Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n faith_n grace_n work_n 6,088 5 6.2038 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14032 An exposition vpon the canonicall Epistle of Saint Iames with the tables, analysis, and resolution, both of the whole epistle, and euerie chapter thereof: with the particular resolution of euerie singular place. Diuided into 28. lectures or sermons, made by Richard Turnbull, sometimes fellow of Corpus Christie Colledge in Oxford· now preacher and minister of the word of God and the holy Sacraments, in the citie of London. Turnbull, Richard, d. 1593. 1591 (1591) STC 24339; ESTC S118931 472,056 683

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

themselues that they do God good seruice if now and then onely they haue a spirt a crash a fit at the worde and leaue off but our Apostle willeth vs to continue therein often yea alwayes to be looking in the perfect law of libertie 4 Therein we must not be idle hearers but doers of the worde the promise of happinesse is not made to the hearing but to the doing of the worde we hearing must do that therein we are taught and so as good ground bring forth fruits with pacience 5 This if we do we shall be blessed in our deed not that our deedes do make vs blessed but because studie and endeuour to do well is a qualitie of such as shall be blessed And this blessednesse is giuen as a free gift and reward from God to such as walke in holinesse of life which life is not the cause of our reigning with God in eternall blessednesse but the way to the kingdome saith Saint Bernard neither are our good workes efficient and Bernard vpon 1. Psal proper causes of saluation and happinesse but ornaments of our faith as Saint Ambrose writeth But of this more was spoken 1. Iames 12. Here it may be obiected that in as much as happinesse is promised to our workes in Scripture therefore our workes purchase this happinesse Dauid pronounceth Psal 1. Psal 41. 119. 8. Luke 11. Reuel 1. him blessed which walketh not in the connsaile neither standeth in the way of sinners him blessed also who considereth the poore and needie those that are vndefiled in the way such as feare God and walke in his wayes Our Sauiour counteth them blessed which heare the worde and do it the Angel those which heare the words of that prophecie and fulfill them The Apostle here those which looke into the law of libertie and continue therein being not idle hearers but doers of the worde I answere that herehence if followeth not that men deserue by their works this happinesse but first these places entreate not of the cause why men are blessed but of their qualitie who shall be blessed euen such as do these things Secondly such things are vnderstoode of their workes who by faith are iustified accepted and blessed in whom the blessednesse of their workes doth followe the blessednesse of their faith as the effect the cause euen as ciuill righteousnesse or righteousnesse by workes whereby the fairh of our heart is knowen to men doth follow righteousnesse by faith which is before God Thirdly rewards are promised to works of grace and not of dutie so that no man by workes can chalenge happinesse vnto himselfe which as also eternal life is the meere gift of God through Iesus Christ Rom. 6. This part of the Apostles comparison is that who so looketh into the law of God with carefulnesse to liue thereafter shall be blessed in his deed Wherefore as Socrates the great Philosopher exhorted all men but specially yong men alwayes to looke into their glasses that if they were beautifull they should behaue themselues accordingly if deformed they should then hide and couer their deformities by vertue and learning so ought all Christians men and women to looke continually into this glasse of Gods worde that if they be alreadie beautified by the graces of God they may walke worthy their Ephes 4. Philip. 1. 2. Tim. 1. glorious calling in true holinesse and righteousnesse if they be deformed through sinne they may learne thereby to couer and correct their deformities of sinne by true obedience vnto the Gospel that they continuing in vertue may be blessed in their deeds not for their owne merits but of the mercie of God to whom with the sonne and the holy ghost be all praises dominion and maie●tie now and for euermore Amen Iames Chap. 1. verses 26. 27. Sermon 8. 26 If any man among you seemeth religious and refraineth not his tongue but deceyueth his owne heart this mans religion is in vaine 27 Pure religion vndefiled before God is this to visite the fatherlesse widowes in their aduersitie to keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world IN which wordes are the other two exhortations or admonitions namely the third and the fourth contained the thirde that Gods worde giueth and setteth downe the rule not onely to do well but to speake wel also The fourth that pure and perfect religion holy and acceptable seruice to God standeth in charitie towards the needie and in puritie of our liues These two verses containe the other two admonitions 3 To refraine the tōgue wherin are two things 1 admonition it selfe 2 The reasons 1 It causeth errour and hurt 2 It defileth religion 4 Wherein pure Religion before God consisteth namely in 1 Charitie towarde the needie 2 Puritie and innocencie in our owne liues The thirde admonition of the Apostle is touching 3. Admonition the restraint and moderation of the tongue wherein he teacheth vs that the worde of truth whereby we are regenerate and begotten through the will of God prescribeth vnto vs not onely a rule of doing well but of speaking well also Wherefore the holy and vnfaigned professours of this worde must endeuour thereby not onely to reforme their actions but also to restraine their speaches and moderate their tongues that they fall not into those vices whereunto the godlesse tongue is giuen therefore sayeth he if any man among you seeme religious and refrayneth not his tongue but deceyueth his owne heart this mans religion is in vaine This admonition teacheth that the law of God being Psal 119. a lanterne vnto our feete and a light vnto our paths and a thing diuinely inspired from aboue to make a man perfect in righteousnesse and absolute to euerie good worke doth not onely restraine the vnbrideled actions of men but also refraineth and holdeth backe the 2. Tim. 3 disordered speaches of their mouthes that both in action and communication they may be holy vnto the Lorde For this cause haue we many exhortations in the sacred Scriptures of God to moderate our tongues and to restraine them In stead of many it may suffice which the holie Prophet and Prince of Israel teacheth vs If any Psal 34. man loue long life and would see happie dayes let him refraine his tongue from euill and his lips they speake no guile Hereof wee haue heard more verse 19. before and shall heare more 3. chapter from 2. verse to 13. verse thereof The reasons hereof are two 1 it causeth errour in our liues and hurt vnto our selues when wee are giuen to babling and prating thereby our hearts are deceyued and our selues indangered For great hurt commeth vnto men for want of moderation and gouernement of their tongues Solomon setting downe the inconuenience of not refraining the tongue affirmeth that life Prou. 18. and death are therein and they that loue it should eat the fruite thereof shewing how dangerous a thing it is to be loose which who is is subiect to great daunger Therfore
Euen as that was no liberalitie neither is it for a man to say to the hungrie go fill thy bellie and to the naked go warme thy selfe and yet to giue them nothing needefull for the bodie but rather a mocking both of the distressed and of GOD himselfe vppon whome the contumelies reproches iniuries redounde which are done to his Saints afflicted in this world and discussed For as the poore is after a manner mocked when in wordes wee seeme to moane him and for his case to bee mooued when notwithstanding we shewe no fruites of compassion so is God also after a manner mocked when we pretende wee haue fayth yet shewe foorth no good workes whereby our fayth in God might bee testified and the afflicted Saintes comforted and so our fayth is but deade in vs. For what the soule is to the bodie that is Charitie and the fruites of loue vnto fayth And wee knowe that the soule quickeneth and giueth life vnto the bodie whereby it is discerned and knowne from a dead bodie so charitie and the dueties of loue giue life vnto our faith and maketh it knowen to bee liuelie quicke and fruitfull So then as the bodie is dead without the soule so is faith deade without good workes which giue life as it were and quickeneth it in the sight of men And what health is to this bodily life the same are fruites of charitie and sanctification to the faith of each man and woman Nowe health giueth strength to the legges might to the armes power to the bodie conuenient abilitie to euerie member for the perfourmance of actions in this bodie and present state of life required euen so vnfeigned loue reformed life the fruites of sanctification the studie of vertue and good workes maketh our soules nimble and our fayth strong to perfourme those dueties which of the Saints iustified by faith in Iesus Christ are expected looked for and required If fayth and workes in Gods Saints be so necessarily ioyned and so inseparably vnited and knit together as that without good workes faith is here counted dead and iustification before GOD bee imputed to fayth as the Scripture teacheth Abraham beleeued and it was imputed Gene. 15. Rom. 4. vnto him for righteousnesse howe shall not iustification be imputed to workes also seeing they are inseparable It may be answered that faith and good workes in the Saints of God now iustified are inseparable but to the obtaining of iustification fayth without workes onely is required and all workes excluded from the worke of iustification Therefore Saint Paul sayth that by the workes of the lawe no flesh is iustified in the sight of Rom. 3. God and that all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ whom God hath set foorth to bee a reconciliation through fayth in his blood A little after making an Antithisis and opposition Rom. 4. betwixt faith and workes so that they cannot any wise agree in the worke of our iustification he sayth to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt But to him that worketh not but beeleeueth on him that instifieth the vngodly his fayth is Rom. 11. counted for righteousnesse In the same Epistle long after hee reasoneth in like manner from things opposed one to the other whereof both cannot be causes of the same effects and so beateth flat to the ground all works from being either in whole or in part cause of our iustification if election and iustification be of grace then is it no more of workes for else were grace no more grace but if it bee of workes then is it not of grace for then were worke no more worke To the Church of Galatia Gal. 2. know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the lawe but by the fayth of Iesus Christ This doctrine hee published to his scholer Titus the Bishop of the Isle of Creta wherefore he saith in this wise when that bountifulnesse of that loue of God our Sauiour towards man appeared Tit. 3. not by the workes of righteousnesse which wee had done but according to his mercie he saued vs. Finally to the Church of Ephesus By grace are you saued Ephe. 2. through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of GOD not of workes least anie man should boast himsef e Whereby it is apparant that workes are excluded from the worke of iustification before God which is by faith only without works according to the scripture If our aduersaries replie that Paul speaketh of the ceremoniall law when he excludeth workes from iustifying vs I answere that hee speaketh not of the lawe ceremoniall onely but of the morall lawe also so that no workes iustifie vs but all are excluded from that worke before God And this may thus appeare 1 When Paul woulde Rom. 3. prooue that both Iewe and Gentile are vnder sinne and so neither by their workes iustified before God he alledgeth many testimonies out of the Prophets Dauid and Isai whereby all men are conuinced of sinne as there is none righteous no not one there is none that seeketh after God there is none that hath vnderstanding they haue all gone out of the way they haue beene made altogether vnprofitable there is none that doth good no not one There throte is an open sepulchre they haue vsed their tongues to deceyte the poison of Aspes is vnder their lippes and so forth from the 10. verse to the 19. verse In the twentieth verse vpon those former testimonies hee inferreth therefore by the workes of the lawe shall no flesh be iustified in his sight His conclusion must holde in the same workes whereof in the proofe and premises he spoke but his testimonies are touching the morall law not the ceremoniall law therefore speaketh he also of the moral law when he excludeth workes from iustifying vs in the sight of God 2 In that place why we nor any flesh can by any meanes be iustified by the workes of the lawe the reason Rom. 3. v. 20 of the Apostle is this for by the law commeth the knowledge of sinne Wherehence I draw this argument by those workes of the law whereby we haue knowledge of sinne no flesh is iustified before GOD. But by the works of the morall lawe we haue greatest knowledge of sinne therefore euen the workes of the lawe morall are excluded from the worke of iustification And that the moral lawe bringeth knowledge of sinne chiefly Saint Paul shewed to the Romanes VVho in another place repeating the Rom 7. same that knowledge of sinne commeth by the lawe he giueth instance not in the part ceremoniall but in the part morall of the lawe I knewe not sinne sayeth hee but by the lawe for I had not knowne lust except the lawe had saide thou shalt not lust If the workes of that lawe whereby the knowledge of sinne cōmeth iustifie
that not onely the beginning of faith but the increase and perfection therof is from him For which cause as the Apostles prayed to Christ Luke 17 who is God blessed for euer for increase of saith so S. Paul and Saint Peter ascribing the perfection establishment and consummation of all things vnto GOD haue therefore praied vnto God as plainly appeareth in their Epistles The God of peace that brought againe from Heb. 13. the dead our Lord Iesus the great Shepheard of the sheepe through the bloud of the euerlasting couenant make you perfecte in all good workes to doe his will woorking in you that which is pleasaunt in his sight thorowe Iesus Christ to whom be praise for euer and euer Amen And Saint Peter And the God of all grace which 1. Pet. 5. hath called vs vnto his eternal glorie by Christ Iesus after that ye haue suffered a little make you perfect confirme strengthen and stablish you to whom be glorie for euer and euer Thus then the beginning continuance and encrease yea the perfection and establishment of the very faith of Abraham was onely from God as the cause yet is it knowen to be perfect and declared so to be before men through workes as the Apostle witnesseth and the Scripture was fulfilled when by his obedience it did clearely appeare how truely it was written of Abraham by the Prophet Moses that Abraham beleeued and it was Gen. 15 imputed vnto him for righteousnes So that his worke is said in the Scripture to haue made the testimonie of Moses true cleare and euident that Abraham beleeued and that his faith to that word of promise that one of his owne loines and bowels should be his heire was imputed vnto him for righteousnes This being the argument of Saint James from the example of Abraham that what faith was in him the like ought to be in all Gods Saints and that as his faith was ioyned with the worke of obedience to God when occasion was ministred so ought the faith of euerie one of the children of God to be bewtified accompanied shewed foorth through good works The conclusion is inferred You see then how that a man is iustified of workes that is The conclusion made proued and knowen to men to be iust and righteous before God by workes and not by faith onely not of a colde dead bare barren fruitlesse idle faith onely such a faith as is in words when we say we haue faith though we haue no workes Of which faith hypocrites so much glorie and make boastein vaine as of that faith which is no true faith And this conclusion must agree in the same sence of tearmes wherein the example was proposed and the tearmes herein to be noted are specially two Iustified and faith Iustified in the example proposed signifieth to be knowen for iust not to be made iust Faith signifieth that bare profession whereby in words we say we haue faith and the religion of Christ Such faith was not in Abraham therefore neither is any other man by such a faith reputed for righteous And their wordes thus in the same and right sense taken the conclusion is true a man is not iustified by faith onely but by workes faith onely in wordes maketh not men to bee knowen for righteous among men but faith in workes and deedes These things thus set downe in the example of Abraham 4. Reason the fourth and last argument which faith in gods Saints is not without workes is drawne from Rahab the vittailer tauerner hostesse or harlot of Ierico whose example teacheth the same that Abrahās did that the faith of Gods Saints is not fruitlesse or void of good works for she also was iustified through workes when she receyued the messengers and sent them out another way The storie is recorded in the booke of Iosua wherein it is set downe that at what time as Iosua by the counsell and Iosua 2. commaundement of God purposed the siege and sacking of Ierico the Citie he sent before him two men to spie out and to view the land and the Citie which thing comming to the eares of the King of Ierico that there were such men come to the house of Rahab hee sent to her to send him the men she seeing that being perswaded they were the true seruants of the God of heauen earth and that the lande should bee giuen by God into their hands wherin her faith consisted she hid the men and tolde the messengers of the King that they were gone and so sent them away who being gone shee came to the spies and tolde them how their feare was vpon the inhabitants of the land therefore desired she them that as she had shewed them mercie so they would shewe he● mercie when the Citie should be destroyed This was promised a signe and warning was giuen shee sendeth them away and so they escaped This her facte Saint Iames commendeth affirming that thereby shee also was iustified euen knowen for righteous and declared thereby to the spyes of Iosua and to all Israel The force of this place then is this as Abraham through bare and naked faith deserued not the prayse of iustice righteousnesse and iustification before men so neither did Rahab but as Abraham hauing occasion thereto shewed his fayth by his holy obedience so Rahab shewed the vnfeignednesse of her fayth by her sauing and sending away safely the messengers of Josua and so both of them were iustified before men and in the vewe of the worlde not by faith onely that is bare faith but by workes whereby their faith was shewed and made manifest In these two examples all men are contained whether Iewe or Gentile whether righteous or prophane and openly wicked Abrahams example containeth all Iewes and all men of vertue and godlinesse Rahabs example containeth all Gentiles straungers from Gods people all wicked persons which yet through the grace of GOD are planted in the Church and made members of the bodie of Christ wherein the diuersitie of the argument consisteth Thus the holie Apostle culled and picked out two most diuerse and vnlike examples the one of a man the other of a woman the one of Gods people the other of a straunger the one of one godly the other of one wicked to the ende that thereby he might teach men that none neither man nor woman neither Iewe nor Gentile neither of the people of GOD nor straunger neither godly nor wicked can bee reputed or reckened for iust and righteous before GOD in deede whose praise appeareth not in the practise of vertue and good workes by which they are shewed and knowen for righteous before men So that in none vvhat kinde or condition what people or nation what coast or countrie so euer they bee of true faith can bee void and destitute of vvorks as by these arguments novv appeareth most manifest Novve the Apostle againe repeateth the conclusion The conclusiō repeated that as the bodie voyde
because all graces and giftes wherewith the Church is beautified come from God as from a fountaine and father of vertues The Apostle Saint John recordeth of God that hee is light 1. Iohn 1. and in him is no darkenesse the fountaine of all vertue the giuer of all grace a nature most perfect and iust farre from all contagion or mixture of sinne the authour of good but not of any euill this the Apostle in these wordes expressing calleth GOD the father of lightes By lights hee vnderstandeth vertues graces good things as by darkenesse the contrarie is vnderstoode by the phraise of the Hebrues If then God be the father fountaine and authour of lightes vertues graces and good things in men then may it not be said that he is cause of euill temptations for that agreeth not to light but to darkenesse 2 Moreouer it is attributed vnto God that hee is not variable mutable chaungeable with whom there is sayeth Iames no variablenesse This is added to preuent that which otherwise might haue beene obiected they might say God in deede is sometimes the cause of good things among men it followeth not therefore but that he may be sometimes in like maner the cause of euill Men excelling in vertue and causes of good things in common wealthes may sometimes change their good into euill and sometimes do one thing sometimes the other and why may not God so do the Apostle sheweth God is not variable there is no changing with him he is constant alwayes alike euer cause of good neuer author of euil Whereof euen Balaam the couetous prophet hath Num. 23. truely prophecied to Balac the King of Moab GOD is not as man that hee should lie nor as the sonne of man that he should repent Seeing then hee had once blessed his people Israel hee beeing alwayes like himselfe will not varie or chaunge his purpose The Psal 102. Psal 89. 34. princely Prophet Dauid remouing all variablenesse from God and making him constant and euer like himselfe affirmeth that albeit heauen and earth perish be changed like a garment yet he remaineth the same and his yeares faile not This Samuel told Saul the king of Israel 1. Kings 15. that seeing he had giuen the kingdome from him to Dauid therefore that purpose shoulde stande because the strength of Israel will not lie nor repent for he is not a man that he should repent God is like himselfe in all things with whom there is no variablenesse VVhen God altereth things at his owne pleasure saith Saint Gregorie the things alter but he remaineth the same and chaungeth Lib. 20. 25. on Iob. not Therefore by his Prophet Malachie he crieth I am the Lord I chaunge not and your sonnes of Iacob Malac. 3. are not consumed VVhen then in Scripture it is saide often it repented God the Scripture speaketh to the capacitie of men but in no wise attributeth inconstancie and variablenesse to God This doe those manifolde places teach which witnesse that GOD is sure immutable and constant in all his wayes If therefore GOD varie not then hee being once the authour of good things hee alwayes doeth good not euill and is the fountaine of good giftes not cause of euill temptations to any 3 As God chaungeth not so there is no shadowe of turning with him He is not like the Sunne the Moone the Starres which appeare and shine sometimes but at other times are couered with darkenesse which haue their chaunges and their courses the day nowe within ten eleuen or twelue houres the night the Sunne glorious now in beautie but anon in an Eclipse the Moone nowe in the full nowe in the waine now newe nowe a quarter olde and so forth The Planets nowe in this place of heauen nowe in that shining There is no such turning with God He is not now good and nowe turned to the contrarie for hee is alwayes light and with him is no 1. Jhon 1. darkenesse at all For his goodnesse is alwayes cleare bright and continually shining his light chaungeth not with Sunne Moone or Starres in the Firmament he giueth not good things at one time and at another draweth vs to euill by any temptation but as himselfe is immutable so are his graces and giftes alwayes good and not chaungeable into euill wherefore hee is not to bee counted authour of euill in any wise as by the wicked he is wrongfully charged neither sendeth hee euill at any time to men whereof they themselues are not the first causes he excelleth not now in vertue and anon falleth into infirmitie he is not now the authour of good things and anon turneth to the contrarie but hee is in deede that God of grace and goodnesse that fountaine and father of lights with whom there is no variablenesse nor shadowe of chaunging wherefore the worker of good things but not the prouoker of man vnto wickednesse by any euill temptation which is the thirde thing here attributed vnto God that with him there is no shadow of turning and this is the thirde reason why men beeing tempted ought not to say they are tempted of God because he is the authour of good and therefore cannot be authour of euill for that he cannot be cause of contrarie effects And thus entreating of the goodnesse of God as the fountaine of al grace in man and shewing by these reasons that God cannot be counted the authour of our euill or the cause of euill temptations in vs he discendeth to the worke of regeneration as the most manifest token and testimonie of his goodnesse For the greatnesse therefore of his goodnesse towardes the children of men and for his manifold graces let vs dayly pray vnto him that he may shrowde vs vnder his mercifull shield of protection and defence that thereby we being armed may be able to withstande all assaultes and temptations of Satan the worlde and our owne concupiscence that we may stand fast in the day of our triall and with inuincible fortitude and pacience may finish our wearifull pilgrimage in his feare religion and seruice to the glorie of his name the profite of our brethren the comfort of our owne conscience the strengthening of our faith through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with the father and the holy ghost be praise for euer and euer Amen Iames Chap. 1. verses 18. 19. 20. Sermon 6. 18 Of his owne will begate he vs with the worde of truth that we should be as the first fruits of his creatures 19 Wherefore my brethren let euery man be swift to heare and slow to speake slow to wrath 20 For the wrath of man doeth not accomplish the righteousnesse of God IN these wordes and so to the 4. Part of this Chapter end of the Chapter the Apostle handleth the fourth and last part of the chapter which is touching the excellencie of the worde of God In which three things must be obserued 1 The excellencie it selfe and the singular effect of the
worde what it worketh in the children of men 2 The remouing of certaine faults which hinder our attending to this worde so excellent 3 Against these faults he setteth downe certaine exhortations and admonitions flowing out of the worde and they are foure as shall appeare from the 21. verse to the ende Now touching these verses they are of this fourth and last part Wherein are two things set downe by the Apostle and to bee considered of vs. 1 The excellencie of the worde of God i● selfe 2 The remoouing of hinderances to the attending therunto and they are two 1 Babling and talking when we should heare 2 Wrath and anger when wee are taught and reprooued Touching the former of these the excellencie of the worde of God it selfe in speciall thereunto he discendeth by the former treatise Wherein disputing of the goodnes of God he here sheweth that his goodnes especially appeareth in the worke of our regeneration the instrumentall cause whereof is the worde of God whereof in this place he speaketh So then in this 18. verse the Apostle giueth vs as it were a taste of that which in generall he had spoken that God is the fountaine of all goodnes which as in sundrie other things appeareth so especially in the worke of our regeneration the most expresse testimonie of his goodnesse towardes vs which being apparant and manifest wee must needes confesse that all good giuings and all good giftes come from him so that wee can not say without blasphemie nor thinke without impietie that GOD is authour or cause of our euill temptations and in as much as GOD both first created man in perfect innocencie and afterwarde regenerated him to bee like the image of his owne sonne in excellent vertue his great goodnesse doeth so appeare to all men that it were incomparable iniquitie in any wise to make him cause of our wickednesse To come therefore to the excellencie of the worde which is the meane of our regeneration the Apostle setteth downe the other causes thereof also so that in this 18. verse there are three causes of our regeneration the most apparant testimonie of the goodnes of God towards man 1. the efficient 2. the instrumentall 3. the finall cause 2 The efficient cause of our regeneration is the free will of God Of his owne will sayth Iames begate he vs. The good will of God the gracious fauour and free purpose of God is the first and efficient cause of saluation and regeneration in men to the trueth whereof all the Scriptures of GOD beare witnesse The electing preferring and aduauncing the Iewes aboue all other people beeing as it were a figure and resemblaunce of the eternall election and regeneration of the Saints was not for any merite of man but of the onely mercie and loue of GOD towardes them as Moises witnessed But Saint Paul speaking not of a temporall Deut. 7. 9. calling as was that of the Iewes but of an eternall calling of Gods Saintes to regenerate them to eternall Ephes 1. 1. Iohn 12. 13. life maketh the onely true and efficient cause thereof the free-will and goodnesse of God whereof he sayeth God hath predestinate vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will Whereunto that is agreeable in another place all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God and are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption Rom. 3. that is in Christ Iesus Thus of his owne will and freely hee electeth thus of his owne goodnesse hee iustifieth thus of his meere mercie hee regenerateth vs vnto life The holy Apostle noting this cause of all these wonderfull workes of God in man affirmeth that God worketh Philip. 2. in vs both to will and to doe according to his owne good pleasure To like sense soundeth that to his scholer and sonne Timothie God saith he hath saued vs called 2. Tim. 1. vs with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was giuen vnto vs in Iesus Christ before the worlde was Finally to Titus when the bountifulnesse and loue of God Tit. 3. our Sauiour towards man appeared not according to our workes but according to his mercie he saued vs. Thus in this place of regeneration he maketh the good will and free mercie of God the cause of our regeneration As God therefore freely and of his owne will worketh in all things So in the election iustification and regeneration Ose 14. of the Saints it is apparant Herence is it that God saith by his Prophet I will loue thee freely and of mine owne wil. The Prophet Dauid saith therefore vnto God Thou hast saued vs for naught what is that for naught saith Saint Augustine but this Thou foundest nothing in vs wherefore Psal De verbis Apost 15. John 15. thou shouldest saue vs yet hast thou saued vs Freely doest thou geue freely doest thou saue This our blessed Sauiour to expresse telleth his Disciples that hee chose them not they him because there was nothing in them wherefore he should choose them yet of his owne free wil he chose them Saint John subscribeth hereunto in that hee saith 1. John 4. Herein is loue not that we loued him but that he loued vs first and gaue his sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes Saint Paul to ouerthrowe all foreseen workes Rom. 11. merites in man and to shew that in election iustification predestination and sanctification God worketh all after his owne will freely he thus concludeth Who hath geuen him first he shal be recompenced for of him through him and for him are all things to him be glorie for euer Amen Thus his free will and fauour towardes man is the onely efficiencie as of al other his vnspeakeable graces so of regeneration in his children That therefore saith Beda which he said before that euery good geuing and ouery perfect gift commeth from aboue from the father S. Bede of light that doeth he consequently confirme by adding that not for our merites but by the benefite of his owne will through the water of regeneration he hath changed vs from the children of darcknesse to be the children of light In this place therefore not only plainly Saint Iames but agreeably to the Scripture reuerende Beda condemneth the doctrine of done or foreseene works held by the Papists and out of this Epistle as they dreame most specially concluded For if regeneration be through the free will of God if predestination election iustification and sanctification be from the mercie and fauour of God as from the first and efficient cause then are none of all these by-workes or deserts of men for there is a playne contrarietie betwixt fauour and merite grace and deseruing so that Paul reasoneth from the opposition thereof against workes in the matter of iustification To him that worketh the wages is not counted of fauour
no flesh and the chiefe knowledge of sinne come by the morall lawe then doe not the woorkes of the morall lawe iustifie more then the workes of the ceremoniall lawe of God 3 That lawe whose workes Saint Paul excludeth from being meanes of mans iustification causeth wrath Rom. 4. as in the same disputation is auouched but to cause wrath is not proper to the ceremonies of the law which were rather giuen to reconcile the people to God but to the morall lawe which thundereth out the fearful wrath Deut. 27. Gal. 3. of God against all transgressions Therefore not onely not the ceremonies but neither the morall workes of the law do iustifie vs before God 4 Finally S. Paul to the Church of Galatia handeling the same argument and question of iustification Gal. 3. and therin prouing that vve art not iustified by the works of the lavve he reasoneth from contraries by the lavve vve are held accursed therefore thereby vvee are not saued and iustified His antecedent or former proposition he proueth by the lavve it selfe vvherein it is thus vvritten Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all Deut. 27. things that are vvritten in the lavv to do them Novv this curse is not so much vnderstood of the breach of the ceremonies as of the moral precepts to the transgression vvhereof from 15. verse to 26. verse setting dovvne seuerall curses as against idolatry disobedience of children to their parents remouing of land markes vvhereunder he condemneth all iniuries and extortions not counselling and helping our neighbour hindering the right of the straunger fatherlesse and vvidovv incest buggerie priuy hurt briberie 36. verse he concludeth Cursed saith he is euerie one that abideth not in all things that are vvritten in this booke to do them Citing therefore that place in the matter question of iustification vvhich he applieth to faith altogether taketh frō works speaketh not of the ceremonies of the lavv only but of the moral precepts also so of all the vvorks of the lavv vvhich both in vvhole and in part are denied to iustifie vs before God Albeit this controuersie betvvixt the Ievves and Acts 15. 5. Gal. 1. 11. Rom. 4. 9. the Apostles began about circumcision vvhich the Ievves vvould haue annexed to faith the Gospel as necessarie to euery one which should be saued as appeareth yet the Apostle rising from the part to the vvhole from circumcision to all the lavve of Moises excludeth not only circumcision but all the vvorkes of the lavve from iustifying vs before God It follovveth not therefore because faith and vvorks are both in gods Saints togither therfore they haue the same effect namely to iustifie before God For albeeit man hath at once feete handes eares and eyes yet followeth not that they serue to one vse but to seuerall the feete to walke the handes to touch the eares to heare the eyes to see so albeit in the Saints there is both faith and good workes yet by faith not by workes are we saued and iustified before GOD. In the Sunne there are together both heate and light yet is not the light but the heate and influence cause of the bringing foorth of earthly creatures and fruites of the ground and by the light not by the heate it shineth vnto men In the Element of water naturally there is moysture ioyned with colde yet to purge and wash is proper to the moysture not to the colde to coole proper to the coldnesse rather then to the moysture So in like manner albeit fayth and good woorkes bee in the Saints at once yet are men iustified by faith and beleefe not by woorkes which in deede are not good but in as much as we are iustified by faith in Christ from whence as fruites from a tree they spring vnto men and are manifest to the worlde by order and consideration faith going before as the cause gendering good woorkes as effects in the Saints of God To applie iustification to workes as well as to faith is a deceit and fallacie from the accident in applying that to one which is proper to another because both are ioyned together Saint Origen vpon the 3. Rom. sheweth that faith alone without works saueth whereof he giueth the theefe for exemple and the woman to whom Christ said thy sins are forgiuē thee thy faith hath made thee whole Origen in Rom. 3. Now that we say faith and workes are ioyned together so inseparablie as that faith without workes is dead according to this infallible doctrine in them which are alreadie iustified it is true not simplie For in men to be iustified they are not for in them first faith is whereby they are iustified and afterwardes good workes follow In the poore publican there were no good works Luke 18. but faith was in him whereby moued he hūbled himselfe said O God be merciful vnto me a sinner so destitute of workes he departed iustified The theefe who through Luke 23. faith intreated our Sauiour Christ that he would remember him when he came to his kingdome thereby was iustified yet had no good workes apparant with his faith Faith therefore in men to be iustified is without workes but being once iustified workes as soone as occasion is ministred shew themselues in the Saints of God according to this doctrine Truely therefore saith Saint Augustine When the Apostle saith wee suppose or conclude Defide operibus c. 14. that a man is iustified by faith without the works of the lawe he doeth it not that men professing and obteining faith should despise the workes of righteousnes but that euery man might know that by faith he may be iustified And writing to Sixtus the priest he saith The Saints haue Epist 105. Sixto good works in as much as they are iustified but to bee made righteous they haue none To Honoratus hee speaketh in like manner Good Epist 120. Honorato workes beginne after that we are iustified but we are not therefore iustified because good works went before iustificatiō Thus must we wisely distinguish times and persons the time before iustification when faith is alone from the time when we are iustified at what time faith and workes are ioyned together The persons to be iustified in whom faith only is required fom these which are iustified already in whom besides faith good workes must also shine and flourish For they together with faith receaue also the holy Ghost and Spirite of sanctification as saint Luke Acts 10. 44. Gal. 32. Rom. 4 3. Tit. 5 Ephes 1. 13. recordeth to haue hapned the Centurion and Saint Paul auoucheth to the churches of Galatia Rome Ephesus to his Scholer Titus And this spirit receaued with our iustification is not idle but worketh so in the saints as that he draweth them from sinne and pricketh them forward to al good works that they may be filled with the fruites of righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and
praise of God Herence is it that Saint Paul teacheth the Saintes Rom. 7. that they are freed from the law to serue God in the newnesse of the Spirite and not in the oldnes of the letter Whom afterwards he exhorteth to walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit and thereby to mortifie the lusts of the flesh that they might liue Faith in these is the Rom. 8. 13 good tree which bringeth foorth good fruite in some thirtie in some sixtie in some an hundred fold without which the grace of Christ is voide the holy Ghost queanched the Spirite of sanctification expelled iustification in vaine profession fruitlesse and faith dead according vnto Mat. 7. this doctrine Euen so faith if it haue no workes is dead in it selfe which is the application of his similitude whereby he prooueth faith without good workes to preuayle nothing After the similitude and the application thereof in the next and third place followeth an ironicall and mocking preuenting of an obiection set downe of purpose by the Apostle against those hypocrites and counterfet professours which so much brag and boast of faith when as they haue no good workes at all in them they might saye to James What say you of vs haue wee no faith doe not we protest that we beleue in God Is our faith a dead faith also Therunto the Apostle answereth with their iust reproofe and mockage Some man may say that is euerie man may thus conuict thee of hypocrisie and beat downe thine intollerable pride and insolency thou hast the faith and I haue workes Shew me thy faith out of thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my workes Let a man say he hath faith yet hath no workes he may be iustly reproued for his hypocrisie for faith must be shewed by workes as the cause is shewed by his effect the effectes of faith are workes Good workes you haue none to auouch the vnfeinednes of your faith therefore haue you indeede no true faith For if you haue faith shew it by your works as I will shewe you my faith by my workes If you cannot shewe your faith by your works then are you hypocrites bragging of faith when you haue none Thus therefore may euery man beate downe your glorious boasting and the pride of your hearts Thou hast faith I haue works shewe mee thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works The force of this place is that faith is an internall thing and habite of the minde impressed and imprinted in our hearts by the finger of God and the power of his spirite and therefore being a qualitie of the minde cannot be knowen or made manifest but onely by workes as the signes and effects thereof For as other gifts and qualities of the minde as wisdome knowledge and learning are not perceiued in men but by speach practise working or other like effects whereby these qualities are expressed and vttered foorth euen so faith lyeng hidden secretely in the minde is not knowen but by good works as fruites proceeding from it And as the goodnes of the tree whose sappe in winter season lieth lowe in the roote is not knowen but when in the Spring time it first geueth sappe to euery branch then buddeth blassometh and finally in her due time bringeth foorth fruite So faith lieth cloased in our breastes and bosomes and is not knowen but by budding blossoming and bringing foorth good workes in vs the liuely fruites of righteousnesse in some thirtie in others sixtie in some an hundred folde This S. Jame● knew wherefore to beate downe the insolencie pride of these hypocrites with mocking reproofe he saith Some man might say thou hast the faith and I haue works shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works Hereby if we cannot shewe our faith it is fruitlesse it is dead it is barren for the inward affection is shewed by the outward action and the outwarde action sheweth of what nature or qualitie the inwarde affection is Our Sauiour would his outwarde actions to bee the witnesses of his pure affection wherefore he saith to the John 5. Iewes The works which the Father hath geuen mee to finish the same workes which I doe beare witnesse of mee Iohn 13. that the Father sent me To like purpose willeth hee his to embrace loue that thereby they might be knowen to be his Disciples by louing one another Mat. 7. In another place deciphering and discouering false Prophets whose hypocrisie lyeth secretelye couered in Sheepes cloathing when within they are rauening and deuouring wolues he would their inward and secrete disposition to be knowen by their outward actions therefore he Ge. n 22 saith By their fruites you shall know them The promptnes and obedience of Abrahams minde was made apparant by his outward actions Euery inward habite of the minde must by outwarde signes and tokens be made manifest Faith therefore being a qualitie of the minde must appeare either sound or counterfet by works Gal. 5. proceeding from it therefore worketh it through loue as Saint Paul affirmeth And Saint Iames thus much signifieth by these works Shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works If therfore we wil make our election sure and certaine if we will shewe the 2. Pet. 1. Rom. 8. 2. Cor. 1 Ephes 4. grace of Christ to be in vs effectuall if we wil make it manifest that wee are sealed vp with the holy seale of Gods spirite to the day of redemption if we will make it knowen that we are inwardly moued by the holy Ghost Finally if we will approue our faith for true and liuely faith in Iesus Christ then must we be studious zealous of good works that thereby our faith may be shewed least we incurre most iust reprehension and for our hypocrisie bee worthely thus mocked Shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by thy workes Herence it then appeareth that good workes are tokens and argumentes of mens faith Whereby it may be knowen whether they haue true faith in Iesus Christ or not If workes declare our faith what shall we say of the workes of the Infidels and mis-beleeuing heathen whose workes were most glorious most vvorthie most excellent in the sight of men What shal be said of the vvorkes of the proud Pharisies halting hypocrites vvhose vvorkes are often to the vievv of men more vvorthy and more precious then the vvorks of the very Saints Shall vve thinke that their vvorks are expresse and liuely testimonies and arguments of faith What shall vve say to the vvorks of men before their iustification Can they shevve faith being before and vvithout faith To these it may be ansvvered that no vvorkes vvhether vvithout faith as in Infidels and hypocrites or before faith as in the Saints before iustification can be accounted or called good Many
things are done of many men which haue the shevve and outvvard appearance of goodnes yet proceeding not from faith vvhereby they are sanctified neither from the same causes neither after the same manner neither to the same end Whence hovv and vvhereunto the vvorkes of the Saints come are done and tende they are farre from good vvorkes So that there is a great difference betvvixt the vvorks of the Saints and faithfull people of God and the vvorkes of heathenish people Phylosophers as betvvixt siluer and tinne golde and copper vvhich are like yet not the same The vvorkes of the heathen come from the lavv and force of nature only vvhich is corrupt and vitiate they are attained vnto by vse custome and exercise continuall their ende is credite glory renoume and estimation in the vvorlde But the vvorkes of Christians proceede from faith grovve of loue spring out of the knovvledge of the Gospell tend to the profite of our brethren and the glorie of God These mens vvorks shevve foorth and testifie their faith but not the vvorkes of the heathen Pharisies or hypocrites vvhose vvorks are not good neither please God Faith maketh not only our selues but all other things Heb. 11. vvhich vve doe vvith the good liking of God to be accepted and pleasant before him Frō vvhich fountaine vvhat soeuer flovveth not cannot please him For vvithout faith it is impossible to please God And be our vvorkes neuer so braue or beautifull in our ovvne eyes neuer so glittering and glorious in the sight of others yet if they come Rom. 14. not from faith they are not only nothing but naught also because vvhatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Saint Augustine therfore disputing against the Pharisaicall Contra duas Epist Pelag. lib. 3. c. 5. Bonifac. pride and presumption of the Pelagians saith very well Our religion discerneth the iust from the vniust not by the law of works but by the law of faith without which faith whatsoeuer seem good works are sinnes and turned into sinnes The workes therefore of the heathen Pharisies and hypocrites are not to be reputed for good yea all works which are either before or without faith are not good as Tertullian Apol. 39. 46. Saint Augustine in the place cited vpon Psal 31. 67. in his booke of the Citie of God chap. 20. against Iulian lib. 4. chap. 8. of grace and free will chapter 7. to Sixtus in his Epistles Epist 105. and other places infinite sheweth Who to Honoratus and to Sixtus and in his booke of the spirite and letter chap. 26. affirmeth that Epist 120. 105. no works are good but in that they folow iustification by faith through which they are reputed onely for good Wherence then it may be apparant that all workes shewe not ne argue true faith neither is it here the mind and meaning of the Apostle to conclude in this manner Workes shew faith therefore all workes shewe faith Or thus Good workes shew and argue faith therefore euerie one that hath works apparantly good hath therefore true faith But his scope and drift is to shew that where there is true faith in deede there cannot be but good works will appeare and follow and that men boast of faith in voine whose faith is not accompanied with good works christian actions Seeing that there is no good tree but in due time bringeth foorth her fruite in conuenient measure Whereof in summer time destitute it is accounted naught dead fruitlesses and rotten Which good workes as they haue shewe and do testifie of our faith so that men gather probablie hee hath works therefore faith but necessarilie from the negatiue which here is respected chiefly he hath no works therfore no true and liuely faith So are these works counted for good and reckned pleasant vnto GOD not for their owne sake but for the faiths sake wherence the budde spring out and issue Moses therfore to intimate thus much in Abel and Gen. 4. Heb. 11 his sacrifice putteth Abell with his faith first then afterward his sacrifice when he saith God had respect to Abell and his sacrifice to shew that because God accepted Abels faith therefore he respected the sacrifice proceding from him and not the man or his faith for the sacrifice Saint Gregorie thereof in a certaine place speaketh to the same purpose In the iudgement of almightie God there is regarde Grego had not so much what is done or giuen as of whō and how Herence is it that God is said to haue looked vnto Abell and his gift For Moses being about to say God looked vnto Abels gift he setteth downe carefully before That God looked vnto Abell By which thing it is manifestly shewed not that the offerer hath pleased for his gift but the gift for the geuer pleased God For this cause the gifts of the wicked please not God because they come from them with whō God is not pleased Thus workes are good in respect of mens faith whereby they are accepted with fauour before God and are such tokens of our faith as without which wee boast in vaine of faith Which thing in this place the apostle geuing vs to vnderstand with a mocking quippe beating downe the vayne pride of hypocrites saith But some man might say euery man might thus mock thee thou hast the faith and I haue works shewe me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works And this is the first reason why true faith cānot be with out works which reason is from a similitude wherof and of the other things in that reason The similitude it selfe the application and the mocking and ironicall preoccupating and preuenting of the obiection This is sufficient to be spoken The second reason why iustifiing faith cannot bee 2. Reason without good works is drawen from an absurditie if that faith which is without workes be that true faith wherby we are iustified then the deuils might bee iustified for they haue a bare faith to beleeue there is a God albeit they applie not themselues obediently to walke in his commandements But it were an absurd thing to say the deuils be iustified for because they are not iustified therfore they tremble at the iudgements of God whereby it appeareth that their faith is not true nor sufficient Now to boast of such a faith as is common to deuils what vanitie what follie what absurditie is it This reason the Apostle in these words expresseth Thou beleeuest there is one GOD thou doest well the deuils also beleeue it and tremble It were an absurd thing to say the deuils are iustified yet if thy faith be but a bare faith in worde without workes in tongue without trueth in shewe without substance they may as well be iustified and saued as thou by thy like faith maist be saued but by such faith which is destitute and voide of the workes of true sanctification the deuils cannot be iustified therefore neither cāst thou O
carelesse to walke woorthie their profession and indeuour not to bee fruitefull in the woorkes of righteousnesse to the glorie of GOD therefore is their faith vaine idle detestable and shamefull in the sight of GOD. 5 The last kinde of fayth is Christian faith which is a sure trust in the mercie of GOD through the merits of Christ vndoubtinglie perswading our selues of remission of our sinnes by his righteousnesse and of eternall saluauion by his passion whereby hauing peace in our consciences with GOD wee rest and walke in obedience vnto his commaundements Whereof the Prophet speaketh The iust shall liue by fayth Abac. 2. Rom. 3. Saint Paul Wee conclude that a man is iustified by fayth without the woorkes of the lawe Againe beeing iustified by faith wee haue peace with GOD through Iesus Christ our Lorde To the Church of Rom. 5. Ephes 2. Ephesus VVee are saued by grace through faith and that not of our selues it is the gift of GOD neither of woorkes least any should boast And againe by Christ wee haue boldnesse and entraunce with confidence Ephes 3. by faith in him Of this faith Paul alwayes speaketh when hee entreateth of iustification which wee obtayne onelie by this faith in Iesus Christ And Gen. 15. Rom. 4. Gal. 3. this is the fayth whereby Abraham vvas iustified before GOD when it was auouched Abraham beleeued and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse And this faith is neuer idle in the Saintes of GOD hauing iust occasion ministred but it woorketh through loue and hath moste singular ornaments Gal. 5. and vertues ioyned vnto it as inseparable companions in all those that are truelie iustified as inuocation of GOD gratefull memorie for benefites receyued pacience and inuincible constancie vnder the Crosse bounteous liberalitie and louing mercie towardes the distressed Saints in their necessities obedience to the worde of truth mortification of our earthly members renouation of the spirite of our mindes with the woorkes of sanctification which as effectes of fayth make it shine and bee manifest in the sight of men There then being many acceptions of faith whereof speaketh this Apostle not of the last as Paul doth but of the second and of the fourth That he speaketh of the second it appeareth in the 19. verse hee speaketh of that Verse 19. faith which is common to men and to diuels for hee sayeth thou beleeuest there is one God thou dost well the diuels also beleeue and tremble Now the diuels haue no true nor iustifying faith that were absurd to graunt for they beleeue not in Christ neither hope they for mercie but tremble in despaire at the iudgement of God but their faith is to beleeue there is one God to acknowledge the things contained in the scripture of the old and new testament to be true to confesse Christ to be the son of god but neither Messiah nor mediator for thē That he meaneth faith in the 4. sense which is the outward presēce of faith which is rather a shew shadow thē any substāce rather an imagination and conceyued opinion of faith then faith in deed as when we say we haue fayth and in wordes pretende it It appeareth also out of the Apostle For Saint James speaketh of that faith when men Verse 14. Verse 19. say they haue fayth as himselfe in the proposition of this place speaketh What auaileth it my brethren though a man saith he say he hath faith whē he hath no worke Can his faith saue him The Apostle inueieth against a bare pretence of faith against that faith vvhich is in vvordes onely vvhich is a verball faith As also Saint Thomas of Aquine their angelicall Doctour confesseth S. Thomas vvho expounding the similitude in the fifteenth and sixtenth verses expressed follovving the same sense of faith saieth As liberalitie in vvordes helpeth not the poore vnlesse meat and other necessarie things be giuen ministred so neither that faith vvhich is in vvords can saue vs. Thus hee expoundeth Saint Iames of verball faith vvhich in vvordes onely consisteth Seeing then Saint Paul speaketh of a true liuely and fruitfull faith vvhereby vve liue Iames of a dead rotten barren faith vvherby men are counted dead they speake of faith in diuerse significations and therefore are not contrarie neither to bee opposed neither can one and the same effect of iustification before GOD bee applyed vnto both these kindes yea the faith vvhereof Paul speaketh iustifieth before God and the faith vvhereof Iames speaketh dooth not therefore speake they not of one kinde of fayth For vvhich cause the conclusion of Saint James cannot be ment of the faith mencioned in Saint Paul but of another vvhen hee saieth ye see then that a man is iustified through vvorkes and not of faith onely This faith then is the faith of diuels and hypocrites not the faith of Christians And so the place serueth nothing at all against the doctrine vvhich vvee out of Paul preach that vve are iustified by faith onely by a liuely faith onely But not by a bare dead or fruitlesse faith onely vvhich vvith Saint Iames vvee also preach vnto the worlde Thus the aduersaries of Vpon 2. chap. ver 15. 16. the gospell play in the word faith and make a doubtfull argument out of Saint Iames from the manifold signification of faith when they conclude that faith onely doeth not iustifie vs. 2 Now as faith is manifolde so iustification or to Double iustification Psal 32. Rom. 4. iustifie is double There is iustifying before God which is to be reputed as righteous to haue our sinnes forgeuē and our iniquities pardoned in the sight of God which is the righteousnesse and iustification mentioned of the prophet and remembred of Paul Blessed is that man whose vnrighteousnes is forgeuen and whose sinnes are couered blessed is that man vnto whom the Lorde imputeth not sinne This iustification is by faith as Moses confesseth in Gen. 15. Rom. 4. Abraham and Paul by his example proueth in the rest of the Saints Abraham beleeued God and it was counted vnto him for righteousnesse Of this iustification Paul to the Romanes Galathians Ephesians Philippians and in all other places speaketh whensoeuer he affirmeth that wee are iustified by faith by which men onely are iustified before God As there is iustifying before God which is through saith So is there iustification before men which is to be shewed declared and knowen of men to be iust and righteous And this iustifying is by works which onely shewe foorth our faith to the knowledge of men and make it knowen to the worlde that we are righteous and iust indeede Thus by his obedience as the fruites of his faith was Abraham iustified in offering his sonne the offering whereof made him not righteous before God but his faith but it made him knowen to men to haue beene iustified before God through faith and so hee was iustified before men through works Thus to be iustified by works with
with him against such as peruerted his doctrine and abused their libertie and free iustification to the wātonnesse of the flesh as men now do also who hearing iustification by faith onely thinke themselues thereby discharged and set at libertie from the practise of holines which is their errour in that they conceiue not that as we are freely iustified before God through faith without the helpe or respect of our works so are we knowen to be iust by workes before men whereby God for his mercie is glorified and therefore ought to be perfourmed of vs. Thus Paul disputeth against those which attributed too much to works as helping causes of saluation Saint Iames reasoneth against such as making too vile account of workes vtterly neglected them S. Paul had to doe with pharisaical hypocrites who swelled with the pride of their owne workes and righteousnes S. Iames with Epicuricall professours who boasting themselues of their historicall and bare faith and profession refuse to bring foorth the fruites of righteousnesse Seeing then these two speake of diuers kindes of faith seeing they speake in diuers sence of iustification seeing they speake of works diuersly and contend finally against diuers persons seeing Paul establisheth true Christian liuely faith S. James condemneth bare fruitelesse idle faith Seeing Paul speaketh of our iustification with God Iames how we are knowen for righteous before men Seeing Paul speaketh of works before faith denying them for causes of saluatiō Iames of works following faith allowing them for effects and fruites therof Seeing Paul denieth good works to goe before men to be iustified S. Iames confesseth them to follow men being iustified Seeing Paul contēdeth against such as too much preferred works S. James against those which too much neglected them therefore no controuersie but a perfect consent and harmonie in their doctrine Whereby it appeareth more cleare I hope then the Sunne at noon day how shamelesly our aduersaries abuse this place against free iustification by faith for the establishing of workes as causes of saluation and iustification with God And thus much of faith and works the cause and the effects necessarilie ioyned together in all those that are iustified in Iesus Christ To whom with the Father and the holy Ghost three persons in Trinitie one eternal and euerliuing God in Vnitie be rendered all praise dominion and maiestie now and for euer Amen The Analysis or resolution of the thirde Chapter of Saint Iames. 3. Chapter of S. Iames hath three partes 1 Is of not vsurping authoritie to iudge censure other men rigorously v. 1. and part of the second wherein there are two things 1 The exhortation it selfe Brethren be not many masters verse 1. 2 The reason thereof and it is double 1 From the iudgement of God vers 1. 2 From our owne imbecilitie ver 2. 2 Is of refraining the tongue From 2. ver to 13. vers Wherein two things are handled Namely 1 The proposition of the place verse 2. and part of 3. 2 The handling tractatiō which is double partly 1 From the profits thereof sette down in two similitudes 3. 4. part 5. ver 1 Of horses 2 Of the rudder of a ship 2 From the euils 1 Generally 2 part 5. v. 1. to 6 2 Particularly 2. part 6 7. to 13. 3 Is concerning gentlenes mekenesse of wisedome 13. to the end In which discourse 4. things are handled 1 An exhortation to gentlenes and and meekenesse of wisedome v. 13. 2 An opposing of the contrarie which is contention v. 14. 3 A distingnishing of wisdom wherby the doore and gate is shut to manie euils and mischiefes v. 15. 16. 17. 4 A reason from reward why gentlenesse and meekenesse of wisedome is to be followed v. 18. THE THIRD CHAP. OF S. IAMES THE FIRST VERSE AND PART OF THE SECOND THE XIIII SERMON 1 My brethren bee not manie maisters knowing that wee shall receyue the greater condemnation 2 For in manie things we sinne all THIS thirde Chapter of Saint James as by the Analysis and resolution appeareth contayneth three places or principall matters The first is Let no man vsurpe authoritie ambiciously to iudge and censure his brother in sharpenesse and rigour of iudgement in the first and part of the second verse contayned In which there are two things to bee noted 1 The exhortation it selfe My brethren bee not manie maisters 2 The reasons of the exhortation first from the iudgement of GOD secondly from our owne imbecilitie and weakenesse who our selues in manie things offending we ought not to be too seuere and rigorous against others The seconde place of this Chapter is concerning the gouernement and refrayning of the tongue beginning from the latter part of the seconde verse and continued to the thirteenth verse hereof In which part there are two things 1 The proposition it selfe 2 part 2. verse If anie man sinne not in his tongue or in worde he is a perfect man and able to bridle the whole bodie 2 The tractation and handling of the matter concerning the tongue which is double first from the commodities of moderating the tongue which Saint Iames expresseth by two similitudes the one of horses who are gouerned by the bitte and cheeke of the bridle 3. v. Then by the similitude of a Shippe which is guided by the sterne or rudder 4. 5. v. Then he handleth the matter of moderating the tongue from the euils of the tongue which hee setteth downe first generally in the seconde part of the fourth verse and in the first part of the sixt then particularly from the seconde part of the sixt verse to the thirteenth verse wherein he noteth three particular euils of the tongue 1 That it defileth the whole bodie 2 That it is a thing vntameable and vnbrideled 3 That it is reprochful contumelious and giuen to cursed bittereesse The thirde part and place is from the thirteenth verse to the ende concerning gentlenesse and meekenesse of wisedome In which discourse foure things are touched 1 An exhortation to meekenesse verse 13. 2 The opposition of the contrarie which is contention condemned and spoken against by the Apostle verse 14. 3 The distinguishing of wisedome which is either earthly or heauenly by the which the way to manifolde mischiefes is precluded and shutte vp 15. 16. and 17. verses 4 The last is a reason drawne from rewarde why the Saints of GOD shoulde embrace and followe meekenesse of wisedome verse 18. Because such as are peaceable gentle and meeke shall in the haruest of the worlde reape the fruites of righteousnesse which they haue sowen in peace And this is the Anatomic of this place or chapter These wordes in the first and part of the second verse of this third Chapter concerne the first part and place which is of not vsurping ambicious authoritie to iudge and censure the brethren sharpely and rigorously and why wee should not so doe as shall appeare 1. And part of the 2 ver 3. of S. Iames being concerning not vsurping
who would not then count it exceeding ioy when they fall into diuers temptations Troubles in the wicked are causes or rather occasions in them to fret and fume to grudge and groane mutter and murmure against God But in Gods Saintes they are the instruments whereby God worketh patience in their hearts therefore to be reioyced in count it therefore my brethren exceeding ioy whē you fal into temptations because the triall of your faith bringeth foorth patience Rom. 5. But it may be obiected that this place and doctrine is against Saint Paul who entreating of the like argumēt saith contrary to this For Saint Iames saith That the triall or proofe of our faith bringeth forth patience But S. Paul saith That patience bringeth foorth triall or proofe These are contrary and how can they then hang togither The reconciliation of these places may be this 1 The words by Iames and Paul vsed are not the same therefore neither is the thing the same Speaking then of diuers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things they speake not contrarily one to the other In this place proofe is taken actiuely as it signifieth those things whereby we are tried as afflictions themselues whereby occasion is ministred of trying and proouing the faithfull Thus temptations and afflictions trie vs and this triall or proofe that is the things whereby wee are tried and prooued which are afflictions bringeth foorth patience that is ministreth matter of our patience And thus triall with James here is as cause of that triall with Paul which after this manner is as an effect With Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 triall is taken passiuely as it signifieth that proofe and triall which is made of vs by which wee are made knowen This knowledge commeth through our patience for patience maketh vs to be knowen whether we mutter and murmure or whether we be quiet in our sufferings And thus patience causeth bringeth foorth that experience proofe or triall which is made of vs. And thus is patience cause as it were of triall 2 We may not looke so straitly and narrowly into causes and effects but that we may graunt the same to be cause and effect also in sundrie kindes of causes or in diuers respects For triall proofe experience of most prosperous successe and happie issue in many troubles encreaseth our patience and confirmeth our constancie so that the more triall we haue of good successe the more patient and more constant are we made in affliction and thus triall causeth parience as Saint Iames saith On the other side patience and suffering of the crosse causeth great experience and proofe of Gods presence to deliuer vs also maketh vs knowen of what behauiour wee be in our troubles And thus patience causeth triall as Saint Paul faith and so triall and patience are mutuall helpers and nourishers one to another and both cause and effect one of the other Thus S. James saying that triall of our faith bringeth foorth patience and Saint Paul that patience bringeth foorth triall or proofe speaketh trueth also For the triall of our faith maketh perfect our patience that the more we are tried the more patient we are And patience causeth triall because he whose faith faileth not whose patience is inuincible is thereby prooued and knowen to be of excellent constancie These thinges thus premised and set downe before the meaning of the Apostle is not doubtfull The triall of your faith bringeth forth patience that is the afflictions and temptations themselues whereby your faith is tried bringeth foorth patience And this is one and the same which Saint Paul preacheth to the Romans We reioyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth foorth Rom. 5. patience Our trials and tribulations our afflictions and miseries which here wee suffer inure and accustome vs to the crosse and men accustomed to a thing grow therein to be patient What we are dayly vsed vnto that we finally beare quietly dayly afflictions make vs so accustomed and acquainted with sufferings that thereby we grow to be patient Wherefore as Milo Crotoniales by bearing a calf when it was yong was made able by dayly exercise to beare it also when it was an olde oxe So men by daily bearing the crosse shal be enhabled to beare it patiently Lament 3. Therfore the prophet said wisely that it was good to beare the crosse from a child that as the affliction groweth greater so our patience might grow greater also and so affliction and the triall of our faith make vs patient Thus afflictions and the triall of our faith thereby bring foorth patience not as the efficient cause of patience and the geuer of patience which is God onely Therefore Paul 1. Philip. saith to the Philippians that it was geuen to them both to beleeue in Christ and also to suffer for him But as the instrumentall cause as the occasion ministred whereon our patience may worke Seeing therefore afflictions do thus bring foorth patience so excelient a vertue as whereby Luke 21. Heb. 10. we possesse our soules and obteine the promises as both our Sauiour witnesseth and the Apostle protesteth this is reason inough to moue vs in afflictions to reioyce And this is the second reason why the Saintes should count it exceeding ioy when they fall into diuers temptations because the triall of their faith bringeth foorth patience 3 From euent or effect the Apostle finally reasoneth The Saints must count it exceeding ioy when they fall into temptations because patience in affliction maketh men entire and perfect Affliction and the crosse of Christ are the instruments whereby God doth pollish vs and refine vs till we grow to be perfect in Christ and become like and conformable vnto the sonne of God him selfe the perfect pattern of all patience Seeing then by patience we be made perfect and patience is caused and gendred of affliction we therefore ought in affliction to reioyce Here the word perfect signifieth stable constant abiding and perseuering continuing and enduring vnto the end in the most holy profession of the Gospell with courage inuinsible as absolute entire and lacking nothing to this perfection we attaine by patience Patience in affliction is the schoole and nurture-house of Christ and of the holy Ghost and the effectuall meane which the Lord our God vseth to make vs perfect wherein if we be continually trayned vve shall grow to full measure and perfection of vertue Thus Abraham Isaac and Jacob thus Joseph and holy Job mightie Patriarkes thus Moises Isai Jeremie thus Michai and Zacharie holy Prophets thus Dauid Hezechia and the rest of the zealous Princes thus Paul Peter Iohn and others true Apostles thus Steuen Polycarpe and infinite the like faithfull Martyrs haue by patience in afflictions growen to such measure of perfection as in the weakenes of nature and infirmitie of man may be attained vnto Saint Cyprian in his De bono patientiae booke entituled Of the profit and good of patience in a
capacitie of man applying it self to the weaknesse of our wittes and so in the doctrine of workes hee doth so also oftner mencioning workes then faith because works are more familiar then faith being an inward vertue 2. Seeing God hath made vs capable of reason and hath giuen vs desire will and iudgement whereby we are caried sometimes to that is good sometimes to that is euill therefore it pleased the holy Ghost oftentimes to mention workes and to vse sundrie exhortations admonitions reprehensions and reproofes thereby to stirre our desir●s will and iudgement to that which is good and to shunne and decline the contrarie 3. Works are trials and tokens signes and testimonies of mens faith which being an internall qualitie and habite of minde is knowen in it selfe onely vnto God whereof that men might haue knowledge and might also followe it in vs therefore by workes it must be made manifest Therefore are wee willed to make our inwarde man knowen too by good workes 4. Moreouer men naturally giuen to hyprocrisie would easily deceiue not themselues onely but others also in a vaine ostentation and name of faith carelesse of the fruites of righteousnesse without which our faith is dead which to shew the Scriptures require works as fruits in al such as were once iustified by faith in Christ Iesus 5. Wee are easily stirred vp to the doing of things by rewards and deterred by punishments That we might by rewards be stirred vp to the fruites of righteousnesse therefore doth almightie God promise great rewards vnto the workes of men thereby to allure vs to righteousnesse and holinesse Which workes he also doth worke in vs for he worketh in man both the will and the deed according to his pleasure Wherfore when he crowneth our Philip. 2. vertues and good workes in vs which he himselfe onely worketh in vs he crowneth not our merits but his owne gifts as notably auoucheth Saint Angustine So then by Tract 3. vpon S. John Luke 17. working we deserue nothing yea rather if we looke into our owne deseruings we shall be forced to crie that we are altogether vnprofitable seruants The Scriptures then mention workes not thereby to merit but by promise of reward to allure to vertue 6. The Scriptures mention vvorkes so often to teach vs our dutie to be fruitfull in all vvorkes of righteousnesse and in all goodnesse to imitate Christ our example and patterne in all vertue that vvee might be such vnto christians our brethren as Iesus Christ vvas to vs louing gentle pacient bountifull righteous easily entreated readie to forgiue and plentifull in good workes and in the fruites of righteousnesse to the glorie of God 7 Finally they mention workes and thereof the rewards are promised to shew what shall followe our workes of obedience euen eternall life not for desert of workes but by the grace of God and according to his mercifull promise as in this place the Apostle promiseth the crowne of life to the pacience of Gods Saints not for the worke of pacience but for the promise of God who hath promised to rewarde therewith the pacience of his Saints whose pacience is the way and meane but not the cause of their happinesse For as the high way is not cause of our comming into the Citie but the meane whereby we come therunto and as the race or place of running is not the cause of the goale or garland there giuen but the way and meane therunto so are not our workes neither is our pacience the cause of our crowne but the way and meane whereby we come vnto it And that our workes can not cause our crowne and eternall blessednesse it is manifest 1 If man might deserue eternall life then the workes of men might binde God but God cannot be bound by vs because he receiueth Psal 16. Job 53 nothing by our workes of righteousnesse as both Dauid and Iob auouch therefore wee can not deserue life 2 If men could deserue life then were not life the gift of God through Iesus Christ therefore man can not deserue it 3 If man could deserue eternall life then must there be a proportion betwixt that which deserueth which is temporall righteousnesse and that which is deserued eternall happinesse and what proposition is there betwixt things temporall and things eternall Insomuch as Paul sayth thar our sufferings are not to be compared with our Rom. 8. 2. Cor. 4. future glorie and that momentanie afflictions cause a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glorie 4 Such as will deserue must haue in themselues whereby they deserue but all our vertues whereby in the vanitie of our mindes wee hope to gaine heauen are from God not of our selues we haue nothing that we haue not 1. Cor 4. 1. James 2. Cor. 3. receiued of our selues we can do nothing not so much as thinke that is good whose willes are framed by God to euerie vertue practised of vs therefore can not wee deserue eternall life let vs holde then with this Apostle that this crowne is due to pacience not by our deserts but by the promise of God 5 Now to conclude this place this is giuen to such as loue God to them which loue God in many places 2. Tim. 4 8 Rom 5. 28. manie promises are made so in this place the crowne of life is promised to them that loue God Why Because we can expresse our loue by no way better then by suffering for him and by bearing such things as he layeth vpon vs. Thus then such as shewe themselues to loue God in pacient bearing afflictions from him are they to whom the crowne of life shall be giuen Now let vs pray c. Iames Chap. 1. ver 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. Sermon 5. 13 Let no man say when he is tempted I 3. Place of the Chapter am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted with euill neither tempteth he any man 14 But euery man is tempted when he is drawen away by his owne concupiscence and is intised 15 Then when lust hath cōceiued it bringeth forth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death 16 Erre not my deare brethren 17 Euery good gift and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neither shadow of turning In these verses are foure things to bee obserued Namely 1. The proposition that men may not count God the cause of their temptations 2. The reasons arguments for cōfirmation of the proposition they are three 1. From the nature of God who neither is tempted nor tempteth 2. From the true and naturall cause which is concupiscense 3. From contrarie effects 3. The effects of lust concupiscense which is cause of euil tēptations they are 2 1. Sinne. 2. Death 4. The conclusion seeing then God cannot be counted the cause of our temptations we must beware that we erre not in making him cause therof THe Apostle hauing ended the
and subiect whereof the Gospell entreateth it is the word of truth for it entreteth of Christ and Christ is trueth it selfe therefore the Gospel the word of truth That it entreateth of Christ it appeareth by all the Euangelists who entitle Iohn 14. their writings the holy Gospell of Iesus Christ of whom therein they entreat by the Apostles which cal their preachings and writings the Gospell the testimonie of Christ of whom therein they speake and to whom they giue and beare witnesse I am not ashamed of the Gospell of Christ 1. Rom. for it is the power of God to saluation to euerie one that beleueth Els where if our Gospel be hid to any it is hid to those that are lost in whom the God of this world hath 2. Cor. 4. blinded their mindes that is the infidels that the glorious Gospell of Christ which is the image of God should not shine vnto them Paul saith he hath sent Timothie the minister of God and his labour-fellow in the Gospell of Christ vnto the Thessalonians and for this cause is it also 1. Thes 3. called the testimony of Christ because it beareth witness and record of him To which sence soundeth that of Saint Paule who geueth thanks to God for the riches of the 1. Cor. 1. grace of God vpon the Corinthians who abounded in all knowledge euen as the testimonie of Iesus Christ that is his Gospell was confirmed in them And a little after he 1. Cor. 2. saith that when he came vnto them he came not in excellencie of words and wisedom preaching vnto them the testimonie of Iesus Christ and finally he exhorteth his 2. Tim. 1. scholer Timothie not to be ashamed of the testimonie of Christ that is the gospell neither of him the Lordes prisoner Seeing then the Gospell speaketh wholy of Christ or at least tendeth wholy vnto him and he trueth as himselfe affirmeth I am the way the trueth the life Ioh. 14. the gospel in that respect also is the word of trueth 3 Moreouer this word is inspired from the spirit For all Scripture saith Paul is inspired from aboue And Saint Peter saith that Prophesie came not in former times by 2. Tim. 2. Pet. 1. the will of man but holy men spoke and vttered the word as they were moued and inspired by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost is the spirit of trueth as our sauiour affirmeth I wil pray the Father and he shal geue you another comforter Iohn 14. Iohn 16. that he may abide with you for euer euen the spirite of trueth And againe when the comforter shall come whom I wil send vnto you from my father euen the spirite of trueth which proceedeth from the father he shal testifie of me 16. Ioh. 13. 1. Ioh. 5. 6. The word gospell being inspired by that spirit which is the spirit of trueth is in that respect Iohn 15. 26. also the word of trueth 4 In respect that euery particular thing in the gospel conteined is true therefore is it also the worde of trueth Whatsoeuer Christ spoke and preached it is truly in effect there deliuered whatsoeuer hee did it is truely reported whatsoeuer he promised it is truely and shal truely be performed what punishment is therin threatened to the wicked it shall assuredly be inflicted Finally whatsoeuer is there mentioned is most true This word conteyning nothing but the sound trueth and hauing therein no lie no vntrueth no falshood no errors as the words of mē haue for al men are liers and their words oftentimes are ful of Pasl 116. 11. Rom. 3. 4. vntruethes therefore may the gospel rightly be called the word of trueth Wherfore whether we respect God the authour or Christ the subiecte or matter or the holy Ghost the inspirer or the things themselues in this worde conteyned it is the word of trueth For God is God of trueth Christ is Lord of trueth the holy Ghost the spirite of trueth the things in this word things of trueth Therefore the Gospell the word of trueth By which word of trueth we are begotten adn regenerate we are new framed and as it were new fashioned vnto a holy birth to our new birth whereby wee are borne not of flesh and bloud but by the word of trueth to eternall life This is the seede of the new birth frō hence 1. Cor. 4. our new birth and regeneration ariseth whereof S. Paul speaking testifieth to the Corinthians that he had begot them through the gospell For this cause speaking of the spirituall begetting and of the regeneration of Timothie Tim. 1. Tit. 1. and Titus whom he had begotten by the gospell and by his meane through the word of trueth regenerate he calleth them his naturall sonnes through faith because they comming by his ministring to the knowledge of the faith of Christ were regenerate by the worde of trueth by him preached Saint Peter speaking of the causes of our regeneration 1. Pet. 1. maketh the gospell and word of God the meane and instrument of our new birth Being borne anew saith he not of mortall but of immortal seed by the word of God which endureth for euer Therefore attributing our new birth and growing vp by regeneration vnto the worde as 1. Pet. 2. the meane and instrument in the next Chapter he prosecuteth his former purpose and addeth thereunto exhortation Therefore saith he as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that you may grow thereby and as the word of trueth is the instrument whereby our newe birth is caused so is it the meane also whereby therein we are continued and therefore a thing of singular excellencie Finally our Sauiour Christ acknowledging the word Iohn 17. of trueth to be the meane and instrumēt of our regeneration to that end praieth vnto his father that his Disciples might not onely be consecrate to his seruice and by him made fitte for the office of the Apostleship whereunto they were called but also might be purged regenerate and born anew saith Sanctifie them with thy trueth thy word is trueth If the gospell of Christ be the word of trueth why doe we not beleeue it if it be the instrument of our regeneration why doe we not honourably embrace it if therby God hath begotten vs againe why are we in any wise so carelesse of it that only such times excepted as for feare of law or shame of the world they must come they come not to the hearing of this word of trueth but either they talke our at table or walke out abroad or sleepe out at home or play out with companie or spende out in vaine exercise or contriue out with dalliance or passe out by euill meanes that time which is apointed for the preaching and hearing of the word These are carnal men and haue not the spirite lumpish and earthly whose affectiōs reach not to this heauenly doctrine If the gospell be the word
Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons VVhich place giueth vs occasion to consider these foure things 1 VVhat respect of persons is 2 That respect of persons in all things and all men by the scriptures of God is coudemned 3 How many waies respect of persons is had and offence therby committed 4 That respect of persons cannot stand with the faith religion and profession of the gospel neither with christian charitie loue of all those which call vpon Iesus Christ especially to be nourished and cherished 1 What is respect of persons it is to respect anie thing besides the cause and matter it selfe which onely ought of vs to be considered whereby we decline from the matter to the man from the thing to the person and swarue from equitie righteous iudgement and true estimation of things VVhich thing may appeare more euident by examples one or two set downe and considered If then for example sake two men laboure in the Church or common wealth for one and the same office vpon a worthie man onely to be conferred the one very worthie and fitte for the place but neither kinsman friend familiar nor of acquaintance the other not worthy yet near vnto vs by birth linked with vs in league of loue of our familiar and best acquaintance to look vnto kinred familiaritie and acquaintance and not to the worthines of the man and necessitie of the place whereunto we ought to haue regard this is respect of persons for we regard not so much the worthines which ought to be in him whom we should thereunto promote as we doe to his person whom we haue promoted In like manner if two men haue committed like trespasse thereby deseruing either Bridewell Newgate or Tiburne or any such like punishment yet the one our frend rich honorable the other a stranger poore miserable to spare the one for his riches honor friendshippe and to punish the other is respect of persons and falling from iustice If two stand in need of our helpe the one lewde yet neare vnto vs the other honest yet further of to haue regard to kinred familiaritie or any such respect and not to the commandements of Christ Geue to euery one that asketh to him Luke 6. Gal. 6. that would borow turne not away and to the rule of S. Paul while we haue time let vs doe good to all men but especially to those of the housholde of faith is respect of persons in the assemblies and meetings of Christians to regard one for his riches another for his glorie a thirde for his nobility or for like respects and to disdain others for their pouertie basenes and meannes of condition is respect of persons here condemned haue not the faith of our glorious Lord Iesus Christ in respect of persons Thus then to looke vnto or respect any thing beside the matter and cause it selfe onely to be regarded is respect of persons To which euill it apperteineth to haue consideration of kith or kinne of sexe or kinde affinitie or consanguinite nobilitie or auncientrie friendshippe or familiaritie condition or countrie birth or parentage pompe or riches power or might or such like To fixe our affections vpon externall things to esteeme according to the outward appearance of men and in regarde thereof either to fauour or to contemne them to account of thē or to disdaine them and in regard of like consideration either to doe for fauour or not to doe for feare any thing against equitie iustice charitie is respect of persons Whē we see rich mighty honourable men adorned with costly aray decked with golde and pretious pearles attēded vpon with great traines of men to iudge according to this outward appearance and to haue them in account admiration with the contempt of the poor which are religious zealous vertuous and honest is to haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons wherof to beware the Apostle admonisheth the Saints 2 Which sinne as pernicious and perillous in all causes in all persons at all times the sacred Scripture cōdemneth as a thing most repugnant to equitie iustice and charitie God almighty ordeyning lawes whereby the cōmonwealth Leuit. 19. of Israel might most happely bee gouerned commaundeth that they should respect neither poore nor riche but haue a sound and simple eye to iustice Moses Deut. 1. in his informations to the Iudges and Magistrates of the people chargeth them not to regard either Iewe or stranger but to iudge equally betwixt man and man the small and the great neither to feare the face of man which who so doeth respecteth mens persons And exhorting the officers not to wrest iudgement requireth them to respecte Deut. 16. no mans person for thereby no doubt the lawe whose tenour is loue is wroong and wrested of men The princely prophet seeing how men swarue away Psal 82. from true iudgement by partialitie respecting the persons of men crieth out against the Iudges and magistrats o● his time therefore How long will you iudge vniustly and respect the persons of the wicked whom Salomon his sonne following in that opiniō condemneth the same as Pro. 18. hurtfull and dangerous among men It is not good to accept the person of the wicked in iudgement and againe Pro. 24. it is not good to haue respect of any mans person in iudge ment If god forbid respect of mens persons in ciuil iudge ments shall it not much more be condemned in matters of religion Our Sauiour therefore to remoue al sinister John 7. iudgement and respect of persons from the professors of religion willeth that men iudge not according to the out ward appearance but according to righteous iudgement geuing a most diuine and heauenly admonition to al mē to iudge according to the trueth of things not to regarde mens persons least thereby they were turned away from righteousnes in iudgement as were the foolish Iewes who Mat. 13. seeing his basenes accounted him for an abiect of Galile the sonne of a poore Carpēter whose kinred was of mean condition and in respect of his person they condemned him not looking to the matter and trueth which he preached among them S. Paul seeing this respect of mens persons and esteeming by the outwarde appearance of men 1. Tim. 5. wisely and wel forewarneth his Scholer Timothie to do the duetie of a Minister without preferring one to another neither to doe any thing partially Finally our Apostle in this place agreeably to the Scriptures admonisheth the brethren not to haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons Thus then both in the olde in the new testament is this euil condemned as repugnant to iustice cōtrary to charitie dissonant and disagreeing to the gospel of Christ 3 This euill is diuersly committed both generally and particularly of men 1. When in our meetings and Christian assemblies we account of men not for their vertue religion honestie but for their countenance they beare the pompe
his vengeaunce to persequute them when they see they can take no hold-fast of Gods mercie for their intollerable pryde and finall apostasie against his heauenly maiestie they cannot but feare they cannot but tremble Now if the Deuils beleeue there is one God then Psal 14. the Epicures the Atheistes the wicked fooles of the vvorlde vvhich say in their heartes there is no God are worse then deuils If the deuils tremble before Gods presence and throne of iudgement then are many men and women which iest at the day of iudgement make a mocke at appearing before the tribunall seate of God to receyue according to their workes worse then deuils If then hypocrites haue no better faith then deuils haue and it be a most absurde thing to say the deuils are saued then is it no lesse absurditie to say that wicked men by like faith can be saued seeing they are destitute of all goodnesse voide of all righteousnesse farre from all fruites of sanctification Which thing this holy Apostle teacheth vs in this place thou beleuest there is one God thou doest well the deuils also belieue and tremble Finally then it may herehence appeare necessarie that as men are truly iustified before God through faith in Christ so they should by their workes the liuely testimonies of true faith shewe themselues before men to be in deede righteous that as inwardly with God they are made iust by their beleefe so outwardly with men they might be knowen to be iuste by their deedes that so they might adde to their faith vertue to their profession sanctification to their religion holy conuersation which is the scope and drifte of this Apostles doctrine Neither is this doctrine a doctrine eyther rarely heard of or vnusiall in other places of holy Scripture for the whole bodie of the Scriptures teach vs the necessitie of good vvorkes and fruits of sanctification in the saints without which all holinesse is hypocrisie all deuotion dissimulation And to this ende not onely the Prophets in their bookes but our Sauiour Christ in the gospell and the holy Apostles in their sacred writings haue moued men professing godlinesse to the fruits of righteousnesse least they otherwise doing be iustly reprooued for their hypocrisie And for asmuch as it is not onely a matter of most great account in all times to haue this godly care of bringing forth fruites of true sanctification vnto Gods glory but is also the most liuely testimonie of our election who are therefore called of God that we might be Ephes 1. irreprehensible through loue and the sure signe of our regeneration and new birth whose chiefe end is to walke in good workes which God hath prepared for vs as witnesseth the Scriptures we are the workemanship of God Ephes 2. created in Iesus Christ vnto good workes that we should walke therein Which thing also Zacharie the father of S. Iohn baptist maketh the end of our redemption Luc. 1. we are redeemed by him from the power or handes of our enemies that we should serue him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life Much more not onely might but also ought to be spoken touching these matters but I hope this may suffice reasonable creatures touching the office of faith and vse or end of good vvorkes in the Saints of God Now God which is the fountaine of all goodnesse the father of all lightes the giuer of all spirituall grace the sender downe of all vertues into our heartes powre downe vpon vs that most excellent gifte of vnfayned faith without vvhich nothing is acceptable nothing pleasant in his sight that it in vs vvorking through loue and vve replenished with all fruites of righteousnesse and abounding in all sanctification may thereby giue infallible testimonie of our iustification and in the whole course of our life may alwaies through righteousnesse and holinesse so glorifie God here that by him vvee may be glorified in the life to come not through our merites but of his only mercie through Iesus Christ our onely Lord and Sauiour who with the father and the holy ghost liueth and raigneth one immortall inuisible and onely wise God both now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 2. verses 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. Sermon 13. Verses 20. But wilt thou vnderstand O thou vaine man that the faith which is without workes is dead 21. Was not Abraham our father iustified through workes when he offered vp Isaac his sonne vpon the altar 22. Seest thou not that faith wrought with his works through the works was the faith made perfect 23. And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse and he was called the friend of God 24. Ye see then how that of works a man is iustified and not of faith onely 25. Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot iustified through workes when she had receyued the messengers sent them out another way 26. For as the body without the spirite is dead so faith without works is dead In these words of the Apostle there are two things to be considered as appeareth Namely 1. The other part of his confirmation conteining the 3. Thirde argument from the example of Abraham 20. 21. 22. 23. 4. Fourth from the example of Rahab 25. 2. The conclusion of the whole discourse 1. Made and set downe vers 24. 2. Repeated 26. The third reason why true faith is not without good 3. Reason workes is drawen from the example of Abraham who had no doubt a true and liuely faith for which cause hee is Gen. 15. Rom. 4. highly praised both of Moses the Prophet and Paul the Apostle of Christ yet did this great and holy Patriarke by offering vp his sonne Isaac in whom the hope of his posteritie and the truth of Gods promise consisted shew what manner faith he had not a dead barren and fruitelesse faith but quick liuely and plentifull in all good workes to the glorie of God For which cause he receaued a true testimonie from Gods owne mouth and it was set downe by Moses for all posteritie for euermore that he was righteous indeede and the friend of God Such a faith ought euery one of Gods Saints to haue therefore whereby they may recete auestimonie from God man of their integritie righteousnes and iustification The force of this reason is this what maner of faith Abraham the father of the faithfull had such faith ought all his children all the Saintes all that rightly beleeue in God and his Sonne Iesus Christ for to haue also But the faith of Abraham was no shadowe nor shewe but a substance and soundnes of faith His faith was not in worde onely but in worke also not in tongue and talke alone but in truth and veritie not a bare barren fruitelesse faith but a liuely working and plentifull faith such faith therefore ought the faith of all Gods Saints to bee and not
wee betray the trueth for which Sirach Ecclus. 4. Iude v. 3. and Jude the Apostle woulde haue vs contende or least by desire of peace wee seeme to sooth vp men in sinne and foster them in wickednesse yea for godlinesse vertue religion Christian faith to shine with all might and maine is not lawfull onely but lawdable also The holie Prophets for these causes haue mightily contended agaynst deceyuers and seducers of the people as Moses Elias Micheas Esay Ieremie and the rest Our blessed Sauiour euen Iesus Christ for the truth Mar. 5. 15. 23. for the lawe for iustice and equitie contended against the deceytefull hypocriticall and superstitious Iewes Scribes Pharisies and high Priests The Apostles for the same causes had fundrie conflicts and combates in their times Saint Paul had sharpe contentions euerie where agaynst the Iewes for iustification by faith without Epistles to the Romans Ephe. Galat. Philip. the woorkes of the lawe agaynst Philosophers and worldly wise men for the truth of Religion agaynst the idolaters of the Gentiles agaynst false brethren which craftily crept in to search out the libertie of the Gospell Galat. 2. 2. Cor. 11. all these contentions were godly VVherefore as Moises agaynst the Amalakites Iosua agaynst the Cananites Israel agaynst the Madianites Sampson against the Philistines Dauid agaynst the Moabites Idumeans and Edomites Asa Hezichia Iosias and other vertuous Princes against idolatrous and wicked persons are commended when they stroue and contended So when for vertue iustice religion Christian fayth and such like quarels we contende our contentions are worthie commendation So then not all strife and contending is euill and opposite to meekenesse but that which breaketh loue alienateth the mindes of brethren renteth in sunder the bond of peace causeth diuisions among Christians and is against the rule of equitie and this is condemned Yea to varie in opinion of sundrie things in confultations and deliberations to disagree to iarre and dissent one from another in disputations of schooles pleadings in court of lawe so that they bee without bitter speaches without spuing out of rancour and poison without wreaking of our wrath and malice of our hearts without vp braiding reuiling taunting defaming and defacing one the other is not forbidden This bitter enuie hurtfull and vncharitable contention and strife whereby loue is broken peace and tranquilitie disturbed and hindered are the two euils opposed to meekenesse whereunto who so is giuen boasteth in vaine of wisedome and lyeth falsely agaynst the truth For the Gospel which is an absolute truth sheweth that onely to be true and sound wisedome when flying bitter enuie shunning contentions and striuings repressing and keeping downe desire of reuenge we shewe by good conuersation our woorkes in meekenesse of wisedome And this is the opposing of these two vices to the vertue of meekenesse the seconde thing in this discourse obserued 3 These things thus set downe in the thirde and next place the Apostle distinguisheth of wisedome and A distinguishing of wisedome setteth each foorth by Epithites and additions by their qualities and markes of difference there is one wisedome earthly another heauenly that condemned and this commended among men Vnto this distinction is he necessarily brought For where contention strife and brawling commonly growe of pride and pride is vsually puft vp with opinion of our owne wisedome hauing spoken of contention the effect of pride he hath iust occasion to speake of wisedome the false opinion whereof is oftentimes cause of pride among men and so distinguisheth of wisedome as that he stoppeth and shutteth a doore or gate against manifolde mischiefes The wicked couer and colour their brawlings brabblements contentions and striuings vnder a cloake of wisedome whose mouthes to stoppe our Apostle protesteth that if to haue bitter enuying and strife in our hearts if to burne and boyle in hatred if to bee giuen to contentions brawlings and disturbing of peace be wisedome as manie men account it yet it is but earthly wisedome sensuall and diuelish and so deserueth not the name of wisedome but vnproperly and as men tearme it vndeseruedly and commeth to distinguish of wisedome one is earthly sensuall and diuelish the which is wicked such wisedome may bee in brawlers and contencious persons another heauenly holy and diuine and this is onely in the true Saints of God Concerning the former which is wicked wisedome Wicked wisedome if wee may call it wisedome after an vnproper speach and by the common speach of men so calling it it is discribed here by three qualities or properties 1 It is earthly such as smelleth and sauoureth altogether of the earth and of the worlde and of worldly demeanour and manners The wisedome of earthly and worldly minded men is to be proude contentious quarellous giuen to reuenge euerie trespasse euerie offence euerie iniurie herehence it is that such are counted wise which take no wrong at any mans hande that put vp no iniuries which will be auenged by force and might They are contrariwise called fooles sillie men innocents which beare iniuries against them committed Insomuch as when we are iniuried and reuenge not the worldlings saying is What fooles are you to suffer it If we bee slaundered and euil spoken of and render not slaunder for slaunder reproch for reproch rebuke for rebuke then say they also What fooles are you If hee had saide so by me I would haue had him by the eares or I would haue spent an hundred pounde but I woulde haue tamed his tongue and made him eate his worde Thus the worldly minded men countbitter enuie and contentious brawlings and dayly striuing with men wisedome VVhich if we graunt to be wisedome yet is it carnall fleshly worldly and earthly Saint Paul hereunto agreeth who condemning the same fault in the Corinthes VVho notwithstanding boasted of their wisedome sayeth in this 1. Cor. 1. wise vnto them Where as is among you enuying and strife and diuisions are you not carnall and walke as men This is wisedome after a manner yet earthly not heauenly carnall not spirituall from beneath not from aboue worldly not godly With this false and coloured wisdome many puft vp thinke it the best way to auoide iniuries to put vp nothing but reuenge euerie quarrell and the onely way to obtaine their willes to cut it out of the whole cloth to quarrell with euerie one to be at endlesse debate and deadly contention with men this is farre from meekenesse this is called wisedome but this wisedome sayeth Saint Iames is onelie earthly 2 As earthly so is this wisedome sensuall naturally blind in heauenly things such whereunto by common sense men are caried as bruite beasts who suffering iniuries one of the other foorth-with either strike againe or push with horne or bite and teare with mouth and so are auenged Such wisedome it is to bee quarrellous contentious and giuen to reuenge This wisedome is 1. Cor. 2. not purged but corrupt with euill affections of nature
Dauid the cause of his iust destruction Had Iudas the traitour learned to resist the diuell when hee put into Mat. 26. Iohn 18. his minde for lucre to betray his maister hee had not for that sinne fallen into dispaire wherein he was his owne hangman the testimonie of his euerlasting damnation If the rebels in the north not long since and the villainous traytours now of late with the traiterous conspiratours fresh in memorie had learned and endeuoured to resist the diuell when to shedde innocent blood when to depose the Lordes annnointed Elizabeth by the grace of God our soueraigne Ladie and Queene of Englande France and Ireland to bring in forraine nations to set vp a murtherer of her husband and the onely cause of many miseries and mischiefes both here and elsewhere in like manner to endeuour the vtter calamitie and finall destruction of their natiue soyle and Countrey they were by him sollicited and mooued neyther had their bodyes beene dismembred too gentle a punishment for so hainous iniquitie neither their soules endaungered to damnation as theirs were all which died in finall impenitencie Had we our selues men and women learned to resist the diuell when nowe by pride nowe by ambition nowe by couetousnesse nowe by extortion nowe by adulterie nowe by enuie nowe by one iniquitie nowe by another by him we are tempted to rebell agaynst GOD then shoulde wee not by committing these and the like sinnes so iustly open the mouthes of our Prophets and preachers to thunder out the heauie iudgement of God against vs and our Countrie neither should we be subiect to so many strange and newe diseases as the punishment of our new sinnes as raigne and abound among vs from yeare to yeare VVherefore both to auoyde manie mischiefes and miseries in our common and temporall life and also to flie the daunger of future calamitie and euerlasting damnation to come wee must euermore remember the exhortation which is giuen vs and holde fast the admonition of the Apostle Resist the diuell VVho beeing the auncient enemie of mankinde seeketh by all meanes to drawe vs from the loue and embracing of GOD and to couple vs in loue and league with himselfe therefore ought we to oppose our selues vnto him as to our mortall enemie withstand all carnall lustes all fleshly desires all wordly prouokements as the instruments of Satan that hauing peace with men without contention and performing reuerent obedience to God without rebellion we may rise vp against the deuill and in all things resist him as we are exhorted Now satan the deuill is sundry wise resisted of men How satan is resisted First by faith in Iesus Christ wherewith we armed stande fast without wauering thereby resist the assaults of satan the deuill S. Paule arming men against all spirituall 1. Cor. 16. assaults by satan and his ministers and preparing them to the spiritual battle with the deuill his members exhorteth them to stand fast in the faith wherby especially our spiritual enemies are beaten back resisted put to flight watch saith he stand fast in the faith acquite you like mē be strong S. Paul calleth faith the spirituall shield whereby Ephes 6. we are able to beare of and quench the firie dartes of the deuill therfore exhorting men to put on the whole armour of god he willeth them chiefly to take vnto them the shield of faith that thereby they may quench the firie dartes of the deuill The Apostle Peter preparing vs and 1. Pet. 5. 1. Iohn 5. 4 12. Reu. 11. arming vs against satan willeth vs to resist him by faith be sober saith he and watch for your aduersary the deuill goeth about seeking whom he may deuoure whom resist stedfast in the faith For which cause S. Augustine attribubuteth Lib. 3. c. 20 de lib. ar bitrio S. Basil in psal 32. this effect vnto faith that it vanquished ouercommeth and resisteth the deuill S. Basill vpon Psalm 32. What man is able to wage warre with the deuill vnles he flie to the helpe of the Captaine of the hoste therehence therefore through our faith in him wee wounde and thrust through our enemie When ●atan then assaulteth with any temptation there is no way better to resist him then by trusting perfectly in the grace of God vvhich is 1. Pet. 1. brought vnto vs by the reuelation of Iesus Christ and to be assured that seeing we are marked with the seale of Eph. 4. 2. Corin. 1. Iohn 10. the spirite for the sheepe of Christ therefore we cannot be plucked out of his handes that sith our names are written in the booke of life therefore vve cannot perish for euer by the temptation of Satan that in asmuch as we are chosen by God and predestinate from euerlasting Rom. 8. of the meere fauour of God to be conformable to the image of Christ therefore no creature in heauen aboue or in earth beneath nor in any infernall place no not Satan himselfe shal be able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Iesus Christ our Lord. This assurance of our hope this persuasion of our faith this certaintie of our saluation if we hold out before satan without wauering we shall in his temptations resist him and thus by faith is he resisted 2. As we resist him by faith so also we resist him by prayer when in our manifolde temptations we flie by prayer vnto God for succour against the deuill our auncient enemie when in the midst of the greatest assaultes of satan we runne for strength vnto God who is the defence the protectour shielde and deliuerie of his people and by whom all they which trust in him do not onely treade downe men their enemies but satan himselfe the aduersarie of all the sonnes of God by which meanes the assaultes of satan are expelled This way of resisting the Mat. 6. deuill our Sauiour Christ commendeth vnto men when he willeth vs among other things to pray for deliuerance from all euill and temptations of the enemie lead vs not into temptations but deliuer vs from euill Saint Paul setting downe the partes of our spirituall Eph. 6. armour which beyng put on and first girte and buckled about vs we shal be able to withstande our aduersarie the deuill after the girding of our loynes with veritie the putting on the brest plate of righteousnesse and the shooing of our feete with the preparation of the Gospell of peace and the taking in hande of the shielde of faith the helmet of saluation the sworde of the spirite which is the worde of GOD he ioyneth vnto all these prayer wherevvith satan is also repelled And experience teacheth the saints of God that if vvhen they are assaulted by satan they giue themselues incōtinently to praier then is the deuill foorthwith repelled and resisted For God is neare to those that call vpon him and will fulfill the desire of them that feare him and deliuer them vvherefore when
greatly broken when he roared for very griefe of his heart Daniel the holy Saint and man of God in like manner Dan. 9. afflicted and chastised himselfe with sackcloth fasting and ashes for his owne sinnes and the sinnes of the people Thus haue the Saints of God done thus must all they doe which feare God by true repentance of their heartes and true mortification of their liues chastise themselues which is the suffering of affliction which the Apostle here teacheth Suffer afflictions This place nothing fauoureth their heresie which holde that they ought to beate themselues with scourges Iesuites and Papists for that it did more put away sinne then any confession Which their doating follie they compared with martyrdome Of which sect of heretiques Alphonsus speaketh Who because they scourged themselues were called Flagellarij or Flagellantes se beating themselues Alphonsus de Castro lib. 2. cont heresis Whose heresie hath patronage neither in the olde nor in the newe testament neither of man nor woman in all the whole Scripture commended Neither must it foster the foolish opinion of wicked Iesuites and popish persons who for vaine-glorie for opinion of desert and merite at the hand of God at certaine times scourge and beate themselues in like maner But of that popish practise we haue no example either of holy Patriarch Prince or Prophet either of blessed Apostle Euangelist or Martyr neither of man woman or saint whatsoeuer in Scripture mentioned neither any commaundement counsell or exhortation either in the olde or in the new testament neither from God Christ the Prophets or Apostles of Iesus Christ neither finde we any iote title sillable in all the worde of God therefore is that practise as drawen from heretiques condemned and disallowed Here the chastising of our selues the suffering of affliction by the Apostle specified is the vnfained repentaunce of our hearts for sinnes cōmitted our true humiliation before God for the same which S. Iames here commendeth vnto vs suffer affliction 2. The way whereby this our humbling and chastising of our selues is performed is also here expressed and it is in foure thinges which are as signes and tokens of the true chastening of our selues before God 1 Men shewe their chastising in their sorrowe and heauines of heart which is not the least token of afflicting Signes of this outward affliction our selues and of our suffering affliction prescribed by the Apostle which is the inseperable companion of our true repentance before God This sorrowing and heauines of our heartes is that contrite spirite that humbled and broken heart which Psal 51. 2. Cor. 7. is a sacrifice acceptable and pleasant before God Which sorrowe Saint Paul commendeth euen that sorow which leadeth to repentance not to be repented of I now reioyce saith hee not that you sorrowed but that you 1. Cor. 5. sorrowed to repentance This godly sorrow Saint Paul required in the Corinthians for that they had tollerated the incestuous adulterer ye are puft vp and haue not rather sorrowed that he that hath done this deed might be put from among you This is that inward grife of the Saints which in their hearts they conceiue for their sinnes committed agaynst God and thereby shewe their afflicting and chastising of themselues before him Thus holy Dauid by vnfeyned sorrowe for his sinnes committed shewed himselfe humbled and afflicted before God as both in the storie and in his Psalme of lamentable repentance is affirmed Manasses 2. Kin. 12. Psal 51. 2. Chron. 33. hauing done manie things agaynst God to despite the Lorde withall being caried away into captiuitie humbled himselfe and afflicted himselfe by repentance which in his sorrow and griefe he conceyued appeared Marie Magdalen chastising and afflicting herselfe for sinne by repentance gaue manifest token thereof in the great sorrowe which she shewed herselfe to haue conceyued euen in the presence of Iesus Christ Saint Peter hauing denied his maister shewed himselfe to haue bene Mat. 26. therefore chastened in conceiuing such great griefe and heauines of heart as forced him to go out of the iudgement hall which was the house of the high priest and to weepe bittetly Thus the holy men of god calling to remembrance their iniquities and sinnes againg God committed and therfore afflicting themselues by repentance before the Lord begin their afflicting and chastising them selues with sorow And this sorow bewraieth it selfe partly in hanging downe of the heade in the casting downe of the countenance partly in outwart behauiour and gesture of the bodie partly in our speeches and words which are the witnesses of our affections and giue testimonie of our heartie sorrowe And this is the first thing wherein the chastising and afflicting our selues appeareth 2 As the chastising and afflicting of our selues consisteth in sorow and griefe conceiued for sinne so doth it in like maner appeare in our weeping and lamenting for the same vvhen we povvre out teares before God in token of our vnfeigned repentaunce vnto him VVhich thing must not be counted altogether effeminate and such as becommeth women onely but it is euen in the best men and most holy Saintes of God a thing commendable and highly to be praysed being ioyned with true faith in Iesus Christ For which cause Dauid the princely Prophet and holy man of God vvas not ashamed to confesse that in signe of his chastising of himselfe Psal 6. by true repentaunce hee wette his bedde and watered his couse with teares VVhen the booke of the lawe of God was founde and brought to Iosiah the godly and vertuous prince and he thereby had perceyued howe greatly the people 4. King 22. had offended in signe of his humilitie and chastising of himselfe with true repentaunce he wept before the Lord. The Prophet Ioel calling the people to this afflicting of themselues by true repentaunce therein hee requireth Ioel. 2. weeping Turne saith hee vnto the Lord with weeping fasting and mourning The Prophets calling the people to repentaunce haue exhorted them to mourne weepe before the Lorde Saint Peter for feare of the Iewes hauing denied and for sworne his master Christ at the looking backe of Christ he remembred himselfe he repented Mat. 26. him of his sinne his heart melted and rent in peeces as it were for sorrowe and to testifie his humiliating of himselfe for the sinne committed he went out and vvept bitterly To this purpose therefore this Apostle exhorting the Saints to suffer affliction to chastice themselues by vnfeigned repentaunce shevving the vvay and manner hovve it must be done teacheth that it must bee in sorrovv and vveeping Herehence then vve see vvhat the true vse of vveeping is and for vvhat cause vve may vveepe lavvfully to vtter the sorrovv of our hearts to testifie our true repentance to God to vvitnesse our afflicting of our selues for our sinnes agaynst God committed vve are exhorted Why the sai●● may weepe to vveepe Saint Augustine that graue and reuerend
their amendement or touched with the extremitie whervnto the innocent and sillie people were subiect he prayed vnto God againe and the Lorde heard him and it rayned and the earth brought fruite Thus at his prayer the heauen was shutte for a time and opened againe whereby it euidently appearerh that earnest and feruent prayers of the righteous are of greate force But leaste any man should say Elias in deede was a great prophet in high fouour with God therefore it is no merueile that his prayer so greatly preuailed but far vnlike him are we He raysed the deade he caused fire to come downe from heauen he therefore might thus preuaile but all are not like him The Apostle answereth not with standing his great graces yet was he a man as we are and subiect vnto passions infirmites and sinnes as other men are yeat God heard him euen so though we be sinners yet if wee serue God according to the measure of his grace geuen vs wee shal be accepted when we pray And if God heard the praier of one man so that thereat heauen was shut opened how much more wil he heare the praiers of the Church the societie of the Saints congregation of the faithfull when in assured hope strong faith vnfeined loue and perfect vnitie they call vpon him And thus much touching remedies in bodily diseases and infirmities Now let vs pray c. Iames Chap. 5. verses 19. 20. Sermon 28. Verse 19. Brethren if any of you haue erred from the truth and some man hath conuerted him 20 Let him know that he which hath conuerted the sinner from going astray out of his way shal saue a soule from death and shall couer a multitude of sinnes AFter the remedies to bodily diseases set downe generally and particularly generally in affliction to pray particularly in sickenesse to sende for the Elders of the Church that they might pray for the diseased and annoint them with oile in the name of the Lord which in that time was in force though not now and also that they should acknowledge their sinnes and offences priuately committed one to another and pray one for another that they might bee healed The Apostle discendeth to the remedie of inwarde infirmities and diseases in the errours of mens Remedie of inward infirmities as errours mindes whereof greater care ought to be taken so that whether they erre in manners and conuersation or in faith and opinion touching religion the Saints and brethren ought to seeke by all meanes their conuersion Which in this place Saint James here commendeth vnto vs who therewith endeth and shutteth vp his Epistle as with a most golden sentence and graue exhortation for the conuerting of others and leading them into the way of truth that they may bee saued then which there is no dutie no deed no action more precious pleasant or pleasing vnto God These two verses containing this argument and matter haue two things to be noted namely 1 The counsell trauaile and endeuour to call such as go astray vnto the way of truth 2 The reward of them and the benefite which by reclayming and calling from errour other men they shall receyue which thus call and conuerte their brethren Concerning then this exhortatiō touching inward diseases and infirmities of the minde it followeth verie orderly vpon the former For seeing inward diseases as errours of our mindes either in manners life or in opinion and faith are oftentimes causes of our outwarde infirmities and diseases of the bodie and the Apostle hath before spoken of bodily infirmities it followeth directly that hee speake some thing touching diseases of the minde and errours howe they also ought to bee dealt withall which thing in the last place and last wordes is prescribed Therein two things obserued thereof the firste is what the Saintes ought to doe when their brethren erre and goe astray they muste doe their endeuour and giue all diligence to reclayme conuert and call home such as go out of the way and erre Double error Now seeing men erre and go astray two wayes either in false opinion concerning faith or in corruption touching life in both these must the Saints of God trauell for the conuersion of such as therein wander of whose errour this is the onely remedie to seeke their connersion and drawing into the way of truth This is a diuine labour this is a holy exercise this is a heauenly trauaile the labour and trauaile to purchase and get soules and winne them to Gods holy trueth whereunto as vnto a most needefull point of loue the holy Scriptures exhort vs. Wise Salomon speaketh of this excellent labour of loue when he saith that the fruite of Prou. 11. the righteous is a tree of life and he that winneth soules is wise To winne soules in this place is to bring them to the knowledge of God and his holy truth and as the Apostle speaketh the conuerting of a sinner from going astray out of his way Our blessed Sauiour seemeth to Matt. 1● haue aimed and shot as it were hereat when in the Gospel he would haue the Saints by telling the offending brethren of their priuate offences committed and warning them thereof to endeuour to conuert them from their errour which if priuate admonition could not effect then they should make two or three acquainted therewith if that coulde not preuaile they shoulde tell it vnto the Church leauing no meane or way vnattempted for their conuersion Where he speaketh of offences and errours in life and manners Saint Iude teaching the Saints what Iude v. 22. 23 loue they should haue of their brethren and what care should presse their hearts for their conuersion willeth that they should haue compassion vppon some putting difference and that they shoulde saue other with feare plucking them out of the fire Not onely teaching men this duetie to seeke the conuersion of the brethren which goe astray and wander but also teaching them howe therein they shoulde behaue themselues to make this godly choise therein that they seeke to winne some by gentle meanes and in mercifull compassion others by terrour and godly seueritie thus by all possible meanes must we seeke the turning and conuersion of our brethren Did not God intimate that in his lawe when hee Exod. 23. Deut. 22. 1. 4. v. biddeth that when we see our neighbours oxe or asse or beast whatsoeuer readie to fall into a dit●h and daunger wherein he might perish then wee should holde them from hurte keepe them from perishing and plucke them out of daunger Hath God care of oxen and not much more of men Shall wee drawe an oxe out of the pitte wherein hee might perish and shall we not drawe our brethren out of their errours wherehence if they bee not reclaymed they shall bee plunged into the bottomlesse pit of perdition When God likewise willeth in his lawe that if wee see our neighbours beast going astray wee should bring Exod. 23.
and so manie kinds of temptations there be that the Apostle may worthily call them manifolde and diuers 3 Finally the ends wherfore they are infflicted are diuers therefore in that respect also they may not amisse be counted diuers Some times we are afflicted to the ende we should be humbled some times we are afflicted to the ende we should be tried some times we are afflicted that in the nature of Gods blessings we may better be instructed some times we are afflicted that God may be glorified some times we are afflicted that our sinnes thereby may be remitted sometimes we are afflicted that the pride of our hearts may be repressed and sinfull desires mortified some times we are afflicted that his loue towards vs may the more liuely be expressed some times we are afflicted that thereby the world may be hated of vs sometimes we are afflicted that we may be more zealous in praier for deliuerance some times we are afflicted that we in afflictions made conformable and like the image of the sonne of God togither with him may be partakers Rom. 8. of his glorie As therefore euery thing serueth not for one purpose neither is euery medicine ordained for euery maladie so neither hath euery temptation one end wherefore it is inflicted but many ends there are of many afflictions so that in respect of their sundrie ends they are also diuers manifold partly then in respect of the manifold instruments whereby God afflicteth men partly in respect of the sundrie kinds of temptations partly in respect of the manifold ends which in afflictions god respecteth they may well be called and tearmed diuers and manifold And these are the things in this proposition the first branch of the diuision to be obserued Brethren count it exceeding ioy when you fall into diuers temptations 2 The proposition ended the confirmation which is 2. Confirmation the second thing here followeth which containeth the reasons and arguments which the Apostle vseth whie the Saints should be comforted vnder the crosse and count it exceeding ioy when they fall into diuers temptations The reasons are three 1 From honest comelines in the Saints It is comely honest and a thing decēt in the Saints paciently to haue their faith tried by afflictions of this life the faith of Gods Saints and seruants is tried the Saints therefore in afflictions must reioyce and be pacient No man doubteth but it is a comely and honest thing for Gods children paciently to suffer the triall of their saith And that afflictions make manifest triall and proofe of our faith the holy Gene. 22. Scriptures of God aboundantly teach vs. When Almightie God would haue the faith of Abraham to shine and appeare glorious vnto the world he tempted him by willing him to sacrifice his onely sonne Isaac in whom only vvas the hope of all the promises Hereby his faith vvas tried Moses vvriteth that the manifold troubles vvhich Deut. 8. the Israelites for fortie yeares suffered in the vvildernesse vvere to trie them To vvhich end God is said to send false Deut. 13. Prophets among the people thereby to trie their faith vvhether they vvould cleaue stedfastly to God Saint Paul 1. Cor. 11. thereunto subscribing affirmeth that there must be heresies among them that they which are approued may be knowen Dauid the princely Prophet speaking of the Psal 105. afflictions of Ioseph in Aegypt confesseth the end thereof to haue beene the triall of his faith When he writeth that God tried him vntill the appointed time was come for his deliuerance Zacharie prophecying of the blessings Zach. 13. which should be vpon the true seruants of God after their clensing and clearing from all idolatrie and shewing that al such as should enioy those excellent blessings notwithstanding should bee tried with manifold afflictions saith that God would bring thar third part reserued to himselfe through the fire and would fine them as siluer is fined and trie them as gold is tried Saint Peter telleth 1. Pet. 1. the Saints that they were vnder manifold temptations that the triall of their faith being much more precious then golde that perisheth though it be tried in the fire might be found to their praise honour and glorie at the comming of Iesus Christ And thus seeing the ende to be the triall of the faith of the Saints he calleth affliction 1. Pet. 4. the fierie triall Thinke it not strange dearly beloued concerning the fierie triall which is among you Wherein hauing an eie to the comparison so vsuall in scripture wherby the Saints are compared to gold and siluer who are tried by affliction as these mettels are by fire calleth affliction fierie triall The Angell willed Iohn to write to Reuel 2. the Church of Smyrna to exhort them not to feare any of the things which the diuell should lay vpon them to trie them whereby it is more cleare then the Sunne in his brightnesse at noone day That afflictions are for the triall of the faith of men they are as the touch-stone to trie gold from copper as the fornace to discerne siluer frō drosse as the sieue or fan to sift the chaffe from the wheat Wherefore as that is counterfet not true gold which beareth and abideth not the touch-stone that drosse and dregges which carieth not the fining that dust and chaffe which suffereth not the sifting so that faith which will not abide trial by affliction is weake imperfect wauering and vnseemely in any Christian Whereas then ciuill and morall vertues are then soonest tried when their obiect is present whereon they may worke as fortitude in daunger chastitie in pleasure temperance in present dainties and delicates anger when we are prouoked so the faith of Gods children is then most manifest when affliction are present to trie them And as the starres and moone shine not at noone day when the Sunne shineth in his glorious beautie so neither doe the vertues of Christians then appeare when men are in prosperitie but in the night and mist of affliction Seeing then it is a comely and honest thing in the Saints of God to haue proofe and triall of their faith and other vertues to bee made and this triall is made specially by afflictions and troubles of this life then no doubt ought the Saints paciently to suffer affliction and to count it exceeding ioy when they fall into diuers temptations in as much as the triall of their faith bringeth foorth their inward vertues and afflictions are therefore sent to make trial of the faith of Gods children and this is the first reason or argument of the confirmation lying secretly in the word triall 2 Another reason set downe manifestly is drawen from the vtilitie and profite which commeth by bearing afflictions by bearing paciently the miseries and afflictions of this life the most singular vertue of patience is wrought in vs. If affliction and triall of our faith bring vnto vs the worthie vertue of patience