heauen But as they cannot merit our saluation by the doing of them so the foresight of them did not moue God to elect vs or yet to call or iustifie or adopt and sanctifie vs and saue vs. Tim. But are not Gods children bound to will and to do good duties to beleeue and to repent Silas True they are and without them none of yeares can be saued but not to ascribe their election vnto them because many Infants are chosen who neuer coulde doe good Tim. Shew vs the reason of this doctrine Silas First all the goodnesse which is in the woorke and will of man proceedes from Gods purpose and election and therefore can be no cause of it 1. Tim. 1. Ephe. 1. 4. Secondly there is that contrariety in the matter of election and saluation betweene mercy and workes grace and merite that if in any sort it doeth depend vpon workes it doeth in no sort come from grace and mercy as the opposition in this text shewes and the plaine words of chap. 11. verse 6. Tim. What is the vse hereof Silas It confutes such as set vp free will and make the beginnings of their saluation to come from themselues which as it directly crosseth the Scriptures which teach that in our will or vnderstanding there is no goodnesse till GOD put it in so it derogateth much from the glory of Gods mercy also too much exalteth and puffeth vp flesh and bloud Secondly though this may not quench and kill our care and endeuour of well doing yet it must serue to humble vs euen for our best desires and endeuours for as much as they doe wholly spring from Gods mercy and are of no value in the cause of election and saluation Tim. What doctrine are wee to learne from the second part of this text Silas That Gods mercy is the whole and all-sufficient cause of mans election as also of all our willing and running well yea and of our heauenly inheritance Tim. If all must be committed to Gods mercy what then are we stocks and stones doe we nothing Sil. Yea 〈◊〉 the godly doc both will and worke but they are impelled thereunto by his Spirite which they receiue from his grace Gal. 4. 5. Rom. 8. 15. Phil. 1 Iohn 15 without mee ye can doe nothing God preuenteth the vnwilling to make him willing saith Augustine and followeth him being made willing least he do will in vaine Tim. Then it seemes that our working and Gods shewing mercy doe together get vs to bee saued as God calleth by the voyce of the Minister and by Parents brings children into the world and Magistrates rule through the helpe and blessing of God and he giues life by foode and light by the sunne so men are saued by his mercies and their owne endeuours Silas Indeede some haue so taken these wordes of willing and running as if they alone by themselues were not sufficient without Gods mercy and so they part the matter of our saluation betweene God and man mercy and workes so as that wee doe were nothing in comparison of that which Gods mercy performeth yet were of some force but it may as well be saide that mercy is not sufficient without our willing and running Secondly mercy is here so set by the Apostle against our will and courses as that the setting vp one of these is the putting downe of the other 3. It is the mercy of God that doth enable men to will and to doe well giuing them faith and repentance and perseuerance in these graces so as mercy is all in all it begins and finisheth our saluation What I am I am by the grace of God Tim. Why would God haue all that belongs to our saluation referred to his mercy Silas First that all might be free as from grace of God not merit of men and he might haue glory of all Secondly that such as would reioyce might reioyce not in themselues but reioyce onely herein that they know God to be mercifull praysing him for putting into them good willes and power to doe good workes and finally for crowning his owne gifts and all of his mercy Phil. 2 13. Tim. What is the vse heereof Silas It admonisheth all Gods children to thinke of themselues and all that they can doe most basely most highly of the rich mercies of God in Christ louing them praysing them and studying to imitate them also to depend vpon his mercy for the beginning proceeding and end of their saluation and to abhorre all conceit of iniustice in God in respect of his eternall election sithence all being lost in Adam hee might according to iustice haue left
taken without stammering or doubting and that Faith which leaneth vpon it must needes bee verie firme and strong against all assaults of Satan whose fierie darts of doubtes and despaire are quenched by the Faith of Gods word If in marriage for wedlocke duties and comforts we stay vppon our mutuall promises how much more may the spouse of Christ euen euery faithfull soule quietlie and firmely rest vpon the promise of our husband Christ for all good thinges present and future both nowe and in Heauen Tim. What profit is to be 〈◊〉 of this second instruction Sil. First heereby is ouerthrowne the Popish doctrine which alloweth vnto iustifying Faith no more but probable or coniecturall knowledge leauing mens consciences full of feare and doubting of their owne blessednesse wherein vpon the matter they disable the word of Gods promise and make his word false For to teach that men ought still to sticke in doubts of their own saluation though God haue promised it by Christ to such as beleeue in him what is this else but to play the Butchers of mens Consciences which are euen kept vppon the racke by Romish Diuinity and also to charge the word of God with forgerie and falshoode as if hee did not meane in good earnest Secondly heereby wee see how slanderous they are which accuse the affiaunce and confidence of Faith to be a wicked and damnable presuming sithence it is dutie and Christian submission to relye vndoubtedly vpon the worde of God and not godlesse presumption which rather they are to bee 〈◊〉 with who haue all or most of their trust in their owne innocencie and good workes and not alone in the truth and mercy of God Thirdly heere is matter of great comfort vnto all faithfull soules who in all temptations stirring them to doubt of their owne happinesse they may enfree thēselues from all terror by hauing recourse to the word and promise of God as Dauid did I had perished in my trouble sayth hee but for thy promise thy worde hath comforted 〈◊〉 For as the palsie man in the Gospell hauing Christs word be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee was thereby cheered aud made both quiet and ioyfull So the promise of the Gospell being applyed to a trembling Soule will fortifie and stablish it in tranquility and peace This Sathan knoweth and therefore his practise is to hide the promises of grace from troubled consciences or else to suggest vnto them this as though that such promises were not made to them or did not belong vnto them Tim. What is the third doctrine out of this 8. verse Silas That the preaching of the Apostles was all one with the Gospel which was written for that word of faith first written by Moses and afterwards by Paul to the Romanes is that selfe same word which Paul and other Apostles preached Therefore it is false which the Manichees and Papists auouch that the Apostles taught other things then that they then wrote that hence they may haue power to ioyne thereunto their Apostolicall traditions vnwritten which errour of theirs must bee reiected as Apocriphall and false If they bee not confonant to the Scriptures they came not from the Apostles but are counterfet Tim. Let vs proceede vnto the 9. verse and tell vs what is meant by confession Silas An open and plaine profession that Iesus who is Lord of all is our Lord also for that hee is Lord the Diuils know and acknowledge Therefore Christians must goe further and beleeue it with affiance Tim. In what respects is Iesus our Lord Silas Both by right of Creation and power ouer vs and also by grace of redemption hauing as well ransomed vs to bee his owne peculiar people as created and gouerned vs. Tim. What is it to beleeue in thine heart Silas It is not onely in our mindes to see and assent vnto the trueth of the history of Christ which euen wicked men and hypocrites yea vncleane spirits doe but to embrace in our hearts will and affections with holy confidence the benefites of Christ his death and resurrection euen reconciliation with God remission of sinnes righteousnes and life eternall Tim. Why is confession set before faith which is the cause and roote of confession Psalme 116. 10. I beleeued therefore did I speake Silas First because Moses did in this order propound them as in the 8. verse is cited Secondly we cannot discerne other mens faith or other men our faith but by our outward profession of it before men it is declared by our confession and action Tim. Why 〈◊〉 hee onely name Christes resurrection seeing faith respects his birth life death and all which Christ did and suffered Sil. First because the faith of the resurrection of Christ doth distingush Christians from Pagans and Infidels who do easily accord to beleeue that the man Christ was born liued and dyed but they deny his resurrection as a thing which exceedeth compasse and reach of reason the Philosophers discerned it not but derided it rather saying What new doctrine is this Acts 18. Secondly because all that Christ did and suffered had profited vs little vnlesse hee had risen againe wherein hee obtained a perfect victory ouer sinne death hell and damnation for all the elect Lastly the article of the resurrection presupposeth al the rest and knitteth together as a linke both antecedents and consequents his incarnation life and death which went before and his ascension sitting at his Fathers right hand and his intercession which followes after his rising Vnder which then by a Synecdoche all the other passions and actions of Christ be contayned Tim. What doctrine ariseth out of this 9. verse Silas Onely this one to wit the facility and easinesse of that righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ 〈◊〉 vnto our righteousnesse before God and saluation in heauen there is no more difficult and hard thing exacted of vs but with the heart to beleeue and with the mouth to confesse Christ and by this meanes Christ will be neere to vs both in possibility and efficacy in possibilitie because it is a thing possible which may bee that elect sinners shall haue grace to beleeue especially God hauing ordained them vnto Faith Actes 13 48. but it is vtterly vnpossible that they should keepe the whole Law perfectly Gods decree and mans corruption being against it And secondly hee is neere and easie to vs in efficacie because through the holy Spirit hee is made to dwell in a faithfull heart really and actually and his righteousnesse as a robe or garment is put vppon them to couer their sinnes and vnrighteousnesse Tim. Yea but to beleeue in Christ is no lesse impossible hard then to fulfill the Law for we haue no more power to doe the one then the other Silas It is true but this facility is to be vnderstoode not in regarde of the beginning and efficient cause of Faith which is meerely Gods gifte without
Prophets rayling at them and speaking against their doctrine with their tongues whereof we haue an example in Acts 13 45. and 19 9. Tim. What followes heereupon Silas That the Iewes for trampling Gods mercies vnder foote and spurning at his word did deserue to bee reiected and without wrong were refused of God and secondly that they had no cause at all to be angry that the Gentiles were adopted taken in to be Gods people in their roome seeing they wel deserued to be quite cut off Tim. What Instructions ariseth from hence Silas First that vnbeleefe of heart when the word of God cannot perswade vs is like the sinne of Rebellion For such do in their hearts rise vp and resist God as Rebels their Prince Secondly that infidelity doth bring forth and breede contradiction therefore men are bold with their mouths to speake against the doctrine of the Scriptures because they do not vnderstand nor beleeue it as faith engendreth reuerence of the word and causeth vs to glorifie it so incredulity procureth prophane men to speake ill of the word of God and to raile at the true Ministers thereof which howe greeuous and heyuous a sinne it is may appeare by the punnishment God tooke on the Iewes whom he cast off for it Thirdly we learne that both Ministers and other godly Christians are to take it patiently when men resist the trueth which they vtter seeing the vngodly Iewes did gainesay euen God himselfe speaking to thē by his Prophets And are men better or greater then God Shall God be gainsaid and dost thou so take on and vexe because thy worde or counsell is crossed and controlled Learne humility and be content to be contradicted CHAP. XI DIAL I. Verse 1 2. I demaund then hath God cast away his people God forbid For I am an Israelite of the seede of Abraham of the Tribe of Beniamin God hath not cast away his people whom he knew before Timotheus WHat is the drift of this whole Chapter Silas To proue that the Iewes howsoeuer a rebellious people yet are not reiected from being Gods people either vniiersally nor for euer but that stil some of them were conuerted to Christ and many more should be towards the end of the world by which discourse he purposeth to comfort the Iewes against despaire and to confirme the stablenesse of Gods promises which failed not towards any Iew which was elected of God And secondly to exhort the Gentiles which were admitted into the voide roome of the refused Iewes to bee modest and lowly minded to take heede of the contempt of the Iewes who were faln and of security considering Gods mercies towards them in their free adoption and Gods seuerity vnto the obstinate Iewes whom yet he had not so abandoned but that he could and would gather them againe into the folde of his Church So as the drifte of this Chapter is two fold one to keepe the Iewes from despaire the other to preserue the Gentiles from presumption and pride Tim. What are the parts of this Chapter Silas They be foure First Doctrinall wherein hee doth three things First hee teacheth to the comsort of the Iewes that a remainder of them were Gods elect to verse 7. and thence vnro the 11. verse Paul confirmeth by a double testimony one out of Esay and another out of Dauid that the most part of the Iewes were reiected Lastly he openeth the finall cause or end of Gods counsell in casting off the vnbeleeuing Iewes to wit that thereby an occasion of calling the Gentiles might bee giuen vnto ver 17. The second part is exhortatorie vnto the Gentiles to verse 25. The third part is Propheticall fore-telling the vocation of the Iewes vnto verse 33. And fourthly a conclusion consisting of an exclamation and of a prayer vnto the end of the chapter Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas Two First an Obiection Secondly an answer thereunto Tim. What is the Obiection Silas This O Paul if the Iews be cast off as thou seemest to affirme out of Esay that for their vnthankfulnes contempt of God they are of him worthlly shut out then are Gods people cast off For the Iewes were Gods people and if they bee cast off then what becomes of Gods promises made to that people and what hope doth there remaine of their saluation Thus might weak ones reason against that which hee wrote in the end of the Chapter but cauillers will bee ready to alledge the Adoption of Abraham and his seed whom God tooke of especiall fauour to be his owne people so as hee should be vnconstant if he brake his owne couenant All this is contained in the first words I say then hath God cast away his people that is I see what you will say vpon my former speeches that Gods people are drawne away from grace and saluation Tim. How is this Obiection answered Silas Two wayes First by deniall God forbid that is I am farre from thinking any such thing that al the Iewes are generally cast out from grace Secondly he proueth this his deniall by sufficient and strong arguments As first from his owne example Secondly from the efficient cause Thirdly from the example of Elias his time applied to the present time wherein Paul wrote Tim. How doth he reason from his owne example Silas Thus I Paul am a Iew not a Proselite conuerted to the Faith but a Iew by Nation not of a base but of a Noble Tribe euen of Beniamin who was borne not of the hand-maides of Iacob but of Rachell his wife but though I be a Iew I am not cast out of Gods fauour and couenant therefore all the Iewes are not reiected from Christ for then shold I be reiected too seeing I am an Israelite Tim. What Doctrine is to bee gathered from this firste reason Sil. That an elect person which is conuerted may be sure of his owne election vnto life Paul was an elect man no cast-out but a chosen vessel and Paul did know himselfe to be so as this place sheweth with Rom. 8 35. Therfore the elect may be sure that they are of the elect and consequently that they shall be saued for all the elect are to be saued and all which are to bee saued bee elect these be Term ni conuertibiles Tim. But Paul knew this by some singular and speciall reuelation Silas He knew it rather by the certainty and assurance of Faith which wheresoeuer it is it is knowne to bee there as Augustine saith they who know themselues to be 〈◊〉 doe withall assure their heartes of their owne election and saluation because the promise of saluation is made to them which are endowed with Faith and all such are ordained to life Iohn 13 16 18 36. Acts 13 48. Tim. What Vse of this Doctrine Silas First to confute the Papists who teach that men ought still to doubt and to haue onely a probable assurance of their owne
saluation and cannot bee sure of it by an ordinary and infallible certainty Secondly to exhort all Christians to endeuour the making sure of their owne election to themselues according to the counsell 2 〈◊〉 1. 10. and it is made sure by the fruites of sanctification 2 〈◊〉 1 5 6 7. Tim. What is the second argument to proue the Iewes to be not reiected from saluation by Christ Silas It is taken from the efficient cause to wit Gods eternall and vnchangeable loue the reason standeth thus whome God from euerlasting loues as his owne and electeth them these he neuer casteth off this proposition is in the beginning of the second verse but there are some of the Iewes whome God did loue and chuse from euerlasting this proposition is not expressed but infolded in these words his people therefore all the Iewes are not reiected this must be vnderstood as a consequent necessarily arising of the promises Tim. What is meant by casting away in the 2. verse Silas To repell or driue from God and Christ Iesus and from eternall life in heauen God hath done this to euery Iew. Tim. What signifies foreknowledge Silas Predestinating so Ambrose expoundes it or whome hee loued and embraced beeing elected from the beginning so Beza expounds it and maister Caluine puts foreknowledge for Gods good pleasure There is in God a twofolde prescience or fore-knowledge the one is a bare speculatiue foresight whereby hee vnderstandeth all things which be and are done in the worlde This belongeth not somuch to his will as to his knowledge and is no cause of things for things are therefore done not because they are foreseene but for that they be decreed Secondly foreknowledge is a knowledge in God with loue and approbation 2 Tim. 2. 19. Rom. 8. 29. this kinde of prescience in God is the cause of things and it is all one with election or predestination which is a knowing of some persons from euerlasting and 〈◊〉 them in his loue as his owne whom he will saue by Christ. Tim. What doctrine ariseth from these words Silas These two First wee are to learne that the first and highest cause of mans election and saluation is the eternall loue will or good pleasure of God as may appeare out of Mat. 11 26. Rom. 11 8. Ephe. 1 5. Rom 27 28. Rom. 9 15 18. For what can God haue out of himselfe to goe and be before himselfe and who hath giuen God first Rom 11 35. Tim. What vse of this poynt Silas First it confutes the error of such as will haue the bare prescience of God to be the cause of election and saluation this was Chrysostomes error who held that as God foresaw men would beleeue liue wel so he choose them also Ambrose was of this minde so expounding Romanes 9 15. and Augustine attributed election to foreseene faith which errour he retracted after Pelagius and his followers did erre in this matter grosly Tim. How is this errour confuted Silas First because the bare foresight of God is not the cause of the existence of any thing for hee knewe before those things which shall not bee as those which shall bee Secondly Iacob was loued and chosen of God ere euer he had done any good thing from Gods purpose nor from his bare prescience Rom. 9 11. Thirdly seeing all men were to be alike corrupt through sinne there was no good thing hee could foresee in any therefore all men shoulde haue beene reprobate if his bare foresight had beene the ground and cause Lastly the Scripture expresly denyeth that mans worthinesse is any cause of mans election Deut. 7 7. See the place Tim. What other thing learne we frem the former doctrine Silas That wee doe owe all thanks and prayse to Gods free loue for electing calling and sauing vs. Thirdly here is matter of comfort by assuring vs that now we are God will not refuse nor destroy vs since hee loued so long before we were And lastly heere is an exhortation to loue all the Children of God since they are euerlastingly beloued of God this is cause sufficient to make vs take heed how we hate any vpon whom God eternally hath set his loue and to repent of our vnkindnesses towards them Tim. What other doctrine ariseth from the 〈◊〉 of this second verse Silas That such as God foresaw and elected before all worlds cannot possibly perish The wordes of our Text do fully auouch this truth God casts not of his people whom he knew before againe it is written Mat. 24. 24. that it is not possible the elect should perish and Rom. 8 30. The predestinate shall be glorified and lastly Christ hath prayed for al the elect that they may haue his glory in heauen Iohn 17 24. Reason also confirmeth this truth for the loue of God is immutable therefore they cannot perish whom he loues for then should God alter and be changeable if the elect could fal from Gods loue and be Reprobates but because God changes not he that is once loued of God is euer loued and therfore cannot bee condemned in hell Hence is the election and fore-knowledge of God compared vnto a seale and foundation which bsares things of great stablenes 1. Ti. 1 17. Mountaines of Brasse are not so strong as Gods louing purpose and decree is I am not as men that I should repent nor as sonnes of men that I should 〈◊〉 againe I am 〈◊〉 I change not Tim. What profite of this doctrine Silas It confuteth the error of such as say the elect may lose Gods loue by their owne fault this is to make God vnable variable and the Scriptures false Secondly it teacheth the estate of the elect to bee most stable and permanent not in respect of their owne strength but of Gods loue and counsell Thirdly it comforteth the poore afflicted consciences of Gods children against the feare of damnation such as once haue perceiued their owne 〈◊〉 may be assured of it for 〈◊〉 Fourthly it is a preseruatiue against despaire and a motiue to continuall thankefulnes that God hath set them in such an vn moueable condition If we blesse God for his temporall perishing benefits what praise doe wee owe for the lasting fruites of his eternall loue and mercy DIAL II. Verses 2 3. Know ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias how he makes request vnto God against Israel saying Lord they haue killed thy Prophets and digged downe 〈◊〉 Altars and I am left alone and they seeke my life Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas A third reason of his deniall taken from the like example of Elias dayes or from the like estate of the olde Church in the time of the Prophet Elias The summe hereof is thus much That as it was in the time of Elias so it is in the times of Paul the Apostle then very many Iewes were preserued in Israel frō Idolatty though Elias knew not of them so now though Paul were ignorant of it
reason is because in the Church of GOD there are euer some to whome they are effectually perfourmed howesoeuer the most neglect and refuse them yet there is a remnant which receiue them still and are saued by them Tim. What profit is to be made of this poynt Silas That the great number of vnbeleeuers and wicked men should neuer weaken our account and credit of the promises of the Gospell which being vniuersally reiected yet still take place in the elect to whome they are peculiarly made Tim. Tell vs what is meant by the election of grace Silas The guift of predestination or the grace whereby men are elected or predestinated or by an Hebraisme a gracious and free election The meaning is that such as are kept free from the pollution of Idolatry and other sins they may not thanke themselues as if they were worthy of it for their workes sake but are beholding to the good pleasure of God who hath separated them from others according to his gracious purpose Note that election is not here put and taken actiuely whereby wee chuse grace but passiuely whereby men were chosen of God for hee speaketh of such as were foreknown of God verse second of Gods election of men and not of mens election of God Tim. What is the doctrine from hence Silas That election vnto eternall life proceedeth from the free fauour and grace of God This is the same with that which is written Rom. 9 11 15 Eph. 1 4 5. Ro 15 19. Tim. What profit is to be made of this poynt Silas First it confuteth the Pelagians who affirme that men chuse Gods mercies not that his free mercies chuseth them whereas this text plainly speaketh not of mans electing God but of Gods electing men out of his grace not out of their owne merites Also it ouerthrowes the conceite of Origen and Chrysostome which vpon this place imagine some men which beleeue in Christ to be saued by grace and others which besides faith haue good workes to be saued by the election of grace deuiding things which are conioyned to wit election and grace faith and works as if there could be a iustifying faith without works Secondly it abateth the pride of all flesh to teach that election commeth not from themselues but is wholly of grace Lastly it 〈◊〉 vs vp to great loue and thankefulnesse towards God to praise him for his free loue Tim. What other doctrines will flow from these words Silas That if election be of grace then our iustification sanctification and glorification all be from grace too as it is written 2. Tim. 1 9. Rom. 3 24 28. The reason hereof is 〈◊〉 est causa causae est causa causati quicquid est causa antecedentis est causa consequentis Tim. But be grace and works at such vartance as that these blessings and things cannot proceed from both Silas Yes verily they are as contrary as can be when the cause of election and saluation is to be searched out there is no coniunction of grace and workes no more then of light and darkenesse as the text speaketh If it be of faith then not of works The reason hereof is because merite of works being once put and granted grace is destroyed as it is heere written then were grace no grace Tim. What is the cause of this consequence that therefore grace is destroyed if works be admitted as a partner in the cause of election and saluation Sil. The reason is because grace giueth eternall life and whatsoeuer belongs to it as a thing not due but merite of workes craues them all as a debt therefore if election calling iustification c. should not bee wholly from grace but in part also from workes then grace should not remaine free and therefore shoulde not bee grace see Rom. 4 4 〈◊〉 Gal. 3 18. Tim. What profite of this point Silas It refuteth such as in the mystery of election iustification c. doe mingle grace and merite of workes together ascribing some-what to grace some-what to workes foreseene in matter of election past or present in matter of iustification whereas these thinges by God himselfe are pronounced asystata which haue no agreement at all together Secondly we are taught that it is impossible that the Church of God should faile upon earth because it doth springe out of the election and grace of God which cannot at any time vtterly faile Thirdly it conuicteth them of error which heere vnderstand by grace infused grace the habite of iustice powred into mans heart by the Spirite whereas the Apostle speaketh heere of grace as it is in God subiectiue as in a subiect and doth oppose it as a thing contrary to the works of righteousnesse which be in men as to a contrary and tels vs what he meanes by grace to wit the election of God Lastly this must prouoke all beleeuers to ioyfull thankefulnesse seeing God when he could not saue them by works which they had not did by his franke grace chuse and saue them which deserues at our hands al possible praise both in word and deed in life and death Such as bee often mindefull of such a free mercy to glorifie God for it it is a good signe that they be vnder this grace and are euen the chosen children of God DIAL V. Verses 6 7. And if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of works it is no more grace or else were works no more works What then Israel hath not obtained that he sought but the election hath obtained it and the rest haue beene hardened Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas These two thinges hauing set downe grace to be the efficient cause of election and of effectuall calling now he excludeth workes or denieth them to be any cause thereof Secondly he concludeth the first part of this Chapter touching the casting away of the Iewes in the seauenth verse That all which were freely elect amongst them were certainely saued none perished but the reprobates and that through their owne default because they were hardened in their sinnes and namely in their disobediēce of the Gospel of Christ which they obstinately and rebelliously refused beeing graciouslie and first tendred to them Tim. What signifies Grace Silas Grace signifies Gods free fauour or his euerlasting gracious loue and mercy and workes doe signifie merite of workes or meritorious workes for these bee contrary to grace and not woorkes simply considered as duties Tim. By what argument doeth Paul shut out workes from being any cause of election or vocation or how proueth hee that these come not from merit of workes Silas The argument is taken from the opposition or repugnancy of flat contraries such as in no wise can stand and consist together being immediate contraries The argument may thus bee framed If election and calling bee of meritorious works then it is not of grace but they both come of grace therefore not of
workes Tim. But why might not the Iewes bee elected and reserued to God both by grace and merite of workes Silas That is not possible for if election were both of grace and workes then workes were no workes because what doth proceede of grace that commeth freely not of debt but what commeth by merite of workes that commeth by debt but debt and no debt that which is free and by deseruing bee most contrary thinges Therefore to say that men are elected and called partly of grace partly of the merit of foreseene workes that were to put togither things that cannot agree to make debt no debt merit no merit workes no workes Grace no grace and so to affirm and deny one and the same thing which is a most absurde matter and vtterly not possible to make contradictories to be both true For as a sonne that is willed to go on an errand to Rochester on foot his father promising him a crowne or an angell at his comming backe if his Father aske him how he will haue his money suppose that hee aunswere that he will haue it partly by fauour and partly by desert the reply to him is ready Thou canst not so haue it for if it be of fauour then it commeth freely therefore not by desert of the worke and if it be by desert of the worke then not by fauour for it is due that commeth by merit desert and there is no being beholding to fauour for that Tim. What is the Doctrine to be learned from hence Silas That mens workes haue no place nor stroke at all in the election and calling of sinners neither in their iustification nor saluation The reason is because works presuppose merit and merit presupposeth debt debt is flat against grace but men are called elected of grace also iustified and glorified as appeareth verse 5. Rom. 3 24. therefore election calling and the rest depend not vppon workes which destroy grace and grace destroyeth them when the cause of eternall life is disputed and debated Tim. But good workes come of grace how then are they such enemies Silas This is true grace is the mother and roote of euery good worke wee haue no power at all to thinke or will well naturally 2. Cor. 3 5. Iohn 15 5. but grace and workes cannot be ioynt causes of election and saluation In this case they fight together as put and admit the one and the other is taken away and shut out affirme the one and deny the other This Antithesis or opposition is to bee marked against all iusticiaries whose mouth is stopped and sealed vp with this one short sentence Tim. What vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas First it confuteth such as will haue grace and workes to ioyne together in the iustification and saluation of sinners which they say is partly of Gods grace partly of mens merites Wee say with the Apostle they bee altogether of grace and therefore not at all by merits Tim. But howe can such auoyde this conclusion of Paul If it be of workes then not of grace Silas The enemies of Gods grace haue sundry shifts to auoide the force of this consequence for some-times they say that the Apostle speaks only of ceremoniall works of the law as of Circumcision Sacrifices c. But this cannot be so because Pauls words be generall shutting out all workes whatsoeuer whether naturall morall or legall ceremonies Of them all he saith that if election to life eternall come of them then it commeth not of grace Also Abraham and Dauid had morall workes as well as ceremoniall yet in Chap. 4. verse 4 5 6. Paul denieth that Abraham or Dauid were iustified and saued by any workes which they had done but by faith Secondly they say that the Apostle speakes of the works of nature which say the Rhemists doe exclude grace fauour and mercy challenging of debt not of guift but not of Christian mens workes which come from the Spirite and grace of God these workes comming from grace may euidently consist with the same and be ioyned with Gods grace as causes of saluation This shift cannot bee currant not onely for that his words be generall but because Paul speakes of the election by grace by which all are saued Therefore the merite of all workes are excluded by whomsoeuer they bee done whether by circumcised Iewe or baptized beleeuing Christian or vnbeleeuing Gentile Secondly in Ephe. 1 4. good workes are saide not to be the cause of election but the end and fruite and effect thereof Lastly Ephe. 2 8 9. Paul saith expresly we are saued not of works but by grace through faith where note that grace and faith may well stand together but they doe shut out all sort of workes from being any moouing or meritorious cause of our iustification and saluation Thirdly they say that good workes are shut out from election to the first grace but not from election to the second grace that is they say that the elect are chosen of grace onely and are also freely called and illuminated of the Holye-Ghost without all workes but the seconde grace that is iustification also sanctification and glorification these do admit merite of works to ioyne with grace Vnto this shifte of theirs I answere that that Scripture which saith that election is of grace and we are called according to grace 2. Tim. 1 9. doth also say that wee are iustified by grace not by workes Rom. 3 24. that eternall life is the gift of God Rom. 6 23. also iustification and glorification bee fetched from Gods eternall loue and foreknowledge as the first and onely efficient cause as well as election and calling Rom. 8 30. Moreouer election is not onely to the first grace but to all the meanes and to heauenly glory which is the end Rom. 9 11 23. Lastly the Pharisie who ascribed righteousnes and saluation partly to grace and partly to his good workes went away vniustified Whatsoeuer therefore the Papists can alleadge to shake and weaken the credite of this texte yet it is so strong to ouerthrow the doctrine of popish merites and iustification by workes as one of themselues Andreas Proles was wont to say in his publike readings My brethren sithence holy Scripture attributeth whatsoeuer we are or haue al vnto grace whence commeth that horrible darkenesse and superstition to ascribe so much to merite of workes Truely the estate of Christianity needes very great and speedy reformation Tim. What other vse of the former doctrine Sil. Here is an admonition to all Christians that albeit they are bound to doe good workes of all sorts and to abound in them yet it is their duty to renounce the merite of them and all trust in them and to sticke whollye and onely in the grace of God through Iesus Christ for all things belonging to their saluation least if wee put neuer so little trust in any thing done by vs we be found the
their teachers which made the Spirit of God in the Scriptures to charge both Ministers to behaue themselues mildly as Pastors Fathers and Nurses amongest the people and their people to haue their teachers in singular loue for their workes sake Tim. What Vse of this Doctrine Sil. It serues to warne Christians to beware least by Satans suggestions their owne corruption or counsell of the wicked any sinister bad conceit bee either dropped into or entertained in the mindes concerning their teachers for by this meanes their doctrine will become of none effect and their saluation will bee greatly hindered These things God Christ Gospell Teachers Saluation are so linked together as to despise one is to despise all Honor one and honor all Tim. What doth this word magnifie import Silas Sometimes it signifies to make known the greatnesse and glorie of another Luke 1 46. but heere it is to honour or to make glorious his office that is his Ministry of Apostleship The Doctrine is that it behooueth a Minister to honor his function Tim. Wherein doth stand the honour and glorie of the ministerie Silas In sundry thinges 〈◊〉 in faithfulnesse when Ministers both liue and teach well 1 Cor. 4 2. it is the credit of Stewards to be faithfull and trusty Secondly in patient suffering tribulations for the Gospel 2 Cor. 6 4 5 c. Thirdly by diligence in preaching the Ministry is much adorned 1 Cor. 9. Lastly by the good successe of preaching when thereby many are conuerted vnto Christ. This last is meant heere as appears by the words of the next verse that Paules meaning is that this would be the honour of his Ministery that he might so preach to the Gentiles as he might win some of the Iewes also as the glorie and strength of a King consists in the number of worthy subiects so the number of good schollers is the honor of their teachers that made the holy Ghost to say in the Acts that the word of God grew and was glorified when many were turned to the Faith by the preaching of it for to conuert sinners to righteousnesse is a greater matter then to worke wonders nay then to make a world therefore both the worde and the preachers of it are not a little honoured when by sounde preaching many are brought to repentance and amendment of life Tim. What profit may wee take to our selues by this Doctrine Silas It confutes such men as place the honour of the Ministery in pompe worldly wealth riches and glory stately ornaments and precious garments in which things the false Prophets most excell See Reuel 18. Also they bee but accidentall and sophisticall Ornaments they doe not appertaine to the nature and substaunce of the Ministery which consists in preaching and doctrine and conuerting soules thereby to Christ. Such as do not this whatsoeuer they haue or do they bring no dignity to the Ministery which is magnified not by titles and shewes but by doing the worke belonging to it Secondly it warneth Ministers to keepe their office from contempt by flying licentiousnesse idlenesse couetousnesse c. by preaching painfully and liuing honestly Thirdly it rebukes such hearers as will not be reformed by preaching for they are a blot and blemish to the word and the Ministery thereof as much as in them is as if it were of no might to saue Fourthly it exhortes all men euen as they tender the credit honour of Gods blessed Ministery to submit vnto the Doctrine taught them by this meanes they shall magnifie the Gospell and cause it to be highly esteemed of Tim. What are we to learne from hence that Paul beeing sent to the Gentiles yet labored to saue the Iewes too Silas That Pastors and Parents hauing first and chiefly looked to their owne charge may lawfully endeauour the saluation of many others by publike and priuate teaching prouided it be no preiudice to thē ouer whom we are specially set Tim. But will not this example serue to iustifie such as commonly leaue their owne charge to teach others abroad Sil. No it will not for these Iewes whom Paul taught were mixed with the Gentiles so as in teaching them he neglected not his owne charge and his commission was to teach all Nations Tim. But seeing it is God onely that can saue how doth Paul write that he will saue some Silas God saueth otherwise then Ministers doe he as efficient chiefe working cause of saluation beeing both author and blesser of the ministry Ministers saue as his voluntary instruments whom he vseth not of neede but because he will to whom that is communicated which is proper to the chiefe agent to teach all men to reuerence the ministry and to see the great necessity of it 1. Tim. 4 16. Iames 5 20. Rom. 1 19. Tim. What else learne we heere Silas That in seeking to saue our greatest care must be for friends and kinsmen Luke 22. 32. Acts 10 24. For charity is limited and ruled iit beginneth at our selues those next to vs and so stretcheth it selfe to others both in temporall matters and in spirituall 1. Timotheus 5 4 8. DIAL XII Verse 15. For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world what shall their receiuing be but life from the dead Tim. VVHat doth this 15. verse containe Silas The 2. argumēt wherby the beleeuing Gētiles are dehorted from insulting or proud disdaining of the vnbeleeuing Iewes it is taken from the hope of the restoring of the Iewes to the Church of God who therfore ought not to be contemned The first argument was from the end of Gods counsell in the reiection of the Iewes whereof we heard out of verses 11 12. Tim. Of what parts doth this text consist Silas Of two parts The first is a proposition The second is a proofe the proposition or matter propounded is this The Iewes which bee now as deade men by their vnbeleefe shall bee reuiued and quickened againe by grace This proposition is illustrated and set foorth by the similitude of the last and generall resurrection when the dead which lye buried in their graues shall arise againe euen as possible it is for God to raise the Iewes out of the graue of their sinnes This proposition is confirmed by an argument a minori from that which is lesse likely to that which is more likely as thus If the calamity of the Iewes brought foorth so great a good to the world of the Gentiles as reconciliation with God then what shall their felicity be but a reuiuing of the whole world when both Iewes and Gentiles shall receiue the Gospell then not Iew alone shall be restored to life but the whole world shal be totally receiued to God-wards Tim. Now expound the words of the first part of this sentence Silas Casting away signifieth the same with fall and diminishing as before verse 14. World by a Synecdoche signifies the Gentiles which be the greatest part of the
brings with it assurance and an infallible perswasion of Gods loue and it beeing once had can neuer be lost againe in respect of Gods power and Christs intercession how is there any place for feare at all in the faithfull Or if beleeuers must feare then how is there any certainty in Faith for there is nothing so contrary to Fayth as feare and doubting Silas Feare and perplexed doubting comes from the weakenesse of faith Faith in it owne nature beeing a most certaine perswasion but we are to note that this is not spoken to this or that true beleeuer for whom it is impossible that they should loose their fayth whollie For it is a gifte whereof God repenteth not also God neuer tempteth his aboue their power But this is spokē of whole congregations wherin some do falsely perswade themselues to be true beleeuers and bee not so indeede Thirdly howsoeuer that feare that engendreth perplexity of minde and breedeth despaire of Gods goodnesse cannot consist together with Fayth the one destroying the other yet that feare which breedes a reuerence of God may well stand with the assurance of Faith being a meanes ordained of God both to continue and encrease faith because it moueth vs to earnest constant Prayer by the which faith is nourished and strengthned Howsoeuer then a beleeuing person need not feare condemnation yet he may must feare transgression Psal 4 4. Hee cannot feare falling away into perdition but he ought to feare falling into sinne hee must haue the feare of humility to make him watchfull but not the feare which arises out of infidelitie which makes distrustfull Tim. What profit is to be made of this instruction touching the feare of God Sil. It acquits vs from the slander of the Papists who accuse vs that wee doe teach men that they may liue securely and need not feare God Secondly it conuicts them of error which say we cannot bee certaine of forgiuenes of sins because we must feare wheras feare being a fruite of sanctification a marke of our adoption Acts 10 35. the more wee doe feare God and his word the more wee are sure to bee blessed which is euery where promised to such as feare God Lastly it exhortes all Christians which lacke this feare to seeke it and those which haue it to be thankefull for it and grow vp in it For blessed is he which feareth continually therefore if ye call God Father passe the time of your dwelling in feare Tim. Come now to the 21. verse and tell vs what is meant by the naturall branches Silas The Iewes Gods owne people who because they were borne of an holy roote beleeuing parents who by a free couenant were of God separated from other people are therfore called naturall branches thogh they were conceiued in sinne as al others are and by nature had no more holinesse then others And whereas it is saide of God that he spared not them the meaning is that he punished them and brake them as it is expounded verse 17 19. see also Rom. 8 32. Lesse is spoken thē is meant which is vsuall in the Scripture see 1. Cor. 15 58. Heb. 6. 10. Tim. What is the lesson to be learned from hence Silas The vnpartiall seuerity of God against the obstinate vnbeleeuers which are contemners of his word in that his anciēt people which had stood so many years vnder his couenant and were so long before vs in possession of religion and had so many great promises and fauours done them yet when they despised and abused Gods goodnesse so farre as publikely to deny and reiect his Sonne they must bee no longer borne with at any hand How then may we which are branches by grafting in descended of infidels and heathenish parents and but adopted children looke to escape Gods fierce wrath if we contemne his word when the very naturall branches and such as come of the holy Patriarchs were disinherited and cast out but not before God had chastned them with rods and sometimes sent them into captiuity This may therefore serue as a patterne for parents how to proceed to disinheriting their children and for superiours how to deale with inferiours with much patience and long suffering wayting long being ready to receiue with their Father in the Gospell lost and returning children and resolued not to shake off and vse extemity till there be no remedy and that all hope be gon DIAL XVIII Verse 22. Behold therefore the bountifulnes and seuerity of God on them which haue falne seueritie but toward thee bountifulnes if thou continue in his bountifulnesse or else thou also shalt be cut off Tim. SHew vs what these words import and meane Silas The Apostle goeth forward in his exhortation of the Gentiles to Christian humility and drawing towardes the conclusion of it heapeth vp many reasons in a small roome which hee woulde haue all beleeuers euer to haue before their eies this one verse containeth foure motiues vnto modesty and lowlinesse of minde First from the example of Gods seuerity in cutting off the Iewes Secondly from the efficient cause of the vocation of the Gen tile to wit Gods bounty or goodnesse Thirdly from the condition vpon which they holde this bounty namely if they continue in this estate wherein his goodnesse hath set them Fourthly from a commination of destruction if through pride and security they forsake the Gospell and loose their faith which is spoken to the whole nation not to any singular person which cannot bee cut off yet this caution is profitable Tim. Now to the interpretation and tell vs what doeth bounty and seuerity signifie Sil. Bounty signifies the clemency of God and his great readinesse to doe good vnto and to pleasure men Seuerity signifies that extreame rigour in God whereby hee dealeth with his enemies precisely and exactly according to their descruings or the cutting off of his enemies according to extreamity of iustice Tim. What may be meant by behold Silas It is as much as to muse vpon and diligently to consider in our mindes till they be so plaine and cleare to vs as things which we doe see with our eyes Tim. What doctrine are we to learne from these words thus declared Silas That goodnesse and iustice mercy and seuerity are both to be sound in one God see Exod. 20 5 6. and 34 6 7. Rom. 2 4 5. Tim. But are not mercy and seuexity contrary qualities how then can they fall into the nature of God Is God contrary to himselfe Silas These qualities agree together and are not repugnant in God but are contray onely in their effects vpon men One and the selfe same God is mercifull and seuere in respect of diuers persons vpon whom he worketh but is not contrary to himselfe no more then a good Gouernour is contrary to himselfe when hee seuerely punisheth euill doers and praiseth such as doe well Also one and the 〈◊〉 same sunne softneth the waxe but hardeneth the
vision touching the restoring by certaine degrees vnto life strength beauty and proportion the dry bones which he saw scattered in the fielde which howsoeuer some by allusion doe apply to the resurrectiō of the dead at the general iudgment yet it is plaine by the text to be meant of Israelites being in respect of spirituall life and grace like drye bones and dead bodyes vnable throrough vnbeleefe to stirre toward God but through the great and rich goodnesse of God to be raised againe by the Gospell and made aliue to God through Christ not all at once but by some degrees whereof their comming out of their desperate captiuity of Babylon might bee a type and figure For it is Gods manner in types of temporall deliuerances to teach spirituall and heauenly things concerning eternall redemption by Christ. Beside these things the counsell of the most wise and almighty God in the wonderfull preseruation of the Iewes ought diligently to be considered waighed of the godly wheras sundry very ancient people and famous as Persians Chaldeans Assirians Troians Vandales Lombards Gothes Saxons Picts Hunnes c. are eyther quite extinct and destroyed or else being seuered and scattered haue not so held their owne as to keepe still their owne ordinances and to be able to shew their originall and historye in sure record and preserue themselues for their ciuill life and religion vnmixed with other people whither they came yet behold a strange thing and markeable the Iewes onely notwithstanding their great and long dispersions and manifold calamities desolations and death in sundry countries where they haue beene butchered like sheepe as in England heere at London and Yorke by hundreds and thousands and elsewhere in other Countries knocked downe by heapes and others cruelly spoyled do for all this not onely remaine in very innumerous multitudes chiefely in Asia and Aphrica as M. Beza and M. Grineus vpon certaine knowledge do report but do keepe their Tribes distinct and vnconfounded and their religion all without commixtion as much as they may reading and searching the Scriptures but with very corrupt construction yet with this fruite and commodity that both their pedigree and descent from Abraham and the Patriarkes may appeare eke by their witnesse of our bookes out of which we deriue our holy Christian faith may be iustified and cleared from suspition of imposture and fraude which the heathenish Philosophers and other prophane Atheist-like persons cannot now charge vs with seeing that people still remaines as preseruers of those oracles of God which bee the fountaines of our religion Of all which what other thing are we to deeme and iudge but that they are reserued thus miraculously of God against the time of their conuersion and saluation to come heereafter in Gods determinate season Of this iudgement and opinion finally are many both moderne writers M. Caluine Beza Peter Martyr Iunius Piscator Pareus and our learned industrious countryman M. Doctor Willet who hath written an whole tract of this argument and diuers of the ancient Fathers and Schoolemen as namely Hilary and Chrysostome and Thomas Aquinas whose words are these Vniuersi Iudaei c. all the Iewes shall come to the Faith not particularlie some but vniuersally all as many beleeued in the beginning when the Gospell first was published so verie many shall beleeue heereafter The Meditation whereof should warne vs 1. of courtesie and charity towardes the Iewes 2. of humility in our selues that wee despise not them whome God will honour 3. of sound amendment of our liues that we be no longer any occasion of their stumbling and auersion from Christianity and that with daily and most feruent supplication we doe helpe their conuersion that God may bee glorified in the free and mighty saluation of that forlorne people and the kingdome of his Sonne enlarged a deare thing vnto all which loue Christ. Tim. Yee haue now finished this generall instruction Tell mee what particular Lessons ye haue to commend out of these two Verses Silas Both what be the benefites of Gods Couenant of grace and in what order Christ himselfe the deliuerer or Redeemer whom except we receiue and embrace being made one with him by Faith wee can haue no part in his merits as an house cannot bee borne vp and supported by a foundation except first it bee close laide vpon it nor a member takes motion from the body if it be not knit to the body The next benefit is remission or taking away sinne both guilt and punishment by the death of Christ whereunto is annexed imputation of Christ his actiue obedience in keeping the whole Lawe for our righteousnes For it is not enough to bee freed from condemnation and curse of sin but there must bee title and interest giuen vs vnto glorification and life eternal that we may be fully blessed Christ may be to vs no halfe but an absolute redeemer Lastly repentance or turning from sin vnto holinesse which is sanctification and is an vnseparable companion of iustification a necessarie fruite of faith and a spirituall benefit of Gods free Couenant so as they doe in vaine boast of hauing Christ and remission of sinnes by him which haue not forsaken their iniquities and begun to leade a new life Obstinate sinners which still abide in their wicked lusts without amendment haue nothing to do with Christ as a deliuerer and Sauiour but as with a fierce Iudge Secondly we are taught that we haue pardon of sinne and sanctification by the vertue of Gods couenant and free promise whereupon all good benefits depend but this is effectuall onely by faith For as no Christ no reconciliation with God without the promise concerning Christ the promise is vaine to vs till we beleeue Therefore the Papists teach corruptly which say that the parties baptized are purged and sanctified by the worke done whether they doe beleeue or not Moreouer if remission of sinnes bee by free Couenant what becommeth of merite of Workes For if our Saluation stands in remission then not in perfection of Vertues if in the prerogatiue of Christ the Redeemer and of Gods free Couenant then not in the glorie of our Merites DIAL XXII Verses 28 29. As concerning the Gospell they are enemies for your sake but as touching the election they are beloued for the Fathers sake For the gifts and callings of God are without Repentance Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas Two Arguments to prooue the former secret about the vniuersall restoring of the Iewes The first is taken from the dignity of the Iewes being his ancient people set forth by the efficient cause Gods election and his Couenant with the Fathers The second is from the nature of GOD who is euermore firme and vnchaungeable and will not frustrate his owne election and calling Therefore it is most certaine that one day the Iewes must bee conuerted vnto the Fayth because God cannot for euer leaue and forsake a people so deare vnto him beeing his chosen people
obtaine to beleeue in Christ not by fortune or by their owne merites but freely through the mercy of God The proofe hereof is first Rom. 9. 16. where election and faith which dependeth vpon it are denied vnto and taken from our owne merites and attributed wholly to God and mercy adde hereunto Ephe. 2. 8. Furthermore vnbeliefe commeth from the free will of man being corrupt therefore it cannot ingender faith for out of one fountain commeth not sweete and sowre water Lastly if faith come from our selues though but in part then might wee haue some reioycing in our selues but we must wholly glory in God and not in our selues 1. Cor. 1. 31. Therefore faith in them by an effectuall calling is the onely woorke of his grace and mercy Tit. 3. 4. 5. 2. Tim. 1. 9. Tim. What is the profit wee are to make to our selues by this doctrine Silas It teacheth where to beg faith when we lacke it and whome to thanke when wee haue it Thirdly it conuicteth such of errour as in matter of saluation part stakes and deuide betweene Gods mercies and mans free will as if it had some power to beleeue the promises and onely needed some helpe of grace Thirdly it humbleth the pride of man to consider that all that is pleasing to God and tending to eternall life doth come without our selues wholly by the grace of God 1. Cor. 1 29. Tim. Will not this weaken our endeauour after the getting and increasing of faith and other sauing heauenly graces Sil. No verily it may quench arrogancy but it will quicken our industry because the more mercifull God is vnto vs the more wee are bound to doe what lyeth in vs to please him Psal. 130. 4. Rom. 12 1. Secondly though faith come of God yet our duty is to seeke aske knocke labour and striue to attaine it and the promise is to such Tim. What other things may we learne from the two former verses of this text Silas That the vnbeleefe and contumacy of the Iewes hath well deserued their breaking off from the Christian Church so as God is iust and they haue no cause to complaine Secondly why the Iewes and the Gentiles might not beleeue both together but by courses one after another is a secret to be adored of vs and not to be inquired into verse 33. Thirdly the conuersion of the Gentiles followed the vnbeleefe of the Iewes not as an effect of the proper cause for the Iewes in their disobeying intended no mercy to the Gentiles but as an euent consequent of Gods prouidence and counsell so purposing disposing matters to the praise of his name Elsewhere that noteth the euent and not the moouing of the finall cause 1. Cor. 12. Acts 1 2. Tim. Now proceede to the 32. verse and tell vs the summe of the argument contained therein Silas God hath equally shut vp both Iew and Gentile as it were in a prison to this ende that the elect among them might equally obtaine mercy vnto saluation Tim. In what sence may it be saide of God that he shuts vp men in vnbeleefe Sil. Not by dropping and powring vnbeleefe into their hearts for God is not the author of sinne nor yet onely by suffering men to be blinded with ignorance and to become vnbeleeuers or by withdrawing the Spirite and word of faith from men and by declaring and conuicting men of infidelity in which sence the Scripture is saide to shut vp men vnder sinne Gal. 3 22. because sinne is reuealed by the law Rom. 3 20. But God as a righteous Iudge deliuering men vp to blindnesse and hardnesse of heart doth hold thē fast fettered in the ghiues of their vnbeleef Like as a Iudge doth inflict imprisonment vpon offenders and restraineth their liberty so all men till the time of their effectuall calling are kept in the prison of incredulity by the iustice of God their sinne so deseruing to haue it This is therefore a metaphor or speech borrowed from earthly affaires and applied to spirituall things Tim. What is our lesson from the first part of the verse Silas That God vseth to punish one sinne by another wherein yet he is not the author of the sinne but of the punishment the iudgement is from God the fault is from men therefore let all men stand in feare of him who can strike the Spirite as well as the flesh Secondly that the condition both of elect and reprobates by nature is alike all being incredulous disobedient to God and miserable and therefore none ought to bee puft vp aboue another our case being all one and the elect beeing no better then others by birth haue the more cause to praise Gods goodnes for caling them to the faith and leauing others in vnbeleefe which were no worse thē themselues were Tim. In the next part of the sentence what is meant by the world All Silas Not euery particular person but some of all sorts as Augustine expounds it some Iewes some Gentiles euen all the faithfull of euery nation This may appeare to be the sence by comparing this place with Ro. 10 11 12. Gal. 3 20 22. where that is called sin which is called vnbeleefe here that tearmed the promise there which is heere tearmed mercie and the vniuersall particle All restrained or limited vnto beleeuers Tim. What instructions haue wee from these last words Silas That wee are not to despaire of the conuersion of any be they neuer so great vnbeleeuers for Gods power and mercy are greater then mens sinnes therefore none must cast away hope of others or their owne saluation Secondly it is God alone that is able to open the eyes of such as are blinded by vnbeleefe as none deliuereth the offender out of prison but the Iudge which committeth him so none can escape out of the Fetters of vnbeleefe but through the mercy of God which shut them vp in that prison Therefore let all pray vnto him to pardon their vnbeleefe to giue them Faith to beleeue in his onely begotten 〈◊〉 our Redeemer for they onely are free whom the Sonne maketh free al others remaine fast tied and bound in the chaines and manacles of naturall blindnesse and infidelity hauing not so much by any strength of their own wil as to desire liberty DIAL XXIIII Verses 33 34 35 36. O the deepenesse of the Riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God howe vnsearchable are his iudgements and his wayes past finding out for who hath knowne the minde of the Lorde or who was his Counseller c. Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A conclusion of the former argument touching election and reprobation but especially of the mystery touching the reiecting and calling of the Iewes at the consideration of which things he as one striken with amazement exclaimeth that they are too high or deepe for him eyther to vnderstand or vtter being worthy to be admired and adored because of the admirable wisedome and iustice of God in them and
Sunne nor the soule borrowes any life from the body but the bodies life is from the soule so is it betweene God and all his creatures No Monarch in the world Emperour or King is or can be so absolute and independing as the soueraigne King of the worlde is for they cannot subsist without their people as a King in royall authority who by their multitude strength and riches doe maintaine the safetie of their Kings and Rulers by their submission do honor them but God had no neede of his creatures he did and can for euer haue subsifted and beene perfect and al-sufficient to himselfe and of himselfe without them and so not they without him of whome they haue being when they were not and all thinges when they had nothing This made Iob to say that as mans wickednesse hurt not God so his goodnesse did not profit him And Dauid Psal. 16 2. that his goodnes or liberality did not extend to God but to the Saints which were of excellent Vertue it might doe them some good and none can giue God any thing Whereas God calles for our affections Giue me thy heart Prou. 23. and for our goods Offer thy substance vnto God and hee looketh for our-thankes and praises Render vnto me praises Psal. 50 14. Wee are to know that we giue God nothing but what hee first gaue vs. Also by our giftes he may be honored but cannot be enriched being an infinite perfection And lastly in our gifts to him wee expresse our dutie but make him no debter for we owe vnto him more then wee do or bee Tim. Vnto what profit and vse are we to turne this doctrine touching Gods absolutenesse Silas First it serues for instruction to teach that God cannot do wrong or offer iniustice to any seeing he is in debt to none and might do with his owne what he would therefore though he haue no mercy on Cain Ismael Esau Saul Achab Iudas or others yet heerein is he not vniust for hee oweth them nothing nay had hee denyed mercy to all mankinde and appointed all the sonnes of Adam to endlesse and remedilesse misery as he did the Angels which fell this plea woulde haue freed and quitted God that none gaue him first and therefore how can any complaine of him sithence all was in his owne power to dispose of them as hee himselfe listed Let then all mouthes be stopped Secondly this exhorts the elect and godly to great and continuall loue and thankfulnesse towardes God because of his gracious fauour they holde themselues and whatsoeuer they enioy they enioy it not onely besides and without their owne deseruings but indeede directly against their merite as being by guilt of sin worthy of the same condition with the reprobate it is the meere goodnesse of God who hath separated them and allotted them a better estate for they gaue him nothing they preuented him not by any merite or desert on their part Tim. Yet the Scripture often affirmeth that Godrendreth to the godly according to their workes Rom. 2. 6. and that hee doeth this as a righteous iudge 2 Thessal 1. 6. 7. 2. Tim. 4 8. Therefore it should seeme God is not iust except hee recompence the godly for that which they haue giuen him see Luke 14. 14. Silas Whatsoeuer workes the faithfull haue they bee Gods guifts who worketh in them both the will and deed according to his pleasure Phil. 2. 13. they be no otherwise called our workes but as our bread is tearmed ours Mat. 7 11. because it is giuen vs wee are they which receiue it to vse it by Gods liberality and as his blessing vppon our industry So good workes being wrought in vs and giuen vs by Gods holy Spirit are therefore named ours and not because they proceed from our wil which made Augustine to say Lord looke not vpon my owne workes but vppon thy workes which thou hast done in mee and again God crowneth in vs his owne guifts not our merites and againe He doeth vs a double mercy first hee giueth vs power to do well and then recompenceth and crownes that worke which we did well by his grace Now God hauing freely promised a reward to good workes hence he is called iust and righteous not because he oweth any thing to any persons but for that he keepeth his promise which is the part of righteousnesse Wherefore popish hypocrites and iustitiaries are little better then mad which presume to make God obnoxious a debter to them by their works as if they gaue him something of their owne and so were vniust except by order of iustice not of clemency he did requite euen for the worthines of the worke See Rhemish notes on 2. Tim. 4 8. Heb. 6 10. Lastly heere is confuted predestination vpon faith and workes foreseene which bindeth Gods fore-appointment to the quality of the creature as if it being the supreame cause of al things did depend vpon something in men which they should as ye would say giue vnto him Tim. What doth the last verse of this Chapter containe Silas A proofe of that which went before that hee is debter to no man because he is the beginning of al things and that he cannot doe vniustly with any because his glory is the end of al things for it is rightfull that euery thing be referred to his owne end but God himselfe is the ende for which some men are elect and others reprobate therfore whether he doe elect or not elect hee cannot wrong any man for it is iust that God should promote his owne glory as he list Tim. What is meant in this sentence by him thrice repeated Silas Some vnderstand it of the three persons in the Trinity without any ground therefore the best is generally to expound it of God Tim. In what sence are all things saide to be of God Silas Not as of the matter where of they are for then al things should be deified but as of the first cause and beginning for he giueth being to all all things made are of him by creation all persons elect bee of him by predestination all the Saints that are beleeuers are of him by regeneration there is nothing in them cyther of nature or grace but it is of God originall sinne being an euill thing is not of God but of the malice of Sathan and of mans corruption though sinne be of God passiuely for he suffereth it and deficiently for hee doeth with-drawe his grace yet not from God as efficient and originall working cause it is by him being by him turned to good and for him because it tends to the praise of his iustice Tim. In what meaning are all things said to be by or through him Silas They are through him by administration because he gouerns all things euen the least to a sparrow on the house top Math. 10. 29. Secondly they are through him by preseruation because he vpholds all things in their being so long as they bee for God is
heere reproued are certaine irregular and exorbitant persons amongst our selues who though they bee in iudgement conuicted and cannot but confesse that this precept is giuen to all Christians and touching all powers yet they make themselues a disperisation and take liberty to doe what they list without all due regard to that which is by superiors commanded Heerein ioyning with Anabaptists and Libertines that as touching their practise they striue to shake off from their neckes the yoake though not of supreame yet of subordinate Gouernors as if they were too good to obey some powers The third kinde is the Pope and his Cleargy who do not onely pleade for an exemption but also do practise it with such manifest and grosse wickednesse as that the Pope doth not onely withdraw subiection from Emperors but hath lifted vp his throne aboue the Throne of Emperors and Kings whom hee taketh vpon him to set vp and pull downe at his pleasure to dispose their kingdome and despise nay destroy their persons vpon imputation of heresie and is not only not subiect to them but causeth them to bow downe their neckes vnder his feete and most filthily to worship him by kissing them vnder this pretext that the soule is better then the body and therefore spirituall Gouernors which teach the soule are to be preferred before temporal whose charge it is to looke to the body and worldly things It was the argument of Pope Baniface the eight whereas in trueth it is not the fashion of Popes to preach the gospel therwith they little trouble themselues but to Lord it and liue in pompe and pleasure And say they did teach the word of God yet as Kings how great soeuer their dignity be must subiect their vnderstandings and willes to be gouerned by the word which the ministers propound for Gods word must rule the highest Rulers so Ministers though their function be very high and excellent yet cannot free themselues from subiection vnto ciuill Magistrates because it is heere imperatiuely commanded Let euery soule be subiect As the High-Priests were subiects Aaron to Moses Abiathar and Zadock to Salomon and Romisn byshoppes to the first Christian Emperours Tim. What may be vnderstoode by the word Subiect Silas This word imports as much as to bee put vnder another or to be brought in order and it insinuateth to them that are gouerned that there is a certain order orderly disposing between the ruler and the ruled by consideration whereof the inferior which is set vnder must giue place to the superiour which is put aboue This emphasis the learned obserue in this word As it is in nature Bees Cranes and Fishes haue one aboue them vnder whose conduct they go forth to feede and returne from feeding and among the Elementarie bodies the more heauier and more massie are subiect and put vnder the lighter and more subtle the earth vnder the water the water vnder the ayre the ayre vnder the sky the sky vnder the starry firmament and that vnder the thirde heauens which are the seate of the Angelles And as in humane bodies the other members as handes armes and legges c. do by nature acknowledge the head as chief and are subiect vnto it so in policy or worldly estates there is such an order setled that some should be aboue to commaund others beneath to obey and that they which are placed as inferiours should submitthemselues to such as by ranke and order are their superiours Againe it is more significant to say be subiect then if the Apostle should haue said obey reuerence resist not honour c. For subiection as a generall word comprizeth all the rest as particulars vnder it namely acknowledgment of their power taking lawes and coine from them arming at their commaundement reuerence loue prayer and thankesgiuing for them thankfulnesse in maintaining them obedience in doing and suffering al these appertaine to subiection Tim. What are we to vnderstand by powers Silas By powers are meant heere not Ecclesiasticall Gouernors as Apostles Euangelists Doctors Pastors Teachers but such as take tribute and beare the sword which Ministers are forbid to doe and ciuill rulers may do and therefore the Papists erre which from this place would set vp the preheminency of Pope and Byshops aboue politicke Rulers who by a Metonymie of the adioynt are heere named powers because they are endowed with great power and might aboue other men to suppresse the wicked and defend the good Also to shew that they beare the Image of God not in respect of his essence but in respect of his power and thence it is that not Iehouah the Title of his Being but Elohim the Title of his power is attributed to the Magistrate Psal. 82 1 5. Obserue also that subiectes may not examine by what way or meane Princes get their power whether by right or wrong for Paul knew that the Romanes had by great force made themselues the Lords of the world yet he will haue the present powers obeyed Lastly Paul speaks not of the persons but of the functions which must be respected be the Gouernors good or bad Mens deformities cannot extinguish Gods ordinances nor can diuine functions be lesse honorable by humane frailties it is a grosse malice or blindnesse not to distinguish the sins of the man and the worthines of the Magistracy DIAL II. Verses 1 2. For there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God Whosoeuer therefore resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance of God and they that resist shall receiue to themselues damnation Tim. HOw doth our Apostle proceede Silas In these words and the verses following he rendreth sundry and weighty reasons why we ought to be subiect to Magistrates whereof the first is taken from the efficient cause and author which is neither fortune nor chance nor men nor Angels good or badde but onely God himselfe whose ordinance we are bound to reuerence and be subiect to it but powers or magistrates are Gods ordinance therefore we must bee subiect to them This is the first argument which may bee thus further pressed and vrged It is a comely and an honest thing to submit our selues vnto that order which comes from God who is not the authour of any thing that is euill therefore seeing Magistracie is a thing which God hath set amongst men it is a seemly and honest thing to submit our selues vnto it Tim. May we not gather from the first words that there are sundry powers and that they are all of GOD one and other Silas Yea this Text implyeth that there are sundrie kindes of powers and that they come all of God theyr first Author because he saith in the plurall number the powers that be are ordained of God which proposition beeing vniuersall shewes that the former exclusiue proposition no powers but of God comprehends al is as much in effect as if the Apostle had saide al powers both high middle or low Priuate
of two sorts of persons First of our infirme and weake Brethren who not knowing but that Moses Lawes touching certaine meates prohibited and difference of dayes were still in force might by the vndue vntimely vse of this liberty by such as had better instruction and knew that Iesus in his death had abolished those Leuitical shadows be brought to mislike Christ and his Gospell as contrary to Moses and to open their mouths to reproach this Christian liberty taught by the Gospell and so to fal off againe from the Faith which they had before submitted vnto Secondly by strangers who were without the Church and might say Lo these are the Christians they cannot agree one holds one thing another the contrarie what concord is this what a Religion is this As our Papists by our home diuisions take occasions to blaspheme our Religion forgetting their own domesticall contentions in more and waightier mttters See M. Doctor Halles Booke intituled the Peace of Rome which is nothing lesse then at vnity in it selfe yet vpbraids diuision to vs. Tim. What may we learne from hence Silas This teacheth that Christian liberty is a blessing seeing it enfreeth vs from the yoake and bondage of ceremonies therefore we owe thankes to God for it that we may freely and lawfully feed on such creatures as Salomon in all his glory might not touch without sin Secondly such as do striue and differ about things indifferent do open and loose the tongues of friends and enemies to reproach our good and our Gospell and our God Oh that Gath and Ascalon had neuer hearde of the diuisions of Epbraim and Iudah DIAL VII Verse 17. For the kingdom of God is not meates drinks but righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Tim. VVHat containes this Text Silas A new argument to disswade the strong from striuing about the vse of meats and such things to the offence of the weake The argument is more forcible then any of the former It is this the kingdome of Heauen stands not in these indifferent things therefore wee may not with the scandall and destruction of our Brethren contend about them In which reason the Apostle seemeth somewhat closely to insinuate vnto the rebuke of the strong as if they had beene too eager and earnest in these externall matters placing piety and pleasing of God in them as if all our good and happinesse had depended on them not so saith Paul the kingdom consisteth in more waightie things as righteousnes peace and ioy in the Spirit and not in such outward indiffrent matters as meates and dayes and the like which in no whit appertaine to Gods worship and mans saluation The parts of this 17. verse bee two the one affirmatiue the other negatiue In this latter it is denied that the kingdome of God is meate and drinke in the other it is affirmed that it is in righteousnesse peace and ioy The holy Ghost who as an efficient cause distinguisheth worldly righteousnesse peace and ioy from that which is both Religious and Christian comming not of the Flesh but from the Spirit being in spirituall not carnall things and therefore the fit and meete matter of the Kingdome of GOD which consisteth not of this world Tim. Interprete the words what signifies the Kingdome of God Silas Amongst sundrie acceptions there bee two especially whereof I now make vse First the estate of grace whereby Christraigneth in our hearts by his Spirite this is called Kingdome because it is the enterance into and the way vnto the Kingdome aboue Secondly Kingdome signifieth the estate of glorie and blisse in heauen where because God shall fully reigne in his Saints and immediately not as heere vnperfect and by meanes of the word therefore it is tearmed also and more cheefly the Kingdom of God I see nothing against it why the Text may not bee expounded in both these sences without wrong to phrase or circumstance or scope For following the first sence putting kingdome for that grace whereby we are reconciled to God or able to please him then the meaning is that since there is no necessity of meates to this purpose as to bring vs to Gods fauour and make vs acceptable to him 1 Cor. 8 8. which teacheth that meates nor drinkes make vs neither more nor lesse acceptable vnto God therefore there ought to be no difference about them to the scandall one of another especially if wee embrace the latter sence our saluation is neither hindred nor furthred by meates and drinkes therefore a folly it is to contend about these things which shall not bee necessarie in the kingdome of heauen as one saith nor of any vse in our celestial conuersation as Origen writeth nor the things that must bring vs to heauen as Chrysostom speaks nor the cause of our reigning there There is a Synecdoche in these tearmes of meates and drinkes for they are put for all other things of a middle Nature whatsoeuer they be they do no whit at al belong to Gods worship now or mans felicity heereafter being simply considered in themselues Tim. What are the Doctrines to bee learned out of the first part of this verse thus opened Silas Euen this that things that be indifferent are of no necessity vnto the seruice of God or sauing of our soules The proofes heereof first from authority of Scripture Mat. 15 11. 1 Cor. 8 8. Heb. 13 9. 1 Tim. 4 4. 8. According to these Scriptures our English Church hath iudged these meates c. to be vnnecessary in their own Nature either to holinesse or happinesse the cleare light of the word hauing taught vs as the words of the statute be An. 3. of Edw. 6. that one day or one kinde of meate of it selfe is not more holy pure or cleane then another and that no meates at any time can defile any Christian and that all meates are lawful so they be not vsed in disobedience and vice but be receiued with sobrietie and thankesgiuing to God and sanctified by the word and prayer therefore howsoeuer with a ciuill abstinence at certaine seasons is well commanded and ought accordingly to be practised yet no Religion is to be placed in such abstinence from meats whereof this reason may bee rendred that by meates neither is the heart strengthened in grace or polluted with sinne made neyther wiser nor better holier or happier Tim. How then doth the Apostle reck on vppe gluttonie and drunkennesse amongest the sinnes which barre vs from Gods kingdome and on the other side seeing murther is a Capitall sinne and men may commit it vpon themselues by Fasting and Abstinence how may it then be truly saide that the kingdome of God is not meates and drinkes Silas It is true that by excesse in meates and drinkes the Kingdome may be lost 1 Cor. 6. 10. Galat. 5 21. but meates and drinkes themselues taken or not taken doe not exclude vsfrom in the kingdom nor giue vs enterest vnto it Howsoeuer the abuse by
the defect not vsing thē at al or in the excesse vsing them intemperatly may and doth deserue damnation and will certainly draw it vpon the heads of all such which repent not of their immoderatenesse about these externall thinges yet a man doth not please God or shal be saued because he eateth Fish rather then Flesh and drinketh Beere and not Ale Tim. Shew vs what vse Christians are to make of this doctrine Silas It serues for confutation of the Manichees affirming some meates in their owne nature to bee euill as Flesh Egges Milke and Wine saying of Wine that it is the gall of the Prince of darknesse dishonouring the Creator and 〈◊〉 this Text which plainely faith The Kingdom of God is not meates Also the 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 fellowes who defend that it were as good to eate and deuoure a soule as to eate things that had bloud and life These put sinne and damnation in meats euen directly and so do the Papistes indirectly and by necessarie consecution For whilst they doe auouch in worde and writing that howsoeuer no creature is impure by creation but so confesse all to bee good which God hath made yet that to eate flesh or white meates at certaine time as Lent Ember Weekes Fasting daies c. is a matter against Religion displeasing to God yea a mortal that is in their construction a heynous sinne and no lesse fault then to kill a man holding them for best christians which doe put most Religion in abstinence from meates which they reckon as a thing not acceptable alone but meritorious and satisfactory to Gods Iustice both for themselues and others all vpon this pretence to tame the flesh which in the meane time they pamper with manifold delicacies great prouokers of lust What is this else but to fulfill the prophesie of the Apostle 1. Tim. 4 2. in hypocrisie and coloured wordes to make all meates vncleane at some time and to some men at all times as if meates were the Kingdome of God or if the kingdome were to be won or lost by meates or drinkes Tim. What other Lesson from these words Silas That meates and whatsoeuer other indifferent things are more slight then that Christians ought to contend about them for seeing they are no parts either of Law or Gospell what reason haue Christians to dissent for them Indeed for such things that please or displease God as precepts of the Law promises of the gospell faith and obedience towards God we are strongly to stand and earnestly to contend for such things Iude 3. whereof we haue Paul for example Galat. 2 11. What may wee iudge then of those Papistes and Protestants which chafe and fret for neglect of a humane Ceremony being colde and carelesse about Christian duties tything Mint and Annice and neglecting greater things of the Law stumbling at strawes and leaping ouer blockes Also what folly to make such adoo about titles precedencie and such other toyes as if Heauen did lye vpon it This very distinction of things vnnecessary to the kingdome and necessary well and duely considered would cut off diuision and debate among brethren who howsoeuer there may be some reason for differences about the inheritance and their fathers goods yet for chips and feathers to contend may argue lacke of wit or good will or of both DIAL VIII Verses 17 18 19 20. But righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost For whosoeuer in these things serueth Christ is pleasing to God and approued of men Let vs then follow c. Tim. WHat doth this text containe Silas First the condition or parts of Christs kingdom which consisteth not in meates or in other externall things bur in things inward and spirituall to wit righteousnesse peace and ioy such as come from the Holy-Ghost and are not carnall nor can bee lost verse 17. Secondly a reason from the effects thus In these things we serue Christ and please God but the kingdome of God doth stand in seruice of Christ and pleasing of God therefore righteousnesse peace and ioy are necessary to the kingdome and not meates verse 18. Thirdly a conclusion that sithence peace is one part of religion and of the kingdome therefore by all meanes Christians are to imbrace that and to put away strife about other vnnecessary things verse 19. But least wee should thinke that euery kinde of peace should bee followed hee adioyneth thereunto edification verse 20. An edifying peace is to be followed and whatsoeuer belongs to it as charity forbearing concord forgiuing one another meekenesse and all other furtherances of peace be diligently to bee sought for Vnto this edifying peace there is set against it as opposite destroying contention Fourthly an answere vnto a secret obiection But seeing all meates are pure created and granted of God as lawfull to vse why should it not be good for me to eate of all meates whatsoeuer become of other men Not so saith Paul for though al meats be good yet they bee not good to him which eateth with offence to his brother verse 20. Tim. Now expound and tell vs what is meant by righteousnesse peace and ioy Silas Righteousnesse signifies iustice imputed or of the person beeing absolued from sinnes and accepted righteous through faith in Christ. Secondly inherent iustice righteousnesse of workes or that which the Scripture calleth sanctification or holinesse of life begun in such as are iustified by faith Peace signifies inward peace of conscience quieted in respect of reconciliation with God and remission of sinnes also outward concorde with the brethren this beeing a fruite of inward peace of the soule as that followeth iustification by faith Romanes 5 2. By ioy is vnderstood the sweete motion of a Christian soule cheered vp and made glad partly by present sence of Gods loue shed into the heart and partly out of hope of the reward to come Rom. 5 3 5 6. Of this ioy Christ saith it is not taken away Iohn 14. And Paul that it makes ioyous in tribulation Rom. 5 3. Of these three ye may reade at large before namely in the Dialogue vpon the beginning of the fift Chapter The Holy-Ghost is added here both to note the efficient cause of Christian righteousnes peace and ioy also to distin guish Christian righteousnes peace and ioy from that which is worldly and carnal grounded vpon earthly thinges and being also vnconstant Tim. What is the doctrine from these words Silas That things which be necessary to the kingdome that is to religion and saluation they bee spirituall and inward things such as by the Holy-Ghost are wrought in the soule as namely iustification by faith peace of conscience ioy in the Holy-Ghost which is not so to bee taken but that charity repentance godlines meekenes patience temperance truth goodnesse fidelity c. doe belong to the kingdome But these three are heere named as chiefe and cause or ground of the rest which bee vnseparably linked to these For iustifying faith
deniall of him till a Cocke awakened him Howe easily then may others let slip out of memory necessary principles and instructions sithens a godly Prophet and an Apostle did it And therefore if there were no other benefit to be reaped by the publike Ministery neither for teaching our ignorance or conuicting our errors or informing vs in duties or reproouing our vices or comforting our faint-heartednes yet heerein were cause enough why to loue and vse assemblies where the worde is preached to haue our remembrances stirred vp As Dauid blessed Abigail for remembring him and Peter wept when hee remembred his fall by the crowing of a bird so it is euery ones duty to embrace and blesse God and his Ministers for this office done to them DIAL IIII. Verses 16 17 18 19 20 21. That I should be the Minister of Iesus Christ to the Gentiles ministring the Gospell of God that the offering vp of the Gentiles might be acceptable beeing sanctified by the Holy-Ghost I haue therefore whereof I may glory through Iesus Christ in those things which appertaine to God c. Tim HOw doth the Apostle proceede in these verses and what connexion haue they with the former Silas Hauing maintained his bolde writing to the Romanes by an argument drawne from his Apostolicall function which being graciously bestowed on him as ver 15. imposed vpon him a necessity to write freely and boldly to them as beeing commanded of God so to doe towardes them beeing a part of his charge Now in these present verses hee describeth and magnifieth his Ministry sundry wayes to make it gracious and glorious to the Romanes and other beleeuers and first it is set soorth by the authority of it the author of it is God or Christ Iesus who immediately and extraordinarily called him Acts 9 3 4. to be his seruant Gal. 1 1. and his publike Minister Not as Magistrates bee Rom 13 6. but to minister the Gospell where of God is the author to giue attendance vnto holye things and to worke in the holy seruice of the Gospell towards the Gentiles as Peter was inioyned to do towards the Iewes Which maketh much to the commendation of his function that he enioyed it with a large commission as to preach to all the Gentiles and also to haue the Gosspell that is the glad tidings of peace and good things to bee the subiect of his preaching as the Gentiles were the obiect of it but heerein especially his ministry was exalted that the elect faithfull Gentiles were as a sacrifice offered by him vnto God and the Gospell as it were the sacrificing knife himselfe as an holy Priest to kill to cleanse and to offer not beasts but faithfull men vnto God And finally the oblation or sacrificing to bee his preaching doctrine and admonitions for the conuersion of soules thorow the Spirite sanctifying and changing the hearts of the elect among the heathen Tim. What are wee to learne by this comparison or likenesse betweene the Ministery of the Gospell and Leuiticall Priesthood Silas First it warnes vs of the great dignity of the ministry that it is sanctified consecrated vnto such an holy end as the conuersion of sinners which as it is the greatest good so the function which effecteth it must be of singular worthinesse Let men honour it as they loue saluation Secondly hence we learne that God is much desirous of and greatly delighted with the saluation of men for that hee doth account it for a very acceptable sacrifice or offering Which should serue not a little to encourage both Preachers and professors with exceeding ioy of hart to trauaile the one in preaching and setting it foorth the other in hearing and receiuing the word of God beeing imployed in such a seruice so pleasing to God so profitable to themselues Thirdly we are taught heere that as the Sacrifices of the law were then pleasing vnto God whē they were pure and offered vp according to rites of the law so Christians doe become an acceptable sacrifice through the sanctifying of the Holy-Ghost working repentance from their sinnes and induing them with a liuely faith that beeing pure and bolye they might please God through Christ. Though holinesse as a fruite of the Spirite doe please God yet it is Christ the Mediator which maketh it and the person in whom 〈◊〉 to be acceptable Lastly from this 16. verse wee haue wherewith to stop the mouths of the Papists prophane worldlings As for the Papists which obiect vnto vs the want of Priest-hood and seeme to lament that we haue no sacrifices c. we say for our selues that we haue both in our Churches for our Sermons are oblations our people be sacrifices our selues Priests not properly taken for so they ceased in Christs person beeing the onely proper Priest and sacrifice of the new Testament but improper and metaphoricall who yet truely and effectually doe by the sword of the worde slay mens brutish sinnes to make them a sanctified hoast to God Rather we haue iust cause to lament their case that hauing thrust out this kinde of sacrifycing by the doctrine and preaching of the holye Scriptures warranted by the authority of God himselfe they wickedly vsurpe in their Masse to sacrifice Christ properly euery day after his example at his last supper wherin yet he made no oblation thus of being the Ministers of Christ they proue the murtherers of Christ and the successors of Iudas rather then the imitators of Paul Now touching the prophane persons which mislike and murmure at the plaine and bolde admonitions of the Ministers Let this satisfie such that as neuer any did finde fault with the Sacrificers of the lawe for killing and dressing of beasts appointed to bee sacrifices so it should bee imputed as no blame to Preachers by the sacrificing knife of the worde to slay mortifie mens brutish lusts and vices which if they be suffered to liue and raigne it cannot be we should be an holy and acceptable sacrifice to God Rom. 12 1 2. Tim. In the verse 17. and verses following vnto the 22. what doth the Apostle performe Silas Hee continueth to commend his Apostolicall function by the effects in the subduing of the Gentiles by his ministry vnto the obedience of the Gospell both by his words and workes verse 18. whereof hee reckoneth first the kindes signes and wonders and the efficient cause the power of the Holy-Ghost the author of miracles verse 19. And for so much as the Romanes might obiect Why doest thou O Paul chiefely begin with vs Romanes and so earnestly deale with vs passing by other nations Thereunto hee answereth verse 19 20. that he had spread the Gospell by his preaching in many other regions yea where the name of Christ had not sounded or beene knowne before whereof hee noteth the ende in verse 20. Least I should builde on another mans foundation and in verse 21. he sheweth his warrant and commission out of the Prophet Esay Chap. 52. verse 15. In
they had of confirmation in respect of Sathans force and their owne feeblenesse so he expresly teacheth that it is God alone who can make them able to stand and perseuer in his grace to the end as hee sayed in Chap. 14. verse 4. For it is Gods might alone which excelleth the power of sinne the diuell and the world which be stronger then the strongest in earth Howbeit from his naked power disioyned from his will there is no comfort but the Romans were assured of Gods loue by their calling and iustifying c. Therefore here is matter of comfort that notwithstanding all the fiery darts of Sathan to which they were exposed continually and all the furie of all the tyrants in the world which persecute the poore flocke set amidst Wolues yet they shall be vpheld because God which loueth them hath might enough to vp hold them Also what Paul prayeth for that they were certainely to hope for being Gods Children and the thing asked necessary to their saluation If any then be weake run to God hide you vnder his powerfull protection if any finde strength to continue attribute the whole glory to God who sayeth to the weake be strong and comforteth the feeble minded shewing his power in greatest weakenesse 2. Cor. 12 9. The next part of his praise is his goodnesse manifested in the Gospell which is the preaching of Iesus Christ the greatest outward mercy of God as the instrument to work grace within wherein wee bee warned that our strengthning and corroboration of our hearts must be drawne neither from humane reason philosophy traditions and inuentions of men no not from the law of God which discouers sinne and directs to duty but comforts not against terrors within and without but from the Gospel preached which is the power of God to the establishing of the hart in faith Therefore it should continually with great reuerence be read heard studied and meditated as Gods arme to confirme vs to the end We are further to note heere in few words the dignity of the Gospell so he cals his owne Epistle as Chap. 2. verse 16. It is a doctrine of most singular worthinesse and value It is extolled and set foorth heere by foure reasons first by the obiect Christ Iesus in whom are shut vp all treasures of wisedome It is tearmed the preaching of Iesus Christ not so much actiuely which he preached as passiuely being preached concerning him as the matter and subiect of it for the Gospel is a good worde or message of Christ and not onely the efficient cause and reuealer of it Paul lesse may other Ministers taught neither himselfe nor from himselfe but Christ by a reuelation from Christ Gal. 1 16. Secondly by the forme a mystery reuealed now by the Scriptures of the Prophets beeing before in the other ages precedent euen from the worlds beginning kept secret of the acceptions of the word mystery looke Dialogue on Rom. 11. verse 25. Heere it would be expounded of the vocation of the Gentiles rather then of the whole doctrine of Christ according to Ephe. 3 4. which heeretofore was taught in some sort to the Iewes onely and but to some of them and obscurely in darke sentences and prophesies that all nations should bee restored by Christ yet in comparison of that cleare and bright knowledge which since Christ hath shined from the beames of the word it may be said to be kept secret and to haue beene hidden Let men therefore so much the more prouoke themselues euen to reall and great thankefulnesse by how much more grace is vouchsafed vs aboue that which the fathers of the old Testament enioyed or else to looke for the greater condemnation Many kings and Prophets haue desired to see these daies c. Woe be to thee Corazin if the great works c. Learne yet moreouer both the antiquity of the Gospell to quit vs from nouelties the harmony betweene it and the Prophets in that by the Scriptures of the Prophets it is saide now to bee made manifest to vs whoe ought therefore to study the Prophets with a purpose to learne Christ in them flying popery as the new way and holding vs to the doctrine of faith as the olde and good way Thirdly it is praised by the author at the commandement of the euerlasting God that is according to the eternall counsell and disposition of God who by his most high liberty and wisedome might shew this secret when and to whom and how farre he himselfe would The whole dispensation of the Gospell depends altogether vpon the good pleasure of God who as he sheddeth his raine vpon one Citty and not vpon another and in what measure and with what fruite hee thinkes good so the doctrine of saluation is absolutely ordered by the appointment and commandement of God mans wisedome and will heere hath no stroke Fourthly by the finall cause or end of the Gospell which is to call not a few but many euen Iewes Gentiles at one time or other such as were giuen to Christ among them vnto the obedience of faith that is that they might beleeue the promises of grace resting in thē by faith which is the most excellent obedience cause of all practicke obedience See Dialogue on Chap. 1 v 5. and Chap. 10 verse 16. And thus farre of the description of the Gospell by the causes ofit The third and last praise of God is for his wisedome To God onely wise verse 27. as hee is intituled 1. Tim. 1 17. because wisedome is essentiall to God and he is infinitely wise knowing himselfe and all other things most exactly and with all perfection also in wonderfull wisedome both making and moderating the world being the very fountaine of all vnderstanding and prudence which shineth in any creature Angels or men hence he is glorifyed by the title onely wise God but especially for that admirable wisedom reuealed in the Gospel from himselfe in maruailous and most diuine discretion For the better explication of this title that sentence cited by Paraus and Peter Martyr out of Origen deserueth often to bee read and thought on Doe not saith hee so vnderstand God to be wise as if wisedome had made him wise as it happeneth amongst men for men are wise accidentally by a separable quality and by participation of wisedome God is not so but as author and well-spring of all wisedome For God is not wise by communication of anothers wisedome but of himselfe he is so and of him the onely wise God all others deriue their wisedome worthily therefore it is written to the onely wise God for he alone so ingendreth wisedome as he is not by wisedome made wise This clause for euer in verse 17. noteth eternity to the end of the world and euerlastingly without ceasing of the blessed Angels and Saints in heauen blisse and honour and glory will be 〈◊〉 to him that sitteth vpon the throne and to the Lambe To whom as for all other mercies which are