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A22481 A commentarie vpon the epistle of Saint Paule to Philemon VVherein, the Apostle handling a meane and low subiect, intreating for a fraudulent and fugitiue seruant, mounteth aloft vnto God, and deliuereth sundry high misteries of true religion, and the practise of duties Ĺ“conomicall. Politicall. Ecclesiasticall. As of persecution for righteousnesse sake. ... And of the force and fruit of the ministery. Mouing all the ministers of the Gospell, to a diligent labouring in the spirituall haruest ... Written by William Attersoll, minister of the word of God, at Isfield in Suffex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1612 (1612) STC 890; ESTC S106848 821,054 582

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abhorre as open blasphemy This also is the opinion of all our Teachers that euer were among vs as were easie to shew u Calu. instit lib. 1. cap. 18. by infinite Testimonies out of their writings if it were necessarie Nay which is more we teach no more then the Schoole-men of their owne side the Men of their owne Religion the Doctors of their owne profession First I will declare what we hold touching Gods prouidence ordering all thinges euen sinne it selfe which is out of order and then confirme the same out of Popish Writers thereby to stop their mouthes and to aunswer the false imputations that are laid vpon vs that if they will not see what we hold yet they may vnderstand themselues or if they wil needs condemne vs let them condemne their own Prophets That which we x God worketh in sin three waies teach of Gods actions concerning sinne may be reduced and referred to these three heads First he is the Vniuersall cause of all things he sustaineth mankinde that in him he liueth and mooueth and hath his being yea he vpholdeth the beeing and moouing of all his Actions good and bad insomuch that no Man could mooue hand or foote to an Action no nor haue beeing himselfe if God sustained and supported not so that the act is of God as also the actions of all Creatures Now if they will not be ignorant but take knowledge of their doctrine y Occham qu. 5. lit K. many among them affirme full as much that God is immediatly the first cause of all thinges produced by the second causes but of things euill he is the mediate cause in that he produceth and preserueth the Creature that is the mediat cause of euill So likewise another saith z Bartol Med in ● 2. qu. 93. art 6. pag. 496. A Sinner when hee sinneth doth against the law and will of God in one sense and in another not against them He doth indeede against his signified will and against his precepts and prohibitions c. but against the will of his good pleasure he doth not nor against the effectuall ordination of God In this maner and meaning write many others a Bann 1. part qu. 49. art 2. that no sinne falleth out beside the will and intention of God Secondlie we teach that God being free to bestow where he will to restraine where he will and being bound to none doth with-hold his Grace withdraw his spirit and leaue the wicked to themselues whervpon it followeth that their minds are blinded their harts are hardned and they cannot chuse but sin But how may some man say doth God harden I answer not by inspiring euill into men not by creating any sin or corruption in their will which was not there before as he doth grace in their heart but by denying them the power of his grace which might mollifie them and by offering them sundry obiects which they conuert into occasions of sinne and by deliuering them ouer as a iust Iudge to the tentations of Sathan whereby they are ouercome and haue neither power nor will to stay themselues For when God departeth how can it be but Sathan should come in place This is not strange Doctrine among the Papistes themselues One saith b Occham 3. qu. 12. lit yy that GOD is a debter to no man and therefore he is bound neither to cause that Act nor the contrary nor yet not to cause it but the will of the Creature by Gods Law is bound not to cause the act and so consequently sinneth by doing it Lastly we teach that God doth both order or ordinate the sinne that is committed which is nothing else but a directing of it as pleaseth him that it goe not beyond his will neither otherwise then seemeth good in his wisedome Sometimes he restraineth it that it shall not passe nor proceed farther then he appointeth who giueth bounds vnto the Sea Sometimes he turneth it to another end then the person intended that practised it Both these we see euidently in Iobs tentations The Deuill desired nothing more then to destroy body and soule but God restrained his rage appointed how far he should goe and what hee should not doe and wrought Iobs greater good by his greatest mallice Sometimes also hee maketh way for sinne to passe that thereby he may punnish one sinne with another And doth not the Church of Rome teach as much Yes fully as much Bellarmine in the third Tome of his Controuersies saith as much c Bellar. de amiss grat lib. 2. cap. 13. that God not onely permitteth the wicked to do many euils neither doth he onely forsake the godly that they may be constrained to suffer the thinges done against them by the wicked but he also ouer-seeth their euill wils and ruleth and gouerneth them he boweth and bendeth them by working inuisibly in them Thus wee see that if our Aduersaries looke well into their wordes and know their owne voyce t●…y shall not neede to exclaime and cry out against vs that we make God the Authour of sinne seeing the same speeches in the same cause are vsed by themselues We freely confesse that God willeth nothing that is formally sinne as he willeth that which is good but he hateth it and forbiddeth it absolutely d Esay 30 21. Rom. 2 15. within vs by the light of his holy spirit e Deut. 27 26 and without vs by the light of his holie word The first entrance of sinne into the World was by the voluntarie action of mans will corrupting it selfe God inspiring or infusing no euill into it To conclude let vs know that as we all agree that euery Act is of God so wee must take a difference between the action the euil that is in the action The action it self is of God but the defect or disorder of the action is from the Instrument which beeing corrupt can it selfe bring foorth nothing but that which is corrupt If a man spurne forward a lame Horse that halteth down right in that he mooueth and goeth it commeth from the Rider but in that he halteth it is from the Horse himselfe If a man cut with an euill Knife he is the cause of the cutting but not of euill cutting but the badnesse of the Knife is the cause Or as a cunning Musition that plaieth vpon an Instrument that iarreth and is out of tune the sound is from him that playeth who obserueth due proportion of time and a right order of striking but in that it iarreth it is in the Instrument it selfe The like we must hold of Gods prouidence ouer wicked men and Angels and all their actions hee putteth no wickednesse into them but he ordereth and gouerneth that which he findeth in them and bendeth it by his infinite wisedome and power to a farre other end then the euill Instrument intended The whole cause of sin is truely and properly in Satan and in our selues Vse 2. Secondly this Doctrine
serueth greatly to comfort vs both in prosperity and aduersitie and that for the time to come wee should repose our whole hope in God For seeing all thinges come to passe by the prouidence of God so that not so much as sinne it selfe is committed without his will it is a great comfort many waies to Gods Church and chosen Children Wee know that hee can moderate and will moderate the rage of the Deuill and the mallice of wicked men that they shall not hurt or hinder their Saluation For the Deuill is the Lordes Seruant or slaue to worke his will albeit he do it vnwillingly and by compulsion The Prophet Dauid saith c Psal 16 8. The Lorde is at my right hand therefore I shall not slide And when his Souldiers were purposed to stone him to death he was in great sorrow and heauinesse d 1 Sam. 30 6 But he comforted himselfe in the Lord his GOD. If then we cast vp our eyes and behold the prouidence of God euermore watching ouer vs wee shall not doubt of the loue and goodnesse of God nor of deliuerance to come from his hand albeit we see no ordinary meanes but all thinges goe a contrarie way This made the holie Man Iob say e Iob 13 15. Though the Lorde would kill mee yet will I trust in him And the Prophet f Psal 23. Though thou cast me into the place of Dragons and into the shaddow of death yet will I feare none euill The church being in great perplexity and danger in the daies of Mordecay he was not without comfort he liued not without hope hee ceased not to vse lawfull meanes for the deliuerie of it he was not at his wits end nor dispaired of an happy issue because his heart was grounded and established in the Doctrine of Gods prouidence as appeareth by his wordes to Ester g Est 4 13 14 Thinke not with thy selfe that thou shalt escape in the Kinges House more then all the Iewes for if thou holdst thy peace at this time comfort and deliuerance shall appeare to the Iewes out of another place but thou and thy Fathers House shall perrish and who knoweth whether thou art come to the Kingdome for such a time Againe this prouidence of God in euery thing teacheth contentation of minde in euery estate yea in aduersity when we lie vnder the Crosse so that all thinges goe against vs forasmuch as Gods prouidence hath appointed vs our lot and portion When we liue in peace and haue abundance of outward meanes to maintaine vs as plenty riches health pleasure friends libertie and such like we must remember from whom they come and so be put in mind to be thankfull for them because they come not to vs by chance but by Gods prouidence so that we must not barely looke vpon them nor wholely rest vpon them but behold his goodnesse and blessing in them For if wee consider that all prosperitie commeth from him as Meate Drinke ease peace and all plenty who is not pricked forward and stirred vp vnto Thankesgiuing towards so louing and bountifull a Father Hence it is that the Apostle saith h 1 Thes 5 18 In all thinges giue thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus The Prophet Esay complayneth of the vnthankefulnesse of the Iewes towards GOD i Esa 1 4 5 6 7 I haue nourished and brought vp Children but they haue rebelled against mee the Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Asse his Maisters Cribbe but Israell hath not knowne mee my people hath not obeyed mee The Prophet Dauid dealt otherwise and behaued himselfe with greater dutie teaching vs all what to doe when hee saith k Psal 116 12 What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits toward me I will take vp the cup of saluation and prayse the name of the Lord. But when these outward things whereby life is maintained do faile vs we must not faile to remember whence famine warre pestilence sicknesse trouble and affliction come that there is no euill in the City which the Lord hath not done Moreouer let vs depend vpon him for the time to come assuring our selues that he will not leaue vs nor forsake vs. He giueth vs euery day experience of his mercies so that by remembrance of benefits receiued from him wee cannot doubt of his fauour toward vs. Lastly this should bee a very strong reason vnto vs not to be vnmeasurably dismayed nor excessiuely offended when offences and great euils breake out among vs as oftentimes it falleth out whereby many are ready to shrinke backe and others are much disquieted to see the Church of God so troubled We are not to thinke it strange or to forsake the faith through these scandals for God would not suffer any euill to come to passe vnlesse out of that euill hee were able to bring good and out of that sinne to bring forth righteousnesse to the glory of his great name and for the saluation of his deere Church Hee would neuer haue left Adam vnto himselfe if he had not determined out of his fal to gaine praise to himselfe and to prouide better for his people It is necessary that offences come but woe to that man by whome they come Let vs not therefore fret our selues because of the wicked men neyther be enuious for the euill doers for they shall soone be cut downe like grasse and shall wither as the greene hearbe And we must rest and be resolued assuredly that God dooth not allow or fauour their sinne nor purposeth to free them from the guilt and punnishment of sin howsoeuer he turneth their wicked purpose to a good end For sinne l 1 Iohn 3 4 Iohn 8 44. is the transgression of his Law But God neuer swarueth nor stayeth from the strait rule of his owne will neither putteth wickednes into man but as the earth affoording sap and moysture as well to the euill trees as the good cannot be reproued because the cause why the euill trees bring forth euil fruit is of themselues and their owne nature or as the Sunne that rayseth euill smels and noysome fauors from vnsauoury puddles cannot iustly bee found fault withall because the reason thereof is not in the Sun beames but in those corrupt places euen so when God disposeth to good endes the sins of men that proceed from the instigation of the Deuill and abide in the vngodly themselues he cannot be called the cause or author of sinne although by his prouidence he moueth all thinges yea euen the vngodly that are not able to moue or remoue themselues Vse 3 Lastly seeing Gods prouidence extendeth to euery thing that is and disposeth it according to his owne pleasure it directeth vs in our obedience putteth vs in mind of a Christian duty namely to be patient in al aduersity If we consider that nothing can befal vs but that which is sent by the fatherly wil and counsell of God who hath alwaies iust
we iustifie them both these belong vnto God and therefore are not to be vsurped by any man We must iudge the best of them according to the rule of Charity l 1 Cor. 13 7. Which hopeth all thinges and beleeueth all thinges We know God reserued to himselfe m 1 King 19 18. 7000. in Israell in the daies of Ahab that neuer bowed the knee to Baall and he hath a few n Reuel 3 4. names yet in Sardis which haue not defiled their garments which shall walke with him in white for they are worthy We may say with the Apostle of them o Acts 17 30. The time of this ignorance God regardeth not but now he admonisheth all men euery where to repent We are not therefore to looke what they haue done but consider what by the word they should haue done and what by the same wee ought to doe And touching the thriuing and prospering of them that neglect this duty this is an Obiection fitter for Atheists then Christians to vse Christ hath taught vs that this is no rule to measure good or euill he sheweth p Math. 5 45. That the Father maketh his Sunne to shine and his raine to fall vpon the iust and vniust vpon the godly and the vngodly The Wiseman hath taught that by outward thinges we cannot q Eccle. 9 1 2 vnderstand whether we be loued or hated of God We see the wicked for the most part prosper more in the World in worldly things then the godly as we read Psal 73. 3 4 5. and Iob 21. 8. 9. Obiect 7. Lastly it is obiected that some which haue beene diligently and duely taught doe yet liue as leudly and prophanely as they that neuer knew any thing of God I answere it may be this is thy wrong and rash iudgement The world speaketh euill of those that will not follow them into all excesse of ryot But let vs grant it to be so yet heerein they play the wrangling Sophisters and Cauillers alleadging a false cause for a true For I am sure this course of learning is not the cause of the loosenesse of their liuing If grace had beene in their hearts it would bee a meanes to make them beleeue and liue better He that knoweth his Maisters will is more likely to performe it then he that knoweth it not nor careth for the knowing of it He that hath his eye-sight is more likely to walke without stumbling and falling then he that is blinde so he that is instructed in the waies of godlinesse hath better meanes to walke in the feare of God then hee that is ignorant and knoweth nothing True it is some that know their Maisters will doe it not some that haue their eyes open fall downe now and then yet none can be so voide of reason to conclude from hence that it is not necessary to know his will or to open our eyes Thus much for the remouing of the obiections and the scattering of those Mists and Clouds that stood before vs. Vse 1. Now let vs come to the Vses of this Doctrine First seeing it belongeth to the Maisters and Gouernours of Families to instruct them in godlinesse we gather that it is not enough for them to prouide for the bodies of such as are vnder them and belong vnto them in this life but they must care most especially for their soules and bodies in the life to come They then are greatly deceiued who when they haue giuen them meate and Money thinke themselues sufficiently discharged If we onely feede them and fill them to the full what doe we more to them then to our brute Beasts If we onely cloath them and pay them their wages r Math. 5 20. what doe wee more to them then the Turkes and Infidels that feare not God that know not God doe performe to their Children and Seruants If we thinke our selues discharged by prouiding for them and leauing vnto them a temporall patrimony and possession and neuer regard to make them heires and Inheritors of the Kingdome of Heauen what do we more then the Iewes or Gentiles that are ignorant of Christ and his Gospell What should it auaile vs or them to leaue them rich in the World and poore in God To lay vp for them treasures on earth and to neglect the treasures of Heauen which are the true and enduring substance True it is Fathers and Mothers are bound concerning this bodily life to make honest prouision for the sustenance of their Children and therefore all vnthrifty Dicers and Drunkards which wast and wash away their goods whose Children may well bee accounted fatherlesse and their Wiues as Widdowes haue no Å¿ 1 Tim. 5 8. spark or portion of naturall Fathers in them neuerthelesse they are charged not onelie to bring them vp in the World but to prepare them for the World to come It is a vaine and foolish imagination to dreame that wee haue done our part or discharged a Fathers and a Mothers duty when we haue nourished appartelled and brought vp our Children whereas wee haue a farre greater account to make before God for their soules They are also greatly deceiued who if they send them to the Church on the Sabbaoth day and bring them to the place of Gods worship they thinke they haue answered the charge required of them These men post ouer all their dutie to the Minister and lay the burthen to ease themselues vpon his shoulders They care not they spare not to lay load vpon anothers backe that they may not beare it or touch it with their little finger But God cannot thus be mocked or deluded or defrauded who commaunded that themselues should rehearse his Lawes and Commaundements to their Children and Housholds Indeed it is a commendable duty to see that they serue God and to accompany them vnto the house of God but this is onelie halfe if halfe our dutie or rather to do our dutie to halues we must both prouide that they may bee taught and also teach them our selues when the Minister hath planted wee must water when he hath preached wee must see how they profit and by all meanes assist him in the worke of the Lord. They are also greatly deceiued who take themselues to be discharged of their duty when they haue taught them to say the ten Commaundements the Lords Prayer and the Creede or the Articles of Faith because they say they haue done what they can and are able to performe no more If they can doe no more it is a shame for them that they will be Fathers before they can doe that which is the duty of fathers It is one thing to teach them to say them another to vnderstand them It is not enough for vs to helpe them to speake the wordes vnlesse wee labour to make them conceiue the meaning of the wordes The Commaundements of the Law and the petitions of the Lords Prayer stand not in the bare wordes but in the true meaning
delight hath the Nurse then to see her child liue in health grow vp in strength and stature and prosper in the world So there is no comfort like to this comfort no ioy like to this ioy no delight like to this delight to behold the haruest of the Lord the sheepe of Christ the Children of God to flourish and to encrease more and more to grow from faith to faith from grace to grace b Ephe. 4. 13. vntill they all meet together vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fulnes of Christ Hence it is that after the Apostle had testified his ioy and thankes to God for the faith and loue of the Colossians he addeth c Col. 19. 10. for this cause we also since the day we heard of it cease not to pray for you and to desire that ye might be fulfilled with knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding that ye might walke worthy of the Lord and please him in all thinges being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God and let vs by this example comfort our selues in such as increase in good thinges and pray for such as are comming forward We liue in a decaying and declining time wherein many haue forgotten their first loue we see the cold season and Winter of all Godlines wherein men are frozen in the dregs of Sinne. Wee may behold with our eyes if we be not starke blinde a generall wasting languishing and consumption of the heate and heart of Religion If then in this common pining of the vital parts we may discerne any reuiuing and refreshing to appeare or any flourishing of Godlines which seemed dead at the root to spring vp let it be a comfort vnto vs and teach vs to giue God the glory who maketh light to come out of darkenesse and life to arise out of death This serueth to reproue those that neuer desire the profiring of their people nor regard what their estate and how their standing is in heauenly thinges they neuer consider whether they goe forward or backward whether they grow vpward or downe-ward to Heauen or to Hell to God or to the Deuill to Saluation or to damnation These are they that feed themselues to the full but regard not to feed the flocke ouer which the holy Ghost hath made them ouerseers These are they that liue of the Alter but care not to minister at the Alter they will be sure to reape carnall things but they haue no conscience to sow spirituall thinges They liue of the Gospell but they will not preach the Gospell The Apostle testifying his longing and thirsting after the saluation of the Church said I seeke not yours but you But these men if they would speake the truth from their hearts might say we seeke not you but yours we care not what become of you so that we may find the sweetnes of that which is yours How farre are these from the zealous affection of the same Apostle who became all thinges to all men if by any meanes he might saue some he teacheth that a necessity lay vpon him to preach the Gospell and denounceth a woe vpon himselfe if he preach not the Gospell Let vs all in our places follow his example and pray vnto God to giue the grace of conuersion to turne the hearts of men to the sauing knowledge of the Gospell and where he hath granted this mercy let vs pray him to encrease it more and more and to continue it vnto the day of Iesus Christ Vse 2. Secondly as the growing in good thinges is matter of ioy so on the other side it is caused of great sorrow and griefe of heart when the professors of the saith and hearers of the word and such as seemed louers of the truth do not profit but reuolt do not goe forward but goe backward do not grow better and better but become worse and worse It must not seeme strange that great sorrow ariseth vnto the seruants of God when men do not profit in good thinges We see what worldly sorrow is found in worldly men that causeth death the least occasion of losse the least feeling of trouble the least crossing of their humors can draw from them abundance of teares But such as are led by the spirit of God are spiritually minded d 2. Cor. 7. 10. they haue godly sorrow that causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of This was in the Prophet Dauid when he saw a decay in Godlines and a growing in wickednesse e Psal 119. 136. mine eyes gush out with Riuers of water because they keepe not thy law This was in the Prophet Ieremy f Ier. 9. 1. and 4. 19. O that mine head were full of water and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weep day and night for the slaine of the Daughter of my people This was in Christ our Sauiour when he came neere to Ierusalem he beheld the Citty and wept for it g Luke 19. 41. 42. O if thou hadst euen knowne at the least in this day those thinges which belong vnto thy peace but now are hid from thine eyes This was in the Apostle Paule when he saw the reuolting and back-sliding of the Galathians h Gal. 4. 19. and 5. 7. O my little Children of whom I trauaile in Birth againe vntill Christ be formed in you I am in feare of you least I haue bestowed on you labour in vaine ye did runne well who did let you that ye did not obey the truth This is a speciall note to discerne and distinguish true Pastors from hirelings and faithfull shepheards from Wolues for the true Ministers of Christ are inwardly touched and grieuously pained to behold the present sinnes of the people and the future iudgments of God hanging ouer their heads This is a great griefe of heart and goeth neere them to see so little growth of Godlines so little fruit of their labours so great encrease of all vngodlines This reproueth those that make a mocke of sinne and can laugh as heartilie at the committing of iniquitie as at the best ieast and the greatest sport If we begin once to laugh at sinne we will not make any conscience to commit it When once we do not sticke to ieast at it we will quickly come to it in good earnest When we can make a play of it there is but a short step to put it in practise The very Heathen i Plutar. in Solone Valer. Maxim lib. 2. Cap. 6. saw thus much that had but halfe an eye that if they suffered euill to be committed merrily and in sport they should finde it practised in their earnest contracts common affaires And many of the heathen by other Heathen are commended k Tacit. in his description of Germany among whom vices were neuer laughed at But how many are there among vs that would be counted and are indeed called Christians
loathsome vomit out of the stomacke who should Remember that they sit in the seat of God m 2 Chro. 19 5 19 6. and are to execute the Iudgements of God with whome is no iniquity nor respect of persons neither receiuing of reward Iehu the King of Israel executing the iudgements of the Lord against the house of Ahab according to al the word of the Lord n Hosea 1 4. is threatned himself to be punished because he did it with a cruell and bloody affection The work was good but his hart was euil the deede done was righteous but the manner of doing was corrupt he respected not the glory of God but his owne reuenge he did it not to serue God but to serue himselfe This was the cause why the Lotde visited him his house and al Israel for it and reuenged their blood thus shedde because he fayled in the manner though otherwise hee did that which is iust and right We must regard not onely what we do but in what sort and maner to what end and purpose wee doo it It is our dutie to shew Mercie and Loue to Offenders euen in punnishing of Offenders Wee must haue respect to their bodies and soules We must admonish reprooue threaten and correct in great compassion and mercy not in rage and reuenge to fly vpon them Obiection But heere the question may be asked whither a Christian man may not be angry with them with whom he dealeth being stubborne and peruerse and deale sharpely with them Answere I aunswere the Apostle giueth direction what to do in this case o Ephes 4 26. Be angry but sinne not let not the sunne go downe vppon your wrath neither giue place to the Deuill If wee breake out suddainly into any passion let vs speedily recal that affection and not suffer it long to lodge with vs. But there is a godly anger and an holy kinde of indignation there is a lawfull zeale to bee commended in the seruants of God which they are to conceiue inwardly and to vtter outwardly against sinne not against their peruersenesse So it is sayd of Christ p Marke 3 5. that hee looked round about him angerly mourning also for the hardnesse of their hearts His anger was ioyned with pitty and compassion it was not so much against the men as against their blindnesse The Church of Ephesus is commended q Reuel 2 6. that it hated the workes of the Nicolaitans which Christ also hateth It hated not the Nicolaitans themselues as they were men but the workes of the Nicolaitans Obiection Againe it may be saide that the Prophet Dauid Psal 109. and in many other places r Ps 59 109 prayed for the destruction of his enemies both their persons and posteritie So did Eliah for fire from Heauen to destroy the Captaines that came to take him Answere I answere we haue not the same spirit that they had and consequently haue not the same warrant They were Prophets and God reuealed vnto them that they were obstinate enemies so that they were enabled to iudge that their malice and wickednesse was incureable and that they would neuer repent They had an extraordinary measure of Gods spirite not onely to see their present condition but to discerne their future confusion and hence it is that they were endued with a pure zeale of Gods Glorie and not carried with an euill desire of Reuenge of Enuie of Hatered and of Emulation Againe the imprecations of the Prophets are prophesied of plagues to come but we haue no such extraordinarie instinct reuealed vnto vs to knowe what is to come wherefore wee cannot alledge their examples for our imitation we must walke in the Kings High way and follow the generall rules of the Scripture to deale mildly to put away pride and cruelty toward those that are vnder vs to banish tiranny and treading of them vnder our feet This is to be obserued of all Fathers Maisters and Gouernors remembring that in Christ we are all Brethren that by Nature we are all of one mold and making that as men we haue all one Creator This consideration wee finde to haue Å¿ Iob 32 13 14. bin in Iob toward those of his Family If I did contemne the iudgement of my Seruant and of my Maide when they did contend with me what then shall I doo when God standeth vp And when he shall visit me what shall I answere He that hath made me in the wombe hath he not made him Hath not he alone fashioned vs in the wombe This the Apostle also t Ephes 6 9. teacheth Eph. 6. Ye Maisters doo the same things vnto them putting away threatning and know that euen your Mayster also is in heauen neither is there respect of persons with him So then we are to deale with gentlenesse not with roughnesse we are rather to seeke to win others by loue then to compell them by rigor We must endeuour that al bitternesse and anger and wrath crying and euill speaking bee put away from vs we ought to be courteous one to another and tender-hearted we are not to thinke that any are priuiledged and freed from reproofe but wee must reproue meekely and modestly least whilst we go about to amend them wee make them worse It is an heauenly Counsell giuen by the Apostle u Gal. 6 1 2. Bretheren if a man be suddainly taken in any offence ye which are spirituall restore such an one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy self least thou also be tempted Beare ye one anothers burden and so fulfill the Law of Christ Where wee see he would haue the faithfull endeuour to reforme a man with all gentlenesse when he hath done amisse We must not flatter him in his sinnes for then we encourage him and vphold him in his wickednesse nay wee betray him into the hands of the Deuill and by that meanes drown him deeper in destruction Whensoeuer therefore our Brother falleth into euill it is no loue nor charitie to cloake his euill doings or to dissemble his lewdnesse which he hath committed but we must haue a care that he may rise againe If a man bee in the myre or in a ditch we will reach him our hand to helpe him out much more ought we to haue pittie on his soule when we see it sinking into perdition Vse 2. Secondly seeing we are to winne men rather by gentlenesse and loue we must acknowledge that gteat wisedome and discretion is required in the Ministry to diuide the word of God aright and to bee able to apply himselfe to euery degree and calling of men Hence it is that the Apostle saith writing to Timothy x 1 Tim 5 1 2. Rebuke not an Elder but exhort him as a father and the younger men as bretheren the Elder-women as Mothers the younger as Sisters with all purenesse There is indeed a profitable and necessary vse both of rough and tender dealing When the people of
3. Thirdlie such motions receiue a blessing from God If we craue and desire nothing at the handes of others but that which is right our perswasions shall be accepted of God who hath the hearts of all men in his owne power to change and alter as it pleaseth him When Ester asked of the King to haue k Ester 7 3. her life giuen her at her petition and her people at her request shee had it granted and more also then she asked On the other side vnlawfull and vngodly suits do oftentimes turne to the confusion of such as obtaine them albeit they may florish for a time yet in the end they are snared with the words of their owne mouth We see this in the example of Haman who after he was exalted in honour next vnto the King he craued of the King very earnestlie l Ester 3 9. That all the Iewes should be slaine and put to death in one day this he obtained and preuailed in his suit but he neuer liued to put it in execution but was hanged on the tree which he had prouided and prepared for Mordecai Wherfore seeing it is a cheefe and principall rule in friendship to request and require onely honest thinges seeing such requestes though they bee great giue comfort and assurance of obtaining and seeing they receiue a blessing at the handes of God it followeth that whatsoeuer we prouoke or procure men to doe must haue a faire warrant and be agreeable to the will of God Vse 1. The vses of this doctrine are not to be omitted First we learne from hence other truths for the strengthning of our Faith So long as any of our Bretheren aske that which is good craue of vs to giue our consent to that which is lawfull we ought to haue our eares and our hearts opened to hearken vnto them No request among ten thousand is more reasonable then when the word of exhortation is offered vnto vs and we are moued to repent and bring forth the fruits of amendment of life So long as we follow our owne lustes and delight in the prophanenesse of our corrupt hearts wee walke in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death and runne the way that leadeth to destruction If then any come vnto vs and perswade vs to turne vnto God and to forsake our former waies who are better or greater or surer Friends vnto vs then these For who can wish vs greater good or procure vs greater benefit then to seeke to saue our soules and to make vs inheritors of Gods Kingdome Wee ought therefore to make much of them and not send them away from vs weeping These seeke not themselues but vs they ayme not at their owne profit but ours it is our duty one to another to exhort one another while it is called To day Are they charged and commanded to haue mouths to speak vnto vs and ought not we to haue eares to hear them and hearts to obey them On the other side it is necessary to deny whatsoeuer is vniust and vnhonest and vnreasonable whatsoeuer we are required and by whomsoeuer we are importuned For as it is a commendable vertue not to deny m Prou. 3 28 or delay a Christian request put vp vnto vs so is it as praise-worthy to refuse to hearken and yeelde to any vnlawfull and wicked desire What though we be deare friendes or great acquaintance or neere Brethren What though we haue a mutuall communion of good thinges among vs Should we therefore abuse this coniunction that we haue one with another It is accounted by the Heathen Philosophers n Haec prima lex in amicitia sanciatur vt neque rogemus res turpes nec faciamus rogati Cicer de amicit as the first Law to be obserued in friendship that we neither request things shamefull and dishonest neyther doe them when we are requested It is an absurd thing to imagine that they which refuse to gratifie vs in vngodly things and to follow our corrupt minds and to be ready at our pleasure to call light darkenesse and darkenesse light good euill and euill good should be saide to part friendship and to transgresse the limits of peace and concord For it is a base and blinde excuse and a weake pretence not to bee allowed for a man when he hath done euill to confesse he did it for his friendes cause or at his friendes request There is no man so closely tyed vnto any that for their sakes he should submit himselfe to that which is euill and so make himselfe partaker of their sinnes There is little difference betweene him that committeth euill and another that yeeldeth to the committing of it Let vs therefore know that God requireth of vs this dutie to take diligent heed that we giue no consent to euill nor incline our hearts to obey those that would prouoke vs vnto it They are Instruments of the Deuill that would draw vs to iniquitie and pull vpon our owne heads the heauy wrath and displeasure of God so that we ought as much to abhorre them and to fly from them as if we heard the Deuill himselfe speake vnto vs and therefore to say vnto them Come behinde mee Sathan or auoyde Sathan thou art an offence vnto me We haue a worthy example of this in Ioseph when his Maisters Wife cast her eyes vpon him and saide Lye with me he hearkned not vnto her but denied her request and refused to be in her company Behold saith hee o Gen. 39 8 9 my Maister knoweth not what he hath in the House with me and hath committed all he hath to mine hand there is no Man greater in this House then I neither hath he kept any thing from mee but onely thee because thou art his Wife how then can I doe this great wickednesse and so sinne against GOD. A Carnall Man that is nothing else but a Lumpe of Nature and a Masse of Flesh and an heape of corruption would maruaile much at the great simplicitie of Ioseph in this place and thinke hee dealt like an vnwise man who by obeying his Mistresse might haue gotten great honour purchased much fauour and rid himselfe from much trouble which afterward hee fell into as well through the false accusation and information of his Mistresse as also through the rashnesse and hastinesse of his Maister Yea Ioseph himselfe if he had looked no farther then to the beholding of glory and prosperity might haue reasoned thus with himselfe What shall I doe in this case I am in great trouble on euery side If I doe not consent vnto her I shall be falsely accused euilly intreated hardly imprisoned and cruelly handled I shall liue in all woe and misery all the daies of my life were I not therefore better to hearken vnto her voyce and thereby auoyd all these troubles that hang ouer mine head whereas on the other side I am likely by her meanes to come to honor and preferment and to be in greater
Hab. 2 4. The iust shall liue by his owne Faith Faith is the worke of the Spirit in the heart of man so that if it must be in the hearts of euerie one of vs it followeth that it must bee speciall Reason 2. Secondly true Fayth giueth sound comfort and worketh peace with God this is the property of that Faith which we must haue in vs. But comfort commeth vnto vs by hearing of a promise made to others not belonging to our selues What consolation of heart can this worke in vs to know that others shall bee saued This the Apostle speaketh of Heb. 6. God willing more abundantly h He. 6 17 18 to shewe vnto the heyres of promise the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an Oath that by two immutable thinges wherein it is vnpossible that God should lye we might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to lay hold vpon that hope that is set before vs. No man receyueth comfort by the riches of another himselfe being poor or by the honor of another himselfe liuing in disgrace can so no man can feele any comfort by the Faith of another so long as he wanteth Faith himselfe to apply Christ vnto himselfe Seeing then that euery man must attaine to saluation by his owne faith which is able to minister comfort vnto him in the time of neede we see that Faith consisteth in applying the mercies of God vnto our owne selues Vse 1. The Vses of this Doctrine are now to bee considered and stoode vpon that so wee may vnderstand how to apply this applying of Fayth vnto our selues First this confirmeth the forme and manner of speech vsed in the Articles of Fayth wherein euerie one is taught to say I beleeue in God Not We beleeue in God For howsoeuer wee are to pray for others as well as for our selues and are taught to say Our Father which art in Heauen yet when the question is of our Fayth wee must say not We beleeue but I beleeue We pray for others but we beleeue for our selues The like is to be sayde of euerie principle of Faith euerie man must holde them all and beleeue them all This ouerthroweth the Doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth a generall and implicite Faith to bee sufficient for vs to Iustification and Saluation For they teach if a man can say I beleeue as the Church beleeueth though hee know not how or what the Church beleeueth though hee vnderstand nothing though he be able to apply nothing vnto himselfe hee hath a good faith and by that faith may be saued Answereable to this Diuinity i Bellar. de iustif lib. 1. cap. 7. are the Iesuites and Schoole-mens damnable and diuellish positions which maintaine that the people are not bound to know what the matters of Faith bee that ignoraunce is better then the knowledge of them that they neede not enquire after them and that Faith is better defined by ignorance then by knowledge Hence it is that they commend the Colliars Faith k Apol. translated by Staplet part 1. page 53 who as the tale is told being at the point of death and tempted of the Deuill what his Faith was Aunsweared I beleeue and die in the faith of Christs Church but being againe demanded what the faith of Christs Church was that faith said he that I beleeue in and thus the deuill getting no other aunswere was ouercome and put to flight This fable hath beene so long told and related among them that now themselues begin to beleeue it to be a truth as a lyar by often telling an vntruth beginneth to thinke it may be a true tale This Colliars faith is the popish Creed which being founded in ignorance is too weake a shield to quench the fiery Darts of the Deuill and to resist his tentations Thus true faith is suppressed ignorance is set on foote by these ignoraunt Teachers who as they are blinde themselues so they would put out the eyes of others They require no knowledge of the things we pray for l Rhem. annot on 1 Cor. 14. on Luke 12 11. but preferre ignorance they require no ability to professe the perticular points of our faith but in grosse and general This ignorance is plentifully condemned in the Scriptures We are taught m Col. 3. 16. 1 Pet. 3 15. that the word must dwell plentifully in vs and that we must be able to giue an account of the hope that is in vs to them that shall require an aunswere of vs. We are taught n Math. 22 29 Rom. 15 4 Hebr. 5 11. Iohn 5 39. that ignorance is the Mother of all euill the roote of all error the cause of all vnbeleefe and that whatsoeuer things are written afore hand were written for our learning that wee might haue comfort and beleeue Thus do these enemies of God and his people take from them their sword when they should go to fight and strip them of their Armor when they should enter the battell like Theeues that put out the Candle which serueth to discouer them To conclude let vs know that an ignorant faith is no faith for where there is no knowledge there can bee no faith But such as liue in the Church of Rome being blindly led of blinde Teachers doo know nothing to their comfort they haue the key of Knowledge taken from them they are nuzled and encouraged in ignoraunce they heare it magnified and extolled vnto the skies Some of them pretend the reading of the Scriptures in the mother tongue and in the translation that all may vnderstand to bee a principall cause of heresie Another shameth not to auouch that it was the inuention of the Deuill to permit the people to read the Bible Another blusheth not to write that he knew certaine men possessed of a Deuill because being but Husbandmen they were able to discourse of the Scriptures They teach that it is Heresy for a Lay-man to dispute in a point of faith These men speake not by the spirit of God but vtter the Deuils language and instruct the people in the Colliars Creed It is written of Timothy o 2 Tim 3 15. that hee was trained vp of a childe in the knowledge of the Mysteries of Religion It is written p Deut. 29 29 that the things reuealed belong to vs and to our children In former times the Doctrines of godlynesse and seuerall points of religion were knowne of all and the lowest of the people reasoned of them q Chryso hom 3 in Lazarum Aug. tract 21. in Ioh. and their Byshops exhorted thē thereunto asking why they are vttered if they may not be known Why they haue sounded if they may not bee heard And wherefore are they heard but that we should vnderstand them Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is the very forme of faith to receiue and apply this teacheth that it is not enough for men to haue an hystorical faith to belieue those things
which requireth his ordinary presence Fourthly it is against the order of Nature the rule of reason and the law of Iustice to take wages for that worke which he doth not performe and to eate where he doth not labour It is a great wrong and iniury done to those that labour in feeding the Flocke to bee denyed to eate of the Milke of the Flocke to do the seruice and another to receiue the reward to take the Corne and to giue others the Straw to sow spirituall things and to be depriued of temporall thinges to beare the burden and to endure the heate of the day and other to come and take away the penny and price for which they couenanted It is a kind of theft to eate without labour and to feed themselues without taking paines Fiftly the danger is very great that groweth both to the Pastors and people by this sin of absence and want of attendance For if any of the Soules which belong vnto their charge doe perrish through their negligence and starue through want of foode they shall be arraigned as guilty of their death and destruction The Prophet Ezekell setteth downe the threatning of God z Ezek. 33 8. When I shall say vnto the wicked O wicked man thou shalt dye the death if thou dost not speake and admonish the wicked of his way that wicked man shall dye for his iniquity but his blood will I require at thine hand Heereunto accordeth the saying of Christ a Math. 15 14 If the Blind lead the Blind both shall fall into the Ditch The losse of the b Ierom. epist ad Furiam flocke is the reproach of the Shepheard and the peoples destruction shall be the Pastors confusion And when the Pastor is absent the people wil soone decline from zeale to coldnesse fall from vertue to vice turne from the worship of God to Idolatry reuolt from the workes of piety to damnable security Let a man with-hold his hand and cease from sowing good seede or vnder-sow his ground by sparing his Corne Thistles and Weedes will spring vp in stead thereof Let a man haue food withdrawne from him and abstaine from nourishment that feedeth the body he shall be filled with winde and fall into weaknesse When Moses was absent from the Children of Istaell but forty daies while he was talking with God in the Mountain c Exod. 32 1. they committed horrible Idolatry and turned the glory of God into the similitude of a Calfe that eateth hay Iehoash the King of Iudah d 2 King 12 2 3. 2 Chro. 24 17 did that which was good in the sight of the Lord all his time that Iehoiada the Priest was with him and taught him but after his death both King and Princes people left the house of the Lorde God of their Fathers and erected Groues and serued Idols so that wrath came vpon them because of this their trespasse This also experience taught the Apostle in the Church of the Galathians while he was present e Gal. 4 18 20. they kept the Faith they turned neither to the right hand nor to the left they did cleaue to the Doctrine of Christs Gospell but when he was gone the false Apostles entred and tooke occasion by his absence to sow Tares among the Wheat and to corrupt the truth with Leauen of false Doctrine When the Shepheard is gone the Wolues may safely enter into the Sheepefold not sparing the Flocke When the Watch-man is gone or fallen asleepe the Enemy may enter and sacke the Citty When the Husbandman that sowed good seede in his fielde is departed f Math. 13 25 the enuious man came and sowed Cockle and Darnell among the Corne. While the people haue the presence and residence of their faithfull Pastor to feede them and to goe in and out before them both in Doctrin and example yet such is the weaknesse of Flesh the corruption of Nature the strength of sin the subtilty of the Enemy the vanity of the world the vnconstancy of humane thinges that they are ready to fall and to giue ouer albeit I say that he be with thē and conuersant among them and remain in the midst of them If then much euill be done while the Ouer-seers are present much more will be committed while they are absent while there is none to stay them while the Bridle is cast in their owne neckes Thus Moses proueth that the people would corrupt themselues and turn from the right way after his death because they had beene rebellious and stiffe-necked he being aliue Deut. 31 27 29. I g Deut. 33. know thy rebellion and thy stiffe-necke behold I being yet aliue with you this day ye are rebellious against the Lord how much more then after my death Sixtly the necessity of hauing the presence of the Pastour continually to call vpon the people appeareth heerein because the danger of the Wolfe is continuall and therefore the vse of the Shepheard is continuall The Apostle telleth the Elders of Ephesus h Acts 20 29. That he knoweth this that aftcr his departing grieuous Wolues would enter in among them not sparing the Flocke Besides Sathan is busie in tempting subtile in vndermining crafty in deceiuing malicious in spoyling and cruell in destroying he compasseth the earth too and and fro and walketh vp and downe in it Now the more diligent the spirituall enemy is the more violent and watchfull ought the Pastour to be If the good man of the House knew at what houre the Theefe would come to rob and to steale doubtlesse he would watch and not suffer his house to bee broken downe Hence it is that Peter saith Be sober and watch i 1 Pet. 5 8 for your aduersary the Deuill as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may deuour And surely this is the cause that in some places the people are defiled with all abhominations in other places they are peruerted and seduced by Iesuits and Seminary Priests and in all places grow cold and carelesse in Religion because they want meanes to guide them and stay them in the right way they haue not zealous Pastours to stirre them vp to godlinesse and to driue away the Wolfe farre from them Seuenthly it is of euill report a note of couetousnesse or euill suspicion of it and giueth great offence to the Church of God For where there is an vnnecessary absence of the Minister from his cure and charge hee giueth occasion to suspect that he rather desireth to feed vpon them then to feed them to seeke theirs then them to prey vppon them then to pray with them to possesse their goods then to win their Soules We are commanded to abstaine from all appearance of euill And the Apostle approoueth his Ministery to the consciences of the Corinthians by this k 2 Cor. 12 14 That hee sought not theirs but them Eightly the inconuenience is great that commeth by this absence it is the cause of a Vagrant
signe of their Reprobation Lydia is commended in that she l Acts 16 4. attended vnto the things which Paule spake but it was the Lord that opened her heart before she could be a faithfull and fruitfull hearer To this purpose Moses speaketh to all Israell m Deut. 29 2 3 4. Ye haue seen all that the Lord did before your eyes in the Land of Egypt vnto Pharaoh and vnto al his seruants and vnto all his Land the great tentations which thine eyes haue seene those great Myracles and wonders yet the Lorde hath not giuen you an heart to perceiue and eyes to see and eares to heare vnto this day Nowe as this ouer-throweth such as teach and maintaine an vniuersall Vocation so it must serue to settle vs in the trueth of the Doctrine of particular election and predestination n Rom. 9 15 16 18 13 14 That it is neither in him that willeth nor in him that rundeth but in God that sheweth mercy He sheweth mercie vpon whom he will shew mercie and will haue compassion vpon whom he will haue compassion therefore he hath mercie vpon whom he will and whom he will he hardneth God loued Iacob and hated Esau so that it was saide The elder shall serue the younger The Lord electeth some vnto life and saluation before the foundations of the world he elected some and therefore not all before the beginning of the world and therefore not for their deserts who then had not their beeing vppon the earth Who art thou o Iob 9 4 Rom. 9 20. that wilt dispute with GOD Or what shall it auayle vs to question it and quarrell it with the Almightie May the p Esay 10 15. Rom. 9 21. Clay reason with the Potter or the Axe with the Carpenter or the Sawe with him that draweth it or the Rodde with him that taketh it Or shall the thing formed say vnto him that formed it Why hast thou made mee thus Dare any Seruant pry and search into all the secrets of his Maister Canst thou follow track the way of the Fish in the Waters of the Fowles in the Ayre of a Serpent vppon a stone of a Shippe in the Sea Let vs not aske a reason of his will but rather say with the Apostle q Ro. 11 33 34 O the deepenesse of the Riches both of the wisedome and Knowledge of GOD Howe vnsearchable are his Iudgementes and his wayes past finding out For who hath knowne the minde of the Lorde or who was his Counsellor or who hath giuen vnto him first and he shall be recompenced If God should doo equally well vnto all his Creatures then were hee after a sort so much lesse to be praised and magnifyed of some for his benefites seeing he should do nothing specially and singulerly to them more then to others Neither is there are iniquitie in our God in so doing for may hee not r Math. 20 13 do with his owne what he will May he not lighten what eyes hee will or shoot away what arrowes he is disposed without our certaine knowledge of his secret counsels Obiection But some man may say when an whole assembly haue the same meanes the same Ministery an whole Family the same teaching and instruction How is it that some beleeue others will not beleeue Some are conuerted others are hardned Some are elect others are reiected Answere I aunswere it is not for the Creature curiously to search into the workes of the Creator but to bee wise according to sobrietie and as well a man might demaund why all in the fielde is not pure Corne but some Tares Why all in the Barne is not Wheate but some Chaffe Why Trees beare some leaues and not all Fruite Why in a great house there are Vesselles of Golde and Siluer some to an honourable and others to a dishonourable vse Why there are as well Goats that will not heare as Sheepe that heare the voyce of the Shepheard The Lord Iesus adoreth the Counsell of his Father heerein and confesseth the reason to bee his will and heauenly pleasure and farther then this whosoeuer goeth higher then this whosoeuer ascendeth and deeper then this whosoeuer searcheth shall wander as in a maze and neuer returne shall fall downe headlong into a Gulfe and neuer rise vp againe Our Sauiour saith Å¿ Mat. 11 25 26 I giue thee thankes O Father Lord of Heauen and Earth because thou hast hid these thinges from the Wise and men of vnderstanding and hast opened them vnto Babes It is so O Father because thy good pleasure was such As for the condemnation of the wicked and the execution of the heauy wrath and iust iudgements of God there is more then sufficient due desert in the Reprobate and though the righteous Lord worke therein yet beware thou imagine any euill in him The raine moystneth an euill Tree and therefore it beareth bitter and no better fruite In that it beareth fruite it commeth of the moysture but in that it bringeth foorth euill fruite it commeth of his owne Nature The Sunne by the strength of his heate and vertue of the Beames thereof rayseth out of the Dirt and Dunghill many foule and filthy sauours that infect men and corrupt the Ayre the raising of them vp is from the Sunne the vnwholsome and noysome smelles are from the places themselues The Raine is not properly the cause of the euill fruite but the Nature of the Tree and therefore it woorthily calleth for the Axe to cut it downe and then iustly deserueth to be throwne into the fire The Sunne is not directly the cause of those filthie sauours that are extracted out of stinking Ponds and puddles but the Miery and marish Ditches themselues So is it with God he is as the Raine that falleth and as the Sunne that shyneth from Heauen t Acts 17 28. Hee mooueth the euill man who worketh euill the action is of God the euill is from the free will of man and from the soule spirite of the Deuill God is not the Authour of the euill and therefore let u Iam. 1 13 14 no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted with euil neither tempteth he any man but euery man is tempted when he is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is entised Seeing then the grace of Election of Redemption of Iustification of Vocation of Sanctification is not generall nor generally giuen vnto all but according to the free purpose and pleasure of him that chooseth redeemeth calleth iustifieth and sanctifieth Let vs acknowledge his great mercie to the praise and glorie of his name when hee maketh his owne ordinances auayleable which we see in many to bee vnprofitable let vs confesse his louing kindnesse toward vs when he doth beget vs by the immortall seede of regeneration and worketh effectually our saluation For what haue wee in vs to mooue the Lorde to sauour vs and followe vs with a
man and man we must not vnderstand our Sauiour Christ when he speaketh of Debts and Debters but of priuate hurts and damages that are done vnto vs in our bodies in our goods or in our good Names These iniuries done to our bodies which oftentimes are misvsed to our goods which are diminished to our good Names which are impaired are to be remitted As for other debts due to vs we may require them so we doe it with shewing mercy to such as are in necessity toward whom we ought to haue patience in forbearing Obiection 2. The second is whether a man may lawfully sue him at the Law that hath offended him Or how doth suing and forgiuing stand together in a Christian Answere I answer the Law is free for all men and the end of it is to redresse all disorders And as a Souldier in a lawfull warre may kill his Enemy and yet loue him so may a man forgiue an iniury and yet vse the remedy of the Law and thereby seeke in a Christian manner to redresse the wronges that are done vnto him Now in suing at the Law we must obserue these sixe rules First it must not be for toyes and trifles but in matters of waite and importance which do neerely concerne vs and whereby we are some way damnified But trifles cannot damnifie vs. This reproueth those that are so farre carried vpon the spleene b 1 Cor. 6 7. as that they are ready to prosecute euery action and slight occasion that is offered vnto them if it be but the wagging of a Straw which bewrayeth an euill heart in them Secondly we must take heede of priuate reuenge and inward hatred which if we conceiue we doe not forgiue We must not suffer our suites to coole our loue to our Bretheren nor to weaken our Faith in performing our seruice worship vnto God For albeit the cause be neuer so iust and lawfull c Rom. 12 9 10. yet if we handle it vnlawfully vncharitably and vnchristianly we offend God and transgresse against our Brother Thirdly we must beware of giuing offence to the Church of God Some offences are taken but not giuen as when men are offended for doing our duty to God We must not omit that which God requireth because man will be offended Our care must be to be ready to giue satisfaction to the godly that our doing be not iustly scandalous obseruing the rule of the Apostle d 1 Cor. 10 32 1 Thes 5 22. Giue no offence neither to the Iew nor to the Gentile nor to the church of God and abstaine from all appearance of euill Fourthly the end of all Controuersies and Suites in Law must bee to liue in concord and to maintaine godly peace If we haue not this end we ayme at a wrong end The end of all lawfull Warre is not murther and tumults but peace and quietnesse So the end of all strife must be to liue without strife For if all iniuries were put vp and were not repressed many would grow worse and worse and ouerturne the Ciuill State and gouernment Fiftly another end we may at must be that the truth may come to light that is hidden that the party offending may be chastised e 1 Cor. 6 11. and by chasticement be brought to repentance for his wronges For such is the mallice of many that the passing by of one wrong would but open a wide gap or gate to bring other iniuries vpon our owne heades and the more we suffer the more hard measure they would offer Lastly the Law must bee vsed not vpon pleasure but vpon necessity and we must take it vp as the last refuge and remedy We must vse it as a Father vseth correction or as a Physition vseth desperate Medicines or as the Surgion vseth searing and cutting f 1 Cor. 6 6. when other will not serue the turne If a friendly agreement and priuate arbiterment may be had let it be preferred and the Magistrate not troubled with our contentions Thou oughtest not to produce into publike Courts of Iustice and iudgement that which may well bee decided and determined by graue sober godly and discreet men at home as the small causes which the Rulers might iudge were not to be brought before Moses Exod. 18 22. If it cannot be had so that though we seeke peace and ensue it yet it flyeth from vs it is lawfull for vs to go farther euen to sue our neghbour at the law and vse the benefit of the Magistrate Obiection 3. The third obiection is how can the Magistrate practise this Doctrine to forgiue offences and offenders seeing as the Apostle teacherh Rom. 13. He beareth not the Sword in vaine If his duty be to punish how can he pardon If he be to execute iudgement how can he forgiue them that trespasse Answere I answere a Magistrate is to be considered two waies according to two seuerall persons which he doth sustaine to wit either as he is a Man or as hee is a Magistrate as he hath a common condition or a speciall As he is a man or a Christian man which estate he hath common with his Brethren he is to beare and forbeare and behaue himselfe as others but as he is a Magistrate which estate he hath as properlie belonging vnto him he is the Deputy and Vice-gerent of God he sustaineth his person he executeth his iudgement and therefore he ought not to haue any respect of persons or winke at the committing of any wickednesse Obiection 4 The fourth Obiection is how we can be saide to forgiue our Bretheren their trespasses seeing no man can forgiue sinnes but onely God Hence it is that Dauid saith in the Psalme Against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight Psal 51. Likewise the Scribes and Pharisies when they heard Christ speake to the man sicke of the Palsie Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee began to reason among themselues Who is this that speaketh Blasphemies Who can forgiue sinnes but God onely Luke 5 20 21. Answere I answer in euery sinne there are two things to be marked and considered the euill of the action and the damage that ariseth to man by the euill action the one God forgiueth the other man forgiueth God pardoneth the euill Man pardonerh the damage or detriment that befalleth his person goods or name So then God forgiueth and Man forgiueth God forgiueth the sinne man forgiueth the hurt For we must obserue that in euery trespasse are two offences one to God the other to man To God when he forgiueth the breach of his law and imputeth it not to the offender which belongeth properlie to him and no man is able to doe To man when he remitteth the iniury or harme that hath risen to him in the things that appertaine to him It is not in mans power to forgiue the sinne whereby God is offended and he oftentimes pardoneth the wrong done to him when God forgiueth not
of Princes in troubling of Common-wealths in plotting and practising of Treasons in murthering of Princes and in setting all things in an vprore Thirdly the Bope vsurpeth a power to free subiects from their allegeance and their oath of obedience as appeareth by the Popes two Breeues that hee sent ouer forbidding his popish Catholickes to sweare homage and fidelitie to the King Fourthly their teachers of popish Diuinity publish and maintaine manie Treasonable positions tending to the dishonour of Princes and to the ouerthrow of Kingdomes It is well knowne to all the World what Bellarmine hath deliuered in the Controuersies of Religion that he hath published to be read and viewed of all men how basely he hath spoken of Princes and how boldly he hath diminished their authority that he might establish the Popes Temporall Soueraignety He teacheth out of his Doctours Chaire or rather from his Orators Deske o Bellar. de laic lib. 7. cap. De pontif lib. 1. c. 7. et lib. 5. cap. 8. 7. that Princes are rather Seruants then Lords subiect not onely to Popes and Cardinals but to Byshoppes and Priests that Princes haue their authority not immediatly from God nor from the Law of God but by the Law of Nations that Princes may be deposed and dethroned by their Subiects and other placed in their stead that the Pope hath Temporall power indirectly that obedience is due to the Pope for conscience sake but to Princes for pollicy sake That the cause why Christians in former time deposed not Nero the Tyrant and Iulian the Apostata and Valens the Arrian and such like was because they wanted Temporall power and if they had not wanted strength they would not haue wanted will to do it that if Princes go about to turne away the people from their base Roman and Bastard-Catholike Faith they may and ought to be depriued of their dominions Heereunto we might adde many like principles of their deuilish Diuinitie taught in their Schooles and brought into the State and practised by their Disciples out of Sanders p Sand. devisib Monarch lib. 2. cap. 4. who was himselfe an Arch-rebell and perrished in his rebellion that he had raised being not onely a beholder of it but an Actor in it Whereby we see if he had no other matter what we are to esteeme of the Roman Religion namely that it is a counterfeit Religion to be abhorred of all true Christians being the Nursery of Treasons and the Mother of all abhominations which setteth vp the Pope as the great Idoll and Arch-rebell of the World so that he vsurpeth a Supremacy ouer all Ciuill Gouernments in the Earth whereas the true Christian Religion is as contrary to this as light to darkenesse which teacheth to bee subiect to the higher powers for Conscience sake which teacheth to feare God and to honour the King which teacheth all degrees as well q Chrys hom 23. in Rom. 13. Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill to stoop downe to this ordinance of God Our Weapons are Prayers and teares our means that we vse are supplications to God and to Man But these Seducers put downe the honour of Kings and Princes and teach them that depend vpon them to take vp Fire and Sword and all other seditious practises which the God of this World teacheth the Children of rebellion so often as occasion of aduantage and hope to preuaile serueth them Vse 3. Lastly seeing the Gospell doth establish not abolish strengthen not weaken confirme not disanull the ordinances that God hath setled among Men we learne that whosoeuer is a good Christian and hath rightly embraced the Gospell is also a good obseruer of Household Gouernment and of Common-wealth Gouernment which stand with the word of God and the maintenance of peace and humaine society I say then that a faithfull and sound Christian is a good Subiect a good Father a good Maister a good Wife a good Childe a good Seruant a good Common-wealths-man The Church and Common-wealth are as louing Sisters liuing dwelling growing flourishing prospering decaying and falling together We must all consider our common and speciall calling and know that Christian duties and Personall duties must not be deuided the one from the other but bee coupled and ioyned in one man It is not sufficient for a man in common conuersation to be a Christian but he must shew himselfe to be so in his speciall calling A Magistrate must not onely be a Christian but he must bee a Christian Magistrate A Father and Maister must not onely be Christians but they must be Christian Fathers and Christian Maisters It is not enough for vs to be Christians abroad we must not content our selues to be Christians in the sight of others but we must manifest our selues to be so in the administration and gouernment of our particular Families and in the discharge of our seuerall duties toward Wife Children and Seruants This reproueth many that liue among vs who beare themselues abroad as men forward in Religion eatnest in their profession and such as would be accounted to goe before many others yet take a view of them what they are priuately in their owne houses and what duties they performe toward their Families they haue lost the reputation at home that they had abroad and shew themselues to be more carefull to seeme religious and to bee thought great Christians then to be good Christians indeede The like we may say of all Inferiours It is not enough for the Wife the Childe the Seruant the Subiect to shew themselues faithfull and religious openly in the Congregation and other places of resort but they must shew themselues right Christians in their reuerence subiection and obedience toward those Superiours that are set ouer them Euery one hath two callings generall and personall Thus we see that as euery one hath two callings one generall which is the calling of Christianity common to euery member of the the Church the other personall or particular which is the discharge of speciall duties in regard of that distinction made betweene man and man so both these callings must be ioyned together in our life as the body and soule are in one man If one of them be wanting the other is missing If they doe not meete together in one person there is onely a shew of true Christianity but the substance is absent A good Christian therefore cannot be an euill Subiect an euill Seruant If they haue Christ Iesus formed in them it will make them obey for Conscience sake Nay heereby wee see that onely such as feare God are good Subiects others cannot be For the wicked and vngodly doe prouoke God to anger against the King against the Kingdome and to procure the destruction of them both by their sinnes This is it which Salomon teacheth in the Prouerbes r Prou. 28 2. For the transgression of the Land there are many Princes thereof but by a man of vnderstanding and knowledge a Realme likewise endureth long Thus
confoundeth the wisedome that is in man and maketh manifest the abundance of his loue to his people in turning al things that fall out to their good and making them serue them we conclude that Gods prouidence disposeth and ordereth all actions whether they be good or euill for the benefit of such as feare him he will make all things that come to passe to serue them that serue him Obiection 1. This doctrine of Gods prouidence is a firme piller of our faith and a fundamentall point of our Religion and therefore it is throughly to be cleered and the questions to be answered that they may be raised against it First it may be obiected that if God gouerne all things by his prouidence it skilleth not what we do whether we doe good or euill seeing his will must come to passe and we cannot change it It seemeth no matter whether we heare the word or pray or labour to doe well inasmuch as his will must be accomplished Answere I answere that this is a false and wicked conclusion which is founded vpon our owne deuise but doth not follow vpon his prouidence For albeit he order all thinges yet he hath appointed vs to vse the meanes It is a great error and ignorance to separate the decree of God and the endeuour of man which he would haue coupled together Rebecca the wife of Isaac had heard it from the mouth of God that could not lie a Gen. 25 23. Mal. 1 2 3. Rom. 9 12 13 that her two sons should make two Nations and the elder should serue the younger whereby she knew that Esau could not kill Iacob howsoeuer he threatned and whatsoeuer he intended yet did she not tempt God nor presume carelesly vpon his prouidence but she vsed the ordinary meanes to saue and preserue the life of Iacob and sent him to her Kindred out of his Brothers reach which she did not in distrust but in faith The like we see in Paule when he was in the Ship and the Angell of God had told him there should be no losse of any mans life but all should come safe though with much danger to the land yet he saith vnto them b Acts 27 31. Except these abide in the ship ye cannot be safe Christ our Sauiour praieth to his Father c Iohn 17 5. to glorifie him and yet he was sure and certaine of it before to teach vs that as we beleeue Gods prouidence so we must vse and not refuse the meanes that he hath ordained But of this we haue spoken else where d Num. 20 13 more at large and therefore will passe it ouer Obiection 2. If all things come to passe by the vnchangeable decree of God then nothing is done freely and so the liberty of the Creatures will is taken awaie Answere I answere a thing may be done by the vnchangeable counsell and necessary decree of GOD and yet changeably and contingentlie and freely in respect of diuers causes by which it is produced so that Gods vnchangeable purpose and mans free will may stand together Wee see this in the History of Christes Passion e Iohn 19 36. the Souldiers brake the bones of the Theeues that were crucified with him but his bones were not broken How came this to passe In their owne nature they might haue beene broken as well as not broken as well as the Theeues were and if we consider the Souldiers in respect of the Nature of their will they might haue chosen the one or the other But in regard of Gods will and purpose it was necessary they should not be broken that the Type might be fulfilled and that the Scripture might be accomplished Obiection 3. If God rule all by his prouidence how is it that there is so great confusion and disorder vnder the Sunne How is it that euill men prosper and flourish and the godly are driuen to the wall and to the worst How is it that there are so many Murthers Blood-sheds Cruelties and Riots Answere I answere the faithfull are afflicted in this World for their good f 1 Cor. 11 32 That they should not be condemned with the World as the Prophet confesseth it in his owne experience On the other side the vngodly receiue Gods blessings for their farther condemnation and to make them in-excusable before the iudgement of God Moreouer there is no disorder in the Worlde in respect of God albeit there be confusion in respect of Men. For there is order in the greatest disorder that hapneth among vs. Hence it is that the Wise man saith g Eccle. 3 11. God hath made all things beautifull in his time Euen those thinges that seeme most foule and deformed in our eyes are yet faire and beautifull being sent as iust and due punishments from God as the execution of his wrath and vengeance for the wickednesse and vnthankefulnesse of the World and for the tryall of the Faith patience and obedience of his Seruants When peace maketh vs secure and securitie bringeth a forgetfulnesse of GOD an abuse of his blessings and a breaking out into all excesse are not the Sword the Pestilence and Famine iustlie sent vpon vs of GOD When we see men thriue by oppression and get their goods with Couetousnesse vniust dealing deceit and vnmercifulnesse to the poore is it not a iust reuenge from Gods owne hand that an vnthrift should arise and ryotously was the goods that haue been naughtily and wrongfullie gotten Marke a little I beseech you the example of Dauid the deare Childe of God so often commended in Scripture He committed Adulterie with the Wife and caused her Husband to be slaine by the Sword of the Ammonites wherein he sinned greeuously and prouoked the Lord exceedinglie For he is threatned by the Prophet and the threatning is performed Nathan is sent vnto him to shew him his sinne to denounce the chasticement of God and so to bring him vnto repentance he saide h 2 Sam. 12 10 11. The Sword shall not depart from thy House Beholde I will raise vp euill against thee out of thine owne House and will take thy Wiues before thine eyes and giue them to thy Neighbour and he shall lie with thy Wiues in the sight of the Sunne c. This was the punnishment that was threatned which was most iust in respect of God that did decree it in respect of Nathan that did denounce it and in respect of Dauid that did deserue it See now how it was brought to passe in the house of Dauid First Amnon his Sonne i 2 Sam. 13 14 and 16 22. defileth his Sister Tamar then Absalom another of his Sonnes in reuenge of that Incest slayeth his owne Brother and afterward rebelleth against his Father gathereth a power of Men and driueth his Father out of Ierusalem and when he commeth thither by the counsell of Ahithophell he causeth a Tent to be spread and in the sight of all the people
them and cursse them and cannot behold them with a friendly looke and a louing countenance as if the fault were in the Clearkes Bayliffes and other publique Officers not in themselues and their owne vnfaithfulnesse which is all one as if a Male-factor should charge the Executioner who is the Minister of Iustice to be the cause of his death forgetting that his owne misdeedes and misdemeanors brought him vp vnto that place and punishment Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is needefull that to confirme our lawfull contractes there be Euidences to shew it is a good point of wisedome required of vs to vse the aduise of such as are learned in the law and are both men of knowledge and of conscience For heere if in any thing else we shall finde the common Prouerbe true That the best is best cheap Many there are that regard the Fee more then the Cause and speake for themselues rather then for the partie that hath chosen them Againe many suites arise through ignorance and vnskilfulnesse of the Law wherefore it is meete we should resort to a learned Counsell so that partly through the want of honesty and piety in some partly the want of skill and practise in others many poore Clients go to wracke We must all deale in the matter of our goods as wise Patients doe for the curing of their bodies and the recouery of their health They will not goe to euery Slubberer or Sorcerer to euery Leach or Mountebanke to take charge of their bodies to whom a man would be loath to commit his Beasts If any doubts arise auoyd all forgery and periury suborning of false Witnesses counterfeiting of Euidences and such like deceitfull practises as the God of this world hath taught the Children of darknesse and confusion Take that course which God alloweth and Iustice warranteth repaire to men of that profession giue him good instruction and follow thou his direction For this purpose I will craue leaue to set downe e Three rules belonging to Lawyers three rules that are required and are to be performed of men of Law the obseruation whereof shall giue peace and comfort of conscience with God and gaine them Crownes and credit among men First of all if they disdaine not to be aduised and taught by vs let the end of all their pleas and proceedings be the finding out of the ttuth Let this be the marke that they shoot at and the starre whereby they direct all their course which seasoneth all their pleadings as it were with Salt If they regard not the tryall of the truth nor which way the cause go so they may receiue their Fee they abuse the ballances of Iustice and turne equity into Iniquity God is truth and euery one that belongeth vnto him should labour to bring the truth to light It is a generall rule taught by the Apostle f 2 Cor. 13 8. We cannot doe any thing against the truth but for the truth Woe therefore vnto them that dig deepe to hide the truth and inuent shifts to bury it out of sight that it may not take place and do all things against the truth and nothing for it The second rule is that they doe not delay the causes of their Clients and protract the time in hope of farther gaine from Tearme to Tearme and from yeare to yeare As there may be too great hast so there may be too great delay and there are Rockes on eyther hand the safest course is to saile in the midst betweene them both for feare of shipwracke It is a dutie of the Surgeon not to linger the curing of his Patient and to torment him a whole yeare where he might restore him in a quarter Suites of Law are tedious and chargeable they are as the fits of a Feauer that vexe the body and trouble the minde It is an euill course to keepe sores alwaies raw and woundes greene in hope to get Mony So it is an vncharitable proceeding to retaine causes and to keepe them alwaies on foot except they may haue for expedition Lastly as the end of their pleading must bee truth and veritie and the course of it without delay so it is required of them when they know the cause to be euill and see the manifest signes of an ouerthrow that they doe not conceale it but discouer and open it vnto their Clients They are to forewarne them of the end that they doe not intangle themselues in vnnecessarie and vnlawfull suites It is deliuered as a dutie of the Physition and of the Minister when they come to a sicke man that lyeth on his death-bed and see manifest signes of death that they doe not hide it from him nor flatter him in his sicknesse saying I hope you shall doe well and recouer and be as merry among your Neighbours as euer you were but rather with wisdome warne him and with discretion certifie him of it to the end he may renounce all confidence in earthly thinges and put his whole affiance in God according to that sentence of the Apostle g 2 Cor. 1 9. We receiued the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead Thus ought it to be with the carefull and conscionable Lawyer when he seeth the cause of his Clyent desperate and languishing without hope of life he ought not to draw him on and moue him to proceede but perswade him to giue ouer and tell him the danger that will come vpon him It is too late to bid the Souldier beware when the victory is lost The wisest way is to preuent a mischiefe betimes before it be too late So then to trusse vp these thinges closely together and to couch them in a narrow roome if he shall vse his diligence that the truth may be discouered and right take place and make this the end of his pleading if he bend his wits to giue quicke dispatch to the causes he vndertaketh and not to prolong the time for his owne aduantage And last of all if he lay open the weaknesse of his Clyents cause vnto him and forewarne him of the issue thereof he shall doe the part of an honest man of a faithfull Christian of a learned Lawyer and of a discreet Counseller Vse 3 Thirdly from these assurances in writing to confirme our promises one to another we learn the cause why it pleased the Lord to vse so many waies and meanes with vs to giue vs his Word his Oath his promises his Miracles his Couenants and his Seales We learne wherefore all these do serue euen to strengthen our Faith in the good meaning of God toward vs. And as he thereby assureth his owne graces so he prouideth for our weakenesse If there were in vs that measure of Faith that ought to be the bare word of God might be all-sufficient to teach vs to acknowledge him to be the God of our saluation and to depend vpon him for our Redemption But seeing
eies by bowing downe the knees and such other gestures as testified the sequestring of all their thoughts from the earth and earthly cogitations and the bringing of all their mind to the meditation of heauen and heauenly things Secondly we haue need in prayer of perseuerance continuance Wee must not giue ouer and wax weary It pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to defer to heare to helpe vs not that he neglecteth vs or forgetteth vs or wisheth our hurt but to exercise our Faith by delaying Wherefore all rash presumption ought to be far from vs which dareth to prescribe vnto God either the time or the maner of our deliuerance and of granting our requests It is our duty to wait patiently vpon the Lord and to refer vnto him the meanes and maner of helping of vs. The woman of Canaan n Math. 15 22. is a notable example to teach vs to continue in prayer euen then when wee seeme to haue the repulse and deniall The Widdow in the Gospell is a o Luke 18 1 2 worthy president to this purpose to moue vs to this perseuerance and not to giue ouer Lastly we must beware that we aske no more then God giueth vs leaue to aske in his word We must require those things that are fitting vs to craue and beseeming God to grant Many men neuer consider these things but are rash and heady in their petitions regarding neither what he in goodnesse and Iustice can giue neither what is profitable for themselues to receiue Some craue riches to spend in lust and riot other wish for strength to be reuenged of their enimies p Rom. 12 21 whom they ought to receiue with goodnesse Others are not ashamed to ask foule and filthy things which one would blush to aske of a mortal man which the Heathen q Pers Satyr 2. themselues haue condemned These are the causes why our prayers are not heard because we aske amisse and do not submit our willes to his will Our wils are carnall and corrupt his will is pure and holy and the rule of all righteousnesse The 3. thing required in prayer The third point to be obserued in prayer is that it proceed from an humble and contrite heart If pride do compasse vs as a Chain and an high conceit of our selues possesse vs we are deceiued if we suppose to obtaine anie thing at the hands of God A proud Begger is hated of God and scorned of men There can nothing be seene more deformed and despised then a poor man that is proud There is nothing can worse sort together then a proude heart and a beggers purse God euer-more resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble and lowly The Prophet Dauid declareth this Psal 51 16 17. Thou desirest no Sacrifice though I would giue it thou delightest not in Burnt Offerings The Sacrifices of God are a contrite spirite a contrite and a broken heart O Lord thou wilt not despise We must learne therefore truely to feele our owne pouerty and misery let vs consider that we neede all things that we aske and so ioyne an earnest and feruent affection and desire of obtaining Indeed wee cannot alwayes haue a like feeling but wee must alwayes striue against deadnesse of heart and dulnesse of spirit Let vs shake off all vaine-glory and pride and giue all the glory to God as the poore Publican did in the Gospell Thus haue the faithfull done r Psal 143 2. Dan. 6 17. Esay 64 5. Ier. 14 7. as appeareth in Dauid Daniell Esay Ieremy We must not bee like the proud Pharisie ſ Luke 16 11. that stood vpon his owne righteousnesse and condemned other of wickednesse and prophanenesse Let vs also come with Repentaunce not onely crauing pardon for sins past and making an humble Confession of faults present but desiring grace to be strengthned in time to come Lastly let not our prayer be a lip-labour for forme and fashion sake but earnest and feruent When Saneherib inuaded Iudah and besieged the strong Citties and thought to win them for him-selfe Hezekiah and the Prophet Esay with him t 2 Chr. 32 20 cried to heauen Thus doth the Prophet Ieremy speake u Lam. 2 19. Arise cry in the night in the beginning of the Watches poure out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord lift vp thine hands toward him c. Heerunto accordeth the Apostle Rom. 8 26 27. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not how to pray as we ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sights which cannot be expressed but he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the meaning of the spirit for he maketh request for the Saints according to the will of God Thus it appeareth out of the practise of the Prophets Apostles what kinde of prayers God accepteth True it is they auaile much howbeit they must be feruent Cold prayers turne into sinne and neuer bring with them any blessing We will seeme to drawe neere to God and to honor him howbeit it is only with our mouths and lips which is a vaine woorshipping of him We will needs cal vpon his name but our prayers freeze betweene our teeth and are vttered without zeale These are they that pray but it is in such sort as if they neuer meant to speed If a Child should craue any thing of his parents in that manner they would take them-selues to bee abused The fourth thing required in prayer The 4. thing expressed in the former description of praier is that it must be put vp in the name of Christ Iesus He is the Mediator of the new Testament he standeth between the wrath of his Father vs he maketh continuall intercession for vs. If then we would haue our prayers accepted we must come in his name he is the High-priest of our profession he offereth them vp vnto his Father who accepteth them not for their woorthinesse but for his worthinesse not for their merits but for his merits as wee shall shew farther in the Doctrine following In his Name did the Fathers come to the Throne of Grace and presented their prayers before God assuring themselues to bee heard for his sake This is manifest in the prayer that Daniell maketh Chap. 9. 17. Now therefore O our God hear the Prayer of thy seruant and his supplications and cause thy face to shine vppon thy Sanctuary that lyeth wast for the Lords sake He acknowledgeth Christ Iesus to be the heire and Lord of all things in whom and through whom God would accept his praiers This we might farther ſ 1 Sam. 3 21. 2 Sam. 7 21. shew by other examples yea it is taught vs by the mouth of Christ himselfe t Iohn 16 23. Verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye sha●… aske the Father in my name he will giue it you As no man can come to the Father but by him so no man can obtaine any thing but by him
ground The like salutation we see in Iudas who had giuen the multitude that came with swords and staues from the High-Priests and Elders of the people a Token saying n Mat 26 48. 49. Whomsoeuer I shall kisse that is he lay hold on him and forthwith hee came to Iesus and said God saue thee Maister and kissed him Thus hee betrayed the sonne of man with a kisse We must haue our words and hearts goe together and not one wander and stray from the other We must not haue our words softer then Oyle hide swords and speares within vs. This is cruell and deceitfull dealing this is farre from true Christianity this is farre from that plaine and simple dealing that ought to be in vs. Such men are the most dangerous and pernitious enemies that are they are hardly knowne and therefore hardly auoyded One of these false hearted Brethren is worse then an hundred open professed aduersaries A pit which is couered so that thou canst not see it is more likely to worke thy hurt and cause thee to fall into it then that which is manifest to be seene Let vs therefore remember that our words bee alwayes seasoned and accompanied with truth Let our mouth speak as the heart thinketh and let vs take heed of lying cogging cozening glozing smoothing and dissembling which are the workes of the deuill the fruits of the flesh and the badges of Hypocrites Thirdly as we haue heard that they are to be reproued that disdaine to speake to others and such as are content to vse friendly greetings in word but their hearts go not with them so likewise such are condemned as vse vnkinde and vncourteous speeches nay foule and vncleane vngodly and prophane communication This the Apostle teacheth Ephes 4. o Ephe. 4 31. Let all bitternesse and anger and wrath crying and euill speaking be put away from you with all maliciousnesse Such was the snappish answere of Caine p Gen. 4 9. Am I my Brothers keeper So for this cause Nabell being a churlish currish man q 1 Sam. 25 10 11. is concluded to be a foole and a wicked man This vnciuill bitter dealing is a great signe and a certaine note of an vnregenerate and carnal man Let vs beware of al railing rotten speeches The mouth is the Messenger of the heart and from the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A filthy tongue argueth a filthy heart an vnbrideled tongue a licentious heart A poysoned tongue that casteth out banning and cursing doth manifest a cursed and corrupt heart The tongue that raueth and rageth beyond all measure and belcheth out blasphemies and vomiteth out pocky and plaguy speech as it were the ouer-charging of a loathsome stomacke doth shew be it spoken with reuerence a pocky and plaguy heart It is a shame almost to speake those thinges I will not say which these men do in secret but which they speake openly publickely euidently And yet alas how common a thing is it when men and women are a little heated and prouoked to wish all euill to fall vpon the persons of their Bretheren and their Cattle nay sometimes vpon their owne wiues their own children their owne Seruants their owne Cattell crying out a vengeance on them a plague of God to come vpon them a Murraine take them the Deuill of hell go with thee and such like which come from an vncircumcised mouth nay from an vncircumcised and vnregenerate Neyther let any alledge for the excuse of their cursed and wretched speeches It is a custome they haue gotten but that they minde and meane no such thing whatsoeuer they speake for first this is a cursed custome and a custome in sinning the greater it is the worse it is The more thou doest accustome thy tongue vnto it the harder it is to be left Our Sauiour teacheth r Mat. 12 35. 36. that A good man out of the good Treasure of his heart bringeth forth good thinges and an euill man out of an euill Treasure bringeth forth euill thinge But I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue account thereof at the day of Iudgement If then we must reckon and account at the end of the World and of our life for idle wordes what madnesse is it for vs to cast out and disgorge blasphemous wicked and cursed speeches which will bring vpon vs horrible plagues and heauy punishments to be suffered in hell fire Hence it is that Christ saith in the wordes following Å¿ Verse 37. By thy wordes thou shalt be iustified and by thy wordes thou shalt be condemned Heere-unto the Apostle Iames agreeth t Iam. 1. 26. Chap. 1. If any man among you seemeth Religious and refraineth not his tongue but deceiueth his owne heart this mans Religion is vaine Neither let them say they thinke not euill they meane not as they speake for this doth not take away the euill but rather increase it in asmuch as they adde sinne vnto sinne hypocrisie to impiety as it were drunkennesse vnto thirst Let such acquaint their hearts with blessiing not with cursing and striue against their corruptions which are growne to an head and haue gotten a custome in them remembring the saying of the Prophet Psal 109. u Psal 109 17 18. As he loued Cursing so shall it come vnto him and as he loued not blessing so shall it bee farre from him as he clothed himselfe with Cursing like a rayment so shall it come into his Bowels like water and like Oyle into his Bones Let vs therefore all of vs put in practise the precept of the Apostle x Ephe. 4 29. Let no corrupt communication proceede out of your mouthes but that which is good to the vse of edefying that it may minister grace vnto the hearers Where he declareth that corrupt speech should be to the eare as vnsauory meat to the stomacke A rotten Sheepe is knowne by his bleating so is an vnregenerate heart by his wordes Wherefore as the tast abhorreth rotten meate so should our mindes loath and detest rotten and vnreuerent talke Vse 3. Lastly seeing we are taught to vse all gentle and curteous communication and all louing salutations and well-wishings one toward another this teacheth vs that we must all diligently study and practise the gouernment of the tongue to order it aright and in due manner This is a worthy study it is an hard study it is a profitable study Hence it is that the Prophet saith y Psal 34 12 13. Psal 34. What man is he that desireth life and loueth long daies for to see good Keepe thy tongue from euill and thy lippes that they speake no guile To this purpose he speaketh in another Psalme z Psal 39 1. I thought I will take heede to my waies that I sinne not with my tongue I will keepe my mouth brideled while the wicked is in my fight The difficulty and hardnesse of this study the