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A09383 A commentarie or exposition, vpon the fiue first chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians: penned by the godly, learned, and iudiciall diuine, Mr. W. Perkins. Now published for the benefit of the Church, and continued with a supplement vpon the sixt chapter, by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Diuinitie Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cudworth, Ralph, 1617-1688. 1604 (1604) STC 19680; ESTC S114465 595,047 756

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good but partly euill for such as the cause is such is the effect now the minde and will of man are the cause of his workes and the mind is partly carnall and partly spirituall so also is the will and therefore the workes that proceede from them are partly spirituall in part carnall Vpon this ground it followes that all the workes of regenerate men are sinfull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnation Obiect Sinne is the transgression of the law good workes are no transgression of the law therefore good workes are no sinnes I answer to the minor The transgression of the law is twofold One which is directly against the law both for matter and manner the second is when that is done which the law requires but not in that manner it should be done And thus good workes become sinfull The dutie which the law requires is done but it is not done perfectly as it ough to be done by reason of the flesh Secondly it is alleaged that good workes are from the spirit of God and that nothing proceeding from the spirit of God is sinne Ans. Things proceeding from the spirit of God alone or from the spirit immediatly are no sinnes now good workes proceed not only from the spirit but also from the mind and will of man as instruments of the spirit And when an effect proceedes from sundrie causes that are subordinate it takes vnto it the nature of the second cause hereupon workes are ●●rtly spirituall and partly carnall as the minde and will of the doer is Thirdly it is alleged that good works please God and that things pleasing God are no sinnes Ans. They please God because the doer is in Christ and so pleaseth God Againe they please not God before or without pardon for they are accepted because God approoues his owne worke in vs pardons the defect thereof Lastly some obiect on this manner No sinnes are to be done good workes are sinnes there-therefore not to be done Ans. They are not simply sinnes but onely by accident For as God commands them they are good and as godly men doe them they are good in part Now the reason holds onely thus That which is sinne so farre forth as it is a sinne or if it be simplie a sinne is not to be done Now then vpon this doctrine it followes that there is no iustification by workes nor no fulfilling of the law for the time of this life Thirdly hence it follows that the grace of God for the time of this life is mixed with his contrarie the corruption of the flesh This mixture the godly feele in themselues to the great griefe of their hearts When they would beleeue their mindes are oppressed with vnbeleefe They see more ignorance in themselues then light of knowledge There are a number amongst vs that say they know as much as all the world can teach them that they doe perfectly beleeue in Christ and euer did that they loue God with all their hearts and did neuer so much as doubt of the mercie of God But these men are voide of the grace of God they are like emptie barrells that make a great sound they neuer knew what is meant by the combate of the flesh and spirit Fourthly we are here to be admonished in all duties of religion to vse industrie and paines by willing striuing and indeuouring to the vttermost to doe that which we ought to doe We must vse asking seeking knocking Matth. 7. 7. we must with Paul vse wrastling in our praiers to God Rom. 15. 30. They that would haue knowledge in the booke of God must doe more then heare a Sermon they must striue against their ignorance and blindnes and laboriously exercise their senses in the discerning of good and euill They that would beleeue must striue against their naturall vnbeleefe and indeauour to beleeue Blessed saith Salomon Prou. 28. is the man that feareth himselfe or inures himselfe to feare Paul saith of himselfe that he laboured and tooke paines to keepe a good conscience Act. 24. 16. Lastly by reason of this combate we are put in minde to vse sobrietie and watchfulnesse ouer our owne corruptions with much and instant praier least we fall into temptation Matth. 26. 41. We should practise these more then we doe for beside the enemies without we haue an enemie within that seekes our perdition 18 And if ye be led by the spirit ye are not vnder the law In the 13. verse Paul propounds a maine rule of good life Giue no occasion to the flesh and for the better keeping of this he giues a second rule v. 16. Walke in the spirit Of this second rule he giues two reasons The first is taken from the contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit v. 17. The second is in these words they that walke according to the spirit are freed from the curse of the law In these words Paul sets downe three things The first is the office of the spirit which is first of all to regenerate and renew all the powers of the soule and secondly to guide and conduct them that are regenerate Psal. 143. 10. In this guidance or conduction there are foure actions of the spirit The first is Preseruation whereby the holy Ghost maintaines the gift of regeneration in them that are regenerate The second is Cooperation whereby the will of God as the first cause workes together with the regenerate will of man as the second cause And without this Cooperation mans will brings forth no good action no more then the tree which is apt to bring forth fruit yeeldes fruit indeede till it haue the presence and cooperation of the Sunne and that in the season of the yeare The third is direction whereby the spirit of God ordereth and establisheth the minde will and affections in good duties 2. Thess. 3. 5. The last is Excitation whereby the spirit stirres and still mooues the will and minde after they are regenerate because for the time of this life the grace of God is hindred and oppressed by the flesh Hereupon after regeneration there must still be new inclining Psal. 119. 36. new drawing Cant. 1. 3. new working of the will and the deede Phil. 2. 13. Hence it follows that beside the antecedent and first grace there is necessarie a subsequent or second grace For we doe not that good which we can doe vnles God by a second grace make vs doe it as he made vs able to doe it by the first grace The second thing is the Office of all true beleeuers and that is to resigne thēselues in subiection to the worke of Gods spirit Now Gods spirit workes in and by the word of God And hereupon this Subiection hath two parts The first is to make triall inquirie and examination what is the good will of God in euery thing Rom. 12. 2. Thus did Dauid Psal. 119. 94. I am thine saue me for I seeke thy commandements The second part is to denie our selues
therefore no man ought to be wearie of well doing It consisteth of two parts of a rule or precept in the former part of the verse Let vs not therefore be wearie of well doing and a reason of the rule or a motiue to incite vs to the performance thereof in the latter part for in due season we shall reape if we faint not In the rule the Apostle speakes that plainely which in the former verses he had deliuered more obscurely for here he expounds himselfe what he meant by sowing to the spirit namely doing of good or as it is in the next verse doeing of good vnto all which may also appeare by that which followeth we shall reape if we faint not that is we shall reape the fruit of that which we haue sowne to the spirit if we faint not therefore to sow to the spirit is nothing els but to doe good Now by well doing the Apostle meaneth not onely the outward worke whereby our neighbour is furthered helped relieued but the doing of it also in a good manner and to a good ende so as it may be a good worke indeede not onely profitable to our neighbours and comfortable to our selues but acceptable to God This is a most necessarie precept for most men are soone wearie of a good course like to these Galatians who beganne in the spirit but beeing wearie of that walke turned aside and made an ende in the flesh Gal. 3. 3. Like Ephraim and Iudah whose goodnes was as a morning cloud and as the morning dowe which vanisheth away Hos. 6. 4. This wearisomnes in well doing hath seased vpon the most euen vpon all drowsie professours which are the greatest part as may appeare by this in that some if they be held but a quarter of an houre too long or aboue their ordinarie time are extreamely wearie of hearing the word And as for duties of mercie and liberalitie putting vp iniuries and tolerating wrongs they are readie to make an ende as soone as they begin And as for Prayer and thanksgiuing and other parts of the worship of God most men say in their hearts with the old Iewes what profit is it that we keepe his commandements and that we walke humbly before the Lord of hosts Malach. 3. 14. nay they count it a wearines vnto them and snuffe thereat Malach. 1. 13. Hence it is that the Holy Ghost is so frequent in stirring vs vp to the performance of all good duties with alacritie and chearefulnes and so often in rousing vs from that drowsines and deadnes wherewith we are ouerwhelmed Luk. 18. 1. Our Sauiour Christ propounds a parable to this ende to teach vs that we ought alwaies to pray and not to waxe faint Eph. 3. 13. I desire saith Paul that ye faint not at my tribulations 2. Thess. 3. 13. And ye brethren be not wearie in well doing And so in this place Let vs not therefore be wearie of well doing Nowe the reasons which make men so wearie of wel doing are in generall these three First the strength of the flesh which euen in the regenerate is like the great gyant Goliah in comparison of poore Dauid Secondly the weakenesse of the spirit and spirituall graces Thirdly the outward occurrences and impediments of this life In speciall they be these First men by nature are wolues one to another Esay 11. v. 6. and so they continue til this woluish nature be mortified and renued by grace beeing so farre from helping furthering releeuing tollerating one another or performing any other dutie of loue that contrarily they are readie to bite and deuoure one another Gal. 5. 15. Secondly oftentimes it commeth to passe that other mens coldnesse doth coole our zeale their backewardnesse slacketh our forwardnesse Thirdly many thinke it a disgrace and disparagement vnto them to stoope so lowe as to become seruiceable vnto their inferiours Fourthly there are many things which discourage vs from well doing either the partie is vnknowne vnto vs as Dauid was to Naball for which cause he would not releiue him in his necessitie or eise seemeth vnworthy of our helpe being such as through rior harlots lewd company hath brought himselfe to miserie and beggerie Or such as reward vs euill for good hatred for our good will or such as are querulous alwaies complaining though neuer so well dealt withall all which make men cold in the duties of loue Fiftly some there be which faine dangers and cast perils which hinder them from doing the good they should The slothfull person saith a lyon is in the way c. Lastly the manifold occasions and affaires of this life doe so distract the minde as that a man is soone wearied yea in the best things Besides many see no reason why they should spend themselues in doing good vnto others Now to all these obstacles and pul-backs we are to oppose the Apostles precept Let vs not be wearie of well doing For verely if the consideration of these small occasions and rubbes that lie in our way daunt and dismay vs and so stoppe our course we shall neuer be plentifull in good workes we may happly put our hand to the plowe but a thousand to one we shall looke backe againe with Lots wife cast a long looke toward Sodom and with the Israelites in our hearts turne againe into Egypt For as he that obserueth the winde shall not sowe and as he that regardeth the cloudes shall neuer reape Eccles. 11. 4. So he that regardeth the ingratitude of some the euill example of others the manifold distractions and occurrences of this life and shall cast perils in carnall wisdome of this and that trouble or inconuenience that may ensue shall neuer doe his dutie as he ought And assuredly he that fainteth in a good course and giueth it ouer before he come to the ende is like vnto the slothfull husbandman who hauing plowed and tilled and in part sowed his ground giueth ouer before he haue finished it and so either the parching heate doth wither it or the nipping colde doth kill it or the foules of the aire deuoure it Now most men are sicke of this disease which shewes the greatnes of our corruptions and that the best Christians haue a huge masse or lumpe of sinne in them and but a sparke of grace in that they are seldome or neuer wearie in scraping together of riches in following their pleasures in pursuing honours and hunting after preferments and yet are quickly wearie in duties of pietie iustice and mercie albeit they haue an vnspeakable reward annexed vnto them Well whatsoeuer the corrupt practises of men be let vs learne our dutie to goe forward without wearinesse nay to do good with chearefulnesse as Paul saith of himselfe Philip. 3. forgetting that which is behind and indeauouring himselfe to that which is before Let vs consider that it is the propertie of a liberall minde to deuise of liberall things and to continue his liberality Esay 32. 8. Neither is this
Gospel I answer he could doe no otherwise If a priuate man shall erre he must first be admonished and then the Church must be told of it If he heare not the Church then iudgement may be giuen that he is a Publican and not before much more then if the Church shall erre there must first be an examination of the errour and them sufficient conviction and after conuiction followes the censure vpon the Church and iudgement then may be giuen and not before And Paul had nowe onely begun in this Epistle to admonish the Church of Galatia Great therefore is the rashnes and want of moderation in many that haue beene of vs that condemne our Church for no Church without sufficient conuiction going before If they say that we haue beene admonished by bookes published I say againe there be grosser faults in some of those books then any of the faults that they reprooue in the Church of England and therefore the bookes are not fit to conuince specially a Church And though Paul call the Galatians Churches of God yet may we not hence gather that the Church of Rome is a church of God The name it may haue but it doeth in trueth openly obstinately oppugne the manifest principles of Christian religion If any demaunde what these Churches of Galatia are I answer that they were a people of Asia the lesse and though they were famous Churches in the daies of the Apostle yet now the countrie is vnder the dominion of the Turke This shewes what God might haue done to vs in England long agoe for the contempt of the Gospell This againe shewes what desolation will befall vs vnlesse we repent and bring forth better fruits of the Gospell 3. Grace be with you and peace from God the father from our Lord Iesus Christ. 4. Who gaue Here is laid downe the second part of the Preface which is the Salutation propounded in the forme of a praier Grace and peace c. Grace here mentioned is not any gift in man but grace is Gods and in God And it signifies his gratious fauour and good will whereby he is well pleased with his elect in and for Christ. Thus Paul distinguisheth the grace of God from the gift that is by grace Rom. 5. v. 15. and sets grace before the gift as the cause of it Here comes the errour of the Papists to be confuted which teacheth that the grace which makes vs gratefull to God is the infused gift of holinesse and charitie whereas indeed we are not first sanctified and then please god but first we please God by grace in Christ and then vpon this we are sanctified and indued with charitie Peace is a gift not in God but in vs and it hath three parts The first is peace of conscience which is a quietnesse and tranquilitie of minde arising of a sense and apprehension of reconciliation with God Rom. 5. v. 1. The second is peace with the creatures and it hath fiue branches The first is peace with angels for man is redeemed by Christ and by meanes of this redemption sinfull man is reconciled to good Angels Coloss. 1. 20. The second is peace with the godly who are all made of one heart and mind Isai. 11. 9. The third is peace with our selues and that is a conformitie of the will affections and inclinations of mans nature to the renewed minde The fourth is peace in respect of our enemies For the decree of God is Touch not mine annointed and doe my Prophets no harme Againe all things turne to the good of them that loue God The fift is peace with the beasts of the field God makes a couenant with them for his people Ose. 2. 18. The creatures desire waite for the deliuerance of Gods children Rom. 8. They that trust in God shall walke vpon the Lyon and the Bafiliske Psal. 91. The third part of peace is prosperitie and good successe whatsoeuer the righteous man doth it prospers And all things prospered in the house of Potipher when Ioseph was his steward because he feared God Gen. 39. 1 2. To proceed Paul sets downe the causes of grace and peace and they are two God the father and Iesus Christ. And here it must be remembred that the father and Christ as they are one God they are but one cause and yet in regard of the manner of working they are two distinct causes For the father giues grace from none but himselfe by the sonne and Christ procures grace and peace and he giues it vnto men from thefather Furthermore Christ is described by his propertie Our Lord and by his effects in the next verse The vse Whereas Paul beginnes his praier with grace we learne that Grace in God is the first cause and beginning of all good things in vs. Election is of grace Rom. 11. v. 5. Vocation to saluation is of Grace 2. Tim. 1. 9. Faith is of grace Phil. 1. 29. Iustification is freely by Grace Rom. 3. 24. Loue is by grace 1. Ioh. 4. 9. Euery good inclination is of grace Phil. 2. 13. Euery good worke is of grace Ezech. 36. 27. Eph. 2. 10. Life euerlasting is of grace Rom. 6. 23. To auoide any euill is the least good and euery good is of God It may be said that will in man is the cause and beginning of some good things Answer In the creating or imprinting of the first grace in the heart will is no cause at all but a subiect to receiue the grace giuen After the first grace is giuen will is an Agent in the receiuing of the second grace and in the doing of any good worke Yet this must be remembred that when will is an agent it is no more but an instrument of grace and grace in God is properly the first middle and last cause of grace in vs and of euery good acte Hence it followes that there be not any meritorious workes that serue to prepare men to their iustification and that the Cooperation of mans will with grace in the acte of conuersion whereby we are conuerted of God is but a fiction of the braine of man Lastly this doctrine is the foundation of humilitie for it teacheth vs to ascribe all to grace and nothing to our selues Secondly we learne that the cheife good things to be sought for are the fauour of God in Christ and the peace of a good conscience Consider the example of Dauid Psal. 4. v. 7. Psal. 73. v. 24 25. and of Paul who accounted all things dung for grace and peace in Christ. And the peace of good conscience is as a guard to keepe our hearts and minds in Christ. Phil. 4. 7. The fault of most men is They spend their daies and their strength in seeking riches honours pleasures and they thinke not on grace and peace After the manner of beasts they vse the blessings of god but they looke not at the cause namely the grace of God Our dutie Aboue all things to seeke
for grace and peace The reason true happinesse which all men desire consists in peace and is founded in grace they are said to be happie blessed that mourne suffer persecution for iustice sake Mat. 5. because in the middest of their sorrows miseries they haue the fauour of God the peace of good conscience Thirdly in that grace peace are ioyned we learn that peace without grace is no peace There is no peace to the wicked saith my god Isai. 57. last They which make a couenāt with hel death are soonest destroyed Isai. 28. 18. Laughter saith Salomon is madnes namely when it is seuered from grace and peace When men say peace peace then comes destruction 1. Thess. 5. The prosperitie of the men of this world ends in perdition read Ps. 73. Paul saith not simply that Grace and peace comes frō God but from God the father and from Iesus Christ that he may teach vs rightly to acknowledge and worship God For God is to be acknowledged and worshipped in the father in Christ in the holy spirit It was the fault of the Pagans and it is the fault of sundrie Christians to worship an absolute God without the father and without Christ. This fault must be amended for it turnes God to an Idol Againe when Paul saith that grace proceeds first from the father and secondly from Iesus Christ he sets downe the Order which God obserueth in the communication of grace peace The father is the fountaine of grace and giues it from none but from himselfe Christ againe is as it were a conduit or pipe to conuaie grace from the father to vs. Of his fulnesse we receiue grace for grace Ioh. 1. In him we are complete Col. 2. Election Iustification Saluation and all is done in and by Christ. 2. Tim. 1. 9. The vse I. Let them that trauell vnder the burden of a bad conscience and a bad life come to Christ by turning from their sinnes and by beleeuing in him and they shall obtaine grace finde rest to their soules II. In our miseries our hearts may not be troubled ouermuch but we must alwaies moderate our sorrowes For if we beleeue in Christ we shall alwaies haue grace and peace Read Ioh. 14. 27. III. We must moderate our cares for this life For if we trusting in Christ haue grace and peace we shall want nothing read Psal. 4. v. 6. 7. Iesus Christ that giues grace and peace is called Our Lord for two causes One is to teach vs to acknowledge Christ aright and that is as well to acknowledge him to be our Lord as wel as our Sauiour He is a Priest to procure life a prophet to teach the way of life a Lord to command them to walke in the way of life The fault of our times All men professe Christ yet many allowe of no Christ but of their owne deuising namely a Christ that must be a Sauiour to deliuer them from hell but not a Lord to commaund them that they cannot brooke The second cause why Christ is called our Lord is to signifie the persons to whome grace and peace belong and they are such as acknowledge Christ for their Lord and yeild subiection to him in heart and life They finde rest to their soules that take vp the yoke of Christ in newe obedience and the patient bearing of the Crosse Math. 11. v. 29. 4. Who gaue himselfe for our sinnes that he might deliuer vs out of this present euill world according to the will of God our father 5. To whome be glorie for euer and euer Amen In these words the second argument is propounded whereby Christ is described namely the effect of Christ which is that he gaue himselfe And he is said to giue himselfe for two causes First because he presented himselfe as a price and sacrifice for sinne to God the Father Math. 20. 28. Eph. 5. 2. 1. Tim. 2. 6. The second because he did publikely propound and set forth himselfe to the world as a sacrifice and price of redemption Rom. 3. 25. Ioh. 3. 14. and Act. 4. 12. In this giuing there are fiue things to be cōsidered The first the giuer Christ the second the thing giuen and that is Christ himselfe The third is the ende of his giuing for sinne that is that he might make satisfaction for our sinnes The fourth is another end of his giuing that he might deliuer vs out of this present euil world Here the present world signifies the corrupt estate of mē that liue according to the lusts of their own hearts 1. Ioh. 2. 16. And men are here said to be deliuered takē out of the world when they are seuered from the condition of sinnfull men by sanctification and newnes of life and by diuine protection whereby they are preserued from euill after they are sanctified Tit. 2. 14. and Ioh. 17. 15. And this deliuerance is not in this life in respect of place but in respect of qualitie The fifth thing is the cause that mooued Christ to giue himselfe and that is the will of God In the 5. verse there is set downe a corollarie or conclusion which containes the praise of God The vse followes Whereas Christ is the giuer of himselfe hence it followes that his death and sacrifice was voluntarie And this he shewed in two things When he was to be attached he fledde not but went to a garden in the mount as his custome was which was knowne to Iudas Ioh. 18. 2. And in the very separation of bodie and soule he cried with a loud and strong voice which argued that he was Lord of death died because his will was to die This must be remembred For otherwise his death had not beene a satisfaction for sinne In that Christ gaue himselfe to be a sacrifice we learne many things First that the worke of redemption exceedes the worke of creation For in the creation Christ gaue the creatures to man in the redemption he gaue himselfe and that as a sacrifice Secondly in that he gaue himselfe it appeares that he gaue neither angel nor meere man nor any thing out of himselfe and that all merits of life and satisfactions for sinne are to be reduced to the person of Christ and consequently that there be no humane satisfactions for sinne nor meritorious workes done by vs because they pertaine not to the person of Christ but to our persons and they were neuer offered of Christ vnto God as merits and satisfactions because he gaue nothing but himselfe and the things which appertained vnto his owne person Thirdly in that Christ giues himselfe we must take and receiue him with hungering hearts Nay he is to suffer violence of vs and the violent are to take him to themselues Lastly in that he giues himselfe to vs we againe must giue our bodies and soules vnto him in way of thankefulnes and dedicate all that we haue or can doe to the good of men The creatures at our tables
any occasion were offe●ed it is to be feared that many of vs would be easily mooued to returne to our old prophanenesse and to the superstition of poperie But for the staying and the better establishing of our mindes let vs alwaies remember that they shall perish who withdraw themselues from their faith profession and obedience which they owe vnto God Heb. 10. 38. Psal. 73. 27. Againe here it must be obserued that Paul in describing the sinne expresseth two actions his eating with the Gentiles and his seperation from them the first good and the latter euill The beginning of his action was good but the end of it was naught The reason is this the man regenerate is partly flesh and partly spirit and hereupon it is that when we will that which is good we cannot accomplish it and euill is present with vs. The child of God is like a lame man that goes the right way but yet halts at euery step Abrahā Sara desire ishue that is from the spirit but they desire ishue by Agar their handmaid that is from the flesh Rebecca seekes the blessing for Iacob that is a worke of the spirit but shee seekes it by lying that is from the flesh Peter eates with the Gentiles that is from Christian libertie he after seperates himselfe that is from corruption Thus we see that the best workes are imperfect mixed with corruption and that for the best workes we must humble our selues and seeke pardon not in respect of the goodnesse of the worke but in respect of the defect thereof It may be demanded how the acte of Peter should be a sin considering he did onely abstaine from certaine meates that he might auoide the offence of certen Iewes Answer The fact of Peter considered by it selfe is not a sinne for Paul did the like in playing the Iewe but the circumstances make it a sinne For first of all Peter doth not onely abstaine from meates forbidden by the ceremoniall lawe but also he withdrawes himselfe from the companie of the Gentiles and keepes company apart with the Iewes Secondly he abstaines not among the Iewes at Ierusalem but at ●n●●●ch among the Gentiles where a little before he had openly done the contrarie in vsing his Christian libertie Thirdly he vsed this abstinence when certen Iewes c●m from Ierusalem to search out the libertie of the Gentiles Fourthly while Peter seekes to auoid the small offence of some Iewes he incurres a greater offence of all the Gentiles Lastly this acte of Peter did tend to the ouerthrowing of Pauls Ministerie and the suppressing of the truth of the Gospel Thus then the act of Peter becomes vnlawfull that was otherwise lawefull beeing simply considered by it selfe Here it may be demanded what Peter should haue done Ans. He shoul haue openly withstood the Iewes that came from Ierusalem as Paul withstood them that vrged the circumcision of Titus Or againe before he had plaid the Iew he should haue aduertised the Gentiles that for a time he was to yeeld to the infirmitie of some Iewes In Peters example we are taught that we must not offend God though all the world be offended Lesse offences must giue place when the great offence is at hand that is when god is dishonoured and the very least part of his trueth is suppressed The third point to be con●idered is the cause of the sinne of Peter and that was the feare of the offence of the Iewes Here two questions are to be handled The first how Peters feare should be a sinne Ans. There is a naturall feare created by God and placed in the heart of man This feare of it selfe is good Neuerthelesse by the corruption of nature it becomes euill And it is made euill two waies One is when men feare without cause as when the disciples feare Christ walking vpon the sea and feare drowning when Christ was in the ship with thē The other is whē there is no measure in feare As whē men so feare the creature that they neglect their dutie to God This was Peters feare and it was a sinne in him For God is to be feared simply because he is Lord of bodie and soule and can destroy both and he is to be feared for himselfe whereas euery creature is to be feared in part onely and for God Rom. 13. 3. 4. By this we are taught daily to inure our selues in our hearts to feare God aboue all things The second question is how Peter could haue the feare of God considering he feared men more then God at the least in this one action Ans. There are three kinds of feare One is without all sinne this was in Adam and in Christ. The second is altogether sinnefull in the wicked and vngodly because it is seuered from faith and obedience as when there is a feare of men without the feare of God The third is a mixed feare in them that are regenerate in whome the feare of God is ioyned with the corrupt feare of man And in this mixture otherwhiles the one preuailes otherwhiles the other And this feare was in Peter in whome at this time the carnall feare of man preuailed against the true feare of God Paul notes feare to be the cause of Peters sinne that he may thereby signifie vnto vs what kind of sinne it was namely a sinne not of malice but of infirmitie A sinne of infirmitie is when there is a purpose in the heart not to sinne and yet for all this the sinne is committed by reason the will is ouercarried by temptation or by violence of affection as by feare anger lust Thus Peter sinned And let it be remembred that to sinne of infirmitie i● properly incident to such as be regenerate as Peter was Euery wicked man makes his sinne his infirmitie fornication is the infirmitie of the ●ornicatour drunkennes the infirmitie of the drunkard c. but it is false which they say For they sinne with all their hearts when they sinne The fourth and last point is the Effect of Peters sinne in drawing the Iewes and Barnabas to the like dissimulation Here we see the contagion of euill example And hence we learne that Minis●ers of the word must of necessitie ioyne with good doctrine the Example of good life For first of all it is the exp●es●e commandement of God 1. Pet. 5. 3. Be patternes of the flocke 1. Tim. 4. 12. Be an ensample in word conuersion loue spirit faith puritie Phil. 4. 8. What ye haue seene in me that doe Math. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works Secōdly practise in the Minister is a part of his teaching For the multitude doe not ma●ke so much what men say as what men doe Herod did many things not because Iohn the Baptist was a good Minister but because he was a good man Mark 6. 20. Thirdly Ministers haue not the presence protection of God vnlesse their liues be vertuous and godly If thou turne thou shalt
therefore thou maist not compell the Gentiles to liue as Iewes Here first let vs obserue the force of euill example it compells men to be euill Therefore let all superiours Magistrates Ministers and all gouernours of families looke to their examples For if they be euill they constraine others also to be euill Here againe we see what wonderfull subiection the ancient beleeuers yeelded to the ministerie of the word For if the actions of the Apostles compelled men to do this or that what then did their doctrines and heauenly exhortations do When Iohn the Baptist preached the kingdome of heauen suffered violence and the violent tooke it to themselues When the disciples preached in Iewrie they saw Satan falling downe from heauen like lightning The weapons of Paul were spirituall to cast downe holds and to bring euery thought in subiection to God Here the fault of our time is to be considered We haue the forme of godlines in hearing and in outward profession but we want the power of it For we doe not in heart yeeld subiection by suffering our selues to be vrged and compelled to obedience by the authoritie of the ministerie Thirdly here we see wherein stood Peters sinne namely in that he constrained men to a necessarie obseruation of the Ceremoniall law by his example binding the Gentiles to the doing of that which the Gospel hath made free Therefore great is the wickednes of the Romane religion in that it placeth a necessitie in many things in the vse whereof Christ hath procured vs an holy and Christian libertie In this respect the vowes of perpetuall continencie of pouertie and regular obedience are falsly tearned states of perfection and are indeede estates of abomination 15 We which are Iewes by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles 16 Know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ which I say haue beleeued in Iesus Christ that we might be iustified by the faith of Iesus Christ and not by the works of the law because by the workes of the law no flesh shall be iustified Here Paul laies downe the second reason of his reproofe it is framed thus That which we defend both in iudgement and practise that must we vrge and not the contrarie but iustification by faith without workes we defend both in iudgement and practise therefore we must vrge it and not the contrarie namely the necessarie obseruation of the law The maior is wanting the minor is expressed in the 16. v. and it is amplified by an argument of things diuers thus Though we be Iewes to whome the law was giuen yet we forsake the law and looke to be iustified by the faith of Christ. Secondly the minor is confirmed by a testimony of the psalme v. 16. by the workes of the law no flesh shall be iustified Here two points are to be handled One of the distinction of the Iewes and Gentiles the other of iustification Touching the distinction of Iewes and Gentiles sundrie points are to be handled The first what is the cause of this distinction Ans. The good will and pleasure of God Moses saith God chose the Israelites ●boue all nations Deut. 7. 6. he loued them Deut. 10. 15. when he de●●ded the nations lacob was his portion Deut. 32. 8. He knew them aboue all nations saith Amos 3. 1. And he chose them because he loued their fathers Deut. 4. 37. Hence we gather the free Election of God and that they are deceiued who thinke that there was no difference of Iewes and Gen●●les in respect of God but in respect of themselues because the one imbraced Christ the other refused Christ. But there cannot be a refusall where the Messias was not knowne and among the Gentiles he was not so much as named Rom. 15. 20. The second point is wherein stands the difference of Iewes and Gentiles Ans. Here the Iewes are opposed to sinners of the Gentiles and therefore by the Iewes are meant an holy and peculiar people The distinction therefore lies in this that the one was holy the other prophane the one in the couenant the other out of the couenant Rom. 9. 4 5. Psal. 147. 20. Here two errours must be auoided One that the difference lay in earthly things which is not true For the law was giuen to the Israelites and it was a schoolemaster to Christ Gal. 3. and an introduction to a better hope Hebr. 7. 19. The second errour is that they differed onely in this that Christ was more plentifully and fully reuealed to the Iewes more darkly and sparingly to the Gentiles But it was otherwise For the Gentiles were without God and Christ Eph. 2. 12. and they were left to themselues to walke in their owne ●aies Act. 14. 16. The third point is how long this difference indured Ans. Till the death of Christ. For the disciples were forbidden to goe into the way of the Gentiles Math. 10. 5. And Christ saith that he was not sent but to the l●st sheepe of the house of Israel Mat. 15. 22. It may be obiected that here we see the difference of Iewes and Gentiles is st●nding long after the ascension of Christ. Ans. Christ in his death did fully merit the abolishment of this difference Eph. 2. neuerthelesse the execution of this abolishment was by degrees and it was at this time begunne by the ministerie of the Apostles yet not accomplished The last point is that the Iewes are an holy people by nature not because holines is conuaied to them by generation but because euen from their beginning and birth by vertue of the couenant they are holy If the roote be holy the branches are holy Rom. 11. 16. If either of their parents beleeue their children are holy 1. Cor. 7. 14. In a ciuill contract the father and his heire make but one person and the father couenants for himselfe and his posteritie euen so in the couenant of grace he beleeues for himselfe and withall makes his posteritie partaker of the said couenant and thus the posteritie becomes holy It may be obiected that whatsoeuer is borne of flesh is flesh Ans. The parent sustaines a double person First he is to be considered as a child of Adam and thus he brings forth a child hauing with Adams nature Adams corruption Againe he is to be considered as a beleeuer and thus albeit he doth not propagate his faith and holines to his child yet by meanes of his saith his child is in the couenant and consequently is to be accounted holy in the iudgement of charitie till God manifest the contrarie Againe it may be obiected that if the children of beleeuing parents be borne holy they want originall finne Ans. The children also sustaine two persons First they are to be considered as children of the first Adam and thus they are conceiued and borne in sinne and are children of wrath Againe they are to be considered as children of beleeuing parents and thus by meanes of the
the world be worse then the life of a beast Againe in these words who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me the nature and propertie of iustifying faith is set down which is to Applie the loue of God and the merit of the passion of Christ vnto our selues And therefore the Papists are deceiued who say that hope applieth and not faith It may be alleadged that Paul speakes these words priuately of himselfe Ans. He speakes them in the name of all beleeuers Iewes and Gentiles For as we may see in the former verses that which concerned Peter and the rest of Christian Iewes he applies to himselfe least his speech should seeme odious Againe it may be obiected that all beleeuers cannot say thus Christ hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Ans. If the minde be fixed on Christ and there be also a will and indeauour to beleeue and apprehend Christ there is faith indeede For God accepts the true and earnest will to beleeue for faith We are not saued for the perfection of our faith but for the perfection of the obedience of Christ which faith apprehendeth The Israelites which looked vpon the brasen serpent with one eye or with a squint-eye with halfe an eye or dimme sight were healed not for the goodnes of their sight but for the promise of God The poore in spirit are blessed Now they are poore in spirit who finde themselues emptie of all goodnes emptie of true faith full of vnbeleefe and vnfainedly desire to beleeue So then if we greeue because we cannot beleeue as we should and earnestly desire to beleeue God accepts vs for beleeuers Againe in these words who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me S. Paul sets downe the reason or argument which faith vseth in the minde regenerate to mooue men to liue to God And the reason is framed thus Christ loueth thee and hath giuen himselfe for thee therefore see thou liue to God Read the like Rom. 12. 1. and 2. 4. and Psal. 116. 12. By this we are to take occasion to consider and to bewaile the hardnes of our hearts who doe not relent from our euill waies and turne vnto God vpon the consideration of his loue in Christ. The waters of the Sanctuarie haue long flowed vnto vs but they haue not sweetned vs and made vs sauerie therefore it is to be feared least our habitations be at length turned to places of nettles and saltpits Eze. 7. 11. 21 I doe not abrogate the grace of God for if righteousnes be by the law then Christ died without cause The meaning Grace in Scriptures signifieth two things the free fauour of God and the gifts of God in vs. And where the holy Ghost intreates of iustification grace in the first sense signifies the good will and fauour of God pardoning sinnes and accepting vs to life euerlasting for the merit of Christ. 2. Tim. 1. 9. Eph. 2. 8. And in this sense is the word vsed in this place And when Paul saith I doe not abrogate the grace of God his meaning is I doe not make void or frustrate the grace of God in respect of my selfe or in respect of other beleeuers by teaching the iustification of a sinner by saith alone He addes If righteousnes be by the law that is if a sinner be iustified by his owne obedience in performing the law then Christ died without cause The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 freely translated without cause hath a double signification One is when it signifies as much as without price or merit Math. 10. 8. Ye haue receiued freely giue freely The second is when it signifies rashly without iust or sufficient cause as Psal. 69. 4. Mine enemies hate me freely as the Seuentie translate that is wrongfully or without iust cause Thus here is Christ said to die freely that is in vaine or without cause because if we be iustified by obedience to the law then Christ died in vaine to make any satisfaction to the law for vs. These words are an answer to an obiection The obiection is this If thou teach that a sinner is iustified onely by his faith in Christ then thou abolishest the grace of God The answer is negatiue I doe not by this doctrine abrogate the grace of God And there is a reason also of this answer If we be iustified by our owne fulfilling of the law then Christ died in vaine to fulfill the law for vs. The vse First let vs marke that Paul saith he doth not abrogate the grace of God and why because he will suffer nothing in the cause of our iustification to be ioyned with the obedience of the death of Christ. And hence we learne what is the nature of grace It must stand wholly and intirely in it selfe Gods grace cannot stand with mans merit Grace is no grace vnlesse it be freely giuen euery way Rom. 4. 4. To him that worketh the wages is giuen not of grace but of desert Rom. 11. 6. If election be of grace then not of workes els is grace no grace Grace and works of grace in the causing of iustification can no more stand together then fire and water By this we are admonished to be nothing in our selues and to ascribe all that we are or can doe to the grace of God Againe here we see our dutie and that is to be carefull not to abrogate the grace of God vnto our selues But how is that done Ans. We must strippe and emptie our selues of all righteousnesse and goodnesse of our owne euen to the death and withall hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnes Math. 5. 6. Luk. 1. 35. Thirdly Paul here sets downe a notable ground of true religion That the death of Christ is made voide if any thing be ioyned with it in the worke of our iustification as a meanes to satisfie Gods iustice and to merit the fauour of God Therefore the doctrine of iustification by workes is a manifest errour For if we be iustified by the workes of the law then the iudgement of the holy Ghost is that Christ died without cause Againe the doctrine of humane satisfactions is a deuice of mans braine For if we satisfie for our selues then did Christ by death satisfie in vaine Thirdly it is a false and wicked though a colourable inuention to say that Christ by his death merited that we should merit by our workes For if we merit by workes Christ died in vaine to merit by his owne death This is the sentence of God who cannot erre Lastly here we see the Church of Rome erreth in the foundation of true religion because it ioyneth the merit of mans workes and the merit of the death of Christ in the iustification of a sinner And therefore we may not so much as dreame of any reconciliation to be made with that religion for light and darknes cannot be reconciled nor fire and water Here the Papists answer that Paul in this text speakes against them that looked to be iustified by
the naturall obseruation of the law without the death of Christ. But it is false which they say For Paul here speakes against Christian Iewes who ioyned the law and the Gospel and looked to be iustified both by Christ and by the works of the law and not by workes of the law done by strength of nature but by works of grace CHAP. III. 1 O foolish Galatians who hath bewitched you that ye should not obey the truth to whome Iesus Christ before was described in your sight and among you crucified THat we may see how this chapter depends on the former we must repeat the principall argument of the Epistle If I was called of God my doctrine be true then ye should not haue reuolted to an other Gospel but I was called of God and my doctrine is true therefore ye should not haue reuolted to an other Gospel The first part of the minor that Paul was called of God was handled in the first and second chapters The second part that his doctrine is true is handled in the third fourth and fifth and is propounded in this verse Moreouer the Conclusion of the argument set downe Chap. 1. v. 6. is here againe repeated namely that the Galatians should not haue reuolted to an other Gospel And withall Paul here notes the causes of their Reuolt and they are two One is follie O foolish Galatians The other is the deceit of false teachers who hath bewitched you Whereas Paul saith O foolish Galatians that we mistake not his example three questions may be demanded The first is In what respect he giues this hard iudgement against them Ans. Three things are subiected to Iudgement the doctrines of men the liues of men and the persons of men Doctrines are to be iudged by the word and the liues of men yet ordinarily the persons of men are not to be iudged For the saying is true that three things are not subiect to iudgement the Counsels of God the Scriptures and the persons of men And in this place Paul giues iudgement not against the Galatians themselues or against their persons but against their new conceiued doctrin and against their practise in Reuolting The second question is whether this iudgement be righteous and true iudgement Ans. It is because it is vpon good ground For first of all Paul giues this censure by vertue of his calling because his office was to reprooue and correct vice Tit. 1. 9. and 2. 15. Secondly it was in truth For indeede they ouerturned the passion of Christ and therefore he could not call them lesse then fooles Thirdly this iudgement was giuen in loue For Paul intended and desired nothing in this speach but their good and amendment Vpon like grounds Isai calls the Israelites people of Sodome and Gomorrha Isa. 1. Christ calls the two disciples foolish and slow of heart to beleeue Luk. 24. 25. Paul calls the Cretians lyers and slow bellies Tit. 1. 12. But Matth. 5. 22. may be obiected where he is said to be in danger of a Councill that saith Thou foole Ans. The place is to be vnderstood of them that charge men with follie with a mind to reproch them and in way of reuenge which Paul in this place doth not The third question is whether we may vse like iudgement against men Ans. Vpon like grounds we may if we haue a warrant and calling from God so to doe For all iudgement is Gods Rom. 14. 10. if this iudgement be in truth if it be in charitie for the amendment of the parties and for the good of others Otherwise if these grounds faile vs we may not giue iudgement against any man but must follow the iudgement of charitie which thinks no euill hopes the best and construes all things in the best part 1. Cor. 13. To come to the second cause Paul saith Who hath bewitched you that is who hath deceiued you as if ye were bewitched by some inchantments Here Paul takes it for a confessed truth that there is witchcraft and witches And that we may the better conceiue his meaning two questions are to be propounded The first is what is the witchcraft here meant Ans. It is a Satanicall operation whereby the senses of men are deluded For the deuill can by certaine meanes delude and corrupt the phantasie or the imagination and cause men to thinke that of themselues which is otherwise There is a disease called Lycanthropia in which the braine beeing distempered men thinke themselues to be wolues and carrie themselues as wolues And in this disease the deuill hath a great stroke Againe the deuill can delude the outward senses as the hearing and the sight Thus Iannes and Iambres turned their roddes into serpents before Pharaoh and brought frogges by deceiuing the eye and not in truth Exod. 7. and 8. Thus the witch of Endor made a counterfeit of Samuel to rise out of the earth 1. Sam. 28. The second question is if this witchcraft be an operation of Satan howmen should be said to doe it for Paul saith who or what man hath bewitched you Ans. Men doe it by league and confederacie with the deuill The inchanter charmes by ioyning societies Psal. 58. 5. The deuill seekes whome he may deuoure and therefore where he finds a fit person to worke vpon he infinuates and offers himselfe And after men be in league with him he hath a word and sacraments for them as God hath and he requireth faith as God doth And looke as theeues some lie in the way some in the wood and they in the way when a bootie comes giue a watchword to the rest and then all are at hand together Euen so when men in league with the deuill vse charmes imprecations curses praises superstitious inuocations according to his appointment and other Satanicall ceremonies a watchword is likewise giuen vnto him and he is straight at hand to doe the intended feate Thus and no otherwise are men said to bewitch or delude the eye That which Paul saith to the Galatians if he were now liuing among vs he would likewise say to vs O foolish nation who hath bewitched you We are wise in matters of the world but in matters concerning the kingdome of heauen the most of vs are fooles besotted and bewitched with worldly eares and pleasures without sense in matters of religion like a peece of waxe without all forme fit to take the forme and print of any religion And we must take heede least this our foolishnes and intoxication of our senses lead vs headlong to perdition And therefore we must learne the way of life in humilitie Psal. 25. 9. We must obey it and in obedience we shall learne it Ioh. 7. 17. We must as heartily loue the word of God as in minde we conceiue it least by not louing of it we be giuen vp to strong illusions to beleeue lies 2. Thess. 2. 10. Lastly we must pray to God to be taught and guided by his word and spirit in things pertaining to
the multitude among vs place their religion in comming to the Church in outward hearing in receiuing the sacrament in some kind of formall praying These things may not be condemned but the power and life of religion lies not in these things Wherefore we must not stand vpon outward painted shewes but looke what thou art betweene God and thy selfe that onely art thou in religion Thou praiest in the church but thou maist deceiue the world in this Tell me dost thou pray at home dost thou pray in thine owne heart vnto God by the spirit of praier then thou praiest indeede If thou canst approoue thy heart vnto God for any act of religion then is it done indeede els not Remember this Furthermore Paul here teacheth that our after proceedings in religion must be answerable to our first beginnings in the spirit And hence we may be aduertised of many things First here we must take notice of the follie of Popish religion For it beginnes in Gods mercie and the merit of Christ and it ends in our merits and satisfactions Secondly we must take notice of the common sinne of our times For in the practise of our religion we are deceiued We are not now that which we haue bin twentie or thirtie yeares agoe For now we see the world abounds with Atheists Epicures libertines worldlings newters that are of no religion and sundrie that haue heretofore shewed some forwardnes beginne to faulter and stagger and to looke an other way This is not to begin and ende in the spirit but to end in the flesh We are betime to amend this fault least if our former zeale be turned to present lukewarmes God in in his anger spue vs out Yong men must here be aduertised as they grow in yeares and stature so to grow vp in good things that both the first beginning and the after proceedings may be in the spirit Thus did Christ increase in grace as he increased in stature Lastly aged persons that haue begunne in the spirit must looke that they grow vp in the graces of the spirit more then others that they may end in the spirit It is said of the angel of Thiatira that his loue seruice and workes were moe at the last then at the first Reu. 2. 19. the same should be saide of all aged persons They which are planted in the house of God bring forth fruit in their old age Psal. 91. 16. It is the commendation of the old man that by reason of his manifold experience he knowes the father more then others 1. Ioh. 2. 14. It is the praise of Anna that shee continually serued God in fasting and praier beeing 80. yeares old When the outward man decaies the inward man should be renewed I speake all this the rather because aged persons are much wanting in this dutie For none commonly are so ignorant in the things of God as they they begin in the spirit but the affections of their hearts vsually end in the loue of this present world But they must be warned that as they goe before others in age so must they also exceede in the graces of the spirit We vse to say of children God make them good old men and it is well said An old man is to be regarded but specially a Good old man who is more to be respected then twentie of younger yeares Now aged persons when they grow in age and not in the spirit they loose their honour for age is a crowne of glorie when it is found in the way of righteousnes Prov. 16. 31. Let them therefore pray with Dauid Forsake me not O Lord in mine old age Psal. 71. 9. 4. Haue ye suffered so many things in vaine if so be it be euen in vaine The interrogation haue ye is as much as ye haue Because the question in this place counteruailes a speech affirmatiue And the wordes carrie this sense Ye haue professed the Gospel and ye haue suffered many afflictions for the same but now haue ye reuolted from the Gospel and therefore all your former sufferings are void or in vaine The words if they be in vaine are a limitation or qualification of that which was saide before and they carrie this sense Whereas I haue said that your sufferings are in vaine I speake it not simply but with some hope of your repentance which if it be then that which would be in vaine shall not be in vaine In this verse Paul sets downe a second reason to prooue the proposition of his first argument on this manner If ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine then is my doctrine true and ye fooles in reuolting from it For by this meanes the things which you suffered well ye now suffer in vaine The vse When Paul saith Haue ye suffered c. he signifies vnto vs the estate and condition of all beleeuers in this life that they must be bearers and sufferers The reason To this are we called 1. Pet. 2. 21. for we are called to resigne all reuenge to God and therefore of our selues to be bearers and sufferers Math. 5. 39. Resist not euill And we are called to imitate the passion of Christ who suffered beeing innocent and beeing reuiled reuiled not againe Moreouer it is for our good that we should beare and suffer 1. Pet. 1. 6. and Psal. 119. 71. It may be demanded What if my cause be good must I then suffer Ans. Yea. The better thy cause is the better are thy sufferings they are blessed that suffer for righteousnes Paul commends himselfe by the multitude of his sufferings 2. Cor. 11. 13. Againe it may be demanded how long we must suffer Ans. Euen to the shedding of our blood if it be for the resisting of sinne Heb. 12. 4. Lastly it may be saide how shall we be able to doe this Ans. God is faithfull and will not lay on vs more then we shall be able to beare 1. Cor. 10. 3. By this we are admonished not to make a reckoning in this world of pleasure and delight as though the Gospel were a Gospel of ease and as we vse to say a gospel made of veluet but euery one of vs must take vp his owne crosse Luk. 9. 23. If thou wilt be my disciple denie thy selfe take vp thy crosse that is the particular affliction and miserie which God laies on thee Againe if in this world we must be sufferers by condition then in dissentions and differences we may neither giue nor take the chalenge but must be content to beare and put vp wrongs and abuses Lastly in these daies of our peace we must looke for daies of triall and affliction For as yet we haue suffered little for the name of Christ. The haruest of the Lord hath bin among vs more then fourtie yeares therefore no doubt the time of threshing fanning and grinding comes on that as the Martyr said we may be good bread to the Lord. And that we may be able to suffer for the name of God we must
are two graces required vnto it helping grace and Exciting grace Helping grace preserues and confirmes the first and initiall repentance Exciting grace giues the will and the deede And without these graces the child of God if he fall cannot repent and recouer himselfe They therefore are deceiued who thinke that they may haue repentance at command and that they may repent when they will It may be demanded why Paul vseth mild tearmes and doth not excommunicate the Galatians Ans. So long as men are curable meanes must be vsed to recouer them The sheepe or oxe that goes astray must be brought home againe Exod. 23. 4. much more thy neighbour Christ himselfe brings home againe the lost sheepe and so must euery shepheard Ezech. 34. 4. Now the Galatians were in all likelihood persons curable and therefore not to be cut off For the Censure of Excommunication pertaines to them alone of whose recouerie there is no hope Some there be that mislike the Preaching vsed in these daies because we vse not seueritie and personall reproofes after the manner of Iohn Baptist. But these men are deceiued We haue not the like calling that he had nor like gifts neither are we in the like times For Iohn the Baptist was in the very time of the change betweene the old and the new Testament Christ did not follow him in the same manner of teaching neither doth the Apostle in this place when he saith of the Galatians in Apostasie that he hoped better things of them In the last place the commination which the Apostle vseth is to be obserued that troublers of the Church shall beare their iudgement Hence I gather 1. That God watcheth ouer his Church with a speciall prouidence We in England haue found this by experience and we are to be thankfull for it 2. That the doctrine of the Apostles is of infallible certentie because the oppugners of it are plagued by the iust iudgement of God 3. On the contrarie our dutie is to pray for the good estate of the Church of God and for the kingdomes where the Church is planted and for the continuance of the Gospel specially in England For what will all the things we haue doe vs good if we be forth of Gods kingdome and lose our soules 11 And brethren if I yet preach Circumcision why doe I yet suffer persecution Then is the scandall of the crosse abolished 12 Would to God they were cut off that trouble you The sense Yet preach now while I am an Apostle Here Paul takes it for graunted that when he was a Pharisie he taught and maintained Circumcision but he denies that he euer taught it after his conuersion in his Apostleship The crosse the Gospel which is a doctrine teaching deliuerance from hell and life euerlasting to be obtained by the death and passion of Christ crucified 1. Cor. 1. 18 23. More plainly the words are thus much in effect It is reported that I Paul an Apostle preach circumcision but the truth is there is no such matter For if I taught circumcision the Iewes maintainers of circumcision would not persecute me as they doe neither would they take offence at the preaching of Christ crucified if I ioyned circumcision with Christ. The drift Paul here answers a new obiection which is on this manner There is no cause Paul why thou shouldest thus reprooue vs for thou thy selfe art a teacher of circumcision To this Paul makes a double answer First he denies the report and prooues his deniall by a double reason one is because the Iewes still persecuted him the other is because they tooke offence still at his preaching of Christ crucified Secondly Paul answers by pronouncing a curse vpon the false Apostles The vse In the wordes I consider two things the report giuen forth of Paul and his Apologie The report was that Paul preached circumcision In this we see what is the condition of the Ministers of the word namely to be subiect to slander and defamation not onely in respect of their liues but also in respect of their Ministerie and doctrine as if they were heretikes Thus the Papists at this day reproch the Ministerie of the Church of England charging it with sundrie foule heresies And many among vs spare not to charge it with the heresie of Puritanisme And I doubt not to auouch it that some are condemned for here●●kes in the historie of the Church who if all were knowne should be found to be good seruants of God 1. This verifies the saying of Ecclesiastes c. 8. v. 14. There are righteous men to whome it befalls according to the worke of the wicked 2. Ministers must hence be put in minde to vse circumspection both for the matter and the manner of their Preaching 3. Beeing defamed and that wrongfully they must hence take occasion to be more carefull to please God as Dauid did in the like case Psal. 119. 69. But how came this report of Paul Ans. Sometime he tollerated circumcision as a thing indifferent for a time and hereupon circumcised Timothie And vpon this occasion a report is raised that Paul preached circumcision In this we see the fashion of the world which is to raise fames reports and slanders of all persons specially vpon Magistrates and Ministers and that vpon euery light and vniust occasion But good men will take no such occasions of raising reports Psal. 15. 3. But how did Paul take this report Ans. He did not requite euill for euill as the manner of men is but he returnes loue and goodnes for euill and for this cause no doubt of purpose he beginnes his speech on this manner Brethren if I yet preach Circumcision The Apologie and defence followes And first he denies the report And this is because for his preaching he is persecuted of the Iewes Here obserue that they which are called to teach must preach the Gospel what trouble or danger soeuer follow as Paul did It may be demanded whether a Minister may not in teaching conceale any part of the truth at any time without sinne Ans. In the case of Confession when a man is called to giue an account of his faith no truth no not the least truth may be concealed Againe when the soules of men are to be releeued and saued all concealements are damnable Yet in the planting or in the restoring of the Church doctrines most necessarie may be concealed Paul was about two yeares at Ephesus and spake nothing against Diana but in generall tearmes If he had he had planted no Church at Ephesus Againe when people be vncapable of doctrine it may be cōcealed till they be prepared for it Christ told his disciples that he had many things to tell them which they could not then learne Some beleeuers must haue no strong meate but milke onely Thirdly when the teaching of a lesser truth hinders the teaching of a fundamentall truth the lesser truth may be concealed that the fundamentall truth may be taught and take place Here we
one thing to be iust an other thing to be declared and knowne to be iust We are iust by faith but we are knowne to be iust by our works therefore men shall be iudged at the last day not by their faith but by their workes For the last iudgement serueth not to make men iust that are vniust which is done by faith but to manifest them to the world what they are in deede which is done by workes Men are often compared to trees in Scripture Now a tree is not knowne what it is by his sappe but by his fruit neither are men knowne to be iust by their faith but by their workes Indeede a tree is therefore good because his sappe is good but it is knowne to be good by his fruit So a man is iust because of his faith but he is knowne to be iust by his good works therefore seeing that the last iudgement must proceede according to euidence that is vpon record for the bookes must be opened and men must be iudged of those things that are written in the bookes all must be iudged by their workes which are euident and apparent to the view of all men and not by their faith which is not exposed to the sight of any And hence it is that the Scripture saith we shall be iudged according to our workes but it is no where said for our good workes Gregorie saith God will giue to euery one according to his workes but it is one thing to giue according to workes an other thing for workes For works are no way the cause of reward but onely the common measure according to which God giueth a greater or lesser reward Take this resemblance A King promiseth vnequal rewards to runners the least of which would equall the riches of a kingdome vpon condition that he which first commeth to the goale shall haue the greatest reward the second the next and so in order They hauing finished their race the King giueth them the reward according to their running Who would hence but childishly inferre that therefore they merited this reward by their running And whereas they vrge that text Matth. 25. Come ye blessed for I was hungrie and yee fedde me I answer first that the word for doth not alway signifie a cause but any argument or reason takē from any Topick place as Rom. 3. 22 23. The righteousnes of God is made manifest vnto all and vpon all that beleeue For there is no differēce for all haue sinned are depriued of the glorie of God Where sinne is no cause of the righteousnes of faith but onely an antecedent or adiunct common to all men So when we say This is the true mother of the child for shee will not haue it diuided There for doth not implie the cause as though her refusing to haue it diuided did make her the true mother of it but onely the signe that shee was the true mother indeed Secondly be it granted that it implieth the cause yet not the meritorious cause for good workes are said to be causes of eternall life not as meriting procuring or deseruing any thing at the hands of God but as they are the kings high way to eternall life God hauing prepared good works that we should walke in them If a King promise his subiect a treasure hid in the topp of a steepe and high mountaine vpon condition that he clime and digge it out his climing and digging is the efficient cause of enioying the treasure but no meritorious cause of obtaining it seeing it was freely giuen If it be further said that the word for doth here signifie the cause as well as in the words following Goe ye cursed for I was hungrie and ye gaue me no meat seeing our Sauiour Christ speaketh after the same māner of the reward of the godly and punishment of the wicked I ans The paritie of the reason stands in this that as by good works we come to eternall life so by wicked works we runne headlong to perdition The dissimilitude is this that euil works are not onely the way but also the cause of death good workes are the way but not the cause as Bernard saith they are via regni non causa regnandi Obiect III. Here God promiseth eternall life to good workes therefore good works merit eternall life Answ. There is a double couenant Legall and Euangelicall In the legali couenant the promise of eternall life is made vnto workes Doe this and liue If thou wilt enter into life keepe the commandements But thus no man can merit because none can fulfill the lawe In the Euangelicall couenant the promise is not made to the worke but to the worker and to the worker not for the merit of his work but for the merit of Christ as Apoc. 2. 20. Be faithfull vnto the end and I will giue thee the crowne of life the promise is not made to fidelitie but to the faithfull person whose fidelitie is a signe that he is in Christ in whome all the promises of God are yea and Amen that is most certaine and infallible Secondly if any thing be due to works it is not of the merit of the worke but of gods mercifull promise Augustine saith God made himselfe a debter not by owing any thing but by promising Thirdly no reward is due to workes of regeneration vpon compact and promise first because we are not vnder the couenant of works in which God doth couenant with vs vpon condition of our obedience but vnder the couenant of grace the tenour of which coue nant runneth vpon condition of the merits of Christ apprehended by faith Secondly though we were vnder the legall couenant yet we merit not because our workes are not answerable to the lawe Lastly wheras the pillars of the Romish church teach that the promise made vpon condition of performing the worke maketh the performer to merit is very false This is not sufficient to make a meritorious worke it is further required that the worke be answerable and correspondent in worth and value to the reward as if one shall promise a thousand crowns to him that will fetch a little water out of the next well it is debt indeed in the promiser but no merit in the performer because there is no proportion betweene the worke and the reward Obiect IV. Sowing to the spirit is a good worke and reaping eternall life the reward but reward presupposeth memerit therefore sowing to the spirit doth merit eternall life Ans. There is a double reward One of fauour another of debt Rom. 44. To him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt So saith Ambrose There is one reward of liberalitie and fauour another reward which is the stipend of vertue and recompence of our labour Therefore reward signifieth generally any recompence or any gift that is bestowed vpon another whether it be more or lesse whether answerable to the worke or not
by good example and by gratious speeches seasoned with salt c. as Barnabas did who comming to Antioch and seeing the grace of God that was giuen them was glad and confirmed them therein exhorting them that with purpose of heart they would cleaue vnto the Lord. Act. 11. 22. and for this cause as I take it it is added v. 23. that he was a good man and full of the holy Ghost and faith The Vniting goodnes is likewise to be practised in setting men at Vnitie in reconciling those that are at variance in making peace and amitie where there is nothing but enmitie and dissention for for this cause Christ calleth peace-makers the children of God Matth. 5. 10. because herein they liuely resemble the goodnes of God their heauēly father as any sonne doth resemble any qualitie or propertie in his naturall father for he maketh men to be of one minde in one house Psal. 67. The Communicating goodnes beeing especially vnderstood in this place hath foure degrees First for temporall things we must communicate to the necessities of the Saints Rom. 12. 13. And for spiritual blessings we must remēber the saying of Peter Let euery man as he hath receiued a gift so minister the same vnto others as good disposers of the manifold grace of God 1. Pet. 4. 10. Secondly we must be plentifull in the workes of mercie not contenting our selues with this that we are beneficiall to some in releeuing them in their wants and necessities but we must be rich in good workes 1. Tim. 6. 18. Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high minded that they doe good and be rich in good works readie to distribute and to communicate We must be like Tabitha or Dorcas who cloathed the poore with the garments which shee made at her owne proper cost and charges Act. 9. 39. and for this cause the holy Ghost giueth this testimonie of her that shee was rich or full of good works almes which shee did v. 36. like to the vertuous woman Prou. 31. 20. who openeth the palme of her hands to the poore and stretched out her hands to the needie like Iob of whome it is said that the loynes of the poore blessed him Iob. 31. 20. Thirdly we must be much in goodnes as the Scripture speaketh of God that is abundant in goodnes in communicating vnto others abundantly those blessings which the Lord hath stored vs withall not onely in louing our brethren for which the Thessalonians are commended that their loue one towardes another did abound but in a liberall supplying of their wants as Paul exhorts the Corinthians that as they did abound in faith and loue so they would abound in rich liberalitie 2. Cor. 8. 7. as good Obadiah did in spending his liuing and venturing his life in hiding an hundred of the Lords Prophets from the furious rage of wicked Iesabel 1. King 18. 13. Lastly we must be exceeding or superabundant in goodnes in exceeding measure if it may be in doing good like the poore widow who had rather want her selfe then be altogether wanting in contribution to the treasurie of the Lords Temple and therefore though it was but two mites which shee cast into the Corban yet Christ preferred it before all the rich mens offerings beeing put together in that they gaue of their superfluitie but shee of her penurie cast in all that shee had euen all her liuing Luk. 21. 4. It is well said by S. Ambrose We must releeue the wants of others according as we are able and sometime euen aboue our abilitie as Paul witnesseth of the Corinthians to their great commendation that to their power beyond their power they were willing 2. Cor. 8. 3. Further in doing good we must obserue these rules I. We must doe good of that onely which is our owne for we may not cut a large and liberall shine of another mans loafe as the common saying is we may not steale from one to giue to another or deale vniustly with some that we may be mercifull to others or robbe Peter to cloath Paul The Lord abhorreth euen burnt offering if it be of that which is gotten by rapine and spoile Esa. 61. 8. and hence it is that Dauid would not offer burnt offering without cost of that which was not his owne 1. Chron. 21. 24. II. We must doe good with chearefulnes and alacritie for God loueth a chearefull giuer 2. Cor. 9. Ambrose saith fitly and finely to this purpose Well-doing ought to proceede from well-willing for such as thine affection is such is thy action Therefore if we giue we must doe it freely otherwise it is no gift for what more free then gift therefore we may not play the hucksters in doing good for that doth most blemish the excellencie of the gift for as Lactantius saith Danda beneficia non foeneranda III. We must so doe good as that we doe not disable our selues for euer doing good but may continue in well doing and as the Psalmist speaketh bring forth more fruit in our age Salomon commands that the streames of our wells should flow to others yet so as that the fountaine be still our owne Psal. 112. 5. A good man is mercifull and lendeth and will guide his affaires with iudgement that is he will so discreetly dispose and order all his actions as that he will keepe himselfe within his compasse so beginning to doe good as that he may continue therefore the wise man saith In the house of the wise there is a pretious treasure and oyntment but a foolish man deuoureth it Prou. 21. 20. All the disciples that were at Antioch sent succour to the brethren which were in Iudea in the great famine that was in the time of Claudius Cesar yet euery man according to his abilitie Act. 11. 29. for according to Pauls rule we must not so giue that others be eased and we our selues pinched 2. Cor. 8. 13. IIII. We must doe all the good we can possibly within the compasse of our callings and hinder all the euill It will be said God whose example we are to follow doth not all the good he can neither doth he hinder all the euill Therefore we are not bound to doe all the good or preuent all the euill we can I answer in this particular we are not to imitate the example of God and that for three causes First because we are subiect to the law Thou shalt not doe euill that good may come of it Rom. 3. 8. whereas God is not bound nor subiect to any Law no not to his owne law but is aboue it and hath power to dispence with it Secondly because he is able to draw good out of euill light out of darknes which we cannot doe Thirdly because God is the Generall good we particular Now there is great difference betwixt these two for it belongs to the nature of the particular good to procure all the good
must doe two things 194. 5 A particular or speciall faith hath 3 acts or effects 239. 22 Arguments of the Papists against special faith answered 239. 30 Euery grieuous fall doth not abolish the fauour of God 237. 13 Of the faith of Infants 261. 15 What faith towardes God is 446. 31. Reasōs to proue that the faith of the most is but false fained 446. 35 Faith workes by loue beeing the cause of loue and loue the fruit of faith 383. 13 In faith two things 385. 24 Faith towardes men standes in two particulars 447. 12 Reasons to mooue vs to maintaine faith truth among men 447. 25 By faith we doe not abrogate but establish the law vide Law The dutie of gouernours of families 410. 24 God is called a father in two respects 336. 13 Or the Fathers sending his Sonne vide God No man exempted from falling 461. 37. Fainting twofold 585. 7 Spirituall fainting twofold 585. 12 Faults of Churches be of two sorts 8. 18. Of naturall feare how it is good and how euill 108. 4 Three kinds of feare 108. 20 Figures and Allegories vsed in scripture 346. 16 Of the spirituall combate betwixt the flesh and the spirit vid. Combate How the flesh and spirit fight together 416. 4 The lust of the flesh hath two actions 416. 21 A treatise of the works of the flesh where is handled the condition the kinds and the punishments thereof 423. 22 Flesh signifies more then sensualitie 433. 15 What the flesh is 450. 18 In the flesh are two things Affections and lusts 450. 27 Meanes to crucifie the flesh 451. 26 For signifies not alwaies a cause but any Argument 568. 14 The foreknowledge of God vide God Fornication what it is 424. ●4 Against tolleration of fornication 425. 12. To flie adulterie and fornication 426. 6. Two speciall occasions of them 427 4. Freedome in good things fourefold 368. 3 G The Galatians reuolt 8. 10 What the churches of Galatia were 9. 28 How the Galatians receiued the gospel 28. 30 To Gentilize what it is 112. 5 Gentlenes what 445. 29 The gifts of God are inordinately vsed three waies vide Inordinate The more excellent gifts any hath receiued the more he is bound to be seruiceable to others 463. 39 The glorie of heauen twofold Essentiall and Accidentall 556. 23 To Glorie implies three things 625. 13. Two Grounds of glorying one in God another in himselfe 517. 12. Howe they differ and howe wee may doe both ibid. Obiections against glorying and reioycing in our selues 517. 30 How glorying in a mans selfe doth differ from vaine glorie which is a branch of pride 517. 30 Foure rules to bee obserued that we may glory in the Testimonie of a good Conference 518. 15 Lessons to be learned from this that we are to glorie in the Testimonie of a good conference 518. 31 Glorying when it is good and when euill 625. Glorying good or euill ibid. 27 Euill glorying is vaine glorying in three respects ibid. 23. Wherein we ought not to glorie ibid. 35. neither in wisdome strength riches honour nor pleasures ibid. Glorying in outward things not only vaine but impious Foure reasons 627. 40 There is a two fould lawfull bosting or glorying one before god another before man 628. 29 Obiections for Boasting answered 628. 16. Vnlawfull glorying when it is 629. 17. Glorying in wickednes three waies 629. 30. Reasons why Paul did Glorie rather in Christs death then in his resurrection 631. 21 The Papists wicked Glorying in the crosse vide crosse Gluttony what it is 439. 16 False Goddes are set vp two waies 304. 16 How God is to be acknowledged and worshipped 12. 15 Gods foreknowledge is not seuered from his will 108. 12 In what order the foreknowledge of God stands to his will 180. 25 God is called a father in two respects 236. 13 How God is said to repent 220. 19 A child of God two waies 236. 26 A treatise of God sending his sonne 279. 5. God knoweth exactly all our actions 549. 26 How the godly mans sinnes doe not condemne him in the latter Iudgment three resons 551. 27 The godly reape not that they sow therefore there is another life 552. 11. Seuen rules to liue godlily 139. 10 What a man must doe to be assured that he is Gods child 297. 14 Why affliction is the portion of the godly two reasons 620. 28 Vses of this that the godly are persecuted and afflicted 621. 15 Good things are commonly done in euill manner 330. 5 How they may be well done three rules 330. 21 The Godly faile in the manner of dooing good 344. 1 The dutie of dooing good declared by sundry arguments 588. 1 Dooing of good standeth in three things 588. 4 Rules to be obserued in dooing good 590. 34 We are not allwaies to imitate God in good and euill for three causes 591. 34 God is the generall good we the particular 591. 40 To the nature of the generall good three things appertaine 595. 4 Reasons why we are to doe good to all men 593. 9 How we are to doe good especially to the houshold of faith 594. 20 Reasons to doe good especially to the faithfull 594. 35 The order to be obserued in dooing of good to others 596. 23 There is no possibilitie of dooing good after this life 601. 37 Goodnes what it is 445. 38. Goodnes respects either the bodie or the mind and stands in foure actions 446. 9 Goodnes three fould preseruing vniting communicatiue 589 Communicatiue Goodnes hath 4. degrees 589. 29 What is vnderstood by God 531. 24 A felicitie to receiue the doctrine of the Gospell and what benefits come thereby 326. 27 The law and Gospell not on in substance of doctrine 378. 9 The Gospell must be preached rather then the law for two causes 54. 1. It must be preached to the Gentiles for two causes 54. 38 There is but one Gospel and one way of saluation 21. 31 Popish religion subuertes the Gospel of Christ. 23. 15 The doctrine of the Gospel called the truth for two causes 159. 20 The antiquitie of the Gospel 181. 19. How it differs from the lawe Vide Lawe The Gospel was not reueiled to the world till after the comming of Christ. 228. 11 Persecution and the preaching of Gospel goe hand in hand 620. 20. The Gospel is no new law 497. 23. In what the lawe and Gospel agree 497. 24 They differ in fiue things 498. 9 Why the Gospel is called a misterie 498. 16 The doctrine of the Gospel called by an excellencie the word also the word of the kingdome of God of saluation of life 530. 36. Our saluation placed alone in grace 654. 15. A child by Grace three waies 236 28. Uide Child The knowledge of the true God stands in sixe points 248. 20 What is ment by Grace 10. 5 The causes of grace be the father Christ and how they are distinct in regard of the manner of working 10. 38 Grace in god is the
preparemen to their iustification 11. 13. How our workes are said to please God 191. 19 The workes of the regenerate are mixed and sinnefull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnatiō ergo no iustification by workes 515. 9. The benefit of approouing of our workes 515. 9 How we may aprooue our workes three rules 515. 16 Whether we may not approoue our workes or actions to men and if we may how farre forth 515. 29 Infants haue no good workes 553. 8. Gods reward shall be according to the quantitie and qualitie of the workes and what may be gathered from thence 555. 25 How Lazarus and the theife on the crosse had good works 553. 27 Workes and laboures of men may differ three waies and what they be 556. 37 Vses that God rewardeth men according to their workes 559. 560 561. 562. Workes though they be seedes yet are they no causes of eternall life 564. 565. 31. That workes are seedes of eternall life it is gods mercie and not the merit of the workes 565. 35 Workes of the flesh perfectly euill and why 566. 5 Good works perfect as they are of god imperfect as they are of mē 566. 12. Reasons why the workes of the spirit are not the cause of eternall life as well as badd workes are the cause of eternall destruction 566. tota pag. Obiections of the Papists to prooue workes the causes of eternall life answered Beginning at pag. 561 line 31. vsque ad pag. 572. Workes no cause of our reward but the measure 568. 2 Good workes make a man knowne to be iust but faith m 〈…〉 him iust 567. 32 Good workes are causes of eternall life not as meriting but as the kings high way 568. 25 How life eternall is promised to good workes how not 569. 6 The promise of reward vpon condition of performing the worke maketh not a meritorious worke 569. 29. Reward not due to workes of regeneration vpon compacte and promise the reasons why 569. 20. Good workes merit not eternall life though it be a reward of them page 569. in fine and page 570. 571. How life eternall is called a reward of good works 570. 11. 571. 5 That we may incite our selues to the dooing of good workes from the consideration of our heauenly reward sundrie reasons 579. 29. In dooing good workes we may respect the reward but not onely nor principally 581. 31 What should most of all mooue vs to doe good workes 581. 32 The loue of the world and of the truth cannot stand together 619 33. What is meant by the world and what it is to be taken out of the world 13. 37 Y Two kindes of yeelding 87. 18 Z Zeale what it is 45. 20 FINIS 2. Tim. 3. 16. 2. Pet. 1. 20. 1. Tim. 6. 20. Eph. 6. 17. Esa. 8. 20. Ioh. 5. 9. Mal. 1 2. Deut 6 8. Hugo de S. Vi●t de Script Scriptor ●●cris l●● 1. c. 1. Deut. 4. 2. Matth 5. 13. Psal 19. 10. Psal 119. 98. c. 2 Tim. 3. 15. Act. 2. 〈◊〉 Iam 1 21. Ier. 2. 13. Ferdinaud Vellosill Epis. Luc. in praef in aduer Schol. Theol Nec Script nec Doctores vel a limino solutaste Laert. de vit Philos. lib. 1. in Thal. Epist. ad Leander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sleidan lib. 6. Coster Enchir. controvers c 1. Socrat. lib. 7. cap. 32. Sixt. Senens in praefat in Bib. 1. Tim. 1 4. Sixt Sen. Bibl. lib. 4. Tetrus Ximenes Episc. Cauriens a. Cor. 3. Non tam Commentarios quam indicie 〈…〉 lorum Hieron proam in 1. 〈…〉 m Esai 2. Tim. 3. 16. Symbolica Theologia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 argumentatiua Thom. 1. Cor. 1 ●3 Volusian ad Nicol. 2. 2. Pet. 3 16. Eccles. 〈◊〉 6. 2. Sam. 〈◊〉 30. Eph. 3. 4. o In his Prophetica Gal. 6. 〈◊〉 Phil●m v. ●8 Ioh 5. 35. Ioh. 2. 3● Rom. 1. 5. Act. 13. 33. Rom. 10. 14. 1. Cor. 16. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apoc. 5. 10. Math. 9. 38. Eph. 4. 11. Act. 20. 28. Psal. 105. 15. Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 〈◊〉 Lev. 10. 1. 2. Reg. 16. 11. Rev. 2. 24. Deut. 22. 9. 2. Tim. 4. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o Praeter quam Contra Petilian l. 3 c. 6. o Non aliud quid amp 〈…〉 us Debono viduitatis c. 1. Math. 5. 48. Iob. 13. 15. v. 26. Term 25 de verbi Apest. Theodoret. bist lib. 4. c. 16. Luk. 10. 16. o I learned nothing or I was not taught o ' Simulatè non verè Matth. 11. 1● Luk. 10. 18. 〈◊〉 Cor. 10. 4. Homil. 2. in Act 〈◊〉 Ioh. 3. 9. Germ. ad mil. Temp. c. 11. Epist 190. o Cr●dere Fac 〈…〉 Aug. de ●●pt concup l. 1. c 33. ad Bon. l. 〈◊〉 c. ●3 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thom. Summ. p. 〈◊〉 q 62. art 4. Bellar. de Sact. l. 2. c. 11. De consid ad Eugen. Vxor materfamilias Vxor Vsuaria o ●us●in in q●●st Act. 12. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traef lib. 8. de bello Gall. Sanos homines à scribendo d●terruit 〈…〉 c. ad Bru●ū Sue●on in C●s. cap. 56. Michael de Montaign in his Estayes the 5 6 7 8. Ethic. lib. 4. c. 3. 1. Macchab. 1. 60. Confess lib. 8. cap. 12. Act. 8. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Anchorat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Rhet. ad Th●●d lib. 〈◊〉 c●p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O 〈…〉 Hierom in hunc loc●m Gen 49. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 4. 9. Philip. 2. 4. de verb. dom ●orm 16. Muff●t Aut●umus a●t ●uimus vel po 〈…〉 es●e quod hi●●st 2. Tim. 4. 2. De verb. Dom. se 〈…〉 16. v. 15. Me 〈…〉 s est v● pe●eat●nus q 〈…〉 m 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ero● Act. 24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 17 Rom 14. 1. and 15. 1. Prou. 19. 11. 〈◊〉 Po● ●5 Duro con duro no● fa bon 〈…〉 o. August ser● 21. de verbi Apost 〈◊〉 hun● locu●●x August 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylactus Sic Hugo de S. Victor lio quast in Epist. ad Rom q. 308. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●omes 〈◊〉 Rom. 7. 23. Exod. 20 Deut. ●8 Deut 13 Rom. 8. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damaseenus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch in Alexandro Phil. 2. 3. Phil. 2. 10. v. 11. Psal. 8. 4. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 5. 16. Rom. 12. 17. Ioh. 5. 41. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 24. 26. Onus rationis ●●dden ●ae●onus inf●●mitatis participandae August contra ●cript Petil. lib. 3. Beda Lumbard i● hunc ●ocum Hugo d● S. Victor in 〈◊〉 qu●st 58. In se●●inali principio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Decima●io ●x●rci●●s 2. Cor. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
temple And thus hoping that these respects may entreate for a friendly acceptance at thy hands and that thou wilt afforde mee thy good word for my good will and a fauorable construction for my paines I commend it to the blessing of the Almightie and thee to his gratious protection vnfainedly wishing to thee as to my selfe the mercie of God in Christ Iesus August 10. Thine in the Lord Iesus R. C. Faults escaped in some copies are thus to be corrected Pag. lin Fault correct 25 30 building binding 70 28 degree decree 86 27 Christin Christian ibidem   refuse refused 105 4 Prov. 14. 24. 136 3 seach search 153 4 7 47 164 25 begunne beginne 176 24 happily haply 241 5 reuealed conceiued 360 33 it is 402 1 come came 440 16 maginations imaginatiōs 461 29 foole foote 469 23 notes motes 472 38 Recidauation Recidiuatiō 473 7 the thiefe thiefe 478 30 Quaerenda Qu●rendo 480 17 Supposes Supposals 482 25 perfunctorie defunctorie 482 37 th● the 490 38 heard hard 505 36 thought though 556 23 equall equall 559 26 our an 585 8 see seeing 612 3 Peter Peters 647 14 o other In the Epistle to the Reader for hath read haue CHAP. 1 THE EPISTLE OF S. PAVL TO THE GALATIANS The Argument TWo things are generally to be considered the occasion of this Epistle and the Scope The occasion that mooued Paul to write this Epistle was because certen false-Apostles slaundered him both in respect of his calling as also in respect of his doctrine teaching that he was no Apostle and that his doctrine was false And by this means they seduced the Churches of Galatia perswading them that iustification and saluation was partly by Christ and partly by the Lawe The Scope of the Epistle is in three things First the Apostle defends his calling in the first and second chapters Secondly he defends the truth of his doctrine teaching iustification by Christ alone And vpon this occasion he handles the greatest question in the world Namely what is that Justice whereby a sinner stands righteous before God in the 3. and 4. and in the beginning of the fift Thirdly he prescribes rules of good life in the fift and sixt chapters 1. Paul an Apostle not of men nor by man but by Iesus Christ and God the father who raised him from the dead THe Epistle hath 3. parts a Preface an Instruction and the Conclusion The preface is in the fiue first verses and it hath two parts an inscription and a Salutation The inscription sets downe the persons that write the Epistle and the persons to whome it is sent The persons that write are two Paul the Brethren Paul is mentioned in the first verse In which in comely and decent manner he commende himselfe to the Galatians by his office and function as Apostle that is one called to be a planter and founder of the Church of the newe Testament among the nations And because the title of an Apostle in generall signification may agree to all teachers therefore he goes further and sets downe the cause of his Apostleship And first he remooues the false causes in these words not of men that is not called by men as by Authors of my calling or not called by the authoritie of men And in this Paul opposeth himselse to the false-apostles who were called notby God but by men Againe he saith not by man that is not called of God in and by the ministerie of any meere man And in this Paul opposeth himselfe to all ordinarie ministers of the Gospell whatsoeuer who are called of God by man This done he propounds the true cause and author of his Apostleshippe of whome he was called immediately Against this it may be obiected that Paul was ordained to be an Apostle by the imposition of hāds of the Church of Antioch I answer that this imposition was rather a confirmation then a calling Secondly they of Antioch had not imposed hands on Paul but that they were commanded by the spirit of God Further Paul addes that he was called by Christ and God the father for three causes The first was to signifie the consent of will in the father and Christ. The second was to teach vs howe we are to conceiue of God namely that he is the Father and Iesus Christ and the Holy Ghost for the Godhead may not be conceiued out of the trinitie of persons The third is because the father is the fountaine of all good things that come to vs by Christ. Lastly he sets downe the effect or action of the Father who raised him from the dead and that for two causes One was to prooue Christ to be the naturall sonne of God for he professed himselfe to be so and that was one cause why he was crucified and put to death Nowe when he was dead if he had not bin the sonne of God indeede he had neuer risen againe but had perished in death And in that the father raised him againe to life he gaue testimonie that he was his own naturall sonne And therefore Paul saith that Christ was declared to be the sonne of God by the resurrection from the dead and he applies the words of the Psalme thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee to the time of Christs resurrection Againe Paul mentions the resurrection of Christ to note the time of his owne calling for though the rest of the Apostley were called when Christ was in the estate of humiliation yet Paul was called afterwards when Christ was entred into his kingdome and sate at the right hand of his father The vse First whereas Paul in the very fore front of his Epistle beginnes with his owne calling I gather that euery minister of the Gospell ought to haue a good and lawefull calling A man cannot preach vnlesse he be sent Christ tooke not vnto him the office of a Mediatour till he was called and sent of the Father Therefore the opinion of the Anabaptist is foolish and phantasticall who thinke that euery man may preach that will without any speciall calling They alleadge that the house of Stephanas ordaine themselues to the Ministerie of the Saints Answer the meaning of the place is not that they called themselues but that they set themselues apart to the ministerie of the Saints in the purpose and resolution of their owne hearts Againe they alleadge that all Christians in the newe Testament are Kings and Priests and the office of the priest is to teach I answer all are priests in that they are to offer themselues in sacrifice to God and to teach priuately within their places and callings as the master his seruants the father his children c and to make a confession of their faith when they are called so to doe Thirdly they alleadge that the power of the keies is giuen to the Church I answer it is indeed yet so as the vse and administration thereof belongs to the Ministers alone in the
present vs with their bodies and so must we present our bodies and soules to God The first ende of this giuing is that Christ might be a sacrifice and ransome for sinne The knowledge of this point is of great vse First it workes loue in vs on this manner We must in minde and meditation come to the crosse of Christ. Vpon the crosse we are to behold Christ crucified and in his death and passion his sacrifice in his sacrifice for the sinnes of his enemies his endles loue and the consideration of this loue will mooue vs to loue him againe and the father in him Secondly the consideration of his endles paines for our sinnes in the sacrifice of himselfe must breede in vs a godly sorrow for them for if he sorrow for them much more we Thirdly this knowledge is the true beginning of amendment of life For if Christ gaue himselfe to redeeme vs from iniquitie we must take vp a purpose of not sinning and neuer wittingly sinne more Lastly this knowledge is the foundation of comfort in them that truly turne to Christ. For the price is paid for their sinnes and they which are eased of their sinnes are blessed Psal. 32. 1. And in temptation they may boldly oppose the satisfaction of Christ against hell death the law and the iudgement of God and if at any time they sinne they must recouer themselues and remember that they haue an Advocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust 1. Ioh. 2. 1. And whereas Paul saith that Christ gaue himselfe for our sinnes he teacheth that euery man must applie this gift and sacrifice of Christ to himselfe This applying is done by faith and the right manner of application is this We must turne to Christ and in turning by faith applie and when we applie Christ by faith we must withall turne Faith goeth before conuersion in order of nature yet in the order of teaching and practise they are both together They which vse to applie Christ and his benefits vnto themselues and yet will not turne themselues to Christ misapplie and presume because the right apprehension of Christ is in the exercises of inuocation and repentance The second ende for which Christ gaue himselfe is that he might take vs out of this euill world And hence we are taught three things First that we must be grieued and displeased at the wickednes of the world as Lot was 2. Pet. 2. 7. Secondly that we must not fashion our selues to the wicked liues of the men of this world but we must in all things prooue what is the goodwill of God and doe it Thirdly seeing we are taken out of this world we must not dwell in it but our dwelling must be in heauen Reuel 13. 6. the beast out of the sea perfequutes them that dwell in heauen that is such as dwell on earth and for affection haue their conuersation in heauen And seeing this must be so we must not loue the world but loue the comming of Christ and euery day prepare our selues against the day of death that we may enter into our owne home And whereas Paul calls this world an euill world he doth it to signifie that there is nothing in men but sinne till they be regenerate yea that ciuill vertues and ciuill life that are excellent in the eyes of men are no better then sinnes before God It is the errour of the Papists that men may thinke and doe some thing that is morally good without grace The cause that mooued Christ to giue himselfe is the will of God Hence it appeares that God giues Christ to no man for his foreseene faith or works For there is no higher cause of the will of God The foreknowledge of things that may come to passe goes before will but the foreknowledge of things that shall come to passe and therefore the foreknowledge of faith and works followes the will of God Because things that shall come to passe are first decreed and then foreseene The will here mentioned is said to be the will of God that is the first person the father for when Christ is opposed to God then God signifies the father And he is most commonly called God because he is God without communication of the godhead from any whereas the Sonne and holy Ghost are God by communication of godhead from the father And this God is called our father by Paul And hereby he signifies that the scope of the Gospel is first to propound God vnto vs not only as a creator but as a father secōdly to inioyne vs to acknowledge him to be our father in Christ and consequently to carrie our selues as dutifull children to him in all subiection and obedience They which doe not this know not the intent of the Gospel and if they know it in deede they denie it The conclusion annexed to the salutation To whome be glorie for euer teacheth vs so oft as we remember the worke of our redemption by Christ so oft must we giue praise thāks to God yea all our liues must be nothing els but a testimonie of thankfulnes for our redemption And all our praise and thankes to God must proceede from the serious affection of the heart signified by the word Amen that is so be it 6. Imaruell that you are so soone remooued away to another Gospell from him that hath called you in the grace of Christ. 7. Which is not another Gospel but that some trouble you and intende to ouerthrowe the Gospell of Christ. Here beginnes the second part of the Epistle in which he giues instruction to the Galatians And it hath two parts one concernes doctrine the other manners The first part touching doctrine beginnes in this sixt verse and continues to the 13. verse of the 5. chapter The summe of it is a reproofe of the Galatians for reuolting from the Gospell and it is disposed in this syllogisme If I be immediately called of God to teach and my doctrine be true ye ought not to haue reuolted from my doctrine But I was called immediately of God to teach and my doctrine is true Therefore ye should not haue reuolted from my doctrine The proposition is not expressed because it was needelesse The minor is handled through the whole Epistle The Conclusion is in the 6. and 7. verses the meaning whereof I will briefely deliuer So soone that is presently after my departure remooued carried away by the perswasions of false teachers to another Gospel to another doctrine of saluation which in the speech and opinion of the false teachers is another manner of Gospel more sufficient and more excellent then that which Paul hath deliuered From him that is from me beeing an Apostle who haue called you by preaching the Gospell of Christ. In the grace that is haue called you freely without any desert of yours to be partakers of the fauour of God in Christ. Which is not another which pretended Gospell of the false Apostles is not indeed another gospell from
without repentance in the counsell of seperation and in the pleasure of God Thirdly by obseruing well this order we may attaine to the assurance of our election For if thou hast beene called and hast in trueth answered to the calling of God by obedience thou maist assure thy selfe of thy seperation from the womb to euerlasting life because this order is as it were a golden chaine in which all the linkes are inseperably vnited Lastly the consideration of this order serues to mortifie the pride arrogancie of our hearts in that it ascribes all to God and nothing to man in the cause of saluation Read Ezech. 16. 63. Againe by the consideration of these 3. causes we gather that God hath determined what he will doe with euery man and that he hath in his eternall counsell assigned euery man his office and condition of life For there is in God a pleasure whereby he may doe with euery man what he will And by his eternall counsell he seperates euery man from the very wombe to one calling or other and accordingly he calles them in time by giuing giftes and will to doe that for which they were appointed And this I vnderstand of all lawfull callings in the familie church or common wealth Thus Christ was called from the wombe and set apart to be a mediatour Isai. 47. 1. and Iohn 6. 27. Ieremie to be a prophet Ierem. 1. 5. Christ is said to giue Apostles Prophets Pastors teachers Eph. 4. 11. God sent Ioseph vnto Egipt to be the gouernour thereof and a releeuer of Iacobs familie Gen. 45. In this regard the Medes and Persians are said to be the sanctified ones of God Isai. 13. 3. and the men of his counsell Isa. 46. 11. The vse Hence we are all taught to walke in our callings with diligence and good conscience Because they are assigned vs of God Hence we are taught to yeeld obedience to our rulers teachers because they that are our rulers and teachers were seperated from the wombe to be so and that by God himselfe without the will of man Hence we may gather assurance of Gods protection and assistance in our callings for in that he hath appointed vs our callings he will also defend vs in them 2. Cor. 3. 46. Isay. 49. 2. Hence we may learne patience and contentation in all the miseries and troubles of our callings for in what calling soeuer thou art thou wast ordained to it by God from thy mothers wombe Thinke on this Hēce we learne thankfulnes to god because our calings giftes and the exequution of our callings is wholy of God and this Paul signifies when he saith that our seperation to our offices and callings was from our first conception Hence we learne to depend on Gods prouidence for the time to come For if he prouided our callings when we were not he will much more aide and blesse vs in them now while we haue a beeing Read Psalme 22. 8. 9. Poore parents that cannot leaue landes and liuings to their children after their decease let them comfort themselues in this that there children are from their mothers wombe seperated to some good office and condition of life by the wisdome of God and that a good office or calling is better then land and liuing Thirdly it appeares hence that the time of all euentes is determined in the counsell of God For God determines with himselfe the time in which he will call and conuert Paul By this we are taught in our praiers not to limit God to any time for the accōplishment of our requests for the disposition of time is his and that is to be left to his wisdome Againe in our afflictions and temptations we may not make hast for helpe and deliuerance before the time but waite the leasure of God who hath decreede the time of deliuerance He that beleeues makes no hast Isai. 28. 16. Habacuk must waite because the vision is for a time appointed Hab. 2. 1. Dauids eyes and strength failed in waiting on God Psal. 69. 3. Daniel waites on God 70. yeares and then praies for deliuerance out of captiuitie the time beeing expired This serues to discouer the wickednes of them that beeing in any kind of miserie cannot staie the leasure of God till he deliuer them by good meanes but they will haue present remedie though it be from the deuill and if helpe cannot be had when they desire they presently make away themselues The second point is the Forme of the calling or conuersion of Paul in these wordes to reuele his sonne in me that is to teach me the doctrine of the redemption of mankind by the sonne Iesus Christ. Here I consider to whome reuelation is made and how For the first reuelation of the sonne is made to cruell and persequuting Paul a desperate sinner Hence euery man can gather that God hath mercy for great and notorious offenders as for Paul and such like and the collection is good For God is much in sparing Isai. 55. 7. And yet here it must be remembred that all desperate offenders shall not finde mercie vnlesse they be great in their repentance as God is great in mercy For Gods mercy hath a double effect in vs one is remission of sinne by the imputaton of the merit of Christ the other the mortification of originall sinne by his efficacie And these two be inseperable as we see in Paul on whome God shewed great mercie whose repentance also was notable As the woman Iohn 7. had many sinnes forgiuen her so shee loued much v. 47. By this we see the great and common abuse of the mercy of God Men euery where presume vpon the greatnes of gods mercie and they make Christ a packe-horse lading him with their burdens and there is little or no amendment of life The manner that God vsed in reuealing the sonne to Paul stands in two things Preparation and Instruction Preparation is a worke of God whereby he humbled Paul subdued the pride and stubbernenesse of his heart and made him tractable and teachable This humiliation is outward or inward The outward was partly by lightening from heauen that cast him to the earth and made him blinde and partly by a voice reproouing him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me The inward humiliation was in a sight and horrour for his sinnes The sinnes that God reuealed to him are these the first was an height of wickednesse that in persecuting the Church he made warre euen against God himselfe Secondly God made manifest vnto him the meaning of the tenth commandement and that secret lust without consent of will was sinne Rom. 7. 7. And thus the lawe killed him that was aliue in his owne opinion when he was a Pharise The instruction whereby God taught the same to Paul hath two parts The first is the call of God whereby he inuites Paul to become a member of the sonne of God And this he did first by propounding vnto him the commandement of the
the better man Outward things doe not commende vs to god And it is the spirituall kindred by meanes of faith and our new birth that bringes vs into fauour with God Mathew 12. 49. 20 Nowe the things which I write I speake before God I lie not Before Paul hath auouched sundrie thinges of himselfe that he preached in Arabia Damascus that he went thence to Ierusalem that he did not learne the Gospell there of Peter Iames or any other Apostle Now some men might happily say that these sayings of his are but false and fabulous auochments therefore in this verse Paul defends himselfe and iustifies his owne sayings by a diuine testimony The wordes containe 2. partes An answer to an obiection concealed on this manner I may be thought to lie but indeede I lie not The second is a confirmation by oath Before God I speake it Touching the first parte there be two pointes to be handled what is a lie And whether it be a sinne or no A lie is when we speake the contrarie to that we thinke with an intention to deceiue More plainly in a lie there be 4. thinges the first is to auouch and affirme that which is false The second is to speake with a double harte Psal. 12. 2. That is to speake against knowledge and conscience as when a man saith that is true which he knowes to be false or that is false which he knowes to be true This makes a lie to be a lie and this distinguisheth an vntruth from a lie For here it must be obserued that a man may speake that which is false and not lie namely if he speake that which is false thinking it to be true For then though he erre and is deceiued yet he speakes not against conscience and consequently he speakes no lie Againe a man may speake that which is true and yet lie for if he speake that which is true indeede and speake it as a trueth and yet thinke it to be false he lies indeed because he speakes the truth against his conscience The third thing in a lie is a minde or intention to deceiue or hurte For in the ninth commandement that is a false testimonie that is against our neighbour The 4. pointe is that he which speakes that which is false vpon a vanitie of minde without reasonable cause is a lier Thus bosters flatterers are liers And these are the things which concurre in the making of a lie For the better conceiuing of the nature of a lie we must put difference between it and sundrie other things incident to speach First we must put difference betwene a lie and a Parable or figure In a parable indeed there is something supposed or fained as for example when the trees are brought in conferring and consulting aboute their king Iud. 9. 8. neuerthelesse a parable is farre from falsehoode or lying for by things fained it signifies and declares an vnfained truth Againe difference must be put betwene a lie and the concealement of a thing for it is one thing to speake against our knowledge and another to speake that which we knowe And concealements if there be a reasonable cause and if it be not necessary for vs to reueale the thing concealed are not vnlawfull Thus Abram speakes the truth in parte calling Sara his sister and conceales it in part not confessing her to be his wife Gen. 12. 10. Thus Samuel by Gods appointment reueales that he came to Gilgall to offer sacrifice and conceales the annointment of Dauid that he might saue his life 1. Sam. 16. 5. Ionas preaches that Niniue shall be destroyed within 40. daies and he conceales the condition of repentance The like did Isaie to Ezechias Isa. 38. 1. Thirdly a difference must be made between lying and fayning which some call simulation not dissembling but rather sembling if I may so terme it And that is when something is spoken not contrary but beside or diuers to that which we thinke And this kind of fayning if it be not to the preiudice of truth against the glory of God and the good of our neighbour haue some conuenient and reasonable cause is not vnlawfull It was not the will and counsell of God to destroy the Israelites for their idolatrie And he doth not speake vnto Moses any thing contrary to his will but something that is beside or diuers vnto it when he saith let me alone that my wrath may waxe ho●● and I may destroy them Exod. 32. 10. And this he spake that he might stirre vp Moses to feruencie in praier for the Israelites and the Israelites to vnfained repentance Iosua hauing besiged Ai meant not to flie yet doth lie faine a flight that he might draw his enemies out of the citie destroy thē Ios. 8. 5. There is a kind of deceit called dolus bonus that is a good deceit and of this kind was the act of Iosua Thus Physitians for their good vse to deceiue the senses of their impotent patients Thus parēts insinuate vnto their childrē terrible things of the beare and bull-begger that they may keepe them from places of hurt and danger And this may be done without fault for it is one thing to contrary the truth and an other to speake or doe something diuerse vnto it without contrariety The second point is whether to lie be a sinne or no the answer is yea For euen in this place Paul puts lying from himselfe and that with an oath The deuill is said to be the author of all lies Ioh. 8. And it is Gods commandement that we should put away lying Eph. 4. 25. It is obiected that the sporting and officious lie is not against charitie to the hurt of any but for the good of men I answer first though it be not to the hurt of our neighbour yet is it to the hurt and preiudice of trueth Secondly they are deceiued to whom these lies are told Thirdly he hurts himselfe that tels a lie though it be for the good of men for when he speakes the truth indeede he is lesse beleeued Lastly though these kind of lies seeme to be good in respect of their ende yet are they not good in respect of their nature and constitution For in speaking there should be a conformitie and consent betweene the tongue and the minde which is not when any lie is vttered Secondly it is obiected that the Egyptian Midwiues saued the male children of the Israelites and Rahab the spies by lying Exod. 1. 19. Ios. 2. 5. and that they are commended for this I answer we must distinguish the worke done from the ex equution of the worke The worke in sauing the children and the spies was a fruite of faith and the feare of God and it is cōmended but the manner of putting these workes in exequution by lying is not approoued If it be said that faith and the feare of God cannot stand with a manifest sinne I say againe that faith and the feare of
flesh I liue by the faith of the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Whereas Paul said before I am dead to the law here he declares the reason of it when he saith I am crucified with Christ. Againe here Paul sets downe the true preparation to spirituall life For God first kills and then he makes aliue And the measure of spirituall life is according to the decay of originall sinne This preparation stands in two things the first is fellowship with Christ in his crosse and Passion in these words I am crucified with Christ. The second is Ab●egation or Annihilation as some call it in these words Not I any more I am crucified with Christ. For the better vnderstanding of these words we must obserue first that Paul speakes not this of himselfe particularly but he speakes in the person of the Christian Iewes before whome he now reasoneth with Peter nay in the person of all beleeuers For all that beleeue are buried into his death Rom. 6. 4. Secondly it must be obserued that Paul speakes this of himselfe not as he is a man consisting of bodie and soule but as he is a sinner carrying about him the bodie of sinne Rom. 6. v. 6. Further it may be demanded vpon what ground he should say I am crucified with Christ Ans. There be two reasons of this speach One is that Christ vpon the crosse stood not as a priuate person but as a publicke person in the roome place and stead of all the Elect and therefore when he was crucified all beleeuers were crucified in him as in the Parlament when the Burgesse giues his voice the whole corporation is said to consent by him and in him The second reason is this In the conuersion of a sinner there is a reall donation of Christ and all his benefits vnto vs and there is a reall vnion whereby euery beleeuer is made one with Christ. And by vertue of this vnion the crosse and passion of Christ is as verily made ours as if if we had beene crucified in our owne persons Hereupon Paul saith in the time present I am crucified with Christ There are like phrases in Paul We are dead with Christ we are risen with him we sit with him in heauenly places Eph. 2. 6. Col. 3. 1. and they are in the same manner to be expounded Moreouer the benefits that arise of this communion with Christ in his passion are two One is Iustification from all our sinnes Rom. 6. 7. The second is Mortification of sinne by the vertue of the death of Christ after we are ingrafted into him Thus much of the meaning The vse Superstitious persons take occasion by the passion of Christ to stirre vp themselues to sorrow compassion and teares by considering the pitifull handling of Christ the sorrow that pearced the heart of the virgin Marie and the crueltie of the Iewes But this is a humane vse that may be made of euery historie The right vse is this we are in minde and meditation to consider Christ crucified and first we are to beleeue that he was crucified for vs. This beeing done we must goe yet further and as it were spread our selues on the crosse of Christ beleeuing and withall beholding our selues crucified with him Thou wilt say this is a hard matter I cannot doe it I say againe this is the right practise of faith striue therefore to be setled in this that the bodie of thy sinne is crucified with Christ. Pray instantly by asking seeking knocking that thou maist thus beleeue This faith and perswasion is of endles vse First it is the foundation of thy comfort If thou beleeue thy selfe to be crucified with Christ thou shalt see thy selfe freed from the dominion of the law and sinne from hell death and condemnation and to thy great comfort shall see thy selfe to triumph ouer all thy spirituall enemies For this Christ doth Col. 2. 14. and thou dost the same if thou be setled in this that thou art crucified with him Secondly vpon this perswasion thou shalt feele the vertue of the death of Christ to kill sinne in thee and to raise thy dead soule to spirituall life When the Sunamites child was dead Elisha went and lay vpon him applying face to face hand to hand and foote to foote and then his flesh waxed warme and reuiued 1. King 4. 34. euen so applie thy selfe to Christ crucified hand to hand foote to foote heart to heart and thou shalt feele in thy selfe a death of sinne and the heat of spirituall life to warme and inflame thy dead heart Thirdly if thou beleeue thy selfe to be crucified with Christ thou shalt see the lēgth the breadth the height the depth of the loue of god in Christ. For thy sinnes are the swords and the speares that crucified Christ and yet thou hast all the benefit of his passion Lastly if thou canst beleeue that thou art crucified with Christ thou shalt further be assured that he is partner with thee in all thy miseries and afflictions to ease thee and to make thee to beare them 1. Pet. 4. 13. Col. 1. 24. The duties hence to be learned are these First if thou be crucified with Christ then must thou applie thy heart to crucifie the bodie of corruption in thee by praier fasting by auoiding the occasions by abstaining frō the practise of sinne and by all good meanes Behold a man hanged vpon a gybbet Thou seest he hath satisfied the law and there is no further iudiciall proceeding against him and withall thou seest how he ceaseth from his thefts murders blasphemies euen so if thou canst behold thy selfe spred vpon the crosse of Christ and crucified with him there will be in thee a new minde and disposition and thou wilt cease from thine old offences Againe beeing crucified with Christ thou must be conformable to Christ in thy sufferings He suffered in loue and the more his passion increased the more he shewed his loue euen so in thine afflictions and sufferings thy loue to God man must be increased though man be the cause of thine afflictions Secondly Christ suffered in obedience Not my will but thy will be done euen so in all thy sufferings thou must resigne thy selfe to God and quiet thy selfe in his will Thirdly Christ suffered in all humilitie humbling himselfe to the death of the crosse euen so we in and vpon our afflictions are to humble our selues vnder the mightie hand of God confessing our sinnes and intreating for pardon Fourthly he suffered in faith as man depending on his fathers goodnes euen in the middest of his passion euen so are we to doe Fifthly he went on constantly in his sufferings to the very death euen so are we to suffer in the resisting of sinne euen vnto the shedding of our blood Lastly the principall care of Christ was to see the fruit of his sufferings so when we are distressed our care must rather be to see the fruit of our distresse then to
pray for this gift at Gods hand For power to suffer is the gift of God Phil. 1. 29. and we must obserue the commandement of God not to feare the terrours of men Reu. 2. 10. 1. Pet. 3. 14. And for this cause we must as Peter saith sanctifie God in our hearts beeing assured by our faith of the presence protection and prouidence of God When Paul saith Haue ye suffered so many things he shewes that we must endure manifold miseries in this life Iacob said to Pharao his daies were few and euill Many are the afflictions of the righteous Psal. 34. 20. Christ saith Take vp thy crosse euery day Luk. 9. 23. and thereby he signifies that euery new day that comes ouer our heads we must looke for a new crosse And for this cause it is not enough to be patient for a fit but we must shew all patience and long suffering and that with ioyfulnes Col. 1. 11. When Paul saith Haue ye suffered so many things in vaine he signifies that our sufferings are of great vse vnlesse our sinnes be the hindrance It may then be demanded what is the vse of our sufferings The Papists answer that in our baptisme or first conuersion Christ sufferings doe all abolish the whole fault and punishment but if we sinne after our conuersion then they say Christs sufferings abolish the fault and the eternall punishment and our owne sufferings abolish the temporall punishment But this doctrine leslens and obscures the mercie of God and it must be obserued that Paul holds all their sufferings to be in vaine that seeke remission of sinnes or iustification in any thing out of Christ. Now we for our parts make fiue other vses of our sufferings First they serue for triall of men that it may appeare what is hidden in their hearts Deut. 8. 2. Secondly they serue for the correction of things amisse in vs. 1. Cor. 11. 23. Thirdly they serue as documents and warnings to others specially in publike persons thus Dauid suffers many things after repentance for his murther and adulterie Fourthly they are markes of adoption if we be content to obey God in them Heb. 12. 7. Lastly they are the troaden and beaten way to the kingdom of heauen Act. 14. 23. When Paul saith If they be in vaine we are to obserue his moderation He reprooues and terrifies the Galatians yet so as he is carefull to preserue the hope of mercie in them and the hope of their amendment in himselfe The like hath bin the practise of the Prophets Ionas preacheth yet fourtie daies and Niniuie shall be destroied but withall he addes It may be the Lord will repent and turne from his fierce wrath Ion. 3. 9. Peter saith to Simon Magus Thou art in the gall of bitternes but withall he addes Pray God that the thought of thy heart may be forgiuen thee Act. 8. 21. See the like Ioel 2. 14. and Amos 5. 15. And thus are Ministers of the Gospel to delay and qualifie their reproofes and censures 5 He therefore that ministreth to you the spirit and worketh miracles among you doth he it by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith These words are a repetition of the second verse whence the exposition must be fetched The words and worketh miracles among you are added and they carrie this meaning That God gaue to the Galatians not onely the spirit of adoption but also other extraordinarie gifts of the spirit as to speake with strange tongues to cure diseases and such like Repetitions in Scripture are not idle but of great vse and signifie vnto vs the necessitie of the thing repeated and the infallible certentie of it The substance therefore of this verse must carefully be remembred and that is this Ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine therefore it is true and of God The argument is of great vse For by it we come to an infallible assurance of the Certentie of the Scriptures and of true religion deriued thence The Galatians are now reuolted from Pauls doctrine and they erre in the foundation and yet Paul saith in the time present He that ministreth the spirit vnto you Hence it appeares that falls of infirmitie in the child of God doe not vtterly extinguish the spirit but onely grieue or make sadde the spirit Againe Paul here teacheth that God is the onely and proper author of miracles For he that ministreth the spirit worketh miracles namely God A miracle is a worke aboue the strength of nature● therefore it can be effected of none but the author of nature It may be obiected the Apostles Prophets and others had a gift to worke miracles Iosua commanded the sunne to stand Ios. 10. 12. and Elias commanded fire to come downe from heauen 2. king 1. Ans. God neuer gaue to any man power to worke and effect a miracle either mediately or immediately The gift was the faith of miracles The faith was grounded vpon reuelation and the reuelation was that God himselfe would worke such or such a miracle when they praied commanded or imposed hands Men therefore properly are but the mouth of God and messengers to signifie what he will doe Againe it may be obiected that the deuill can worke miracles Ans. He can worke a wonder or things extraordinarie in respect of the ordinarie course of nature Thus he caused fire to fall from heauen and he caused vlcers to arise in the bodie of Iob and that true vlcers And this he did by the force of nature better knowne to him then all the world But as for a true miracle that exceedes the strength of nature he cannot possibly doe it no not Christ himselfe as man though he be exalted aboue all men and angels By this we see that they are deceiued who thinke that the deuill can make raine thunder and lightning Indeede when the matter of raine and thunder is prepared by God he can hasten it and make it more terrible but raine and thunder he cannot make for that is indeede as much as any miracle Againe it is a falsehood to thinke that Alchimists are able to turne baser mettals into gold For it is a worke of creation to turne a creature of one kind into a creature of an other kind It is also as foolish to imagine that witches by the power of the deuill are able to turne themselues into catts and other creatures None can doe this but God that made the creature Here againe we see the vse of miracles that is to confirme doctrine in the Apostolike Churches That their vse is further to confirme doctrine euen at this day it cannot be prooued Lastly here in the Galatians we see what an easie thing it is to fall from God from our faith and allegiance to him They were taught by Paul they had receiued the spirit of adoption they were enabled to worke miracles and yet for all this they fall away to an other Gospel They must be a looking glasse to vs. In peace we
me doth it Here marke Paul calls concupiscence in himselfe after regeneration sinne and that properly because he saith it is the same that maketh men to sinne And Col. 3. 5. he saith Mortifie your earthly members and among the rest he nameth euill concupiscence And to the Ephesians 4. 22. Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mindes Therefore after baptisme some portions remaine still of the old man or of originall sinne S. Iohn saith 1. Ioh. 1. 8. If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues Answer is made that this is spoken of veniall or small sinnes but how can they be small sinnes that are to be washed away with the blood of Christ as he saith v. 7. And if these words be spoken of infants as they are then must Concupiscence be a sinne in them for they haue no actuall sinnes Lastly Christ saith Ioh. 13. 10. He that is all washed must haue his feete that is his carnall affections washed Here obserue two things One that defilements of sinne remaine in them that are washed The second that they are after the first washing to be done away by Christ and not by the acts of our pennance The grounds of Popish doctrine in this point are two The first is this They make three degrees of Concupiscence The first is the pronesse in the flesh to rebell against the law of the minde or the pro●esse to euill The second stands in the first motions to sinne which goe before consent of will The third stands in acts of lust ioyned with consent of will This third they say is forbidden in the moral law which forbids and condemnes voluntarie concupiscence and the two first are not Because as they speake concupiscence it selfe with the first motions are not in mans power and therefore they are rather to be tearmed defects or infirmities then sinnes and that men are no more to be blamed for them then for the diseases of their bodies Ans. The doctrine is false for it is an euident truth that Concupiscence with the first motions thereof to euill is condemned in the Morall law It is a Principle in expounding the law where any actuall sinne is forbidden there all causes occasions furtherances thereof are likewise forbidden Therefore considering actuall concupiscence ioyned with consent is forbidden in the law Originall concupiscence with the first motions thereof beeing causes of the former are likewise forbidden And Paul saith he had not knowne Lust to be sinne vnlesse the law had said Thou shalt not lust Rom. 7. 7. Now he was a Doctor of the law and knew that lust with consent was a sinne for thus much the light of nature teacheth therfore the law speakes of an higher degree of lust namely of lust going before consent The second ground is this When sinne is remitted it doth not make men guiltie but ceaseth to be a fault Originall sinne therefore ceaseth to be sinne after baptisme Ans. Though actuall guilt be taken away yet potentiall guilt remaineth namely an aptnes in Originall sinne to make men guiltie and though it be not the fault of this or that person yet it is a fault in nature or as it is considered in it selfe The vse If Originall sinne remaine after baptisme to the death then we must humble our selues and vse to the very death the plea of mercie and pardon denying our selues and resting on Christ. Againe if persons baptised be sinners to the death it may be demaunded what difference there is betweene the godly and vngodly Ans. In them that are regenerate there is a sorrow for their inward corruptions and for their sinnes past with a detestation of them and withall there is a Purpose in them to sinne no more and with this purpose there is ioyned an endeauour to please God in all his commandements so as if they doe sinne they can say with good conscience that they sinned against their purpose and resolution This cannot the vngodly man doe The third point is how baptisme conferres grace Ans. It conferres grace because it is a meanes to giue and exhibit to the beleeuing minde Christ with his benefits and this it doth by his signification For it serues as a particular and infallible certificate to assure the partie baptised of the forgiuenes of his sinnes and of his eternall saluation And whereas the Minister in the name of God applies the promise of mercie to him that is baptised it is indeede as much as if God should haue made a particular promise to him In this regard baptisme may well be said to conferre grace as the Kings letters are said to saue the life of the malefactour when they doe but signifie to him and others that the kings pleasure is to shew fauour Againe baptisme may be saide to conferre grace because the outward washing of the bodie is a token or Pledge of the grace of God and by this pledge faith is confirmed which is an instrument to apprehend or receiue the grace of God And this confirmation is made by a kind of reasoning in the minde on this manner He that vseth the signe aright shall receiue the thing signified I saith the partie baptised beeing of yeares vse the signe aright in faith and repentance therefore I shall receiue the thing signified remission of sinnes and life euerlasting A king saith to his subiect He that brings the head of such a traytour shall haue a thousand poundes Well the head of the foresaid traytour is cut off and he that hath the head may say Here is a thousand pounds or this will bring me a thousand pounds because it is vnto him as a pledge vpon the kings word of the reward of a thousand pounds And so is the washing in baptisme an infallible pledge to him that beleeues of the pardon of his sinnes Thus doe the sacraments conferre grace and no otherwise One reason for many may be this The word of God confirs grace for it is the power of God to saluation to them that beleeue and this it doth by signifying the will of God by the eare to the mind now euery sacrament is the word of God made visible to the eye the sacrament therefore confirs grace by vertue of his signification and by reason it is a pledge by the appointment of God of his mercie and goodnes It may be said a sacrament is not only a signe and a seale but also an instrument to conuay the grace of God to vs. Answer It is not an instrument hauing the grace of God tyed vnto it or shut vp in it but an instrument to which grace is present by assistance in the right vse thereof because in with the right vse of the sacrament God conferres grace and thus is it an instrument and no otherwise that is a morall and not a physicall instrument The doctrine of the Papist is that the sacrament conferres grace by the worke done that is that the outward action of the Minister conferres grace by his owne force when
thy selfe vnder the curse of the law and for thine offences by it bound ouer to euerlasting death If thou should est be proclaimed an Outlaw or a writ of rebellion should be serued on thee it would make thee at thy wits ende Now behold the law proclaimes thee a traytour and rebell against God through heauen and earth The law shuts heauen against thee it sets hell and death wide open for thee and it armes all the creatures of God against thee Therefore it stands thee in hand to looke about thee and to flie from the sentence of the lawe to the throne of grace for mercie and forgiuenes It hath bin the fashion of all holy men to acquaint themselues with this one lesson that they were by nature vnder the law specially then when they were to humble themselues in the presence of God Daniel in his praier ascribes shame and confusion to himselfe Dan. 9. according to the voice and crie of the law and the prodigall sonne confesseth that he had sinned against his father and against heauen and that he was vnworthy to be accounted a child of God according to the law iudging and condemning himselfe The third point is what is the price wherby men are bought or redeemed from vnder the law Ans. The obedience of the Sonne whereby he stood in subiection to the law for vs as Paul signifies in the words immediatly going before It may be said how can the obedience of one man be a price of redemption for an other I answer we must consider Christ not as a meere man but as God-man and by this meanes his Obedience is of infinit merit and efficacie Againe we must consider him not as a priuate but as a publike person representing all the Elect in his obedience to his father And by this meanes his Obedience ferues for all that beleeue in him Againe it may be alledged that the law saith Thou shalt loue thou shalt not lust c. And the soule that sinnes that soule shall die Ezech. 18. 20. And a man shall not redeeme the life of his brother Psal. 49. 7. Ans. The law requires that euery man performe obedience and make satisfaction in his owne person and the law knows no other obedience But this must be considered that the law is but one part of the reuealed will of God and that the Gospel is an other distinct part reuealing more then the law euer knew And the Gospel teacheth a Translation of the law in respect of obedience from our persons to the person of the Mediatour and thereby it addes an Exception to the law The fourth point is who are partakers of this Redemption Ans. They which see and feele and bewaile their condition that they are vnder the law and flie from the sentence thereof to the throne of grace for mercie Christ came to saue sinners Matth. 9. that is such as are conuicted by the law and know themselues to be sinners He offers ease to them that trauell and are heauie laden Matth. 11. 28. He preacheth deliuerance to captiues Luk. 4. 18. Here we are to bewaile the miserie of our people that know not themselues to be vnder the law nay they loue and delight to be vnder it For they alleadge for themselues that they say their praiers duly and truly that they meane well to God-ward and deale truly with men and therfore they thinke God will haue mercy on them and haue them excused for all their offences The last point is what benefits arise of this deliuerance from vnder the law Ans. They which turne to God and beleeue in Christ reape foure benefits hereby The first is that no sinne shall haue dominion ouer them Rom. 6. 14. Here marke by the way that they which are in Christ cannot wholly fall from grace For they which wholly fall away are vnder the dominion of sinne The second is that God will accept the indeauour to obay for obedience because they are freed from the rigour of the law Read Malac. 3. 17. The third is that they haue libertie to liue and serue God without feare of damnation or any other euill Luk. 1. 74. The last is that afflictions cease to be curses and are turned to blessings and for this cause they are delaied and qualified for the good of them which are afflicted Psal. 89. 32. J will correct them that offend with a rodde but I will not take my mercie from them Prou. 3. 11. Grieue not for the correction of the Lord for he loueth whome he correcteth Ierem. 10. 24. Correct vs in iudgement and powre forth thy wrath vpon the nations that haue not knowne thee This must teach men that professe or teach Christ not to be discouraged when they are abused railed on slaundered or cursed For if they be from vnder the law and so from vnder the sting of a guiltie conscience nothing shall hurt them They must be content for a while to suffer the snatches and bitings of the deuill for in the ende his head shall be bruised in peeces To ende this point it may be said if we that beleeue be not vnder the law then we may liue and die as we list Ans. We are free from the law as a yoke but not free from it as it is the rule of obedience and good life And because we are freed from the bondage of the law therefore we must be a law to our selues we must be voluntaries Psal. 110. 4. without constraint freely yeelding subiection to the will of God and not for feare of hell and the last iudgement The third and last degree is the Fruition of adoption in these words that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes Here two questions are to be considered The first is How the Church of the new Testament is saide to receiue the adoption which was before receiued in the old Testament Ans. In scripture a thing is often said to be done when it is done more fully and plentifully Christ tells Nathanael that he shall see heauen open Ioh. 1. 51. that is more plainly opened For it was not shut in the old Testament And the holy Ghost was not yet Ioh. 7. 39. that is in the full measure And the way into the Holiest was not open while the Tabernacle was standing Hebr. 9. 8. that is plainly made manifest And in this place Beleeuers of the new Testament receiue the Adoption because they receiue it in a more full and plentifull manner in that the spirit of children is powred forth vpon them in larger measure whether we regard Illumination or the gifts of regeneration This must teach vs that liue in these latter daies to put on the condition of sonnes and daughters of God in reuerence obedience and thankefulnes Butalas among the multitude it is farre otherwise For the most liue euen as Atheists in ignorance according to the lusts of their owne hearts The faith and repentance which they professe is but Ceremoniall faith and Repentance The second question
ouer vs. Thus Dauid knew God when he saide that he numbred his flittings and put his teares into his bottle Psal. 56. 8. Thirdly we must know God in respect of his will in all things to be done and to be suffered and this is the right knowledge of God to haue regard to his will Rom. 12. 2. Eph 5. 17. Dauid saith All thy lawes are before me 2. Sam. 22. 23. And when Shemei reuiled he spake thus He raileth because God biddes him raile 2. Sam. 6. 10. Lastly we must know and acknowledge God in the power which he shewed in the death and resurrection of Christ. Read and consider Eph. 1. 17. where Paul placeth the knowledge of God in two things in the knowledge of the riches of eternall life and in an experimentall knowledge of the vertue of the resurrection of Christ in our selues The third propertie is that this knowledge must be an effectuall and liuely knowledge working in vs new affections and inclinations He that saith he knowes God and keepes not his commandements makes him a liar 1. Ioh. 2. 4. and 3. 6. Tit. 2. last The vse Seeing the conuersion of a sinner stands in this spirituall knowledge of God we must be stirred vp to seeke to know God according as he will be knowne of vs. We desire to serue God and we cannot serue him vnlesse we know him nay so long as we know him not we doe nothing but serue the false gods of our owne hearts Againe we desire life eternall and this is life in right manner to acknowledge God Ioh. 17. 3. And the whol matter of our boasting must be the knowledge of God Ierem. 9. 24. God himselfe ministreth vnto me a further Argument to mooue you to this desire namely by the moouing of the earth yesterday For though Philosophers ascribe all to nature yet the truth is that the trembling and shogging of the earth is a signe of the great and extraordinarie anger of God The cause of this anger is that we know not God neither doe we for the most part care to know him We haue had the Gospel long but we bring forth but small fruits For this cause the earth in his trembling doth as it were groane to be disburdened of so rebellious a nation and it doth aster a sort craue leaue of God that it may deuoure a sinnefull people as it once deuoured Dathā and the companie of Abiram Now our dutie is in this iudgement of God to acknowledge his maiestie his anger and his iustice and with feare and trembling to humble our selues for our sinnes past thereby to preuent his anger to come The earth a bruite and dumme creature in his kinde is become a preacher vnto vs and his trembling must teach vs to tremble in our hearts and to sinne no more Againe if we must know God we must remember God and Christ and as we must know God so must we remember him Now we must not knowe Christ according to the flesh 2. Cor. 5. 17. and therefore we may not remember Christ according to the flesh that is in any worldly and carnall manner This therefore is not to keepe a Memorie of Christ to spend twelue daies in reuell and riot in masking and mumming in carding and dicing as many doe this is rather to burie the memorie of Christ and to doe homage to the god of pleasure Of them that saide Let vs eate drinke and sleepe Paul faith thus Awake and doe righteously for some of you doe not know God 1. Cor. 15. 34. Paul saith further But rather ye are knowne of God The knowledge whereby God knowes men stands in two things his Election of them to his speciall loue 2. Tim. 1. 19. and the Execution of Election whereby he makes men his peculiar people by calling iustifying and sanctifying of them Tit. 2. v. 14. Hence obserue first that Gods Election is the roote of all the gifts of God in vs. We know God because he first knows vs. Paul saith that we were elected that we might be holy Eph. 1. 4. Therefore we are not elected as some teach either for our faith or according to our faith but to our faith that is Elected that we might beleeue Secondly hence we learne that we can neither thinke will or doe that which is good vnlesse God preuent vs with his grace God must first vouchsafe to acknowledge vs before we can acknowledge him Ioh. 10. 14. Preuenting grace is twofold The first and the second The first when God in our first conuersion takes away the stonie heart and puts a fleshie heart in the roome The second is after we are regenerate for then God still preuents vs with good motions and desires Of both read Ezech. 36. 26. Some teach that if we doe that which we can God will giue vs his grace but this is false for then we should preuent God Thirdly by this we see that the workes of grace in God imprint their image in the hearts of them that belong to God And this is worth the marking There is a knowledge in God whereby he knowes who are his and this knowledge brings forth an other knowledge in vs whereby we know God for our God There is an Election in God which workes in the Elect an other Election whereby they choose God for their God The loue whereby God loues vs workes in vs an other loue whereby we loue God 1. Ioh. 4. 19. Christ first apprehends vs and this apprehension of his workes in vs the apprehension of faith wherby we lay hold vpon him Phil. 3. 12. When Christ makes intercession for vs in heauen there is another intercession wrought in our hearts by the spirit whereby we crie Abbafather Rom. 8. 26. The death of Christ hath a vertue in it to worke in vs the death of sinne Thus doth the spirit of God seale vs to the day of our redemption By this may we know that we belong to God if we finde any impression of the grace of God in vs. The sunne by his light shines vpon vs and by the same light we view and behold the sunne Lastly here is the foundation of true comfort Our faith doth not saue vs because it is a perfect vertue but because it apprehends a perfect obiect namely the perfect obedience of Christ. So then if our faith erre not in his obiect but be rightly fixed on the true causes of our saluation though it be but a weake faith and doe no more but cause vs to will desire and indeauour to apprehend Christ it is true faith and iustifieth the weakenesse of it shall not hinder our saluation which stāds not in this that we knowe God but in this that God knowes vs whose knowledge is perfect and cannot faile Againe our saluation stands not in our apprehension of Christ but in Christs apprehending of vs. Phil. 3. 12. This knowledge of God whereby he knowes vs hath two properties First it is speciall whereby he knowes all the elect euen
in respect of iustification as Paul shewes at large in this Epistle and yet the Popish doctrine is that we are to be iustified by the workes of the law Againe Christian libertie frees our consciences from the Traditions of men Col. 2. 20. and yet the Popish religion bindes vs in conscience to the Traditions of men nay it is nothing els but an heape of traditions Here two things are to be considered the manner of standing and the time The manner is signified in the very words For to stand fast is to hold and maintaine our libertie with courage and constancie whatsoeuer comes of it as the soldier keepes his standing though it cost him his life We are readie to defend the libertie of our countrie euen with the hazard of our liues much more then are we to defend Christian libertie with the losse of all that we inioy sinne must be resisted euen vnto blood Hebr. 12. 4. If men be fearefull they must pray to God for the spirit of boldnes and courage and if God vouchsafe not this gift when opportunitie is offered they may withdraw themselues and by flying preserue their libertie The time of standing is the euill day that is the day of triall Eph. 6. 13. And then to stand fast is a matter of great difficultie And for this cause we are before hand to prepare our selues by obseruing these rules following First we must labour that religion be not onely in mind and memorie but also be rooted in the affection of our hearts so as we loue it reioyce in it and esteeme it aboue all things Secondly we must not onely be hearers of the word of God but also doers of it in the exercises of faith repentance new obedience Thirdly we must ioyne with our religion the soundnes of good conscience for if conscience faile we cannot be sound in our religion Lastly we must pray to God with all manner of praier and supplication for all things needefull Eph. 6. 18. 2 Behold I Paul say vnto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shal profit you nothing These words are a reason of the former conclusion thus If ye be circumcised and goe backe from your Christian profession Christ shall profit you nothing therefore stand fast In the words I consider a sentence and the proofe of it The sentence If ye be circumcised c. the proofe J Paul say vnto you For the better vnderstanding of the sentence Circumcision must here be considered according to the circumstance of time three waies Before Christ it was a sacrament and a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. after the death of Christ till the destruction of the temple it was a dead ceremonie yet sometime vsed as a thing indifferent After the destruction of the Temple when the Church of the new Testament was planted among the Gentiles it was a deadly ceremonie and ceased to be indifferent and in this last respect Paul saith If ye be circumcised c. Againe circumcision must be considered according to the opinion which the false Apostles had of it now they put their confidence in it and made it a meritorious cause of their saluation and ioyned it with Christ. The words therefore carrie this sense If ye will be circumcised with this opinion that circumcision shall be vnto you a meritorious cause of your saluation Christ shall profit you nothing The vse Hence it followes that the doctrine of iustification by works is an errour ouerturning the foundation of religion which whosoeuer obstinately maintaineth cannot be saued It will be said this is true of ceremoniall works but not of morall works Ans. Yea euen of morall For that which Paul saith here of circumcision he speakes generally of the whole law vers 4. Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law And circumcision must be considered as an obligation to the obedience of the whole law Againe it may be said this is true of the works of nature but not of works of grace Ans. Yea euen of workes of grace for the Galatians were regenerate and therfore looked not to be iustified saued by the workes of nature but by workes of grace Secondly hence we gather that to adde any thing to the passion as a meritorious cause of our iustification and saluation is to make Christ vnprofitable For he must be a perfect Sauiour or no Sauiour he admits neither partner nor deputie in the worke of our redemption And the grace of God admits no mixture or composition with any thing that is of vs. Grace is no grace vnlesse it be freely giuen euery way Therefore the Popish religiō is a damnable religion because with the merit satisfactiō of Christ it ioyns humane merits satisfactions in the case of our iustification It may be alleadged that the Popish religion maintaines all the articles concerning Christ as we doe Ans. It doth so in word but withall it addes to the foresaid articles the doctrine of humane merits and satisfactions which make voide the death of Christ. Againe Papists alleadge that it is the glorie of Christ that he merits for vs and withall makes vs to merit for our selues as it is the glorie of an Emperour to make other kings vnder him Ans. It is not the glorie of the Emperour to make kings as partners with him in his kingdome And workes set vp as meritorious causes of saluation dishonour Christ for they make him vnprofitable as Paul here teacheth Popish religion therefore is in no wise in any place to be tollerated where it may be abolished but it is to be wished that it were banished forth of towne and countrey and students are to be warned with great circumspection to read Popish writers For no good can be looked for of that religion that makes Christ vnprofitable Lastly we are here taught to content our selues with Christ alone and with his works merits and satisfactions For in him we are complete Col. 2. 10. The confirmation of the sentence followeth I Paul say it therfore it is so This kind of reasoning may not seeme strange for the Apostles in writing and preaching had the diuine and infallible assistance of the spirit so as they could not erre This must be held as a Principle in religion and beeing denied there is no certentie of the Bible 3 For I testifie againe to euery man that is circumcised that he is bound to keepe the whole law 4 Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law ye are fallen from grace The meaning Paul saith I testifie againe because he hath spoken thus much in effect before Gal. 3. 10. That is circumcised who is of opinion of the false Apostles that will be circumcised and looke for iustification thereby Bound to the whole law that is to the whole ceremoniall law to the iudiciall law and to the whole morall law And further bound in respect of iustification and life to doe all things in the law For he that
be brethren or consider not that they haue to deale with their brethren as Iosephs brethren who considering him as an enemie said one to another Behold this dreamer commeth come therefore let vs kill him Gen. 37. v. 19 20. But when they consider him as their brother they say Come and let vs sell him to the ●shmeelites and let not our hands be vpon him for he is our brother and our flesh v. 27. The second reason is in these words Considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted And it is taken from the consideration of our owne estate that we are subiect to fall into and to fall in temptation as well as others and therefore we ought to deale with them in all meekenes as we would be dealt withall in the like case The words are laid downe by way of admonition or aduise and they carrie a double sense either thus Considering thy selfe that is looking to thy selfe lest thou also be tempted that is least thou offend and sinne in beeing too seuere a censurer of thy brother in reproouing sinne with sinne Or thus Consider thy selfe that is thine owne frailtie how thou maiest ea●ily be ouertaken with the same the like or a greater sinne seeing thou maiest be taken in the deuils snare and deceiued with his pleasant baites as well as he was therefore deale as mildely with him as thou wouldest others should deale mercifully with thee Here Paul forbiddeth vs not to consider the actions of our brethren for we are to consider one another First that we may auoid the contagion of euill example Marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences and auoid them Rom. 16. 17. Secondly that we may be able to reprooue and censure them Consider the matter consult and giue sentence Iudg. 19. 30. Thirdly that we may follow their good example Looke on thē which walke so as ye haue vs for example Philip. 3. 17. Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and to good works Hebr. 10. 24. But he would haue vs especially to consider ou● selues that by the consideration of our owne weaknesse we might learne more mildnes towards others in our reproofes for seeing we stand in neede of mercie we ought to deale mercifully and seeing God forgiueth vs innumerable sinnes we ought to forgiue seauen times yea seauentie times seauen times seeing he forgiueth vs tenne thousand talents we ought to forgiue a hundreth pence Matth. 18. 32 33. Obiect The Pharisie considered himselfe when as he said Lord I thanke thee that I am not as other men thus and thus or like this Publican Luk. 18. 11. and yet he is reprooued by our Sauiour Christ. Ans. True it is for he onely considered his owne supposed vertues which he should not haue considered but forgotten though they had beene true vertues indeede according to Christs precept Mat. 6. 3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth and Pauls practise Phil. 3. 13. I forget that which is behinde And neuer so much as lightly considered his owne sinnes which Paul here would haue vs to consider and therefore he is reprooued Paul would haue vs consider our selues because the serious consideration of our owne weaknes will mooue vs to practise this dutie of meeknes for as we helpe vp those that are fallen releeue the distressed pitie the afflicted burie the dead c. because we consider our selues in them that their case may be ours So we ought to restore those that are fallen in all meekenes because we may fail and be ouertaken as well as they the rather because God himselfe in correcting and reproouing vs doth descend to our weaknes and considers that we are but flesh and a wind that passeth and commeth not againe Psal. 78. 39. and Christ became like vnto vs in all things and was tempted in like sort yet without sinne that he might be mercifull and a faithfull high Priest and might be touched with a sense of our infirmities Heb. 2. 17 18. and 4. 15. Obiect He therefore that knowes assuredly he cannot be ouercome by temptation is not to reprooue in the spirit of meeknes Ans. No man is sure and therefore no man can be secure Againe though a man know he cannot totally nor finally fall away yet seeing he doth finde by experience that he cannot ouercome without much adoe without much striuing and wrastling nay oftentimes not without resisting vnto blood he ought to vse more meekenes and mildnes considering with what difficultie he ouercame our Sauiour Christ learned by experience how hard a thing it was to ouercome temptations that he might haue a fellow feeling of our infirmities Therefore spirituall men must remember that they were once carnall euen babes in Christ those that are strong must consider that they were once weake old men that are graue and staied must call to mind that once they were in the heat of their youth and what difficulties encountred them and with what contention they passed the vanitie of that age and so they shall the better reprooue others in the spirit of meeknes if they looke themselues in the glasse of their example this is Pauls reason why we should shew all meekenes to all men because we our selues were in times past vnwise disobedient c. Tit. 3. 2 3. Lastly marke here how Paul changes the number for hauing said ye that are spirituall restore c. in the plurall number here he saith considering thy selfe in the singular and not your selues lest thou also be tempted and not you which he doth not through rudenesse of speech as some of the ancient Diuines haue thought but with great iudgement he vseth a familiar Hebraisme changing the number First to giue the greater force and to set the sharper edge vpon his admonition For that which is spoken to all is spoken to none Secondly to shew how hard a thing it is for a man to consider himselfe It is naturall for men to spie notes in other mens eyes and not to perceiue beames in their owne Matth. 7. 3. to looke outward at others not inward at themselues Like Plutarchs Lamiae or fayries which carried their eyes in their heads when they went abroad but when they came home put them vp in a boxe In doing good and beeing beneficiall we must not so much consider our selues Philip. 2. 4. but in iudging and reproouing we ought to beginne with our selues For the better vnderstanding of the doctrine of brotherly correction and Christian reproofe I will handle these foure questions I. who are to be reprooued II. for what III. by whome IIII. in what manner I. Who are to be reprooued Ans. All that are brethren for so our Sauiour Christ saith If thy brother sinne against thee reprooue him Matth. 18. 16. And S. Paul saith Brethren if any man c. The name Brethrē is takē foure waies in Scripture as Ierome hath well obserued against Helvidius I. for those that are brethren by nature as Iacob and Esau the
represse the good motions of the spirit In this respect Paul saith when I would do good euill is present and the law of the flesh rebelles against the law of the mind Rom. 7. 21. 23. Hereupon the flesh is fitly resembled by the disease called Ephialtes or the mare in which men in their slumber thinke they feele a thing as heauie as a mountaine lying on their brests which they can no waie remoue The second action of the flesh is to bring forth and to fill the mind with wicked cogitations and rebellious inclinations In this respect concupiscence is said to tempt intice and draw away the mind of man Iam. 1. 14. Againe the lust of the spirit hath two other actions The first is to curbe and restraine the flesh Thus Saint Iohn saith that the seed of grace keepes the regenerate that they can not sinne 1. Ioh. 3. 9. The second action of the spirit is to ingender good motions cogitations and inclinations agreeable to the will of God Thus Dauid saith that his raines did teach him in the night season Psal. 16. And the prophet Isai saith thine eare shall heare a voice saying here is the way walke in it when thou ●urnest to the right hand or to the left c. 30. v. 21. And this voice no doubt is not only the voice of such as be teachers but also the inward voice of the spirit of God in vs. And thus by the concurrence of these contrarie actions in one and the same man is this combat made The third point is concerning the cause of this combat in these wordes and these are contrarie one to another The contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit makes the combat And the contrarietie is very great for the spirit is the gift of righteousnes and the flesh standes in a double opposition to it for it is first of all the want of righteousnes and secondly a prones to all vnrighteousnes that is to say not a single but a double priuation or want of the grace or gift of God Hence I gather that man hath no freedome of will in good duties before his conuersion because he is then wholly flesh and wants the spirit of God and the flesh is flat contrarie to the spirit and one contrarie hath no power at all to bring forth the effect of his contrarie And hence it followes that there are no such workes wherby a man may prepare himselfe to his owne iustification for though the mind be inlightned with a general faith yet man before he be iustified is nothing but flesh and flesh beeing in nature opposite to the spirit can make no preparation for the spirit no more then darknes can make preparation for the entrance of light The fourth point is concerning the persons in whome this combate is to be found And they are beleeuers not vnbeleeuers or wicked men such as the Galatians were to whome this combate is said to belong It may be alleaged that naturall men haue a combate in them For they can say I see and approoue that which is good but I doe that which is naught Ans. This combate is betweene the naturall conscience and rebellious affection and it is incident to all men that haue in them any conscience or light of reason But the combate of the flesh and the spirit is of an other kinde for in it the mind is carried against it selfe the will against it selfe and the affections against themselues by reason they are partly spirituall and partly carnall Secondly not all beleeuers haue this combate in them but only such as be of yeares for infants though they haue the seede of grace in them yet do they want the act or exercise thereof and therefore they feele not this combate because it standes in action Thirdly this combate is in the godly for the time of this life only because in death the flesh is abolished and consequently the combate it selfe The fift point is in what things doth this combate shew it selfe Ans. In all the actions of men regenerate which Paul signifies when he saith ye cannot do the things which ye would For example in praier sometime we feele feruent desires and sometime againe deadnes of spirit sometimes faith sometimes doubting This combate is in all the actions of the Godly specially in good actions Thus much Paul teacheth whē he saith I find by the law of God that when I would do good euil is present Rom. 7. 21. And I do not the good which I would but the euill which I would not that do I. v. 19. And that we mistake not it must be remembred that Paul speakes all this of himselfe as beeing regenerate that he speakes it not of this or that action but of the course of his life in which he willed and indeauoured to do that which was good and acceptable to God And that appeares by the very wordes when he saith to will is present with me And I would do good but I do it not Marke further while Paul wills and indeauours to do that which is good if he faile and do amisse he may well say It is not I that do it but the flesh that dwelles in me And vngodly men for the couering of their wickednes if they say as they do that it is their flesh that sinneth and not they the abuse the holy doctrine and example of Paul The last point concernes the effect of the Combate which is to hinder the Godly that they cannot do that which they would and that three waies First it makes them that they cannot sinne that is liue in practise of any one sinne 1. Iohn 3. 9. Secondly if at any time they fall it s●aies and keepes them that they sinne not with full consent of will For they say when they sinne the euill which I hate that do I. Thirdly though in the ordinarie course of their liues they do that which is good yet by reason of this combate they faile in the dooing of it Rom. 7. 18. to wil is present with me but I find no means to fulfil or accomplish that which is good Euen as a sick-man that is in recouerie for his affection thinkes he is able to walke a mile or twaine and yet by reason of faintnes and weakenes is scarce able to walke once or twise about his chamber So the regenerate man for affection inclines to the best things and yet by reason of the flesh failes in the dooing of them Thus much of the combate the vse followes Hence I gather that concupiscence or lust after baptisme in the regenerate is a sinne For the lust of the spirit is the thing that God requireth and approoueth now the lust of the flesh is directly contrarie to it as a defect or priuation thereof and therefore the lust of the flesh is properly a sinne whether consent of will goe with it or no. Againe hence it followes that workes of the regenerate are mixed workes that is good workes indeed yet not perfectly