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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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his people Wee shall not now need other proofe than this of our Apostle in this place The Philippians had embraced the faith of Iesus Christ they abounded in knowledge and in iudgement they stood fast in the faith notwithstanding their assaults by false Apostles they were carefull ouer him and communicated to his afflictions they were excellent in many graces So that our Apostle had great cause to haue great ioy ouer them But because of some contention and vaine-glory amongst them his ioy was not full A sufficient president for the Pastor that he count not his ioy full so long as any thing is amisse amongst his people Which may serue to admonish the Pastor to labour that nothing may bee amisse amongst his people either touching life or doctrine that so his ioy may be full and that his people may be the crowne of his reioycing in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming But I come vnto that which the Apostle exhorteth in generall The thing which the Apostle exhorteth the Philippians in generall is that they be like minded that is like affectioned hauing their affections likings and desires set on the same things An euident argument that they were not like minded as also the rest which followeth is that some things were amisse amongst them And in that hee dealeth so earnestly with them that these things might bee amended in them it sheweth that these are things which are carefully to be procured regarded and maintained LECTVRE XXV PHILIP 2. Verse 2. That yee be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accord and of one iudgement that nothing bee done through contention c. WE haue heard the manner of the Apostles exhortation and therein foure very patheticall arguments couched to perswade the things whereunto hee exhorteth all so closely followed and so passionately vrged as that the manner of the exhortation could not be deuised more effectuall to perswade the things whereunto hee exhorteth If there bee c. It remained to speake of the matter of the Apostles exhortation Wee spake only of that which I tooke to be onely a motiue prefixed before the matter of the exhortation in these words Fulfill my ioy Now wee are to proceed vnto the maine matter of the Apostles exhortation which is that they be like minded hauing the same loue c. By which matter of the exhortation this in generall appeareth that some things were amisse amongst them there was not that loue and concord amongst them nor that humilitie which should he in them many things were done amongst them through contention through vain-glory through selfe-seeking of their owne things so that though many things were to be much commended in them yet were some things likewise to be reformed in them which hindered the course of that Christian conuersation which becommeth the Gospell of Christ Iesus Whence I obserue in generall what the state euen of the best reformed Churches and so of the most holy men is no Church so reformed no men so sanctified but that many things are amisse amongst them though many things bee much to be commended in them yet some things likewise are still to be reformed in them Looke into all those Churches vnto which our Apostle wrote his Epistles yee shall not finde any of them so commended for embracing the truth and for standing fast in the truth as this Church of Philippi Hee giueth indeed testimonie vnto the Galathians that they were sometimes such as if it had beene possible would haue pluckt out their owne eyes and haue giuen them vnto him so loued they him and the truth which he taught But quickly were they remoued to another Gospell Gal. 1.6 as the Apostle witnesseth whereas the Philippians still stood so fast that the Apostle was perswaded that he that had begunne that good worke in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Yet here ye see that some things were amisse amongst them Againe looke into those seuen Churches vnto which Iohn writeth in the Apocalyps and there yee shall see that some were fallen others decayed some were proud others negligent Of all the rest of those Churches the Church of Smyrna and the Church of Philadelphia are there most commended Yet in both those Churches by the right vnderstanding of those Epistles that were written to them it will appeare that there were some amongst them who professed themselues to be good Christians whereas indeed they were no better than a Synagogue and sinke of Satan Againe looke into the reformed Churches euer since that time vnto this day and at this day and still yee shall see that as in those seuen Churches of Asia so in these there were and are as many things to bee commended so likewise many things to be reprehended And so long as the Church is militant vpon earth it cannot be but that shee should be blacke blacke I say not onely in respect of her afflictions whereby her beloued doth sometimes proue her and sometimes chastise her but blacke also in respect of her blemishes imperfections and sinnes which are the causes of her afflictions For all men while they carry about with them the earthly house of this tabernacle vnto what degree of perfection in faith knowledge or other graces of the spirit so euer they be growne had still neede to pray O Lord increase our faith our knowledge and vnto what perfection in innocencie obedience or the like they be growne yet still they are taught to pray O Lord forgiue vs our debts and trespasses For here we know in part we beleeue in part we loue in part we obey in part and our greatest perfection is but great imperfection whiles we liue here at home in the bodie 1 Cor. 13.9 as that of the Apostle sheweth And so long as we are clothed with corruption if we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues 1 Ioh. 1.8 and truth is not in vs. That which is in part either in knowledge or in loue or in obedience or in the like graces of the spirit shall be abolished our imperfections shall be taken away and we shall be made perfit But where and when Not here otherwise then by imputation but then and there when and where corruption shall put on incorruption and mortalitie shall put on immortalitie as the former place to the Corinthians sheweth ver 10. and the Church shall be presented vnto Christ Iesus her beloued not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but pure and holy and without blame but then when shee shall bee made glorious when her vile bodie shall be changed and be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie Eph. 5.27 as that place to the Ephesians sheweth This then should teach vs to long to be of that triumphant Church to long to enter into the holiest of holies to long to be loosed and to be with Christ Here the father of the faithfull holy Abraham here the man after Gods owne
my comfort bridle thine inordinate desires flie from that which is euill and doe that is good what cares the people for the comfort of their Pastor in this case or the childe for the comfort of his father or the friend for the comfort of his friend Will any of them for the loue of them that they may bee comforted by them yeeld vnto their holy desires Nay wee loue them not so but whatsoeuer become of their comfort wee will follow our owne wayes If it be so with vs this is verily a fault amongst vs and let vs hereafter so loue the godly whatsoeuer be their place that wee make reckoning of their comfort and in token thereof let vs hearken to such holy aduice as they giue vs. His third argument is If there be any fellowship of the spirit that is if yee be knit together in the bond of one spirit and haue fellowship one with another as members of one body vnder one head then fulfill my ioy c. The ground of which argument is that men knit together in the bond of one spirit are to giue proofe thereof by concord loue and agreemen● amongst themselues Whence I obserue that wee are to giue proofe of being knit together in the bond of one spirit by the bond of peace concord and loue amongst our selues Thus where it is said in the Acts of such as were brought to the faith through the Apostles preaching that they beleeued and were baptized as a token and proofe that they were all baptized into one spirit it is also said that they continued together with one accord that they were of one heart and of one soule All that beleeued saith Luke were in one place Act. 2.14 and had all things common 41.46 And they sold their possessions and goods and parted them to all men as euery one had need And they continued daily with one accord in the Temple c. All which things are set downe as tokens and proofes that they were all baptized into one spirit And againe The whole multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one soule that is of one minde will consent and affection whereby they shewed indeed that they were knit together in one spirit and had fellowship one with another as members of one head and therein left vs an example how wee should shew that wee are so knit that wee haue such fellowship What proofe then we giue that we are knit together in one spirit and haue fellowship one with another as members of one body let our contentions discords and diuisions witnesse vnto the world Indeed they doe too too plainly witnesse vnto our faces that herein wee are carnall and walke not as they that are knit together in the fellowship of the spirit But the words following wil giue vs further occasion to speake of this point His fourth argument is If there be any compassion and mercy that is if yee haue any bowels of compassion to shew any mercy vnto mee the Lord his prisoner for your sake fulfill my ioy c. The ground of which argument is that in mercy and compassion towards him the Lord his prisoner for their sake they should at his request fulfill his ioy to be like c. Whence I obserue that the godly requests of Gods Saints afflicted for Christ his sake should moue in vs such bowels of compassion as that wee should gladly hearken and yeeld vnto them Hereupon our Apostle before diuers exhortations and requests which he maketh in his Epistles prefixeth this that hee was prisoner in the Lord prisoner of Iesus Christ I therefore being prisoner in the Lord saith he Eph. 4.1 pray you that yee walke worthy of that vocation whereunto yee are called Where in that he saith I being prisoner in the Lord he thereby implieth that they were the rather to hearken vnto his exhortation because it was the exhortation of him that was prisoner for the Lord his cause And so hee beginneth his Epistle to Philemon thus Paul a prisoner of Iesus Christ implying that Philemon was the rather to hearken and to yeeld to his request for his seruant Onesimus because it was the request of him that was now prisoner for Iesus Christ I omit other places By these yee see how powerfull and effectuall the godly requests of Gods afflicted members ought to be with vs. And it were well that in all places they were so powerfull and effectuall as to stirre vp the very bowels of compassion towards them But are not many in many places rather readie to adde affliction vnto their bonds Would it not now be enough to reiect the requests were they neuer so godly if they should come in the name of the prisoner of the Lord I the prisoner of the Lord pray you that yee reforme the wickednesse of your wayes Indeed wee may well wish in our daies that enioying our libertie we may beseech you in Christ his stead for I feare that if out of our prisons bonds wee should thus write vnto you If there bee any compassion and mercy in you towards mee the Lord his prisoner hearken vnto mee in this that yee be like minded or the like I say I feare mee the mention of our bonds would not much preuaile with you or moue any bowels of compassion in you Well howsoeuer it would it should and I hope it will in all that belong to Christ Iesus And let this suffice to be obserued from the seuerall arguments couched in the manner of the Apostles exhortation Now followeth the matter of the Apostles exhortation which is this in generall that they be like minded Which is not simply proposed but with this motiue prefixed thereunto My ioy though for great cause it be great yet is not full vnlesse yee be like minded Fulfill my ioy that yee be like minded Whence I obserue first that the godly Pastors ioy is to be in the weale of his people whatsoeuer his owne case bee If himselfe bee as Paul here was close in prison bound with chaines and looke for nothing but sentence of death yet if his people be well if they stand fast in the faith hee is to bee glad and reioyce euen in his bonds When our Apostle wrote to Philemon hee was in prison as euen now wee heard yet saith he to him wee haue great ioy and consolation in thy loue because by thee the Saints hearts are comforted So how hard soeuer the Pastors owne case be yet if hee bee a good one hee hath great ioy and consolation in his peoples weale But too too many Pastors wee haue in our day which if themselues be well care not in what case their people bee If they haue the fleece from them their hearts are glad whatsoeuer become of them But such reioycing is not good and shall be bitternesse in the end 2. Hence I obserue that the good Pastors ioy is not to be full so long as any thing is amisse amongst
writer of this Epistle and Timotheus the approuer of it or Paul the inditer of it and Timotheus the writer of it The title of dignitie commune to them both whereby they are described is this the seruants of Iesus Christ seruants both and therefore to attend vpon their ministerie and seruice and both seruants of Iesus Christ and therefore to attend vpon the ministration of the gospell which he had committed vnto them but yet the seruants of Iesus the Sauiour of the world euen of Iesus Christ annointed a King to defend vs a Prophet to teach vs and a Priest to offer vp a sacrifice for our sinnes The persons saluted are generally the whole Church of Philippi and more particularly the Bishops and Deacons there The whole Church at Philippi generally is saluted vnder the name of all the Saints in Christ Iesus which are at Philippi for by all the saints in Christ Iesus he meaneth all them which in baptisme had giuen their names vnto Christ Iesus thenceforth to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto God in righteousnes and true holinesse which was all the Church at Philippi Now this Philppi was a chiefe Citie in the parts of Macedonia Act. 16.12 whose inhabitants came from Rome to dwell there the first Citty in the passage out of Thracia beyond the riuer Strymon At the first it is generally thought to haue beene called Crenida because of the many fountaines about the hill whereon it was built 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being as much as fons and afterward to haue beene called Philippi because of the fortification and enlargement thereof by Philip King of Macedon and now to be called Gricopolis as if yee would call it Chrysopolis a Citty of gold because of the great abundance of gold that is there so great that Philip is said to haue receiued thence yearely aboue 1000 talents of gold which is asmuch as 600 thousand french crownes This Citty is notably knowne as for the great ouerthrow of Brutus and Cassius there by Octauius and Antonie so especially for the preaching of the gospell there by Paul and Silas and Timotheus for the embracing of the truth there by their ministerie and for many other accidents there during the Apostle his abode there for Paul being warned by the spirit to goe into Macedonia hee went thither and first came to Philippi there preached and by his preaching converted Lydia so that shee and her houshold were baptized Afterwards he cast out of a maide a spirit of diuination Wherevpon hee was brought before the Magistrates sore beaten with rods cast into the inner prison and his feete thrust into the stocks Being there in prison the foundation of the prison was shaken by an earth-quake the dores were opened the prisoners bands were loosed the Iaylor was conuerted he and his house baptized and the Apostle deliuered For these things this Citie is well knowne and it was the Church generally in this Citie that the Apostle saluted The persons more particularly saluted are the Bishops and Deacons there Where by Bishops he meaneth the Pastors and Teachers which laboured in the word and doctrine For both the word so signifieth throughout the whole New Testament and here it must needs so signifie because he speaketh of many in one Church By Deacons also he meaneth those that by their office were to receiue and distribute the common liberalitie of the Church according to the necessities of all the poore members thereof such as we read to haue beene ordeined in the Church Act. 6 5. and such as are described by our Apostle 1 Tim. 3.8 c. Vnto whom together with the Bishops the Apostle is thought here to write as to magnifie their office so because theirs had beene the care chiefly in respect of their office to send the Churches liberalitie to him by their Minister Epaphroditus The salutation followeth wherein he wisheth them all good from him which is the author of all goodnesse Where 1. is set downe the thing which he wisheth vnto them which is grace and peace vnderstanding by grace the free fauour of God wherewith he loueth his children and whence as from the fountaine all other goodnesse doth flow and by peace euery blessing corporall and spirituall for this life and that that is to come flowing from that fountaine of grace 2. is set downe vnto whom he wisheth this grace and peace namely vnto all the Saints at Philippi together with the Bishops c. 3. is set downe the author from whom and by whom he wisheth this grace and peace vnto them which is from God our father as the fountaine and first originall from whom commeth euery good and perfect gift and from the Lord Iesus Christ as the meanes by whom euery grace of the spirit is conveyed and deriued vnto vs. Thus much for the purpose of the Apostle in these words and the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction Paul and Timotheus First then for the very name of Paul it should not passe vs reading or hearing of it but therein we should obserue the great mercy of our gracious God towards sinfull creatures For what was Paul that now wrote vnto the Churches here and there to stablish them in the faith Surely he was sometimes a bloudy Saul a cruel persecutor of Gods Church one that hauing receiued authoritie of the High Priests Act. 26.10 shut vp many of the Saints in prison and when they were put to death gaue his sentence 11. punished them throughout all the synagogues and compelled them to blaspheme and being more madde vpon them persecuted them euen vnto strange Cities one that was a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1.13 an oppressor that spared neither men nor women Act. 22.4 but beat them and bound them and deliuered them vnto death Gal. 1.13 one that persecuted the Church of God extreamely and wasted it All which things himselfe testifieth of himselfe Could there well haue beene a more forlorne man a more desperate and godles creature Yet this man was receiued vnto mercy yea vnto such mercy that the Lord called him to be an Apostle and chose him to beare his name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel And that this was a worke of the Lord his owne mercy our Apostle himselfe witnesseth where he thus saith I was a blasphemer and a persecutor and an oppressor 1 Tim 1.13 but I was receiued to mercy And why was he receiued to mercy himselfe tells vs saying for this cause was I receiued to mercy 16. that Iesus Christ should first shew on me all long-suffering to the ensample of them that shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life It was then the Lord his great mercy towards him that of a cruell persecutor he became an holy Apostle of Christ Iesus and this mercy was shewed on him that in him might be an example of Gods mercy
therefore by Dauid the Lord saith Psal 50.23 who so offereth me thanks and praise he honoreth me euen with most excellent honor Let vs therefore clense our selues from this sinne of vnthankfullnesse Phil. 4.6 and let as the Apostle exhorteth our requests be shewed vnto God in prayer and supplication with giuing of thanks The fouler that the sinne of vnthankfulnesse is let vs the more detest it and the more requisite that thanksgiuing vnto God is let vs the more abound therein Let vs follow the counsell of the Apostle and walke in Christ Iesus rooted and built in him and stablished in the faith Col. 2.6 7. as we haue been taught abounding therein with thanksgiuing The second thing which here I note is the cause of the Apostles thanksgiuing vnto God which is because of the fellowship which they had in the gospell from the first day vntill then 1. because they as other Churches had receiued the gospell whereby they had fellowship with the Father and the Sonne and because they had continued in the truth from the first day of their conuersion vnto Christ by the worke of his ministerie vnto now that he wrote vnto them Whence I obserue a principall matter of our thanksgiuing vnto God a principall cause why we should vpon the blessing bestowed vpon vs giue thanks vnto God for it In all things indeed is matter of our thanksgiuing vnto God for euery good giuing and euery perfit gift is from aboue Jam. 1.17 and commeth downe from the father of lights c. He created vs formed vs and made vs and that in his owne image in him we liue moue and haue our being he giueth health wealth peace liberty foode rayment he sendeth raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons deliuereth in all dangers comforteth in all troubles helpeth in all needs blesseth the worke of our hands and filleth vs with plenteousnesse of all good things And for all these we should and haue great cause from day to day to tell out his praises with gladnes and to offer vnto him the sacrifice of praise thanksgiuing But yet is a more principall matter behind which is the fellowship which wee haue with other reformed Churches in the gospell of Iesus Christ and the continuance thereof so long time amongst vs the preaching of the word of our saluation amongst vs and the blessed increase thereof vnder a most gracious gouernment Here is indeed principall cause of reioycing and thanksgiuing for by our fellowship which we haue with other Churches in the gospell we haue fellowship with the Father and with his sonne Iesus Christ as Iohn witnesseth saying that which we haue seene and heard to wit the gospell 1 Joh. 1.3 declare we vnto you that yee may also haue fellowship with vs and that our fellowship also may be with the Father and with his sonne Iesus Christ By our fellowship in the gospell we are called out of darknes into his marueilous light and we which in time past were not a people are now the people of God 1 Pet. 2.9 10. and we which in time past were not vnder mercy haue now obteined mercy as Peter witnesseth By our fellowship in the gospell we are borne againe not of mortall seede 1 Pet. 1.3.23 but of immortall and are begotten vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus as the same Peter witnesseth And by our fellowship in the gospell 2 Tim. 3.15 we are made wise vnto saluation through the faith which we haue in Christ Iesus as witnesseth our Apostle O blessed fellowship in the gospell whereby we are made wise vnto saluation whereby we are regenerate and begotten vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus whereby we are called out of darknes into light and of no people made the people of God and whereby wee haue fellowship with Christ Iesus which is the great end of the ministery of the gospell that we may haue fellowship with him and walke in the light as he is in the light Againe the continuance of our fellowship in the gospell from the first day of her Maiesties most gracious gouernment ouer vs vnto now our pereseuerance in the truth without being remoued away vnto another gospell which is not another gospell saue that there be some which trouble you and intrude to peruert the gospell of Christ what a principall blessing is this of our good God vnto vs Surely these are such blessings as may well make vs breake out into exclamation with Dauid and say Psal 116.12 13 17. What shall I render vnto the Lord for these his great mercies towards me I will receiue the cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. I will offer a sacrifice of thanks-giuing will call vpon the name of the Lord. This was Dauids resolution vpon deliuerance from dangers by Saul and much more vpon such blessings as these haue we iust cause of such resolution God being principally in this soft and still voice of the gospell Haue we then such principall cause of thanksgiuing vnto our God for the fellowship which wee haue with other Churches in the gospell and for the continuance of this fellowship from the first day vnto now euen these forty yeares This then 1. should teach vs willingly and gladly to embrace the gospell of Iesus Christ when it is brought vnto vs. For if there be such cause of thanksgiuing vnto God for it being had then surely is there great cause of gladly embracing it when it may be had And yet what dullnesse and slacknes and coldnes herein In this congregation how is it embraced I beare you record some of you that yee doe embrace it willingly and gladly and I assure my selfe that from your hearts you thanke your God for it But others there are that seldome or neuer come vnto the hearing of it others that when they should heare it turne their backs and depart away from the hearing of it others that heare it sleepingly or coldly so that either it enters not in or quickly after is choked by the cares of this world Do these thanke God for the fellowship which they haue with others in the gospell Nay they haue none and some of them will haue no fellowship with others therein and therefore vnlesse at length they take hold of the grace that is offered them they shall haue no fellowship with the Father or with Iesus Christ his sonne As for you beloued that gladly embrace the gospell of your saluation hold on your good course thirst after it as the Hart doth after the water brooks frequent the places where yee may heare it lay it vp in your hearts that yee may not sinne against the Lord and let your mouthes be euer filled with praises thanksgiuing to God for it Secondly this should teach vs to labour by all holy meanes to continue in the grace and in the truth wherein we stand vnto the end For if it should so principally cause in vs
pray for perseuerance therein because he will haue all them so exercised whom he will confirme vnto the end Whatsoeuer graces therefore the Lord hath bestowed vpon vs yet still let vs pray vnto him either for our farther assurance and confirmation or for perseuerance and increase in them Let vs pray for our selues vnto the Lord for euery grace needfull for vs and let vs request to be commended by the faithfull in their praiers vnto God This is our wrestling with the God of Iacob and thus wrestling wee shall surely preuaile Matth. 7.7 for so he hath promised and faithfull is hee th●● hath promised The second thing which I note is that the Apostle in his praiers for the Philippians praied for them all for so he saith that he had them in perfect memory alwaies in all his prayers c. Whence I obserue how in our praiers for the Church we ought to be affected towards it namely that so in our praiers we commend the whole Church vnto God For what though in the Church all bee not knit together in one minde and in one iudgment what though all be not alike forward in acknowledging and embracing the truth what though many things bee done in the Church through contention or vaine glory The Apostle knew well that it was thus in the Church at Philippi as many euidently appeare by sundry places in this his Epistle yet in his praiers vnto God for them he tooke no such notice of these things as that he did seclude any of them out of his praiers vnto God but ioyntly he commended them all in his praiers vnto God Right so we in our praiers for the Church we should not easily take notice of euery contention of euery defect of euery thing that may offend in the Church so to seclude any out of our praiers vnto God but in a Christian affection towards all and in an holy desire for all we should commend the whole Church in our praiers vnto God It was such an ordinarie practise with our Apostle both to giue thanks vnto God for all them to whom he wrote and likewise to pray for them all notwithstanding that many things were amisse amongst them that we are not to doubt but that we are so to doe as we haue the Apostle for an ensample Looke into his Epistles and by the beginning almost of all of them ye shall see that this was his ordinary practise leauing vs therein an ensample that as he did so we should do And the reason is plaine for doth not the Apostle in writing his Epistles vnto the Churches still write as vnto the beloued of God and vnto Saints in Christ Iesus still entituling the whole Church vnto which he wrote vnto these titles without exception of any Or doth the Apostle so and are not we to doe so Or are wee to doe so and not to commend the whole Church in our praiers vnto God The reason I take it inferreth the point and commendeth vnto vs that generall care of commending the whole Church in our praiers vnto God A good lesson and well worthy the learning of many in these our daies for as it fareth more priuately and particularly amongst men so doth it fare more publikely and generally in the Church Amongst men ordinarily euery trifling matter is enough to cut off all loue and friendship amongst vs nay to breed great hatreds and enmities amongst vs nay to set vs at such odds that rather we will banne and curse one another then pray one for another And if wee differ in iudgement one from another about some matters of the Church then nothing on one part but carnall gospellers and time-seruers nothing on another part but sacrilegious persons schismaticall persons troublers of the state and hypocriticall dissemblers nothing but slandering and forging things neuer writ or spoke nothing but such vncharitablenesse as that it may bee feared that on some part there is little praying for the other vnlesse it bee to confound them Neither is it otherwise more publiquely and general●y in the Church if we may iudge by outward appearances Some parts of the Church vnto some seeme to haue so many defects and blemishes so many superstitious rites and ceremonies that they cannot brooke them they cannot abide in them they cannot pray with them I know not whether they doe pray for them And of others other parts of the Church because of their forme of gouernment are so misliked that they cannot with patience heare of them and therefore it is like do not in all their prayers remember them But these and all such might hence be better lessoned and such vncharitablenesse if any such be in them reformed Let vs beloued be otherwise minded Howsoeuer there be things amisse in the Church let vs not seclude any out of our praiers vnto God but let vs commend in our praiers the whole Church vnto God In our praiers vnto God let vs abandon all cogitation either of priuate quarrells one with another or of publike contentions in the Church and let vs pray each for other and all of vs for the whole Church vnto the Lord feruently Let the same minde bee in vs that was in our Apostle and let vs alwaies in all our praiers haue all the saints in Christ Iesus in perfit memory The third thing which here I note is the thing for which the Apostle praied in all his praiers for them and that was the same in substance with that wherefore hee gaue thanks vnto God For as his thanksgiuing vnto GOD on their behalfe was because of the fellowship which they had in the gospell from the first day vntill then so his praiers vnto God for them were that they might continue in that fellowship which they had in the gospell vnto the end Whence I obserue a very materiall point to be remembred in our praiers vnto God both for the whole Church and for our selues which is continuance in the fellowship of the gospell that our Church may continue in that fellowship which it hath with other reformed Churches in the gospell and that we may continue grounded and stablished in the truth wherein we stand Here is indeed principall cause of prostrating our selues before the throne of grace and powring out our soules in praier vnto our God whether we looke vnto the curse in the wanting or vnto the blessing in the enioying of the glorious gospell of Iesus Christ For what greater curse or plague of God could fall vpon vs then that our candlesticke should be remoued from vs that a famine of the word should be sent amongst vs that the gospell of our saluation should be translated from vs to another people The Lord threatning to bring a fearefull iudgment on the Church of Ephesus if they should not repent and returne to their former loue saith Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent Ap●c 2.5 and doe the first workes or else I will come against thee shortly and will remoue
thy candlesticke out of his place What is that that is he will remoue his Church from thence by taking his gospell from them Euen as our blessed Sauiour also threatned the Iewes saying Matth. 21.43 The kingdome of God shall be taken from you and giuen to a nation which shall bring forth the fruits thereof So the Prophet threatning a heauy iudgement vpon the rulers of Israel Behold saith he the daies come that I will send a famine in the land Am●s 8.11 not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the word of the Lord which how grieuous a famine and how heauy a iudgement it is appeareth by that of Salomon where he saith that where there is no vision Prou. 29.18 .i. no sincere preaching of the word no sound fellowship in the gospell there the people perisheth euen perisheth both in soule and body And as the curse and iudgement is great and grieuous of wanting so is the blessing and benefit of hauing this fellowship in the gospell exceeding great and happy for it is indeed our very life and soule 1 Pet 1.3.23.2.2 whereby we are begotten borne and nourished vnto euerlasting tife as Peter witnesseth It is the lanterne vnto our feete and the light vnto our steps to bring vs to the Citie of the liuing God the celestiall Ierusalem Heb. 12.22 23 24. and to the company of innumerable Angells and to the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and to God the iudge of all and to the spirits of iust and perfit men and to Iesus the mediator of the new testament and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things then that of Abel By it we are called out of darknes into light instructed in the way of God perfitly grounded and stablished in the faith and made wise vnto saluation Rom. 1.16 for it is the power of God vnto saluation vnto euery one that beleeueth See then whether here it be not principall cause for vs to pray for our Church that in it the gospell of our saluation may for euer be freely and sincerely preached and for our selues that we may continue in that grace wherein we stand by the gospell of our saluation Yes surely if either feare of as great a plague of Gods wrath as can fall vpon vs may force vs to pray or desire of as great a blessing of God as can befall vs may perswade vs to pray we haue great cause euen to powre out our soules in prayer and supplication vnto our God for the blessed continuance of that fellowship which we haue with other Churches in the gospell that as now so euer this grace may bee continued vpon vs. Yea beloued if yee shall but cast your eyes abroad into the land yee shall finde that there is great cause thus to pray For how doth Atheisme and abominable irreligion spread it selfe and ouer-spread the whole face of the land Hath it not nestled it selfe on hie and said within it selfe who shall bring me downe to the ground How doth Papisme and out-worne Pelagianisme now shoote out the head and breake out in many places as if now the day approched wherein they may say so so thus would we haue it How hath cunning policie broken the necke of Christianitie and now so swaieth that it carieth all almost with it What neglect and contempt of the word is there in all places And what else are these but forerunners of a fearefull iudgement to follow What else doe these threaten but the remouing of our candlesticke from vs Beloued shall wee see and know these things and shall wee not pray Let vs pray at euening and at morning and at midday let vs pray and that instantly that this iudgement may neuer fall vpon vs that this light of the gospell may neuer be put out but that it may shine amongst vs from generation to generation vntill the day of Christ Iesus The more that the danger is let vs pray the more feruently and let vs not giue our selues any rest but still pray vnto the Lord for our continuance which we haue with other reformed Churches in the gospell The fourth thing which here I note is that the Apostle thus praied for the Philippians alwaies in all his praiers Whence I obserue with what constant assiduity and carefullnesse we ought to pray for our Church and for our selues that we may continue in the fellowship which we haue in the gospell we should neuer pray but alwaies in our praiers this praier for our Church and for our selues should continually be remembred that the fellowship which we now haue with other Churches in the gospell may for euer be continued vnto vs. To pray alwaies Rom. 12.12 1 Thess 5.17 Luc. 18.1 and not to faint or giue ouer is a thing much commanded by the Holy Ghost Continue in prayer saith our Apostle And againe in another place Pray continually And to the same purpose is that parable of the importunate widow in the gospell All which places shew vs the necessitie of praier that whensoeuer we stand in neede we haue recourse vnto God by praier so the constant perseuerance that is to be vsed in praier that howsoeuer for some time we seeme to pray and bee not heard yet we faint not nor giue ouer but still pray and that instantly Now as wee are to pray and to pray alwaies so alwaies in all our praiers this is to be remembred that we pray that the Lord his way may be knowne vpon earth and his sauing health among all nations that the preaching of the gospell may bee fruitfull vnto vs and vnto the whole Church that the word of the Lord may haue free passage and be glorified that we may continue grounded and stablished in the faith as wee haue beene taught in Iesus Christ that we and our whole Church may continue in the fellowship which we haue with other Churches in the gospell This the example of our Apostle teacheth vs to do who in that he did for others left vs an example what to doe for our selues and for others Yea but is not the Lord alwaies more ready to heare then we are to pray and hath he not said that whosoeuer asketh receiueth that he that seeketh findeth and that to him that knocketh it shall be opened Or if it be so what needeth it alwaies in all our praiers thus to pray as hath beene said True it is that whosoeuer asketh receiueth and that the Lord is more ready to heare and to grant our requests then we are to pray and call vpon his name for commonly he preuenteth vs with his blessings and whatsoeuer it is that we haue by praier he it is that teacheth vs to pray for it as we ought But some things we aske often and receiue not Jam. 4.3 because we aske amisse and some things he hath appointed so to be granted if they bee continually asked And of this sort
we suffer with Christ we shall also reigne with Christ Where it i● to be noted that the Apostle saith this is a sure word this is a true saying that if we suffer with him we shall also reigne with him This then is a promise of the Lord vnto his children that loue him that if they suffer with him for his sake and his Gospels they shall also reigne with him and be glorified with him So that either the godly must doubt of the Lord his promises all which are yea and amen most certaine and sure or else the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and their wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus For what better assurance then that which is grounded on the Lords promise Or what plainer promises can there be then these of the Apostle in these places or rather of the Holy Ghost by the Apostle And therefore the Apostle saith in another place that ●t is a righteous thing with God to recompense tribulation to them which trouble others and to them that are troubled rest 2 Thess 1.6.7.10 when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels and shall come to be glorified in his Saints It is a righteous thing with God righteous indeed for his iustice sake to recompense tribulation to them that trouble others and righteous for his promise sake to recompense rest to them that are troubled Because then God is righteous and keepeth promise for euer therfore the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus Here then is a notable consolation for all the godly in Christ Iesus against all crosses persecutions and troubles whatsoeuer As Christ was to suffer many things and so to enter into his kingdome so the godly in Christ Iesus are through many tribulations to enter into the kingdome of God But the comfort is that they shall all turne vnto their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus when they shall be for euer in the presence of the throne of God Apoc. 7.15.16 and serue him day and night in his Temple when they shall hunger no more nor thirst any more nor the sunne shall light on them nor any heat when he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them 17 and the Lambe which is in the middest of the throne shall gouerne them and wipe all teares from their eyes as the Lambe himselfe witnesseth touching them that haue suffered tribulation and washed their long robes in the bloud of the Lambe 14. The flesh I know will suggest and say in the meane while our case is hard no man with vs euery mans hand against vs we hunger and thirst we are reuiled and persecuted we are cast into prison and made the talke and wonder of the world we are driuen to many hard shifts and put to shreude plunges But what of all this when wee know that these shall turne to our saluation Be they what they will how great they will how lasting they will yet they are but light and but for a moment in respect of that farre most excellent and eternall weight of glory which they cause vnto vs as our Apostle witnesseth where he saith that our light affliction which is but for a moment 2 Cor. 4.17 causeth vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory Here is the fruit and consequent of our affliction glory our affliction causeth vnto vs glory and here is both the smallnes and the shortnes of our affliction in comparison of that glory which shall be reueiled be it neuer so great and heauy it is but small and light in comparison of that farre most excellent glory be ●t neuer so long and lasting it is but for a moment in comparison of that eternall weight of glory laid vp for vs in the heauens Howsoeuer therefore when we suffer any crosse persecution or trouble these things for the time be grieuou● vnpleasant vnto vs as no chastizing for the present seemeth to be ioyous but greeuous Heb. 12.1 yet seeing they bring the quiet fruit of righteousnes vnto them that are thereby exercised seeing they cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory seeing they shall turne to our saluation let vs be of good comfort whatsoeuer in this kinde doth befall vs. And let vs 1. as the Apostle willeth runne with patience the race that is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. who for the ioy that was set before him endured the ●rosse and despised the shame and is set at the right hand of the ●hrone of God And whatsoeuer our sufferings be let it be with vs as it was with the Apostle that with him we may say as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs 2 Cor. 1.5 so our consolation aboundeth through Christ Againe here is a good ground and warrant for vs against ●hat vncomfortable doctrine of doubting of our saluation For if we may assure our selues that our sufferings and our wrongs shall turne to our saluation then may wee assure our selues of our saluation Yea but it will be said what an argument and reason is this Paul might therefore wee may I say it is a good one because vpon the same ground that he might we may Yea but he might know this by the reuelation of the spirit which now we are not to looke for True but he might also know this out of the holy scripture where the Lord hath passed his promise for this and so we may on the same promise whereon he might build his knowledge and assurance on the same may we and all the faithfull children of God build our knowledge and assurance the promise being made vnto all that loue God and are in Christ Iesus Many doubts indeed we haue and full of distrustfulnesse we are oftentimes euen the best of vs but yet yee see that vpon good ground of Gods promise by the example of our Apostle we may assure our selues of our saluation if as the Apostle did so we doe belong vnto Christ Iesus at least if we suffer persecution and trouble for his sake for so farre this place will go that if we suffer persecution and trouble for Christ his sake then we may assure our selues of our saluation because we may assure our selues that our sufferings and troubles shall turne to our saluation Suffer not your selues therefore to be deceiued by those vncomfortable teachers of doubting which teach that not any man to whom it is not reuealed by the spirit in particular can be sure of his saluation but onely in an vncertaine hope As this place doth shew that such of the godly as suffer persecution and trouble may assure themselues that their troubles shall turne to their saluation and so consequently may assure themselues of their saluation so many other places
it would and should As then it is better to be out of prison and to liue at libertie so is it better to die and to be with Christ than to liue in the body 5. Because in the body wee only know in part beleeue in part loue in part liue in part ioy in part and are blessed in part with all such graces of the spirit but when wee remoue out of the body then that which is in part shall be abolished As then it is better to know to loue to liue to ioy c. perfectly than only but in part so is it better to be loosed and to be with Christ where all these shall be perfected than to liue in the body where they are neuer but in part Lastly to passe ouer the rest in silence because it is better to be with God than with men in heauen than in earth in a state freed from sorrow sinne and temptation than in a state subiect to them all Job 14.1 for man that is borne of a woman is but of short continuance and full of trouble as Iob speaketh yea his life is as a warfare 7.1 Matt. 6.34 as the same Iob speaketh and as our Sauiour speaketh euery day of his life bringeth griefe enough with it neither hath his griefe an end till his life haue an end But blessed are the dead that die in the Lord Ap. 14.13 euen so saith the spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them They rest from their labours inasmuch as all teares are wiped from their eyes no more death nor sorrow nor crying nor paine doth take hold of them and their workes follow them inasmuch as they are had in remembrance before God when all other things of our life leaue vs and forsake vs. I spare to enlarge this point further at this time Ye may easily conceiue what might be added Let this serue for a iust reproofe of them that are vnwilling to die For come now and let vs reason the case together What man is there among you that if hee were clothed only with ragged and torne and patched and worne and bad cloathes would not be willing to be vncloathed of them and to be cloathed with better And what else is this mortall and corruptible body but as ragged and rotten cloathes wherewith wee are cloathed Why should wee not then be willing to be shifted of those cloathes of this mortall and corruptible body and to bee cloathed with our house which is from heauen euen with incorruption and immortalitie Againe what man is there among you that if hee were in prison would not be willing to be set at libertie or being in a place where he is but a stranger would not be willing to be at home And what else is this sinfull bodie but as a prison of the soule wherein it is so shut that it hath no libertie till it returne vnto him that gaue it Or what else is this world but as a place wherein wee wander as pilgrims and haue no abiding Citie Why should wee not then be willing to remoue out of this prison of the bodie and to bee receiued into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God or to loose anchor from this land wherein wee are but strangers and by death to saile towards heauen where is our home and our abiding Citie Where should the members ioy to be but with their head Where should the spouse desire to bee but with her husband Where should man whose breath is in his nostrils delight to bee but with him that is his life to see him as hee is and to liue in his continuall presence Surely whosoeuer thou art that art vnwilling to die thou doest not yet conceiue nor beleeue the blessed estate of them that die in the Lord thou hast not yet throughly learned this lesson that Christ is the husband of the Church that Christ is the life of his body that in the presence of Christ there is fulnesse of ioy and life for euermore for then wouldest thou willingly desire with the Apostle to bee loosed and to bee with Christ which is farre the best If the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts were euen as one condition vnto them so that in their death there were indeed no difference or if after death there remained nothing but a fearefull expectation of iudgement then indeed thou haddest some reason to be vnwilling to die But now that Christ by death hath triumphed ouer death and made death vnto thee if thou belong vnto him a passage vnto life without death vnto ioy without sorrow vnto all blessednesse without any miserie why shouldest thou bee vnwilling to die Nay now a chip for death nay now most welcome death And so beloued let it be to euery one of vs. If wee belong vnto Christ there is no cause why wee should feare death and great cause there is why wee should embrace death Let vs therefore neuer feare death nor be vnwilling to die but whensoeuer the Lord his will is let vs be willing to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all LECTVRE XIX PHILIP 1. Verse 23. Desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all NOw to proceed Against this which hath beene said it may be obiected that as no man is to put asunder the things which God hath coupled together as the soule and the body so no man is to desire that the things which God hath coupled bee sundred and therefore no Christian is to desire to die Whereunto I answer that it is true that no Christian is to desire simply to die nor to die to this end only that he may be rid of the miseries of this life nor to die otherwise than when the Lord his will is but yet he may desire to die and to be with Christ to die to this end that hee may bee with Christ to die when the Lord his will is and when his death may be for his glory 1 Reg. 19.4 So it is to be vnderstood of Elias that he desired to die when he praied and said It is enough O Lord take my soule for I am no better than my fathers And so wee say that a Christian may desire to die when the Lord his will is not for that death in it selfe is to be desired but because he desireth to be with Christ So that the thing which a Christian desireth simply and in it selfe is to bee with Christ neither doth he otherwise desire to be loosed but that he may be with Christ and so wee say he may desire to be loosed when the Lord his will is And thus much for this which is the chiefe point in these words whence ye see that a Christian in respect of himselfe may desire rather to die than to liue Other things there are which may not vnfruitfully bee noted in these words which I will only briefly touch
high hand and as they haue begunne so continue to persecute the Church of God this is an infallible token of their perdition yea it is a cleare cause of their destruction as wee see heauie plagues and iudgements to haue ouertaken Hananiah Shemaiah Amaziah Ier. 28.16.29 25. Amos 7.17 and others because they were malicious enemies against his Prophets Ieremiah Amos and others The vse which our Apostle here teacheth vs to make hereof is this not to feare the aduersaries that oppose themselues against vs for when they persecute vs from one Citie to another beat vs imprison vs and euery way afflict vs whom hurt they Euen themselues they runne themselues vpon the rockes and bring vpon themselues swift damnation They thinke they haue great masteries ouer vs but indeed themselues smart for it Let them therefore looke vnto it how they hold on to wrecke their malice vpon vs and let vs not feare all that euer they doe or can doe against vs. Yea but though they hurt themselues yet they hurt vs also how should wee then but feare them Nay that is the next reason wherefore wee are not to feare them because their persecution and rage against vs is no harme vnto vs but a token vnto vs of saluation And to you of saluation that is The furie and rage of the aduersaries against you if yee stand fast and fight together with one minde through the faith of the Gospell is a plaine token vnto you of your saluation Whence I obserue that persecution by the aduersaries is vnto Gods children a token of their saluation Wee reioyce saith the Apostle of you in the Churches of God 2 Th. 1.4.5 because of your patience and faith c. Againe Gal. 6.17 I beare in my body saith the Apostle the markes of the Lord Iesus Whereby he signifieth that his afflictions were the very markes of his saluation through Christ Iesus as whereby hee was made like vnto him Againe If wee suffer with him 2 Tim. 2.12 wee shall also raigne with him And againe Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Matt. 5.10 for theirs is the kingdome of heauen The Scriptures are very plentifull to this purpose cleerely shewing that persecution by the aduersaries is vnto Gods children a token of their saluation A token I say but not a cause for that of the Apostle is euer true that the afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Rom. 8.15 Vnto the aduersaries indeed their persecution and rage against vs is so a token that it is also a cause of their destruction for sinne being a iust cause o● death Rom. 6.23 according to that of the Apostle The wages of sinne is death surely this great and grieuous sinne of persecuting the truth and the professors thereof must needs bee a iust cause of their endlesse destruction But vnto vs their persecution and their rage against vs is onely a token not a cause of our saluation for both to suffer for Christ is the gift of God as it is in the next verse and saluation also through sufferings is his gift by grace through faith So that it is no cause but it is vnto vs a token of saluation as both this and many other places shew Howbeit here yee must also vnderstand that so their persecution and rage against vs is a token vnto vs of saluation if wee continue in one spirit and in one minde fighting together against them through the faith of the Gospell and in nothing fearing the aduersaries It is not standing 〈◊〉 while and not continuing or fighting for a blow or ●wo and then giuing the bucklers or taking courage for a spirt and afterwards for feare falling away that betokens our saluation But he that continueth vnto the end he shall bee saued Mat. 10.22 he that fighteth lawfully and as hee should hee shall be crowned 2 Tim. 2.5 Hab. 6.6 and he that for feare flatly falleth away purchaseth vnto himselfe a fearfull iudgement The vse which our Apostle teacheth vs to make hereof is this as of the former not to feare the aduersaries which oppose themselues against vs for what if wee be tried by mockings and scourgings yea moreouer by bonds and imprisonments What if wee be stoned hewen asunder slaine with the sword afflicted and tormented many wayes This is vnto vs a token of our saluation They thinke that t●●s they hurt vs and haue their willes ouer vs but indeed thus they further our reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus Let vs therefore not feare what they doe or can doe against vs but let vs be of good courage and hold fast the profession of our hope vnto the end LECTVRE XXIII PHILIP 1. Verse 29. For vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not onely yee should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake 30. Hauing the same fight which yee saw in mee and now heare to be in mee YEa but how and whence is it that persecution betokeneth perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto vs It is of God as our Apostle in the next words saith And this is the third motiue or reason which the Apostle vseth to perswade the Philippians not to feare the aduersaries because it is of God that persecution is perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto them Whence I obserue that it is of God that tribulation is recompenced vnto them that trouble vs and saluation vnto vs which are troubled This also our Apostle plainly witnesseth in another place where he saith 2 Thess 1.6.7 It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them ●hat trouble you and to you which are troubled rest with vs c. Where not only this is manifestly set downe that God recompenceth tribulation to the troublers and rest to the ●roubled but withall that it is a righteous thing wi●h God so to doe A righteous thing indeed with God in respect of his iustice to the one and a righteous thing in respect of his promise vnto the other for in respect of his iustice it is a righteous thing with him to recompence tribulation to them that trouble his Saints because they deserue to haue vengeance rendred vnto them in flaming fire according to that of the Apostle Rom. 6.23 The wages of sinne that which is due in iustice vnto sinne is death and damnation and iudgement mercilesse Iam. 2.13 due in iustice vnto him that sheweth no mercy and therefore doubtlesse vnto him that without all mercy rageth and persecuteth And in respect of his promise it is a righteous thing with him to recompence rest vnto them that are troubled because he hath promised the kingdome of heauen to them that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Mat. 5.10 saying Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen and againe If wee suffer 2 Tim. 2.12 wee
his comming And not to stand vpon many places when our Apostle here saith if there be any consolation in Christ c. What else is this but an adiuration of the Philippians by these things that they like minded c. Albeit therefore wee are to remit of that which we may do and of that which sometimes ye constraine vs to doe and not to threaten or command but only to beseech you in Christ Iesus yet are ye to take our beseeching of you as a commandement vnto you euen as a deepe charge touching the things whereof we beseech you Let this then beloued teach you how ye ought for your parts to carie your selues towards your Pastors and Teachers Are we in all mildnesse and meeknesse of spirit to deale with you as parents with their children Then are you in all obedience as children to hearken vnto vs as your fathers in Christ Iesus Are we for loues sake to beseech you the things which in Christ we might commaund you Then are yee when wee beseech you to take it as if we commanded as if we charged you and more to be moued therewith then if we commaunded then if wee charged you Of many of you I am so perswaded that the Pastor shall not be more readie to deale with you as a father then ye will be ready to carry your selues towards him as children and that his beseeching of you shall be as if he commanded as if he charged you But for some to what purpose is it to beseech them to reforme any thing that is amisse in them Whether in Christ his steed wee beseech them or in his name we commaund them or out of the law we threaten them they will not come to heare vs they will none of our instructions But I leaue them vnto him vnto whom they stand or fall And I beseech you beloued by the mercies of God to continue in the grace wherein yee stand rooted and built in Christ and stablished in the faith as yee haue been taught in Christ Iesus And let this suffice to bee obserued in generall from the manner of the Apostles exhortation whereby ye see the manner how Pastors ought to labour to keepe their people in holy duties and to represse disorders amongst them and that is by beseeching them in all meekenesse of spirit for all loues sake to doe that which is conuenient Now in particular from so many arguments as are couched in the manner of the exhortation may so many sundrie obseruations be gathered His first argument is if there be any consolation in Christ i. If ye haue receiued any consolation by my ministerie and Apostleship then fulfill my ioy that ye be like minded c. The ground of which argument is that if the Philippians had receiued comfort in Christ by him then ought they likewise at his request thus to comfort him as to be like minded c. Whence I obserue that vnto whom consolation in Christ is ministred of him he that ministred it may require and looke for the like againe For the generall it is so commonly held that it is the saying of euery man that one good turne requires an other and a pleasure shewed requires the like againe And for the proofe of this particular that of the Apostle is not impertinent where hee saith 1 Cor 9.11 If we haue sowne vnto you spirituall things is it a great thing if we reape your carnall things Out of the generall meaning whereof this particular may not vnfitly bee gathered that where spirituall consolation in Christ Iesus hath been bestowed there as other things so comfort againe as it is required may iustly be expected Wretched then is that vnthankfulnesse where hatred is returned for good-will and where the comfort which was ministred is requited with cause of heauinesse And yet what more common than such vnthankfulnesse The Ministers labours for the consolation of his people in Christ Iesus are in too too many places requited with too too great cause of heauinesse Let the faithfull minister now say vnto him that hath receiued great comfort in Christ Iesus by his labours if there be any consolation in Christ if you haue receiued any comfort in Christ Iesus by my ministerie let me beseech you that you set not your affections so much on things which are on the earth that you will bridle your inordinate desires which runne too much after couetousnesse that you will not lend your mony vpon vsurie c. And how seldome doth he receiue this comfort from them againe thus to preuaile with him Nay to his great griefe hee findeth that his words are not esteemed Let it not be so with you beloued but by whose labours ye haue receiued comfort in Christ Iesus let them receiue this comfort againe from you that their holy desires may preuaile with you His second argument is If there be any comfort of loue that is if yee so loue mee that ye desire my comfort in my bonds for the defence of the Gospell then fulfill my ioy c. The ground of which argument is that if the Philippians loued him as he loued them and in their loue of him desired his comfort in his bonds then they should fulfill his ioy c. Whence I obserue that to yeeld vnto the holy desires one of another is an effectuall token of Christian loue in one towards another If yee loue mee saith Christ keepe my Commandements Joh. 14.15 Which place sheweth that so we make proofe of our loue of God if we conforme our selues in obedience to his commandements But more direct to our very purpose is that of our Apostle where he saith to Philemon Philem. 17. If thou count our things common receiue him as my selfe As if he should haue said Let ●his be a token of thy loue towards mee and that thou countest all mine thine and thine mine euen to yeeld to my desire to receiue Onesimus as my selfe This then in part sheweth why it is that we yeeld not to the holy desires of such as would gladly haue comfort of our good euen for want of loue of them If sinners shall entice vs and say Come with vs wee will lay wait for bloud Prou. 1.10.11.12 and lie priuily for the innocent without a cause wee will swallow them vp aliue like a graue euen whole as those that goe downe to the pit c. we are ready enough to yeeld our selues vnto their willes and to runne as fast as they for their liues vnto mischiefe But let the Pastor say to his people If yee so loue mee that ye desire my comfort prophane not the Lord his Sabboths breake off your sinnes by righteousnesse and your iniquities by mercy towards the poore or the father to the childe If thou so loue mee that thou desire my comfort refraine thy feet from euery euill path and walke in the wayes of the Lord or the friend vnto his friend If thou so loue me that thou desire
of God is decked and beautified more than with all costly iewels and precious ointments whatsoeuer But here it is to be obserued euen from the Apostle in this place of Peter that there is a two fold humilitie and holinesse the one inward the other outward the one of the minde the other to the eye the one true and holy the other ill and hypocriticall Of the outward and hypocriticall humblenesse the Apostle speaketh where he thus writeth vnto the Colossians Let no man at his pleasure beare rule ouer you by humblenesse of minde Colos 2.18 and worshipping of Angels c. For the vnderstanding of which place it is to be vnderstood that there were craftily crept in amongst the Colossians certaine which taught them to worshippe Angels because forsooth it was a point of great arrogancie streight-way to rush into the holy place and to worship God greater humblenes beseemed them then foorthwith to rule into Gods presence and to fall downe before him and to worshippe him Much like vnto those who at this day teach men to vse the intercession of the saints departed this mortalytie and to make their praiers vnto them not boldly and presumptuouslie themselues to enter into the Kings palace before the throne of grace but in all humblenes to prostrate themselues before the saints and their images that so their praiers and supplications through their intercession may bee accepted with God But against such as by such humblenes ●eeke to abuse vs the Apostle plainly warneth vs in this place ●or that this humblenesse is a voluntarie submission not taught ●y God but chosen according to mens owne fantasie The ●nward humilitie and lowlinesse of minde is that whereof Pe●er here speaketh and wherunto our Apostle in my text exhor●eth It is the heart the minde and the soule that God regardeth there must be the seate of humilitie if it be true humilitie The glorie of the true Christian is within and therefore it is said The Kings daughter is all glorious within Psa 45.13 the kings daughter i. the Church and then if thou be a liuely member of the Church thy glory is within and thy outward humility is then good when it proceedeth from within euen from the lowlinesse of the minde And now that you see what it is euen what humility it is that the Apostle exhorteth vnto I beseech you with the Apostle that the same minde be in you that was euen in Christ Iesus that in meekenesse of minde euery man esteem other better then himselfe It is an exhortation which if we shall a little looke into some of those properties which alwaies follow this humblenes of minde wherunto the Apostle exhorteth I feare me we shall finde that we haue either neuer heard of or neuer hearkened vnto The propertie of it is in giuing honour to preferre others Rom. 12.10 as ye haue already heard out of the Apostle and as is further prooued by that parable of our Sauiour Christ vnto the guest when he marked how they chose out the chiefe roomes at feasts Luc. 14.7 Out of both which places it may appeare that he that is truely humbled in matters of honour preferreth not himselfe before others but preferreth others before himselfe But how farre we are from this humilitie the great ambition of men in our daies and great seeking of euery preferment yea of euery petite office in euery towne incorporate would speake if I should hold my peace Nay so farre are we from preferring others before our selues that rather than we will not clime ouer the heads of those that are better than our selues we will vse all bribery and corruption yea out of our false hearts we will deuise all manner of lies and slanders against them and rather then faile we will libell against them It is so and where it is so there wants this humblenesse of minde here spoken of Another property of it is that hee that is humble and a● our Sauiour calleth him poore in spirit esteemeth others better than himselfe as the Apostle sheweth vers 3. He standeth not vpon the conceit of his knowledge of his honour of his wealth of his friends If he haue these things hee acknowledgeth them to be the blessings of the Lord but no cause why he should swell with pride or aduance himselfe aboue his brethren But doth not the wealthy rich man treade vnder foote and oppresse with all wrong and violence his poore neighbours Is not the great Scholar and wise man so puft vp with his knowledge that he counts of others little better than fooles Doth not the great man whether it be that he bee great in office or in birth and friends doth hee not disdaine his inferiours and oftentimes make a mocke of them I wish it were not so but if it be so there wants in them this humblenesse of minde here spoken of A third propertie of it is as to humble vs so before God that we willingly acknowledge whatsoeuer good thing wee haue to be onely from God without any merit in our selues so without selfe respects to regard the good of others and of Gods Church For the truely humbled man doth not looke on his owne things as it is in the former verse as so louing them that he careth not for the things of other men but he looketh on the things of other men and whatsoeuer is good for Gods Church that he doth I wish there were no cause of feare that this humblenesse of minde were wanting But who seeth not that the reformation of many abuses is hindred that many godly and Christian exercises are staied that much good many times is left vndone and why Forsooth because such a one moued it because such and such men call for it such and such men like too well of if and therfore rather then please their humours let things stand as they are A thing in practise too too common and what humblenesse of minde where it is so By this which hath already beene spoken I thinke it may appeare how little hitherto we haue hearkened to this exhortation of the Apostle Well I beseech you that whatsoeuer is amisse in this behalfe may be amended Decke y●ur selues inwardly with lowlinesse of minde in giuing honour go ●e before another esteem euery man another better then himselfe ●t neither opionion of wisedome puffe you vp or of wealth make you ●ell but submit your selues one vnto another and let the same ●ind be in you that was in Christ Iesus And so I come to my se●ond note out of this exhortation 2. In this exhortation I note the inducement which the ●postle vseth to moue them vnto this humblenesse of minde ●hich is the example of Christ Iesus Let the same minde bee ● you that was in Christ Iesus Will ye then haue a reason why ●e should be lowly in minde Christ Iesus whose example is ●erule of our life and whose actions ought to be our instru●tions he so humbled himselfe
modest conuersation towards our neighbour towards our brethren in these words Doe all things without murmuring c. For as the example of Christ his humilitie and obedience should stirre vs vp vnto all humble obedience vnto our God to walke before him feare and with trembling so ought it likewise to perswade vs vnto all humble and modest conuersation toward our brethren laying aside all secret murmuring and all contentious reasonings and with meeknesse euery one yeelding one vnto another and euery one forbearing one another Doe all things without murmuring c. These words you see are a dehortation and disswasion from things to be eschewed and by consequent they are an exhortation vnto things to bee embraced Two things there are you see which the Apostle disswadeth the one murmuring the other reasonings By murmuring the Apostle I take it in this place doth not so much meane murmuring against God as secret grudgings in our selues against our brethren and priuie whisperings such as closely runne from hand to hand to defame or to disgrace those whom wee like not By reasonings are meant such open discords and contentions as those secret grudgings and priuie whisperings doe for the most part breake out into Both these faults the Apostle would haue auoided and eschewed amongst men one towards another that neither there should be secret grudgings and priuie whisperings one against another neither there should be open quarrelling or contending one with another Now it is further to be vnderstood that in this dehortation from these faults the Apostle implieth an exhortation to those good vertues whereby these bad faults may be redressed namely vnto a modest conuersation with our brethren and a peaceable agreement with all men When the Apostle therefore saith Doe all things without murmuring it is as if he had thus said Let there be no secret grudgings amongst you one against another nor any priuie whisperings running closely from hand to hand to defame or to disgrace one another but let euery one amongst you approue himselfe vnto another in all modestie of conuersation modestly yeelding vnto his superiour and equall and willingly making himselfe equall vnto them of the lowest degree Againe when he saith Doe all things without reasonings it is as if hee had thus said Let there bee no open discords or contentions amongst you either through bearing out your selues one aboue another or vpon any occasion what else soeuer but follow peace and loue with all men and doe all things with patience and mildnesse This I take to bee the meaning of these words Now before wee proceed vnto the opening of the rest that follow let vs see what vse wee may make of this exhortation Doe all things without murmuring The first thing which the Apostle here disswadeth is murmuring Now wee reade of two sorts of murmurers in the holy Scriptures the one of such as murmur against the most high God Lord of heauen and earth So wee reade that the Israelites often murmured Num. 21.5.11.5 sometimes for want of water sometimes for want of bread sometimes for want of the cucumbers and the pepons and the leekes and the onions and the garleeke and the flesh-pots of Egypt and for want of such things as caused their often murmurings it is said that they returned in their hearts into Egypt And such murmurers against God at this day are they who in this our time of want of bread either breake out into such impatient speeches as these What meanes the Lord to kill vs with famine what greater sinners are wee than such and such that haue the world at will and all things at their desire Would God hee would either mend these things or make an end of vs who can endure such a●●ard time better to die any way than to die of famine c. they I say that either breake out into such impatient speeches or through male-contentednesse seeke to raise vp seditions and vprores and rebellions in the common-wealth so to procure a remedie by a worse mischiefe are found to be murmurers against God grudging at that which he doth and seeking a way without him to redresse it But what was the end of those murmurers amongst the children of Israel Some of them were consumed by fire from heauen others were smitten with an exceeding great plague others died being bitten and stung with fierie serpents and of all of them this was true that none of them came into the promised land A fearfull end vpon murmurers against God some die one way and others are slaine another way euery one hath a fearfull end and neuer a one comes into the promised land neuer a one enters into that heauenly rest where only is rest and ioy for euermore As therefore the Apostle exhorted the Corinthians saying 1. Cor. 10.10 Murmur not as some of the children of Israel murmured and were destroied of the destroier so I say vnto you Take heede that none of you be found murmurers against God either for this his iudgement whereby hee now doth most iustly visit our sinnes and our iniquities vpon vs or for any thing else lest his wrath bee kindled against you and there bee none to deliuer you For all these things whereof wee haue spoke came vnto the children of Israel for ensamples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come Another sort of murmurers there are which murmure against their brethren grudging either at their wealth or at the loue and fauour or at the credit and preferment wherein they go before them and closely seeking their discredit whispering amongst their neighbours whatsoeuer euill they can deuise against them So the Euangelists euery where testifie that the Scribes and Pharises murmured against Iesus and against his Disciples because they saw that the people fell euery where vnto them and followed them So we read that the Grecians murmured against the Disciples of Christ Act. 6.1 pretending that their widowes were neglected in the daily ministring And this principally is that murmuring which our Apostle in this place would haue abandoned that wee should not maligne one another that we should not haue any grudgings or heartburnings within our selues one against another that we should not secretly and closly seeke the discredit or disgrace one of another A fault whether more bad or more common it is hard to say and that euen amongst neighbours amongst brethren For what more ordinary then one neighbour for some cause or other to murmure against another If hee be our superiour in wealth or in honour or in credit wee murmure against him as too great to dwell so neere vs and be hee neuer so kinde vnto vs yet still we doe imagine that hee beares himselfe too much vpon his wealth or vpon his birth or vpon his place c. and ouerlookes vs. If hee be our equall wee grudge that hee should come forward as well as our selues that he should be as much honoured that hee should be as
obeyed is called a sacrifice Now what sacrifices be these These be the sacrifices of the new Testament these bee liuely sacrifices and holy and acceptable vnto God and these together with the sacrifice of praise and of the workes of loue are the only sacrifices which now Christians are to offer vnto their God An end of all other sacrifices was then when Christ cried vpon the crosse it is finished These onely remaine and these are our reasonable seruing of God How should not this stirre vp both Pastor and people to doe that they should In the Pastor his burning zeale to giue his life for his people in the people their obedience of faith by the ministery of their Pastors are their holy and Christian sacrifices and their reasonable seruing of God And these sacrifices are now no lesse to be offered by vs in the new Testament then were those sacrifices of beasts and other like things to be offered in the old Testament and surely are farre more acceptable vnto God then were they But I promised only to speak of this in a word Now a word likewise of that that followeth For the same cause c. In these words the Apostle armeth them against sorrow if he should be offered vp vpon the sacrifice of their faith As he would be glad and reioyce with them if their faith should be confirmed by his death so hee would haue them likewise to be glad and reioyce with him if hee by his bloud should seale the testimony of their faith What then must we be glad and reioyce when our best Pastors and teachers are taken from vs Did not the Church well when Steuen was stoned to death Act. 8.2 to make great lamentation for him Yes no doubt they did well and whensoeuer the Church is depriued of any worthy member especially of any worthy Pastor and Teacher there is iust cause of great sorrow And the Apostle alloweth a moderation in lamenting for the dead so that we sorrow not as they that haue no hope 1 Thes 4.13 And it was a part of Iehoiakims plague that he should be buried like an Asse and none to make lamentation for him The meaning then is not that we should reioyce and be glad and not mourne simply at the death of our best Pastors and Teachers but that wee should bee glad and reioyce at the fruite which comes to the Church by their death if they suffer martyrdom for the confirmation of the brethrens faith For seeing their constancie and their cheerefulnesse to seale that truth with their bloud which they taught and preached this should both make vs reioice that God giueth such strength vnto his Saints and likewise confirme vs in the faith of Iesus Christ and further animate vs patiently to endure whatsoeuer tribulations for Christ his sake The Apostle himselfe would not no doubt reioyce simply in his suffering and death but in that onely thereby God should be glorified and Gods children strengthened So we are to reioyce not simply that our Pastors and Teachers are taken by the hands of Tyrants and racked and martyred but in that God vouchsafeth thus to conforme them to the image of his sonne and to make their bloud the seede of the Church so that thereby both the faith of them that are already in the Church is confirmed and others likewise are brought vnto the faith Here only wee are to looke to this caueat that we do not iudge of a martyr only by his suffering but further by the cause of his suffering For not the suffering but the cause of his suffering makes him a Martyr If he suffer death for the testimonie of Christ Iesus his death is well called a martyrdome And in his death we are so to reioyce as already ye haue heard Thus farre of the reasons enforcing obedience to those exhortations which the Apostle inferreth vpon the example of Christ his humility and obedience which the Apostle laid as a most strong and sure ground of his exhortation vnto humblenesse and lowlines of minde LECTVRE XXXIX PHILIP 2. Verse 19.20 And I trust in the Lord Iesus to send Timotheus shortly vnto you that I also may be of good comfort when I know your state c. AND I hope in the Lord Iesus In this latter part of this Chapter the Apostle his desire is to comfort the Philippians and indeed to confirme them that they should not bee troubled though they liued in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation as it appeareth they did ex vers 15. but that they should grow forward from grace vnto grace that when hee should heare of them he might heare of them to his comfort To comfort them therefore he 1. promiseth to send Timothy vnto them a man whom themselues knew to bee a faithfull minister of Christ Iesus and to loue them sincerely 2. He putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly after vnto them 3. He telleth them that now he sendeth their faithfull minister Epaphroditus vnto them and the causes why By all which things as the Philippians were iustly to be comforted so were they so many caueats to warne them that neither Timothy nor hee nor Epaphroditus might finde any cause of griefe or discomfort amongst them when they should come vnto them In his promise to send Timothy vnto them I note 1. his promise to send him 2. the reason why he sent him rather then any other In his promise 1. I note the holy limitation thereof 2. The promise 3. The end of sending him Touching the 1. Paul doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but saith he I hope in the Lord Iesus c. It is to bee vnderstood that at this time when the Apostle wrote these things he was in prison at Rome where Timothy ministred vnto him and serued him in such things as he needed Now it seemes he was in hope shortly to bee deliuered out of prison and then his certaine resolution was first to send Timothy vnto them and then shortly after himselfe to come vnto them But how the Lord would dispose of these things he knew not Onely hee knew that the heart of Nero who had cast him in prison was in the hand of the Lord Iesus to dispose of as seemed best to his godly wisedome and so he loued them that he hoped the Lord Iesus would deliuer him out of prison and bring him vnto them Because therefore he knew not certainely how it would please the Lord to dispose of these things hee doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but inasmuch as his loue to them made him to hope the best hee saith I hope in the Lord Iesus c. The lesson which hence wee haue to learne is this in all things whatsoeuer we purpose to doe still to depend vpon the will and pleasure of the Lord Iesus not resolutely to set down this or that will I doe but with these or the like conditions and limitations I
number but vnto all the brethren Thus yee see with what gladnes the Ministers of the Gospell ought to be receiued yee see how our Sauiour Christ the high Priest of our profession was thus receiued when towards his passion he came downe from the mount of Oliues vnto Ierusalem yee see how the Disciples and Apostles of our Sauiour Christ were thus receiued euen with great ioy of all the brethren And thus at this day the Ministers of the Gospell are receiued euen with all gladnesse of all the brethren But as then it was so now it is the multitude of the brethren no great multitude as may easily appeare euen by this one note that the multitude of them that receiue the Ministers of the Gospell with all gladnes is no great multitude Well beloued to stand no longer vpon this point I cannot better exhort you touching this point then out of these words of the Apostle Receiue the ministers of Christ his Gospell in the Lord receiue them with all gladnes and make much of them for so it followeth And make much of such In which words the Apostle brings it to the generall which before he had spoken in the particular tels them how he would haue them to receiue not only Epaphroditus in particular but the Ministers of the gospel in generall Make much of such make much account of them haue them in high honor estimation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so the word here vsed in the originall signifieth But whom must we haue in such honour Make much of such such as Epaphroditus such as faithfully and painefully worke in the Lord his haruest such as carefully watch for our soules as they that must giue accounts such as labour in the word and doctrine make much of them and account them worthy of double honor Here then we are taught in what account we are to haue such Ministers of the Gospell as faithfully and painefully labour in the word and doctrine We are to make much of them we are to haue them in high honor and estimation we are to account them worthy of double honor For so the Apostle else where also telleth vs saying 1 Tim. 5.17 The Elders which rule well are worthy of double honour especially they which labour in the word and doctrine Where whatsouer be meant by double honour in particular in generall it is meant that all honour is due vnto them that labour in the word and doctrine Yea indeede honour such make much of such such finde-faults such troublers of the state such hot-headed fellowes such discoueries of their fathers shame such publishers of whatsoeuer they know euen in Gath and Ashkelon For thus commonly they are accounted of especially if according to the necessitie of the times they lift vp their voices like trumpets and shew the people their transgressions and the house of Iacob their sinnes If they tell Herod of his incest they may doe it without that danger that Iohn did but let them looke for no lesse then to be counted troublers of all Israel 1 Reg. 18.17 Act. 19.25 as Elias was accounted by Ahab If Demetrius and the craftsmen men with him be like to sustaine any losse by their preaching if the godles Atheist or the superstitious Papist thinke themselues galled by their preaching then they traduce them by such and such names and then they raise vp whatsoeuer troubles possibly they can against them Thus are they rewarded with euill for good and with hatred for their good will thus doe they become enemies because they tell the truth thus are they honoured and accounted of the world thus commonly are they made of in the world that are carefull not to doe the worke of the Lord negligently Yea and see the strangenesse of it The cause why we should make much of the Ministers of the Gospell is for the message sake which they bring vnto vs because they bring vnto vs the holy word of life the Manna and foode of our soules and because out of it they both teach vs that truth which we are to beleeue and imbrace and improue those errors which we are to beware and auoide and correct those faults in our life which we are to flie and detest and instruct vs in that way of righteousnesse wherein we are to walke all the daies of our life Thi● I say is the cause why we should make much of them and this is the very cause why we cannot away with them It would best of all please a great many of vs that they should hold their peace and so 〈◊〉 and suffer vs to sleepe in our sinnes Other o● 〈◊〉 ●●ppily can away with it that they should reach and instruct and exhort and speake to the eare But that there should be amongst the Disciples of Christ sonne of thunder that the Ministers of the Gospell should powre into the wound both oyle and vineger that they should improue and rebuke that a great many of vs cannot away with and therefore when they doe so we breake our into termes at our pleasure against them Well he that will be soundly healed he must suffer both oyle and vineger to be powred into his wounds and he that will liue must suffer himselfe to be awaked out of his dead sleepe of sinne and he that will shew himselfe to haue profited in the schoole of Christ must make much of such as both teach and improue and correct and instruct as the glory of God and the good of hi● people doth require As for those that are not such I say now no more but I wish they were such and that they would studie to be such Beloued I haue vrged this point touching the Ministers of the Gospell of receiuing them in the Lord of receiuing them with all gladnesse of making much of them partly the last day and partly this day For your sakes that yee might know how to vse the Ministers of the word that so yee may giue testimonie how yee honor the word For as men like or mislike the Ministers of the word so commonly they are affected towards the word Let the word of Christ therefore dwell in you plenteously let your delight be in the law of the Lord and loue the word of life as your life and for a proofe thereof such as faithfully and painefully labour in the word and doctrine receiue them in the Lord receiue them with all gladnes and make much of such It followeth Because that for the worke of Christ c. This is the reason which the Apostle bringeth why the Philippians should receiue their Minister in the Lord and with all gladnes The reason then briefly is this Epaphroditus was neere vnto death for the worke of Christ and regarded not his life to fulfill that seruice c. therefore yee ought to receiue him in the Lord and with all gladnes By the worke of Christ the Apostle meaneth in this place that whole paines and labour which Epaphroditus tooke
dwelleth the loue of God in him As if the Apostle should haue said Whatsoeuer shew this man makes the loue of God dwels not in him neither he loueth God nor God loueth him Men and brethren what should more stirre you vp vnto this holy worke of releeuing of Gods poore Saints a thing so needfull now to be vrged and pressed what I say should more stirre you vp vnto it then this which hath already beene said It is a worke of Christ which Christ commandeth which hee loueth and liketh which Christ highly rewardeth and vnmercifulnesse to the poore he hateth and detesteth As euery man therefore wisheth in his heart so let him giue vnto the poore Saints not grudgingly or of necessitie for God loueth a cheerefull giuer 2 Cor. 9.7 If it be a worke of Christ it well beseemeth thee if thou be a Christian if he haue commanded it it stands thee vpon to obey it if he loue and like it thou hast great cause to moue thee to it if for his mercies sake he reward it thou hast great reason to be occupied in it and if he so hate the neglect of it it behoueth thee not to be negligent in it As therefore euery man hath receiued of the Lord so let him be ready to giue according to that he hath Hee that hath mercy on the poore Pro. 19.17 lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him that which hee hath giuen And blessed is hee saith Dauid Psal 41.1 that considereth the poore and needie the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble Consider what I say and the Lord giue you a ●ight vnderstanding in all things and fill your hearts full of all knowledge that yee may abound in euery good vnto the glory of God the Father to whom with the Sonne and the holy Ghost c. Laus omnis soli Deo THE THIRD CHAPTER LECTVRE XLVIII PHILIP 3. Vers 1.2 Moreouer my brethren reioyce in the Lord. It grieueth me not to write the same things vnto you and for you it is a sure c. THe holy Apostle hauing in the first chapter of this Epistle first signified his good minde towards the Philippians by retaining them in perfect memorie by his longing after them all from the very heart roote in Iesus Christ and by his praying for them and hauing afterward exhorted them that they should not shrinke for his imprisonment because thereby the Gospell was confirmed and not diminished In the second Chapter as we haue heard he first exhorted them vnto humility that putting apart all contention and vaine glory they would haue euen the same minde that was in Christ Iesus who being God humbled himselfe to be man and became obedient to the death euen the death of the Crosse and was therefore highly exalted c. 2. Hauing grounded certaine exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience as 1. That they would runne forward in that race of righteousnesse wherein God had freely placed them through Iesus Christ making an end of their saluation with feare and trembling and then that they would doe all things with their neighbours without murmuring and reasonings that they might be blamelesse and pure and the sonnes of God c. The Apostle I say hauing grounded these exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience 2. For their comfort and confirmation against certaine false Apostles crept in amongst them hee both promised to send Timothy shortly vnto them and likewise that himselfe would shortly after that come vnto them and besides sent their Minister Epaphroditus presently vnto them Now in this 3. Chapter the Apostle instructeth the Philippians in the things wherein the false Apostles laboured to seduce them and so armeth the Philippians against them till his comming vnto them by confuting that false doctrine which they deliuered The doctrine which the false Apostles deliuered was that not Christ alone and faith in his name but circumcision also and the workes of the law were necessarie vnto iustification and saluation Which doctrine the Apostle doth at large confute in the Epistle to the Galathians because they had suffered themselues to be seduced and bewitched by it But here because the Philippians had manfully withstood it and giuen it no place amongst them the Apostle very briefly confuteth it and proueth that our righteousnesse is onely by Christ and faith in his name not at all by the works of the Law The principall parts of this Chap●er are three 1. He exhorteth them to beware of false Teachers verse 2. and instructeth them in that truth which the false Apostles gainesay vers 3. 2. The Apostle proposeth himselfe as an imbracer of that truth touching mans righteousnesse which they were to embrace à vers 4. ad 15. Lastly hee exhorteth them to embrace and hold fast the same truth with him and to walke as they haue him for an ensample from vers 15. to the end of the Chapter Now before he come to the handling of any of these principall parts 1. He setteth downe this exhortation reioyce in the Lord as a conclusion of that which went before as a ground of that which followeth 2. He excuseth h●mselfe for writing now the same things by epistle which before he had taught them by word of mouth That the exhortation is set downe partly by way of conclusion of that which he had spoken before may appeare by the entrance vnto it in that he saith Moreouer c. For it is as if the Apostle had thus said hitherto ye haue been full of heauines partly for my bonds and imprisonment Phil. 1.12.14 partly for Epaphroditus your minister his sicknes Now for my bonds they ●s I haue told you haue turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell inasmuch as many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bonds to speake the word and now so it is that I am in good hope shortly to be deliuered from my bonds and to come vnto you Again for Epaphroditus God hath had mercy vpon him and now he is returned vnto you in good and perfect health What therefore now remaineth my brethren but that ye be glad and reioyce in the Lord in the Lord I say whom before I haue described vnto you in that Lord who being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to be equall with God yet made himselfe of no reputation and tooke on him the forme of a seruant c. Reioyce for that there is no other cause but that ye should reioyce but reioice in the Lord who became man for you died for your sinnes rose againe for your iustification setteth at the right hand of God to make request for you vnto whom euery knee in that day shall bowe and confesse that he is the Lord reioyce in him Againe it is partly set downe as a ground of that which followeth as if the Apostle should thus haue said I haue already as in a glasse
but they know not what it meaneth and as much may be said for the proud contemning Pharisie as can be said for such men Luk. 18.11 Beware therfore of ambition and vaine-glory for it shutteth from God as witnesseth our Sauiour where he saith vnto the Iewes I●h 5.44 how can yee beleeue which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour that commeth of God alone Let vs therefore speake with gladnes of the blessings which the Lord hath vouchsafed vnto vs and if neede be let vs glory and boast of them but euer remembring that which is written he that reioyceth 1 Cor. 1.31 let him reioyce in the Lord. To glory in the mercies of the Lord towards vs affecting our owne praise and glory is pharisaicall hypocriticall and wicked but in some cases so to doe to the praise and glory of God is both lawfull and very requisite I will end this point if in one word I shal● answer one doubt which is how the Apostle should reckon it amongst his externall praises and arguments of confidence in the flesh that he persecuted the Church of God This no doubt was a great and grieuous sinne to persecute the Church of God as our Apostle acknowledgeth where he saith I was a blasphemer 1 Tim 1.13 and a persecutor and an oppressor but I was receiued to mercy But we must remember that the Apostle had to doe with those that would seeme to be very zealous of the law He mentioneth therefore his persecution of the Church onely to proue that he was as zealous of the law as the best of them Which zeale they highly accounted of as also hee did before his conversion though now he condemned it In respect therefore of them and likewise in respect of his owne opinion before his conuersion his so feruent zeale that he persecuted the Church of God is reckoned amongst his praises And the same is likewise to be said of all the rest as hereafter we shall shew 3. Here I note that the Apostle to proue that he might haue confidence in the flesh if he would as well as the best reckoneth whatsoeuer outward things the Iewes most stood vpon or could indeede bee stood vpon as circumcision great kinred ancient continuance therein euen from Abra●am the Ebrew noblenesse of Tribe religiousnesse of profession feruencie of zeale and most precise obseruation of the commandements and ordinances of the law Whence I obserue that to haue confidence in any outward thing without Christ whatsoeuer is to haue confidence in the flesh This is proued because whatsoeuer outward thing without Christ is termed flesh both here as this discourse proueth and else where in the very like forme of speech as where the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 11.18 seeing that many reioyce after the flesh I will reioyce also Now what are the things that here he reioyceth in Surely many of them the selfe-same things that here the Apostle speaketh of and besides other things also as hunger thirst cold nakednesse stripes imprisonment stoning persecution and the like all which he comprehendeth in the name of flesh affirming that hee reioyceth in the flesh when hee reioyceth in these things As then to reioyce in any outward thing without CHRIST is to reioyce in the flesh so likewise to haue confidence in any outward thing without Christ is to haue confidence in the flesh Let this then teach vs not to haue confidence in any outward thing whatsoeuer without Christ Thou art bapt●zed it is well so was Simon Magus Act. 8.13 1 Pet. 3.21 It is not the putting away of the filth of the bodie that saueth vs but in that a good conscience maketh request to God Thou hast eaten at the Lord his table it is well so no doubt did Iudas Hee that eateth and drinketh worthily is made one with CHRIST and CHRIST with him but hee that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation 1 Cor. 11.29 Thou art borne of holy and godly Parents it is well so were ISMAEL and ESAV They which are the children of the flesh Rom. 9.8 are not the children o● God but the children of the promise are counted for the seede Thou art of an holy profession It is well so was Dema● Holinesse of profession commendeth not vnto God but an heart purified by faith which worketh through loue Thou distributest to the poore and doest many good things it is well Mat. 19 20 1 Cor. 13.3 so did the Pharisies and the yong man in the Gospell Though I feede the poore with all my goods and though I giue my bodie to be burned and haue not loue it profiteth me nothing In a word there is nothing vnder heauen without Christ that doth profit vs so that we should reioyce or haue confidence in it Act 4.12 for among men there is giuen none other name vnder heauen whereby we must be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus Let vs therefore trust perfectly on the grace that is brought vnto vs by the reuelation of Christ Iesus and let vs haue no confidence in any outward thing without Christ whatsoeuer no not in the outward action of receiuing the sacrament of baptisme or of the Lord his supper For if we haue then haue we confidence in the flesh and if we haue confidence in the flesh we reioyce not in Christ Iesus and if we reioyce not in Christ Iesus we worship not God in the spirit and if we worship not God in the spirit we are not circumcised with the true circumcision and if we be not circumcised with the true circumcision we belong not to the couenant of grace O Lord blesse thy word vnto vs which now we haue heard with our outward eares Such of vs as it hath pleased thee to reclaime from any error in opinion or folly in life make vs carefull of reforming such errors and follies in others and such of vs as are yet holden with any error or folly we beseech thee so to frame vs after thy will that we may hearken vnto wisdome and incline our hearts to vnderstanding Remoue farre from vs all vaine affectation of our owne praises and open our mouthes to set forth thy praises so oft as shall bee meete for thy glory Weyne vs O Lord from all confidence in any outward thing whatsoeuer and settle all our confidence in thy selfe and on thy sonne Christ Iesus to whom c. LECTVRE LIII PHILIP 3. Vers 7.8 But the things that were vantage vnto mee the same I counted losse for Christ his sake Yea doubtlesse I thinke all things losse c. BVt the things c. In these words the Apostle goeth forward and shewes that albeit hee had as good cause and greater of confidence and reioycing in the flesh and in things without Christ then had either those false Teachers or the best of the Iewes whatsoeuer yet now since the knowledge of Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse was reuealed
and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that there is no condemnation vnto them that are in Christ Iesus and that by faith in him we are made one with him and he with vs all this and much more touching Christ we know by the glorious light of the Gospell which hath shined in our hearts ● Pet. 1.19 And this is that knowledge which the Apostle here calleth the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus Excellent indeed aboue all other knowledge and excellent euen as much as our life and saluation is worth And this knowledge of Christ is compared by the Apostle Peter vnto the day starre An excellent knowledge and such as is so much more glorious then the knowledge of Christ by the law as is the light and brightnesse of the day-starre more glorious then the light and brightnesse of a candle The third knowledge of Christ is in heauen when wee shall see him face to face which is the most excellent knowledge of Christ of all the rest For then shall we see him as he is then shall we enioy the continuall fruition of his presence then shall we see the name written vpon his thigh The King of Kings and Lord of Lords then shall that knowledge which is now onely in part be fully perfited And this knowledge of Christ is compared vnto the Sunne in her brightnes and is as much more excellent then the second as the second is then the first Now the knowledge of Christ Iesus of which the Apostle here speaketh is not this last nor the first knowledge of Christ but the second which he calleth excellent both in it selfe and in respect of his first knowledge of Christ For he had before a generall and obscure darke knowledge of Christ by the bookes of Moses and the writings of the Apostles being brought vp at the feete of Gamaliel but that was nothing in respect of this this was the excellent knowledge and for this excellent knowledge sake he counted both his former knowledge and all things else to be but losse and dunge Now how all things are to be iudged losse and dunge for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus that is in the next place to be considered Birth kinred nobilitie wealth learning knowledge holinesse of life righteousnes temperance sobriety and the like euen all outward things and all our workes whatsoeuer are all to be iudged losse and dunge for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus What then Must we renounce birth kinred nobilitie and the like Must we make away our wealth and riches and vow a voluntarie pouertie Must we remit all care of learning and knowledge and in stead thereof imbrace ignorance Must we leaue of to follow after holinesse of life righteousnesse temperance sobriety and the like Must we cease from good workes if we will be partakers of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus No such matter Paul needed not to renounce his tribe his kinred his noble parentage neither was he to grow dissolute or negligent in the obseruation of the commandements and ordinances of the law that he might come to the knowledge of Christ His circumcision was commanded his tribe and kinred were worthy prerogatiues and his workes done according to the law were very commendable He was not therefore simply to renounce or clearely to abiure all those things but onely to renounce all confidence in these things if he would be a Christian Right so it is to be said generally Is any man noble and great by birth and parentage So were many godly kinges of Israel and Iudah But therein we may not secure our selues as if therefore we needed to feare no euill Is any man rich and wealthy So was Abraham and Lot but if riches increase let no man set his heart vpon them let no man trust in vncertaine riches Is any man holy righteous which feareth God and aboundeth in euery good worke So were the Saints of God therefore renowned in the holy scriptures and let him that is such be such still He that is holy let him be holy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still Yea let euery man labour and striue still more and more to increase in all knowledge and vnderstanding in euery good thing and in euery good worke But let no man reioyce or put any confidence of his saluation in these things but as it is written He that reioyceth let him reioyce in the Lord. How then are all these outward things to be iudged losse and dunge Certainely not in respect of the substance of the things or of the good workes which are done For the things such as we haue spoken of as honour riches wisdome learning knowledge and the like are the good gifts and blessings of the Lord thankfully to be enioyed and vsed to his glory and likewise good works are commanded and rewarded by God and are well-pleasing in his sight as the Apostle witnesseth where he saith Heb. 13.16 To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifice God is pleased It is not then in respect of the substance of these outward things that they are to be iudged to be losse dunge but they are to be iudged losse and dung in respect of any confidence to be reposed in them for better it is that we wanted them then that we should repose any trust or confidence in them For besides that they are as a staffe of reede on which if a man leane it will breake into shiuers and hurt him confidence in them doth stay vs and hinder vs from comming vnto Christ and reposing that confidence in him which we ought to haue in him Which is plainely proued by that of the Apostle and that of our Sauiour which I mentioned the last day For the Apostle maketh this the reason why the Iewes submitted not themselues vnto the righteousnesse of God because they went about to stablish their owne righteousnesse Rom. 10.3 They saith he being ignorant of the righteousnes of God and going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse submitted not themselues to the righteousnesse of God What was the cause of their blindnesse and ignorance of the righteousnesse of God What was the cause why they submitted not themselues vnto the righteousnesse of God Here it was they went about to stablish their owne righteousnesse they had a great conceit of their owne workes done according to the Law they thought themselues righteous by them and therefore they cared not for comming vnto Christ nor sought not after the righteousnesse of God in him And this was the very cause why our Sauiour told the Pharisies that the Publicans and the harlots should goe before them into the kingdome of God The Pharisies had a proud conceit Mat 21.31 and a very great confidence in their owne righteousnesse insomuch that they iustified themselues aboue all other men And therfore our Sauiour hereby giues them to vnderstand that they are farther from the kingdome
This also is a part of the cause why hee disclaimes all righteousnesse by his workes because otherwise he could not be found in Christ in that day Why not What is it to be found in Christ The Apostle shewes that to be found in Christ is to bee found not clothed with his owne righteousnesse which is by the workes of the Law but clothed with that righteousnesse which is Christs and only ours through faith in Christ euen that righteousnesse which God doth impute vnto vs through faith in his name So that he that will be found in Christ in that day must disclaime his owne righteousnesse and renounce it as dung and rottennesse and must cleaue onely vnto the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus which God doth impute vnto him through faith in him The summe then of that which the Apostle tels the Philippians in these words is that hee now at this present in the state wherein hee now stands doth iudge all things euen his very best present workes to be so farre from any part of his righteousnesse as that he iudgeth them to bee dung euen vile and contemptible so that hee doth disclaime all righteousnesse by them that he may winne Christ that is that he may be more and more neerely incorporated into him and possessed of his righteousnesse by faith and that hee may be found in that last and great day not in Moses but in Christ that is not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law as his garment to stand before the Lord withall but hauing that righteousnesse to be clothed with which is indeed Christs and his through the faith of Christ euen that righteousnesse which God doth impute vnto him through faith in Christ his name This I say I take to be the summe of that which the Apostle tels the Philippians in these words So that yee see here is first a disclaiming of his owne righteousnesse by workes in that he iudgeth them to be dung 2. A reason why hee so iudgeth them and so disclaimes them that he may winne Christ and may be found in him thirdly an explication what it is to be found in Christ by a distinction of righteousnesse into his owne and Christs where hee saith not hauing mine owne c. Now let vs see what obseruations may hence be gathered First it is not vnworthy our noting that the Apostle goeth ouer and ouer these points so often as if he could neuer satisfie himselfe with disclaiming all righteousnesse by any works and proclaiming Christ alone to be all his righteousnesse In the former verse hee disclaimeth all his workes done before his conuersion as no vantage but losse vnto him and maketh Christ all his vantage either for righteousnesse or saluation In this verse three seuerall times he disclaimeth all his workes generally whether done before or after his conuersion as touching any righteousnesse by them and againe so many times auoucheth in effect Christ Iesus alone to bee all his righteousnesse Whence I obserue both the difficultie and the necessitie of enforcing these points A difficult and hard matter it is when we haue done any thing well when we haue walked faithfully in our calling when we haue releiued the oppressed iudged the father-lesse defended the widow when wee haue humbled our selues in praier chastened our selues with fasting absteined from the delights of the world or pleasures of the flesh c. a difficult and hard matter I say it is herein not to please our selues not somewhat to be puffed vp with these things not to haue some conceit of merit and righteousnesse by these things A difficult matter to perswade vs that these things are no vantage vnto vs vnto iustification or saluation A difficult matter to perswade vs that these things are but losse and dung things vile and contemptible And yet necessarie it is that we be thus perswaded of these and the like things as touching any confidence of our righteousnesse or saluation by them and that we count Christ alone all our righteousnesse and the horne of our saluation And therefore the Apostle knowing both the difficultie and yet the necessitie of perswading this beateth vpon it twise thrise often that he did thus and thus and therefore the Philippians should doe so This should teach vs with great diligence to obserue and marke the things that are so much and so often beaten vpon as things which either we are dull to comprehend or vnwilling to yeeld vnto and yet things which are as most certaine for their truth so most necessarie for their vse for albeit all the things in the whole booke of God be of such importance as that they are most worthie of our due meditation and diligent obseruation as able to make vs wise vnto saluation yet when things are so much vrged and so often beaten vpon we are to thinke that it is not without great cause that they are so pressed and therefore that they are with greater attention and heedfulnesse to be marked by vs. As therefore we are with all diligence to obserue whatsoeuer is written because all things are written for our learning so let vs with all diligence obserue the things so often vrged It may be that they are so often vrged because of our dulnesse to comprehend them it may be because of our vnwillingnesse to yeeld vnto them it may be because of the vnfeined assent that we should yeeld vnto the truth of them it may be because of the necessarie vse that there is of them Surely they are not so much vrged without great and vrgent cause And so for these points heere beaten vpon let vs assure our selues both that it is most true that our works are no part of our righteousnesse but Christ our whole righteousnesse and that it necessarily behooueth vs to be throughly perswaded thereof How good soeuer therefore our workes seeme vnto vs and how difficult soeuer it be to perswade vs that our very best workes are to be iudged but losse and dung yet seeing the Apostle so often tels vs that he iudged so of his best workes let there be the same minde in vs that was in him and let vs iudge so to 2. In that the Apostle saith and doe iudge them to be dunge I note the Apostles present iudgement of his present workes He now at this present in the state wherein he now stands doth iudge all things euen his very best present workes to bee so farre from being any part of his righteousnesse as that hee iudgeth them to be dung euen vile and contemptible so full of pollution and vncleanesse as that there is no reckoning to be made of them in respect of any righteousnesse by them but rather they are to be contemned as vncleanesse Whence I obserue that our very best workes such as are wrought after our knowledge of Christ Iesus and faith in his name are no part of that righteousnesse whereby we are accounted righteous before God Great difference I know there is betweene
to loue one another as Dauid and Ionathan did to redeeme our owne peace and quietnesse with some losse as Abraham did to be faithfull in the Lords house as Moses was ●o cloth the naked to feed the hungry to iudge the fatherlesse and widow as Iob did to delight in the Law of the Lord and to exercise our selues therein day and night as Dauid did to serue the Lord with fasting and praier as Anna did to sit down at Iesus feete and heare his preaching as Mary did to restore with vantage that which was taken by forged cauillation as Zaccheus did these and such like are the actions wherein wee should earnestly desire to resemble the Saints of God as neere as we can And if we marke it in the places where we are precisely exhorted to follow the example of the Saints of God we are exhorted to follow them in these and the like things as in beleeuing that faith is imputed vnto vs for righteousnesse as it was to Abraham Rom. 4.23 1 Cor 4.16.11.1 2 Thes 3.8 in suffering affliction for Christ his sake in not seeking priuate profit but the profit of many that they may be saued in labouring carefully and not walking inordinately in following after perfection Christianly and embracing the truth zealously as in this place of our Apostle Moe rules I doubt not might be noted but these being obserued we shall make an holy vse of following the example of the Saints of God in the whole course of our life But if we do consider what holy vse we make of such examples of the Saints of God as either haue beene or are it will appeare that many of vs make little or no benefit at all of them For not to speake of great Princes and Councellors whom it were to be wished that they were like vnto good Iosias and faithfull Hushai our rich men doe they not more resemble that rich man in the Gospell that was clothed richly and fared delicately euery day but neuer regarded poore Lazarus that lay at his gate full of sores begging some crummes that fell from his table Luc. 16. then Abraham The poorer sort doe they not more resemble those foure Lepers that first entred into one Tent and spoyled it 2 Reg. 7.8 and then into another and spoyled it then the good Shunemite Our Artificers and Trades-men do they not more resemble Demetrius and his company mentioned in the Actes that made more account of their gaine Act. 19.24 and of their bellies then of Paul of the Preacher or of the preaching of the word then those that wrought in the worke of the Temple Our Countrey-men and they that are occupied about their cattle and their grounds do they not more resemble those that could not discerne betweene their right-hand and their left-hand that had no knowledge in the waies of God Ionah 4.11 or the things that belonged vnto their peace then Noah or the Patriarches Our Magistrates doe they not more resemble those of whom Salomon speaketh Pro. 29.2 that when they rise vp men hide themselues when they beare rule the people sigh then Moses or Iosua Our Ministers do not they resemble more those of whom the Apostle saith that they sought their owne Phil. 2.21 and not that which was Iesus Christs than the Apostles of Christ Surely so it fareth with too too many that they are more like the worst then the best For if it be so ●●at happily we doe looke at the examples of the Saints of ●od what do we For examples of the Saints of God menti●ned in the word of God either we say that they are onely to ●e wondred at but not to be imitated or else we follow them 〈◊〉 the things wherein we ought not If Samson say Iud. 15.11 as they did ●●to me so haue I done vnto them by and by we perswade our ●●lues that we may lawfully be reuenged of our enemies If ●lisha curse them that mocke him euen vnto the death 2 Reg. 2.24 and tearing 〈◊〉 pieces by beares by and by we think we haue a good defence ●r vs if we curse those that wrong vs euen vnto hell And if Moses or Ieremie draw backe the shoulder when the Lord cals ●●em by and by we thinke we may be excused if we doe not ●●waies hearken when the Lord doth call vs to this or that ●utie And so likewise in the rest either we thinke them on●● to be admired but not to be imitated or if we doe imitate ●●em it is either in the things that wee should not or as we ●ould not only looking vnto some thing which they did ●●t not considering the manner or the cause or some other ●●rcumstance of doing that they did or that they sinned in ●●at they did Againe for examples of such of Gods Saints as liue among ●s and whose practise we may see daily before our eyes when ●●e are told of them wee scorne that their actions should bee residents for vs to follow yea such is our corruption that of●entimes we are not ashamed to say doe such and such men ●●uour such a godly work further such an holy action coun●enance such a religious exercise we will hinder it wee will ●rosse it we will crush it or else we will take the foyle nay to ●et them see and know how little we care to be like them doth ●●a● king when there should be mourning for the heauie hand ●f God vpon vs grieue them doth swearing and prophaning ●f the Lords day grieue them we will doe these things the ra●her to despise them If they be men fearing God eschewing ●ui●l and doing the thing that is good we will haue some ex●eption against them wherefore wee will not follow their ex●mple And commonly we will brand them with the name of ●ustere and precise men and then will we be so farre from following their example as that wee will both crosse what good they intend if we can and besides wee will grieue them either by our selues or others as much as we can This is the vse that generally we make either of old or new examples past or present But beloued it should be farre otherwise as already we haue heard Yea a great cause it should be vnto vs of thankfulnesse vnto our God for his great mercie towards vs in that he hath vouchsafed to beset vs with so many old and new examples of his holy Saints whereby we might be drawne to walke in such an holy course as they walked Let vs therefore be thankfull vnto our God for them and to testifie our thankefulnesse let vs alwaies remember them and in our liues follow the holy practise of them For for that purpose were they written which are commended in holy Scripture vnto vs. And as I told you let vs be sure of this that if the multitude of holy examples past and present wherewith we are compassed shall not preuaile with vs to be followers of them they
Will ye then know who by this note may be descried at this day to be false Teachers that knowing them ye may not follow them nor walke as they doe Marke who they are that seeke honour and glory amongst men but seeke not the honour and glory that commeth of God alone Who is it that stirres so much that he troubles all for the chiefe soueraigntie in earth ouer all persons in all causes ecclesiasticall and ciuill Who is it that exalteth himselfe against all that is called God or worshipped sitting as God in the Temple of God shewing himselfe that he is God Who is it that is arayed with purple and skarlet and guilded with gold and precious stones and pearles and hath a cuppe of gold in her hand full of abominations and filthinesse of her fornication wherewith she makes all the nations of the earth drunke Who is it tha● glorifieth her selfe and liueth in pleasure and saith in he● heart I sit being a Queene and am no widow and shall see n● mourning Marke I say and see whether this be not the false Prophet that workes miracles before the beast Apo. 19.20 Marke and see whose honour and glory it is that this false Prophet and his followers seeke and hunt after Gods or their owne And if by this that hath beene said ye can descrie who they be th●● take heed and beware of them For what shall become of all this pompe and glory which they so greedily seeke after Iohn saith Apoc. 18.8 Her plagues shall come at one day death and sorrow and famine and she shall be burnt with fire for strong is the Lord which shall condemne her And our Apostle saith their glory shall bee turned into shame and their end shall be damnation Take heede therefore and beware of them follow them not lest if yee be partakers in their sinnes and bee partakers also of their punishment Now I wish that this poyson had crept no farther into the Church and that they were the men alone that seeke the praise of men and not of God But are there not some others that are tainted with this vice of vaine-glory Are there not some others that preach themselues rather then Iesus Christ that in a vaine affectation of their owne praise more then Gods studie rather to speak vnto the eare then vnto the hart● whose preaching standeth rather in the intising speech of mans wisedome then in plaine euidence of the spirit and of power I wish there were no such but if there be yee may not be followers of them For the Gospell is not deliuered vnto vs that we should thereby seeke our owne praise and glory or that the people should honour and magnifie vs which are the Ministers thereof but to the end that the benefit and the glory of Christ might bee preached and published and that the Father might be glorified for his mercy offered vnto vs in Christ his sonne whom he hath giuen vs and together with him all things also To conclude therefore this point in one word we are all of vs that are Christians both Pastor and people in all things to seeke the glory of God and not of men For if we doe otherwise and seeke the glory of men and not of God our glory shall be turned into shame The last thing which the Apostle noteth in these many ●nd inordinate walkers of whom he had told them often and ●ow told them weeping is that they minde earthly things Whereby the Apostle signifieth that their studie delight and ●ll their affections were set on honours wealth friends commodities and the things which are on earth neuer minding ●he things which are aboue And here was the roote of all the other euils For why were they the enemies of the crosse of Christ why was their belly their God why sought they after vaine-glorie and estimation in the world and not that honor ●hat commeth of God alone The reason was they minded earthly things This is a briefe comprehension of the rest this being a certaine ground of the rest and the rest being cer●aine notes of this For as the cause why they were enemies to the crosse of Christ why their God was their belly why they sought glory with men and not with God was because they minded earthly things so these were euident notes to conuince them that they minded earthly things for that they were enemies to the crosse of Christ for that their God was their belly and that they sought after the praise of men and not of God Hence then I obserue the last note of inordinate walkers which is indeed the ground of all inordinate walking and that is the setling of the affections on the things which are on earth and resting in them as in the chiefest good 1. Tim. 6.10 The des●re of mony saith the Apostle is the roote of all euill which while some lusted after they erred from the faith and pearced themselues through with many sorowes That which the Apostle speaketh in particular of this one earthly desire of mony is also true in the generall of all earthly desires For the minding and desire of all earthly things is the roote of all euill whereon when men set their affections they erre from the faith and pierce themselues through with many sorrowes So that as the Apostle reasoneth saying 1 Cor. 3.3 whereas there is among you enuying and strife and diuisions are ye not carnall and walke as men so may I likewise reason is there any error in faith or corruption in life and is it not hence for that they minde earthly things Iudas that was numbred with the Apostles and h●● obtained fellowshippe in that ministration betrayed his M●ster Christ Iesus What was the cause He bore the bag a●● he loued it too well thirty pieces of siluer were the reward 〈◊〉 his iniquitie Demas forsooke Paul what was the reason H● loued the world and embraced it Those Ministers of t●● Gospell that the Apostle speaketh of in the former chapt●● sought not that which was Iesus Christs and what was th● stoppe they sought their owne their owne pleasure the owne profit their owne honour their owne ease they minde earthly things Neither is it so onely in the ministerie but g●nerally in all sorts of men this minding of earthly thin● chokes vp euery good thing and inclines vnto euery bad● thing Those chiefe Rulers of whom we spake before confe●sed not Christ what was the cause They loued the praise 〈◊〉 men more then the praise of God A good confessio● hindered by minding an earthly thing the praise o● men Demetrius likewise and his company raised a seditio● tumult against Paul what was the cause they thought th●● by his preaching the siluer Temples of Diana which the● made and which brought great gaines vnto them would be● set at naught A wicked sedition raised through carnall an● earthly minded men whose mindes were so set vpon the● gaines that for it they could not looke towards
out of my band My Father which gaue them me 29. is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand Hath not he prayed for them whom the Father hath giuen him Ioh. 17. that they may be one with him that they may be kept frō euil that they may be sanctified through the truth And doth not Iohn say that whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not 1. Joh. 3.9 namely that sinne that is vnto death so that he fall away finally from God Men may haue tasted of the good word of God and come to some knowledge of the Lord Iesus Christ and yet fal way but they that haue truly tasted of the powers of the world to come shall be euen as the mount Sion which may not be remoued but standeth fast for euer Why then doth the Apostle exhort vs to continue in the Lord if it be sure that we shall continue in the Lord It is to remoue from vs carnall securitie and to teach vs to depend on the Lord by whom we continue in his faith feare and fauour To conclude this point therefore as the Apostle here speaketh vnto the Philippians so say I vnto you Continue in the Lord euen in the faith and knowledge of Iesus Christ so as ye haue bene taught in Christ Iesus Let it neuer be said to you as it was to the Galatians Ye did runne well who did let you that ye did not obey the truth But as ye haue begun to loue and like the truth so continue to walke in the truth that when Christ Iesus shall come in the clouds of heauen ye may be the crowne of our reioycing and that ye may also appeare with him in glorie LECTVRE LXXVI PHILIP 4. Verse 2. I pray Euodias and beseech Syntyche that they be of one accord in the Lord. 3. Yea I beseech thee faithfull yoke-fellow c. NOw follow certaine particular exhortations vnto particular and priuate persons touching some discord fallen out amongst them In the second verse his request is vnto Euodias and Syntyche that they would be of one accord in the Lord. What Euodias and Syntyche were it is not certaine neither are they mentioned elsewhere in the Scripture Like it is by this place that they were two women of good note and such as had much stood with Paul at his first planting of the Church at Philippi But now it seems they were at oddes whether the one with the other or both with the rest of the Church and whether about matters of faith and religion or about ordinary matters of common life it is not certaine This we see the Apostle would gladly compose the strife and therefore he exhorteth them to be of one accord in the Lord that is of one mind and one iudgement in the things of the Lord betwixt themselues and with the Church If we vnderstand that they differed in matters of faith and religion or if we vnderstand the words in generall of what dissensions soeuer then the exhortation is that laying aside all debates and dissensions they would be of one accord in the Lord that is they would dwell together in such vnitie as is pleasing to the Lord. I pray Euodias and beseech Syntyche c. It followeth Yea and I beseech thee c. In this verse the Apostles exhortation or request is vnto his faithfull yoke-fellow that he would be a meanes to compose the strifes of Euodias and Syntyche with this reason implied because they were women which had laboured with him when he preached the Gospell at Philippi nor with him onely but with Clement also and with diuers others which labored with him in the same work whose names are written in the booke of life What this faithfull yoke-fellow was whom he maketh this request vnto it is not certaine Much disputation there is who it should be Like it is that it was some speciall man that preached the Gospell purely and sincerely there with him at Philippi Him he requesteth to helpe those women namely Euodias and Syntyche How to helpe them Namely to order their matters and to compose their strifes whatsoeuer they were And why should he do so That which the Apostle addeth seemeth to be added as a reason to moue his faithful yokefellow to help them and to compose their strifes for they laboured with him in the Gospell that is when the Gospell was first preached by him at Philippi they laboured yea and euen stroue for so the word signifieth putting themselues in hazard for the hearing of the Gospell preached and for the defence of the Gospell For in the Acts mention is made of women among whom was Lydia that came together to a place besides the riuer Act. 16.13 not daring as it may seeme to haue their assemblies in the citie of Philippi and there heard the word at Pauls mouth These two women it may seeme were two of them of whom the Apostle for that cause saith that they labored and stroue with him in the Gospell he being willing to preach and they desirous to heare when there was great danger for both and they standing much in his defence when he was much contradicted Neither doth he commend them to haue laboured with him alone in the Gospel but with Clement also and with other his fellow-labourers which laboured with him in the worke when the Gospel was first preached at Philippi Who this Clement was it is not certaine as neither who these his fellow-labourers were Silas it is like by that place in the Acts was one Ministers of the Gospell they were which ioyned their labours with Paul to the gathering of the Church at Philippi whose names though they were not written by him in this Epistle yet he saith that they were written in the book of life Whereby he meaneth that their life was as certainly sealed vp with God as if their names had bene written vp in a booke to that purpose For the speech is borrowed from the maner of them that bill the names of them in a booke whom they haue chosen into their seruice whom then they know to be theirs because they haue their names billed in a booke So God knoweth who are his as certainly as if their names were written in a booke and their life is as surely sealed with him as if their names were registred to that purpose The summe then of the Apostles reason is this these women for their labour with him and other his fellow-labourers in the Gospel were worthy that he should do this for them and therefore he requests his faithful yoke-fellow that he would help them compose the strifes which were either betwixt themselues or betwixt them and the Church there And let this suffice to be spoken touching the scope of these particular exhortations and the meaning of the words in them both Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our further vse First then in the person of Paul I note his
thing at his pleasure And albeit it may be that some couetous misers and wretches of the world may by fraud and guile or how else soeuer scrape and scratch more riches together then they should yet riches so gotten are rather the beginning of pouertie then of riches For Eccles 5.12 as the Preacher saith Riches so gottē are reserued and heaped vp to the owners thereof for their euill For either they are as a fretting canker vnto the rest to bring the owners thereof vnto pouertie or else they are gathered for him that wil scatter them So that to be ouermuch carefull is altogether in vaine and vnprofitable And thirdly as it is vaine and vnprofitable so is it also pernicious and hurtfull For whiles our thoughts are running vp and downe vpon this or that matter whiles we are troubled with cares here or there while the things of this life and the euent of things we deale withall runnes in our heads and tosseth vs to and fro as billowes in the sea we are not onely dispossest of euery good thought euery good care but if any good thought or care be suggested vnto vs it is quite choked by these worldly cares of this life This is clearely proued by that in the parable of the seed where it is said Mar. 4.18.19 that they that receiue the seed among the thornes are such as heare the word but the cares of this world and the deceitfulnesse of riches and the lusts of other things enter in and choke the word and it is vnfruitfull the cares of this world choke the word Great reason then ye see why we should abandon this ouermuch carefulnesse because it is forbidden by the holy Ghost because it springeth from the ignorance or distrust of Gods prouidence because it is in vaine and vnprofitable and because it is pernicious and hurtfull Adde also hereunto that the day hath enough with his owne griefe Matth. 6.34 as our Sauiour telleth vs as if he should haue said The care that euerie day brings with it is enough to trouble our selues withall though we do not increase our present griefe by the carefulnesse of this how we may liue in time to come This then may teach vs to moderate our cares that they be not excessiue and vnmeasurable The prohibition of such carefulnesse is strait the cause of it is euill the vse of it is none the hurt of it is great Let vs not therefore suffer our selues to be turmoiled with such cares Let such cares be left vnto the couetous worldling which hath made the wedge of gold his god which still cryeth Giue giue and neuer saith he hath enough but the more he hath the more he craueth Let him for so he will torme●t himselfe with such cares let his thoughts be troubled o● his bed about ioyning house to house and laying ground to ground about his ships at sea his marchandize at home his sheepe and oxen in the field let his sleepe depart from his eyes about his sales and bargaines his gaines and losses his debts and improuements let him be distracted with cares as with wilde horses about the euent of his businesse the successe of his labours the maintenance of wife and familie Let all his dayes be sorrowes and his trauell griefe and let his heart take no rest in the night For this is iust the case of him that immoderately scrapes and scratches carkes and cares perhaps for an vnthrift perhaps for a stranger perhaps for an enemy He eates vp and wasts and consumes himselfe with care and oftentimes enioyes no pleasure of that he hath But let such care be farre from vs and if such cares haue surprised any of vs let vs shake them off and following the counsell of our Apostle let vs be carefull for nothing What then should we be idle and carelesse and let the world runne as it listeth should we do nothing care for nothing but leaue all things as they say to Fortune and let euerie thing be as it be may and fall out as it can Not so We are not to be idle no such thing spoken of in our Apostle but we are to labour and worke euery man in his calling We are to care for not euery care is forbidden here in our Apostle but we are not to be ouermuch careful for any thing so as the worldling careth and killeth himselfe with care We are not when we haue done what we can and ought to cast all care away and to leaue all things as they say to the hazard to fall out as they can but the euent and successe to leaue vnto God always depending vpon him and flying vnto him by prayer and supplication and giuing of tha●kes in all things in prosperitie and aduersitie praying for good things praying against euill things giuing of thankes for blessings receiued and casting all our care vpon God who careth for vs for to this purpose I take this which followeth in our Apostle to be spoken when he saith but in all c. Whence I obserue that carefulnesse for the things of this life is so to be abandoned that yet we cast our care vpon the Lord doing that we ought but alwayes depending vpon him for the euent and successe and flying vnto him in all things by prayer and supplication and giuing of thankes Man goeth forth to his worke Psal 104.23 Iob. 5.7 and to his labour vntill the euening as the Psalmist speaketh and therein he doth well for man is borne vnto labour and trauell as the sparkes flie vpward euer since it was said vnto Adam Genesis 3.19 In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate thy bread So that the Apostle maketh it a rule that He that will not worke 2. Thess 3.10 shall not eate But our care for a blessing vpon our labours for the successe and euent of our labours that must be committed vnto the Lord that must be layd on him So the Prophet willeth Psal 37.5 where he saith Commit thy wayes vnto the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe And againe 55.22 Cast thy burthen vpon the Lord and he shall nourish thee he will not suffer the righteous to fall for euer If there be any thing that troubleth thee or that thou wantest commit all the care thereof vnto the Lord and stay thy selfe vpon his prouidence and vndoubtedly thou shalt not want So our blessed Sauiour Matth. 6.30 If God so clothe the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrow is cast into the ouen shall he not do much more vnto you O ye of little faith What must be the conclusion but this Cast therefore your care vpon him And so the Apostle Peter willes vs Cast all your care on God for he careth for you 1. Pet. 5.7 This then must be our care to do that we ought and then to commit the blessing of all vnto the Lord. We may not carelesly fling off
Silas it is said Acts 16.24.25 that when they were cast into prison and their feet made fast in the stockes they prayed and sung a psalme vnto God Nay how often do we reade that Christs owne mouth was filled with the praises of God giuing thankes in his miracles of feeding certaine thousands with some few loaues and fishes giuing thankes when he instituted the holy Supper giuing thankes because his Father had heard him giuing thankes for opening those things vnto Babes which were hid from the wise and men of vnderstanding Generally this note hath so well tuned at all times in the mouthes of all Gods children that they haue euer bene ready to giue thanks vnto him in all things euen as ready to offer vnto the Lord the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing for benefits and blessings receiued as to poure out their praiers vnto him for such graces of his Spirit as they stood in need of But is it so with vs Haue our mouthes bene filled with the praises of the Lord and with thankesgiuing vnto our God When our wants haue enforced vs to prayers haue we remembred to praise the Lord for such mercies as we had receiued Or hath not the Song of praise and thankesgiuing bene eyther as a strange and daintie Song vnto vs which we could not tune or as an harsh and vnpleasant Song wherein we haue had no delight Haue we not bene as those ten Lepers Luke 17.18 which being cleansed neuer returned to giue God praise When famine or sickenesse or the sword are vpon vs and our Land it may be that we will call an assembly and fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker and crie and say Spare thy people O Lord and deliuer vs from this sickenesse or famine or sword it may be I say we will do so though to too seldome we do so But when the Lord in mercie hath remoued any of these his plagues from vs what sacrifice of praise and thankesgiuing do we offer vp vnto him Let the yeare 1588 witnesse against vs at which time the inuincible Army as they called it rose vp to make warre against vs. When that mighty and cruel enemy was vpon our coasts and in the sight of our Land displayed his banners against vs thinking to deuoure vs at once and to swallow vs vp quicke then we called an holy assembly and humbled our selues before the Lord and praied vino him for deliuerance out of the hands of our cruell enemies But when he had wrought a mightie deliuerance for vs euen such a one as the world wondered at and for which we might very well take vp that of the Prophet and say Psal 124.2 If the Lord himselfe had not bene on our ●ide when those enemies rose vp against vs they had swallowed vs vp quicke when their wrath was kindled against vs 3.4 the waters had drowned vs and the streame had gone ouer our soule yea the deepe waters of the proud had gone ouer our soule when I say the Lord had wrought such a mightie deliuerance for vs how many of vs like vnto good Iehosaphat and his people assembled our selues eyther the fourth day after or at all after in the valley of Berachah or blessing to giue thankes vnto the Lord in how many places did we meete together to praise the Lord in the midst of the great Congregation whatsoeoer were done in other places no such matter here We indeed of this place whence others should haue all good example are so much afraid to seeme forward in good things that we are hardly or neuer drawne vnto it in time of common danger to fast and pray or after deliuerance from such danger to praise and giue thankes Our prayers for Prince for people for peace for prosperitie for raine for faire weather in time of famine in time of warre in time of common sickenesse and the like which we vse are good and very good And were it not well that our requests were shewed vnto God in prayer and supplication with giuing of thankes If euerie man shall looke into himselfe we shall all of vs finde a great defect in our selues this way For if the hand of the Lord be any way vpon vs then we call vpon him and pray vnto him as for example if we be sicke then we poure out our requests vnto God for health and for deliuerance from that paine wherein we lie But how many of vs do then remember to praise the Lord either for that health which before the Lord gaue vnto vs or for other good graces and blessings of the soule and of the bodie wherewith euen then we do abound Nay surely the paine of our sickenesse takes such hold on vs that onely we remember it and pray to be deliuered from it forgetting the praises of the Lord for other his mercies vnto vs. And afterward when we are restored vnto health how many of vs do sing a new Song vnto the Lord for it We commend our Physition or such a potion that we tooke or such a medicine that was applyed or such a diet that we kept but not many of vs sing the praises of the Lord by whose onely blessing vpon those meanes we haue recouered our health I do instance onely in this one example But the like is to be said of other crosses If we be in pouerty in imprisonment in banishment yea if our head or tooth or toe do ake and the like we poure out our complaints before God and make our prayers vnto him But how seldome are our requests shewed vnto him with giuing of thankes I dispute not the point whether together with our praiers and supplications should alwayes be ioyned praise and thankesgiuing Sure it is that there is none of vs all in any such need or necessitie in any such miserie or affliction but we haue many blessings of the Lord for which we ought to be thankfull So that as we haue need to pray vnto the Lord so we haue cause also to giue thankes vnto the Lord euen then when we pray But this is it which I vrge that as we are to pray vnto the Lord for such things as we neede so we are to giue thankes vnto the Lord for such blessings as we haue receiued For this is true that whatsoeuer it be that we aske we are not worthie new blessings and graces vnlesse we be thankefull for the old And this is as true that so our payers are accepted with God as we are thankfull vnto God Our vnthankefulnesse shuts out our prayers that they enter not into the eares of the Lord God of hoasts And amongst other our sinnes in my iudgement our vnthankfulnesse is one great cause why the hand of the Lord now a long time hath bene and yet is so heauie vpon vs. Of late euen by the space of a twelue moneth he hath giuen vs great hope of remouing one of his plagues of dearth and famine from vs by
reuerence beseeming them is due which yet they want because there wanteth in themselues that grauitie which beseemeth their persons and wherby they should win reuerence vnto their persons For here in my iudgement is one very great cause of that want of reuerence which is euery where We complaine greatly and not without iust cause of great want of reuerence in the yonger sort towards their elders and their betters in their places but certainly here is one great cause of it we our selues euery man in his place walke not in that grauitie that beseemeth our persons we are not of that discreete and seemly cariage which should win reuerence vnto vs in our places but not considering our selues one way or other we bewray that vanitie that lightnes that foolishnesse and oftentimes that boyishnesse in our selues which causeth want of reuerence and bringeth contempt vnto our persons Well ye see our Apostle would haue vs to thinke on and to do whatsoeuer things are graue and decent and beseeming our persons in our places Let vs hearken vnto our Apostle and let vs euery man consider himselfe and do that which is graue and beseeming vs in our places Let vs auoide both in our apparell and in our gesture and in our talke and in our deeds whatsoeuer may bewray any kind of lightnesse in vs. So shall we do that which in this point we ought and so shall we recouer that reuerence which we haue lost Whatsoeuer things are iust This is the third generall head of that Christian dutie which the Apostle commendeth to the Philippians wherein he exhorteth them to think on and to do whatsoeuer things are iust that euery one may haue that which is right and none may be defrauded of that which is due vnto him For the Apostles speech here of iust things is meant I take it of things which may be iustly required of vs that such should be performed not of things which we may iustly require of others for such things we will exact fast enough though we be not exhorted thereunto Hence then I obserue this lesson for vs That whatsoeuer things may iustly be required of vs we are to think on them and to do them May the Lord iustly require a dutie of vs and may the Prince iustly require a dutie of vs Mat. 22.21 Giue vnto God those things which are Gods and giue vnto Caesar those things which are Caesars That obedience which is due vnto the Lord giue vnto him and that loyaltie which is due vnto the Prince giue vnto him May our neighbour require a dutie of vs The rule of our blessed Sauiour is generall Mat. 7.12 Whatsoeuer ye would that men should do vnto you euen so do ye to them And a most absolute and rare example thereof we haue in Iob in Chap. 31. from verse 16. to 22. whence it is most plaine that what could be iustly required of him by his neighbour he was not awanting in it Are we maisters what the seruants may iustly require of vs that we must thinke on and do as it is written Ye maisters Col. 4.1 do vnto your seruants that which is iust and equall knowing that ye haue also a maister in heauen Are we seruants what our maisters may iustly require of vs that must we think on and do as it is written Seruants 3.22 be obedient vnto them that are your maisters according to the flesh in all things not with eye-seruice as men-pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing God c. Are we husbands what our wiues may iustly require of vs that must we thinke on and do as it is written Husbands loue your wiues 19. and be not bitter vnto them Are we wiues what our husbands may iustly require of vs that must we thinke on and do as it is written 18. Wiues submit your selues vnto your husbands as it is comely in the Lord. Are we fathers Fathers prouoke not your children to anger 21.20 lest they be discouraged Are we children Children obey your parents in all things for that is welpleasing vnto the Lord. Which also tutors and schollers are to apply vnto themselues Do we owe any thing to any man Owe nothing to any man Rom 13.8 Exod. 22.25 but to loue one another Do we lend any money to any If thou lend money to my people saith the Lord that is to the poore with thee thou shalt not be as an vsurer to him ye shall not oppresse him with vsurie Are we Ecclesiasticall men or temporall men or militarie men or scholasticall men or publike men or priuate men Look what may be iustly required of vs by the lawes of the Church or of the Common weale or of armes or of schollers or of those cities and places where we dwell and liue that we are to think on and to do Generally what men soeuer we be what things soeuer may iustly be required of vs by the law of nature or of nations by the law of God or of man we are to think on them and to do them And that for these reasons first because the things are iust in themselues for otherwise they cannot iustly be required of vs but being iust in themselues we are to think on them and to do them Secondly because the things which may iustly be required of vs do indeed make vs debters vnto them that may require them of vs. For haue we counsell wisedome learning strength c We are debters vnto them that need these things and require them of vs. And hereupon the Apostle said Rom. 1.14 that he was debter both to the Grecians and to the Barbarians both to the wise men and to the vnwise a debter to bestow on them such spirituall gifts as he had receiued of the Lord. Thirdly because the things which are iustly required of vs may be for their good that require them For we are to do good vnto all Gal. 6.10 as the Apostle exhorteth saying Do good vnto all but especially vnto them that are of the houshold of faith Being then that thereby we may do good whatsoeuer things may iustly be required of vs we are to thinke on them and to do them This then should teach vs in any case to beware of defrauding any of any thing that is due vnto him 1. Thess 4.6 Let no man saith the Apostle oppresse or defraud his brother in any matter But do we not defraud the Lord defraud the Prince defraud our neighbours and brethren Yes surely And wherein do we defraud them In that we giue them not that which is due vnto them in that we do not thinke on and do whatsoeuer things they may iustly require of vs. For who is he that walketh in that obedience which the Lord most iustly requireth of him Our manifold rebellions against our God and our wilfull transgressions against his law are too too great euidence against vs. I cannot speake of many things wherein we sin all against
Paul I note that it was Paules necessitie which the Philippians sent once againe to relieue Whence I obserue that euen the best Ministers of the Gospel of Christ Iesus are sometimes vrged and pressed with necessitie In Paul indeed it was lesse maruell both because that was the infancie of the church and for that he alwaies went about either planting or stablishing the Churches and setled himselfe in no certaine place But now that the Church is stablished and the Ministerie settled that now sometimes the very best should be pressed with necessitie I know not well what to say to it It is certainely one of the shames and discredites of our Clergie that in many places the worthiest labourers want and the veriest loyterers abound Some lights of the church haue either nothing or as litle as litle may be againe some others that either cannot or will not do any good in the Church at all haue liuing vpon liuing dignitie vpon dignitie heaped vpon them Ye see the note which I should prosecute but time will not giue me leaue LECTVRE XCII PHILIP 4. Verse 17. Not that I desire a gift but I desire the fruite which may further your reckoning 18. Now I haue receiued all c. NOt that I desire a gift c. In these words the Apostle signifieth the very true cause of that his ioy in the Lord whereof he spake before verse 10. and the very true cause of this his commendation of their liberality in the two verses next before For as before he signified in verse 11. that the principall cause of his reioycing was not because of his want because his want was supplied by their liberalitie so now he signifieth that the principall commendation of their liberalitie was not for that he desired a new gift of them as some thereby might haply imagine but the principall thing which he regarded both in the one and in the other the principall cause both of his reioycing in the Lord for their care for him and of his commendation of their liberalitie both first and last towards him was the fruite which followed thereupon to further their reckoning in that day of the great account But I desire c. The phrase of speech here vsed is borrowed from the Merchants counting-bookes for as in case of the debt of a great summe of money to a Merchant the more mony that is noted in his booke as payed the more his reckoning is furthered that payed it so the Apostle hereby signifieth that the more of their charitable workes towards him were noted as it were in Gods booke the more their reckoning was furthered with God who in the great account should reckon that to their fruite aduantage which they had done to him What was then the things which the Apostle principally desired euen more then their gifts though he needed them It was the fruite of their liberalitie that they might reape the fruite thereof with God And what was the fruite of their liberality Namely the furthering of their reckoning with God in that day when they should giue accounts of that they had done in their flesh whether it were good or euill for the Apostle knew that this fruite should follow their liberalitie towards him that thereby their reckoning should be furthered with God who would reckon that vpon their head to their vantage that they had done to him And this was it which principally caused the Apostle to ioy in their gifts and liberality Thus much for the opening of the meaning of these words Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence whereof to make some farther vse for our selues Not that I desire a gift The first thing which here I note is the Apostles diligent care to cleare things as he goes In verse 10. of this Chapter the Apostle signified his great reioycing in the Lord for the Philippians great care for him shewed by the things which they sent him by their minister Epaphroditus Whereupon lest it should be thought that before he receiued their gift he had bene cast downe through heauinesse or were not able to endure his want he cleares himselfe of all suspicion of any such abiect mind and tells them in the next verse that he spake not because of want that is that he reioyced not so much because his want was supplied by their liberality but there was another matter in it Againe in ver 11.12 he signified that he could be content with whatsoeuer state he were in that he knew how to be abased and how to abound that he was instructed both to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want Whereupon lest he should seeme to haue boasted himselfe too much of himselfe as if by his owne power and strength he had bene able to do all those things he cleares himselfe of all such arrogant presuming of his owne strength and tells them verse 13. that he is able to do all those things but how by his owne power and strength No but through Christ which strengthened him Againe the Apostle hauing said that through Christ which strengthened him he could endure want and he could be content whether he were full or hungrie hereupon it might be thought that he made small account of their benefit and could as well haue bene without it as with it He therefore cleares this point also and tels them that notwithstanding he could do all things through Christ yet they had well done to communicate to his affliction Againe in verses 15.16 he highly commended the Philippians for their great liberality towards him euen from the first vnto the last and preferreth them before all other Churches of Macedonia Whereupon lest he should seeme to affect a new benefit to desire a new gift he cleares himselfe of any such desire and tels them plainly that he doth not so commend them for that he desireth a gift of them Thus sometimes to cleare the truth of doctrine sometimes to free himselfe from vniust suspitions alwaies to rectifie them that they do not misconceiue of things euermore he cleares matters as he goes Whence I obserue a good lesson for the Minister of the Gospel of Christ Iesus which is that he giue all diligence in his teaching so to cleare things as he goes as that his people may not misconceiue any thing either touching the truth or touching himselfe He is to be iealous of both euen with a godly iealousie of the truth that no speech of his may cause them to erre touching the truth that he speake not any thing against the truth but for the truth that in all simplicitie and plainnesse he deliuer the truth or if at any time he speake something which may be mistaken yet he so cleare it before he leaue it as that there neede to be no doubt of it Of himselfe that no speech slip him nor any action passe him whereby he may be noted of impatience or pride or contempt or couetousnesse or
the profit of his people that they may be saued euen for the gaining of them in the faith and knowledge of Christ Iesus To which purpose also is that of the Apostle Peter Feede the flocke of God which dependeth on you 1 Pet. 5.2 caring for it not by constraint but willingly not for filthie lucre but of a readie mind But as our Apostle saith to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 4.15 Though ye haue ten thousand instructers in Christ yet haue ye not many fathers so may it now be said though many Churches and many congregations haue many Ministers and teachers yet haue they not many so fatherly affected as seeke not their owne profit but their profit that they may be saued If we should looke into the Popish Clergie it would easily appeare by their practise what it is they seeke and desire For to what end are their trentals diriges masses buls pardons and such other their trash but for that they desire gifts and seeke after their owne profit It were to be wished that they onely were such and that there were no such amongst vs. But what shall we say of them that so they may get in care not how they come in in at the window or downe at the house top that sticke not at these matters of simonie and corruption but swallow them downe greedily that take the fourth fifth seuenth tenth twentieth part of the liuing and leaue the rest vnto the Patron that flie to Tarsus when they should go to Niniueh and rather reside any where then where they should that heape liuing vpon liuing and dignitie vpon dignitie and come either at none or but at some one of them that feede themselues and fleece their flocks but do not labour with them in the word that keepe no proportion concerning the matter of giuing and receiuing but reape as many carnal things as they can and sow either none or as few spirituall things as they can Do not these seeke their owne profit more then the profit of the people that they may be saued Are not these of those that seeke their owne and not that which is Iesus Christs If they could say any thing for themselues it is all well surely I cannot say any thing for them I wish that they who by their place may and ought to looke to the reforming of these things would in an holy care looke vnto them and as much as in them is reforme them Worke there will be for hardly will these things be reformed Now as there are many in the Ministerie that neither are nor wil easily be perswaded to be so fatherly affected towards their people as to seeke them and not theirs or more then theirs so beloued are there many among you that heare vs and vnto whom we are sent that will hardly be perswaded of any of vs that we seeke not yours but you that we seeke not our owne profit but yours that you may be saued Nay if we tell you that it is not your worldly commodities that we so much seeke after that it is not your carnall things that we so much desire but that the principall thing that we long after euen from our very heart roote is your godly growth in the faith and knowledge of Christ and your saluation in the day of Christ what do ye commonly twit vs withall namely this that we shall long tell you thus before you will beleeue vs. And this is one great cause in my iudgement why oftentimes we labour all night and catch nought why we spend our strength in vaine and for nothing amongst you euen your hard perswasion of vs as wanting all such fatherly affection towards you But as the fault is great of such in the Ministery as want such affection towards you so is your fault also great to thinke that none in the Ministerie are so affected towards you Where therefore their presence their diligence their watchfulnesse their care ouer you giue you no other cause there perswade your selues the best of your Ministers and Teachers Yea perswade your selues of this that they seeke not yours but you that they seeke not their owne profit but yours that ye may be saued that they desire not a gift but the fruite which may further your reckoning The third thing which I note is that the Apostle saith that the fruite of their liberality towards him shall redound to the furtherance of their reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus Whence I obserue a notable commendation of charitablenesse towards the poore afflicted and distressed and generally of good workes The commendation is this that looke what we giue vnto the poore and afflicted members of Christ Iesus looke generally what good we do that shall as it were be reckoned vpon our head in that day when we shall giue our accounts what we haue done in the flesh whether it be good or euill For imagine that it were with God as it is with man and that he had a booke wherein were noted as our debts so our payments in the day when the account shall be made whatsoeuer charitable worke we haue done vnto any of Gods Saints shall be reckoned vnto vs for good payment and the moe we haue done the more shall our reckoning be furthered nay the good workes that here we haue done they shall then be recompenced with eternall glory in the heauens Prou. 19.17 He that hath mercie on the poore saith Salomon lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him that which he hath giuen Mat. 10.42 Whosoeuer saith our blessed Sauiour shall giue vnto one of these little ones a cup of cold water onely in the name of a Disciple verily I say vnto you he shall not lose his reward And in the last day Come shall he say ye blessed of my Father Mat. 25.34.35 inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world For I was an hungred and ye gaue me meate c. The reason of such recompence of reward is because Christ reckoneth it as done vnto himselfe whatsoeuer is done vnto his members here on earth If they be persecuted he is persecuted as that his voyce from heauen shewed when he cryed Act. 9.4 Saul Saul why persecutest thou me when not he but his Disciples were persecuted And againe if they be relieued he is relieued as that place of Mathew sheweth Mat 25.40 where he saith Verily I say vnto you in as much as ye haue done it vnto one of the least of these my brethren ye haue done it vnto me Now shall any good be done vnto Christ the euerlasting Sonne of the Father and shall the reward bee lesse then euerlasting glory in the heauens What shall we say then Is saluation in the heauens the reward of our workes yea it is so Is it a reward due vnto our workes Yea it is so Is it a reward due vnto our workes vpon the merit of our workes No in no sort
the beasts of the forrest are his and so are the cattell vpon a thousand hils the whole world is his and all that is therein The eies of all waite vpon him 145.15.16 and he giues them their meate in due season he openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing with plenteousnesse All riches of grace and glorie of this life and of that that is to come are with him and vnto whom he will he giueth them And therefore the Apostle telleth the Corinthians saying 2 Cor. 9.8 God is able to make all grace to abound toward you that ye alwaies hauing all sufficiencie in all things may abound in euerie good worke The Corinthians they did as we do they feared that if they should giue much to the reliefe of the poore Saints they should impouerish themselues thereby For they thought that whatsoeuer was giuen to others was taken from themselues And therefore they gaue when they gaue very sparingly and nothing chearefully Whereupon the Apostle tels them that God is able to wit through his riches to make all grace to abound towards them that is to repay them all that they haue giuen with aduantage that they might haue enough both for themselues and also to helpe others withall So rich is our God that he can and so good is our God that he will do thus vnto all them that sow liberally and giue chearefully And why should any man doubt of this When thou sowest thy come in the ground doest thou not hope to receiue thine owne againe with aduantage and doest thou not reape oftentimes a great deale more then thou diddest sow Why then shouldest thou doubt after thy dispersing to the poore to reape seuen fold more for it Why shouldest thou not hope to receiue thine owne againe with very great aduantage Considering these things beloued let it be farre from vs to doubt that pouertie will follow our liberalitie Let vs not thinke with our selues that the more we giue the lesse we haue but rather that the more we giue the more through his riches we shall haue Let the poore therefore be our field wherein we sow our corne and surely we shall reape plentifully let the poore be our altar whereon we make our offering and then surely our sacrifice shall be acceptable and pleasant vnto God let the poore be our chist wherein to hourd our treasure and this shall surely further our reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus If our liberality abound according to our abilitie to the poore our God shall fulfill all our necessities through his riches yea he shall fulfill them with glory euen with such plentifulnesse and abundance as that his name may be glorified thereby The third thing which I note is that the Apostle saith that their recompence of reward was in Christ Iesus Whereby he giueth them to vnderstand that God made this recompence of reward vnto them of their liberality towards him not for their works sake as vpon desert but for Christ Iesus sake onely by grace Whence I obserue how the promises of God touching the recompence of reward for our works are made good vnto vs the promises are made and payed only in Christ Iesus not any way for the merit of our works seene or foreseene In him God from the beginning loued vs and made all his louing promises of his sweete mercies vnto vs and in him partly now he doth partly hereafter shall make them good vnto vs through his riches with glory This our Apostle witnesseth where he saith 2 Cor. 1.2 that all the promises of God in Christ Iesus are yea and are in him Amen that is in him they are all made and performed ratified and established And the reason is plaine for why doth he make or performe such promises vnto vs but onely in his gracious loue and fauour towards vs euery promise of his vnto vs being a testimonie of his loue towards vs And how doth he loue vs but onely in Christ Iesus in whom alone he is well pleased Mat. 3.17 His promises then vnto vs being made and performed onely in loue vnto vs his loue vnto vs being onely in Christ Iesus it is plaine that all his promises are made and performed vnto vs in Christ Iesus alone By him we are reconciled vnto God and in him through him and for him we haue whatsoeuer we haue So that whensoeuer any promise is made vnto vs throughout the whole Scripture either of blessing for this life or for that that is to come of temporall or of eternall reward of safetie from enemies or of saluation in the heauens still we are to lift vp our eyes vnto heauen where Christ Iesus sitteth at the right hand of God to know that in him alone both the promise is made and shall be performed vnto vs through the loue of God wherewith he loueth vs in him Hence then first we learne not to credit any such as shall tell vs that any reward is promised or giuen vnto vs for the merit or worth of our works seene or foreseene For let but this ground be laid which is most certaine and true that all the promises of God vnto vs are made and performed in Christ Iesus then must it needs be concluded that in vs no merits or any thing were seene or foreseene wherefore such promises should be made or performed and that we are altogether vnworthie in our selues vnto whom any such promises should be made or performed For therefore are they made and performed in Christ Iesus because in vs there is nothing wherefore they should be performed or made Or if there be then as the Apostle reasoneth touching iustification saying If righteousnesse be by the Law that is by the works of the Law then Christ died without a cause so do I touching this point If in vs there be any thing wherefore the promises of God should be made or performed then in vaine are they made and performed in Christ Iesus I omit to speake of the great vnworthinesse of our best works because I haue spoken to that purpose often heretofore Onely for this time let this ground be considered and if any man at any time shall seeke to perswade you that this or that reward is promised and shall be giuen vnto you for the merit of your works tell him that it is promised and giuen vnto you in Christ Iesus and therefore not for any merit of your works Secondly hence learne the stablenesse of all Gods promises made vnto his children As this here is so they are all made in Christ Iesus and therefore must needs be stable and neuer faile Euen as we say that whom he loueth once he loueth vnto the end because whom he loueth in Christ Iesus him he alwaies loueth so his promises being all founded and grounded vpon his loue once made vnto his children shall not faile for euer because they are all made in Christ Iesus A notable comfort vnto all Gods children Hath he