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A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

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creature no not for the Angels which fell as well as man The third degree which is most principall is that whereby he loues his elect and chosen children which is that loue whereby he accepts of them to life euerlasting This third degree hath two parts for it is taken first for the purpose of his decree to loue secondly for the action or declaration of his loue For the first as I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau that is I haue purposed to loue the one and hate the other Secondly for the declaration of his purpose to loue Thirdly for the action and for the declaration of his loue and speciall fauor in speciall benefits 1. Ioh. 3. 1. Behold what singular loue God hath shewed on vs nothing the declaration of his purpose to loue vs in giuing his son for vs. So in this verse is meant Gods special loue or the declaration of his purpose to loue vs in speciall benefits Now whereas S. Iohn placeth this in the first place of all the benefites of Christ That he loued vs he would teach vs that this loue is the very ground of mans redemption the very cause of Gods liking and fauor to man Then there is no foreseene faith away with foreseene workes for he loued vs first and that alone is the cause and ground of our election and saluation But it may be obiected The loue of God as also of man respects the goodnesse of things loued so we loue a thing because it is good and when it is euill we hate it There is great difference betweene the loue of the creature and the Creator The creature loues the thing because he seeth it is good but God the Creator he first loues the creature and hence it comes that it is good because he loues it 2. Whereas S. Iohn and all the Churches of Asia as other true Churches do beleeue and are assured that Christ loues them for that S. Iohn taketh for graunted this should moue all men to haue this care to labour aboue all things to be rooted and grounded in loue seeing he places that in the first place This we do when we are assured in heart and conscience by the working of Gods spirit that he loues vs in Christ so that he which takes away the assurance of Gods loue to vs in Christ takes away the very ground of our saluation Now that we may haue this loue of God we must in all our duties to God and man draw neare to God keeping a good conscience before God all men and so if we loue God he wil come to vs stay and dwell in vs. And if we would haue his loue to be plentifully shed in our hearts then we must draw neare to him by loue and he will draw neare to vs for he louing vs first if we increase in that loue to him then will he double his loue to vs. And washed vs from our sinnes in his blood Here is the second benefit and action of Christ to his Church which is first the remission of sinnes secondly the mortification of sinnes Washed Here he sheweth that the sinnes of men are as filthy spots in their soules and after he confesseth the vile estate of the Church and euery member thereof in that he saith they were so washed For washing presupposeth filthinesse before and a corrupted estate and so should we by their example learne to consider our owne estate how that our soules and bodies be spotted and defiled with sins originall and actuall So did Dauid Psal. 51. most sensibly and excellently feele his owne wants and see his miserable estate when he desired the Lord to wash him thorowly confessing thereby his soule and body was foule stained and polluted with sinne and addes thoroughly not once and so inough bnt wash me againe and againe thoroughly till I be cleane and cleanse me rince bathe swill me in the blood of Christ to be purged and cleansed from all my sinnes In which words he sheweth his exceeding feeling of his own miseries how fouly he was defiled so should we labour to see how the spots of sinne are deeply stucke in our soules they be fast set so that one washing will not serue but we must be rinced bathed and cleansed by the blood of Christ for it is not the hand of any man or Angell which can wash away these spots nor any thing they can giue vs but onely Christ Iesus whose finger alone dipped in his owne blood can wash away our spots of sinne The consideration whereof should make vs consider our wretched estate and often to repent vs of our sins to take heed of sin which staines vs so We must labour to haue our hearts purged and cleansed by the blood of Christ and till we haue them so purged neither our faith obedience loue or any thing we do is acceptable to God The first part of this benefit of Christ containes the remission of our sinnes the taking away of the punishment and the guilt due to them the second part is the mortification of sin Which hath washed vs from all c. He addeth these words to shew that if any beleeue truly he hath pardon of all his sinnes without any restraint or limitation of these or those sinnes By his blood How can blood wash away filthinesse nay it rather defiles a man Answ. This washing stands not in the substance of the blood but in the merit thereof for the blood of Christ shed is lost and God knowes what is become of it whatsoeuer the Papists say but the merite of it washeth away sinnes Obiect But why doth Christs blood rather then any other mans blood as Peter Iohn c Answ. Because that blood was the blood of God not of the Godhead but of him who was both God and man for these two natures being vnited together make but one person and so it may be called the blood of God as Paul saith God redeemed vs by his blood that is Christ God and man God-man or God incarnate and so it being the blood of God is more meritorious then the blood of any creature whatsoeuer Besides I answer Christ was appointed by God to be a publike person to be suretie for all mankind but no man can be so to be in the roome of the whole company of mākind Then damnable is the doctrine of the Papists who hold the blood of Martyrs can merit for other for seeing they be but priuate men they cannot profit any other By blood we must vnderstand the passion of Christ being a part for the whole and withall we must remember his fulfilling of the law for in his suffering he fulfilled the whole law and in fulfilling the law he suffered and these two cannot be seuered so that this containes the whole obedience of Christ partly in suffering partly in fulfilling the law S. Iohn addeth these words and sets downe these two blessings to draw men to loue and like
cities be Churches though not the Catholicke Church but members of it Note first the matter of this book concernes the Church seeing it is a propheticall history concerning the estate of the Church from the time of Iohn to the end and therefore it is meet it should be dedicated to the Church Secondly it is dedicated to the Church seeing the true members of the Catholicke Church be the pillars and ground of truth not that their authority is aboue the word but because they preserue the scriptures as a treasury from age to age And they be pillars and grounds of truth because they giue testimony to the truth of Gods word 3. Because they publish the truth of Gods word in and by the ordinary ministery of the word and so the church being the pillar and ground of truth it is fit this booke should be dedicated to it Secondly he writes it not to all Churches but makes choise of these seuen Churches in Asia first because they were then most famous as the Chapters following and histories of the Church do shew Secondly he sayes not to the Churches of Ierusalem and of the Iewes but of Asia to shew them that which was long before foretold was now fulfilled namely that the Gentiles according as the Prophets foretold should be called which now was verified seeing the Gentiles dwelt in Asia Seeing Iohn wrote and dedicated this booke to the Churches in Asia many yeares after Christ not to the Church of Rome then we see that the Papists are deceiued who would haue their Church the mother Church and all other Churches must rely on theirs but if that Church of Rome had bene the mother and most famous no doubt Iohn would haue dedicated it to her But he doth dedicate it to the Churches in Asia shewing they were then more famous then Rome 2 Now followes the salutation Grace and peace c. Salutation is of two forts ciuill or religious ciuil as that which men vse ordinarily with one another 2. religious which is more peculiar and proper to the Church and so it is here a religious salutation And seeing the Apostles vse it commonly in all their Epistles may be called an Apostolicall salutation They vsed this in all their Epistles Grace and peace c. which they did because their ministery was of grace and peace and they made their salutation answerable to their ministery for their Apostleship stood in these two to preach the word and to pray for the people that they might haue grace peace And the apostles vse this phrase in manner of blessing for when their ministery stood in two actions in preaching and praying for the people vnder the second action of praying was contained this to blesse the people and so did the high Priests and Leuites as also Christ he vsed this so Ministers to shew their duty more fully after they preach the word they blesse the people Grace be with you Most excellent words and containe in them the summe and substance of the whole Gospell Grace signifies two things first Gods fauour and good will secondly his graces Here it signifies his fauour because in this salutation grace is opposed to peace which is a grace of God so that it cannot be meant of a grace of God then by it is meant his good will and fauour whereby he accepts of vs for Christ his sake S. Iohn begins with Grace first and not with Peace because grace is the ground of peace and all blessings graces of God We must first be in Gods fauour then we must looke to haue prosperitie and graces from God Grace is the ground of all blessings as of our election vocation redemption iustification sanctification of faith repentance and perseuerance in faith and repentance nay it is all in all in the matter of our saluation For this cause he begins with it And peace Peace is taken first for welfare and good successe in things of this world by Gods blessing Exod. 18. 7. Moses askes Iethro his father in law of his peace that is of his welfare and so it is partly taken in this place Secondly it is taken for that vnity and blessed concord we shall haue in the kingdome of God and so it is especially taken here And being thus taken it hath sixe parts first when we haue peace with God which is when we stand in the fauour of God reconciled to him in Christ Iesus Secondly when we haue peace with Gods Angels in that they guard vs and cary vs as a nurse doth her child in her armes that we hurt not our feete at any stone and when they reioyce at our good estate Psal. 91. 11. The third is peace with a mans selfe when his conscience will not accuse him but excuse and cleare him as when our conscience is washed in the blood of Christ Phil. 4. 7. this peace passeth all vnderstanding The fourth is peace with the church So Act. 4. 32. those which beleeued were all of one mind and heart had peace with each other So Esa. 11. 6. The wild beast and the Lion the Lamb and the Cockatrise and the yong child shall lie together Fiftly this peace fauor of God is with the enemies of God so far as it is for the good of the Church and the glory of God So Ioseph had peace in Pharaohs house So Daniel had peace with the Kings Eunuches for though he was free when the children were cast into the ouen yet he did not reuolt but being fauoured they saued him The sixt is peace with all Gods creatures beasts birds all creatures in heauen and earth Ose. 2. 18. The Lord will make a couenant betweene vs and all his creatures Psal. 91. 13. The child of God he shall tread vpon the lion and serpent and they shall not hurt him for when a man is in Gods fauour what creature dares to hurt him nay al the creatures are ready and willing to serue him Grace and peace As though he had said first you must be in the fauour of God you must haue vnity and reconciliation with and in Christ and then this peace welfare prosperity in all good things as farre as is necessary yea then concord and vnity with God and all his creatures will follow Whereas the Apostle wishes them grace in the first place he would teach vs that this Gods fauour is to be sought for aboue all things yea in the first place Psal. 4. 6. Many say Who will shew vs any good But Dauid he seekes this grace and fauour of God Lord lift vp the light of thy countenance vpon me let me be in thy fauour And often he sayes the Lord he is his portion inheritance and his lot shewing to be in the loue and fauor of God is to be preferred before all things in the world So must we seeke first to be in Gods fauour make that our chiefest care seeke it aboue all things but we litle
and reading the writings of men contemning the word of God And yet the writings of men be sinfull and erronious euery way imperfect the writings of God holy certain and euery way absolute being giuen to the Sonne as he is king priest and Prophet To shew to his seruants cōcerning this testament shortly to be done In these words be 3. arguments for the description of this Reuelatiō First the end vz. to shew it secondly the persons his seruants thirdly the matter of it vz. things shortly to be reuealed The end of this reuelation was to manifest declare to his seruants to wit the Church of God his seruants and children to publish to them those things which should shortly be fulfilled and this is the maine drift of this Reuelation Hence then we note that the Papists erre who say that lay men should not haue the word but barre them the reading of the Scriptures but the holy Ghost saith this reuelation was to reueale things to come not onely to the Clergie nor to the doctors of the Church but to his seruants if so then to the lay man as well as the Clergie vnlesse they will say he is none of his seruants Then this I gather if that this booke being most hard must be learned of the lay man then those bookes which be not so hard must be learned and read and much more those which be more easie as the historie of the Gospell the Epistles c. Secondly the persons are the seruants of Christ this booke then of Reuelation belongs not to all men indifferently but it is written for the seruants of Christ that is such as repent of their sinnes beleeue truly in Christ and shew their faith by the fruites thereof in their liues And so the Lord saith he will reueale his secrets to his seruants the Prophets and the Lord will not keepe backe but reueale to Abraham the things he was to bring vpon Sodome and Gomorrha Then seeing those to whō the Lord shewes his will to whom he declares this book and others they must be his seruants we must not content our selues only to heare the word and receiue the Sacraments but we must seeke to be his seruants we must repent truly beleeue in Christ and shew this faith in obedience and then the Lord will more and more daily acquaint vs with his will And the cause why we heare the word daily and neuer profit but be as ignorant and blind as before the cause is because we be not his seruants we be bare hearers neuer practise that we heare in faith and obedience we repent not neither liue a new life by repentance in new obedience For else if the Lord see any which is his true seruant he approues of him he likes of him and acquaints him daily with his will and word increaseth his knowledge and obedience Secondly seeing that this reuelation is written for the seruants of Iesus Christ I obserue that Christ is true God the reason is because they be called his seruants that is Christs The reason stands thus he which is Lord of the Church the members thereof and also of Angels as it followeth after he is true God but Christ is Lord of men and Angels ergo he is true God His seruants not to all men to the whole world and euery singular man but to his seruants Hereby we see the opinion of those which hold God would haue all to be saued and cals all men is false For if he called all effectually then he would offer al the meanes to wit the word of God that so they might be called but he writes it not to all but to his seruants now that which is true of this booke is true of the whole Scripture The Lord shewed his word to Iacob not to all the world not to all nations as to him Psal. 147. 19. 20. he shewed to Iacob that is his true members his seruants and true Christians Now followeth the matter which is the fourth argument of the description of this reuelation vz. Things which shortly must come to passe and in this the matter of this booke is distinguished from all other bookes of the Scripture which speake generally of things either present or now past but this speakes of things to come The matter of this booke is described by two arguments first these things be necessarie they must be done Secondly by the circumstance of time shortly or quickly First the matter is things to come which must be done so speakes the holy Ghost in many places of the word As Christ saith shewing the necessitie Offences must come so Paule saith There must be heresies Act. 14. We must through manie tribulations enter into heauen c. So to Timothy they which be godly must suffer afflictions Shewing in all these places that things which are to come must necessarily come to passe But this doctrine agrees not with mans reason though it be the will of God for men will say If all things come to passe necessarily then it takes away mans free will for necessitie and free will can not stand together Answer They may Indeed constraint and mans will can not stand but mans will and vnchangeable necessitie may stand both together As I shew thus In God there is absolute free will yet he doth many things of necessitie as he willeth that which is good necessarily for he can not possibly will that which is euill but willes that which is good most freely So Christ he died necessarily he could not but die for he died in regard of Gods counsell and yet he died most willingly and gaue himselfe most freely to die when he suffered death ergo these two mans free will and vnchangeable necessitie though not constraint may stand together Men will obiect againe If things come to passe by necessitie then it is in vaine to vse anie meanes as to heare the word receiue the sacraments for Gods will must come to passe do we what we will do Answer These men must consider that as God hath appointed what things must come to passe so he hath appointed the meanes how they must come to passe Then seeing the Lord hath appointed as well the meanes as the ende we should by this necessitie rather be induced to vse the meanes then not to vse them To make this more plaine we must know there is a double necessitie one is absolute another is but in part I call that absolute necessitie which can not be otherwise possibly As that God liues it cannot be otherwise he is omnipotent he cannot but be so There is a necessitie which is not absolute but in part as when anie thing done is necessarie because it depends on necessarie causes As fire to burne this is not absolutely necessarie but in part because it depends on that order which God set in things in the creation It is not absolute for if God should change that order in the creation
on the sea yet they must keepe the Sabbath they must pray fast and call on the name of God c. In that he receiued the vision then when he was exercised in praying and fasting here is a comfort for the children of God that when men draw neare to God he draweth neare to them Iam. 4. Iohn a worthie Apostle being in banishment he draweth neare to God in fasting and prayer and the Lord he draweth nigh to him and reuealeth his will to him so if we draw neare to God by faith repentance by prayer and inuocation of his name then he will draw neare to vs. But if we draw our selues backe from him he draweth backe from vs. This then should moue vs aboue all things to seeke to draw as neare him as can be then he will come and shew his goodnesse to vs. And the cause why we are so litle acquainted with his goodnesse is because we will not be acquainted with him Now in the second place followeth after the fourth circumstance the parts of the vision which be two first an entrance into the vision secondly the representation of Christ as he is King and Priest to his Church which is the substance and chiefe thing in this vision The entrance is in these words And I heard a great voice behind me till the end of the eleuenth verse The vision or the representation of Christ from the twelfth to the end of the third Chapter The beginning and entrance into the vision is a preparation whereby the holy Ghost maketh S. Iohn more fit to receiue and marke things to be reuealed which may be heard and seene The meanes to prepare Iohn is a voice And I heard a voice The like to this we haue commonly in the old Testament where the Lord reuealing his will doth send a voyce before to prepare his seruants to receiue his will So when he would giue the couenant to Adam Gen. 3. he prepareth him to receiue and letteth him heare a voyce in the garden which made him affraid and to hide himselfe after the Lord speaketh to him face to face and giueth the couenant to him So when the Lord wold giue the law to Moses in the mount first he sent a voice in a mightie thunder lightning and sound of a trumpet after he declared the law to him 1. Sam. 3. When the Lord would speake to Samuel he sendeth a voice to him three times and after he speaketh to him plainely and calleth him by his name So commonly in the old Testament when the Lord will declare his will to his Prophets he prepareth them by a voice So to Cornelius Act. 10. c. Seeing the Lord dealeth thus with this most famous Apostle when he receiued his will by extraordinarie reuelation being first prepared then much more we which are sinfull men which haue not the thousandth part of those graces he had of knowledge faith and obedience but are so farre short in ordinarie gifts we must much more be prepared that our vnderstanding and memorie may be made fit to heare know and remember Gods will and word declared to vs. And the cause why we increase not in faith repentance and knowledge after long hearing the word is because we come vnprepared without looking that our vnderstanding memorie by all good means may be prepared to receiue the word The voice is described by the place Behind me Not before him but behind him to stirre vp attention in him for men most marke those things which come as of a sudden behind them so this coming suddenly behind him drew him to more earnest attention A great voyce Thirdly it is like the sound of a trumpet not onely a great voice but full of power and maiestie as the sound of a trumpet Now he vttereth these to stirre vp more attention in him for if he should heare an ordinarie voice or a small voice it would not perhaps haue stirred him but being a great powerfull sudden and a strange voice it could not but make him very attentiue Seeing he vseth all these meanes of attention in Iohn a worthie Apostle then much more must we vse all good meanes to stirre vp attention in vs seeing we in all gifts are a thousand times inferiour to the least Apostle seeing we be dull and heauie and our senses not so sharpe as they shold be we must stirre vp our selues seeke to be attentiue to that which which is spoken and as Lydia did we must employ all our diligence to make vs attētiue And the cause why the word is preached without fruite is because we heare it without attention and haue no affection to it Now that we may do this we must beware of two enemies of attention the first are by-thoughts when a man bringeth his bodie but his mind goeth about his farmes or worldly riches about a iourney or bargaine or some worldly affaires These by-thoughts are thornes in our hearts which choake the good seed of the word that it cannot prosper and grow for men which are troubled with them cannot see how one point dependeth and hangeth on another but their memorie and vnderstanding is hindered The second enemie is dulnesse and heauinesse of bodie and soule which is shewed in this that we come heauie and sleepie to heare the word and spend that time which we should employ in hearing in heauinesse and sleeping But if we will haue the word fruitfull to vs we must shake off this drowsinesse be affected with ioy and gladnesse and heare the word with greedinesse If a man should come heauie and sleepie into the presence of the King especially he being to tell him of great matters or the giuing of him some great benefit he would take it for disloyaltie and contempt of his Maiestie The cause why the word hath no better effect in vs but that after long preaching and teaching we be as blind and ignorant as euer we were is because we come not prepared contrarily if we come prepared the Lord increaseth our faith knowledge obedience c. Saying I am Alpha and Omega Before he described the voice which he heard as a meanes of this preparation by the place Secondly the qualitie A great voice like the sound of a trumpet In these words he proceedeth further to describe this voice in this eleuenth verse setteth downe the substance and matter of this voice which he heard which standeth in two things The first a testimonie in these words I am Alpha and Omega c. The second a commandement to write all these words c. 1 The testimonie in substance is in the eighth verse before In which words of Christ is as before a comparison namely as Alpha and Omega are the first and the last letters in the Greeke Alphabet so I Christ the Sonne of God am the first and last of all things because before me there was nothing neither after me shall there be any thing in being and
all three and that the Father doth the Sonne doth and what the Sonne doth the holy Ghost and the Father do in outward actions Secondly Christ after his ascension teacheth not bodily but by his spirit for Christ being at his Fathers right hand sendeth his comforter to leade vs into all truth Now seeing the holy Ghost speaks in the Scripture he teacheth vs we see how the church of Rome sinneth in that they will haue a iudge which must speake for Christ he being in heauen and the Scriptures being not able to speake but are as a dumme iudge therefore the Church that is men in the Church they must be iudge of Scriptures But we see that the holy Ghost speaketh in the Scriptures and Christ he is iudge alone of them The Church is an instrument onely and cannot giue sentence of them but they be of themselues sufficient to take away any doubt whatsoeuer 2 Faith is no part of repentance but a cause of it for they be 2 distinct parts of Christianity the first a sermon beleeue and repent where repentance followeth faith as a fruite of it Thirdly obedience is no part of repentance but a cause thereof ergo repentance stands not in these three properties neither is all one with regeneratiō for this goeth before them for godly sorrow is the cause of repentance but regeneration is before godly sorow ergo before repentance too The second point is how we must practise repentance this stands in two things first true humiliation secondly true reformation of life Humiliation stands in confessing our sins miseries and wants and in condemning our selues for them and in harty praier to God for pardō Reformation is the changing of our bad actions to good and if need require to make satisfaction to men Dauid Psal. 32. first humbled himselfe secondly he prayed for pardon and withall promiseth reformation of life Manasses fel from God but he prayed to God humbled himselfe 2. Cron. 33. 12. So the prodigal son And Dauid in all these Psalmes of repentance humbles himself Psal. 32. 38. 51. 130. 143. 77. And so must we do if we truly repent Then we see the dānable doctrine of the Papists which make repentance stand in contrition and confession of sins to a Priest satisfaction for a man may do all these and yet be a reprobate So did Iudas he had contrition confessed his sinne made satisfaction and yet his repentance was not true repentance Another abuse is that they make contrition a part of repentance which is indeed no grace but may be a cause of grace Besides to confesse all sinnes to a priest is a gibbet to a mans conscience and more then God himselfe requireth Last of all to teach that a man must satisfie Gods iustice is to ouerthrow the satisfaction of Christ. The third point is Who commaunds this It is Christ. Now some out of these words gather that God giueth sufficient grace to euery man to repent if they will for say they if he command repentance and yet some cannot then he but mockes them and it is as if we should bid one bound hand and foot to rise and walke Ans. The Lord giueth not that commaundement to euery particular man but to the Church or to some people which shal become a Church and then he doth it to gather the elect Now in the Church there be elect and reprobate now this commandement to repent is giuen to the elect directly but to the reprobate by consequence as they be among the elect in the church And this commaundement is giuen to both for diuers ends first to the elect to shew them what they ought to do not their ability what they can do secondly that it may be an outward means to bring them to repētance for when he giueth them this commandement he is present by his spirit Phil. 2. 12. he bids them work out their saluation but addeth God giueth the will the deed shewing that God giuing that commandement is present by his spirit to worke in them abilitie to performe it Now the wicked being in the Church haue the same commaundement not directly neither to those ends but first to keepe them in outward ciuill order secondly to make them without excuse But whereas they reason thus If Christ command all to repent then all haue sufficiēt grace to repēt but the first is true ergo Ans. The first part is false vnles it be restrained thus if he command to this very end that they should repent and practise it for he giueth cōmandement to some not that they may do it but as to Pharaoh to harden their harts For the second part that he giueth commandement to all the meaning is he giueth it onely to the elect directly because he giueth them his spirit to obey it but to the wicked by consequence as they be mingled in the Church with his owne children The fourth point is who must repent namely the Angel and whole Church of Ephesus Ob. But they had repented before how then doth he bid thē repent againe Ans. There are two degrees of repentāce one is the beginning the other is the renewing of it In the practise of which two stands the whole life of a Christian first to begin to repent when he is truly called and secondly in continuing and renuing it dayly as he often falleth If we haue begun by Gods grace we must not stay there but go on and be renued euery day There is no man but he shall see in him selfe daily new sins slips and wants for which he must haue renewed repentance Then seeing we daily increase our sins we must take heed we lie not or continue in sin without this repentance for we are not so much condēned for sin as for lying in sin this if a man repent brings not condemation but lying in sin doth then aboue all things take heed of this let vs daily labor to know our sins to be acquainted with our wants to humble our selues pray for pardon 2. Cor. 5. 20. I beseech you saith Paul be reconciled to God they were reconciled before for they were iustified and sanctified but he would haue them to labour to be more assured of their iustification and to haue a more full and sensible feeling of it and that because their apprehension by reason of their weaknes is but sin all The like must be had of vs. The fift point is why or for what cause namely for their decay in loue especially and other wants Christ prescribeth to thē repentance not that they had none at all And so Christ preacheth to vs by his Ministers to repent of this decay in loue if we haue had loue and feele it now decayed we must repent if we haue not then we must labour to haue it And Christ we see giueth a large commaundement not for drunkennesse whooredome theft or such grosse sins but euen for their decay in loue want of knowledge faith feare
diuell feareth not the sword or gun but this spirituall weapon will ouerthrow him I proceed to the second point their affliction is described by the persons some of you not all but some of them thirdly by the kind of affliction imprisonment he shall not kill or destroy you but imprison you and some of you not all of you Fourthly the end to trie you that your hope faith patience and other graces may be made knowne to your selues and other In all these we note that Gods prouidence is the first and generall cause aboue all causes ouerruling ordering and disposing them In this prouidence he vseth two instruments good as good Angels and regenerate men and he workes in and by these in all things and in these there is a good order no disorder The second kind of instruments be bad as wicked Angels diuels and wicked men which though they be wicked in themselues yet God can vse them well and in these is nothing but disorder and the Lord he worketh by them but not in them and permits their disorder and sinnes to shew by them his iustice and power These wicked instruments in themselues the Lord vseth well and to good ends for his prouidence is aboue them it restraines them keepes in their malice bridles them that they cannot shew their malice to the ful but be bridled and kept short being ouermastred by his prouidence So here the diuel he afflicts them yet not all but some of them and he destroyeth not but onely imprisoneth them and not alwayes but for a short time The second action of Gods prouidence vsing wicked instruments is that the Lord turneth all to the good of his children The diuell in afflicting them purposeth their destruction but the Lord turneth it to their good to proue them and trie the vertues and graces of their hearts as their faith hope loue patience c. so that the Lord doth not onely restraine their malice but turneth all things to the good of his people Now we should often thinke of this prouidence of God and for euer blesse his name for the same seeing he ouerrules the wicked instruments he restraines their malice he vseth them for the good of his children and considering of this it shold make vs to renounce our selues to commit our selues to his protection make his prouidence our sure defence and safegard in all our temptations And seeing the end of their affliction is to trie them we must al first labour to haue the power of godlinesse not onely in outward shew and formall profession but to feele the power of it truly in our hearts for the Lord wil trie vs as gold in the fire the Lord will cast vs into the fire of affliction to proue vs whether we be pure gold whether we haue pure faith vnfained repentance and a good conscience or not these wil abide the fire and not burne when formal shew of godlinesse will 2. Seeing afflictions are to trie vs we must reioyce and thinke tribulation a great blessing I am 1. Thinke it exceeding ioy to fall into temptations for by affliction our graces are made manifest to our selues and to the world The fifth circumstance is the time for ten daies Some vnderstand by this a long time as Gen. 31. 41 Laban changed Iacobs wages ten times that is many times but it is not so here for Christ speakes that to comfort them now what comfort were this to be long in affliction Others thinke that by ten daies ten yeares is meant and that because it is often in scripture so vsed seeing there is a weeke of yeares as well as of daies but that cannot be proued that they were in persecution so long and no longer Then I take it by ten daies is meant a very short time a litle space of time and this is most sutable to all the circumstances of the text and the purpose of Christ which was to comfort the Church as if he had said Thinke not thy affliction to be long for it is but for ten daies a short time In which words note two things first that the afflictions of Gods Church are for a certaine time a time decreed and set downe by God that cannot be shortned or made longer So the Lord told Abraham that the Israelites should be in captiuitie and affliction 430. yeares and so it came to passe for they were in affliction especially in the land of Egypt 430. yeares but so soone as that time was expired the same night were they deliuered So Daniel for the space of threescore and ten yeares captiuity prayed not to the Lord for deliuerance for he knew the time was certaine and could not be changed and therefore was patient but when that time drew to an end then he prayed for deliuerance and the Lord heard his prayer This should teach vs in affliction to be patient and to seeke to arme our selues with patience seeing the time of our affliction is certain and cannot be made shorter or longer we cannot be deliuered till the whole time be expired Secondly note that the afflictions of Gods Church and children be but for ten dayes a very short space of time in respect of eternall life and this is a notable comfort to any in the crosse and persecution seeing the Lord wil put an end to it it shal be but for ten dayes a short time as Paul teacheth 2. Cor. 4. 17. But yet there is more to be noted in these words euery word containing an argument of comfort for the Church for first the author of afflictions is the diuell he causeth them now feare not him for he is Gods enemy therfore thou being his enemy hast God for thy friend and then what can he do to thee to hurt thee for they which haue him their enemy their cause is good Secondly he shall not afflict all the whole Church but some of you a few of them the Lord restraines his malice he cannot do his wil. Thirdly he cannot kill or destroy them but onely afflict their bodies Fourthly he shall not do that to their destruction as he would but the Lord turnes it to try them for their good So this affliction it shall not last alwaies but for ten daies a very short time why then should you feare Let not feare ouercome your hearts be not discouraged but take Christs fortitude and courage lay aside all feare and vndergo manfully al danger to keepe faith and a good conscience to the end The third part of Christs counsell is another precept which containeth a most blessed and heauenly counsell be thou faithfull The children of God ought to be faithfull in regard of God and that fidelitie they owe to him first by promise made to him in baptisme for in that Sacrament God promiseth to his child Christ with all his benefits and the child of God promiseth and maketh this stipulation to God that he will renounce himselfe and in death and life rely onely on Christ. Now
being beleeued it is powerfull no might of man or any Prince is comparable Thirdly Christ destroyeth and killeth all our enemies all the aduersaries of the Church this is the principal end of this sword for Christ speaketh these words to comfort his Church in persecutions and for this he is said to haue a sharpe two edged sword for he killeth and slayeth the enemies of his Church partly in this life but deadly in the life to come In this life the word serueth to conuince them of hypocrisie vnbeleefe heresies superstition for Christ he abolished them with the breath of his mouth that is this sword 2. Thess. 2. Secondly when they be touched by the preaching of this word with desperations for when the law and Gospell is preached to them it wounds them to the heart by reuealing all their cursed dealings their vnbeleefe and hypocrisie and sets the conscience on the racke and stirres it vp which is fit of it selfe to accuse them when it hath reuealed their sinnes then it smites them with feare and horror and makes their conscience more fit to accuse terrifie them and then though they run on in sin yet they haue a deadly wound of desperation and this increaseth in this life and slayeth in the next for it cleane cuts them off when Christ shall say Go yee cursed this smiteth them starke dead casting them into eternall destruction for euer We must labour to haue the word of God worke powerfully in vs. to take place in our hearts by faith not onely to shew our sins Gods wrath against the same but withal to wound them slay and kill them and at the first to wound deadly for onely to haue our sins detected and our consciences terrified this is the way to desperation and the first wound to death but we must go further haue our corrupt hearts ript vp wounded crucified haue them reformed and this is the way to wound our soules and the end why Christ hath the two edged sword The second part is the proposition containing two parts first a commendation secondly a rebuke The commendation in the thirteenth verse I know thy workes In these words he commends this Church first in generall secondly in particular generally in these words I know thy workes that is thy waies and doings thy counsels affaires and withall I approue them as Psal. 1. 6. The Lord knoweth the righteous that is he approues them I know thy works Christ he begins with these words in this and euery of these Epistles to teach vs one especiall thing that the feare of God is the chiefe thing to be learned the beginning of all religion and for this cause he beginneth thus I know thy workes three or foure times I know shewing by this that wheresoeuer we be we are in the presence of Christ he sees all our works he heareth and knoweth all we do we cannot go out of his presence and to settle this deepely in our hearts that he is present alwaies seeing and beholding vs he repeates this seuen times in the beginning of euery Epistle Then this should teach vs both Minister and people to labour to haue this perswasion in our hearts that Christ is present seeth and beholdeth all we do when we take any thing in hand he stands at our elbowes looketh on vs whether we do well or ill then we must labour to haue this perswasion in our hearts that we can say now I do this or that my Sauiour Iesus Christ my Lord and redeemer he beholds me lookes on me seeth all my dealings therefore I will behaue my selfe well And the Preacher may spend himselfe in speaking and to no purpose till God giue grace to teach the people this one point which is the beginning and ground of all religion and feare of God for men may haue knowledge and speake much of the words of religion yet they cannot be true Christians till they haue learned this one point to be so perswaded as they can say in their heart Christ seeth and beholds me and till we can do that we shall make conscience of no sinne 2 The particular first commendation And where thou dwellest though thou dwel in a place where the diuel hath set his throne a place most incommodious and vnfit yet thou obseruest and keepest my name and religion thus he commendeth her for her constancie in religion Throne That is any place where superstition idolatrie and wickednesse is practised without controlment and frō whence wickednesse is conueyed to other places for the diuell is the god of this world 2. Cor. 4. 4. and he hath his kingdome throne and seate placed where he can practise sinne and wickednesse where iniquitie is maintained the Gospell despised and from whence he conueyeth his diuellish wickednesse to other places Such a place was Pergamus a citie wherein sinne did abound without controlment religion despised and from whence wickednesse was conueyed to many other cities townes and places Here we may note the diuels pollicie who hath his kingdome here on earth like to God here he placeth his thrones as a Prince and maketh choice to haue the fittest place where he may rule and raigne and practise wickednesse without controlment frō whence he may conuey it to other places he hath euer had hath now will haue his thrones He had in old time the high places the groues and such places where the people committed idolatrie Among the Gentiles there were Oracles to erect his thrones for in them he gaue answers and so conueyed his wickednesse to many In later dayes he had euery church and chappell his throne when Images Saints Roodes and such like were erected to which all men from all parts of the land came to worship In schooles of learning he had his thrones when nothing was taught but superstition and errors And now in our times he hath his thrones and officers to attend on the same as wisemen and these are a speciall meanes to erect his throne for vnto these come men from farre and neare so that he conueyeth his iniquitie to many seeing many seeke to them and so do him homage So dicing and brothell houses seeing in them iniquitie is practised in them is his throne In families where they liue in ignorance in sinne and wickednesse in blaspheming and drunkennesse or any one sinne there is his throne and so many thrones as families where they liue by any vniust dealing Then it is necessarie seeing the diuell hath his throne the Lord should haue his opposite to this as when men haue thrones of iustice both ciuill and ecclesiasticall ciuill to represse all iniustice and wickednesse to punish vice to reward vertue and ecclesiasticall to punish and reprehend those sinnes which ciuill iustice cannot The diuell cunningly and pollitickly chooseth Pergamus not a base towne or village but a huge citie whence many kings proceeded where there was a famous and great king and where was much people So he
it is a vertue and work of loue whereby a Christian man becomes a seruant to euery man for his good This is commended and described Heb. 6. 10. Paul Gal. 6. commaunds vs to do seruice one to another by loue 1. Cor. 13. loue seekes not her owne but the good of others So Christ Iohn 13. commaunds his to be seruants one to another in those good things which God giueth vs. As we must do them good in all we can so one speciall dutie here mentioned is to be ready to releeue according our abilitie the want of the Church for we must haue first loue and charitie then seruice as a braunch springing from loue Heb. 6. 10. which is when we are ready to bestow our goods or gifts which God giueth vs to the good of the Church especially the godly in the Church This were to be wished in England but it is not seeing the richest sort bestow their goods in hawks hounds beares buls dogs and other their pleasure and pastime but when any comes to be bestowed on the poore then they be strait handed all comes as hardly frō thē as a rib out of their side We see men can be content yearely to bestow much money in playes pastimes and other delights and that with zeale and earnestnes but come to the poore our owne flesh to our brother who beares the same image of God as we do here we sticke and from winter to winter suffer them to starue for want of that which our dogs haue To moue men to help the poore first see how men in the old testament were charged with offerings first fruites sacrifices and many other ceremonies now these be ended but instead of that altar the poore they be the altar whereon we must offer our burnt offerings our sacrifices Secondly Esay 58. 10. he which imparts his heart to the poore that is seeing him in want hath his heart touched with the bowels of compassion and testifies his loue in releeuing his want this man hath a happie promise his name shall not be put out but shine for euer and this is true religion to visit the fatherlesse and widow to comfort and releeue them Iam. 1. Prou. 25. He which giueth to the poore lendeth to the Lord. Now the Lord he comes in his person to borow he makes the pore his stewards to gather it in wilt thou say him nay to lend him of his owne thou wilt not Wouldest thou haue him stay or send his steward away emptie Again Christ comes in their person he askes an almes he saith in their person I am hungry naked fatherles and motherles and in them he stands crauing at our doores Now if we would escape that horrible sentence of condemnation Away from me c. let vs not say him nay or deny him But if we wil be liberall in any thing and bestow largely on any thing bestow it on the poore our owne flesh and so we lend to God who is the best paymaster and we giue to Christ who will not let it be vnrewarded Now followeth the third particular vertue for which Christ commends the Church of Thyatira which is faith that is fidelitie whereby we are faithfull to God in keeping our promise made to him in baptisme wherein we promise to renounce our selues to beleeue in God three persons one true God to obey him all our life time this is commaunded 1. Tim. 5. 12. Now it would be wished that our Church might be commended for this fidelitie but it cannot for though it be a common thing among vs to sweare by our faith yet there is litle faith in our hearts yea litle care to keepe this fidelitie promised in baptisme for some of vs lie in ignorance neuer knowing what promise we haue made to God and such are many among vs young olde high low rich poore Others they haue no care of goodnes of heauen or heauenly things but of eating drinking sporting in which they spend their days neuer thinking of Christ or of their promise to him A third sort are those which we account honest and wise men but they come short indeed for these set their hearts on riches and the things of this world spend their strength and wit in the getting of them and haue their hearts glued to them They like Molds are euer in the earth We call them I say honest men but indeed they deny God forsake their first faith and fidelitie to God in baptisme and in stead of the true God erect an idoll euen their riches and of these we haue great heapes Then it stands vs in hand often to remember our promise in baptisme to renounce our selues the things of this world to beleeue in Christ to performe obedience to him in al our life for if we go on and stil deny our first faith nothing belongs to vs but condemnation The fourth vertue is patience whereof we haue heard in this and the former chapter Here marke how patienc is ioyned with loue to men faith to God and seruice to men and God The reason is because no good action can be done of any man without patience loue and faith without it are nothing for if a man do his dutie to man he shall be sure to be hated now without patience he ceaseth to do his dutie So if a man beleeue in God and professe the same the world contemnes him now without patience he cānot perseuere constantly Patience is the effect of faith Rom. 15. faith brings forth hope and Mat. 13. the good ground brings forth fruit but in patience All that a man doth if it be done acceptable to God it must be ioyned with patience Then we must in all our gifts and graces ioyne patience with our hope faith loue knowledge c. 2. Pet. 1. 6. No grace can shew it selfe without this a man cannot endure the crosse without it And thy workes Christ before had said the same here he repeateth it againe which is not idle for no word in scripture is idle but by this Christ shewes his exceeding approbation of the workes of this Church of Thyatira that they were such as he liked of not in a meane but in exceeding great measure the cause why he liked them so followeth afterward Now seeing Christ repeates these words after foure worthy vertues he doth it to shew vs what things are required to a good worke namely faith loue seruice patience and fidelity for to do a worke to God we must ioyne these foure vertues and therfore Christ addeth these words both before and after these vertues First faith is required because in doing any actiō euery mā must shew his fidelitie to God which we do when before we do any worke we search the word of God whether it be commanded or forbidden there for no worke we do can please God vnlesse we be perswaded out of the word that it is lawfull nay being not of faith it is sin Rom. 14. Secondly our works
Secondly in regard of his manhood because the holy Ghost hath powred foorth into his manhood the perfection of all graces and gifts whatsoeuer as he is annointed with the oyle of gladnesse aboue his fellowes And this perfection standeth in two things first in number secondly in degree or measure First in number thus Among Gods seruants some haue these graces some those none haue all but Christ hath all the graces which all men and Angels haue more too Secondly in degree for the graces of Christ are more in measure then all the graces of all the Saints and seruants of God whatsoeuer he hath the fountaine of all grace and therefore he is said to haue the Spirit without measure And for that cause also Christ is said to haue the seuen spirits This is spoken by occasion of the Church and people of Sardis which was a dead people and therefore Christ was able to quicken them and to put life and spirit into them That no man can haue fellowship with the Father or the holy Ghost but by Christ it is manifest by other places No man can come to the Father but by me so there must be a participation with Christ before there can be any with the holy Ghost This serueth for our instruction because among the Papists there be many great learned men which haue excellent gifts of nature wit memorie and vnderstanding and though they haue withall a reformed and ciuill life yet they want faith and regeneration How cometh this to passe that such worthy men hauing the common gifts of the spirit want the speciall The cause is this their Christ is a false Christ yea an idol Christ they professe the want of sauing faith and all is because they want Christ. Therefore no maruell though you see the greatest learned there mocke and scoffe at this speciall grace of the assurance of our election Againe many among vs looke to be saued by Christ and yet you shall see no grace neither of knowledge nor faith feare nor care to keepe Gods commandements or a good conscience no sparke of grace and yet looke to be saued by Christ. How can these stand together Though they say they haue Christ they deceiue themselues for they haue not the graces of the Spirit and they haue no grace because they are not in Christ and by that they may know they are not in Christ because they haue no grace To conclude then we must all be admonished to labour that we may be vnited to Christ our head truly to haue fellowship with him that in him we may haue fellowship with the Father and the holy Ghost No grace of God to life eternall will be bestowed vpon vs till we haue Christ himselfe Therefore first labour to be in Christ and to be truly ioyned and vnited to him by the bond of faith that by this meanes we may haue all graces distilling and flowing into our hearts by Christ. Now the second royaltieis he hath seuē starres that is the Ministers and Pastors of the seuen Churches Christ is said here to haue them because he is the soueraigne Lord ouer them he is an absolute Lord ouer all For he setteth them apart and giueth them whatsoeuer gifts they haue he appointeth them their offices duties and callings so as he hath rule ouer them he appointeth ordaineth maketh and preserueth them As he hath in him the fulnesse of spirit so is he a Lord ouer his Ministers he hath power to saue if they obey or to destroy if they rebell Ob. The Church maketh Ministers Ans. The right of making Ministers and ordaining them is Christs royaltie and belongeth to him the Church doth but testifie and declare who they be that Christ maketh Ministers and approueth them therefore he saith here the seuen starres be his Now the end of these words is to strike the heart of the Minister which is secure and negligent to make him know himselfe and his place that he may begin to haue sound conscience of his dutie And this point is an excellent motiue to make them looke to their dutie their gifts are not their owne nay they themselues are not their owne but Christs and he is their Lord. This very consideration cannot but be effectuall to stirre vp all pastors to regard their duties for seeing they are Christs they must not do their owne will We must renounce our selues in all things and therefore bethinke our selues our soules and our bodies are not our owne but Christs Let this consideration draw vs on to do thinke and speake nothing but that which Christ would if he will haue you liue be content because he is the Lord of your life if to dye be content because you are his and not your owne So much for the Preface Now followeth the second part of the Epistle containing two parts first a reproofe secondly a promise The reproofe in the first verse I know thy works in which is contained a reproof and withall a remedie in the next words I know Here note the vice and withall the reproofe the vice is hypocrisie for she pretended religion in outward shew but wanted it indeed Thou hast a name that is the Churches about thee iudge thee to liue that is to be borne anew beleeue in Christ to haue his spirit to guide thee but thou art dead in sinnes and wantest newnesse of life and regeneration The like we may say of many great Churches by name the Romish Church which though it seeme to liue yet in regard of spirituall life it is dead It pretendeth to be the true Church of Christ but in truth it is dead in sinne Yet some say it is not dead but diseased full of sores and sicknesses and though the throat be cut yet it breatheth and panteth but the truth is it is starke dead and cold it hath no spirituall life at all But some alleage the contrarie saying it hath the Sacraments in it and where there is a Sacrament there is a Church but they haue Baptisme therefore a Church Ans. Baptisme is not alwaies a note of a true Church for the Samaritanes had circumcision which was before Baptisme yet they were no people nor church of God Os. 1. 9. That there may be baptisme yet no church it appeareth because there may be baptisme without the preaching of the word As the Papists haue baptisme without the true preaching of the word so they haue the outward Baptisme but deny the inward Baptisme which is iustification by Christ and sanctification by his Spirit Againe I answer it is a Sacrament not to that church of the Papists but to the hiddē church in popery for the Lord euer hath his church among them he keepeth among them euen 7. thousand which neuer worshipped their idols Now then that Sacrament is reserued in that church not for the Papists but for Gods children among them By this we see Gods owne prouidence to call them by those meanes and for their sakes
yea though they preach it oftentimes But they must looke that they do it not for ease but for the good of the Church And therefore the hearers hearing the Minister repeate the same doctrine ought not curiously to reprehend him for then they may as well reprehend Christ himselfe as before I haue shewed Here then is a dutie commaunded namely to heare this hearing is the good learning that bringeth true faith saluation and sincere obedience with it But to whom is this commandement giuen To hearing hearers and to such as do not onely receiue the word of God with their outward eares but with the eare that is in the heart Hence we learne first that God doth not giue to all men grace to heare his word to their saluation Secondly that we must so heare that thereby we may be conuerted and changed But what is to be said namely what the spirit teacheth to the Churches That we might heare attentiuely he vseth a double reason one drawne from the speaker another from the auditors to wit the Churches But I haue spoken of these before And to the Angell of the Church of the Laodiceans write c. As before all the other Epistles so before this last Epistle there is a commandement giuen to Iohn to write it And the Epistle hath three parts as the former had first a Preface secondly the matter thirdly a conclusion First of the Preface wherin Christ is described in whose name it was penned by two arguments First by his name and title Amen a faithfull witnesse Secondly by his priuiledge and propertie the beginning of the cratures Amen is an Aduerb of affirmation or asseueration signifying truly verily certainly The reason why he is so called is rendred in the words that follow which are a commentary and full exposition of this The faithfull witnesse c. So that to this end he is called Amen to shew that he is a true and faithfull witnesse See chap. 1. 5. there I expound it And here I will repeate the heads onely of that exposition He is called a witnesse betweene God the father and vs because he doth not onely reueale the fathers will to vs but sealed it with his blood and giueth vs many testimonies inward and outward but of all testimonies that of the Scripture is most certaine And for these three respects he is thus termed first because he doth reueale it and seale it and ratifie it by inward and outward testimonies secondly because he wold accomplish his fathers wil. 2. Cor. 1. 20. All the promises of God are in him yea and Amen that is most certaine and therefore he is a witnesse yea a faithfull witnesse Thirdly he is called a true witnesse because he speaketh the truth that which he reuealeth from his father is the will of his father who is truth it selfe he saith as the thing is without error or falshood nay his will is the rule of all truth This is the meaning of the first argument Now the vse and the end why here Christ is so called if we do but reade the Epistle and marke the contents we may guesse probably at the end which is that he might shew himselfe an example to the Angell of that Church who was slacke and negligent in his ministery therfore Christ instructs him how to cary himself without respect of persons teaching the word of God truly and faithfully See chap. 1. 5. And not only to the Angel but to all the Church yea to all Christians he propounds himselfe an example of two worthy vertues faith and truth he would haue all to be true and faithfull in their life and conuersation euen as he is This faith is a vertue whereby a mans word becometh as sure as an obligation as we vse to speake whereby we make good all our words othes and promises Truth is that whereby a man without lying deceit or fraud speaketh the truth from his heart that I say which is necessary to be knowne for his owne and others good and for the glory of God Set we this example before our eyes and as Christ is a true and faithfull witnesse so let vs be carefull to shew our selues true in all our words and speeches and to be faithfull in all our promises These be excellent graces in Christ and fruites of the spirit in Christians therefore let vs be knowne by these to be like Christ. The second end of this title is to induce this Church to apply it selfe to the word of God effectually for it was faultie in this point therfore that he might bring them to this he saith that he is a faithfull witnesse How should they do this Thus consider in the word the law and the Gospell the commaundements promises and threatnings and apply them particularly euery man to himselfe the commandements to know sinne the threatnings to humble vs and that we may be touched in conscience and made fit to receiue Gods grace see an example of it Luke 15. in the prodigall son I haue sinned and am not worthy c. So Daniel and Ezra humbled themselues No man can truly be humbled till he make this particular application of the word which he readeth and heareth Now the Gospell also must be thus applied we are bound to beleeue the promises of life eternal not onely that they are true but to apply them to our selues The Gospell requireth a further thing which is the foundation of the church for proofe see Phil. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. The summe is this he esteemes all things losse in regard of Christ and desires the righteousnes which is by faith in Christ and to know the vertue of Christs resurrection Now marke the fifteenth verse let so many as be perfect be thus minded teaching euery one of vs our dutie to apply Christ to our owne person Thus are we bound in conscience to apply the Gospell to our selues and whosoeuer doth not so he makes God a lier as much as in him lieth 1. Iohn 5. And this is the principall end and reason why Christ calleth himselfe so that men might not onely beleeue the word in general but apply it in particular to themselues The not doing of this is the cause of negligence in religon of so many luke-warme Christians and professors Therefore let vs all learne this dutie It is not enough to know the word no nor to be able to teach it but aboue al things to lay it to the conscience to apply it that we may be truly humbled and turne to God therefore iustifying faith is that which applieth in particular Now the second title of Christ is the beginning of all creatures Col. 1. 16. By him all things were created in heauen and earth therefore in regard of creation he is so called Yet I doubt not but there is a further cause why he is so called here namely because he is the beginning of the new creatures as Ephes. 1. 10. where it is said we are Gods workmanship created
in Christ to good workes Marke there euery Christian is a workmanship of God To this purpose Esay 53. 10. saith whē Christ shal giue him selfe a free will offering he shall see his seed How Thus All that are borne a new they are the seed of Christ he is the beginning and roote and so much the very scope of this Epistle declareth Now he is such a beginning two waies first as he is the author of regeneration for whosoeuer is borne a new Christ is the cause and author of his conuersion Therefore Esay 9. 6. he is called the father of eternitie because he doth regenerate men to life by his spirit and Esay 8. 18. he saith Loe here I am and the children that thou hast giuen me Secondly as he is the matter thereof Ephes. 5. the Church is flesh and bone of Christ where the Apostle alludeth to the creation of our first parents for Adam was a figure of a man regenerate and as Eue had her beginning from Adams side so the Church and euery Christian haue their being and beginning from Christ from his blood springs the Church of God and all Christians as they are new creatures and regenerate not as they are men and women Now the end why he is so called is to meete with a vice in that and other Churches Men haue more care and desire to seeme to be Christians then to be Christians indeed men set more by a shew then truth shadow then substance Therfore he shewes that their principall care must be to be true Christians indeed not to seeme so only This church was not regenerate in that church and therefore Christ tels them of it that he is the beginning of new creatures And the same is our fault our care is not so much for the power of godlines as for the shew of it therefore I beseech you haue care of this to heare the word and to receiue the sacraments are good things in their kind but they are not sufficient to saluation except thou become a true member of Christ thou hast no good by them 2 He saith this to meete with another vice that is spiritual pride He shewes that there is no excellencie in outward things all earthly excellēcies are nothing without this wherby a man is a new creature therefore we must not stand vpon our pantofles for our birth or gentry but whosoeuer wil reioyce must reioyce in this that he hath Christ for the author of his regeneration Further this teacheth vs an excellent lesson that Christ loueth and preserueth his church for as it was in the first Adam so it is in the second Adam The woman had not her beginning apart from man but of and from him that he might loue her the better and haue care of her preseruation So this is to teach vs that Christ hath a care of vs and that we must honor him Nay which is more Adam was but the matter onely and not the author of Heuah but Christ is both to the church to shew his loue to be endlesse The root neuer hurts the branches nay it strengtheneth it selfe to defend cherish and maintaine the branches it hath no affection inclination or disposition to hurt but to helpe Thus much of these words to note the bond betweene Christ and his church yea his loue and our dutie Hence I gather that the Papists erre in teaching that a man hath the vse of his owne will in his regeneration and that he can dispose himselfe in his iustification for a creature cannot worke nor help to create himself but euery regenerate person is a creature of God and the conuersion of a sinner is here made the creation of a man the creature in his owne creation is able to do nothing If there were no more such sayings in the Bible this one were sufficient to confute that opinion And thus much of the preface Now the matter of the Epistle or contents and substance Verse 15. I know thy workes c. that thou art neither hote nor hote c. The Proposition hath two parts First a dispraise or reproofe Secondly counsell The dispraise is for two faults the first lukewarmnesse the second pride and vanitie of mind Then first I will make the words plaine secondly declare the vse of them I know that is all thy waies and workes be manifest to me and I vtterly dislike them And to lay open their fault the more he borroweth a comparison from water whereof there be these three sorts hote cold and warme Cold and hote water may be receiued into the stomack with lesse hurt and annoyance but the water that is lukewarme troubleth the stomacke and ceasseth not till it be cast vp againe Now with these three kinds of water he compareth three sorts of men By cold men vnderstand the enemies of religion as Iewes and Gentiles Turkes and Saracens Gadarens and Galileans By hote vnderstand men zealous in religion by lukewarm indifferent So the meaning is thou art neither an open enemy of religion nor yet truly religious or a true friend I would c. Christ here maketh a wish but he doth not simply wish that they were enemies of religion but in respect of their estate he wisheth they were either of those rather then as they were Otherwise this absurditie would follow that Christ should wish them to be of a people no people of God By lukewarmenesse he vnderstandeth a people professing the word of God and yet not greatly regarding and reuerencing it This people is a lukewarme people as if he should say a mixture of both neither hote nor cold wanting the heate of grace and the fire of Gods spirit whereby their hearts should be heated and inflamed Vers. 16. Because thou art neither c. The meaning is this Euen as a man that hath receiued such water will cast it vp and cannot keepe it in so Christ being grieued with their sinnes will cast them off from hauing any fellowship with him and make them to be no Church This is the true and right meaning of the words Now in them these things are contained First Christ setteth downe their fault and aggrauateth it Secondly he compareth three kinds of men together The hote man hath the best place and the cold man the second and the lukewarme man the last and lowest So you see the enemie of religion and of Gods grace is better then he that professeth religion and liueth not thereafter As if he should say the ordinarie Gospeller which contenteth himselfe to heare the word and to receiue the Sacraments is not so good before God as the Turke and Iew. The threatning followeth I will spue them out of my mouth Now hauing found the meaning we must examine our selues whether we may not be charged with the same fault and it will be found that we are guiltie of this and euen plaine Laodiceans Which that you may see I will shew diuerse kinds of such lukewarme Gospellers and Christians 1