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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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the world III. The impediments lets of the world And IV. Our own corrupt affections Why must we love the Lord First because all good things are prepared Quest 3 for those that love him eye hath not seene nor Answ 1 eare heard nor have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1. Cor. 2.9 Read also Ephes 6.24 2. Timoth. 4 8. Iames. 1.12 Secondly because it is a shame for Christians to love the world and not to love God Larkes Answ 2 that soare aloft in the ayre build their neasts in the earth but the children of men should not doe so The wood Pecker is called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for her beauty feathers of divers colours but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q Arist she builds her neast in the earth so there are many men of rare parts otherwise who spoile all by groveling upon the earth setting themselves wholy to gather the thick clay of this world together Now it is a great shame for those who would bee helde the children of God and members of Christ to love any created temporall thing more then God Answ 3 Thirdly if wee looke upon God wee shall finde that there is great cause to love him and that in many respects namely I. In regard of his Law and that First because hee commands us in his Law to love him Secondly because his Commandements are just holy and equall II. In regard of his relation unto us because he is our Father Master and King therefore we should love him III. In regard of his liberality and mercifull bounty unto us extended both in our creation as also in providing for us what is good in protecting us from all evill in bestowing spirituall mercies and meanes upon us yea in giveing of Christ for us And therefore wee shou●d love him IV. If wee respect the essence and nature of God we shall see therein great cause to love him and that First in regard of himselfe because hee is invisible immutable incomprehensible immortall the most high and blessed Lord God Secondly in regard of our selves because he it the object of the soule and there is nothing that can give rest to the soule but God The heart of man is like the needle of the Compasse that trembleth untill it come to the Pole The soule of a wicked man is in a sling r 1 Sam. 25.92 Now that which is in a sling is violently tossed about and so is the soule when it is not upon the proper object David said Libbi schharchar my heart was troubled Psalme 38.10 Sohh●r is called a Merchant which goes to and fro to sell his wares to shew how the heart of man is troubled about sundry things yea further the letters here are doubled to signifie the great care and trouble that David had when hee sought after these things as the Merchant seeketh for his gaine When the rich man said in the Gospell Soule take thy rest for now thou hast much goods laid up for many yeares Luke 12.19 Hee put the soule then from the right object But when David said Returne my soule to thy rest Psalme 116.7 Then he set his soule upon the right object As light is the first object of the eye and not the light of the Sun or Candle So God is the first object of the soule but not this or that way revealed by his creatures or by his word And therefore hee ought to bee loved for himselfe Quest 4 By what meanes may we be inflamed with the love of God Answ 1 First labour to feele the sweetnesse of God labour to know how good and gracious the Lord is All men desire that which they judge to be principally and chiefely good for them And therefore if wee could but once tast or conceive how sweet and good the Lord is it would make us to love him A man comes to this knowledge partly by the hearing of the Word of God and partly by meditating of the great and gracious workes of God but principally by Faith in Christ Secondly pray daily unto God that hee Answ 2 would so shine into thy heart by some glimpse of his holy Majesty that thou mayst become sick of love Thirdly separate thy selfe from all those Answ 3 things which may hinder thee from loving the Lord. What things let or hinder us from the love Quest 5 of God First the love of sinne Non bene conveniunt the Arke and Dagon cannot both stand in one Temple nor God and sin be in one soule And therefore labour to leave and learne to loath all sinnes whatsoever because God will not come where sinne is wittingly harboured without any opposition or reluctation Secondly the love of the world as in this Answ 2 verse and Iames. 4 4. 1. Iohn 2.15 Wherefore love not the world Thirdly the blindnesse of the judgment Answ 3 sense preferreth temporall things before spirituall And therefore labour that our understandings may bee enlightned and our judgements informed that being able to discerne between things that differ we may with Christ know to refuse the evill and chuse the good ſ Esa 7.15 How may we know whether we love the Quest 4 Lord or not First if wee hate sinne the world and Answ 1 worldly things and all things that are opposite or contrary unto God it is a signe that we love him Secondly if we thinke and meditate seriously Answ 2 and frequently upon our God in private it is a signe that we love him Thirdly if we have a high estimation of our Answ 3 God valuing him above all other things it is an argument of love Alexander desiring to know whether Apelles were in love with Campaspe whom hee had intended for himselfe caused his page when Apelles was in serious discourse with him to cry out Apelles Apelles looke about you your shop is one fire wherewith hee being afrighted cryed out aye mee if the Picture of Campaspe bee burnt I am undone Thus if we can say with him we are undone if we loose our God or with David that there is nothing in Heaven or earth that wee desire besides him it is a comfortable signe of love t Ps 73.25 Fourthly if our love bee perpetuall and Answ 4 constant it is a signe of true love Gasper de Magno a Knight of Millan bare a Stock-dove with a Diamant in her bill it being the nature of this Bird never to loose any thing it hath once taken thereby to inferre that he would never give over to love his Lady whose name was also Diamanthe His Motto was In aeternum For ever Thus it is not enough to love the Lord at times or for a time but if wee desire to approve our love to be faithfull and unfained we must love him above all things and that for ever and ever Sect. 4 § 4. Or he will cleave or bold to the one and forsake the other I
Because God hath commanded the use of the meanes if we desire to obtain the end III. Because we tempt Gods providence if wee neglect the means Matth. 4. Secondly but we must not use the meanes for Answ 2 this end that we may change or alter the decree of God Esay 46.10 but that we may be excused And therfore the use both of evill and doubtfull means is altogether inexcusable And thus much for the first generall answer unto the Objection Secondly it was necessary that Christ should Answ 2 fulfill the Prophesies for the confirmation of his sending from God hee hereby proves himselfe to be the Messias who is sent from God for the redemption of mankind because whatsoever was foretold by the Prophets concerning the Messias is fulfilled by him Reade for this purpose these places Matth. 11.5 and 26.54 Mark 14.49 Luke 22.27 and 24.44 Iohn 18.9 Thirdly our Saviour by his miracles and healing Answ 3 the sick and dispossessing of the poss ssed doth shew that the Prophesies are fulfilled not only in the soules but also in the bodies For there is herein a reciprocation as appears thus As in the Gospel corporall things denote spirituall as for example I. Leprosie denotes the corruption of our nature and Christ by healing Lepers doth shew that it is he and he only that takes away and heals the leprosie of sin II. Christ gives unto the blind their sight to shew that hee is the light of the world Mal. 4.2 III. Christ by making the deafe to hear doth shew that he is the Doctor of the soule IV. Christ by curing Fevers doth shew that it is he only that allayes the fire and the heat of concupiscence within us V. When Christ opens the mouth of the dumb he would have us to learn that he onely teacheth us to cry Abba Father Gal 4.6 VI Christ by healing those who were sick of the Palsie and restoring the Lame unto their limbs would have us know that he is the onely Physician which corroborates and enables us to worke the worke and walke in the wayes of God VII When Christ dispossesseth and driveth away devils he would have us know that first hee is that seed of the woman who was of old foretold should break the Serpents head Gen. 3. And Secondly that it is only he Rom. 16.20 that enables us to trample Sathan under our feet VIII Christ by raising the dead unto life doth teach us that it is hee who gives the spirituall life of grace unto us and who for us purchased life everlasting So in the Prophets spirituall things are applied unto the body as in this verse When●e we might learn That it belongs unto the Messias not only to cure soules but bodies also Psalme 103.2 3. Why doth it appertain unto Christ to cure Quest 6 and heal bodies as well as souls Answ 1 First because he redeemed both bodies and souls and therefore both are his 1 Cor. 6.20 Answ 2 Secondly because he commands us to serve him both in souls and bodies Rom. 12.1 And therefore as our Lord and Master it belongs unto him to be carefull of both Answ 3 Thirdly corporall evils are the punishments of sin and therefore it belongs to him to take away both the evill of sin and the evill of punishment both the cause and the effect Vers 18 Vers 18. Now when Iesus saw great multitudes about him he gave commandment to depart unto the other side Sect. 1 § 1. When Iesus saw great multitudes Observ It appears here that many were present but Christs departure shews that he was not well pleased with them From whence we may learn That there may be many hearers and yet but few good Quest 1 How doth this appear Answ 1 First evidently by these Scriptures Mat. 3.7 and 7.21 22. and 8.1 and 12.15 and 13.2 and 14.13 and 15.30 and 19 2. and 20.16 29. Answ 2 Secondly by these two reasons namely I. Because many followed Christ for some temporall gain to wit either that they might be healed or fed by him Ioh. 6.26 II. Because many heard him for novelties sake as the stony ground who rejoyceth at the first and falleth away and relapseth at the last Mat. 13.20 and Ioh. 6.66 Quest 2 Is it not a good thing to see people flock unto the Word and house of God Answ 1 First certainly to come to the Temple is but an externall work and is easily done Answ 2 Secondly to come to the hearing of the word is a thing of good repute and to absent our selves from thence or to be negligent in hearing is a shame and therefore many repair thereunto Answ 3 Thirdly but thus to flock to the house of God is good namely I. That thou maist there worship and serve God by prayer II. That thou maist feed thy soul by hearing III. That thou maist gain something either for thy information or reformation or consolation or corroboration or instruction or direction in the way of grace Sect. 2 § 2. He commanded them to depart unto the other side Quest 1 Why doth Christ command them that is those which were in the ship with him to depart Did Christ desire to hide or conceal himself from those who sought for him Non cadit in bonitatem Salvatoris circumcursantes linquere a Hilar. s How can this stand with the goodnesse of our Saviour to depart from and forsake those who run up and down to see and hear him Answ 1 First it may be Christ departed that they might seek him more intently and earnestly as the Mother sometimes seems to depart from the Childe that it may more diligently seek her and more affectionately cry after her So Christ would have them seek him with tears and seriously to endeavour to finde him thinking no pains too much Secondly perhaps Christ was weary and Answ 2 therefore desires to depart that he may rest himself for his body was subject to our infirmities Heb. 4.15 whence he prays against death Thirdly because there were great multitudes Answ 3 therefore he departs that he might avoid vain-glory Observ thus thinks Chrysostom s Teaching us hereby to avoid and shun all vain-glory as much as we can Philip. 2.3 Gal. 5.26 and 1 Thes 2.6 Why may we not seek the praise of men in the Quest 2 performance of good works First because the applause of the world is the Answ 1 reward of Heretikes and hypocrites Matthew 6.2 5 16. Secondly because this would argue us to be Answ 2 blinde and ignorant of our selves or our own conditions It was the proud Pharisee who was ignorant of the corruption of his own heart who boasted of himself Luke 18.11 And she was but a poor and blinde and miserable Church who boastingly said She was like a Queen wanting nothing neither should ever be moved Revel 3.17 And those who know themselves know with Paul that in them that is in their flesh dwels no manner of thing which is good for they have no
hearts are confirmed in a full assurance of faith Rom. 1 17. Ephes 3.13 Heb. 10.22 and 1 Peter 1.5 Quest 4 How must wee so use the word that we may hope for the operation of the Spirit thereby Answer The word teacheth perfectly both what is true in Doctrine and also what is sure and certaine in and unto faith but wee cannot understand these things except wee be taught by the holy Ghost both what is true in the understanding and what is certaine and sure in faith and the promises of the word And therefore if we desire so to heare and reade the word of God that thereby the holy Spirit may teach us within in our hearts then these three things are required of us namely First we must adhere and cleave closely and diligently to the word of God as to our Schoole-Master remembring that it is a seed to beget us and milke to feed us and a candle to enlighten us and a sword to defend us and joy to cheere us and a companion to associate us and life eternall to crowne and rejoyce us Secondly we must hope for and expect the blessing of God in the hearing of the word according to his promise that is we prizing valuing and loving of the word of God and frequenting the Preaching and reading thereof for this end that we might be taught thereby wee may then rest confidently assured that the Lord will blesse his word unto us because hee is faithfull in his promises and the word is powerfull in its operation Heb. 4.12 Thirdly to this esteeme of the word and hope of the Spirit wee must joyne prayer that is beg at the hands of God this blessing that he would come unto our hearts by his Spirit and teach us Psalm 143.10 And then wee may comfortably rest assured that he who is most faithfull in all his promises and whose eares are alwaies open to the prayers of his Children will in his good time grant our requests with his Spirit fill our hearts with joy unspeakeable and glorious Rom. 5.1 and 14.17 and 1 Peter 1.8 Philip. 4.7 § 7. Vnto Babes Sect. 7 How or in what sense are they called Babes Quest First they are not Babes in understanding Rom. Answ 1 16. Or spirituall knowledge But Secondly in humility and that either by an acknowledgement Answ 2 of their folly or weakenesse And Thirdly in a dependance upon God their Father Answ 3 to feed them and nourish them by his word § 8. Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy Sect. 8 sight We see here how our blessed Saviour whose action is our instruction neither gives nor seekes for any further cause of Gods actions then his owne good pleasure that we might from him learne to rest therein and in all the decrees of the Lord to make that our Non ultra or Herculean Pillar beyond which we dare not nor desire to goe For if it be demanded Why God doth not bestow upon some those Quest 1 corporall or spirituall those terrestriall or celestiall graces which hee doth bestow upon some others Wee answer that the true and principall cause is the good pleasure of his heavenly will Answ And therefore the Pelagians are confuted who doe teach that the will of God was moved to elect some and to reject others because he foresaw the good workes of them a Hil. the know of the true God pag. 287. and the bad workes of these flat against the Apostle who saith of Iacob and Esau that before they were borne when as yet they had done neither good nor evill not of workes c. Rom. 9.11 And to confirme this Proposition Christ saith that his Father hid the Gospell from the wise and revealed it to Babes Why because it was his good pleasure Where we see that his pleasure is the cause that hee did not reveale as well as that hee did And therefore from hence we may learne That we must not enquire of God a reason of his actions but rest in his will Rom. 9.20 Thus did good old Eli 1 Samuel 2.18 and holy Iob 1.21 22. And the blessed Apostles of Christ Acts 2.23 and 3.18 and 4.28 and 13.27 Quest 2 Why may we or must not we demand a reason of Gods actions Answ 1 First because God is a debter to no man Who hath given first unto him Rom. 11.35 And therefore he saith in the person of that Master of the vineyard who was not so liberall to one as to another Can I not doe with my own as I will Psalme 50. The Lord shewes that all things are his and therefore none can give ought unto him yea he hath despoticall and absolute rule and power over all creatures For I. They had all their beginning of and from him And II. They all are ruled and governed by him And III. They all are ordained for him according to that of the Apostle For of him and through him and to him are all things Romans 11.36 And therfore who shall dare to call the great Judge and King of all the world to the Barre to render a reason why he hath done this or that Answ 2 Secondly the judgements of the Lord are a great deepe and who is able to search or sound the bottome of them Romans 11.33 c. and 1 Corinth 2.16 Esa 40.13 The judgements waies and workes of the Lord are alwaies just but yet man is often forced to say with Mary How can these things be Luke 1.34 and 18.27 And therefore in such a case we must confesse the blindnesse of our reason and not dare to summon God to give account unto us of what he doth Quest 3 Who are here guilty of blame Answ Those who dispute of the justice of Gods actions It is dangerous swimming in this Foorde for we may easily sinke or be dasht a pecces Non ad discussionem operum Dei sed ad honorandum Deum conditi sumus d Muscul s We were created for the worship and service of God and not to discusse dispute of or censure the actions of God Non Iudices actionum sed imperi● subditi Chrys imp s Wee are the Lords vassalls and not Judges of his actions Non ferenda mor●sit●● non tribuentium Deo justitiae laudem nisi quoad sensus eorum pertingit Great and intolerable is the insolency of those who will not acknowledge the Lords justice any further then they can see reason for it Muscill s We see how our Saviour doth apply this reason taken from the will of God to the hardening of some and to the illumination of others As if he would say it proceeds not from any impotency in God that all obeyed not the Gospell but because it otherwise pleased the Lord Calvin s Observ 2 Hence then wee may learne That the predestinating of some unto life and of others unto death doth depend absolutely upon the will of God He drawes and then we runne after him Cantic 1.3 He addes unto the
as he hath about him if hee will but spare him that which now hee carries because hee hath undertaken some urgent affaires which cannot be accomplished if now hee should be robbed In this case I say a man ought not for lucres sake to violate his promise Or II. Hostilitatis causa promises are not to be violated no not unto our enemies this the Lord reproves n Ezech 17.13.15.16 and Peter Martyr o f 364. from Augustine and Ambrose proves that the faith and faithfull promises which are plighted unto our enemies are to be observed Secondly although promises oblige in themselves as is already shewed yet God commanding it is lawful and behoveful to violate them and the reason hereof is because God is by no means to be disobeyed Disobedience being as the sinne of Witchcraft p 1 Sam. 15.23 Yea hee must bee obeyed without any delay when hee commands Here wee must consider what promises are unlawfull and in that regard to bee broken then how promises come to be unlawfull First we are to consider what promises are unlawfull or the causes why promises become to bee unlawfull the causes are either 1. conjecturall or 2. true Peter Martyr q f. 364. doth propound many causes why promises are made unlawfull viz. I. If the promise bee impossible to bee performed Or II. contrary to the wil of God or the good of Gods Church Or III. If it be evill for him to perform who hath promised it Or IV. If it were extorted by deceit and fraud Or V. If the promise were forced by violence and feare then these promises are not to be observed The true causes of the violation of promises are two Ordinary Extraordinary The Ordinary causes of the violating of promises are these First if the promise be impossible to bee performed for then of necessity it must be broken yet two things are here to bee observed I. If the thing promised were impossible to be performed before the promise was made then is he no better then a deceiver that made that promise yea if a man be not certaine that it may be performed hee sinnes because hee ought to take heed least hee should offend with his tongue r Eccles 5.4.5 and therefore every one must beware of promising those things which are either impossible or may prove impossible to him afterwards as single life because the gift of continency is not given unto all II. If the thing promised were in thy power to performe when the promise was made but after the promise becomes impossible unto thee to performe then thou art freed from thy promise because God hath hindred thee from the performance of it And this is the first ordinary cause Secondly the second ordinary cause of the violation of promises is this if the promise made be unlawfull to be performed that then it is not to be observed A promise is made unlawfull in a double regard either in respect of the Action promised to bee performed thus some promises are unlawfull In themselves the substance of the promise being wicked ſ Matth. 14.9 Mark 6.26 like Herods promise and this promise is not to be kept And the reason of it is this because the first vow and promise of obedience which we made unto God and which we are principally obliged to performe doth contradict this This promise is two-fold I. When being first made it is knowne to be unlawfull this is sinfull And herein David sinned towards Nabal a 1 Sam. 25.22 II. Or when the thing becomes unlawfull after the promise is made and then it is not to be observed As for example if a man promise upon such a day to lend his friend armour and weapons and before the day comes his friend proves a traytor and a rebell or mad and distracted he is not then to keepe his promise And the reason is this because hee is not changed that made the promise but he to whom the promise was made is changed from what he was In regard of some circumstances that is when the thing promised may be performed in regard of the substance or matter of it but some circumstances doe make it unlawfull As for example I. If that which is promised tend to the scandall of thy brother which being contemptuously and freely performed without any coaction by superiours is evill but not so if it be commanded or enjoyned by lawfull authority II. If the promise tend to the impunity of sin for this is good if it be done in mercie as David towards Shemei b 2. Sam. 19.23 but evill if by negligence and remisnesse because the Magistrate should not hold the sword for nought but for the punishment of offenders Time when the promise is to be performed and thus some promises are unlawfull either by Promise the time being altogether unlawfull for the performance of the promise as if a man should promise his friend to plow his ground upon the Lords day Or Some subsequent alteration as if a man should promise his friend to come and feast with him and make merry with him such a day and in the mean time upon some urgent publick necessitie it is proclaimed a day of solemne fasting and humiliation as in Niniveh c Jonah 3.4.5 Besides these ordinary causes of violating of promises there are extraordinary and that is the commandement of God when God forbids the performance of the promise as in this verse the Lord forbids the wise men to goe backe unto Herod according to their promise so also the Israelites borrowed of the Egyptians eare-rings and jewels and the like with promise without doubt to restore them againe but God forbids them to returne them d Exod. 3.22 11.2 12.35 Now this wee must observe that these are not to bee imitated without a particular command from the same Spirit of God Thus wee have seene what promises are unlawfull and the causes why promises are not to be performed wee are now to consider how promises are made unlawfull which may briefly be shewed first affirmatively secondly negatively I. Promises are violated and not performed by a mans owne impietie and wickednesse as for example a man perswades his friend to promise him that he will neither meddle with himselfe nor any weapon he hath and when the promise is made the other dreaming of no such thing at all he goes about to hang himself or to stabbe himselfe this promise otherwise lawfull is made unlawfull to be performed by his desperate enterprises II. Lawfull promises are not made unlawful by an Episcopall absolution but here observe A Bishop may absolve first declarativè by a power declarative as a Levite or an interpreter and expounder of the law of God that is he may shew from the word of God what promises are not to be kept and by vertue of the power and authoritie given unto him by Christ may absolve and acquit them But secondly not positively as a Lawgiver or as
So Saint August blessed are the poore in spirit that is Non habentes inflantem spiritum who hath no lofty or puffed up spirit Humilia spirantes conscijindignitatis sua q Hilar. s the poore in spirit are those that are lowly being truely conscious of their owne unworthinesse Quest 3 Are not these words then understood of poverty at all Answ They are as we shewed before But I. Not at all of the vow of poverty Nor II. Of the action Nor III. Of the affection But IV. of the state onely of those who are poore Quest 4 Doe not they then that are rich in estate and substance come unto the Kingdome of Heaven Answ 1 Yes if they be poore in spirit otherwise their portion is woe Luke 6.24 Abraham Iob Salomon Ioseph of Arimathaea were rich in substance and poore in spirit and therefore are now blessed Saints in heaven Secondly this word poore is added exceptivè Answ 2 as though our Saviour should say blessed are the humble bee they never so poore for their poverty shall bee no barre or let unto their felicity Quest 5 Why doth our Saviour speake this unto his Disciples they were proud of nothing being of the inferiour sort of the people and therefore it rather seemes to bee spoken of poverty then of humility Answ 1 First this was spoken unto all and therefore hereby are taught the rest of the people as well as the Apostles Answ 2 Secondly this was spoken unto the Disciples in regard of the time to come Christ knew that afterwards they were to bee endued with many singular graces and the gift of miracles and therefore he doth preadmonish them not to be proud of any thing that hereafter may be imparted or bestowed upon them Answ 3 Thirdly this was spoken unto the Apostles in regard of the present time and occasion for they seeing their Master thus magnified and followed and flocked unto and that they onely were suffered to approach unto him might perhaps bee proud of this and therefore to prevent it our Saviour thus speakes unto them blessed are the poore in spirit Answ 4 Fourthly I may adde that the Disciples were proud indeed as well as poore and meane and therefore the excellency and felicity of humility was as seasonable a doctrine unto them as the blessednesse of poverty Wee read of the pride that was in Iames and Iohn the sonnes of Zebedee that the one might sit on his right hand and the other on his left in his glory r Mark 10.35.36 Yea wee see a great deale of pride in the rest who in their Masters company dispute among themselves who should be the greatest ſ Mark 9.34 Why is this blessednesse first pronounced for Quest 6 some of the following vertues as of hungring after righteousnesse and purity of life seeme to excell humility First this was because the beginning of all misery Answ 1 and perdition both in Heaven and Earth came from pride for that was the sinne that threw Lucifer and his proud traine out of heaven and that was the sinne that cast Adam out of Paradise and brought so much misery and wretchednesse upon the earth t Chrysos imperf Secondly because the Prophet had foretold Answ 2 that the Messias should come unto a people that were humble lowly and should tremble at his word Esa 66.2 Therefore our Saviour doth first pronounce this beatitude u Hilar. s from this which hath been spoken Concerning the sense and meaning of these words we may gather a threefold observation Observ 1 viz. First poverty describes a right spirit or no spirit is liked allowed and approved by Christ but onely the poore and humble spirit There are coveteous spirits and crafty spirits and impure or uncleane spirits and factious contentious unquiet and brawling spirits and bloody or cruell spirits and murmuring repining discontented and impatient spirits yea scoffing mocking and deriding spirits All these Christ rejects and none of these are pronounced by him blessed and happy because these are not poore nor humble spirits Secondly we may learne hence that the poore Obser 2 in temporall substance or estate are not blessed except they be poore in spirit also Salomon tels us that a poore proud man is an abomination unto the Lord whence we may see that a man may be poore and proud although he bee poore yet if hee bee proud hee is so farre from being one of the blessed of the Lord that he is abominable in his sight How shall wee know whether poverty bee Quest 7 good or evill or how may a poore man know whether his poverty be such as Christ commends or no Poverty is knowne and discerned to be evill 3. Answ manner of wayes viz. First if it were wickedly occasioned Secondly if it be the cause of wickednesse Thirdly if it bee accompanyed with evill First poverty is evill if it be evilly procured or were occasioned by some sinne that is first if thou hast prodigally and profusely wasted thy estate by idlenesse or negligence in thy calling or by drunkennesse or gluttony or gameing or whooring and the like Or Secondly if thou hast provoked God to punish thee with poverty for some of these sinnes to wit because the riches that now thou art deprived off were acquired either by fraud or deceit or oppression or rapine or theft or by undermining of others or by wronging the fatherlesse and widdowes If thus thy poverty were occasioned then it is mala paupertas not commended by Christ Secondly povertie is evill if it cause evill that is If because thou art poore thou wilt therefore lye and steale and pilfer and injure thy neighbours then thy poverty is not beata paupertas pronounced blessed unto thee but rather condemned Thirdly if thy povertie be accompanied with evils or in thy poverty thou dost accompany thy selfe with evill men as with wandring beggars amongst whom is the cave and denne of all impietie or drunkards or harlots or theeves or cheaters or lyers or idle persons or murmurers then thou art none of those poore which Christ here pronounceth blessed The third observation that arises from these Obser 3 words is That the poore in spirit are humble Or it is onely humility that is pleasing unto God and here commended by Christ but of this we shall treat in another place Sect. 4 § 4. For theirs is the Kingdome of Heaven Quest 1 What is here meant by Kingdome Answ Kingdome is twofold to wit First there is an earthly Kingdome Secondly there is an heavenly Kingdome which is taken three wayes Either for the Kingdome of Grace Or For the Kingdome of glorie Or For both the Kingdome of Grace and Glory And thus the Kingdome of Heaven is taken in this place First for the Kingdome of Grace Secondly for the Kingdome of Glory First by Kingdome of heaven is here meant the Kingdome of Grace that is the preaching of the Gospell w Aretius s Because it was thus fore-told of Christ
diversitie of sinnes but another kinde of punishment beside eternall it sheweth not For Iudgement a Counsell and Hell fire doe but signifie three degrees of the same punishment Hell fire being due to the rest but added onely for distinction to shew both the difference of the sinne and punishment Answ 2 Secondly Iudgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken in Scripture for everlasting punishment or condemnation as Roman 2.3 How shalt thou escape the Iudgement of God And therefore Bellarmines consequence is nought He that is angry shall be guiltie of judgement therefore not of hell fire for Iudgement signifies the punishment of ever-burning Tophet Thirdly Saint Paul sayth No rayler shall inherit Answ 3 the kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.10 But he that sayth Racha to his brother is a ●ayler wherefore hee that sayth Racha shall not inherit the kingdome of heavens The Minor proposition is thus proved Racha is an Hebrew Interjection and is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Raiak evacnare and is read by the Thalmud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inavis vacuus that is a light head or cock-braine wide and emptie of wisedome or understanding Now hee that thus reviles his brother railes upon him and therefore if Saint Paul may bee beleeved hee that calles his brother Racha shall not inherit the kingdome of heaven § 8. Whosoever shall say thou Foole. Is it Sect. 8 not lawfull then at all to call any Foole Quest 1 First it is lawfull for God to call wicked men Answ 1 fooles Prov. 12.6 and for Christ to call the two Disciples foolish Luk. 24.25 yea for Saint Paul to brand the Galatians with folly Gal. 3.1 and plainly to call the Cretians Liers and Slow-bellies Titus 1.12 Secondly this place is to be understood of Answ 2 them which charge men with folly with a mind to reproach them by way of revenge we must not call any foole in anger hatred or contempt because as was formerly sayd Christians must looke upon all men as their brethren and our Saviour sayth here plainly thou must not in anger call thy brother foole Doth the abuse of the tongue deserve hel fire Quest 2 or destroy the soule First Pomerius saith Convitia reprochfull Answ 1 words are veniall sinnes when they are thus qualified I. When they are given by superiours by way of correction or reproofe II. When they proceed not from hatred but from the levity of the mind III. When they proceed from a light or small anger and from unbridled or immoderate rage IV. When they procced from no desire of disgrace that is although a man use some reprochfull and disgracefull words unto his brother in his anger yet doth it not with a purpose or intent to disgrace him V. When by the reprochfull words which are given our brother is not much disgraced Secondly Pomerius saith Maledicta evill Answ 2 speeches and maledictions are but veniall sins when thus occasioned or uttered viz. I. When they proceed from a good cause or from some calling from God II. When they are pronounced against or reflect upon him onely who hath deserved to be evill spoken of III. When they are occasioned for a trifle a matter of no great moment IV. When they are from a sudden undeliberated heat of passion These respects thinkes Pomerius doe so allay and qualifie the poyson of the tongue that it wil not prove mortall unto us Thirdly we have a more sure word of prophecy Answ 3 to resolve and establish us in this particular then the opinion of an erring Papist and that is the word of God which teacheth us what to thinke or judge of rayling reproachfull and cursed speeches by these particulars First the Scripture commands us if wee desire to approve our selves to have put on Christ to put on the vertue contrary unto these Put on therefore as the elect of God bowels of mercies kindnesse humblenesse of mind meekenesse long suffering forbearing one another and forgiving one another p Coloss 3.12.13 All these are contrary or opposite to reproaches and evill speakings and therefore if the one bee commanded then is the other forbidden if one bee an argument of an elect vessell the other is of a reprobate at least for the present And therefore whether simply taken or according to Pomerius his qualifications and restrictions they are no veniall sinnes Secondly the Scripture prohibites these ex consequenti by a necessary consequent Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth but that which is good c. That you grieve not the Holy Spirit of God q Ephes 4 21. Now none will deny but that reviling and wicked speeches are corrupt communication at least tend not to edification but rather offend God The Apostle seemes plainely thus to argue those speeches which are corrupt and edifie not the hearers are displeasing to the pure Spirit of God and become not Christians but rayling reviling and reproachfull speeches are corrupt and tend not to edification and therefore they are unbeseeming Christians and displeasing to the Holy Ghost and consequently in their owne nature lethall and not veniall Thirdly the Scripture dislikes all speeches of this kind because they argue that there is neither grace in us for the present nor hope of glory for the time to come I. That man who gives way to these abusive speeches doth thereby testifie that his heart is not seasoned or sanctified with true grace If any man seeme religious and bridleth not his tongue he deceiveth his owne heart and his religion is in vaine r Iam 1. ●6 II. That man is as yet no heire of glory Be not deceived for raylers and revilers shall never enter into the kingdome of God ſ 1 Cor. 6 10. I conclude this particular with this plaine syllogisme That which excludes us both from grace and glory is mortall and not veniall but rayling reviling and reprochfull words not being repented of exclude us both from the possession of grace and true hope of glory therefore they are no veniall sinnes Fourthly these are directly and positively forbidden by God in his word and therefore are no veniall sinnes in their owne nature Lay aside all malice envy and evill speakings saith Saint Iames t 1 Pet. 2.1 and Saint Paul most plainely Let all bitternesse and wrath and anger and clamour and evill speaking be put away from you u Ephes 4.31 Having shewed that rayling and reprochfull words are Quest. 3 mortall sinnes it may hence be further demanded why the abuses of the tongue doe destroy the soule and must bee punished with Hell Fire Answ 1 First because the tongue was given unto us for other ends speech is onely given unto men and that for this end that thereby they might performe those dueties which God requires of them viz. to wit First wee must blesse and praise God with our tongues Jam. 3.9 Secondly wee must confesse Christ with our tongues Rom. 10. Thirdly wee must invocate and supplicate the
was a righteous man and yet he saith of himselfe I am poore and needy Psal 40. last verse which shewes that hee wanted many things Rabbi Semlai was wont to say In omni loco in quo invenis pro haereticis objectionem Answer invenies quoque medicamentum illius in latere ejus Pet. Galatin wheresoever thou findest a passage of Scripturee which may seeme to serve an heretick to ground an objection upon looke diligently and thou shalt find an answer to the objection in the same place It is a proverbe wheresoever you see a Turtle you may bee sure to finde her mate within a stones cast so the Rabbi thought that what place of Scripture soever an hereticke should produce for the confirming of an errour in the same verse or at least Chapter aman might find how the objection were to bee answered I finde the truth of this in this present objection for in the very same verse there is an answer thereunto It is objected David is poore and needy To this he answers that the Lord thinketh upon him and is his helper and deliverer whereby hee manifestly shewes that hee trusteth in God and is not perplexed with the care of distrust and diffidencie The righteous are sometimes exules Obiection 2 banished from their countrey friends possessions and meanes and so want all good things The godly shall alwaies finde some place which shall receive them Answer if Moses be banished he shall finde a Iethro to entertaine him if Elias be in danger the crowes shall feede him and the widdow shall entertaine him if Ieremiah bee in danger hee shall find either the King or Abimelech to favour him if David be forced to fly hee shall be received of King Achish The providence of God never sleepes but hee watcheth still over his so to preserve and keepe them that a haire shall not fall from their heads without his divine providence We see when Iacob was in danger of Laban God warned not to harm him d When Abraham had like to have beene wronged by Abimelech God threatens to punish Abimelech if hee injure the Prophete. Thus God is alwaies ready to take notice of all the wants distresses and dangers of his children and is able to succour and redresse them when he will The righteous have not every Objection 3 good thing how then is it said that all things shall bee added unto them Great was the want and necessity that Paul was in 1 Corinthians 4.9.10 11.12 and 2 Corinthans 4.7 c. and 11.9.23 and 1 Corinth 15.19 yea a brother may want James 2.15 and many havef. First there are many temporall things which are not good for the children Answer 1 of God principally in respect of their infirmity and weakenesse There are many things which would be unto them more like poison then foode rather bridles to keepe them backe from the service of God then spurres to pricke them forward yea like thornes to choake the seede of the word g Mat. 13.22 and ginnes to ensnare themselves h 1 Tim. 6.9 and therefore no wonder if God withhold such things from his children Answer 2 Secondly there are many temporall blessings which are not necessary for the children of God For I. God can give them Analoga some other things that may bee as good for them as that which they want Man lives not by bread onely neither is God ever driven to such a straight that he hath but one way left to helpe his children If the children of God bee hungry it is all one to them for the Lord to give them bread or to take away their hunger now hee can doe either of these and therefore bread is not simply necessary God can feede Elias by the Crowes and the Israelites in the wildernesse with quailes and Manna and can take away hunger of Elias and Moses and enable them to subsist without meate fortie dayes II. Sometimes God withholdes temporall blessings from his children but gives them greater and better things that is such internall solace and joy in their wants and sufferings that they scarce feele them or are sensible of them Wee are saith Saint Paul as sorrowfull yet alwaies rejoycing as poore yet making many rich as having nothing and yet possessing all things 2 Corinth 6.13 and Romans 8.37 It is all one whether the Lord take off our heavie burthen or inable us to beare it and hee can do either and will do one And therefore it is no marvell if the Lord withholds some temporall things from the righteous seeing they are not necessary for them hee being able to give them other things which may be as good for them or better Answer 3 Thirdly whatsoever temporall blessings are both good and necessary for the righteous God will certainely give unto them in his due time Obiection 4 The wicked are more blessed in temporall things then the righteous are as appeares Psa 73. how then is this promise of our Saviours that all things shall bee added unto them made good Answer 1 First God gives good things to good men in mercy and as blessings Psal 146.8 Secondly God gives good things to Answer 2 evill men for a threefold cause namely I. That hereby they might bee comforted and encouraged in their labours and honest callings II. Because they have no other comfort besides that which they have here in this life the portion of the wicked in the life to come being torments eternall and insufferable III. That hereby they might bee fatted unto slaughter They spend their dayes in good things and in a moment they goe downe to the pit Psalme 73.18 Iob 21.13 How doth it appeare that righteous Question 4 and holy men shall lacke nothing that is good and necessary for them First in generall it is evident thus Answer 1 God gives good and necessary things to the other creatures therefore hee will much more give them unto his children as was proved before verse 28 29 31. Secondly in generall God for the Answer 2 righteous mans sake often blesseth the wicked therefore hee will much more blesse the righteous himselfe propter quod unum quodque est tale id ipsum est magistale God blessed Egypt for Israels sake and Potaphar for Iosephs and Laban for Iacobs and Zoar for Lots and therefore the righteous themselves are much surer of blessings Thirdly and more particularly God Answer 3 is omnipotent or in all things potent hee is not a God of the mountaines onely but of the vallies also hee is alwaies ready and alwaies able to give unto his children whatsoever is good and necessary for them hee is alwaies at their right hand and therefore will not fuffer them long to lacke Reade Psalme 16.8 and 145.18 Fourthly the truth hereof appeares by Answer 4 the consideration of Gods end in giving good things unto the righteous which is twofold namely I. God gives them for their consolation that they might not be too much dejected or cast downe but
amisse Answer 2 Secondly sometimes they speake fainedly and hypocritically and then speaking the trueth of God they may benefit others thereby but so it is not their fruit but the blessing of God upon his own ordinance and thus Caypha● prophesied when hee was High-priest and Saul when hee was amongst the Prophets Whether can false teach● is truely convert a●y Question 6 from their sinnes unto God First it is not safe to answer negatively and say Answer 1 they cannot For 1. There is a dogmati●●● I knowledge of Christ which they may have although they have not the practicall which is mentioned John 17.3 This is life eternall to know thee and hi●● whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ 2. The power of the Word doth depend upon the ordinance of God whose●●s it and not upon the worthinesse of the man who brings it Hence Paul seemes to intimate that a man may preach profitably unto others and yet not to him selfe 1 Corinth 9.27 Yea God sometimes works with evill ●o●les and by bad meanes or instruments as wee see hee sent his word by Balaam and directed Caiphas to speake true yea Sathan himselfe confesseth Christ An evill King may governe well and a false teacher save others and yet damne himselfe as they did who built Noahs Arke 3. The power of regenerating is not in man but in the Word Iames 1.18 the spirit aplying it to the soule 1 Cor. 3.6 4. If an evill teacher may not convert and benefit others then why are wee commanded by Christ to heare such All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe that observe an● doe (u) Matth. 23.3 Secondly such certainly cannot preach zealously with a true affection and good heart but either Answer 2 coldly or hypocritically § 3. Neither figs of this●●es Section 3 Our Saviour showes two things in these words namely First if the tree be bad the fruit cannot be good if the tree be a Thistle the fruit cannot bee Figges of this something hath beene spoken and more remaines to be spoken verse 18. Secondly if the fruit bee good we must not judge the tree to bee bad if the fruit bee figges wee must not judge the tree to be a Thistle For men doe not gather figgs of Thistles Why are not they to be suspected or judged who Question 1 bring forth good fruit First because wee should imitate our God now Answer 1 hee never punisheth but for acertaine and apparent fault and therefore wee should not suspect without some apparent signes or palpable persecutions Secondly because none are rashly to bee judged Answer 2 without good ground Iohn 7 51. Iames 4.11 Thirdly because judgement belongs unto God Answer 3 1 Corinth 4.5 And therefore this is to take the sword out of Gods hands which is dangerous unto any and a thing full of perill Rom. 14.4.10.13 Fourthly because charitie is not suspicious 1 Cor. Answer 4 13. And therefore those who suspect the tree when the fruit is faire and good are too emptie of this grace of Christian love Fiftly because the heart is unsearcheable Ierem. Answer 5 17.9 wee see the actions not the heart and affections and therefore where wee see good things done there we must thinke that they are done with a true affection and right heart Sixtly they who bring forth good fruit are not to Answer 6 bee suspected because wee are implicitely forbidden it in these words and expressely 〈◊〉 the first words of this verse and verse 20. yee shall know them by their fruits where our Saviour would have us to leave the heart unto God and where wee see good fruits there to judge the heart and tree to bee good also Question 2 What are the causes that men so often judge and suspect the tree when the fruit is good Answer 1 First because of some heavy affliction the world looking upon a man whose life hath beene outwardly unspotted doth presently conclude that his religion was but hypocriticall if it see him under some sharpe and grievous disaster and mise y. Thus do Iobs friends And thus do both Jewes and Gentiles Luke 13.2 Acts 28.4 Answer 2 Secondly the cause of this uncharitable judgement is sometimes the envie of another mans glory wee envying the estimation our brother hath in the world by reason of his unblameable Life do therefore censure and judge his profession to bee but in hypocrisie Matth. 10.25 and 12.24 Luke 7.34 Answer 3 Thirdly sometime malice is the cause hereof thus the Jewes judge Christ to have a divell John 9.16 Answer 4 Fourthly this unchristian judgement doth sometimes proceed from hypocrisie many a man cosening the world with false pretences doth judge other men to doe so likewise Rom. 1. last verse and 2.1 Verse 17 Verse 17. Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evill fruit Our Saviour speaking here of the regenerate and unregenerate man may move this question Question 1 Who are not Regenerated Answer They who doe not fructifie in good works Gal. 5.15.25 Philip. 1.27 What trees are there in the Church which thus fructifie not First hypocrites who have onely a forme of Question 2 godlinesse 2 Timoth. 3.5 drawing neere unto Answer 1 God with their lips while their hearts are far from him Matth. 15.9 Secondly Back-sliders who start aside like broken Answer 2 bowes forsaking and leaving their first love Reade Gal. 3.3 Revel 2.5 Doe the regenerate then not sin at all Question 3 First certainly they sinne 1 Iohn 1.8 And therefore Answer 1 are taught daily to pray forgive us our debts Secondly but they walke not in the wayes of Answer 2 sinne neither make it their worke but watch and strive against it as shall elsewhere more amply bee shewed Verse 18. Verse 18 A good tree cannot bring forth evill fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit § 1. A good tree cannot bring forth evill Sect. 1 fruit Saint Hierome s Galath 5. thinkes this place is not spoken of men but of the fruites of the flesh and Spirit Two things are here directly pointed at namely First that a good tree cannot bring forth evill fruit N. Secondly that an evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit § 2. N. First make the tree good and then the fruit cannot bee evill For a good tree cannot bring forth evill fruit Who is a good man or a good ●ee doth not Question 1 Christ say there is none good save God Matth. 19.17 Goodnesse is either Abusive and that either by Or The phrase or proprietie of speech when goodnes is taken for beautie Answer Genes 6.2 1. Samuel 9.2 2 Pet. 2.21 or propernesse of person The sonnes of God saw the daughters of men that they were good so the Latine hath it that is beautifull So Saul was a choice young man and a goodly that is a very personable and proper man Or Comparison Thus S. Paul saith That it had beene good for those who relapsed if they had never knowne
commended in Scripture and weaknesse and doubting reprehended Now this certainty of faith which we say is praised doth consist in a particular application whereby a man promiseth unto himselfe that that thing which he hopes for shall certainly be fulfilled unto him Many are the examples which may be brought to prove this Argument that certainty of faith is commended First of all this woman with the bloody issue unto whom Christ here saith Be of good cheer or Confide be confident thy faith hath made thee whole Now what manner of faith was this Saint Mathew here tels us The woman said within her selfe if I may but touch the hemme of his garment Servabor I shall be whole And this certain confidence of hers we see Christ commends and praises Secondly it is said of Abraham that he beleeved God and it was counted unto him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 Now what manner of beleeving was this Saint Paul afterwards most clearly explicates thus vers 18 19 20 21. For Abraham against hope beleeved in hope that he might become the Father of many nations according to that which was spoken so shall thy seed be And being not weak in faith he considered not his owne body now dead when he was about an hundred years old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe He staggered not as the promise of God through unbeliefe but was strong in faith giving glory to God And being fully perswaded that what he had promised he was able also to perform In these words is described an extraordinary confidence in the divine promises of God which Abraham beleeved should altogether be fulfilled yea fulfilled in him although if hee had consulted with flesh and blood he might have opposed objected many things and therfore there was not onely Confidentia objecti but also subjecti propter veritatem divinam Thirdly of Saint Paul who writing unto Timothy saith For the which cause I also suffer these things neverthelesse I am not ashamed for I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that hee is able to keepe that which I have committed unto him against that day k 2 Tim. 1.12 the meaning of the words is plaine for the Apostle herein doth describe the hope that he hath for the time to come by which hope he is sustained and upheld in the midst of so many and so great afflictions and calamities as lye upon him Here he saith he is not ashamed and Rom. 5.4 he saith Hope maketh not ashamed and therefore hee is certaine of the event Whence comes this certainty I know saith he whom I have beleeved and that he is able to keepe that which I have committed unto him that is I am certain that at the last day he will render and restore unto me what I have committed unto him to keepe And thus from these examples we may according to the truth hold and maintain a certainty of faith and a particular application of the divine promises unto our selves VERS 23 24. Vers 23. And when Iesus came into the Rulers house and saw the Minstrels and the people making a noise hee said unto them give place for the Maid is not dead but sleepeth And they laugh●d him to scorne § 1. And when Iesus saw the Minstres Sect. 1 How manifold is the use of musick Quest 1 Two-fold namely lawfull and heathnish Answ Wherein is or hath Musicke been lawfully Quest 2 used Answ 1 First it hath been used by the godly sometimes in their joy and mirth as David ever and none testifieth in the Psalmes and as our Saviour intimates when he saith we have piped unto you but you have not danced Mat. 11 17. Answ 2 Secondly Musick hath been used lawfully in sacris in holy duties and divine worship as appears plainly by these places 2 Sam. 6.5 and 2 Chron. 5.12 and Psalme 71.22 Quest 3 Whether was the use of Musick at funerals a Jewish or Heathenish custome Answ Although it was sometimes used by the Jewes yet they borrowed it from the Gentiles for the understanding wherof observe that the Jewes at the buriall of their friends used two sorts of Ceremonies namely First some to testifie their sorrow of which in another place because the present text speaks not of these And Secondly some to augment their grief these were I. Minstrels who with their sad tunes inclined the affections of the people to mourning Now of these there were two sorts namely First some playing on pipes And Secondly others sounding Trumpets At the Funerall of Noble-men or old men they used a Trumpet at the Funerall of the common people or children they used a Pipe In this respect it is said here that Iesus when he raised Iairus daughter cast out the Ministrels II. Women there were which were hired at burials to sing for the same purpose viz. to augment their mourning and to incline the affections of the people to sorrow Now these women besides singing did likewise u●● some outward significations and expressions of sorrow to move the company and more strongly to affect them Call saith the Prophet for the mourning wom●n and send for the skilfull women Ier. 9.17 These women the Romans called Preficas quasim hoc ipsum praefectas Chiefe or skilfull Mourners Now these customes we reade no where commanded by God unto his people but were only borrowed from the practises of others Quest 4 How manifold was the use of Musick at funerals amongst the Gentiles Answ The Heathens had a four-fold use of Musick in their burials namely First Civill to honour and adorne Funerals whence also they used sometimes great pomp and did sing songs of the praises of the deceased persons as wee see in Tabitha Act. 9.39 Now this Cantus in generall was two-fold namely Encomiasticus and Threneticus Rhod. 27.26 Secondly Philosophicall to shew that when any is taken out of this miserable world there is cause of joy Let the Reader reade Alex. ab Alex. 128. 129. where hee shall see this confirmed by the example both of the Grecians and Thracians Whence we may learn That in the death of those who are good Observ we must rejoyce rather then mourn Why must we rejoyce in the death of our good Quest 5 friends or allies First because death is better to such then life Answ Eccles 4.2 c. Secondly because death is best of all unto such as appears thus I. This world is an evill world in it selfe Gal. 1.4 and evill unto the righteous 1 Cor. 15.19 II. So long as wee are here wee are strangers from the Lord that is absent from him 2 Cor. 5.2 c. but when by death wee are dissolved we shall possesse and enjoy him Philip. 1.23 Thirdly Solaminis their next use of musick was that thereby the minds of those who mourned might be lightned and comforted because we are prone to exceed our bounds in all things whether in joy or sorrow Fourthly Idololatricus they had an Idolatrous use of Musick at their
save his life with much unwillingnesse did whereupon the wicked wretch having his desire presently stabbed him with that Dagger which was at his throat and afterwards bragged that he had taken the bravest and most exquisite revenge of his enemie that ever man did for he had destroyed both his body and soule What things doth the Scripture silence as being Quest 1 not necessary to be knowne The Scripture speaks nothing distinctly Answer concerning the place of this Hell whereinto God can cast both body and soule nor of the manner of the torture thereof nor of the nature of those outward things that belong thereunto because these are not necessary to bee knowne by us There are two things which concerne us whereof the one concerns us little but the other concernes us much First it concernes us but little to know whether Hell bee in the Aire or in the concave of the earth or of what longitude latitude or profundity it is Secondly it concerns us much I. To acknowledge that there is a Hell and II. To know that the torments thereof are eternall perpetuall and insufferable extending both to body and soule and III. to labour indeavour and pray that we may never come there In hell there 's nothing heard but yells and cryes In hell the fire nere slakes nor worme ere dyes But where this hell is plac'd my MUSE stop there Lord shew mee what it is but never where a Pentelogia dolor inferni What things doth the Scripture expresse as Quest 2 being necessary to be knowne of us First it teacheth us that there is a spirituall Answ 1 death of the soule as well as a corporall of the body and that by and after death the soule of the wicked is cast into Hell but at the Resurrection both soule and body Revel 21.8 Secondly the Scripture teacheth us the fruits Answ 2 and effects of this spirituall death namely sorrow Lamentation howling and unspea●e●ble torments gnashing of the teeth and the like Reade Luke 13.28 and 16.23 § 2. Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing Sect. 2 c. In these words our Saviour doth teach us Observ That the providence of God doth governe all things yea even the least things Reade Psalm 104.21 and 145.15 and 148.8 and Hebr. 1.3 God doth not take care for Oxen. 1. Corinth therefore not for all things Object First God cares for somethings for themselves Answ 1 and thus he cares for his Children and he cares for other things for others namely men or the elect and thus he cares for the creatures Answ 2 Secondly that saying of the Apostle is to bee understood comparatively that God doth not care for Oxen in comparison of men Quest 1 How doth it appeare that the providence of God rules and governes all things Answ 2 First it appeares by the example here given For our Saviour I. Names a poore contemptible bird a Sparrow And II. A bird of small value or price for two of them are sold for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a farthing Now although the true value of this coyne is not certainly known yet all grant that it is lesse then a penny Our Translaters render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Farthing the Marginall note telleth us that it is a halfpenny Farthing Thomas Thomasius saith it is worth onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a penny Beza s Luke 12.6 saith it is ¼ of an English penny Marlocrats s Math. 10.29 saith that it was foure pence in French mony The Rabbines call it Isor and say that it containeth eight mites Drusius in Praeter Luk. 12.59 And Godwyn in his Jewish Antiquities pag. 324. saith that Assarium valueth of ours in precise speaking q2. q. Whatsoever it was worth certainly it was of lesse worth then a penny in our English coyne and we know that a penny is but a thing of a small value according to that of Catullus Omnes unius assis estimemus And yet although two of these poore Birds be sold for a Farthing and a quarter of a Farthing or thereabouts not one of them falls to the ground without the providence of God III. Our Saviour doth not onely name a small bird a sparrow of a small price but hee also useth a diminutive phrase for the word here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a diminitve 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now this signifies Passer a Sparrow that Passerculus a little Sparrow And therfore hence it is cleare and evident that the most contemptible and least things are not excluded from the providence of God Answ 2 Secondly it is further evident thus because it belongs unto the Omnipotency of God I. To governe all those things which he hath created And II. To direct them to that end which himselfe hath ordained Quest 2 What is providence Answ The providence of God is Ratio ordinandi praecedentia ad finem Thom. a wise ordering and disposing of things unto their end And therefore Providence is the principall part of Prudence And therefore we must endeavour to see God in all things and not looke to intently upon second causes For so we shall bridle our anger and revenge against our brethren and our murmuring against our God Quest 3 Who erre about this doctrine of divine Providence Answ 1 First the Epicures who deny all Providence Answ 2 Secondly the Platonicks whereof there are two sorts namely I. Some held that there was a divine Providence in heaven but not in earth Thom. That God by a speciall providence did rule and governe all things above but nothing below Iob. 22.14 II. Some of them held a providence in Spirituall and eternall things but not in corruptible Thirdly the Maniches who held Duo principia or Duos Rectores two Lords Rulers and Answ 3 disposers of all things namely I. God by whose providence all good things were ordered And II. Sathan who did dispose of all evill things and actions Fourthly the Stoicks who connect the second Answ 4 causes by a certaine fatall and inevitable necessity What are Christians bound to beleeve and Quest 4 hold concerning this divine Providence First we must hold that God hath ordained Answ 1 nature able to produce her effects even by naturall causes and that not necessarily but contingently Secondly we must hold that God doth accompany Answ 2 corroborate and helpe or co-worke in all these for from hence it is said that in him we live move and have our being Acts. 17.28 Thirdly we must hold that God when it Answ 3 seemes good unto himselfe can so bridle and change these causes that they shall not produce their effect either contrary to his secret will and decree or to the good of his children Examples of this we have in Scripture when most violent and most naturall causes could not produce their effects fire could not burne Fire could neither burne nor scorch though nothing more naturall Dan. 3. Lyons could neither kill nor eat though nothing more usuall Dan. 6. Fourthly
Num. 31.16 Certainly none can be free from misery that thus giueth offence our Saviour here denouncing a woe against such And thus we see how this offence given is voluntary or in the will of the agent Or II. There is an Offence given which consists in the nature of the action and thus First some things are offensive to a mans self Matth. 5.30 If thy hand offend thee c. but this is improperly or at least lesse properly called an Offence Secondly some things are offensive to our brethren and thus all publike sinnes are 2 Samuel 12 14. Thus much may suffice for the understanding of Scandulum datum the Offence given Secondly there is Scandalum acceptum an offence which is taken but not given and herein we have two things to observe namely I. The description thereof viz An offence taken is when our brethren are offended with that which we do without any fault in us at all that is when there is in us neither a will or desire to offend them nor any direct depravity in our actions wherewith they are offended II. Wee have to consider the Destribution of this offence taken viz. it consists either First in an indifferent or adiaphorall action which is two-fold to wit either I. An action which is indifferent and remains such that is when the thing is indifferent of it selfe and in its owne nature and a man is neither compelled to doe it or not to doe it either by Any Publike Command Or Any private Necessitie Now here offences must by all means be avoided and shunned by those who desire to avoid this woe denounced in the Text. Reade Mat. 17.27 Rom. 14.15 and 1 Cor. 8.9.13 and 10.29 c. Or II. There are actions which are indifferent in their owne nature but are changed either by the command of the Magistrate or by some great or inevitable necessitie and if a man bee offended with these actions it is Scandalum acceptum an offence taken because the Agent or doer thereof doth it not voluntarily but by a command from authority and also because the action or thing done is not simply or positively evill but in its own nature indifferent that is a thing which may be done or left undone without sinne Or Secondly this Offence taken consists in a pious and religious action as when men are offended with Christ and Religion and the Gospell as was shewed before § 2. Now these offences wee must not at all regard nor shun and avoid but if men will bee offended with that which is good and godly let them bee offended Matth. 16.23 And thus we see the truth of the Observation that many offences are to be expected in the world by those who are faithfull in the service of the Lord. § 4. But woe be to that man by whom the offence Sect. 2 commeth Our Saviour here denounceth a woe against those who offend or are stumbling stones unto the children of God Woe be unto them that is they shall perish for ever Hence then wee may observe That offences Observ and scandals shall be the cause of eternall death or hee who offendeth the children of God or causeth them to offend shall perish eternally without repentance Or in generall both the offenders and the causers of giving offence both the seducers and the seduced both those who stumble and they who lay Quest 1 the stumbling stone shall be punished Matthew 5.29 Wherein or how doe they offend who lay stumbling blocks before men First such offend because they give occasion Answ 1 to the Adversaries to blaspheme and here they are guilty who professe the truth but do not live according to the truth who have a forme of godlinesse in their words but not the power thereof in their lives 2 Tim 3.5 Wo be to such who by their hypocrisie and colour of Religion give offence unto others Secondly such offend and sin in laying of Answ 2 stones of offence before the feet of the faithfull For a Scandall or Offence is either I. A cause of evill by precipitating and casting head-long that which is good Or II. It is a confirmation of evill by hardning men in sin and hindring them from conversion for those who cause others to offend are causes unto them both of doing that which is evill and of leaving undone that which is good And therefore wee must take heed of giving offence or a Scandalis datis for by that means wee are guilty of our brethrens sin and smart and their blood shall be required at our hands Object 1 But some will object that offences are necessary It must needs be saith our Saviour that offences come Answ It is true that offences must come but wo unto them by whom they come The Wolfe cannot change his nature and yet hee is blamed for his cruelty Neither Iudas nor the Iews did any thing but what was before determined and yet they are blamed and that justly for the doing of it because they did it willingly and out of envie unto him Object 2 But some object and say againe That wherewithall many good men are off nded was not done by me for that end that they might be offended and therefore it is Scandalum acceptum non datum an offence taken but not given Answ An offence is either First voluntarie as I. When Lawes are made directly against Religion And II. When men exhort perswade and tempt unto sin Now these are the worst scandals Or Secondly there are occasionall offences and these are therefore condemned because they are causes of evill and if hee be threatned and shal be punish●d who is seduced then much more he who is the S●ducer Now we must farther observe that these occasionall Scandals are either I. In doctrin as when men teach that which is Popish Idolatrous and supersticious now woe be unto such ●lind and wicked Leaders of the blind for both themselvs and those who are seduced and mislead by them shall perish and fall into the Ditch Or II. In Practise and that either First by exhortation and that either I. Docendo by teaching others to lye steal and the like as parents often do their children and Masters their servants for their advantage and filthy lucres sake Or II. Alliciendo by alluring others unto theft adultery drunkennesse and the like Or III. Terrendo by terrifying and affrighting others with scofs taunts derisions and the like by which some are kept back from the profession of Religion Or Secondly by Example and thus great men are great scandals for an evill life or example in a Superiour doth much harme and occasions much evill in and amongst inferiours Or Thirdly men give occasion of offence by their words to wit by their scurrilous speeches and songs and oaths and the like wherewith pure and chaste cares are offended Object 3 It will be objected againe if wee must avoid giving of offence then it is not lawfull to use the Ceremonies of our Church at all that is neither the
sinne Answ 3 Thirdly an idle and lazy sluggishnesse hinders this call Agrippa was almost perswaded to become a Christian Acts 26.28 but not all together Vult et non vult piger the sluggard being called and awakened answereth to rise but deferres and procrastinates it crying Yet a little sleepe a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleepe And therefore if wee desire this effectuall vocation let us I. Learne to deny our selves and to renounce all selfe-confidence and high conceits of our owne deserts and goodnesse And II. Let us learne to hate all Sinne and that with a perfect hatred And III. To cast off all sluggishnesse and avoide all idle endeavours and Soule-killing delayes and with speed alacrity and diligence undertake the labour of the Lord and the worke of our salvation unto which wee are called Object Some object these words against the wise and divine Providence of God He hath rejected more then he hath elected because many are called and but fewe are chosen Now this stands not with the providence of an all-wise Creator Answ 1 First it is not against the most wise providence of God that there is a greater number of wicked then godly because he maketh no man evill but whatsoever he made was very good and he onely suffereth the evill to be Answ 2 Secondly it is true that God hath rejected more then he hath elected but he did it not without good cause For I. Hereby he would shew that those who are chosen are chosen of meere grace and not for any merit or worthinesse of their owne And II. Hereby he would stirre up us to give grea-thankes unto him for so great a benefit in choosing us so few out of so great a multitude of men unto eternall life Sect 9 § 9. And few are chosen Quest 1 It is questioned by some whether there be a generall election or not that is whether all be elected unto life or not Answ Wee answer no and the trueth of our negation appeares thus First God hath mercy of whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardens and therefore all are not elected Secondly our Saviour here saith Many are called but few are elected Thirdly few enter into the straite gate Mat. 7.13 14. But all that are elected unto life enter therein 2. Timoth. 2.19 And therefore all are not elected Rom. 8.30 Fourthly the Apostle saith plainly The election obteyned mercy and the rest were hardned Fifthly the goates shall goe into everlasting fire which was prepared for them from the beginning Matth. 25. And therefore all were not at the beginning elected Sixthly universall election is overthrowne by these Scriptures Iohn 13.18 and. 15.19 1. Corinth 1.26 and. 2. Timoth. 2.20 Iohn 17.9 Rom. 8.29 Se●venthly Election is out of a heape or masse or multitude to segregate or choose some things or some persons and therefore all are not elected Deuter. 7.7 Iohn 15.19 and. 1. Corinth 4.7 Some demand againe why there are but few Quest 2 elected and why God rejected so great a multitude of men that is predestinated more to death then to life For if the principall finall cause was his glory which is illustrated both in the manifestation of his wrath and power against sinne and in the demonstration of his riches grace and goodnesse towards the vessels of mercy could not this cause have place in the reprobation of a few as well as of many First who art thou O man that reasonest against Answ 1 God who hath knowne his minde or was his Counseller who is wiser then God who Rom. 9.23 and. 11.34 Secondly we deny that God should have Answ 2 bene as much glorified or his glory as much manifested by the reprobation of a few as it is by many for nothing could bee done more wisely or better then God hath done it And with this answer every godly man should rest satisfied VERS 18. Vers 18 Behold wee goe up to Ierusalem and the Sonne of man shall bee betrayed unto the chiefe Priests and unto the Scribes and they shall condemne him to death Why was it necessary that CHRIST should be Condemned and suffer and dye Quest First because it so pleased God Answ 1 Secondly because so he wrought and purchased Answ 2 our Redemption For it was necessary that hee should satisfie the divine Justice for our sinnes Thirdly because God so loved the World Answ 3 that he gave his Sonne unto death for the Redemption and Salvation thereof Iohn 3.6 VERS 22 23. Vers 22 23. But JESVS answered and said Yee know not what yee aske Are yee able to drinke of the Cup that I shall drinke of and to be Baptized with the baptisme that I am baptized with They say unto him Wee are able And hee saith unto them yee shall drinke indeed of my Cup and be baptized with the Baptisme that I am baptized with but to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give but it shall bee given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father § 1. Yee know not what yee aske Sect. 1 Wherein did the Sons of Zebedee erre in their requests that our Saviour here blames them Their petition and request was faulty and inordinate in three regards to wit Answ First because they desired the crowne before victory And Secondly because they desired and dreamt of a carnall Propinquity and nearenesse unto CHRIST And Thirdly because out of a certaine Presumption and pride they seeme to have made this request desiring the chiefest place and glory yea that they might be preferred before all the other Apostles Carthus § pag. 164. b. Sect. 2 § 2. But to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give Object The Arrians objected this place against the Deitie and power of CHRIST thus The Mother of Zebedees children desiring that one of her Sonnes might sit at Christs right hand and the other at the left in the Kingdome of him hee answers To sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father Therefore CHRIST is not omnipotent or of absolute power and consequently is not God Answ 1 First the mother of Zebedees Children desired these things out of a humane affection acknowledging CHRIST onely to be a man and his Kingdome some Kingdome of this world Now our Saviour answers in her sence that as he is man it is not his to give so before when the young man called him good he answered there is none good but one that is God because the young man did onely attribute unto him a humane goodnesse Answ 2 Secondly this was spoken by Christ not onely in regard of his humane nature but also yea rather in respect of the present Ministery for which he was sent into the world and therefore Christ denies that it was his worke to assigne to the Elect divers degrees of
the like Exod. 18.21 And IV. With magnanimity and constancy Sect. 3 § 3 Let him be crucified Quest 1 Who were guilty of the death of Christ either as actors or a bettors Answ 1 First Pontius Pilatè who condemned him I name him first because I speake not of him at this time Answ 2 Secondly the chiefe Priests and Elders of the Iewes in whom two things are observable viz. I. Causa the cause why they endeavoured and procured the death of Christ and that was ambition they loved the praise of men more then the praise of God and the glory of the world more then the glory of God Iohn 12.42 and 5.44 They saw that Christ derogated much from them and spake much against them and therefore they envy Christ and frequently calumniate him II. Modus the manner of procuring Christs death and that was corrupt for they suborne the people and false witnesses Read Matth. 26.59 and 28.12 Wherefore we must take heed of subornation Why may we not use this suborning of others Quest 2 when it may stand us in stead I. because subornation is the practice of Answ 1 wicked men 1 King 21.10 and therefore if we would be esteemed righteous we must not use this practice II. because truth seekes no corners but Answ 2 delights to goe naked and therefore this practice of suborning others argues a hatred of truth and a love of falsehood III. because the suborning either of witnesses Answ 3 or friends or Judges argues either an evill cause or an evill mind Thirdly the people were guilty of and accessary Answ 4 unto the death of Christ now in them two things are observable namely I. The cause of their sinne which is two-fold to wit First in constancy for not long before this they would have made Christ a King Iohn 6.15 and strawed their garments in his way Matth. 21.8 crying Hosanna verse 9 but now they cry crucifie him crucifie him And Secondly a desire of pleasing their Elders and Governours who perswaded them unto this Christ certainly was not odious unto the common people but yet whilest they basely seeke to please their high-Priests and Elders they neglect both equity their owne salvation II. The blacknesse and horriblenesse of their offence which shewes it selfe in these things vi● First they had two testimonies from which they might and ought to have considered something namely I. Diuine testimonies as for example a Propheticall speech search the Scriptures for they testifie of me Iohn 5.39 yea a living voyce from the Father and God of heaven Matth. 3.17 yea the frequent presence and assistance of the blessed Spirit of God and divers visions and apparitions of Angels and the confession of the devill himselfe Marke 1.24 yea many times CHRIST let them see if they would haue observed it that the secrets of their hearts were not kept secret from him Now these things they should seriously haue considered before they had cried Crucifie him II. Humane testimonies were not wanting unto them if they had observed them and those were Christs workes the workes saith he which I doe testifie of me Iohn 5.31 He cast out of devils he cured the sicke he quickned the dead he enlightneth the blind he opened the eares of the deafe he with his word made his enemies to fall to the ground be with his word appeased the raging of the Sea Reade Matth. 8. and 9. and 11.5 6. and Iohn 4.26 Luke 5.17 and Iohn 3 2. Now these they ought to have considered And Secondly they preferred Barabbas before Christ a murderer before the Lord of life a seditious turbulent person before the Prince of peace When men say they Iohn 2. are ●runke then the worst wine pleaseth the palat so when men are drunke with sinne and besotted upon it then they will receive Theudas and Iud●s Galilaeus for the true Messiah then they will thinke Simon Magus to be the great power of God and then with the Gergesens they will preferre their Hogs before CHRIST And Thirdly they adjudge Christ unto death desiring that he may be crucified although they were not able to accuse him of any evill or to witnesse any evill against him Sect. 4 § 4. What evill hath he done Quest 1 Pilate here propounds the question Whether Christ have done any evill or not And Answ 1 First he answers hereunto himselfe that for his part he finds no evill in him And Answ 2 Secondly Christ in answer hereunto appeales unto their owne conscience which of you can accuse me of sinne Iohn 8. And Answ 3 Thirdly the common people once answered He hath done all things well and nothing amisse And therefore there was great reason why Pilate should aske this question and thus seeke to free CHRIST from their hands and power Quest 2 What good did Christ Answ 1 First in generall he did all things well and many good things unto many Answ 2 Secondly more particularly when Christ lived on the earth he did many temporall good things viz. I. He healed and cured all diseases amongst the people And II. He cast Devils out of those who were possessed And III. He went up and downe doing good the Lord being with him Acts. 10.38 And IV. He stilled the raging waves of the Sea And V. He sed those who were hungry And IV. He raised up the dead unto life Now if there had beene no greater workes done by Christ then these yet who would have lost such a treasure and rich Magazin of all temporall blessings if they could have kept it Answ 3 Thirdly but besides these there were spirituall benefits and inestimable graces bestowed by Christ upon all those who came unto him in sincerity of heart and are still held forth and freely offred by him unto all who with hungring affections long for him The spirituall graces and benefits which the Jewes might and we may have by Christ are many and great and of unvalued worth as for example I. Christ reformed Religion and taught the whole counsell of God And II. He reconciled us unto God that in him we might have peace And III. He caused Sathan to fall as lightning from heaven and destroyed all his workes And IV. He sends his holy Spirit unto us whereby we are regenerated and sanctified And V. He hath taken away the vaile and laid open unto us a way unto the holy of holyes And VI. In him all the promises of God are yea and Amen And VII Of his fulnesse we all receive grace for grace Iohn 1.16 And VIII By his Resurrection and Ascension he hath sealed unto us our Resurrection and ascension with him unto life eternall And therefore no wonder if Pilate saith What evill hath he done seeing he was no other but a rich treasurie of all grace and vertue § 5. But they cried out the more crucifie Sect. 5 him c. It may here be demanded Quest what manner of answer this was which the people gave unto Pilates question in the former words
a. How Apostles and Disciples differ pt 2. fol. 2. We should all labour to be the Disciples of Christ why and how pt 2. folio 104. Apparell Garments Divers questions concerning the necessity and use of apparell pt 1. folio 346. Appetite Belly How the desires of the Belly and our naturall appetites are evill pt 1. fol. 96 a. Armour Weapons What a Christian mans Weapons are against his spirituall enemies pt 1. fol. 62 a. Arrogancy The nature and causes of Arrogancy Pt. 1. fol. 46. Ashes A manifold use of Ashes pt 2. fol. 85 a. Assemblyes Divers sorts of Assemblyes pt 2. fol. 221 b. Assurance See Faith Avarice See Covetousnesse Austerity Although an Austere life be commeadable yet it is not approved of by carnall men pt 2. fol. 70 a. 77. b. B. BAbes Infants There are three sorts of Babes Pt. 2. f. 94 b. Whether there be such a thing as Limbus Infantum pt 2. fol. 332 a. 335 b. 336 a. Backbiting Calumny Detraction c. How these two to revile and to speake evill off differ pt 1. fol. 168 b. We must not Calumniate or deprave any and the causes of Calumny and remedies against it pt 2. folio 77 b. 121 b. Backsliding See Apostacy Banquets See Feasts Baptisme Questions concerning the Baptizing of Infants part 1. fol. 66 b. and Pt. 2. fol. 237 b. 238 a b. 388 b. 389 a. Divers questions concerning the nature necessity Ceremonies sorts excellency utility and abuse of Baptisme Pt. 1. fol. 70. 75 b. 79 a. 80 a. and pt 2. fol. 390 391. Divers questions concerning Christs Baptisme and Iohns pt 1. fol. 68 a. 73 74. 79 a. 80 a b. Whether Ministers in Baptisme give grace to those whom they Baptize part 1. folio 68 b. What Analogy there is betweene Baptisme and the Lords Supper Pt. 2. folio 279 b. Beggars Beggars permitted contrary to the Law and why Pt. 2. folio 266 a. Beleevers Faithfull How the Faithfull are saved from their sinnes and from what sinnes they are saved Pt. 1. folio 19 a. Wherein the Faithfull should be like Angels pt 2. fol. 285 b. And wherein their felicity consists pt 1. fol. 487 a b. Beliefe See Faith Belly See Appetite Belzebub What Belzebub signifies Pt. 2. fol. 33 b. Bethlehem Divers questions concerning Bethlehem Pt. 1. f. 23 a. 31 b. 32 a. Bigamy Digamy Poligamy All these both now are and heretofore were unlawfull Pt. 1. fol. 231. 233 b. 260 a. Birds What we may learne of or from Birds Pt. 1. fol. 344 b. 345 a. Blasphemy Divers necessary and profitable questions concerning Blasphemy or the sinne against the holy Ghost pt 1. fol. 312 a b. and pt 2. fol. 123 124 125. Blessednesse Divers questions concerning the number of the Beatitudes and the nature of true Blessednesse and what it is and wherein it consists and from whence i● proceeds and the way thereunto pt 1. folio 127 a. and 136 137 138. 160 b. 161 a. 158 a b. 416 b. and pt 2. folio 32 b. 97 b. 180 b. Blessings Divers questions concerning temporall and corporall blessings pt 1. folio 128 129. 142. 527 b. 525 b. Blindnesse Darknesse Ignorance All men by nature without Christ are ignorant blind and darke pt 1. fol. 116. and pt 2. folio 33. 64 a. The causes of Spirituall blindnesse and the remedies against it pt 2. fol. 89 90. 92. 265 266 a. and pt 1. fol. 518 b. Whether Ignorance or knowledge be better pt 2. fol. 146 a. Body There is a fourefold Body pt 2. folio 102 b c. Bounty See Almes Bread What is meant by this word Bread in the Lords prayer pt 1. fol. 306 a. 308 a. Brethren Brothers Ministers are Brethren Pt. 1. folio 119 b. All Christians are Brethren Part 1. folio 205 a. Christ loves amity and unity amongst Brethren pt 1. folio 120. Buriall Sepulchers Christians Buriall must be performed unto the dead and why Pt. 1. folio 154 b. and 155 a. 470 a. The Iewish customes at Burials pt 2. fol. 381 a. and pt 1. folio 508 b. and 509 a. Burthens How many sorts of burthens there are and how they are to be borne pt 2. fol. 99 b. 100. C. CAlamity See Adversity Calling Vocation Function Divers questions concerning externall Callings pt 1. fol. 123 b. and fol. 362 363. 486 a. and pt 2. folio 55 b. Divers questions concerning God and Christs calling and recalling of us pt 1. folio 132 b. 446 a. 468 a b. 494 b. 500 b. 501 a. pt 2. folio 256 257. 260 261. Things are called three manner of ●ayes pt 1. fol. 168 a. Calumny See Backbiting Captivity Why the Lord permitted the Iewes to be kept captive under the Romanes pt 1. fol. 23. By nature we are Sathans captives part 1. fol. 477. Care Whom God cares for most part 2. folio 36 a. Divers questions concerning worldly Care pt 1. fol. 328 a. 341 b. 342 b. 343 a. 349 b. 350 a. 361. Casting off To cast out To Reject Divers questions concerning Gods rejecting of man and mans casting off God pt 1. fol. 459 a b. pt 2. fol. 280 b. 281. 292 a. Centurion What a Centurion was pt 1. fol. 447 a. 451 b. 454. Ceremonies See Adiaphorall things Charity See Almes Charmes See Magi. or Magicke Chastity Wherein the felicity of those who are pure and chast consists pt 1. fol. 221 a. Children Divers questions concerning the signification of this word Child and of childrens duty towards their Parents pt 1. folio 122 b. 123 a. and pt 2. fol. 52 b. 53 a. 54. 158. 159. 206 b c. 237 a. 242 b. 294 b. Divers questions concerning the felicity safety nature number and markes of Gods children and the way and meanes thereunto pt 1. fol. 35 a. 51 a. 83. 127. 167 b. 254 b. 255 a. 437 a. 487 c. and pt 2. folio 58. b. 59 a. 88 b. 89 a. 156 b. Our chiefest care and labour should be to be made Gods Sonnes pt 1. folio 254 b. None can rejoyce in God but Sonnes pt ● fol. 88 b. 89 a. Christ Controverted questions concerning the Deity and Humanity of Christ pt 1. fol. 16 17 a. 21. 78 b. 83. pt 1. folio 467 b. 507 a. and pt ● fol. 88 a. 197 a. 238 b. 239. 262 a. 316. 326 b. 376 b. 377. and 391 b. Whether Christ be every where in regard of his Humanity pt 2. folio 215 b. 290. 356. and 386 b. 387 a. Divers questions concerning the temptations of Christ pt 1. fol. 84 85 86 87. 95 96 97. 112 113 b. Questions concerning the c●nception nativity birth Baptisme Flight Education life humility and time of Christs being upon earth pt 1. folio 17 a. 20 b. 23 a. 32 a. 37. 40. 49 a. 52 53 a. 54 b. 78 b. 79 80. 115 c. 123 b. 124 a. and pt 2. folio 107 a. 134 b. 263 b. Questions concerning the workes and actions of Christ as he was our Physitian Saviour King Doctor Mediatour Shepheard and Corner-stone Pt. 1.
This star may be considered either tropologically or Allegorically or historically Some e Haymo s Epiphan expound this starre tropologically thus Herod is the divell and the starre is the grace of God and therefore when the Wise men goe unto Herod and while they are with Herod the starre forsakes them teaching us Observ that the grace of God flies those that follow the divell or run after sinne because the pure Spirit of God will not come unto a polluted soule This starre may be considered of Allegorically the starre signifies the light of faith in the heart and therefore although the Wise men have the word of God delivere● unto them by the Chiefe Priests which teacheth them where Christ is to be borne yet they cannot finde him nor come unto him untill the starre of faith doth arise in their hearte f Muscul s Teaching us that the knowledge of the Scriptures without the light of faith is insufficient to bring us to Christ as the Apostle saith the word profits not when it is not mixed with faith g Heb. 4.1 Historically this starre may also be interpreted Obser 2 even now the starre was not seene when they were in Jerusalem but as soone as they are upon their journey and want a guide it appeares unto them Teaching us that the Lord will Observ 3 never be absent from his children in an acceptable time Or whensoever the children of God stand in need of his helpe by reason of any necessitie or danger he will bee present with them if not by and by yet certainly at length Hence a question may be propounded Quest How may wee be assured of the Lords gracious ayd and assistance in the time of trouble Answ I answer by a carefull observation and observance of these three rules First labour for a pure and immaculate conscience both towards God and towards man lest otherwise we be plagued for our just deserts and plunged into some gulfe of danger for our sins committed Secondly labour that our faith may be without wavering a Iam. 1.6 that we doe not call the mercy or truth or love or power of God in question but boldly walke by faith when wee cannot by sight b 2 Cor. 5.7 Thirdly although these two rules bee observed yet thou must not expect such mercy or helpe or deliverance as thou wouldest have but such as the Lord sees and knowes to be behovefull beneficiall unto thee for Deus non semper audit ad voluntatem vel voluptatem ut semper exande●t ad salutem c Isidor lib. 1. cap. 3. de sum bono faith doth not assure us of any particular temporall blessing or freedome from any particular outward crosse but only in generall that whatsoever the Lord knows to be good for us in his appointed time he will give us Vers 10 VERS 10. When they saw the Starre they rejoyced with exceeding great joy Observ 1 The estate and condition of these Wise-men seemes at first viewe to bee deploreable and miserable but upon more mature deliberation it is happie and blessed for first their journey was long and tedious but God protects them in it from all danger Secondly Herod is netled and the Iewes troubled a tyrant raignes in this Citie to which they bring the newes of the nativitie of a new King but God doth so curbe and restraine Herod that he can doe them no harme but rather performes divers friendly offices unto them Thirdly they goe to Ierusalem hoping there to finde Christ but they cannot meet with him there for there hee is not yet this journey is not lost but well spent for 1. they are confirmed by the prophecie concerning Christ and 2. they are taught the Citie and place where he is to be borne Fourthly they had lost their guide the Starre as they came to Ierusalem but 1. there was no neede of it there as is shewed before and 2. when they stood in neede of it it appeared againe unto them as in this verse Observ 2 All this that hath beene said Teaching us that wee often thinke our estates and conditions to be miserable and evill in regard of temporall things when if they were rightly weighed examined and considered they are good and blessed Quest Hence it may be demanded How should we learne aright to judge of our conditions and estates in these outward things I answer Answ if we ponder our conditions according to these three rules First consider what thou hast deserved justly at Gods hands and what thou hast received mercifully from his hands and compare these two together and thou shalt finde that God hath dealt gratiously with thee and farre above thy deserts yea it will make thee then confesse with Ieremie that it is of the Lords mercy that thou art not consumed d Lam. 3.22 Secondly consider what thou hast not what thou wantest and thou shalt finde that thou art at the least equall that is thou hast as many blessings as thou wantest Thirdly look upon those that are below thee not those that are aboue thee and thou will say jam sumus ergo pares that there are as many in a worse condition then thou art as are in a better and therefore thou hast no cause to complaine but a great deale of reason to blesse God for that estate and condition wherein thou art and to be abundantly contented with it §. 1. VERS 11. Vers 11 And when they were come into the house they saw the young child with Mary his Mother and they fell downe and worshipped him and wh●● they had opened their treasures they presented unto him gifts gold and frankincense and Myrrhe It may heere be asked How or in what manner Sect. 1 doe the Wise-men finde Christ Quest 1 I answer Saint Luke gives a conjecture Answ that they found him in a stable and in a manger e Luk. 2.7.12.16 It may bee demanded againe Why did the Lord preadmonish the wise men of the birth of Quest 2 this infant by a miraculous starre I answer Answ least otherwise they should have beene offended with this poore and meane estate wherein they found Christ It will be questioned further The Lord admonishing Quest 3 the Wise-men of the birth of Christ and they undertaking so long a journey to see him why doth hee suffer them to finde him in so poore and meane a place and condition I answer first because God would heereby Answ 1 shew them that Christs kingdome was not of this world Secondly because the Lord would hereby Answ 2 shew them that Christs glory is not helped by earthly pompe Thirdly because the Lord hereby would have Answ 3 them understand that as Christ the head of his body the Church was in outward shew so poore and despicable so the true religion of Christs Church is not pompous I am not ashamed saith the Apostle f Rom. 1.16 of the Gospel of Christ as if hee should say out religion seemes to
imagine that they can prevaile against God as Pharaoh said who is the Lord that I should obey him I know him not neither will I at his command let Israel goe b Exod. 5.2 as if he would say mauger all his power I will still keepe them so in divers other plaine places we may see this truth confirmed c 2 Ring 18.34 19.10 Dan. 3.15 Ier. 43.2 This arrogant branch that thus thinkes to toppe the heavens sprouts from these three rootes First from those desires which are too importunate and boundlesse unde habeat quarit nemo sed oportet habere when men have not learnt to want nor to bridle their ambition but are infected with the itch of honour then they runne on in a violent course to obtaine their desires either by right or wrong thus hoping in despight of God as Pope Iulius said to obtaine and effect their purposes This was Herods fault who being blinded with ambition and desire of raigning hoped by his craft and policie to cut Christ short Secondly this hope that wicked men have to prevaile against Christ ariseth from the confidence they have in their owne power and strength wicked great men thinke nothing hard for them to doe and therefore dare wage open battell against Gods religion and his children Thus doth Herod and because none dare gainsay him hee hopes to prevaile This hope arises from forgetfulnesse they remember not oftentimes the hand of the Lord but looke upon things as meerely ordered and governed by second causes d Iames 4.15 they consider not the eye of the Lord that sees all nor the hand of the Lord that swayes all or they presume God will take no notice of them or they dare violate the truth and yet hope to escape punishment as Adam and Evah eate the apple and yet hoped they should not dye although God had positively without any If or and for that peradventure e Gen. 3.3 was of Evahs adding affirmed the contrary f Gen. 2.17 and thus doth Herod hope to prevaile against Christ although God himselfe had most plainely said the contrary g Psal 2. And therefore every one should learne 1. to restraine his bottomles desires and be content with whatsoever estate or condition the Lord shal call him unto or settle him in 2. Every one must remember that he can doe nothing of himselfe because in God we live and moove and have our beeing a Act. 17.28 yea because preferment comes neither from the East nor from the West but from the Lord and therefore when we endeavour against the will of God we doe but strive against the streame 3. All must learne not to forget either the eye or hand or power or truth of God but remember all things are ordered by a divine hand of providence and therefore let us not put forth our hands to use any wicked or unlawfull meanes either for the procuring of any blessing or the preventing of any evill for in doing so we prove our selves to be like wicked Herod that thinkes hee can prevaile against Christ the onely begotten sonne of God VERRS 17. Then was fulfilled that Vers 17 which was spoken by Ieremiah the Prophet saying Then was fulfilled Wee see heere how carefull the Lord is that every word of his should be Quest 1 fulfilled whence First it may bee asked shall every word of God whether promises or threatnings be accomplished Certes it shall Esa 55.11 Answ my word saith the Lord shall be fulfilled and not one jot or jota thereof shall perish b Matth. 5.18 for if the Lord speake it he wil also doe it 1 Pet. 1.24 Secondly Why shall every word of God be Quest 2 fulfilled why is the Lord so carefull to bring to passe whatsoever he hath spoken I answer First because God is truth it selfe Answ 1 Iohn 14.6 and the truth of the word doth depend upon the truth of God and therefore the Lord will fulfill whatsoever he hath spoken least an aspersion of falshood should be cast in his face Secondly because God is infinite in knowledge he knowes from the beginning what shall Answ 2 be for ever and cannot be deceived c Gal. 6.7 and hence it is that the Prophets doe so often speake of things which are to come as though they were present yea sometimes as though they were by-past I. Sometimes they speake of things which shall not bee for many yeares after as though they were already present as d Mal. 3.1 Mark 1.2 the Prophet from the Lord saith concerning Iohn Baptist Behold J send my messenger who shall prepare the way II. Sometimes they speake of things that are to come divers hundred y●●res after as though they were already past as it is said of Christ e Esa 9.6 for unto us a child is borne and unto us a sonne is given as though he were then already borne and given Now the reasons of their thus delivering ther-prophecies was because they were as sure of th● event and accomplishment of that which by them from the Lord had beene spoken as though it were already present or past Thirdly because God is omnipotent able to effect whatsoever hee hath promised or threatned Answ 3 by his word at first all things were made yea so powerful is the voice of God that it never returnes in vaine f Esa 55.11 If the Lord should not accomplish what he either promises or threatens men would beleeve that he were not able to doe it and therefore being jealous of his honour hee is carefull to fulfill whatsoever he hath spoken Fourthly God will fulfill every word of his Answ 4 because he is constant and immutable g Iam. 1.17 for 1. he is never disturbed with affection nor transported by passion he doth all things upon mature deliberation with infinite wisedome and most calme affection 2 His will is never changed he is to day and to morrow and for ever the same and therefore hee certainely fulfilles whatsoever he speakes To summe up all this whole question in few words If the Lord did not fulfill or performe what he promises and threatens it were for some of these causes either first because hee is not true or not a God of his word Or secondly because he knew not what would come to passe some thing thwarting or crossing him which he did not foresee nor know Or thirdly because he is not able to performe what hee hath spoken Or fourthly because he is mutable and of another minde to day then he was yesterday Now all these are blasphemously derogatory from the Majestie of the Almighty and therefore least men should thus conceit of him hee fulfills all his prophecies and predictions that they may see and know that hee is infinite in truth power knowledge and also immutable Against this it will bee objected God threatens all sinners that none of them shall escape but Obiect 1 every one shall perish h Psal 9.17
the word but like the Jewes who were of the seede of Abraham but did not the works of Abraham So onely the true seede of Abraham shew forth the fruit of Abrahams saith Fiftly the chaffe and the wheat are both nourished by one and the same juice and humour watered also with the same raine and warmed with the same sunne so hypocrites and the children of God are made partakers of the same spirituall meat and drinke d Cor. 10.1.2 that is they have both of them first the word of God wherby they are informed in their judgement Secondly the motions of the Spirit of God whereby their understandings are more enlightned and thirdly the holy Sacrament Sixtly the wheat and chaffe doe both increase alike in the beginning when they are but grasse but by and by may easily bee distinguished so beleevers and hypocrites for a time can hardly be distinguished but after a time the true practitioner may be discerned from the formalist if not here yet certainely at the last day Seventhly the eare and stalke and chaffe are profitable unto the corne while it is growing so hypocrites and wicked men sometimes support and sometimes comfort the children of God for a time Eightly the greatest part of the corne which springs up in the field is straw and chaffe and in regard of that there is but a little wheat that is the straw beares a greater bulke by much then the wheat so in the Church of Christ there are but a few good in comparison of the bad g Matth. 7.13.14 20.16 Ninthly the chaffe and wheat are not separated untill they bee threshed so hypocrites are discerned from true professors when affliction or the fiery trial of persecution comes which is here intimated by purging Quest 4 How will God purge his floore I answer by fire thus saith the Prophet who shall abide his comming Answ for he is like a refiners fire b Malach. 3.2 And Saint Peter saith God will try our faith with fire c 1 Pet 1.7 By what fire will the Lord purge his Church Quest 5 I answer by a threefold fire viz. Answ First by the fire of his word I will make my word fire and this people wood saith the Lord and it shall devoure them d Ier. 5.14 and againe Is not my word as a fire saith the Lord Ier. 23.29 Secondly by the fire of affliction thus the Apostle saith the fire shall trie every mans worke of what sort it is e 1 Cor. 3.13 that is the fire of affliction called by Saint Peter the fiery triall f 1 Pet. 4.12 Thirdly by the fire of the last judgement according unto that of the Prophet Tophet is ordained of old the pile thereof is fire and much wood g Isa 30.33 and thus our Saviour in his description of the last day the wicked shall be cast into everlasting fire h Matth. 25. Why doth Christ purge his Church by the fire of affliction Quest 6 I answer first because he desires to have a pure Answ 1 Church without spot or wrinkle Eph. 5 25. Secondly because his Church doth continually Answ 2 gather soile the body ever and anon stands in neede of purging the orchard of pruning the garden of weeding the field of cleansing the materiall Temples of repairing and the Church of purifying from her pollutions daily contracted How may wee know whether wee bee wheat Quest 7 or chaffe and consequently whether wee shall be gathered into Gods garner or burnt with unquenchable fire I answer by these markes First the wheat is not perceived when it is in the eare Answ it lurkes within it boasteth not it selfe and therefore we must labour to bee free of boasting pride vaine and Pharisaicall ostentation for the wheat doth not so Secondly although outwardly it shewes not it selfe yet within it is full of fine meale and flower that is faith and sanctification so we must labour to bee full of good workes and to grow and increase therein day by day i 1 Cor. 15.58 and Col. 1.10 and Iam. 3.17 Thirdly the wheat is stable and solid and being shaken goes to the bottome abides there and is not like chaffe blowne away thus wee must bee rooted grounded and established in the faith of Jesus Christ k Col. ● 26 and 2.7 Vers 13 VERS 13. In those dayes came Iesus from Galilee to Iordan unto Iohn to bee baptized of him Sect. 1 § 1. In those dayes In what dayes or times was this comming of Christ Quest 1 I answer when Iohn was baptizing in Jordan Mat. 1.9 when the people were baptized Answ Luk. 3.21 hee did not come before the Baptist least he should have come in darkenesse and obscurity neither long after him but as the Sunne who rises when the day starre ascends so when there were many gathered unto Johns preaching and were baptized by him then comes Christ Why did Christ come at this time expressed in the former question that is not untill many Quest 2 were baptized by Iohn and taught by his preaching I answer for two causes the first Allegoricall The second Historicall Answ The fift cause hereof was Allegoricall to teach us that Christ will not come unto us Observ untill a way bee made for his receiving by preaching and repentance for first there is great neede of preparation because if we be carelesse to prepare the way for him he will not care to come unto us Secondly this preparation is to bee made by repentance that so our sinnes may bee blotted out because hee will not come into a polluted soule l Acts 2.38 and 3.19 Thirdly the ordinary meanes of working repentance in the heart is the preaching of the word as the Lord saith unto Ieremie goe and preach these words unto the North and say repent c. m Ier. 3.12.13 The second cause is Historicall that Christ might bee made knowne and manifested to the whole people that is first that all might see him Secondly that all might here the testimonies concerning him viz. ● the testimony of Iohn I have neede to be baptized of thee 2. of the opening of the heavens 3. of the Dove lighting upon him 4. and of the voyce of God from heaven saying This is my beloved sonne in whom I am well pleased Thirdly that all those who were not as yet baptized might the more readily embrace and receive it seeing hee was baptized that had no evill in him at all § 2. Came Iesus from Galilee Why was Sect. 2 Christ and Iohn Baptist in two severall places Quest 1 I answer first least they should seeme to have Answ 1 compacted together in what they did Secondly because Jordan was a type of Baptisme Answ 2 as also the red sea was 1 Cor. 10.4 Thirdly because the Prophets had thus foretold Answ 3 it that Christ should be a Nazari●● and a Galilean but the Baptist should be brought up in Iud●● Why doth the Master come unto
beginning viz. either first ab extra from without or secondly ab intra from within First there is a temptation which hath his beginning ab extra from without when neither the minde nor thought nor delight nor affections nor meditations nor suggestions goe along with the temptations but the soule or the party tempted is meerely passive And thus tempteth Man often as the wife of Potipha● thus tempteth Ioseph many a time e Gen. 39.7 and Iob also is thus tempted by his wife f Iob. 2.9 and the three children were thus tempted by Nebuchadnezzar unto Idolatry g Dan. 3.15 And thus often one man tempts another unto that which he hath not so much as a thought of or any love unto at all Now this temptation is sinne In the party tempting Not In the person tempted Sathan but scarce at any time for when hee tempteth for the most part he exciteth and enflameth our concupiscence which being stirred up becomes an active instrument within us unto evill and consequently is sinne as followes in the next particular Secondly there is a temptation which hath his beginning ab intrà from within when a man is tempted and allured by his owne innate corruption and this is sinne according to Saint Iames every man is tempted when he is drawne aside of his owne lust and entised h Iam. 1.14 and Rom. 7.7 and therefore the Papists are to blame who deny our first concupiscence to be sinne Here they object there is a double concupiscence Obiect 1 viz. First where there is no assent of the Mind and Will at all Secondly where the Will and Mind consents now this second is sinne but not the first I answer the first is a lesse sinne Answ but yet it is sinne neverthelesse because it is a corruption and evill They object againe this first concupiscence Obiect 2 is so farre from being sinne unto us that it is a praise and commendation unto us so to resist it that not so much as our Mindes assent therunto but herein we can say as Paul did It is no more I but sinne that dwells in me i Rom. 17.17.20 I answer Answ certainely it is commendable to resist the first motions of sinne and gratefull unto God but yet because there two things that concurre herein we must distinguish between Suggestion and Reluctation now if Reluctation bee good then must Suggestion needes be evill for that is the nature of concupiscence k Iam. 1.14 And herein is the difference betweene our temptations and Christs First in us wee have naturally these things 1 Suggestion and Concupiscence 2 Meditation or a ruminating of this wicked suggestion 3 Delectation or a delighting in these wicked thoughts c. Secondly in Christ there is 1 no Delectation in any wicked thing 2 there is no meditation or rumination of any wicked thing but by and by hee repels and beates it backe yea 3 in him there is no evill concupiscence at all but all his temptations were ab extrà from without Why would Christ be tempted Quest 4 I answer first Answ the generall cause hereof are Either in respect of Himselfe to shew his Deity and power in conquering Sathan Us and that either To overcome and put our enemies to flight which otherwise would have beene difficult yea impossible for us to have done Or To teach us these 3 things to wit First the nature of temptation that it is not a signe of the anger of God 1 because it may be without sin as was shewed in the former question and 2 because Christ was tempted with whom God was not angry Secondly the nature of the tēpter that is First his Malice hee is our enemie as followeth afterwards Secondly his weakenesse that now being conquered by Christ he may bee overcome of those who are Christs Thirdly the manner of overcomming him and that is by the word of God as followes by and by Thirdly the readinesse of his helpe and assistance for hee was tempted that hee might be able to succour those that are tempted l Heb. 2.18 Secondly the principall and particular causes why Christ was tempted were these two First Answ 2 to shew us the hostility of Sathan Secondly the victory of Christ First the Hostility of Sathan appeares in this that he tempts all Gods children and dares give the onset unto the best of them Quest 5 Here it may bee demanded What shall wee thinke then of those that are not tempted Answ I answer we may safely thinke that neither God cares for them because hee doth not exercise them neither the devill feares them because he meddles not with them As in a Common-wealth it is an argument of a traitor to bee beloved of the enemie so in the Church of God those whom the devill spares may justly bee suspected of disloyalty towards their heavenly Soveraigne Quest 6 How may wee know who are tempted and who are not Answ I answer by these markes First he that sinnes with greedinesse Ephes 4.19 is not tempted he unto whom sinne is pleasant and to wallow in the puddle of iniquitie is delectable is not tempted because he runnes headlong of himselfe unto wickednesse and sinne Secondly those that are puft up with an hypocriticall pride thinking themselves to be Saints because they seeme so unto men are assaulted with a strong temptation which prevailes against them yet they cannot bee called Souldiers because they fight not neither struggle against this temptation but willingly give way unto it Thirdly those that desire to serve God but doe it negligently being neither wary nor circumspect in their lives and actions but are tempted by pride anger the cares of the world and too great a presumption of the mercies of God and yet see none of these things in themselves because they doe not carefully watch over their wayes these fight not lawfully m 2 Tim. 2.5 according to the Apostles opinion who sayth If a man also strive for masteries yet hee is not crowned except hee strive lawfully Fourthly hee that faithfully devotes himselfe unto the Lord but is not able to doe or eschew what hee should complaining continually with Saint Paul that the good which he would doe hee cannot and the evill which hee would not doe hee daily commits n Rom. 7. ●8 because the flesh wrastles and strives and struggles against him o Gal. 5.17 so strongly that in the anguish of his heart hee cries out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee p Rom. 7.24 And with that holy Apostle being pressed with the burden of sinne and the weight of some present and strong temptation prayes thrice that is many times that the buffets of Sathan may bee taken away from him q 2 Cor. 12.8 and strength of grace given unto him whereby hee may be able to quell and subdue all his corruptions Although this man to himselfe seeme a miserable man yet to mee hee seemes a very happy and
unto us how doth Quest 5 he give counsell or advice unto us for no such thing appeares at all I answer Hee doth not come unto us Answ or perswade us visibly but by Instruments by his enticements which are either externall or internall First the Divell hath externall allurements to entice us by as for example one hath lost a Gold Ring or a Silver Spoone another hath his sonne sicke or his horse or hogge sick here the Divell perswades to goe unto a Witch who can helpe the sicke and restore the thing lost but let us remember that there is a God in Israel and therefore let us give our selves unto him and seeke ayd and succour of him and not from the Divell Secondly the Divell hath internall enticements to allure us viz. First our owne evill concupiscence so long as sinne is pleasing unto us and therefore let us fight against this lust which warres against our soule e 1 Pet. 2 1● Secondly our owne wisedome for reason dictates and teaches many things unto us contrary unto Gods word yea often times those things which are not false principles but false consequences from true antecedents as for example the Sabbath was made for man therefore man may lawfully breake the Sabbath By lying we may helpe our brethren or save our selves from danger therefore it is lawfull to lye in such a case Usury is profitable for a Common-wealth therefore it is by no meanes to bee abolished Thus as Christ can bring light out of darknesse and good out of evill so the Divell can sucke evill from good and with the Spider change wholsome juice into mortall poyson Secondly Christ would not turne Stones into Bread because the counsell given was inconvenient and therefore though the thing in it selfe might have been done yet in regard of the circumstances it might become unlawfull Teaching us that that thing which is lawfull in generall may in the circumstances be unlawful It was lawfull for the Israelites to offer sacrifice unto God and yet some circumstances made their sacrifices execrable and abominable unto him f Esa 66.3 It was allowed also unto them by God Observ 2 to celebrate some feast dayes and yet some circumstances there were in the celebration of their feasts which made the Lord openly protest against them g Esa 1.13.14 Amos 5.21 It is lawfull for Christians to eate flesh but if it doe offend a weake brother it becomes unlawfull unto us to doe it if it be in our power or choyce to doe it or not to doe it Quest 6 How or by what meanes can lawfull things become unlawfull Answ Because even lawfull things are to bee moderated according to a three-fold rule and therefore when they erre from any of them they become unlawfull The first rule is faith wherein two things are required I. That the thing which is done bee good not a thing which is forbidden by the Law And II. that it be done well sincerely discreetly with a good intent c. The second rule is Charitie wee must not offend a brother for whom Christ died by that which we doe The third rule is decencie or comelinesse which is described by the holy Scriptures in three words The first is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Comely h 1 Cor. 11 13. Judge you sayth the Apostle if it be comely for a woman to pray uncovered Wherein hee teacheth us to doe those things which becometh us and our profession we being called unto a holy calling i Eph. 5.3 and women must doe the● workes which become women professing the Gospell k 1 Tim. 2.10 And Titus must speake those things which become sound Doctrine l Tit. 2.1 which places teach us that wee must not onely doe those things which are good but also which are comely and beseeming us The second word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 honestly or de●●●ly Let us walke decently as in the day a Rom. 13 23. and honestly towards them that are without b 1 Thess 4.12 The third word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let all things be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decently in order c 1 Cor. 14.40 for it is a cause of rejoycing unto the righteous to see this as Saint Paul said I reioyce beholding your order d Col. 2.5 And thus things lawfull in themselves may become unlawfull unto us if either first wee doe them not well for the manner of them but for some base or by end or if secondly we offend our brethren when we need not by any impulsive command or thirdly when we doe those things which are undecent uncomely disorderly or not beseeming our places or persons or professions And therefore it is not sufficient to say as some doe this is not a sinne for although it be not in the substance yet it may be so unto thee in regard of the circumstances thereof wherefore we must examine our actions by these three rules Faith Charity Decency First examine what thou dost by the rule of Faith and herein observe these two things An Bonum sit An Benè fiat First examine whether that which thou dost be good or not that out of thine own knowledge for nothing must be done with a doubting faith e Rom. 14.22.24 for that pollutes and defiles the conscience f 1 Cor. 8.7 And therefore remember if it be not certaine that thou maist lawfully do that which thou desirest it is most certain thou maist lawfully abstain from doing it as for example if thou be not certainly assured of the lawfulnes of Usury or of recreations upon the Sabbath day or of going to law with thy brother thou maist be assured that it is lawfull to abstain from these and therefore rather forbeare that which is certainely lawfull then doe that which is disputable controverted and consequently uncertainely lawfull Secondly examine whether that which thou dost bee well done or not And herein search into these two things I. In generall if thou dost it Sincerè with a sincere heart Deus remunerat adverbia g Bern. God doth not alwayes reward Bonum a thing which is good for the substance of it or good materially but alwayes bene that which is formally good done well and with a sincere heart If a Justice of Peace or a Judge upon the Bench execute Justice with anger or hatred or revenge it is bonum a good thing to execute just judgment but not bene thus to execute it If an hypocrite pray that hee may the better devour widowes houses this prayer shall not be rewarded because although to pray bee bonum yet thus to pray is not bene II. In particular examine if thou dost that which thou dost Securè safely to wit if thou dost not tempt God in the doing thereof by approching too neare the gates of sinne There are certaine cords of vanity which draw on iniquity as with cart-ropes h Esa 5.18 from which all ought to abstain
Scriptures be obscure Answ 2 humane writings are no lesse yea where shall we meet with certainty and infallibility but onely in the word Can we have it in the Fathers they have their navi and blemishes yea Augustine and Hierom confesse that they may erre and therefore would have none to subscribe to their opinions further then they go according to the word of God Can we find infallibility in the Councels they have erred as may bee shewed largely both out of Bishop Iewell Doctor Whitakers Doctor Willet Chamierus and divers others Can we finde certainty amongst the Popish writers least of all they jarring like an instrument wholy out of tune Thomas against Scotus Catherinus against Cajetane Whatson against Parsons Bellarmine in somethings almost contrary to them all and therefore if obscurity and difficulty bee a sufficient rampire to keepe us from reading the Scriptures by the same reason we are debarred from reading Philosophers Rhetoritians Fathers Schoolemen Popish writers yea all writings and bookes in any sort materiall or necessary to bee studied because they all in many things are difficult and obscure to the understanding and the Scripture is no more Answ 3 Thirdly those things that are obscure in the word of God may bee explained by more easy and cleare places as was said before Answ 4 Fourthly the Father saith e August li 1. de doct Christ Christum Dominum obscurasse Scripturas quo his major habeatur reverentia autoritas qua communia sunt vilesscunt rara verò difficilia cum pretio admirantur that is Christ our Lord in his infinite wisedome hath made the Scriptures something difficult not that men might forbeare to reade or study them but that they might hold them in greater authority price and reverence for naturally we contemne those things that are plaine and facile unto the understanding but those things which are rare and difficult we most admire and more highly value Obiect 3 They object againe The tree is knowne by his fruit and the cause conjectured by the effect and therefore it is neither requisite nor good for people to reade the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue They proove the consequence thus the Scripture read by those that are ignorant is the cause of all errours and heresies usus Scripturarum est causa omnium haereseon f Alphons de Castro the vulgar use of the Scriptures is the ground of all errours Audenter dicimus nullam haeresin ess● quae non occasionem in Scriptura g Cens Colon. I dare boldly say a bold speech indeede that there hath no heresie sprung up in the Church but it was occasioned by the word of God An Italian Bishop dehorted the people from reading the scriptures ne fiant haeretici h Clem. Espens s Tit. 1. least it should make them damned Heretiques To this we answer First the Scriptures may occasion errours either Answ 1 By containing that which is false and erroneous but this the Papists say not Or By a misunderstanding or wrong interpretation thereof but this is not the fault of the Scriptures but the malice perversenesse or ignorance of men Answ 2 Secondly if a wolfe should cloth himselfe in a sheepes skin the sheepe must not therefore cast off his skinne as Saint Augustine saith the Bees must not forsake the sweet flowers because the spider extracts poyson from them Christ doth not here forbeare the use of Scriptures because the devill abuses them some men wickedly abuse Wine unto drunkennesse Meat unto gluttony Marriage unto coveteousnesse and adultery Magistracy unto Tyranny Must therefore Wine Meat Wedlocke Magistracy be prohibited and cryed downe as unlawfull I hope they will not and therefore let them consider how little reason they have upon the like grounds or insequent or ilsequent consequences to forbid the reading of the Scriptures unto the laity in the vulgar tongue 3. They permit worse and more pernitious Answ 3 things unto the common people and therefore why not the Scriptures though they were dangerous as they say First the Popish Clergy allow the Laity to reade other bookes which may occasion errours as well as the Scripture yea containing errours which the word of God doth not as Iustinus Irenaeus Origen who were Chiliastes Tertullian and Cyprian who were Montanists these they permit only the Scriptures they prohibit why because there is a greater enmity betwixt the Scriptures and the Papists then there is betweene these Fathers and the Papists the Fathers in somethings have erred greatly the Papists in many things doe erre grossely but the Scripture in nothing at all it being the touchstone of truth and the hammer of errours to breake them and dissolve them in peeces and therefore as great opposition and enmity there is betweene the Papists and Scriptures as is betweene truth and errour life and death Secondly the Priests allow the people to reade lascivious and wanton bookes which may and doe infect them why then not the Scriptures which is immaculate it is an inhumane thing yea an argument of small love to permit them to wallow in stincking puddles or to drink unwholsome yea venomous waters and onely prohibite pure streames yea the water of life unto them Si manifestū infidelitatis signum sit aliquid scriptorū rejecere vel non scripterum inducere quid dicemus de lasciva praeferentibus a Basil tract de vera fide that is if it be a manifest signe of infidelity either to reject refuse any part of holy writ or to induce into the Canon of faith that which is not divine scripture what shall we say then of those who preferre lascivious and wanton bookes or toyes before the word of God Fourthly and lastly the objection is apparantly false for first it is not the Scripture but the Answ 4 ignorance of the Scripture that is the cause of errours and heresies b Chysost s col 3.16 which truthes we learne even from Truths lips ye erre saith Christ not knowing the Scriptures c Mat. 22.29 where wee see plainely the cause and the effect the effect is error yee erre the cause of their errour is ignorance of the word of God ye know not the Scriptures therefore ye erre It is not then without great cause that the Holy Ghost cals the Pope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the adversary that thus dares in his Tenets oppose Christ himselfe to the face Secondly the Scriptures reproove heresies and errours and therfore there is no likelyhood that they in themselves should bee the cause of them d 2 Tim. 3.16 Thirdly there is nothing else worthy of credit besides the Scriptures other writings being as chaffe this as wheate e Ierem. 23.28 whence the Fathers f Hier. s Matth. 23. Greg. hom k. sup Ezech. said quod de scripturis sacris authoritatem non habet eadem facilitate contemnitur quà probatur those writing or opinions which are not confirmed by the holy Scripture are easilyer contemned
profit but indeede none at all being no other then sweet poyson Secondly wee conclude hence that it is filthy polluted and uncleane if the devill perswades unto it such as the cause is such is the effect from a filthy stincking puddle cannot issue pure and wholsome water no more from an uncleane divel can any pure thing be derived Thirdly we conclude mors in olla that there is danger and death in it if the devill tempt unto it because he is our enemie f Matth 13.25 and therefore his counsell must needs be pernitious he is a lyer and a murtherer and therefore death is the doome of him that beleeves his lies § 4. For it is written We see Christ here Sect. 4 makes the Scripture his first and last argument the fortresse which hee will not forsake nor bee beaten from Why doth not Christ answer the devill otherwise Quest 1 for being moved with leasings and provoked by his bold insolences he might have answered First dost thou speake true sathan in what thou promisest wouldest thou indeede give me what thou sayest if I should fall downe and worship thee or dost thou promise that which thou meanest not to performe Secondly though thou hast a desire to bee as good as thy word whether art thou able or not is the whole world thine to dispose of at thy pleasure Thirdly suppose all this world were thine to give me couldest thou thereby make mee greater or more happy then I am already Fourthly canst thou perswade thy selfe or imagine that I can bee moved or enticed at all with the possessions and preferments of the world Christ I say might thus have taken off sathan but he doth not but onely puts him in minde of his duty Answ It is written thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God And that for these causes First that he may teach us his Modesty he doth not complaine of these injuries and injurious speeches of sathan unto him Secondly that he may teach us his meekenes he doth not by way of recriminatiō reproach satan Thirdly that hee may teach us his carefulnesse to obey his Father seeing hee neither proves nor affirmes any thing from himselfe or his owne will Observ but all from the rule of obedience the word of God And Fourthly his answer being necessary modest and directly pertinent to the question doth teach us thereby that Christians answers should be meeke and ad rem gentle and punctuall unto the thing demanded First they must bee meeke and gentle let all bitternesse of speech saith Saint Paul be put away from you a Ephes 4.31 And againe lay aside all evill speakings b 1 Pet. 2.1 Secondly they must be ad rem pertinent unto the question and the thing in hand let your speech saith the Apostle be alwaies with grace seasoned with salt that ye may Quest 2 know how ye ought to answer every man Colos 4.6 Why must wee be thus carefull of our answers Answ 1 First because wee ought to bee imitators of God who hath made or done nothing in vaine there is nothing idle in nature there is not a vaine or needlesse word in all the Scriptures we therefore in all our answers should labour to imitate God herein by striving that they may Answ 2 be concise weighty and to the purpose Secondly idle words in interrogatories or harsh answers beget jarres and contentions and bitter brawlings and therefore our answers must Sect. 5 be meeke Obiect 1 § 5. Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God The Papists c Bellar. l. 4. de Euch. Cap. 29. object this place for the adoration of the Eucharist God is verily and truely to be worshipped as in this verse thou shalt worship the Lord thy God But Christ in the Eucharist is very God therefore verily in the Eucharist to Answ 1 be worshipped First we may easily grant the whole argument as framed by the Cardinall that Christ is in the Eucharist to be adored and so hee is also in Baptisme and in the word preached as the Apostle sheweth plainely d 1 Cor. 14.24 If all prophesie and there come in one who beleeveth not c. the secrets of his heart are made manifest and hee will fall downe on his face and worship God and say plainely that God is in you indeede So wee also though we utterly deny that the Eucharist is to bee adored yet we worship Christ in the Eucharist saying we praise thee we blesse thee we worship thee we glorifie thee c. Answ 2 Secondly wee may deny the argument as framed by the Cardinall it being a false Syllogisme the Minor proposition not following from the Major according to the rules of Art God is verily and truely to bee worshipped this is most true But Christ in the Eucharist is very God saith Bellarmine whereas he should have assumed thus if hee would have proved any thing But the Eucharist is very God which is blasphemy to say Answ 3 Thirdly though we should grant the body of Christ to be verily present in the Eucharist yet it is the not the body of Christ God Answ 4 Fourthly there are the formes of bread and wine remaining still which being creatures and not hypostatically joyned to the person of Christ cannot without great perill of idolatry be adored Answ 5 Fiftly to put all out of doubt Christs flesh is not bodily present neither can they ever be able to prove it and therefore they have no colour or ground at all for this their adoration of the elements Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God These words we see are here alleadged by our Saviour against sathan who had tempted him to fall downe and adore him wherefore by this text all falling downe and prostrating of our selves before any creature to adore it is forbidden without which submissive gesture not the meanest kind of religious worship can be exhibited unto any Argum. from whence we collect this conclusion that no religious worship properly or improperly accidentally or of it selfe or any other kind of way belongeth unto Images but that to God onely wise immortall invisible all religious worship is onely due Obiect 2 Bellarmine answers hereunto that this place is to be understood of a certaine kind of religious worship which is onely proper unto God Answ All religious worship is forbidden in this place to be given to any but unto God for sathan did not tempt Christ to worship him as God but onely to fall downe and worship him he asked onely of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a certaine inclination of the body which Christ denyed as being onely proper to God Sect. 6 § 6. And him onely shalt thou serve Quest Solum onely or alone is not in Deut. 6.16 Why doth our Saviour here adde it or alleadge it First to teach us that all precepts enjoyning the Answ 1 worship and service of God include the force of this particle Alone a Perkins Secondly sathan doth not prohibite Christ
griefes whatsoever as for example First if thou bee in any temporall danger then here is thy comfort that all things shall worke together for the best unto thee x Rom. 8.28 Secondly if thou bee derided for the profession of religion the holy Comforter will afford internall consolation unto thee Thirdly dost thou mourne for the sinnes of others and art in feare for them then here is thy comfort viz. 1. If they be righteous men who have sinned and for whose sinnes thou art troubled thou must remember they stand or fall to their own Master y Rom. 14.4 2. If they bee wicked men for whose sinnes thou mournest and whose persons thou art afraid of in regard of their sinnes yet thou maist be comforted through hope What hope can we have in bewailing the sins Quest 7 of the world and of wicked men Chrysost imperf First it may be that by thy prayers tears counsell Answ 1 advice some may be converted although the Apostle feares the worst and heares bad enough of those unto whom he writes yet hee hopes the best Heb. 6.9 Secondly the audaciousnesse and boldnesse of Answ 2 the wicked in sinning shall not be perpetuall for Christ will come to judge the world and therefore hence wee may have some comfort in our mourning for the sinnes of the wicked Thirdly God will glorifie himselfe either by Answ 3 converting them from sinne or by confounding them for sinne Wherefore in regard of Gods glory wee are not utterly deprived of comfort in our sorrow for their sinnes Answ 4 Fourthly at least when wee see apparantly that they belong not unto God we then mourne no more that is if we see them die in their sins as they lived in their iniquities then wee are to cease our mourning for them and therefore in bewailing the sinnes of the world wee have this hope that either our mourning shall be turned into mirth by their amending or shal be brought to end by their death Fourthly if thou grievest for thy owne sinnes committed against thy God thou maist hearken what the Lord saith and hee will speake peace unto thee he will tell thee he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turne from his sinnes and live He will tell thee that the sacrifices of God are a broken and contrite heart and such a sacrifice he will not despise z Psa 51.17 Yea thy Christ will tell thee that if thou feele thy sinnes to be a burthen unto thee that hee will ease thy shoulders of that load if thou wilt but come unto him a Mat. 11.28 Thus the Lord hath particular comforts for all the griefes of his children or whatsoever their causes of mourning be And thus we have seene the first consolation which wee have from this Blessed Comforter and that is temporall Secondly the Holy Spirit gives unto all holy mourners spirituall solace and that two wayes first by mitigating their affliction by inward comfort hence they can rejoyce in tribulation b Rom. 5.3 yea hence they can cheerfully endure death c Rom. 8.36 as we see in Paul Acts 20. and in the other Saints Heb. 11.35 c. And in the Apostles who rejoyce that God is pleased to thinke them worthy to suffer for Christs sake d Acts 5.41 Secondly by giving unto them internall peace of conscience both with themselves and with their God e Phil. 4.7 insomuch as they become thereby more then conquerers in their greatest afflictions and tryals f Rom. 8.31.37 and 2 Cor. 1.4 Thirdly this Paracletus will give unto these mourners in Zion eternall consolation in the new Jerusalem which is above where and when Death shall be swallowed up in victory and all teares wiped from off their faces g Esa 25.8 and Apoc. 7.17 Revel 21.4 And their temporal mourning changed into eternal mirth as Abraham saith to Dives of Lazarus he in his life time received paines therefore now hee is comforted h Luk. 16.25 and hence it is called everlast●ng consolation i 2 Thess 2.16 yea joy and comfort which the heart of a mortall man is not able to conceive off k 1 Cor. 2.9.10 Quest 8 How many degrees are there of this Eternall Consolation Answ Two to wit First from death when the spirit returnes unto God that gave it and the soule is caried by the Angels into heaven to enjoy the joyes of that celestiall paradise with Christ for ever and ever The second is from the resurrection when the body beeing united into the soule both are made partakers of that eternall blisse when we can see God with these same eyes l Iob. 19.26 having put on immortality as a garment and our corruptible bodies being made incorruptible And therefore from the consideration hereof we may see how blessed a thing it is to mourne and to want comfort for a while here on earth and how wide they shoot that thinke those happy that laugh and rejoyce here on earth Extrema gaudij luctus occupat the end of temporall joy is eternall sorrow as wee see in Dives thou in thy life time receivedst pleasure saith Abraham therefore now thou art tormented m Luk. 16 25. We see worldlings rejoyce and expose themselves wholly to profuse laughter and mirth according to that of the Prophet The harpe and the violl the tabret and pipe and wine are in their feasts n Esa 5.12 with joy and gladnesse slaying Oxen killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine o Esa 22.13 in bowles chaunting to the sound of the violl inventing instruments of musicke and anointing themselves with the chiefe ointments p Amos 6 5.6 But all this jollity doth not argue felicity the lives of worldlings being meerely tragicall that is merry in the beginning but the Catastrophe death and misery Balthazar feasts but by and by trembles and within few houres is slaine Dan. 5.5 And many more like him spend their daies in good things and in a moment goe downe into the pit q Iob. 21.13 And therefore let us remember how vaine all the joyes of this world are and not place our felicity in them or thinke our selves happy because we enjoy them but rath r thinke blessed are they that mourne What comforts may we be supported withall Quest. 9 in the time of our sorrow What consolations may wee propound unto our selves in our distresse that we may the more patiently beare and undergoe it Ruminate in the day of mourning and time of griefe of these five things Remember first Answ that affliction is common with thee unto all the faithfull and therefore thou mayest the better beare it r Heb. 12.8 Secondly remember affliction may bee grievous to the body but it is joyous to the soule our Saviour sayth Feare not him nor that which can kill the body but feare him and that which can cast body and soule into hell fire And therefore we should not
to be reverenced and doth strongly convince Private spirits when we can say none have as yet thought thus besides your selfe Secondly the true use of the ancient writers is in convincing those adversaries which trust unto them and relie upon them for although this follow not the Fathers say thus therefore it is true yet this followes these men pretend to follow the Doctrine of the Fathers yet in their opinions varie frō yea are enemies unto the Fathers and therefore they doe but deceive and juggle with the world making a shew of that which is not This is the usuall pranke of the Papists to exclaime that all the Fathers are on their side and when the matter comes to triall their Judges condemne them and the Fathers speake against them Thirdly the use of the Ancients is for the moving of the affections of their hearers for certainely modest Christians and ingenious natures will be much moved and strongly perswaded when they heare the thing they are exhorted to embrace not onely to be consonant to Scriptures but also agreeable to the example counsell and resolution of the Fathers Fourthly the use of the Fathers is to direct us in outward things or to teach us the nature of indifferent things how farre they may bee used and how they are abused Sect. 3 § 3. Whosoever is angry with his brother c. Quest 1 What is the meaning of this verse in general or of the words distinguished herein namely Anger Racha Foole Iudgement Counsell Fire Answ 1 If the Reader desire full satisfaction herein I referre him to Mr. Weemes in the tractate of the Judiciall Law of Moses lib. 1. chap. 16. and Doctor Field of the Church who will resolve him in this particular m D. Field of the Church lib. 5. cap. 9. for my own part I forbeare to transcribe them they being both in English and easily to be had Answ 2 Secondly because I would not leave my Reader altogether unresolved I intreat him to take notice that our Saviour here observes three degrees of anger The first is in the sudden heat and boyling of the affection inwardly without cause layd downe in these words Whosoever is angry with his brother unadvisedly The second is in shewing of this indignation outwardly by any disdainfull words as in calling one Racha that is idle-head light-braine for so Rik in the Hebrew to which this Syrian word Raka agreeth both in found and sense signifieth light or vaine u Iuniur s This indignation may bee expressed also by other signes as by grinning frowning spitting and such like The third degree of anger consists in open railing as calling one Foole with other tearmes of reviling which is a weapon fit for the Gyant with three hands because Tres quasi uno ictu occidit o Basting it killeth three as it were with one blow first himselfe that revileth and raileth Secondly him that giveth credit to his reviling and railing Thirdly him who is slandeted and reviled Answ 3 Thirdly as our Saviour maketh difference of the sinnes so also hee here sheweth three degrees of punishments alluding to the publicke forme of judgement used among the Jewes For first there was the Session of judgement of three who judged of small causes Secondly there was the Councell of three and twentie who determined more weighty matters Thirdly the great Synedrion or Judicatorie which consisted of seventie and two sixe chosen of every Tribe who sometimes convented before them the High Priest and sometimes false Prophets yea sometimes a whole Tribe as reverend Beza thinkes Fourthly from these premises I thus conclude Answ 4 and determine the question First hee that suffers anger to boyle in his breast shall be censured in the secret judgement of God Secondly hee that bewrayeth his indignation by opprobrious words shall be held guiltie before all the assembly of heavenly Angels and Saints Thirdly he that raileth and revileth shall bee judged worthy of hell fire that is of the greatest punishment For foure kindes of punishments were practised and exercised among the Jewes whereby they put malefactors to death First strangling secondly the sword thirdly stoning fourthly the fire Of the which they thought the last to bee the worst as Beza affirmes upon this place Or if wee looke to the former words they will helpe us to the true understanding of these It was sayd of old Thou shalt not kill and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of judgement where we see the Jewes held a murderer to bee guiltie of judgement and that not onely positively but privatively as if our Saviour would say yee yeeld the homicide to be guiltie of judgement who really takes away his brothers life but hee is not called into judgement with you who sheddes not his brothers bloud although he hate him in his heart revile him with his tongue But ego dico I say unto you whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of judgement Where wee see Christ gives as much to anger as they to murder p Areti s And therefore the true sence and meaning of the words I take to bee this Hee that is angry shall bee guiltie of judgement that is at the day of judgement hee shall give account and answer for that his anger q Math. 12.36 Hee that calles his brother Racha shall bee guiltie of a Councell that is shall bee more severely punished than the former as his sinne is greater Hee that calles his brother Foole shall bee guiltie of hell fire that is is condemned already before God r Augu. s And yet all these three are eternall punishments and the first may be resembled unto a pettie Sessions the second unto a generall Assizes the third to Marshall law Quest 2 Are then some of these mortall sinnes some veniall doth it deserve condemnation to call our brother foole but not to bee angry with him Answ 1 First the Papists answer here affirmatively both in generall that there are some sinnes in their owne nature mortall and some veniall and in particular that the last sinne mentioned in this verse is mortall the first to wit Anger is but veniall and therefore of his owne nature deserveth not everlasting condemnation which is onely due unto the last to call one Foole ſ Bellarm. de Purga lib. 1. c. 4. Secondly Thomas of Aquine likes the generall Answ 2 allowance of the distinction of mortall and veniall sinnes but dislikes the particular application thereof unto this place holding that this Anger which is here spoken of is a deadly sin in that Christ saith He that is angry with his brother is guilty of judgement which words must be understood De motu tendente in nocumentum c. of a motion tending to hurt where there is consent and so that motion is deadly sinne Thom. in opuscul Ex Lippom. Answ 4 Fourthly the distinction of sinnes veniall and not veniall in their owne nature in
not at things which are seene but at things which are not seene l 2 Cor. 4.18 Where wee may observe that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is so to looke as the Archer looketh to the marke hee that beholdeth a woman thus hath an adulterous eye yea the word here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not onely to looke with the eye but with the heart signifying more then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for this onely signifies the beholding of an object simply which way a man may behold a woman without sinne but that signifies the intention of the minde which goes along with the eye and thus to behold a woman with the sight of the eye and the lust of the heart as evill is here forbidden If the sight of the eye be thus dangerous and readie to conveye lust unto the Quest 2 heart is it not then good to plucke out or put out our eyes First some of the Heathen knowing how unruly the eye was have pulled out their eyes Answ 1 thinking them most happy who were so blinde of which minde was Seneca when he said Nonne intèlligis partem foelicitatis nostroe esse coecitatem It addes no small deale unto our happinesse that wee are blinde Secondly these were mistaken for Christ requireth not this of us to plucke out our bodily Answ 2 seeing eyes but to pull out our sinfull eye in the next verse that is to take lust from our eye which is a Member of our sinfull body and then the eye of it selfe is a good member of the body § 2. Hee that looketh upon a woman to lust after hath committed adulterie with her already Sect. 2 in his heart Quest It is questioned here by many Whether the uncleane desires of the heart bee a breach of this Commandement thou shalt not commit adultery or of the last Thou shalt not covet Answ 1 First some of the Fathers have thought that the uncleannesse of the heart doth not belong unto this seaventh Precept God doth not by this Commandement cut off the sinfull thoughts but the sinfull act said Gregor in Ezech hom 13. Yea Augustine also is of this opinion That in this seaventh Commandement the worke of uncleannesse onely is noted but in the tenth the very concupiscence m Aug. in qu 71. in Exod. Answ 2 Secondly the inward sanctimonie and purity of the minde is here commanded and the contrary forbidden as appeares by these particulars First by the definition of puritie and chastitie which is to be holy both in body and spirit thus Saint Paul describeth a true Virgin n 1 Cor. 7 34. And thus he exhorts us to bee o 1 Thes 5. ●3 Secondly both the soules and bodies of th● faithfull are the Temples of the Holy Ghost and therefore ought to be kept holy p 1 Cor. 3 16. Thirdly Chrysostome urgeth these foure reasons I. From the interpretation of our blessed Saviour who sheweth that this Commandement is broken in the very inward lust and concupiscence in this verse II. From the analogie and correspondencie which it hath with other Commandements To bee angry with our brother without a cause is a breach of the precedent Commandement Thou shalt not kill So to desire a strange woman though the act of concupiscence follow not is against this Precept III. In respect of God who doth not so much looke to the worke of man as to his heart IV. Because concupiscence is the cause of adulterie all adultery proceeding from concupiscence q Mark 7.21 Chrysostom hom 12. in Mat. And therefore seeing the effect that is adultery and outward uncleannesse is forbidden in this Precept it followeth also that the very cause thereof which is concupiscence should be restrained Sect. 3 § III. Whosoever shall looke upon a woman c. hath committed adultery with her Quest 1 Why doth our Saviour here ascribe Adultery to the eye and a wanton looke Answ 1 First because the sence provokes unto act as the Apostle saith he plants and Apollo waters unto good 1 Cor. 3.6 So we may say the eye plants and the tongue and speech waters unto impurity and uncleannesse Secondly because the eye is the most quick Answ 2 sense ut vidi ut perij sometimes a glade of the eye brings a glance to the heart which sets on fire the whole course of nature Observe here that a man hath two eyes to wit I. Oculus informans the right eye whereby sometimes he casually beholds a woman this is not simply condemned as was shewed before § 1. II. There is Oculus depascens the left eye which delights in the beholding of beauty and is never glutted therewith this is faultie and here forbidden as was shewed before Indeede the first sight is sometimes a baite and proves at last mortall as we see in Evah whose sight of the Apple cost the world deare r Gen. 3.6 afterwards the sight of women caused those sinnes that at length brought the Dleuge ſ Gen. 6.2 The sight of Dina● cost the Shechemites their lives t Gen. 34.2 And the sight of Joseph unto his Mistresse brought her to forget all woman-hood u Gen 39.7 And Davids eye first casually beholding Bathsheba occasioned adultery subornation to drunkennesse and murder Thirdly because the beholding of beautie Answ 3 is evill and doth pollute in it selfe if it be with delight and desire after it And hence in the law the brother and sister were to be cut off if they saw and did contemplate that is willingly and with delight one anothers nakednesse v Levit. 20.17 And therefore with Iob we should make a covenant with our eyes and not give way to alascivio●s looke What lookes must we principally avoide Quest 2 There is a three-fold aspect of women Answ namely First there is Visus solicitans a sight which perswadeth and counselleth unto evill and this is wicked Solomon saith He winketh with his eyes w Pro. 6.13 that is he laboures by wanton lookes winkes smiles and the like to seduce and allure These as absolutely wicked are to bee avoided Secondly there is Visus ruminans a pleasing and delightfull looke this Solomon forbids Let not thine eyes behold strange women x Pro. 23.33 And his father David telleth us it is a vanitie and therefore we should turne our face from it y Psal 119.37 This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very thing which is here forbidden Noli aspicere quod non licet concupiscere Doe not looke earnestly upon that which it is not lawfull for thee at all to covet Bern. Oculus impudicus impudici cordis nuntius Augustin Such lookes are often the fore-runners of unchaste actions and doe presage an unchaste heart Thirdly there is Visus casualis an accidentall or casuall aspect this is not evill in it selfe yet even in this wee must be warie and watchfull and not let our heart goe along with our eye § 4. To lust
Church out of our love unto the children of God who are offended by them and with them as was said before Fourthly wee may begge this even out of Answ 4 our love unto themselves who are for the present both Gods enemies and the Churches for I. We desire the Lord to lay some affliction upon them though it be heavie that thereby they may learne to feare God And so by the punishments of their bodies their soules come to bee saved in the day of the Lord. This is good and profitable for them II. If temporall affliction will not humble and bring them home then we desire God to remove them away by death speedily that so their punishment may bee lesse in hell fire For if they should live longer they would sinne more and worse wicked men growing daily worse and worse and consequently their eternall judgement would bee so much the greater and more insupportable And the lesse their punishment is the better it is for them Will God heare these imprecations Certainely hee will hee hath promised to Quest 6 heare his childrē when they pray for vengeance against their owne particular enemies Answ and persecutors Luke 18.7 much more then when they pray against those who are both the enemies of God and adversaries also unto his Church Who are these enemies whom we must pray Quest 7 against First those who by their sinnes dishonour Answ 1 God the Lord is displeased with all sinnes but his name is dishonoured by some sinnes more then others and by the sinnes of some men more then others Now the more that any man dishonours God by his sins the more sure he is of perdition destruction except he repent because he is one of the Lords chiefe enemies Secondly those who by their sinnes glve a Answ 2 publike scandall to the profession of religion are great enemies both to God and his Church Thirdly those who sinne with a high hand Answ 3 and are insolent in their wickednesse against either God or his Church are some of these enemies who shall certaine●y perish Fourthly those who sinne desperately without Answ 4 repentance being obstinate in their transgressions and not mourning for their iniquities are of this number which the Lord will be avenged of when his children cry unto him to declare himselfe unto the world to bee King of Kings by the destruction of his and their enemies And thus much for this exposition of these words Thy kingdome come Secondly Adveniat regnum Thy kingdome come is taken for perficiatur and hath reference to the Kingdome of mercy Now in the words thus understood we begge many things at Gods hands To wit both that we may be Freed from the false Church to wit both of Sathan and His Ministers that is Persecuters And Seducers which are either Atheists Or Superstitious persons Brought into the true Church and this we desire both for All the godly that First the Church may be consummated Secondly that it may bee glorified to wit by the extension of the Limits and bounds thereof And Holy profession thereof And Pure life and good examples of professors Thirdly that they may enjoy the meanes viz. The word and The power of the Spirit with the word Our selves that we may be brought both into the Kingdome of Grace in this life Glory in the life to come Having all these severall particulars to handle in another place I will here onely speake a word or two of the two last wherin we pray that both wee and all the elect may first bee brought into the kingdome of grace and afterwards into the kingdome of glory Quest 8 Can we of our selves or by our owne power come unto the Kingdome of grace Answ To this Gerson answers Signanter dicitur in oratione Dominicà Adveniat regnum tuum id est ad nos veniat quia virtute nostra ad ipsum pervenire non possumus Very significantly doth our Saviour in this verse say Thy Kingdome come that is let it come unto us because wee by our owne power and strength are not able to come unto it Quest 9 If it be thus then how can wee promote or helpe forward this Kingdome of grace and Christ Answ We must strive to advance propagate and enlarge this Kingdom of grace by these meanes namely First by prayer as in this verse Secondly by submitting of our selves unto God by true obedience suffering him wholy to rule beare sway in our hearts by his blessed spirit Thirdly by opposing and resisting as much and as farre as lawfully we may the enemies of Christ and his Church Fourthly by comforting and helping the Church and children of God to our abilities we must doe good unto all but especially unto the houshold of faith that the faithfull who are in any distresse may be comforted and others thereby encouraged to strive to be of that societie and fraternitie who will not see one another lacke Fifthly by a good life and holy conversation for that is a meanes to convert others unto the faith and bring home erring sheepe unto Christs fold Phil. 2.15 and 1 Pet. 2.12 Quest 10 Why must we be thus carefull by all waies and meanes to bee made members of Christs Kingdome upon earth Answ 1 First because we have an expresse Commandement for it Mat. 6.33 Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof Answ 2 Secondly because wee have the constant example of all the faithfull for it whose principall care hath beene still for this Answ 3 Thirdly because wee have bound our selves with an oath both in Baptisme and the Supper of our Lord that we would forsake the kingdome of Sathan and submit our selves to this Spirituall kingdome of Christ Answ 4 Fourthly because the subjects of this Kingdome are interested and made heires of all good things in this life both temporall and spirituall Mat. 6.33 Rom. 8.32 and 1 Cor. 3.21 Answ 5 Fifthly because the Citizens of this spirituall Jerusalem shall be made eternally happie and blessed in that Jerusalem which is above in the Quest 11 life to come Who are carelesse and negligent of helping forward this Kingdome of Christ and grace First those who are altogether negligent in praying fervently for the amplification and extension of this kingdome Answ 1 Secondly those who cannot endure the Answ 2 yoake of Christ but disdainefully and reproachfully cast it off from their necks Psal 2.2 3. Thirdly those who mani●estly and openly Answ 3 or closely and secretly warre and fight for the sworne enemies of Christ sinne sathan and the wicked opposers of the Church truth These are I. Secure sinners who sleepe in their iniquitie and cry tush no evill shall come unto them although they be not the servants of Christ but the slaves of sinne and sathan II. Those who dispute and pleade sinnes and the devils cause that is argue and reason for the upholding bolstering and maintaining of sinne III. Those who speake for side and take part with wicked
saith or his face as saith Saint Luke for this was not onely a civill reverence but a true religious adoration because he did not honour him onely as a Prophet but adore him as a God as appeares plainely by his prayer unto him Answer 3 Thirdly by his prayer the Leper doth expresse his faith Oh Lord saith he if thou wilt thou cast make me cleane in which words are laid downe a cleare confession of his faith trust and confidence in Christ For 1. He cals him Lord and that not onely as a title of honour but as belonging unto him as God 2. He ascribes divine Omnipotency unto him that he can doe what he will yea he can if he will expell and drive away his Leprosie where we see that he is certainely assured of Christs divine power neither doth he doubt of his will and yet he will not presume but refers himselfe wholy to the will of Christ as if he would say Oh Lord if thou wilt thou canst if thou wilt not I prescribe nothing but leave it to thy free-will to dispose of Quest 2 Why did he not say Oh Lord thou canst and thou wilt make me cleane First because he had no expresse promise that he should be heard or healed of this particular Answer 1 griefe faith not assuring us of freedome from any particular temporall evill Secondly because he knew that God will have Answer 2 us beare the crosse that he layeth upon us therefore he will not prescribe any thing unto Christ Thirdly hee will not peremptorily say thou Answer 3 canst and thou wilt or positively desire that Christ would reduce his power into act and heale him because hee was not ignorant that wee are oftentimes ignorant what may be truly good and profitable for us Faith dare goe no further neither presume any more of God then is expressed revealed and promissed in the word now from the word the Leper is 1. Certainely assured of Gods omnipotency power that unto him nothing is impossible yea 2. Of the good-will and mercy of God towards his children in spirituall graces yea 3. He doubts not of Christs love and mercy towards him in temporall corporall things but yet he will not presume so farre as to prescribe any thing but submits himselfe thus wholy unto his will That he can doe wh●t he will and he knowes he will doe what may be for his owne glory and his poore servants good What is the nature of true faith First not onely to assent unto or to beleeve the Quest 3 promises of the Gospell in generall but also particularly Answer 1 to apply them unto our selves S●condly the nature of true faith may be lively seene in this Leper who Answer 2 1. Doth acknowledge Christ omnipotent and mercifull And 2. Doth deny himselfe humble himselfe unto Christ and acknowledge his uncleannesse and unworthinesse that Christ should glorifie his power and mercy in him And 3. By a sure trust and confidence doth apply the promisses and power of God unto himselfe that as Christ can doe all things so he will also doe what may be for his glory and the good of his unworthy vassaile Verse 4. And Jesus saith unto him see thou tell no man but goe thy way Verse 4 shew thy selfe to the Priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded for a testimony unto them Clichthoveus a Papist objects this verse for humane satisfactions thus Objection if the Lawes which injoyne satisfaction be impious then why doth Christ command this Leper to observe them now when he is cleansed saying Goe shew thy selfe unto the Priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded for a testimony unto them where by shewing of himselfe is meant secret confession and by the oblation is mystically meant satisfaction First the argument being Allegoricall is of no Answer 1 ●orce for where doth the Scripture say or intimate that shewing and offering doe signifie confession and satisfaction Secondly if we should grant that this precept Answer 2 were Typicall yet we would not grant that by this offering were signified any satisfaction and that for these reasons viz. 1. Because no oblation in the Law of Moses was instituted for a punishment but for a Type 2. Because Christ himselfe when hee commanded the cleansed Leper to offer addes the cause For a testimony unto them Maldonate expounds the place thus See thou tell no man but shew thy selfe unto the Priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded that they to wit the Priests Scribes and Pharisees who most of all oppose me may be the first witnesses of my Miracles that so by their owne testimony their owne incredulity may be reproved And therefore we deny that Christ here imposed any punishment upon the Leprous man after he was healed or any thing in the stead of punishment or that in this precept there was any Type of punishment (h) Chamier Tom. 3. de satisfact l. 23. cap 12. §. 37.38.39 fol. 1009. Verse 5.6 Verse 5.6 And when Jesus was entred into Capernaum there came unto him a Centurion beseeching him and saying Lord my se●vant lyeth at home sicke of the palsie grievously tormented Section 1 § 1. And when he was entred into Capernaum Christ who knew all things knew that Capernaum was a most corrupt place and yet hee comes thither to abide there for a while Quest 1 Why doth Christ come into corrupt Capernaum Answer 1 First To shew that although they were wicked yet hee was prepared to call them unto repentance or to teach us That the calling of Christ is wanting to none Observ except they be wanting unto themselves Quest 2 How doth this appeare Answer 1 First from these places of Scripture 2 Chron. 36.16 Zach. 1.3 Prov. 1.24 c. Math. 23.37 Rev. 3.20 Answer 2 Secondly from the scope of Christ which is two-fold 1. The first scope of our blessed Mediatour is our conversion and this proceeds from the will of Christ 2. The second scope of Christ is the confusion of the wicked and this proceeds from necessity or their obduration because they will not be converted And therfore we must needs acknowledge with the Prophet that our destruction is from our selfe (i) Hos 13. Object But it may be objected by some that they seeke and pray and yet are not converted Answer 1 First it may be thou seekest and prayest fainedly and hypocritically Math. 15.9 Or Answer 2 Secondly impurely thou seekest and prayest but in the meane time continuest in sinne Or Answer 3 Thirdly sluggishly and negligently and not fervently Rom. 12.12 Jam. 5.12 For undoubtedly if we seeke Christ and pray unto him sincerely purely fervently and perseverantly he will in his good time convert and heale us Answer 2 Secondly Christ comes to corrupt Capernaum to hasten vengeance upon the rebellious or that all excuse may be taken away from them Quest 3 Are all those happy who enjoy the word of Christ First certainely it is a blessed thing in it selfe to
and see him at the last which hope begets joy within Secondly those who are brought unto Christ are made Partakers of a finall joy which is a hope of glory Rom. 12.12 Thirdly those who are brought unto Christ are made Partakers of a spirituall and mysticall joy that is internall peace of conscience Phil 4.7 and Ephes 3.19 and 1 Cor. 2.11 and joy of the Holy Ghost and this indeed is that Manna and white stone which is promised to al those that overcome sin Sathan and their owne corruptions Revel 2.17 § 3. Thy sins be forgiven thee Sect. 3 Why doth Christ here answer to that which Quest 1 they doe not desire they bring a sick man and pray that Christ would cure him and hee answers Thy sins be forgiven thee First Gualter answers that this sick man was Answ 1 troubled within in his conscience as well as without with sicknesse but this appears not by any particle of the History Secondly Chrysostome answers that Christ thus Answ 2 replies because hereby he shews that he is God and not a meere man and this is probable Thirdly I conceive that Christ thus answers Answ 3 for this cause that hereby he might shew himselfe to be the Physician of soules as well as bodies Whence we learne Observ 1 That Christ in the curing and healing of bodies hath an eye and aime unto soules Quest 2 How doth it appear that Christ hath an aim at spirituall cures in corporall It appears thus namely Answ First by the conversion of those whom he healed Thus hee commands the man whom he had dispossessed to follow him And Secondly by blaming those who being corporally cured were negligent of their spirituall duties where saith he are those nine Lepers Thirdly because the cure of the soule is Christs principall end and last scope and the cure of the body is but a meanes hereunto Reade Mat. 4.16 Luke 1.79 Iohn 9.39 Esay 9.2 and 29.18 and 42.7.16 Thy sins be forgiven thee we see here that Christ doth not reproach him for his sins neither altogether silence them whence I might observe Observ 2 That sinners are to be admonished of their sins in love Reade 1 Sam. 12.24 and Esay 59.1 and Ezech. 3.17 and 33.7 Quest 3 Who is the faithfull Minister of the word of God Answ 1 First not hee who bitterly reproves and reproacheth his people out of some private hatred or jarre Nor Answ 2 Secondly he who is silent and although he see much amisse yet will reprove nothing for feare of offending th●se are guilty of the destruction and condemnation of their people Heb. 13.17 Answ 3 Thirdly but he who reproves in love and after a loving manner that is who I. Observes the errours and straying of their flocks with sighes tears and heavinesse And II. Admonisheth them of their errours and sinnes with gentlenesse and in the Spirit of meeknesse Observ 3 Thy sins be forgiven thee Our blessed Saviour shewes here the root of this and all evill therby teaching us That the cause of all affliction and sicknesse is sin Esay 59.2 Ier. 5.25 Object Against this it may bee objected that Christ himselfe denies this for being asked whether the Blind-mans sin or his Parents iniquity were the occasion of his blindnesse he answers Neither hath this man sinned nor his Parents but that the workes of God should be made manifest in him Iob. 9.3 yea experience shewes that the best and most holy are often under the scourge as wee see in Abel Ioseph David Ioh Paul and the rest Heb. 12.8 and 2 Tim. 3.12 And therefore sin is not alwayes the cause of affliction but sometimes wee are afflicted for our triall and sometimes for the terrour and example of others Non p●●●●vit hic paralyticus Hilar. s sinne was not the cause of this mans Pulsie Answ 1 First our Saviour doth no where deny that those who are afflicted are sinners but that they are not greater sinners then the rest Luke 13.2.3 c. Neither that God doth inflict some remarkeable or extraordinary or particular punishment alwayes for some hainous or particular offence Secondly there may be and are other causes of affliction besides this but this is alwayes one yea Causa sine qua non sin is one cause though Answ 2 not the alone cause of all affliction and if there had been no sinne there had been no affliction For this comes from God who doth nothing casually nor unjustly now to punish the innocent were a point of injustice Who are blame-worthy here Quest 4 They who do not in every evill repaire unto God reconciling themselves unto him Answ and acknowledging their punishment and affliction to be just by reason of their sins as for example First some being injured are enraged against their brethren who doe them wrong like the Dog who bites at the stone which is throwne at him Secondly some fly in the face of those who reprove them although for the sins reproved Gods hand be upon them Thirdly some repaire unto wicked and unlawfull means as poor men do to stealing and sick men often to charming enchan●ing and the like Fourthly some have accesse to lawful means but without God as Asah sought to the Physicians but not unto God for a blessing upon those lawfull means which were administred unto him by them 2 Chron. 16. What is required here of us Quest 5 We must in all afflictions generally Answ but particularly in our sicknesses see our sinnes to be the causes of them 1 King 8.38 Deuter. 28.22 Iohn 5.14 and 1 Cor. 11.30 What are the fruits and effects of sin Quest 6 First sin separates us from God Ier. 5.25 Answ 1 Secondly sinne subjects us unto Sathan Romans Answ 2 6.16 Thirdly sinne subjects us unto punishment Answ 3 and sorrow Fourthly sinne wounds the conscience and Answ 4 hinders us from comfort and peace which is of all burthens the heaviest to a circumcised heart Quest 7 What doth Christ require of us to the pardon of our sins These things viz. First that wee should heare his word Answ Esa 55.3 Secondly that wee should goe out of our sins Esay 52.11 and leave them Ezech. 18.21 Thirdly that wee should goe unto God that is repent Act. 2.38 and 3.19 Marke 1.4 Fourthly that we should beleeve in him who justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.3 c. Although our Saviour did not require of this Quest 8 sick man a confession of his sins before he absolved him yet is not auricular confession lawfull First certainly confession is very excellent Answ 1 and profitable when it is aright performed but this word Confession is an equivocall word For I. Sometimes it signifies a praysing of God as Psalme 44.8 and 99.3 and 107.8.15.21 c. II. Sometimes it signifies a profession of Christ or Religion and that either First r●ligious as Rom. 10.10 Or Secondly hypocriticall T it 1.16 Or Thirdly a bare protestation Thus it is said of Iohn He confessed and dented not that hee was not the
conclude falsely They argue thus Only God forgives sins this man forgives sins therfore he is a Blasphemer whereas they should have argued thus Only God forgive sins this man forgives sins therefore he is God II. Intus in their intention because this cogitation sprung from an evill root and original viz. First from Sathan Gualt s that thus hee might fasten some disgrace upon Christ And Secondly from envie the Scribes consenting herein unto Sathan And Thirdly from covetousnesse because hee remitted sins without the sacrifices of the Law Gualt s Quest 4 Wherein did the envie of the Scribes appeare in thus thinking Answ 1 First thus the sick man neither said not thought any thing against our Saviours words And it did not belong unto or concern them And therfore their envie shewes it selfe in medling with that which concernes them not Secondly they ought first to have asked Christ the reason of his so speaking before they had Answ 2 condemned him for so speaking And therefore it was enviously done to thinke evill of Christ before they knew whether there were any just cause for it or not VERS 5 6. For whether is it easier to say Vers 5.6 thy sins be forgiven thee or to say arise and walke But that yee may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins then saith hee to the sick of the Palsie arise take up thy bed and goe to thine house § 1. That yee may know Sect. 1 Wee see here how maliciously the Scribes go about to detract and deprave Christ and on the contrary how mildly and gently he answers them This was done that yee might know from whence we may learne That the scope of Ministers should be Observ that their people might be taught 2 Tim. 2.25 and Psalme 45.10 and Colos 1.9 Why must Ministers bee so carefull to teach Quest 1 their flocks First because preaching the ordinary meanes Answ 1 to beget and increase knowledge is the great mercy of God to call men unto salvation 1 Timothy 2.4 And therefore woe be unto those to whom are committed these rich treasures of wisedome grace and knowledge if they bee carelesse in the distributing of them to their peoples edification Secondly because the preaching of the word Answ 2 is the justice of God that those who heare the word and know the will of God may bee condemned of their own consciences if they will not obey And therefore Teachers should bee carefull to teach lest the people perish for lack of knowledge and their blood be required at their hands Our Saviour here mildly teaching and not satyrically Quest 2 taunting the Scribes may move this question who are to be reproached and menaced in the preaching of the word First tart threatnings doe not belong unto Answ 1 the simple and ignorant But Secondly unto the perverse and obstinate Answ 2 who either I. Will not know their dutie or are ignorant because they will not learn being proud and unbridled in sin as Ier. 43.2 and 44.16 Or II. Who will not understand as the obstinate Recusants Psal 82.5 and 2. Pet. 3.5 Or III. Who neglect to remember those things which they heare and understand as 2 Pet. 1.9 § 2. He said unto the sicke of the Palsie Sect. 2 We see here that our blessed Saviour hath one salve for all sores one remedy for all things and that is Dixit his word thus we reade bee said unto the Pharisees and hee said unto the Feaver and he said unto the wind and he said unto Sathan Matth. 4.3 c. this word Dixit he said is sufficient for all things Matth. 8.8 Iob. 18.6 Whence we learn Observ That Christ can do all things by his voice and word Quest 1 How doth this appear It appears by these particulars viz. Answ First by these Scriptures Exod. 20.19 and 1 King 17 4 9. Psalm 33.6 9. Esa 40.8 Mat. 24 35. Heb. 1.3 Secondly because all the power of Christ as of God is within in himself And therfore it is sufficient for him to expresse his will by his word Now there is a two-fold word to wit I. Externall uttered with the voice And II. Internall conceived in the mind Now neither of these can be falsified but either First by the mutability and change of the minde of him that speaks or thinks but with Christ there is no mutability nor shadow of change Iames 1.17 Or Secondly by reason of the debility and weaknesse of him that speaks or thinks he not being able to do what he hath promised or intended but unto Christ all power is given both in hea●en and earth Matth. 28.20 c Luke 1.37 Psal 148 8. And therefore he is able to do whatsoever he saith Thirdly because the word of Christ is accompanied with the holy Ghost Ioh. 6.63 and therefore it is sufficient unto all things and effectuall in every thing it speaks Esa 55.11 Quest 2 When or wherein doth Christ speak unto us Answ 1 First he speaks unto us in his word converting us therby thus he spake to the Eunuch Acts 8. and to Lydia Acts 16. Answ 2 Secondly he speaks unto us in Meditation and holy thoughts infusing his Spirit into us Answ 3 Thirdly he speaks v● to us in Prayer answering our requests thus he spake unto Paul 2 Corinth 12.9 Answ 4 Fourthly he speaks unto us in Faith assuring us of our justification Heb. 12.24 and adoption Rom. 8.15.16 Answ 5 Fifthly he speaks unto us in our striving struggling and wrastling against sin by strengthning us with might in the inward man and enabling us to trample Sathan under our feet Vers 8. VERS 8. But when the multitudes saw it they marvelled and glorified God which had given such power unto men Observ Vnto Men This must necessarily be understood of the Ministery of Absolution or remitting of sins whence we might observe That God hath given to the Church power to forgive sin Reade Mat. 16.19 and 18.18 Iob. 20.23 And besides remember briefly this That God and Christ have given the Gospel for our comfort now to be assured of the pardon and forgivenesse of our sins is a main and principall comfort yea we can have no true joy in our hearts untill we be assured hereof and therefore without doubt Christ would not leave his Church under the Gospel without this power to afford such comfort unto his people How is this remission Quest or absolution wrought by the Church Three manner of waies namely First by the preaching of the word Answ Mat. 16.19 and 2 Cor. 5.19 c. and that either I. Generally when remission is preached by Christ to every truly penitent sinner Or II. Particularly when remission is applied to any particular person upon the conditions of faith repentance and obedience And certainly whomsoever the word looseth they are truly loosed for all the promises of the word are true Secondly by Absolution for the Church I. Excommunicates obstinate and perverse sinners 1 Cor. 5.5 and 1
the truly humble and humbled Quest confesse and acknowledge their sins First because they rejoyce to have escaped Answ 1 from sin and the snares of Sathan olim haec meminisse juvabit as we see in Saint Paul I was a reviler and I was a persecuter but blessed be God I found mercie 2 Tim. 1.13 Secondly because the light which is in them Answ 2 doth reprove and make manifest their sins Ephes 5.13 which before they neither saw nor knew § 3. Sitting at the receit of Custome Sect. 3 What is meant by Matthews sitting at the receit Quest 1 of Custome The holy Ghost would hereby have us know that he was a Publican as Mat. 10.3 Luke 5.27 Answ What is observable in these Publicanes Quest 2 First the word Publicanus a Publican is derived Answ 1 a Publicis quia publicis utuntur publica vectigalia c Perott Calep. ex V●p because they gathered up the common Tolls Customes and Tributes Answ 2 Secondly their condition estate and rank was two-fold viz. either I. Among the Gentiles and thus the calling of a Publican was a very honorable and high calling for in time past among them Publicans were of the highest and chiefest orders of Knights f Alex ab Alex. pag 107. Calep. So Cicero pro Planco saith Flos equitum Romanorum ornamentum civitatis firmamentum Reipublicae Publicanorū ordin● continetur The Publicant were the prime of the Roman Knights the ornament of the City and the chiefest stay and supporters of the Common-wealth If we reade Iosephus 12 4. fol 324. he will tell us how all the chief m●n of all the Cities both of Syria and Phaenice came to Ptolomy to buy the Customes and Tolls Or II. Among the Iews and thus the calling of a Publican was most base despicable and contemptible and in this consideration our Saviour doth oppose them so often to the Pharisees Mat. 5.46 and 21.32 and 18.17 and Luke ●8 13 For First it was an unworthy thing for the Jews to pay Tribute to the Romans who were Gentiles Mat. 22.17 for they s they said to Christ were never servants or in bondage to any man Ioh 8.33 Secondly it was a more unworthy thing for the Jews to serve the Gentiles in so base and vile an employment as this yea in a calling which was injurious unto them And yet many of these Publicans who gathered up the Taxes and Tributes for the Gentiles were Jews as we may see in Matthew who was a Publican although a J w. Thirdly none usuall undertook this employment except onely either I. Those who were of the lowest and basest sort of the common people Or II. Those who were of a corrupt life and of unbridled lib●rty wherefore they are called Publicans and harlots in the next verse as also chap. 11.19 and Luke 18.13 Fourthly these Publicans carried themselves covetously and greedily in their places yea unjustly and cruelly Luke 3.13 and 19.8 And therefore for these regards they were justly contemned hated and despised of the Jews Answ 3 Thirdly it seems that there were two sorts and kindes of Publicans to wit I. Redemptores those who farmed the Customes Tolls Taxes and Tribute of the Romans now these were more noble or of a higher rank and quality and such a Publican I conceive Zacheus to have been because he is called Princeps Publicanorum the chief of the Publicans Luke 19.2 II. Collectores Exactores those who gathered this Toll or Tribute either up and down in Markets or at Bridges or the like now these were of the lowest sort of the people and for the most part were greedy and unjust and of this sort of Publicans I conceive this our Evangelist to have been § 4. And he saith unto him follow me And he Sect. 4 arose and followed him We may from hence observe two things to wit First whom Christ cals Secondly what sort of people the Apostles were First we may observe what manner of persons Observ 1 Christ cals and converts not Pharisees but Publicans to teach us that the lowest among men are sooner called and converted unto God than the highest or the poor and abject before the rich and great ones of the world 1 Cor. 1.26 Mat. 21.31 Acts 9.1 Why are the inferiour sort of people sooner Quest 1 called home unto God than are the superiour First not onely because the judgment of man Answ 1 is corrupted and therefore without cause contemns and despises Christ and Religion as John 7.48 The Rulers and the Pharisees would not beleeve on Christ Secondly but rather because the conscience Answ 2 being depressed is the better prepared unto Repentance and conversion Luke 18 13. when men see nothing but their sins and themselves to be miserable then they are sooner perswaded to confesse their sins and to leave them and to repent of them as 2 Sam. 12.14 On the contrary a good opinion of our own wisdom knowledge and goodnesse doth hinder us from confession contrition and conversion as Luke 18.11 Iohn 9 41. Because the whole need not the Physitian but the sick onely How must we truly deject debase and humble Quest 2 our selves that so Christ may please to call and convert us First let us confesse and acknowledge that Answ 1 hitherto we have been asleep dreaming onely of grace and goodnesse there being indeed no such thing in us as yet Esa 29.8 The frantick man thinks not himself sick and therfore it is a good sign when a man feeleth and acknowledgeth his sicknesse Secondly let us confesse that hitherto we are Answ 2 full of sin and that we cannot cease to sin so long as we are naturall 2 Pet. 2.14 for miserable are those blinde souls who do not see their sins Thirdly let us acknowledge how we are Answ 3 wholly taken up with the world all our care being about and all our labour for worldly things Psal 127.1 c. spirituall things being wholly neglected by us Fourthly let us confesse that without in our Answ 4 lives there is no good thing the best works we do being but like airy smoke or idle dreams or performed for some private ends Fifthly let us acknowledge that within in Answ 5 our hearts all is amisse for I. Neither is our Repentance solid but either First intentionall vult non vult piger we resolve to repent but resolve not when and therefore it is procrastinated and delaid from day to day Or our Repentance is Secondly temporary during for a time and afterwards returning with the dog to his vomit and with the swine to his wallow 2 Pet. 2.20.21 II. Neither is our faith lively for carnal perswasions will not cause us to rejoyce with that joy unspeakable and glorious nor give us that peace of conscience which passeth all understanding III. Neither can we solidly desire and hunger after Christ a naturall man may with Balaam desire to die the death of the righteous and desire that Christ may be his Saviour but not
they worke Miracles freely or Quest 4 why may they not take money for doing them First the Text saith because they have received Answ 1 this power freely if by long study they had found out the nature of hearbs plants roots and second causes and by those have cured or healed or if healing by meanes their physicke had cost them ought then they might have taken money for their cures but seeing neither their skill cost them study nor their meanes of healing money therefore they must give and doe these freely Secondly whether it was lawfull for them to Answ 2 take any gratuity for healing or not I confesse I am not able to decide This I know was unlawfull namely I. In healing to aime at their owne gaine and profit And II. To covenant for such a summe for such a cure But III. Whether here they were forbidden to take any gratuity which was neither thought of nor contracted for on their parts but freely offered and given by the partie or friends of the partie cured I confesse my selfe unable to determine Indeed I doe not thinke that ever the Master took any recompense for any of his cures nor doe I reade that the Apostles did for any of theirs and I know how Elias refused to take such a gratuity from Naaman and therefore I leave this to the intelligent Readers opinion to conceit of as he findes most ground for Answ 3 Thirdly the reasons why they must not contract for any thing for working any miracles but doe them freely are these namely I. Because spirituall things cannot be equalled to any terrene price and therefore they are not to bee sold Simon Magus would have given money for this power that upon whomsoever he should have laid his hands they might have received the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost but Peter rejects him and sharpely reproves him for it because it is a work more worth then all the money in the world II. That onely is to be sold whereof a man is master but the Apostles were not lords and masters of these gifts but onely dispensers h 1 Cor. 4.1 And therefore it were unjust to seek gaine by that which is not their owne III. In bestowing of these graces they must carefully avoid shunne and abstaine from gifts lest the grace of God in them should have been vilified For by the free magnificence of God who freely gives such power unto his servants and by the contempt of riches and gifts in the dispensers of these graces men will be the more provoked to admire those charismata and graces which are given and to glorifie God the free giver of them and to beleeve that doctrine which is sent from such a Lord and brought by such servants Men usually are wont lesse to admire or esteeme those things which they know how to esteeme and therfore the Apostles must freely give them because people should the more highly prize them and see and acknowledge that no price was able to purchase and procure them Verse 9 10. VERS 9.10 Provide neither gold nor silver nor brasse in your purses nor scrip for your journey neither two coates nor shooes nor yet staves for the workman is worthy of his meat Sect. 1 § 1. Provide neither gold nor silver c. Quest What is meant by this word Provide Answ 1 First the old Interpreter renders it Ne possidie possesse not but this is improper For 1. The word here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both but more commonly to provide procure or get It is easier saith i Oly●● ● Demosthenes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep those things which thou hast then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to procure those things which thou hast not and hence Aristotle calleth those Arts whereby men provide and procure food Artes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Our Saviour doth not here command a long custome but an action or a law which is by and by to be revoked and repealed Luke 22.35 And therefore the word is unfitly rendred by the vulgar translation Possesse not Answ 2 Secondly the word is here to be understood either 1. De non possidendo of not possessing gold silver c. As the Votaries and Franciscanes corruptly would have it Or 2. De non accipiendo of not receiving gold silver c. of their hearers lest they should seem to preach for their owne gaines sake and not for Gods glory or the salvation of his people k Hier. s Non dicit ne accipiatis vobiscum sed ne possideatis aliunde Chrys s Or 3. De non portando of not carrying about with them these prohibited things And this I thinke to be the true meaning of the place For first it is most like that the Apostles themselves now had no money about them neither used to carry any because Christ bought and procured all things needfull for them all and Iudas carried the bag and Peter had not Didrachmum which is not above a shilling at the most in our money to pay Tribute withall Secondly our Saviour forbids them to goe home to their owne houses to provide these things for although they have them not now yet they shall be supplied when they want For the workman is worthy of his hire Luke 17.31 § 2. Neither gold nor silver nor brasse nor scrip Sect. 2 nor coates nor shooes nor staves Object Our Saviour seemes heere to answer an objection which they might make If we must give freely then might they say we must provide money and garments and purses for our selves otherwise we shall bee destitute To this Christ answers no Answer for I doe not bid you to give freely to others that you may burden and overcharge your selves but because you shall be freely provided for by others therefore carry not these things about with you neither goe home to make ready for your selves or journey Chrysostome observes here the order observed by Christ he doth not first say carry nothing with you but first gives them power to worke miracles and then afterwards bids them not to be carefull for their journey he gives unto them before he will burden them that so they may the more confidently and assuredly hope and trust to be provided for How many sorts of money are there that Quest 1 our Saviour forbids to provide gold silver brasse There are divers sorts of money Answer which are differenced two manner of wayes namely First in regard of time thus money first was made of Lether and of brasse and of iron and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies any of these then secondly of silver and thirdly of gold Ita crescunt nummi decrescunt mores as money increased manners decreased Aetas Saturnia aurea Iovialis argentea Nostra ferrea Saturne lived in a golden age Iupiter in a silver but we in an iron age thus resembling Daniels Image Dan. 2.32 Secondly money is differenced in regard of its estimation for in one and the same time there
was imposed upon and injoyned man as a curse and therefore these Labourers are not simply happy neither as such have any promise of comfort ease or rest from Christ II. Acquired and thus First some labour and take much paines in sinne And Secondly some bestow much care and diligence and labour in the acquiring of riches and the gathering of the thicke clay of this world together Now neither are these Labourers happy except they feele their labour and grieve for it and labour to ease their shoulders of the burden thereof Secondly spirituall in mind and this is two-fold to wit either I. Vnjustly imposed and that either First by Doctors which are either Or Pharisaical loving to lay heavie and unnecessary loads of Ceremonies upon mens shoulders Matth. 15.14 c. h Acts. 13 1● Or. Papisticall teaching men to labour to obtaine salvation by the merits of workes and not by the grace of Christ Rom. 10.3 Philip. 3.9 Or Secondly By the Tempter Sathan who accuseth men and tempteth them and by his accusations temptations troubleth and molesteth them as wee see hee did with Saint Paul 2 Cor. 12.8 Now these Labourers are blessed if they resist Sathans temptations and wrastle manfully against them Iames 4.7 II. Religiously conceived that is when men are poore in spirit Matt. 5.3.4 and broken and contrite in heart Psalme 51.17 And these are they whom our Saviour principally speakes of and to And therefore if we desire to bee made partakers of the rest and comfort promised we must strive thus to labour and groane under the heavie burden of our sinnes Quest 6 What must wee doe to attaine unto this labour which hath a promise of rest and comfort First we must labour to know what our estate and condition is and not deceive our selves by false perswasions or destroy our soules by Answ 1 flattering presumptions Secondly wee must labour to condemne our Answ 2 sinnes and our selves for our sinnes 1 Cor. 11.29 Here I. Wee must be carefull not to extenuate our sinnes And II. Wee must urge the certaintie of destruction unto our selves for our sinnes except wee repent us of them 1 Cor. 6.9 Gal. 6.7 For if wee would but presse our consciences and cast our soules downe unto hell it would be a meanes to make us rise the sooner to comfort and spirituall consolation Answ 3 Thirdly wee must labour to be freed from the chaines of sinne wee must pray and cry incessantly untill the Lord heare and answer us Fourthly we must seeke for Christ and that Answ 4 earnestly for an unfained desire of him and a faithfull enquiry and search for him will make us mourne and lament untill we find him Here two things are implied namely I. Wee must seeke for Christ For First Wee are commanded to doe it Esa 55.6 And in many places Secondly the Lord promiseth that those who seeke him shall find him Ieremie 32.41 Thirdly the Lord and Christ complaine upon those who will not seeke him Reade Ierem. 2.13 and 32 33. Rom. 10.21 And therefore if wee desire either to please our God or to bring comfort unto our owne soules wee must seeke Christ II. Wee must seeke him seriously and earnestly wee must hunger and thirst after him Esay 55.1 Iohn 7.37 Because if with the Church wee seeke him in our beds we cannot find him Cantic 5. How many burdens are there because Christ Quest 7 here promiseth to ease those who doe groane under their burden and are overladen with it First there are temporall burdens namely Answ 1 I. Want which is either absolute when men simply are poore wanting many necessary things or respective when mens desires are not satisfied although they have food and raiment sufficient And II. An uncertainty of possessing keeping and enjoying what we have Many trouble themselves with this thought and care that all they possesse will bee like grasse upon the house top which quickly withers fades and dies and that it may be their land riches friends children and all will be taken away from them And III. The burthen of worldly cares and of labouring and toyling for the world of which Gregory speaketh and that not amisse That it is a rough yoke and a hard burden of servitude to bee under temporall things to seeke after earthly things to seeke to hold these fading things and to feare to lose or leave these transitory things Secondly there are corporall burthens namely of afflictions and hence when Judgements to Answ 2 come upon any country were spoken of by the Prophets they were called burthens as the burthen of Edom and Moab c. Answ 3 Thirdly there are legall burthens to wit the burthen of the ceremoniall Law for this St. Iames calleth a burthen which neither we nor our forefathers were able to beare Acts 15. Answ 4 Fourthly there are spirituall burthens and these are either I. For our separation from God or the absence of God from us Psalm 42.4 and 51.11.12 Or II. For sinne the cause of this separation And that either First for some sinne already committed this was Davids burthen Psalm 51. and 38.4 Or Secondly for the daily practise of sinne this is the burthen of all the faithfull who grieve daily for their daily transgressions whereby their Father is offended Or Thirdly for the remainders of sinne or the strength of internall concupiscence in the heart this was St. Pauls burthen Romans 7.23.24 Or Fourthly for some strong temptation which lyeth upon a man and which hee is not able to remove this likewise was the same Apostles burthen 2 Corinth 12.7 8 9. Where hee saith that there was given unto him a thorne in the flesh the Messenger of Sathan to buffet him for the which hee besought the Lord thrice that is often that it might depart from him And yet hee did not by his prayer remove the burthen but onely obtained the grace of God supporting him under it the Lord onely assuring him that his grace was sufficient for him Or Fiftly for an impotency and inability to resist the assaults of Sathan and this is the burthen of those who are taken captive of the Divell at his will 2 Timoth. 2.26 and who cannot cease to sinne 2 Peter 2.14 and this burthen lieth upon the backes of many and although it bee a very heavy and greevous burthen in it selfe yet they feele it not Quest 8 How must wee beare the burthen of our sinnes Answ Not joyfully or contentedly but with teares and sorrow and griefe of heart Hereunto two things are required to wit First we must know our molestations and causes of griefe and that either I. Temporall which we may see in one kinde or another in our selves or others Or II. Spirituall which are thus to be discerned and knowne viz. First from the Law we may know what displeaseth and offendeth the Lord. And Secondly from our owne consciences wee may know wherein wee are guilty Then Secondly we must humble our selves And that I. That we live in
to death hee feared the multitude because they counted him as a Prophet verse 5. Answ 2 Secondly Augustine thinkes that Herod did truely feare Iohn and willingly heard Iohn and heartily grieved at the Maide request Answ 3 Thirdly Carthusian s thinkes that those words in the 5. verse of this Chapter are to bee understood of an unwilling will when Herod would have put him to death that is with a will mixed with an unwillingnesse and some reluctancie And indeed the letter of the History both here and in Marke 6. doth seeme to side with Augustine that the plot was not laid by Herod but by Herodias thus to bring Iohn to death UERS 12. And his Disciples came and tooke up the body and buried it and then went and told Iesus It is evident by many passages in the Gospel Ver that the Disciples of Iohn did envie Christ and emulate his glory but now Iohn being dead they goe unto Christ and shew him vvhat had hapned vvhich argues that their former emulation vvas abated at least if not altogether ●●nished Whence it may be demanded What was the cause that now they doe envie Christ as before First because they saw and perceived thy Christ and Iohn was led by one and the ●●me Spirit and neither of them did envie or labour to suppresse the glory one of another but did rather labour and study to exalt the honour and fame of each other Secondly because Iohn being in prison had Answ 2 sent his Disciples to Christ that by his gracious words and miraculous workes they might learne that hee vvas the true promised and expected Messias vvhose Fore-runner he vvas VERS 13. When Iesus heard of it Vers 13. hee departed thence by ship into a desart place apart and when the people had heard thereof they followed him on foot out of the Cities Whether did Iesus depart Quest 1 Saint Luke saith into a defart Answ named Bethsaida Luke 9.10 that is the house of hunting because it was full of wild beasts and was therefore so called for the much hunting which was there used What was the cause of our Saviours departure Quest 2 unto that desart The cause was two-fold namely Answ First that hee might escape danger Herod had now beheaded Iohn and therefore when Iesus heard of it hee departed that hee might not fall into the Tyrants hands the time of his suffering being not yet come And this cause is here expressed by Saint Matthew Secondly that his Disciples might rest themselves and this cause is plainely laid downe by Saint Marke Chap. 6. verse 30 31 32. VERS 14. Iesus went forth Vers 14 and saw a great multitude and was moved with compassion towards them and hee healed their sicke From verse 13. to 22. is shewed our Saviours care for the multitude whence it may be asked What is the office of a good and faithfull Minister Quest 1 of Christ First to reduce from errour those that goe Answ 1 astray Secondly to cure the soules of those who are Answ 2 spiritually sicke Thirdly to feed those who are hungry or hunger Answ 3 starved And all these wee see here in Christ What are the signes of false shepherds Quest 2 First to seduce and mislead their flocks into Answ 3 errours And Secondly to sleight and neglect those who are sicke And Answ 2 Thirdly to devoure and prey upon those Answ 3 who are well and sound For all these are diametrally opposite unto Christ Quest 3 Who is the true and faithfull Shepherd of the soule Christ For Answ First it is hee who teacheth all and reduceth those who wander into the right way Iohn 6. Secondly it is hee who cureth and healeth all Psalme 36. and 103.3 and 107.20 Thirdly it is hee that feedeth all Psalme 104. and 145. And therefore those who teach and instruct in the truth and reduce stray sheep into the way of truth and feed the hungry and cure the sicke soules doe it by vertue of that power which is derived unto them by Christ Vers 19 VERS 19. And hee tooke the five loaves and the two fishes and looking up to heaven h●e blessed them Quest Why did Christ lift up his eyes unto heaven Answ 1 First to signifie that his power and efficacie in working Miracles was from his Father according to that Iohn 6. which hee saith I can doe nothing of my selfe c. Answ 2 Secondly to teach us that we must expect and desire that the use of the creatures may be blessed unto us by God we cannot hope that our meat will turn to the nourishment of our bodies except the Lord blesse it and give it this power neither can we expect a blessing from God except wee desire and pray for it And hence according to the present practise of our blessed Saviour wee use to give thankes before meat Vers 24. VERS 24. But the ship was now in the midst of the sea tossed with waves for the wind was contrarye Quest 1 What is here Allegorically meant by the ship and the sea Answ By the Sea is meant the World and by the Ship is meant the Church Quest 2 Why is the Church meant by the Ship Answ 1 First because as the Marriners and Passengers are saved in the ship from drowning so are the faithfull saved in the Church For as none were saved but those who were in the Arke so none can be saved but such as are within the Church for Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus Secondly because as the ship never abides Answ 2 long in any one certaine place so the Church is not tied to any one Citie or nation perpetually but as the Ship is carried by the wind so the Church is gathered by the Holy Spirit whether hee please for the wind blowes where it lists Iohn 3. Quest 3 What resemblance or Analogie is there betweene the Church and a Ship Answ For answer hereunto observe that in a Ship there are many things namely First there is Nauelerus the Master and Pilot of the Ship and this is Christ who is I. Potens an able Pilot and can defend the Church against all Pirats whatsoever II. Bonus a good Pilot and doth graciously gather up or let loose the saile as hee sees most fit 〈◊〉 sometimes his Church sailes with ful sailes and is in a prosperous and peaceable estate sometimes it is as it were becalmed and stands at a stay yea sometimes tossed to and fro with the waves But the good Pilots care is such that although it seeme for a while to make but a smal progresse yet he doth preserve it even then from danger III Sapiens Christ is so a wise Pilot and doth so direct this Ship his Church through quicke sands and rocks that at length it arrives to the haven of happinesse and eternal rest Secondly there are in a Ship Remiges the Mariners and these are the Ministers of the Church who helpe to manage this Ship and to carry or transport it from haven
the Law were condemned in this verse Therfore all unwritten Traditions must now be abolished To this Bellarmine answers two things namely Answ 1 First Christ condemneth not the ancient Traditions of Moses but those which were newly and lately invented Answ 2 Secondly Christ taxeth and findeth fault onely with wicked and impious Traditions To his first answer we answer two things viz. Replie 1 First the Scripture maketh no mention of any such Traditions of Moses Christ biddeth them search the Scriptures and not run unto Traditions Secondly these which our Saviour here speaks Replie 2 of seemed to be ancient Traditions bearing the name of Elders Traditions and they were in great authority among the Iewes most like because of some long continuance To his second Answer we answer likewise two things to wit First their Traditions were not openly and Replie 3 plainly evill and pernicious but had some shew of holinesse as the washing of pots and Tables and beds yea the Traditions of the Papists come nearer to open impietie and blasphemie then the Jewish Traditions did Secondly Christ in opposing the Scripture against Replie 4 Traditions therein condemneth all Traditions not written which were urged as necessary besides the Scripture What may wee safely hold concerning the Quest 1 Traditions of the Church First that besides the written word of God Answ 1 there are profitable and necessary constitutions and E●clesiasticall Traditions to wit of those things which respect the outward decencie and comelinesse of the Church and service of God Secondly the efficient cause of all true Traditions Answ 2 is the Holy Spirit which directs the Bishops and Ministers assembled together in Councell or Convocation for the determining of such orders and Constitutions according to the word of God and doth also direct the Churches in the approving and receiving of such Traditions Thirdly no Tradition of the Church can constitute Answ 3 or ratifie a Doctrine contrary to the written word of God neither any rite or ceremony for both Constitutions and Doctrines ought to be agreeable at least not contrary to the written word And as all Civill Lawes ought to have their beginning from the Law of nature so all Ecclesiasticall Traditions from the word of God Rom. 14.23 and 1. Corinth 14.26 40. Fourthly although Ecclesiasticall Traditions Answ 4 may be derived from the word yet they are not of equall authority with the word How may the true Traditions of the Church Quest 2 be known or discerned from humane and superstitious Ordinances By these foure notes and marks to wit Answ First true Traditions are founded upon the word and consentaneous unto the word and deduced derived and taken from the word Secondly true Traditions are profitable for the conserving and promoting both of piety and externall and internall worship Thirdly true Traditions make for the order decorum and edification of the Church And Fourthly are not greevous and intollerable as the Traditions of the Pharisees were and the Papists are Matth. 23.4 VERS 4 5 6. For God commanded saying Honour thy Father and Mother Verse 4.5 6. and he that curseth Father or Mother let him die the death But ye say whosoever shall say to his Father or his Mother It is a gift by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me And honour not his Father or his Mother he shall be free Thus have yee made the Commandement of God of none effect by your Tradition Sect. 1 § 1. Honour thy Father and thy Mother Quest 1 Whether is the Father or Mother more to be honoured and loved Answ 1 First Children can never honour and love parents that is either Father or Mother enough because we are imperfect in our Obedience to every precept Answ 2 Secondly I conceive that a vertous Father is more to be honoured and loved then a vitious Mother and contrarily a vertuous Mother more then a vitious Father because there is Tantundem aliquid amplius a naturall Relation to both but a spirituall Relation onely to the vertuous and godly We are commanded principally to love our heavenly Father best and caeteris paribus to love those best next him that are neerest unto him in love and most like unto him in purity Answ 3 Thirdly if we speake properly positively and without any Relation to any thing understanding the Question thus Whether the Father In quantum est pater as hee is the Father or the Mother as she is the Mother be more to be honoured and loved then with the Schoolemen I answer that the Father is more to be loved and honoured then the Mother And the reason hereof is this because when we love our Father and Mother Qua tales as they are our Father and Mother then wee love them as certaine principles of our naturall beginning and being Now the Father hath the more excellent cause of beginning then the Mother because the Father is Principium per medum Agentis Mater autem magis per modum Patientis materiae And thus if wee looke upon Father and Mother Secundum rationem generationis then we must confesse that the Father is the more Noble cause of the Child then the Mother is If the learned Reader would see this prosecuted let him read Thomas 2.2 q. 26. Art 10. And Arist ethe● lib. 8. And Anton. part 4. tit 6. Cap. 4. § 8. And Aurtum opus pag. 60 b. Answ 4 Fourthly if we speake of that love and honour which is due unto parents according to their love towards Children then we answer that the Mother is more to be beloved then the Father and that for these reasons viz. I. The Philosopher saith because the Mother is more certaine that the Child is hers then the Father is that is his he beleeves it is his Child but she is sure that it is hers II. Because hence the Mother loves the Child better then the Father doth Arist lib 9. ethic III. Because the Mother hath the greater part in the body of the Child it having the body and matter from her and but only the quickning vertue from the Father h Arist de gen animal lib. 1. IV. Because the Mother is more afflicted for the death of the childe than the Father is and doth more lament the adversity thereof than his Father doth Solomon saith Prov. 10. A wise Son rejoyceth his Father but a foolish Son is a heavinesse to his Mother From whence some say that Fathers in regard of their naturall constitution of body which naturally is hot and dry do more rejoyce when their children are promoted unto honour than the Mothers do but Mothers in regard of their naturall constitution which naturally is cold and moist do more mourn and lament for the losses and crosses of their children than the Father doth But I will neither trouble my self to prove this nor perswade my Reader to beleeve it but leave it to the Philosophers and Schoolmen to be decided and discussed V. Because the mothers part is more laborious
from the testimonie and mouth of God the Father that Christ was God as well as man yea no other then the Son of the living God verse 5. Object The Rhemists object this place for the proofe of Transubstantiation Christ say they transfigured his body marvellously in the Mount as wee reade Matth. 17.2 Therefore he is able to exhibite his body under the formes of bread and wine Answ 1 First the Argument followeth not Christ could give a glorious forme to his passible body therefore hee can take away the essentiall properties of his naturall body and yet keepe a true body still Or thus Christ could glorifie his body not yet glorified Therefore he can or will dishonour his glorious impassible body by inclosing it under the formes of bread and wine which may bee devoured of dogs and mice which is honoured and worshipped of the Angels and Saints in heaven Answ 2 Secondly the question is not so much of Christs power as of his will and therefore the Argument followes not Christ is able to doe it therefore he will Verse 3 VERS 3. And behold there appeared unto them Moses and Elias talking with him Object Many Papists yea some Popish Writers hold That soules after they are departed may returne on earth againe and appeare unto men And for the proofe of this produce this place Moses and Elias appeare unto Christ and his Apostles and talke with them Therefore soules after they are departed may returne on earth againe and appeare unto men Argu. 1 First wee grant that God is able to send soules againe into the earth but that it is his will so to doe or that it is necessary so to doe especially in the dayes and places of Christianity is neither proved by Papists nor approved by us Argu. 2 Secondly Moses and Elias appeared not to all the Apostles but onely to three neither that wee reade of did they speake to those three or perswade them to doe any thing for their honour as to build Churches in their name or teach any new Doctrine unto them which is the common practise of the Popish spirits that appeare Thirdly Moses Answ and Elias were not sent to the Apostles as popish spirits are sent to men but unto Christ himselfe onely Object Against this it is objected If it be thus then it was needlesse for the three Apostles to have beene there Christ might have gone up to Mount Tabor alone but Christ doth nothing in vaine there was some use therefore certainly of their presence It was very necessary Answ that they who should be Christs witnesses should rightly understand that both the Law and the Prophets doe beare record unto Christ that hee should die for the world and come againe in the end to raise up the bodies of the faithfull and lead them with him into heaven And for this cause God would have these two excellent Prophets seene of the Apostles Why doe these two above all the rest appeare unto Christ Quest First that by Moses who was truely dead and Answ 1 by Elias who was not dead it might be shewed that Christ is Lord and Judge both of the dead and living Secondly Moses and Elias appeare unto Christ Answ 2 for that speciall conformity which was betwixt them for Moses was the giver of the old Law and Christ of the new and Elias was a Type of Iohn Baptist the fore-runner of Christ Thirdly these two appeare for the signifying Answ 3 of the nature and perfection of Christ for as Moses was of a meeke and gentle spirit and Elias of a fiery when God was dishonoured so Christ is meeke and gentle and infinite in mercy to all penitent and beleeving sinners and soules but infinite in justice and fiery indignation against all those who are impenitent and disobedient Fourthly for the eminencie of the dignity Answ 4 and sanctity and miracles of Moses and Elias Fifthly these two appeare to shew that Answ 5 Christ came not to destroy the Law or the Prophets but to fulfill the Law and verifie the Prophets VERS 4. Then answered Peter and said unto Iesus Vers 4 Lord it is good for us to be here if thou wilt let us make here three Tabernacles one for thee and one for Moses and one for Elias § 1. Lord it is good for us to be here Sect. 1 St. Bernard applies this briefly to Religion or the true spiritual Spouse and Church of Christ It is good to be here that is in Religion and the true Church it is good yea very good to be a member of this little house and to be truly religious and that in many regards viz. First because those who live in the Church and are of the Church live more pure and holy lives then those do which are without Secondly because those who are of the Church and are truly religious sin much seldomer then doe they who are either without the pale of the Church or are irreligious in their lives for these sell themselves to worke wickednesse and that frequently but those onely sometimes through infirmity and frailty Now there are three reasons why the religious sinne seldomer then the other namely I. Because hee carefully avoids all evill occasions or occasions of evill but those who are not of the Church run into them II. Because hee carefully avoids all evill customes and labours to resist them but the other makes custome a law and is led thereby III. Because he carefully shuns the company society and conversation of wicked men but the other rusheth thereinto Thirdly it is good for a man to bee religious and a member of Christs Church because such rise from sinne more quickly they sometimes fall as was said before but they lye not long but speedily renew themselves by repentance but those who are not of Christs fold and flock lye and continue in sinne yea wallow in the puddle of iniquity not hastning at all to come out of the jaws of Sathan Fourthly it is good for a man to be in and of Christs Church because then hee wil walke more warily and circumspectly Religion is a Schoole of wisedome wherein he learnes the wisedome of God and how to direct his steps in the wayes of God Ephes 5.15 Now this wisedome whereby wee may be enabled to walk warily is acquired by these meanes and wayes namely I. It comes from God and is procured by faithfull and fervent prayer Iames 1.5 If any man lack wisedome let him aske it of God c. II. It is learnt by the reading hearing meditating and studying of the holy Scriptures Psal 119 9.105 And III. By the godly exhortation admonition advice and counsell of good men And IV. By experience which is the Mistris of things Paul would have us not to be ignorant of Sathans devices but learne his craft and policie and marke what occasions of evill he doth offer unto us what impediments hee casts in the way to hinder us from that which is good and how he watcheth his
man doth frequently prevent danger whereas the secure fals into it Answ 6 Sixthly there can be no true security amongst us nor freedome from evill if we consider these things namely I. Our sinnes and the nature of them and our continuance in sinne And II. Our God whom we offend by our sinnes and who sees and registers all our sinnes and who is able to avenge himselfe upon us for our sinnes and whose justice and truth will not permit him to spare our sinnes without repentance And III. How God hath punished others for our admonition and terrour we have heard of Plague Famine Warre amongst our neighbours wherewith they have beene wasted which heauy judgements we cannot but thinke in regard of Gods infinite justice to have come upon them for their sinnes and we have cause to thinke that CHRIST saith unto us That they were not greater sinners then we are and therefore except we repent we shall likewise perish Wherefore it is most dangerous for us to be secure Quest 3 Who are here worthy of blame Answ 1 First they are extreamly faulty who thinke that state to be the happiest where there is no feare for the contrary is most true and security is a sure Answ 2 signe of approaching misery Secondly those also are to be taxed who thinke the godly to be melancholy men because they feare danger when neither danger nor distresse appeares Quest 4 What is here required of us Answ 1 First a serious consideration of the roote of our security we should consult with our selves and see from whence it springs and whether we have just cause to be secure or not Answ 2 Secondly it is required of us to be watchfull over our selves and wayes and to arme our selves against the Judgements of God and prepare to meete him And Answ 3 Thirdly to awaken others who are sleepy and secure because security shews that judgement hangs over their heads If we should see a house on fire and perceive some asleepe therein we would awaken them and not suffer them to perish how much more then should we doe so when we see men lulled asleepe in carnall security when the judgements of God hang over their heads And it is required Answ 4 Fourthly that we should meditate of our death and repent before our death It was the saying of a Rabbi Repent one day before thy death that is every day we should daily expect death and by unfained repentance prepare daily for it Fifthly we must doe as Noah did make an Answ 5 Arke against the over-flowings of Gods judgements and labour that our God may be reconciled unto us Answ 6 Sixthly it is required of us that we should bring forth fruit and grow and increase in grace labouring daily more and more for it for thereby we shall be kept from security What are the causes of security and the remedies Quest 5 against it First ignorance errour or an erroneous opinion Answ 1 of the nature of sinne and the providence of God causeth security Many thinke that God neither sees nor observes their sinnes neither will punish them because as some of the Heathens thought all these terrene and sublunary things are ruled by chance and Fortune The ignorance of God and of the nature of sinne or the incogitancy of both causeth security for no wonder if we doe not feare those things which we neither remember thinke of nor know The Remedy against this Cause is to thinke sinne to be out of measure sinfull and to learne to know the Lord to be Omnipotent Omniscient and Omnipresent We must remember that God sees all things and by his providence governes all things and hates sinne with a perfect hatred and will punish undoubtedly sinne in all those who will not repent them of it and turne from it Secondly a neglect of those meanes which God Answ 2 prescribes to be used causeth security and ignorance For none ordinarily are more secure then they who most neglect all exercises and duties of Religion Now the Remedy against this is to be diligent industrious and frequent in all holy means and duties both publike and private Answ 3 Thirdly incredulity of the word of God and of his judgements causeth security when mens hearts grow hard sleepy and unfaithfull neither beleeving the promises nor threatnings of the word nor the judgements of God then they grow secure Now this infidelity is strengthened by our sensuality for as the light of the Sunne darkens the light of the Starres so the light of sense darkens and obscure the light of holy and spirituall things we being naturally backward to beleeve any thing which is not plaine and perspicuous to sense The Remedy against this cause is to labour for the knowledge of the word and to assent to every good word of God as infallibly true yea to remember that Heaven and Earth shall passe away before one jot or tittle of the word fall to the ground unaccomplished because if God have spoken he will also certainly doe it And therefore we must feare his threatnings and beleeve his promises Fourthly a presumption of the mercy of God causeth Answ 4 at least corroborateth this in fidelity for when men thinke that he who made them will save them and though they sinne yet grace shall abound then they speedily waxe carnally secure The Remedy against this is not to presume of mercy without repentance obedience and faith the Lord having said That though he be mercifull and gracious c. yet he will by no meanes let the impenitent sinner goe unpunished Exod. 34.4 5 6. And againe that he that made men will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour if they be wicked and rebellious Esa 27.11 Fifthly prosperity causeth security and makes Answ 5 men fearelesse as we see in David who in his prosperity said that he should never be moved Psalm 30.6 And in Iob who said I shall dye in my nest Iob 29.18 And in the Church of Laodicea Revelat. 3.17 The remedy against this is I. To remember that neither love nor hatred is knowne by these things Eccles 9.1 And II. That all these outward things are vaine transitory and as mutable as the Moone And III. That all our riches and abundance cannot availe us at the last day nor free us from the judgements of God here Read Proverb 10.4 and 11.4 and Iob. 15.21 and 21.7 c. unto 14. verse and Psalm 73.3 c. unto the 18 verse Answ 6 Sixthly security is caused often by Gods lenity and long suffering or because sinne is not avenged but punishment deferred Wicked men thus wickedly ruminate with themselves J have sinned often and long and am yet spared and perceive that the threatnings of preachers are but scare-Crowes and therefore now J may be secure and need feare no evill though J runne on unto sinne as a Horse unto the battell The remedy against this is to remember Quod differtur non
it leads men unto most notorious offences so it ends and brings men unto most fearefull judgements How many are the causes of Desperation and Quest 2 what are they that knowing them we may learne to avoid this fearefull offence which Iudas here fell into The causes of Desperation are many namely Answ First a shame to confesse sinne or to have sinne to be knowne many are so confounded when th●y thinke of the shame which wil redound unto them when some sinne they have committed is published that to prevent it they desperately cut the thread of their owne lives Secondly the next cause of Desperation is the multitude of sinnes many reviewing the Catalogue of their offences find them to be in number numberlesse the sight whereof doth so amaze and affright them that they despaire of mercy with Iudas in the text Thirdly another cause of Desperation is the greatnesse enorm●ousnesse of the offence many see some sinne which they have committed to be so hainous and horrible that with this traytor they despaire of mercy and hasten vengeance by their desperate enterprizes Fourthly the next cause of Desperation is the continuance in sinne many calling to mind how long they have wallowed in the puddle of iniquity despaire of mercy and desperatly lay violent hands upon themselves Fifthly another cause of Desperation is a certain pusillanimity of mind for many considering the many and great workes which God requires of them unto salvation do utterly despaire of heaven and like faint-hearted Cowards give over the work and warre unattempted excusing themselves with the old proverbe Vni atque geminis praestat involvi malis they may as well sit still as rise and catch a fall they may as well never undertake the taske as take it in hand and be enforced to give it over againe unfinished Sixthly the next cause of Desperation is a false imagination or judgment of our selves and works many are so sensible of their weaknesse and inability to serve the Lord and so sensible of their lukewarmenesse in his service and worke and of the power and strength of temptation that they are ready to despaire because if they belonged unto God then undoubtedly they thinke that it could not nor should not be thus with them This cause hath place sometimes in the faithfull in whom it is onely temporall not at all finall Seventhly another cause of Desperation is the weight of some temporall affliction many being under some heavie burden of corporall calamity thinke to free themselves from it by putting a Period to their lives skipping thus as the Proverbe is out of the pan into the fire and passing from corporall paines to eternall punishment Eighthly the last cause of Desperation is Infidelity many distrust of the truth of the promises of the power and love of God and of the valew of CHRISTS death as though neither God nor CHRIST could nor would save them although they should repent crying our desperately with Cain My sinnes are greater then God can forgive Quest 3 What are the remedies against Desperation or these causes thereof Answ The Remedy against this great evill is a sure trust and confidence in the mercy love power and truth of God who hath promised that his mercy shall be above all his workes and above all our sinnes if we will but repent And therefore let us learne and labour truly to repent and turne from our sinnes and we may find hope and comfort and be assured of mercy and favour More particularly First if the shame of the world terrifie us then let us remember that if men condemne us for sinne they will commend us for repentance yea this shame i● temporall but the infamy of desperate persons is perpetuall and eternall and although men blame them for sinning yet God will pardon them and blot all their sinnes out of his remembrance wherefore they need not set by the shame of men if they have the praise of God Secondly if the multitude and magnitude of our sinnes come into our remembrance let us repent us of them and be truly sorrowfull for them but not despaire because the mercy of God is infinite and the merits of Christ are of an infinit valew and worth and his blood which was shed for penitent sinners is sufficient to purge us from all our sinnes Thirdly if we be almost at the Gate of Desperation by reason of the consideration of our continuance in sinne then let us remember that the time of our former ignorance God will not regard but willingly passe by if now from henceforth we labour to redeeme the time devoting our selves wholly up to the service of our God Fourthly if we begin to despaire and doubt that we shall never be able to doe that which God requires of us unto salvation then remember Conanti aderit Deus God will be present with us if we doe our endeavour yea he will accept of the will for the deed if he see that with our minds we serve the Law of God yea he will give us both the will and the deed and inable us in some measure to doe those things which he requires of us if in sincerity of heart we desire and endeavour to serve him Fifthly if we be dejected and plunged into the pit of sorrow through the sense of the weaknesse of grace and the strength of corruption in us we must then remember that the Lord hath promised to strengthen the weake and to cause the barren to bring forth and to feed and nourish babes untill they come to strength and to the measure of perfect men And he is faithfull in his promises and tender in his affections unto all his children wil neither quench a smoaking flaxe nor breake a bruised reed nor reject nor cast off any of his babes because they are sicke and weake Sixthly if the sense of any heauy affliction lying upon us be ready to sinke us in the Whirle-poole of desperation let us then remember that I. The deare children of God have endured longer and heavier afflictions then we have or doe as we may see in Ioseph Iob and David II. That afflictions doe attend all those who would be saved yea that they who would come unto heaven must suffer affliction it being given unto them to suffer Philip. 1.29 III. That God will lay no more upon us then he will inable us to undergoe By these and the like meditations we must strengthen and arme our selves against doubting and desperation VERS 9 10. Vers 9.10 Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Ieremy the Prophet saying And they tooke the thirty peeces of silver the price of him that was valued whom they of the children of Israel did value and gave them for the Potters field as the Lord appointed me Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Ieremy the Prophet Sect. From what Prophet or place doth the Evangelist Quest 1 cite these words First for answer unto this the next qu. I
from God Part 2. fol. 1. a. b. To which of Christs Apostles he gave Power and what power hee gave them Pt. 2. f. 1 b. Absence See Presence Abuse The best and most lawfull things may be abused Part 1. fol. 243. b. Account Divers necessary questions concerning our Spirituall account and reckoning with God Pt. 2. fol. 328 329 330. Actions Workes Divers profitable questions concerning the definition division necessity and nature of Workes in generall and good workes in particular Pt. 1. f. 72 a b. and 154. a b. 158 b. 177. b c. 179. a. b. 266 b. 270. b c. 341. b. 425. b c. 427. a. 471 a. 50● b. 506 a. Pt. 2. f. 16 b. and 129 a. Divers questions concerning the merit reward examination and regulating of good Workes Pt. 1. f. 98 b. c. 158 a b. 258 b. 259 260. 266. 269 b. 270. 403 b. 426 b. 428 b. and Pt. 2. f. 46 b. 73 a. Who are enemies unto good Workes pt 1. f. 161. b. 259 a. 273 a b. Vnbeleevers cannot performe good Workes Pt. 1. fol. 262 a. Whether the Workes of the Righteous be perfect Pt. 1. fol. 330 331. Questions concerning Supererogatory Workes Pt. 1. f. 188 a. and pt 2. f. 235 a. 337 b. Adiaphorall things Ceremonies The Ceremonies of our Church used in Baptisme and the Lords Supper are lawfull Pt. 1. f. 67 b. and pt 2. f. 354. b. 355. Circumstances may make indifferent and lawfull things unlawfull and how pt 1. fol. 98 a b. Lawfull and Adiaphorall things are to be regulated according to a three fold rule Pt. 1. f. 98 a. Divers questions concerning Offences given and taken by Ceremonies and Adiaphorall things Pt. 2. fol. 207 208 c. and pt 1. f. 496. a b. Admonition Advice Counsell Who hide their Counsels and how it may lawfully be done Pt. 1. fol. 32. a b. Wee must Admonish Counsell and advise our Bretheren how and why Pt. 1. f. 153. a b. and pt 2. fol. 19. a b. Questions concerning Evangelicall Counsels unto Perfection Pt. 1. f. 186 a. 226 a. 262 b. and pt 2. fol. 243 b. 286 b. c. Adoption The nature markes and signes of adoption Pt. 1. f. 113 a. 487 488. Adversity Affliction Divers questions concerning the Causes end utility removall reward and benefits of Affliction and our duty in affliction Pt. 1. fol. 50 b. 112 b. 142 a. 169 a b. 303 a b. 314 a b. 362. and 439 b. and 448 a. and pt 2. f. 58 59. and 159. and pt 1. fol. 489. The Lord afflicts his Church and why pt 1. fol. 78 a. Vnlawfull meanes are never to be used in Affliction and misery and why pt 1. fol. 99 b. 100 a. Advice See Admonition Adultery Fornication adultery and uncleannesse must be avoided and why pt 1. fol. 216 a b. and 227 b. c. Divers questions concerning the division effects punishments and remedies of adultery fornication and uncleannesse pt 1. fol. 216 c. to fol. 223. Affections A right use of the affections helpes us in Gods service pt 1. fol. 41 b. Affliction See Adversity Agreement Vnity Concord Questions concerning our Vnion with Christ pt 2. fol. 278 a b. The Vnity and Vnion of the Church and faithfull is manifold pt 2. f. 8 a. 40 a. How brotherly Unity and Concord are to be continued pt 1. fol. 321 b. c. Christ loves Amity and unity amongst brethren pt 1. fol. 120. Allegories Figures It is lawfull to use Allegories and Figures in preaching pt 1. f. 120 b. Rules observeable in the Allegorizing of any Scripture pt 1. fol. 43 a. Almes Charity Divers questions concerning the division necessity impediments and remedies thereof and rules to be observed in the distribution of almes pt 1. f. 153. 155 156 157 158 160 b. 248 b. 268 269. Who are enemies to Almes-deeds and workes of charity pt 1. fol. 150 b. 151 a b. 267 a. Whether Almes-deeds be meritorius pt 1. fol. 160 a. and 267 a. Ambition Ambition is often the cause of arrogancy and arrogant presumption pt 1. fol. 46 a b. Amen What is meant by this word Amen part 1. fol. 321 b. Amity Love Divers questions concerning Love in generall the definition and division thereof and of our Love unto God pt 1. f. 133 b. 252 b. 334 b. 335. and pt 2. f. 54 b c. 286 287 288. Divers questions concerning the Love of our brethren Pt. 1. fol. 120 a. 159 b. 252 b. and pt 2. f. 56 b. 57 a. 135 b. 288 b. 289 a. Concerning the Love of our enemies See Enemies How Love is the fulfilling of the Law pt 1. f. 405 a. pt 2. f. 289 a b. Whether Love be a meritorious worke or not pt 1. folio 254. a. Anabaptists Famalists Separatists The Conventicles of Anabaptists and Familists are not warrantable pt 1. fol. 125 b. 126 a. Separatists are unpleasing unto God pt 2. folio 8 a b. The faithfull must be separated from the world and how Pt. 1. f. 175 b. Angels Divers questions concerning the evill Angels pt 1. f ●7 a. 140 b. 346. ● Questions concerning tutelary Angels part 2. fol. 214 b. Anger Divers questions concerning the nature originall causes effects degrees kinds and punishments of anger and the remedies against it pt 1. fol. 44 45. 105. 108. Christians must not be angry why pt 1. fol. 197. a. And what commendable anger i● Pt. 1. fol. 198 b c. and pt 2. fol. 297 b c. Whether anger be a ●eniall or mortall sinne pt 1. fol. 196 197 b. Anguish Griefe Mourning Divers questions concerning godly Mourners and mourning and the comforts and blessednesse which belong unto such Mourners Pt. 1. folio 142 143 144 145. There are divers sorts of Mourners pt 1. fol. 143 a b and 509 a. The outward expressions of sorrow are divers pt 2. fol. 8● b. Answers All our Answers must be gentle and to the matter and why Pt. 1. fol. 114 a. Antichrist Who is Antichrist pt 1. folio 19. Whether he be one particular man pt 1. folio 17 b. and pt 2. fol. 315. b. Whether Antichrist be yet come pt 2. fol. 312 a. 313 a b. Antiquity When and how farre Antiquity is to be beleeved pt 1. fol. 189 b. 190 a b c. 194 b. Antiquity is a good proofe in controversies pt 2. fol. 233 a. Apostacy Backsliding The causes why so many are in danger to fall back and why so many doe fall back from Christ and Religion pt 1. fol. 132 b. and 506 a. and pt 2. fol. 28 a. 69 a b. Those who forsake and fall from Religion shall be forsaken pt 2. f. 6 a. Apostles Disciples Divers questions concerning the 12 Apostles and Disciples of Christ pt 1. fol. 134 135. 140 a. 171 172. 467 a. 495 a. and pt 2. fol. 1 a b. 2 a b. 12 a. 27 b. 387 b. Ministers must be Disciples before Apostles and why pt 2. fol. 1
the Law pt 1. f. 118 b. and Pt. 2. fol. 275 b. 365. Without humiliation and compunction no comfort and consolation pt 2. folio 98. The division of humiliation and the meanes thereunto pt 2. fol. 275 b. 365. and pt 1. fol. 494 b. Conclusions See Collections Concord See Agreement Concupiscence Many necessary and profitable questions concerning the internal concupiscence of the heart pt 1. fol. 87 b. 101 b c. 222 223 b c. Condemnation Punishment All wicked men shall be punished and condemned at the last and why pt 1. f. 409 b. 410 a. 428 a. 429. Condition Estate Our estate and condition is often happy when it seemes miserable pt 1. fol. 35 b. Confession Divers questions concerning the kinds properties and necessity of Confession pt 1. folio 58 b. 59 a. 69. and 493 b. Controverted questions concerning Auricular confession pt 1. fol. 68 b. 69 489 b. 490. Confidence See Faith Conscience Divers questions concerning the division of Conscience in generall and the nature of an evill conscience and the necessity of a good pt 1. f. 29 a. pt 2. f. 16 b. 277 b. 302 b. 350 b. 365 a. 366. Consistory Sanhedrim Questions concerning the Iewish Consistory Sanhedrim Iudgement so●ts pt 1 f. 195. and pt 2. f. 27 b. 187 b. Consolation See Comfort Cōstancy Inconstancy Perseverance Perseverance in obedience is hard pt 1. folio 61 b. Meanes or helpe● unto perseverance pt 1. f. 133. Inconstancy becomes no Christians pt 2. f. 69. b c. Consultation Deliberation who offend in their Consultations Pt. 1. folio 15 b. How Deliberation and d●lay differ pt 1. folio 15 b. 6● b. Deliberation requisite in wrighty actions pt 1. folio 15 b. and 60 b. Contempt Contemners Despisers To Despise Divers questions concerning the contempt of the Word and Preachers thereof Pt. 1. fol. 119 a. and 441 a. and 450 b. Pt. 2. f. 50 b c. 86 b. 87 a. 90. 300 b. Contentation Christians must be contented and why and the rules observeable thereunto pt 1. fol. 11 b. and 35 b. Contention Dissentiō Discord Strife Iarres Dissention hinders religion part 2. fol. 40 a. The causes of domestical Contentions and jarres and the remedies against them pt 2. fol. 50 51. Who are sowers of Discord and strife pt 1. fol. 168 b. Contrition See Compunction Conventicles The Conventicles of Separatists unlawfull pt 1. f. 125 b. 126 a. 523 a b. Conversation Life Divers questions concerning our temptations after the purpose and endeavour of a new Life pt 1. fol. 84 b. 85 b. Profitable questions concerning the purging and regulating of our Lives and conversations Pt. 1. fol. ●5 416 417. and Pt. 2. folio 16. b. 17. 135. 166. Divers questions concerning the kinds of Life and the nature of Life in generall and of a Christians Life and Spirituall life in particular pt 1. fol. 304 305. 417 418. 472 473. and 492. b. c. and pt 2. folio 50 a. An austere life is commendable and why pt 2. fol. 7 a. See Austerity The Life of the wicked is shortned pt 1. fol. 430 a. Conversion Repentance Penance What Repentance John Baptist preached Pt. 1. fol. 55 b. Objections for popish Penance answered pt 1. fol. 55 b. 56 c. Divers questions concerning the kinds parts properties meanes methode necessity and signification of Repentance and the felicity of the truely penitent pt 1. fol. 57. 60. 204 a. 313 b. 4●7 512 b. 520 a. and pt 2. fol. ●● 82 83. a. 84 b. 85 86 a. 87. a. ●75 276 a. 302 b. c. 362 b. Questions concerning false Repentance pt 2. fol. 364 b The ●●●●dest ●ay be converted pt 2. fol. 〈…〉 b 〈◊〉 Altho●g● 〈◊〉 can doe nothing in the worke of Conversion yet he is inexp● repe●● 〈…〉 2. f. 274. Corb●n ●hat 〈◊〉 sig●ified by the 〈…〉 pt 2. f●l 59 ● 〈◊〉 298 ● Corne. Who are Corne and who are chaffe pt 1. folio 78 a. Corruption How manifold Corruption is pt 1. folio 427 a. Covetousnesse Avarice World Worldlings and Temporall things Divers questions concerning Covetousnesse and the love and service of the World pt 1. folio 333. b. 334. 338. 481 a. and pt 2. f. 363. Divers questions concerning the nature and wickednesse of this present world pt 1. fol. 122 a. 408 a. and pt 2. folio 40 b. The difference betweene the Worldling Hypocrite and godly man pt 1. folio 226 a. The difference betweene Temporall or worldly things and heavenly pt 1. folio 329 b. Councell Synode Divers questions concerning the infallibility power and calling of lawfull Councels Part 1. fol. 30 a. and pt 2. fol. 218 a. 221 b. 222 b. What the Iewish Councels were pt 2. folio 27 a. Councell See Admonition Craft Deceit Double dealing Fraud Christians must be free from all Fraud false dealing and the like and why pt 1. folio ●61 a. Creatures What we may learne from the Creatures pt 1. folio 344. Crosses See Adversity Cruelty Questions concerning the fruits effects nature and kinds of Cruelty Pt. 1. folio 43 b. 44 a. and 45 b. 479 b. c. Customes Questions concerning the Customes of Nations and the kinds of Customes Pt. 1. folio 261 c. D. DAnger Distresse Perill Trouble Questions concerning the dangers and troubles of the Apostles and faithfull and the remedies against them and deliverance from them Pt. 1. f. 31 a. 35 a. 50 b. and pt 2. fol. 27 b. Whether danger may be feared and how pt ● fol. 41 b. and f. 362 a. Darknesse See Blindnesse Day How the Day of old was divided Pt. 2. fol. 257 a. and 382 a. Deafenesse Divers Questions concerning the kinde and causes of deafenesse and the remedies against it Pt. ● folio 6● 69. Death Questions concerning the division des●●●●●●●ctation 〈◊〉 and welco●●●ng of Death pt ● fol. 61. 70 a. 196 b. 320 a. and pt 1. folio 510 a b. Questions concerning sudden Death and the uncertainty of the houre of Death pt 1. folio 328 b c. 430. and pt 2. folio 320 a. Questions concerning our Spirituall Death and deliverance there-from Pt. 2. folio 70. The dead have no benefit by the indulgences of the Church Pt. 2. folio 326 a. and pt 1. folio 512 b. Living men appeare to be dead and that many wayes Pt. 1. fol. 509 b. Debts Questions concerning the kinds of Debts and what debts we must forgive our brethren and why pt 1. fol. 309 b. and pt 2. fol. 223 b. 224 a. Decrees Although Gods Decrees be sure yet meanes must be used pt 1. folio 51 a. Delay Procrastination How deliberation and delay differ pt 1. fol. 15 b. 60 b. Whether it be good or not to protract our obedience pt 1. folio 85 a. Deliberation See Consultation Deliverance What is meant by this word Deliver Matth. 10.17 They will deliver you part 2. folio 27 a. Deniall Selfe-deniall Questions concerning Deniall in generall and the kinds thereof and Selfe-deniall in particular Pt. 2. folio 47 48 49 b.
are often in danger to be abused by the wicked unto wickednesse Part. 1. folio 32 b. 33 a. The way of Holinesse is a strait way why and how Pt. 1. floio 413. The difference betweene a Holy carnall and hypocriticall man pt 1. fol. 226 a. Divers necessary questions concerning the kinds necessity meanes measure seat and end or reward of Purity and Sanctity as also who are enemies thereunto pt 1. folio 161 162 163 a. 176 b. 177 a. 416 b. and part 2. folio 276. Holy things are not rashly to be communicated unto any Part 2. fol. 170. What is meant by this word Hallowed pt 1. folio 294 b. Gold Silver Money How many sorts of Money there are part 2. folio 14 b. Good Goodnesse Good things Divers questions concerning the Author of all good things in man and why he gives good things unto man and how good things are abused by man Pt. 1. folio 243 b c. 399. and pt 2. fol. 12. Good in man is the exemplar of God pt 1. fol. 403 a. How manifold Goodnesse is Pt. 1. fol. 425. Gospell Divers excellent questions concerning the Author nature name Penmen Preachers power dignity excellency and efficacie of the Gospell pt 1. folio 3 4 b 55 a. 62 b. 63 a. 126 b. 141. and Pt. 2. folio 83. 207 b. 208 a. 311 b. Questions concerning the receivers embracers enjoyers and heires of the Gospell pt 2. fol. 66 b. 141 a and pt 2. fol. 20 b. 21 a. 84 a 88 a. Questions concerning the hiding revealing and enlargment of the Gospell Pt. 2. folio 87 b 88 90 a. 181 a. In what Language St. Matthew writ this Gospell Pt. 1. folio 5. Wherein the Law and Gospell differ Pt. 1. folio 55 a. 183. 427 b. Grace Profitable questions concerning the necessity excellency measure and meanes of Grace and the labour and paines which must be taken for the procuring thereof Pt. 1. folio 271 b. 400 401. and pt 2. folio 276. What Graces are given unto us for the obtaining of heaven Pt. 1. fol. 81 a. How Grace is ordinarily wrought in great sinners Pt. 2. folio 274 b. 275 a. How and wherein Grace resembles Wine Part 1. folio 504 505. Grace is given undeservedly on our part pt 1. folio 514 b. Gratis Freely How and what the Apostles did receive Gratis and how and what they must give Gratis Pt. 2. folio 12 b. 13. Griefe See Anguish Ground See Field H. HAires Many notable things in these words Your haires are numbred Pt. 2. folio 36 b. Happinesse See Blessednesse Hardning Hardnesse of heart Obduration How God hardens the heart and whom hee hardens and the causes of Obduration and the remedies against it and the misery of those who are hardened pt 2. folio 89 b. 90 91 92. 141 a. and pt 1. folio 459 b. 460 a. Hatred See Detestation Hearers Hearing Divers questions concerning the sorts of Hearers and unprofitable Hearers and the signes and duties of good Hearers Pt. 1. folio 70 b. 75 b c. 127 a. 166 b. 178 b. 437 438 a. 441 a. 524 b. and pt 2. folio 10 b. 84 b. 87 a. 104 b. 138 b c. 147 148 149 b. 162 a. 300 b. Divers questions concerning our unwillingnesse to Heare and the necessity impediments and benefits of hearing and the fruits we must shew of our hearing pt 2. folio 57 b. 68 69. 138. 142 a. 147 b. 161 b. Heart Why the Heart is the seat of all true purity pt 1. fol. 163 a. Who serve God but not with the heart pt 1. fol. 163 b. The lust of the Heart is sinne pt 1. folio 223 b. Heathens See Gentiles Heaven Divers profitable questions concerning Heaven viz. whether there be a Heaven and the joyes thereof and the way and meanes thereunto and the difficulty of comming thither and who come unto Heaven pt 1. folio 141. 265. 300. 304 b. 305. 341 b. fine c. 351 352 353 354 355. 412 413 414 a. and pt 2. folio 135 a. 116. 195 b. 196. 252 253 254 255. Why and how the Heavens were opened when Christ was baptized pt 1. folio 81 a. What graces are given unto 〈◊〉 for the obtaining of Heaven part 1. folio 81 a. God is perfectly obeyed in Heaven pt 1. fol. 304 a. Heavenly things by farre are ●●re excellent then earthly Part 1. fol 329 b. Hell Divers questions concerning the meaning of this word Hell and of the torments thereof and what the Scripture expresseth and what it conceales concerning Hell pt 1. folio 202 a. 430 b. 431 a. 432. 481 b. 482. and part 2. fol. 35 b. 214 a. 281 b. Helpe Succour We should helpe one another unto Christ part 2. folio 119 b. Heremite See Eremite Heresy See Error Herod Divers questions concerning the time wherein Herod lived and his feare fraud folly idlenesse life and death pt 1. folio 23. 28 b. 32 a. 33 a. 46 a. 48 b. Whether Herod did well or not in consulting with the high Priests and Scribes part 1. fol. 30 b. Why the Lord suffered Herod to know where Christ was borne part 1. folio 31 a. Three Herods mentioned in Scripture pt 1. fol. 150. What the sinnes of Herod were which Iohn reproved pt 2. fol. 152 a. Whether Herod was originally accessary to the death of Iohn part 2. folio 153 a. Hierusalem Jerusalem What prodigious signes preceded the destruction of Jerusalem Pt. 2. fol. 309 b. Hill Mount Mountaine Why Christ went up to the Mount to preach part 1. fol. 134. What the Hill is upon which the Church is built Pt. 1. fol. 174. Divers questions concerning Mountaines Pt. 2. fol. 175 b. 176. Holinesse See Godlinesse Honesty Honesty and honest dealing betweene man and man is commendable pt 1. folio 405 b. Honour See Dishonour Hospitality How many sorts of Hospitality there is and why Christians must be given thereunto Pt. 1. folio 154 b. and part 2. folio 56 b. 333 b. Houre What and how manifold an houre of old was pt 2. f. 257 a. Humiliation See Contrition Humility Divers questions concerning the degrees fruits benefit and kinds of Humility and why we must be humble and whether all humility be good or not Pt. 1. fol. 74 b. 75. 141 142 a. 466 a and 493 ● and part 2. f. 107. Hunger Thirst There is a threefold Hunger and Thirst Pt. 1. folio 147 148 149. Hypocrites Hypocrisie Questions concerning the markes and reward of Hypocrites and the kinds of hypocrisie why it must be avoided Pt. 1. fol. 33 b. 34 a. 71 b. 226 a. 341 b. and pt 2. folio 136. 179 b. 244 a. 295 a. What things are common to the Hypocrite and the sincere professor Pt. 2. folio 135 b. 324. I. IArres See Contention Idolatry Idols Idolatry provoketh the Lord to cast off Nationall Churches part 2. folio 6. Jerusalem See Hierusalem Jesus Of the derivation and signification of the name JESUS part 1. folio 17. Jewes Divers questions concerning the misery and impiety of the
Iewes Pt. 1. folio 29 a. 54 b. and 459 a b. pt 2. fol. 132 b c. 374 b. 375 a. Seven Sects amongst the Iewes part 1. folio 30. What was required of the Iewes in regard of the Messias part 2. folio 74 a. The Church of the Iewes shall flourish againe Pt. 2. folio 271 a. Ignorance See Blindnesse Illumination Light Sight Lookes Questions concerning the excellency and notes of divine Illumination Pt. 1. fol. 24 b. 25. and part 2. folio 66 a. Divers profitable questions concerning Spirituall Light viz. Who is the Light of the world Part 1. fol. 116 b. 117. 171. How Light differs from Salt pt 1. folio 171 a. What Light signifies part 1. fol. 171. 170 a. and part 2. fol. 65 a. The originall and causes of true Light and meanes thereunto pt 1. folio 171 b. 172 a. and Pt. 2. fol. 65 a. 66 a. Wherin Light is resembled to an eye Pt. 2. folio 65. And who must let their light be seene pt 1. folio 176 b. 177 a. How many things hinder Sight Part 1. fol. 452 a. Lascivious lookes are sinne and what lookes are to be avoided pt 1. fol. 221 222. Image How man is made after the Image of God pt 1. fol. 403 a. Imitation How manifold Imitation is Pt. 2. fol. 105 b. Examples worthy of Imitation and wherein we must imitate God and Christ pt 1. folio 264. 469 b. and folio 455 a b. pt 2. fol. 106. 152 b. 172. 196. Impossible Possible What things are said to be Impossible pt 1. folio 340. and pt 2. fol. 246. Inchantments See Magi. Magicke Inconstancie See Constancy Infants See Babes Infidels See Gentiles Injures Wrongs What is required both of those who doe and suffer wrong See Reconciliation Intention A good intention will not justifie an evill action pt 1. folio 79 b. 99 a. Interpretation Who must interpret Scripture and what Rules are observeable in the Interpretation thereof pt 1. folio 30 a. 211 a. 213 214 a. 226 b. 251 and pt 2. fol. 235 b. Interrogations Questions Why questions are asked or Interrogations pt 1. fol. 70 b. 71 a. John What John signifies part 1. folio 55 a. Divers questions both Speculative and practicall concerning Iohn Baptist pt 1. fol. 54 b. 55. 64 b. 66 b. 79 b. 80 a. and pt 2. fol. 60. 70 b. 71 b. 72. 151. Ionas What kind of Fish it was which swallowed Ionas part 2. fol. 131 b c. Wherein Ionas was a type of Christ pt 2. fol. 131. 177 b. Joram How Joram was Ozias his father pt 1. fol. 9. Ioseph Divers questions concerning Ioseph the husband of Mary pt 1. fol. 14 b. 15 a. 40 b. 41. 50 b. Ioy. Rejoycing Those who enjoy Christ truly have true joy and wherein the joy of the faithfull consists pt 1. folio 117 b. 127. and pt 2. fol. 296 b. 297 a. Isaac Wherein he was a type of Christ part 1. fol. 9. Israel Israelites .. How many wayes the word Israel is taken pt 2. folio 7 b. 8 a. and part 1. fol. 454 a. Why the Apostles were sent to preach to the Israelites pt 2. fol. 8 b. and 9 a. Iudas Divers questions concerning the office life covetousnesse treachery and death of Iudas part 2. folio 339 a. 361 362 363. Iudges Iudgement To Iudge Questions concerning the office and duty of civill Iudges and judgement pt 1. fol. 149 a. 393 a and pt 2. folio 327 b. 373 b. Questions concerning the judging of our selves Pt. 1. fol 200 a. 236 a. and part 2. fol. 295. Questions concerning the judging of our brethren and their actions pt 1. folio 200 a. 391 392 393. 424 b. 425. 497 a. 522 a b. Vsefull and Vtile questions concerning the last judgement and the judgement presently after death and the Iudge of the whole world and the horrour of the wicked at the day of Iudgement part 1. folio 210 a. 428 a. 434. and pt folio 48 b. 252. 295 b. 309 a. 314 a. 320 b. 321 322 323 a. 328 a. 335. Many deride Gods judgments and who they are and the effect of their derision pt 2. fol. 323 b c. Iurisdiction See Excommunication Iustice Iust men Righteousnesse Righteous men How we must fulfill all righteousnesse and how and why we must hunger after righteousnesse and whom we must exceed in Righteousnesse and how manifold Rightrousnesse is and what it signifies and the happinesse of the Righteous and examples and the duty of Righteous men Pt. 1. f. 14 b. 15 a. 80. 148 b. 149 a. 189. 328 b. 355 356 357 358 359. An opinion of selfe-Righteousnesse keepes us from Christ Pt. 1. folio 497 b. 501 a b. Justification What Justification is who justifieth and whether Justification be of workes or not pt 1. fol. 310 b. 312 b. pt 2. fol. 130 b. 313. 334 a. K. KEyes See Excommunication Kingdom King Divers questiōs concerning the Kingdome of Heaven and Christ that is both the Kingdome of grace and glory and what Kingdome signifies pt 1. fol. 62 b c. 127 a. 141 a b. 297. 299. 300. and 354. pt 2. folio 73 74 a. 206. 296. God is the King of all the world and where his Kingdome is pt 1. folio 301 a 320 b. Kisses Kissing There are many sorts of Kisses pt 1. folio 261. Knowledge Questions concerning the Lords knowledge and the kinds thereof and our knowledge of God and the sorts and signes thereof pt 2. folio 97 a. 137 b. 139 b c. 326 b. and pt 1. fol. 518 a. None can know God except he reveale himselfe unto them pt 2. folio 96 b. 97 a. L. LAbour Who are meant by Labourers and how manifold labour is and what we must labour principally for and what labour shall be refreshed pt 2. f. 98 b. 99 a. 100 b. 103 a. and pt 1. fol. 492 b. 493. Lame We are naturally lame pt 2. folio 66 b. Laughing Two sorts of Laughers at Christ pt 1. folio 511 a. Law See Commandements Learning Schollers Figures and humane learning necessary and usefull pt 1. folio 48 b. Two things required in Schollers and those who learne pt 2. folio 93 a. We must be Christs Schollers part 2. folio 104. Lending To Lend Divers questions concerning Lending pt 1. folio 248 b. 249 a. Lent Whether the institution thereof be Apostolicall pt 1. folio 502 b. Leprosie Divers questions concerning the nature of the Leprosie pt 2. folio 11 b. 66 b. 67. a. and pt 1. folio 441 b. 442. Liberality See Almes Liberty How manifold liberty is Pt. 1. folio 185. pt 2. fol. 206 a. How Christians are freed from the Law pt 2. folio 75. Men have not a lawlesse liberty to use their owne as they please pt 2. folio 260 b. Life See Conversation Light See Illumination Lilly Wherein the Lillies excelled Salomon pt 1. folio 347. Limbus Concerning Limbus Infantum See Infants concerning Limbus patrium See pt 1. folio 457 b. Locusts What the Locusts were pt 1. folio 65. b. 66 a. Lookes
head of the Church pt 2. f. 181 182 183 184. 186 b. Whether he may erre pt 2. f. 184 185. 199 b. Whether the chiefe authority of expounding Scripture belōg unto him pt 2. fol. 189 b. 292 293. Whether he can dispense with oathes and sell pardons be above Councels pt 2. f. 192 b. 216 b c. The Popes pride shewes him to bee Antichrist pt 2. fol. 15 b. 263 a. Possession See Dispossesse Possible See Impossible Poverty See Poore Power See Ability Practise Why knowledge and practise must be joyned together pt 1. folio 176. 438 a. Praise The praise of men is not to be sought and why pt 1. fol. 341. Prayer Questions concerning publike and private prayers pt 1. fol. 125. 272 b. 273 b. 274 275 a. Questions concerning the definition nature necessity efficacy utility impediments quantity time place and posture in prayer and to whom wee must pray Pt. 1. fol. 272 a. 276 b. 277 278. 292 b c. 316 b. 317 318 b. 321 a. 401 b. 433. 443 b. 446 a. 450 451. 460. 474 a. 517 a. 525 b. 526 527. and pt 2. f. 171. 266 b c. 268 a. 271 b. 272 a. 273 a. 296. How must we pray perseverantly fervently humbly submissively and with meditation pt 1. f. 401. 443. 44 b. 445 a. 514 a. and pt 2. folio 266 b. 268 b. Men may be knowne what they are by their prayers pt 1. fol. 226 a. Prayers not understood are not pleasing unto God pt 2. fol. 271 a. What things are contrary to true prayer pt 1. fol. 272 a. 273 a. 276. Whether prayer be meritorious pt 1. folio 275 b. 277 a. Whom God hath promised to heare when they pray pt 1. f. 293 a. 433 a. Questiōs concerning the Lords prayer pt 1. f. 280 289 290. 318 b. 319. Divers questions concerning praying for temporall things pt 1. f. 306 b. 307 308 309. and pt 2. f. 359 a. Why Christ heard Sathans prayer granted his request pt 1. fol. 484. Preaching See Ministers Preaching Teaching To Teach Questions concerning those who are called to preach pt 1. folio 4. Questions concerning the excellency dignity necessity utility definition end power universality effects and perpetuity of Preaching pt 1. f. 63 a. 66 b. 70. 118 b. 119 b. 124 b. 126 b. 127 b c. and f. 524 b. and pt 2. f. 9 b. 10 a. 11 a. 51. b. 59 b. 62 a. 84 b. 170 b. 273 b. 352 c. Questions concerning those who enjoy the preaching of the word pt 2. fol. 8 b. 88 a. How preaching and teaching differ pt 1. fol. 1●4 and pt 2. folio 11 a. Why the word was not preached unto the Gentiles pt 2. folio 5 a. Who hinder the preaching of the word pt 2. folio 10 b. 11 a. How Christ teacheth us p. 2. f. 32 b. 138 Why the preaching of the word must not be promoted by worldly pompe pt 1. folio 172 b. Why the word is preached to wicked men yea all men pt 1. f. 396. b. 523. Precepts See Commandements Predestination The decree of Predestination depends upon the will of God part 2. folio 95. Preferre See Esteeme Preparation We must prepare to meet Christ and how pt 1. folio 63 b c. and Pt. 2. folio 325 b. Preparation is necessary unto every good duty pt 1. folio 57. And where in this preparation consists pt 1. fol. 63 b c. 64 b. and pt 2. folio 73 a. And by whom it is wrought pt 1. folio 64 a. Presence Absence Divers questions concerning the utility and excellency of the presence of God and Christ Pt. 1. fol. 327 a. 486 b. and 491 a. and 502 b c. and pt 2. folio 33 a. and 222 b. 223 a. Questions concerning the causes and evill consequents of Christs Absence pt 1. fol. 502 b c. Presumption The causes of presumption against God pt 1. fol. 46. The Devill tempts us unto Presumption Pt. 1. fol. 103 b. Pride What and how manifold Religious pride is pt 1. fol. 141 b. Pride was the first sinne part 1. fol. 140 b. Priest The office and nature of the High-priest pt 1. fol. 30. Principles See Maximes Procession Popish Procession on Palm-Sunday not warranted by Scripture Pt. 2. folio 207 b. Procraftination See Delay Profession Professors Divers necessary and profitable questions concerning the necessity manner impediments helpes effects and reward of a sincere profession of Religion pt 1. folio 125 b. 520 b. and pt 2. fol. 28 b. 34 a. 38 39 40. 44 45 46. 179 a. Questions concerning outward Professors and outward profession onely pt 1. folio 432 b. and pt 2. fol. 41 42 43. 46 a. 69 a. Questions concerning those who dare not in dangerous times publikely professe Religion pt 2. folio 38. 40 b. 41 a. What things are common to the hypocriticall and sincere professor pt 2. folio 135 b. Promises Questions concerning mans promises to man pt 1. folio 37 38 39. And mans promises to God pt 1. fol. 59. And Gods promises to man pt 1. folio 46 b c. 110 a b c. 127. Prophane men Prophanenesse Wicked men Wickednesse Questions concerning the nature iniquity end punishment and duty of prophane and wicked persons pt 1. fol. 33 a. 46 a. 398. 429 b. 430 a. and pt 2. fol. 349 b. How wicked men have right to temporall blessings pt 1. folio 258 a. Prophets Prophecying Divers questions concerning Prophesies or prophecying pt 1. fol. 42 b. 43. and part 2. fol. 63. 75. Questions concerning Prophets pt 1. fol. 183 a. and 423 b. 424 a. and Pt. 2. fol. 56 a. 62 a. 70 b. 75 b. 290 a. Questions concerning false and evill Prophets pt 1. folio 422. 427 b. 435 a. and pt 2. fol. 310. Propositions See Conclusions Prosperity In outward things prosperity is very dangerous pt 1. folio 142 b. Protection The Lord will protect his Children pt 1. folio 35 a. Wherein we may read the protection of God Pt. 1. folio 344 a. Protestants Protestants may be taken two manner of wayes pt 1. folio 69. Providence Divers questions concerning the Providence of God viz. what it is and who erre about it and what we are to beleeve concerning it and wherein we may read the providence of God and who tempt his providence and what the nature of his generall and particular providence is pt 1. folio 257. 302 a. 303 344 a. 347 b. 357 358 359. 466 a. 486 a. and pt 2. folio 35 b. 36 37 a. Objections against the providence of God answered pt 1. folio 406 b. and pt 2. folio 261 a. Those things which proceed from second causes are ordained by the providence of God unto higher ends pt 1. folio 115 b. 484 b c. Christ by his providence orders the temptations of his children pt 1. folio 112 b. Provision God will provide for his Children pt 1. folio 51 a. and pt 2. folio 14. b. 37 a. What is meant by this word provide Matth. 10.9 Provide