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A04902 Lectures of John Knewstub, vpon the twentith chapter of Exodus, and certeine other places of Scripture Seene and allowed according to the Queenes maiesties iniunctions. Knewstubs, John, 1544-1624. 1577 (1577) STC 15042; ESTC S106684 202,339 374

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in deede they nourish monsters at home and can well inough awaye with them yea whiche more is play and dallie with them It were good in such causes to practise firste vpon a man him selfe before he take libertie to go abroade first to vse some sharpe dealing with his owne affections to see how that wil work before he shall minister so bitter medicines vnto others For it is an intollerable thinge that greate euils should liue quietly at home when little ones are so sharpely reuenged abroade It is straunge that any manne shoulde play with some that is growne to bee a monster and not to bee able to looke vpon it in the childhoode thereof when it is nothing so deformed nor euill fauoured Suche quarelling with euils not halfe formed in others especially when there is quietnesse with many that be alreadie perfectly shapen at home can not proceede of any sound meaning or hatred against sinne We must remember the end why the Lord hath giuen vs a toung which is that wee should mainteine loue and friendlinesse in communicating the good things that lie hid in our harts affections by our speach and talke one with an other Wherefore wee must carefully consider that we vtter no poyson nor venome that lurketh in our corrupt nature ▪ and is deepely rooted therein by our toung and talke one with an other The holy ghost being priuie to our great infirmitie this way hath in many wordes forewarned vs of the slipperinesse of the toung that wee should haue it vnder sure and safe custodie telling vs in playne wordes that hee who shall let his lippes goe at libertie without restraint shall surely come to destruction according as we are taught in the Prouerbs He that keepeth his mouth keepeth his life but he that letteth loose his lippes destruction shal be vnto him And further the good man is described to be musing and meditating what to speake and the folish and euil mā without any moderation of that mēber to be babbling out whatsoeuer first commeth into his head The heart of the righteous studieth to answere but the wicked mans mouth babbleth euill things In this place we see that the holy Ghost ascribeth only a mouth vnto the foolish man and not a hart to ponder and consider his wordes before which hart he giueth vnto the wise man occupying it self in musing and considering how to speake In the same chapter there is yet a clearer and playner difference betwene the wicked and the godly drawn from their vsage in speach that the good man hauing wisdome and therfore good matter to vtter doth notwithstanding beautifie adorne it in entering the cōsideration how to make it good get grace fauour vnto it by obseruing the circumstances of fit time place and manner of vttering whiche most may commend it whereas the wicked and foolish man hath neither care of the matter whiche he is to vtter neyther yet of the maner how to vtter it This vse and end of the toung to communicate the good thinges of our heart one with an other to the increase of loue and friendship among men doth reproue those who are wont to presse vpon others with wordes of wrath and contempt It shall not excuse him that hath layde reproch or contempt vpon his neighbour in his speach to say that his wordes were no wordes of malice but of pleasure and myrth for euen that pleasant speache that nippeth and taunteth oure neighbour and bringeth reproch contempt or griefe of heart vnto him can neuer be so cloaked with the outward shewe of iesting speache but that the Lorde shall clearely see the bitter griefe of contempt or disdaine that lyeth close within it and howe farre that toung is from the maintenaunce of that loue and amitie which increaseth the estimation and credite of his neighbour Moreouer if the vse of the toung bee to communicate the good thinges of the heart not onely these infamous speaches shall be brought to iudgement but also fruitlesse and vnsauourie words that haue not the fruite and profite of wholsome instruction in them As we are taught by the apostle Ephesians that we should let no vnsauourie communication proceede out of our mouth but that which may bring grace vnto the hearers For as we haue heard the tong serueth to communicate together the good things of our heart not the wickednesse or vanitie that lurketh therin and wherof there is so great daunger that we are counselled in the scripture to separate our selues from foolish men when wee perceiue not in them the lippes of knowledge It is apparant by this that hath beene spoken what are the dueties and good works of this commaundement euen the contrarie of these aforenamed It shall be therefore sufficient in a worde to touch them here bycause they are clearely perceyued in their contraries whiche nowe wee haue heard reproued and forbidden in this commandement The general charge of this cōmandemēt is by loue to mainteine and vpholde the credite estimation and good name of our brother For our loue must be declared as well by louing and entire deling with his credit honor good report as by louing behauiour towardes his goods and person It behooueth therefore that the loue which wee beare towarde our brethren should bee fruitfull in the good workes of this commandement bicause this way the inward affection of the hart hath her outgoing and is conuict either of loue or hatred no lesse than in his person and goods As false witnesse standing against the life and bloud of our neighbour was the thing whiche in the first place as we haue heard was forbidden so the good worke contrarie to this is to vse the credite of our testimonie for the defence of him The goodnesse of such a worke is declared in the Prouerbes in these wordes A faithfull witnesse deliuereth soules What worke can be of greater account then to come iustly into this commendation to haue deliuered the liues of men The good workes of them that by their sentence execute iustice is according as it is declared in the person of Iob to deliuer the poore that cryeth the fatherlesse and him that hath none to helpe diligently to seeke out the trueth and goodnesse of their cause to plucke the praye out of the vnrighteous mans teeth This bringeth the blessing of him that was readie to perish vpon them It was forbidden as a sinne againste this commaundement to blaze abroade the infirmities of our brethren The good worke that answereth it is to admonishe one an other and so to hide sinne and iniquitie as it is written 1. Thessalonians Wee desire you Brethren admonishe them that are vnruly comfort the feeble mynded beare with the weake be patient toward all men It was forbidden vs to expound things that might bee well taken into the worse parte and for some little blemishe to deface the whole It is commaunded vs to shewe foorth our zeale against
vppon vs to let goe the care of that and there to keepe watche and warde where there is no assault made against vs As if sathan should sore assault vs with couetousnesse and labour to enter there breakinge downe the walles of sobrietie and temperaunce in these earthly profites whiche we should vse so soberly and temperantly as if we vsed them not and wee doubting no harme from thence should conuert all our munition and defence to vpholde the walles of gentlenesse loue and meekenesse when as in deede we are not assaulted with wrathe or displeasure Were not this a wofull kinde of warre to lay open where we are assaulted and to bee fenced on those partes where we are not once attempted Were not that a slender victorie for that man to bragge that he hath not one wound vpon his legges whose heade and shoulders haue borne off all It cannot be denied but many that goe for Christians boast themselues greatly of such kinde of victorie that their legges are safe because some grosse euils as reuengement or plaine oppression hathe not preuailed against them when notwithstanding their head is yet bleeding with the strokes of ignorance in GODS worde or carelesnesse of his glorie and their shoulders full of the scarres of couetousnesse or suche other like grieuous woundes This mischiefe is redressed by the lawe by the light whereof we clearely perceiue where the force of the aduersarie lieth soarest vpon vs that we may turne our prayers and all spirituall armour to that part especially So shall our prayers not bee cast off without care at aduenture and by custome but beeing bothe warned of great daunger which without the alarme of the law we would not haue feared and also hauing warning to what place the aduersarie directeth his power our prayers may carefully and directly stande against it Nowe let vs praye vnto our Heauenlie Father that we may learne by the Lawe bothe to bee humbled vnder his mercies and also to be directed vnto his owne good pleasure will to the praise of his name and our owne euerlasting comfort c. The fourteenth Lecture vpon the thirde Chapter of S. Iohn verse 16. So God loued the worlde that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perishe but haue euerlasting life AFter the knowledge of the Lawe and the vse thereof it is necessarie to speake of Christe who is the ende of the lawe howe by faith he is receiued bothe to iustifie vs from the curse and rigour of the lawe and also to sanctifie our hearts to such a liking of those duties that there are appointed to be done as bringeth with it the careful attending vppon the doing thereof This doctrine hath bene somewhat touched in the lawe but a more plentifull discourse thereof is yet required where the mater may be laide open more at large then hitherto we haue heard of For the perfourmance wherof this portion of Scripture that now I haue read vnto you promiseth verie muche Wherein we may vnderstande that the firste spring and founteine of our saluation is the loue of god That is the first cause the principal ground and chiefe beginning of all our happinesse and therfore it is set down here as the cause why Christ was giuen for our sinnes So God loued the worlde sayth the texte that he gaue his onely beegotten sonne The tender affection and loue of God towards vs is placed before that great gift to commend the goodnesse of it For not so muche the gifte as the minde of the giuer is wont to be considered This is noted by the holy Ghost with a speciall note of cōmendation in these wordes Herein is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs and sent his sonne to bee a reconciliation for our sinnes Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes There is set against the single transgression of Adam as an ouer matche the grace of God and the gifte in grace or by grace The benefite and medicine of Christe his obedience was sufficient for the wounde of Adam his transgression to make it whole withall then remaineth as an aduantage or ouerplus the grace and goodwill of the Father wherin this medicine was lapped and closed vp which is the cause why he maketh a special note of the grace of God and of the gifte in grace or by grace These thinges are diligently to be obserued for they are the groundes of muche good doctrine that is established strongly hereby When we consider what that was that first turned the fauour of God towards vs we may not begin at ourselues as if it had come of our works preparing ourselues for him addressing ourselues towards his obedience we may not beginne at our merites nay we may not beginne at the worke of our redemption and the merite of Christe to make that the first thing that euer turned his heart towardes vs For here it is affirmed by the holie Ghost that he loued vs and therefore gaue his onely begotten sonne for vs When we come to the meriting of Christe we must not looke vpon the vertue of it without the good will and fauour of God wherein it was founded and from whence it hathe the worthinesse and merite that it hath So farre off then are our owne works from bringing their deserte with them and opening by themselues the gates of his goodnesse that the good will of God the father prepareth the way euen for the merite of Christe his passion Our owne woorkes come shorte of beeing the first that hath commended vs vnto God when bothe the good will of God the Father and the merite also of Iesus Christe haue beene there before them in our behalfe Let men therefore ceasse to say or imagine that their owne woorkes were the firste that euer spake one good worde for them when it is so assured by the word of God that they haue had friendes in that courte that haue done for them when al the credit of their owne doeings was vtterly reiected and coulde not be heard Whensoeuer therefore we seeke out the chiefe cause and the first spring of our blessednesse let vs come to the loue of God. For it is saide that God so loued the worlde that he gaue his onely begotten sonne c. Let vs take heede of beginning at our selues and our owne doinges For as hath beene saide it was the loue of God that did begin all our blessednesse yea and that euen then when we were enimies vnto him and therefore farre from deseruing any good thing at his hands which thing cōmendeth his loue aboue all the loue and affection that is to be found in the worlde For who hath euer beene knowen the Sonne of God excepted to giue his life for his enimies Therefore doth the holy Ghoste vppon iust cause affirme that the loue of God towards vs is herein sette out and commended aboue all loue and affection that we haue heard of because
can not otherwise be compassed And where is that man then that seeing what duties are to be perfourmed bothe to the Lord and to his brethren and in what manner of affection and loue for it is the end of Christe his death and the purchase of his passion to haue a number not only giuen but zelously giuen vnto good workes remembring withall what an enimie he hath at home of his owne nature if there be any feare of God in him that shall not be occasioned hereby more plentifully to practise the meanes of his saluation especially knowing that those who are ingrafted into the body of Christe must dye vnto sinne and rise vp in to these fruites of righteousnes Moreouer the knowledge and meditation of the lawe and commaundements doe helpe vs forward vnto true and sincere Christianitie For a great number deceiue them selues in a generall good meaning whiche they haue to serue the Lord taking that to be the true seruice of him and in the meane time are nothing carefull to keepe a good conscience in the seuerall dueties of the lawe nor any thing traueyling to traine vp their affections to delight therin as if in Christianitie we were to roue vncerteinely aboute good motions and good meanings and had no certeine marks of seuerall dueties set before vs to shoote at that we might so iudge of our selues as we see vs come shorte or wide of them whereas the true Christian in very deede profiteth in drawing neerer and neerer vnto the Lord in making his life and conuersation more conformable vnto the seuerall duties set downe in the commaundementes beeing likewise carefull to approue his doings by the lawes statutes made for the same as in ciuil dealings and traffique a man wil feare to offende against the lawes and statutes prouided in that behalfe And as a wise man that hath much dealing in the worlde wil haue some abstract of the statutes that as occasion requireth he may turne to them and so deale without danger of lawe so it standeth well with the policie of a Christian to be skilfull in the statutes of his God that when he hath to deale with the name of his brother lookeing in this abstract he may see the cautions to be obserued in the same that he offend not against the lawes and statutes of the Highest when soeuer he hath to deale with his goodes he may turne in like maner to that statute that hath prouided for wel dealing therin so auoide the dangers that otherwise he should fall into The like is to be done when there are dealings immediately betwene vs the Lord that we should often loke into this briefe abstract of the statutes of our God to see alwayes what is the prouiso that is made for his glorie and the suppressing of our owne corruption Our corrupte nature doeth aske all this of vs and the man that feareth God giueth no lesse vnto it For the blessed man is saide to meditate in the lawe of his God day and night Nay we see that the only wise God who knoweth better then we our selues what nede we haue hath appointed vs yet more meanes and therfore we must thinke that there is more vntowardnes in vs then we could of our selues suspect For he hath left it a perpetuall order for the education of his children that there should be men of special giftes both for learning and aptnesse to teach also for good life who by teaching exhorting and reprouing should as it were whet the word to make it enter It must of necessitie bee an hard matter that requireth such instruments such workemen for both the instrument and the workmen are from aboue The wisedome of the world could not perfourme this and therefore the Gospell which is the arme and power of God vnto saluation was sent from the bosome of the father and for the workemen we are not at our choyse to take where it seemeth good vnto vs but they are appointed to our hād by the holy Ghost who hath set downe such notes of good learning good life to discerne them by who are of his sending and fit for so weightie a worke as that they giue forth a plaine testimonie vnto vs that they come from Heauen framed and prepared of the Lord him self vnto this work As the goodnesse of our God could not deny vs any thing necessarie so his wisedome would not that we should be loaden with any thing superfluous and vnnecessarie which must force vs to conclude against our selues that we are not knowen vnto our selues vnlesse we see matter within vs necessarily requiring to be pricked forward with the liuely preaching and sounding ministerie of the word and that we tempt the Lord if we content our selues with our priuate readings and meditations and despise the preaching of the worde which the Lord hath seene to be so necessarie that hee hath appointed it not for one sorte of men but vnto all of what condition soeuer neither vnto age alone but perpetuall for all ages and times The labours therefore of them that doe write are not taken in hand that men standing vpon them should contemne or lesse frequent the publique ministerie of the Church but to bring them into greater loue and liking with the same that receiuing some fruite that way they might looke for a greate deale more by that which is appoynted by the Lorde to present vs perfect in Christe Iesus Concerning these Lectures I am to craue generally of all men to whose handes they shall come that in what point so euer they shall thinke their admonition may doe mee good they woulde not denie mee that Christian and Brotherly helpe and likewise if they shall in any thing finde themselues holpen by my trauell that as they are to returne the whole praise vnto GOD to whome onely it is due so they woulde not denie the comfort of their prayers vnto him whom the Lord in mercie hath vouchsafed to make an instrument though most vnworthie of some goodnesse vnto them And of your honour my verie good Ladie I am most humblie to require that this dutie how slenderly soeuer performed may according to your accustomed clemencie be well accepted of that what want soeuer be in the work either of that you desire or that I were in duetie to perfourme may finde a supplie herein for that it proceedeth from a minde moste willing to answer your desire and moste vnwilling if abilitie did serue to be behinde with the leaste parte of that that duetie may in any respect demaunde And as al good Christians should rather be desirous to lerne howe to go forwarde then to heare what good beginnings they haue made so I doubt not Madame but a fewe wordes vttered to that ende especially from me that haue great cause to be thankeful vnto God for that he hath already wrought in you shall finde better interteinement with your honour then much speeche directed to an other purpose howe good and iust soeuer the cause be
affections which are noted to bee in vs by the fourme of speaking For to what ende should the holy Ghoste will vs to doe no murder if there were no disposition in vs thervnto This is the cause why the holy Ghost dealeth so plainely with vs in telling vs what we are that our care may be great to reforme it And when we shal haue profited any thing herein it may be acknowledged from whence we had that whiche we are assured was not to be founde in our nature The holy Ghost therefore in this place detecteth our nature of want of loue nay of hatred crueltie whiche otherwise we should not haue marked no nor suspected our selues of it if we had not had warning from the almightie that our nature is poysoned therewithall For if a man not fearing God yet otherwise of good vnderstanding to cōceiue the trueth of things be demaunded what his opinion is of himself whether he be prone bent to hatred whether he findeth his nature greatly inclining thereto or no he will with great protestation constantly affirme that in him he thanketh God there is no suche matter abiuring it with admiration and woondring how any man should be brought to think so of him thus in the not vnderstanding his owne corruption he seeth not what neede he hath of a sauiour redeemer and therefore whatsoeuer hee sayeth is in deede and trueth vnthanckfull for that benefite while in finding no great thing amisse in himselfe he cannot see what way he should so greatly be beholding to a sauiour that would answer for his transgressions which in his owne opinion is no greate matter to doe they being either fewe and so borne out in the number of those good thinges which he hathe done or else none at all Moreouer if wee shall haue done something or diuerse thinges that may be thought louing and friendly yet if the inclination to wrath which is by nature in vs be either not knowen or being knowen the strength thereof shall not bee subdued and the sting pulled out that it reigne no more within vs we shall neuer be prouoked by any euill dealing of others but that foorthwith letting the reyne go to our heart we shall dishonour his name in following the rage of our minde contrarie to the lawe of our god So might it come to passe that a man hauing some good opinion of him selfe for some outwarde things but neuer tryed with iniurious dealing of another might take it to go well with him when notwithstanding this corrupt nature of his standeth whole in her full force and strength beeing neuer a whit subdued vnto the spirite as hee well perceiueth when that any great occasion shal be offered to try him with all We see then how iust cause there is that the Lord should admonish vs of this corruption of hatred which is within vs not onely that we should see the benefite of our Sauiour and mediatour but also that subduing it and treading downe the strength of it we might finde free passage to doe and not to be remoued from doeing the workes of mercie and loue whiche are heere cōmaunded euen the contrarie of those that as we haue heard were forbidden vs We are commaunded to haue care of the body and life of our brother to mainteine it as his necessitie shal require and our abilitie can perfourme remembring that the Lord hath commited that care vnto vs. The Iewes were commanded to make places of refuge and defence where the guiltlesse persons might haue protection against the rage of them who pursued them vnto death that as it is written in Deuter. innocent bloud be not shedd within their land and least bloud should be vpon them for these are the very wordes of the texte in that place signifying that the not regarding and prouiding for the safetie of their life were matter sufficient inough to make them their land guiltie of their bloud that thereby they might well vnderstand that the care of their brethrens life was commended vnto them not without greate danger if there were to be found any negligence therein Mercifull dealing is heere commaunded towardes all but especially towards inferiours widowes fatherlesse children and those that be in any greate extremitie A notable practise we haue of this in the person of Iob suffering his seruauntes to pleade their right and to maynteine their good cause before him not vsing his authoritie to oppresse them and crueltie to execute his rage without regarding the equitie of their cause only standing vpon his owne authoritie ouer them If I did contemne the iudgement of my seruaunt and of my maide sayeth Iob when they did contend with me what then shall I doe when GOD standeth vp and when hee shall visite me what shall I answere he that hath made me in the wombe hath he not made him Here is the true tryall of a mercifull man for it is no commendation not to offer wrong vnto those who are our equals and able to match vs but then haue we true tryall of our affections that there is some mercie in trueth within vs when we shall shewe pittie and compassion towardes those whome for our authoritie or place that we bee in wee might easily oppresse when we shal be kept from fleshing our affections vpon those that lay open vnto vs hauing no fence of power or credite that is sufficiently able to holde vs His example of compassion is no lesse commendable towardes all of them that were in any greate want or extremitie as the holie Ghoste vnder his person witnesseth in these wordes I deliuered the poore that cryed and the fatherlesse and him that had none to help him The blessing of him that was ready to perish came vpon me and I caused the widowes heart to reioyce The Iewes were bound to declare their compassion towardes their brethren by that lawe which commaunded them to lend their brother that was needie amongst them sufficient for his neede taking for assurance a pledge whiche hee might forbeare as appeareth in Deuteronomie where they haue a streight charge that when the yeere of Iubilie should approche at what time all men were charged to relese their debts they should not at that time shut vp their compassiō from him that would borrowe for his nede but frankly giue vnto him notwithstanding the yeere when all debts must be released be euen at hand There is a promise added to incourage them that for so doeing the Lord would blesse them in all that they should put their hand vnto They were charged also to relieue their brother or the straunger that dwelte with them who was fallen into decay forbidding them in expresse wordes to take any vsurie or increase of suche either of money or meate as appeareth in Leuiticus vsing their goodes to suche comforte of their brethren as might wel witnesse the loue that they had vnto them The lawe and commaundement that was giuen to
sinnes that bee alreadie ripe in oure selues and to turne it that way to be reuenged vpon them when it would be so gladly occupied in suspecting and surmising euill in others which either is not so at all or at the least not so cleare as in our selues So that alwayes this bee our rule from the sight of our owne sinnes to proceede to the reprouing of others In consideration of the end and vse of the toung which is to giue foorth the good things of the heart we are sent from speach either bitter or nipping or vainely or without profite delighting vnto the wholesome wordes of edifying and instructing one an other vnto good as it is written in the Prouerbes The heart of the wise maketh his mouth wise and addeth doctrine vnto his lippes His sweete words are as an honie combe sweetnesse to the soule and health to the bones The lippes of the iust man are reported to feede many and that they knowe what is acceptable to God and man and labour to get grace and fauour to that which they do speake It is sayd that the fruit of a righteous man is as a tree of life and that he bycause he winneth soules is wise and that he shal be filled with good things for the fruit of his mouth that it is that good vnderstanding and wisedome that getteth grace and fauour with men with other infinite testimonies out of that booke directing vs to the right vse of the toung Wee haue to learne so to examine our dealings with our neighbours credite and good name according to these dueties here prescribed vs that wee learne truely to humble vs vnder the free mercies of Iesus Christe and truely to honour him by shewing forth our loue towards our neighbour in all good dealing with his name and subduing those affections that rise vp against it that we may giue forth testimonie vnto others that we are in Christe by cause we are dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse Nowe let vs pray vnto our heauenly father that wee may witnesse our loue vnto men by all faithfull and louing dealing with their name The xj Lecture vpon the seuenteenth verse Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house neyther shalt thou couet thy neighbours wife nor his man seruant nor his mayde nor his oxe nor his asse neyther any thing that is thy neighbours THis last commaundement pearceth deeper then the former Before the deede was condemned that was hurtfull to our neighbours and the setled wil also and resolued determination these were forbidden in the other commandements but nowe the holy Ghoste reproueth the desire and lust towardes any thing of our neighbours notwithstanding there be no full resolution nor setled consent giuen therevnto I call it a setled consent when in our mynd we are fully resolued and haue set it downe that we will embrace and follow that as occasion shall be giuen wherevnto our desire lust and appetite doth leade vs Desire and longing after the thinges of our neighbours as house wife goods or lande which yet are cut off before we sit down with the deliberate persuasion to take our pleasure of them are here brought vnto iudgment and restrayned by this commaundement In deede the Lorde doth pardon and forgiue vnto his childrē the desires and longings of their minde that are repulsed and beaten backe before they obteine full consent But it is one thing to dispute what desire vnto euill is in the desart of it selfe and an other howe it is pardoned in the merites of Christe For in the merites of Christe not onely the desires but also the euill doings of his seruants lye hidden and couered We are then to consider what reckoning is to be made of the lusting coueting desires that solace themselues some good time with their neighbours benefite when yet they shal be scared frō that feast before their affectiō shal be filled wholy satisfied In the gospel after S. Luke we are charged to loue the Lord with all our hart with al our strēgth with al our thoghts While thē our thoughts are carried hither thither now after his goodes to desire this house or this parcell of land of his or the estate condition that now is his although we would not wishe it before his death being a long time holden in these thoughtes and vanishing in these desires although nothing be fully concluded to say deliberately in our heartes These pleasures will we followe are we not iustly blamed for not louing him with all our thoughts Were it not a plaine mockerie of GOD if a man should giue libertie to his thoughts to pursue pleasures whole dayes and weekes so that they take heede of setting it downe and concluding fully to wallowe in any Our thoughts should be wholy taken vp to the Lords vse and therefore may they not be let loose after goods or benefites of our brethren with the alone charge to take heede howe they fully settle them selues in them but so they be sure of that otherwise to take no great care this is not by loue to take vp our thoughts and direct them to his seruice but by carnall libertie to giue them the head And surely we may discerne a fault in this euen by the light almost of reason that our thoughts should rather delight to spend themselues vpon euill or vaine thinges then vpon those that haue the greatest pleasure and chiefest goodnesse in them Behold then it is a faultie thing that our thoughts run rouing after vaine things that they folow the delights of their neighbours pleasure or profites though not greatly setled in them but wantonly wandring by them Why should they not bee fastened with delight and whole consent vnto good things Hath not the Lord payde the price for body and soule and al that is in vs Why then should not all bee kept vnder his obedience without rouing after our owne desire Either else why should wee excuse any thought straying and wandring from him with this answere that it had returned before it was gone so farre as possible it might This is no reasonable excuse nor plaine dealing before our God this is not to loue him with all the thought It were a verie vngodly thing and would be cryed out against euen amongst mē if any should permit his sonne not to spare daliance and delight with young women so that hee made this alwayes sure that they should gette no holde of him by giuing full consent to ioyne in marriage with them This were an intollerable thing among men And can we thinke when we shall haue delighted oure selues a long time in the pleasure of vnlawfull thoughtes that this wil wipe out all bicause we are not fully purposed to dwell in them Our thoughts are married already vnto the Lorde they are not at libertie to matche them selues where it shall best like them neyther yet to acquaint them with any straunge loue She is no longer
that the word of the Lord came vnto Abraham in a vision saying Feare not Abraham I am thine exceeding great reward And Abraham said Oh Lorde God what wilt thou giue me seeing I goe childlesse Beholde to me thou hast giuen no seede wherefore a seruaunt of myne house shall be myne heire Then the worde of the Lorde came vnto him saying One that shall come out of thine owne bowells hee shall be thine heire Moreouer he brought him foorth and sayde Looke vp nowe vnto heauen and tell the starres So shall thy seede be And Abraham beleeued the Lord and he accounted that to him for righteousnesse By this testimonie we see that Abraham was accoūted righteous not in part righteous or half righteous but with out any addition it was sayde of him that he was righteous before he had any sonne and therefore before he could offer vp his sonne in sacrifice euen then when he made complaint vnto God for that he had no sonne and therefore a seruaunt must bee his heire beleuing the promise that thē was made vnto him for a seede and posteritie that shoulde come out of his owne loynes that fayth was reckoned vnto him for righteousnesse and hee him selfe accepted of as righteous before the Lorde Iames sayth that hee was iustified when his owne sonne Isaac was offered vppon the altar and that this deede of his in not refusing to kill his onely sonne for a sacrifice at the commaundement of God did so please the Lorde that he was iustified for it In the other place alledged the holy Ghost affirmeth that hee was iustified before his sonne Isaac was borne euen at that time when the promise was giuen forth that he should haue a sonne and that the beleeuing of this good will of God towardes him herein did so please the Lorde that he accounted of him as righteous for it Howe then Doth the holy Ghost differ from him selfe God forbid But the Apostle Sainte Iames attributeth that to the effect for being ioyned with his cause which the holy ghost in that other place giueth vnto the true and originall cause alone As if one man wold iustifie a workman and commend him aboue others for workes that hee hath seene him do and an other would in like manner iustifie the same but for the inward skill knowledge and conceiuing that he hath of the rules and principles of that trade or occupation what so euer which skill he may discerne by his speache albeit he neuer sawe him worke And albeit a man may say that he is a good workman bicause his worke is good yet if a man wil speake properly he must say he is a good workeman bycause his skill is good For his good skill in that trade is the cause of his good workmanshippe and the goodnesse thereof commeth from thence as from the proper founteine and cause Nowe euerie man knoweth that when any man is commended for his worke it is bycause of the skill and knowledge that appeareth therein and is ioyned therewith as the onely cause and occasion thereof Euen so bycause our fayth appeareth in our good woorkes as our skilfull knowledge dothe in our skilfull workmanship that is giuen to good woorkes which is peculiar vnto fayth as the proper cause thereof and a man shall bee called a skilfull woorkman for his skilfull workmanship when notwithstanding it is most assured that his skilfull knowledge is before his skilfull woorke as also the cause thereof and hee iustly may be called skilfull for it notwithstanding he should bee kept from vttering that his skill in worke many yeres after the perfect knowledge thereof The holie Ghost therefore in Genesis iustifieth Abraham as skilfull for his skill alone and in that epistle of Iames he iustifieth him as skilful of that worke wherein so much skil appeared For it may be lawfull vnto me for the better vnderstanding hereof to resemble fayth by skill and good deedes by skilfull workmanshippe bycause as good workmanship hath all the commendation for the good skill that appeareth in it so haue good woorkes all their praise from the fayth that hath begotten them and is necessarily ioyned with them This is also to be added that bycause there is not in our workes that perfection that is required we are constreyned to stand to the mercie of God and to seeke refuge there by a true fayth and this is the cause why we magnifie faith which otherwise is imperfect as be all things that are in vs bicause it applieth the mercy of God vnto vs wherby our sinnes are pardoned and the want that is in our worke not imputed And for proofe that the Apostle Sainte Iames giueth not that title vnto woorkes to iustifie but bycause of the fayth whiche hath begotte those workes and which is ioyned with them and couereth the imperfections that is in them in the same place where he ascribeth righteousnesse vnto Abraham for offering vp his sonne hee sayth that this scripture was fulfilled Abraham beleeued and it was reckoned vnto him for righteousnesse and he was called the friende of God So that all the commendation of this woorke is included in faith and giuen vnto it for the fayth of the doer For other wise hee should haue sayde Abraham wrought and that was receiued bycause it was righteous seeing hee had stoode vppon the commendation of his workes so muche immediately before and was euē yet in the same matter But he sayth Abraham beleeued and that was reckoned vnto him for righteousnesse They would match workes with faith in iustification and the Apostle when hee speaketh most of works doth shrowd them vnder fayth saying after mention of his best woorke that this Scripture was fulfilled in it Abraham beleeued and that was imputed to him for righteousnesse and not receiued in the righteousnesse and deseruing of it selfe and he was called the friend of God. And in the eleuenth Chapter to the Hebrues all the woorkes of the godly fathers are ascribed vnto fayth and by name in the seuenteenth verse of that Chapter this deede of Abraham is fathered vpon his faith For workes are so farre from iustifying vs that the cause why they them selues are iustified is in fayth For without fayth it is impossible to please God. And in this chiefe worke of Abraham that nowe wee haue heard of that Scripture of imputing righteousnesse vnto him was fulfilled Therefore the worke did not stande in any account for the worthinesse thereof but onely bycause the Lorde did impute it vnto him for righteousnesse which thing also it did not attaine vnto of it selfe but bycause of fayth whiche was ioyned with it It is to be noted that the Apostle Sainte Iames speaketh here but of one woorke as the offering vp of his sonne and that woorke also not done but onely purposed to be done If therefore his meaning had beene to debate the worthinesse of woorkes and what place they haue in the purchase of our saluation hee would haue taken woorkes
Iames that he that doubteth and wauereth is like a waue of the sea tost of the winde carried away which shall not receiue any thing of the lord Yet herein we are to be admonished that we doe not take either that anguish and feare of the fleshe in daunger and trouble or yet the weakenesse and feeblenesse of faithe to be that wandering that the Apostle speaketh of For feare and anguishe in trouble weakenesse also in faith are euer to be founde in fleshe and wil not be vtterly remoued so long as we abide in this mortal life That prayer that by faith holdeth out and continueth notwithstanding this feare of the fleshe and feeblenesse of faith to sollicite the Lorde is sure to speede of her purpose at the last For patience wil bring experience of his goodnesse and experience bringeth hope for by continuing our prayers to the Lorde in the time of trouble we are sure to finde suche mitigation thereof as not onely maketh it so tollerable that it may be borne but also leadeth vs to a further hope in that experience of mitigation alreadie had whiche thing is better learned with vse then it can be made plaine by any rule Onely we haue to take heede lest we should let goe the experience of his goodnesse towardes vs either in hauing taken away trouble at our request or else in hauing asuaged the rage thereof for experience strongly vpholdeth hope and mightily battereth downe despaire And nowe to incourage vs to prayer we haue not onely a commaundement for it whiche maketh our obedience herein better then a sacrifice offered vnto God our contempt and neglecte of prayer sinne and rebellion against God but also most plentiful and louing promises to allure vs with assured hope of rewarde as it is written in Matthewe Aske and it shal be giuen you Knocke and it shal be opened Seeke and ye shall finde What man is there among you whiche if his sonne aske him bread would giue him a stone If ye then which are euil can giue to your children good giftes howe muche more shall your Father whiche is in heauen giue good things to them that aske him These promises whiche are grounded in the mercies of God haue made the godlie conceiue hope to pray vnto him and not their owne worthinesse nay they haue turned away their eyes from the feare of their owne sinnes after the hope of these promises made in mercie vnto his A notable example wherof we haue in Genesis where Iacob after he confessed that he was not worthie the least of those benefites whiche he had alreadie receiued yet notwithstanding is imboldened to pray for other benefites because God had promised The promises of God are founded in his mercie and therefore perfourmed because of his mercie These promises made al the godly that euer were in any age bolde to pray We therefore hauing the same promises haue also the same hope and holde of his mercies that they had and the same cōmendation of our cause and suites whatsoeuer For all their hope did hang and depend vppon the goodnesse of God promised in his word therefore let vs not be guiltie of so greate sinne againste our owne soules as to be disobedient by our neglect of prayer to the lawe and commandement of our God neither yet so iniurious vnto the Lord as through infidelitie and mistrust to call into question the veritie of his worde and trueth of his promises which are perfourmed vnto vs in our mediatour and redeemer Christ Iesus in whom all the promises are fulfilled When the question is then of our vnwoorthinesse let vs call to minde that there was neuer any man vpon the earth no Saint or seruaunt of God howe holie or blessed so euer that was heard for himselfe or had the promises perfourmed vnto him in respect of his owne worthinesse but onely in and for Christe to whome the promises were made who is the heire of all things as it is written to the Hebrues and therefore no man hathe true title to any promise of blessednes but in his name and for him because he is a part and member of Christ who is Lord of all hath true title therevnto Our hope ariseth in the right of Christe our clayme is good in his title our comfort commeth by his interest We beeing therefore members partes of him haue lawfull title in his name who is the true and lawfull heire of all the inheritaunce notwithstanding that in any title that we can shewe for our selues as from our selues we remaine without hope of any help or comfort by suite to recouer any thing at all a deede of gifte being before made vnto the Lord Iesus of that inheritance and all that belongeth therevnto Euerie gifte and graunt that is made passeth in his name and whatsoeuer suite is recouered apperteining to our happie estate it is entred likewise in the title right of him and is giuen vnto vs because we are members of him The firste Chapter of the Epistle to the Ephesians maketh plaine proofe hereof that we haue no spirituall blessing but in Christe because we are his and in him whom the father hath appointed the lawful inheritour of all thinges It is in plaine wordes affirmed by the Apostle to the Corinthes that the faithfull are by the appointment of God the Father in Iesus Christe who is made vnto them as before wee haue heard wisedome righteousnes holinesse redemption that he who will glorie may glorie in the Lord. Those therefore that enter their suites and petitions to God the Father in the title and right of any Saint Angel or Apostle whatsoeuer whether they passe in their names alone or in Christe his name and theirs together they enter their suite amisse and therefore shall neuer profite by it They take vpō them to frustrate that graunt made from God the Father to Iesus Christ alone making an alienation thereof vnto others at their owne will and pleasure cancelling that deed of gifte and forging a newe wherein the virgine Marie and others are made parteners with him affirming that the suites and petitions must proceede in their name also as well as his That blasphemous prayer of theirs is not vnknowen vnto any Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te impendit fac nos Christe scandere quo Thomas ascendit Thou Christ for that bloud whiche Thomas for thee did spend make vs clyme thether whither Thomas did ascende If they woulde qualifie their speeche their owne practise will condemne them For they haue prayed to bee accepted in the title right and deseruing of the Sainctes making mediatours to him who is for vs alreadie and our alone mediatour in deede making him as a straunger or enimie rather to be appeased by others when as in verie deede hee is our best and deerest friende appointed our mediatour and standing on our part to appease other Whose affection that it standeth better towardes
of them But when it pleaseth God to pull any out of their corruption and to begin Christianitie in them hee doeth let them see with assurance of his mercie towarde them but so as notwithstanding he bringeth them not onely to the sight and bewailing of that rebellion which they feele in their affections against his wil but also to the mortifying and subduing thereof The man therefore that will truely examine him selfe hath to consider what resisting of his affections hath beene in his life so shall hee soone perceiue what neede he hath to betake him selfe vnto the mediatour CHRISTE IESVS while his conscience shall wittnesse either of no profiting at all herein or at the least so little as shall sufficiently conuict him and force him to lay holde vpon the righteousnesse of Christe as his only refuge yet so as his care to suppresse his affections be no lesse because hee vnderstandeth what mercie is in Christe but so much the more increased as he perceiueth that trauaile to please the Lord euen as the best thankfulnesse that wee can performe for the great benefite of our redemption Now let vs pray that we may beare such an enimies heart against our owne corrupt affections as may not spare to treade vppon them when soeuer they shall ryse vp against the Lord. ¶ The fifte Lecture vpon the twelfth vearse 12 Honour thy Father and thy mother that thy dayes may be prolonged vpon the land which the Lord thy GOD giueth thee THe former commaundementes doe perfectly instructe vs in all the dueties that apperteine directly to god These following doe giue vs rules and preceptes for the dueties that wee doe owe vnto men The Lord our God being perfect in all happinesse by him selfe alone hath no neede of our seruice yet will he haue tryall of the loue that wee beare vnto him not onely by deedes done immediatly vnto him selfe but also by deedes done for his cause vnto men He therefore meaning to make a tryall of our loue towardes him hath commaunded vs that we should not be altogether our owne men closed vp within our owne profites and pleasures onely regarding and procuring them and wholy taken vp of them but that we should go out of our selues at his commaundement to the good of our brethren witnessing our thankfulnesse vnto God in giuing for his sake this seruice vnto men The dueties vnto GOD going in order before these vnto men do admonish vs of this doctrine that all our doeings towardes men are nothing where Gods glorie doth not go before as it is written in the Epistle of Sainct Iohn In this wee knowe that wee loue the children of GOD when wee loue God and keepe his commaundementes And like as our dealing with men is nothing when the true seruice of God is either not knowen or not regarded so that seruice that is giuen vnto GOD is not accepted when our brethren are neglected of vs. Therefore doeth our Sauiour Christ in Matthew charge vs that when our neighbour hath any thing against vs wee should not presume to offer any gift vnto God before we be reconciled so greatly doeth the Lorde esteeme of this louing conuersation with men that the holie Ghoste maketh it the proofe of our blessed estate as it is written in Iohn Wee knowe that we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren Concerning that which we do owe vnto men the honourtng of father and mother hath the firste place By Father and mother are all those vnderstoode who are the instruments of GOD in any of his speciall goodnesse towardes vs whome because hee hath vouchsafed to be his meanes in the conueying of that grace that we doe inioy by them he cannot abide that they should be without honour at our handes By honour whiche is required to be giuen vnto them wee are taught so to behaue our selues towardes them in all our dealinge as may wittnesse that in heart wee doe honour them and therefore this honour doeth not so much exact any one seuerall thing as it putteth a qualitie and condition vppon all our behauiour towards them that it should be such as it may be a wittnesse of our hearte howe highlie it doeth reuerence and regarde them If it be demaunded why the Lorde by Father and mother should vnderstand all the instrumentes of his goodnesse towards vs whereas hee maketh mention but of one sorte it may be required of them againe why the Lorde forbidding all kinde of violence should make mention onely of murther For as by murther beeing the chiefe he comprehendeth all of that kinde so by one instrument of his speciall goodnesse hee leadeth vs to the consideration of all the like Moreouer we must reuerence the wisedome of the onely wise GOD heerein who by the moste grosse euils laboureth to worke the loath-thing of all the like and by benefites and good thinges in them selues moste amiable to further the cause of all the rest setting the ouglyest shape he possiblie can vppon euils to terrifie vs withall and giuing to good thinges the countenaunce that may best commend them Our trauaile therefore muste bee to searche into these good thinges which wee receiue by others that when we shall haue founde them wee may as by dutie apperteyneth honour the owners of them Nature may preuaile with them that bee of any consideration for the conceiuing of those benefites whiche they inioye by meanes of theire Parentes so that the trauaile neede not to be muche heerein Reason may persuade euen the moste simple that if wee haue any good thinge in this life or any blessing following it they who haue brought vs into life may iustely clayme a parte therein The matter of Magistrates is not so plaine what good wee receiue by them therefore it craueth more time to be giuē vnto it The Magistrate is the instrument of GOD to preserue that life whiche the Lorde in mercie hath giuen vnto vs For by the administration of iustice and execution of good lawes the outrage of the wicked with whome the worlde is alwayes pestered is restrained from laying violent handes vppon the good which otherwise would at all times burst foorth because the occasion which is the good workes of the one and the euill of the other can neuer bee separate from their liues And that this is the occasion may be proued out of the Epistle of S. Iohn where after inquirie had what it was that moued Caine to slay Abel he answeareth Because his owne workes were euill and his brothers good And least wee should note some extraordinarie thing in Caine hee putteth all the wicked in the ranke with him making it the common disposition of them all and therefore saying We may not bee as Caine which was of the wicked and slew his brother It is therefore no small blessinge and benefite of God that keepeth the sword of the vngodly from our throte whiche is euery houre drawen out and shakē at vs with whom we
subiect our selues in modestie vnto them euen he that hath more vnto him that hath lesse as it is written to the Philippians In meekenesse of minde let euerie man esteeme another better then himselfe And to the Romanes In giuing of honour let one go before another There is as great a cause why the aged shuld be honoured in his knowledge long time experienced in good thinges as the young man for the ripenesse of his witte and therefore men must mutually reuerence the gyfts of their fellow brethren if loue and liking shall be any longe time mutuallie vpholden That is the cause why in the same verse when the Apostle had persuaded vs to brotherly loue immediately hath these wordes In giuing of honour go one before another as if the one would not long continue where there were not the other There is no one thing that our nature can lesse like of then to be vnder contempt and that nothing should be espied in vs for the whiche men woulde regarde vs wherefore it standeth all vpon to trauell so in finding out the goodnesse of the gyftes and graces of GOD in other as their hartes may in vnfeignednesse yelde reuerence therevnto and also thereby to make a defence against infirmities whiche wil be in flesh and bloud that there may be bearing and forbearing one of another by loue reuerent regarde had to the gyftes of Gods grace in them Our nature is no better inclined in dueties towardes men then it is as before we haue learned in dueties towardes god For we are giuen to seeke to haue our selues honoured in our calling or gyft whatsoeuer but litle to regard nay euen to enuie the honour of others whiche we shall then discerne when any shal be compared with vs and made either superiours or else equals vnto vs And therefore when it pleaseth God to call any of his vnto the hope of his kingdome he letteth them see their corruption euen in this commandement so as they are forced by the sense and feeling thereof to giue ouer the claime of saluation in the title of their workes whiche haue no promise if they doe not perfourme the whole lawe and euerie worke thereof throughout the whole course of their life For it is written in Deuteronomie Cursed is hee that confirmeth not all the wordes of this lawe to do them And I would willingly learne what man there is that can truely say that he hath neither done nor yet left vndone any thing either to his superiour or inferiour to men of greater gyfts or lesse thē him selfe which did bewray want of honouring of them from his hart The lord also causeth those whom he calleth both carefully to stand in watch against their infirmitie lest it should burste forthe to the dishonour of God likewise more hartily to require a readie and willing affection to procure the honour of his name by walking duetifully in this commandement And if the outward work of this commaundemēt should be attended vpon of any neuer so diligently yet Gods glorie not sought therein it would profite vs nothing For if we giue men their due and in the meane time deny the Lorde his what auayleth it vs Therefore those former foure pointes wherein his glorie consisteth conteyned in the former commaundements must of necessitie be ioyned with all duties vnto men which are First that we acknowledging all our welfare to come from the Lorde alone doe depend wholy and only vpon him Secondly that in loue of him for his mercyes wee begin to obey him after his word Thirdly that his glorie beeing the marke we shoot at make vs carefull in all our works so to do them as he may haue honour by them Fourthly and last of all that in true acknowledging and trauaile in subduing of our owne corruptions whiche will not altogether bee sundred from our wayes and workes we humble our selues in our best obedience that the Lord may alwayes reteine the praise of the free and vndeserued working of his grace Now let vs pray vnto our heauenly father that we may truely see and bewaile the little reuerence and regarde that we haue had bothe to superiours and inferiours becomming thereby not onely vnthankfull vnto them but also vnto the Lord who hath placed such graces for our benefite in them and let vs craue of him that we may not onely obteine more power to suppresse the same but also may be inabled from him to send abroade suche fruites of true reuerence and honour as may come to the sight hearing of many to the great praise of his name The sixte Lecture vpon the thirteenth verse 13 Thou shal not kill THe former commandement hath giuen forth instruction for particular callinges from whiche by reason of more particular imploying of benefites mutualy one vpon another there ariseth more particular duetie of the one vnto the other then that which euerie common man may claime vnto himselfe Nowe we are to be instructed in those dueties that generally we doe owe vnto all men amongst whiche this cōmandement of not killing hath the first place wherein we are forbidden to do any violence iniurie or wrong to the bodie life of our neighbour and commanded to defend mainteine and cherish the same It is to be obserued that the Lorde bidding vs shewe foorth loue vnto our neighbours hath not left it vnto vs to deuise wherein to pleasure them but hath set downe what things are most deare vnto them that by our helpe giuen for the preseruation of those thinges safe vnto them and in benefiting them therin they may haue true triall of the loue and affection that we beare vnto them Our neighbour therefore in this consideration is not shut vp in the alone fleshe bloud of the man but the duties of neighbourhode reache vnto the life and bodie wife goodes and good name of the man Neither is loue the not hating or not hurting of a man but the helping and furthering of him to receiue more comfort in those thinges aboue recited ouer the whiche euerie man is so tender that beeing in any of those annoyed he can no longer account him selfe as a man loued or regarded of the authours therof For he himselfe is vpholden in life and liking by the comfort of them The Lorde in forbidding murder forbiddith also all violence crueltie and wrath towardes our neighbour labouring in the detestation of this greatest euill to worke in vs a hatred towardes all that be of any affinitie with it and therefore not letting vs see them but in that fourme which may most feare vs from them putting vpon them al that feareful fourme of murder The punishment of the offences against this commandement wil help vs to iudge the greatnes of the same Touching the murderer it is said in Leuiticus He that killeth any man he shal be put to death Violence bursting foorth into extremities of dealing in the olde lawe was punished with the like of that
kinde of sinne shall haue a godly wife whome the Lord shall preserue from this euill to yeeld vnto the wickednesse of others yet is his faulte neuer a deale the lesse heerein then if he should haue fallen into that extremitie of sinne because his deseruing hath called for that punishment from the Lorde which the Lorde in mercie towardes her hath withholden And in asmuch as the adulterer depriueth a man of the true comforte of his true and naturall seede and posteritie can we imagine otherwise of the Lorde but that hee will drawe one swoorde or other vppon some of his children that shall neuer ceasse to pursue them before it hath driuen them in at the dores of death Iob speaking of this sinne of adulterie sayeth that it is a fire that deuoureth all to destruction So that by this testimonie the house of the whooremonger must be consumed and there is a secret fier flaming there that threateneth to deuoure before it hath done and made a finall end which men might easily se by sundrie experiences in the world if there were no word of God to leade vs therevnto The hope to hide this sinne which bewitcheth the vngodly leadeth them into this fire of God his wrath must of necessitie be vaine because the Lorde him selfe hath taken vpon him to be reuenged of those that shall dare to breake that bond of wedlock which he hath made In the olde testamēt the Lord did by a special law made for the purpose take vpon him not only the knowledge reuealing and punishing of this sinne euen when it should be most secretly done without witnes of any other man yea or certeine knowledge frō the husbād him self but also the defence and clearing of the guiltlesse woman oppressed vexed with the vniust ielousie of her husbād who might presēt his wife whether she were guiltie in deed or onely in his ielous minde was thought to be so before the priest vnto that tryall which God had appointed established for the end After which matter solemnized with all the circumstances therof as it was appointed in the boke of Num. if the woman were defiled in deed then should her belly swel and her thighe rot if she were not defiled then should she not only be free from this punishmēt but also be blessed with fruitfulnesse as appeareth in the same place We see how greatly the lord doth abhorre adulterie taking vpon him to bewray the closest dealing in the wickednesse that can be and also what a care he hath of the vniting of their mindes who are become one by mariage in ordeyning a law to cure ielousie and so taking vppon him also the defence of the innocent partie That law is now ceased but that same God doth yet remaine bearing the same hatred to that sinne that he did before hath the like loue to innocencie that before he hath had So that there is small hope to be had when God is become the searcher him selfe when he who knoweth it is an vtter enimie vnto it and hath professed the reuealing of it yea and that more is the iust and deserued punishing thereof It would greatly feare the theefe if it were noysed that that man would searche him whome he doeth wel remember to haue passed by and behelde him while he was hiding of that whiche before hee had stolne Wee doe not reade through the whole testament the like solemnitie in the searching out of any sinne neither yet that in any other sinne the partie suspected was compelled to subscribe vnto certeine words of execration and calling for euil against himselfe if he had offended saue onely in this tryall of adulterie whiche may both teach vs in what place of sin to set this crime of adulterie and what measure of punishment to looke for after trespasse and transgression made in this parte The punishment whiche in the olde Testament was appointed to be executed againste it by the ciuil Magistrate was death according as it is written in Leuiticus The man that committeth adulterie with another mans wife because hoe hath committed adulterie with his neighbours wife the adulterer and adulteresse shall dye the death In this commaundement is not onely adultery forbidden which is when one of the offenders is ioyned or betrouthed to another in marriage but also fornication when bothe the offenders are single persons We haue learned before that it is vsuall in the commaundements vnder one kinde of euill to forbid all that bee of affinitie with it and like in wickednesse vnto the same Fornication is forbidden in expresse wordes in Deutero There shall be no whoore of the daughters of Israel neither shall there be any whoorekeeper of the sonnes of Israel The punishment of this sinne of fornication whiche was so fearefull among the people of Israel is brought in of the Apostle Paule to bring all men to suche feare of God as may restraine them from it Neither let vs commit fornication sayeth the Apostle as some of them cōmitted fornication and sell in one day twentie three thousand The life of man beeing so precious vnto our mercifull father as it is it can be no small sinne that prouoketh the Lord to procede in iudgemēt euen to the death of twentie three thousand And therefore is this notable punishment notwithout great reason ioyned to fornication which was the cause thereof For commonly this sinne is made as nothing hauing naturall infirmitie set beside it in the vsuall speech of men to hide it withall But the holy Ghoste doeth not so matche it in his speeche he doeth not set it before our eyes in a cloake of natural infirmitie whereby we should the lesse feare it but putteth vppon it the garment that in deede belongeth vnto it euen a cloake bathed with the bloud of xxiii thousand men There is great diuersitie betweene these two cloakes the one is farre vnlike the other in the eyes of the holy Ghoste this sinne is fearefully stayned with much bloud in the sight of fornicatours there is nothing in it whiche is not naturall and kindely so diuerse are their iudgements and so great is their disagreement of their opinions The Apostle Paule reasoneth against fornicatours by the worthines of our bodies whiche are the members of Christ howe great is that abasing and howe miserable to be diuorced from Christ and coupled to an harlot d ee ye not knowe sayeth the Apostle that hee whiche coupleth himselfe with an harlot is one bodie for two saith he shal be one fleshe Moste certeine it is that the bodie of an harlot can be no member of Iesus Christe And the fornicatour by the testimonie of the apostle is become one bodie with her hauing the same coniunction with her in wickednes that the husbande hathe with his lawful wife in holinesse and by the appointment of the Lorde There is great cause therefore why the holy Ghost shoulde so earnestly persuade vs to flie fornication making
dignitie and degree of countenaunce in their apparell that most lawfully they might otherwise clayme For therefore it is called temperaunce bycause it restraineth a man of his libertie But in this our age when almost all goe as farre as they may and the most part both of men and women a great deale beyond their compasse where is this temperance and sobrietie which is so highly commended in the Scriptures the verie walles of pure life and barres of chast conuersation This may be bewayled of all men but the disease is so vniuersall as it is impossible to be cured if the lord shall not put to his mightie hand from heauen It will be sayde that it is hard to measure these indifferent things but the trueth is otherwise for the holy Ghost hath sent vs a measure and meteyard euen sham efastnesse and temperance so that when there is no moderation or temperance but that by euerie indifferent iudgement they bee as farre as their estate can giue them leaue when there is no shamefastnesse but that they dare bee bolde to goe without blushing as farre as their place or abilitie can leade them maye wee not boldely say that they haue left the Lorde his measure and therefore their attire and behauiour must of necessitie be deformed in his eyes how wel soeuer it be pleasing vnto them selues This temperaunce is to be taught the yonger sort not onely from the mouth of the elder but frō their life and conuersation that they may be kept in those means which do vphold chast behauiour and therefore the Apostle Paule chargeth Titus that he stirre vp the elder both men and women to season yong yeares therewith Although this be the dutie generally of all elder people yet is it the speciall dutie of parentes to their children by their teaching and example of life thus to instruct thē And therefore in Deuteronomie it appeareth that the woman that had offended in her fathers house the matter not beeing knowne before marriage must be stoned to death at the doore of her fathers house But and if her husband should wrongfully charge her that he found her not a mayde after triall made to the contrarie he must pay an hundred sickles of siluer to the father of the mayde The reward of her innocencie as well as the punishment of her wickednesse reaching vnto the father for she must be stoned at his doore telleth vs what dutie belongeth vnto the parents in as muche as they had their parr as well in the dishonour as honour that followed the good education of their childrē The Lorde in forbidding vs adulterie telleth vs that our nature is inclined therevnto For what neede wee to be forewarned of that which we are in no daunger of It is required that we peruse diligētly the course of our life with due consideration how our intemperancie hath vttered it selfe in any of those things which we haue nowe learned to be forbidden vs and also in diligent consideration howe prone and tickle our affections be therevnto that we may in truth come from the opinion of our selues to betake vs wholy to that perfect obedience of Iesus Christ to rest in it as that onely which can abide the iustice of the righteous God then in thankful regard of those his mercies manfully to set vpon our in temperat desires for the mortifying therof that the Lord may haue the honour of our moderate and chast conuersation Which that it may so come to passe let vs call vppon our heauenly father saying The eighth Lecture vpon the fifteenth verse Thou shalt not steale IT hath bene shewed before that our neighbour is not to be considered in his person alone but in what so euer thing is deare vnto him as goods good name and suche like and therefore that the loue which we must beare towards him may not be towardes his body alone but also towardes his goods that our dealing with them may be so vpright as may declare in deede that we doe loue the man For if any thing of his passing through out handes shall not finde fidelitie and faythfull dealing but deceitfull conueyaunce of it or some parte thereof to oure selues can it bee truely sayde wee loue the man there is no man that can so iudge of it that can I say persuade him selfe that hee is beloued of those men when nothing of his goodes commeth to their handes but it is sure to be fleeced and to pay toll before it shall depart The Lord therefore commaunding safe passage and louing dealing towardes our neighboures goodes when so euer according to the manifold necessities of euerie man to deale and communicate with an other in buying and selling or otherwise they haue occasion to passe through our handes hath forbidden stealing and all vnfaithfulnesse in their goods condemning it of want of charitie and loue towardes them selues whose goods are diminished by vs when so euer we shal haue dealing with thē And bicause we goe so closely to work and are so cunning to deceiue our selues imagining that wee loue our neighbours when in deede there is no such affection in vs the holy Ghoste is compelled as it were to trace vs and by such vnfaithful footesteps as these be to descrie vs For when we are so often taken with vntrustie dealing and vnfaythfulnesse in our neighbours goods good name and such like is there not iust cause to arest vs for not discharging this duetie of loue which is so due vnto them This vnfaythfull dealing with the goodes of our neighbour howe greatly it did displease the Lorde and with what lawes he did restraine his people of Israel from the same the statutes and orders of that gouernement can best declare from whence it shall not be amisse to take some helpe in the interpretation of this commaundement In Exodus we doe reade that if any man should steale a sheepe and kill it or sell it he should restore for that one sheepe foure but if any man should steale an oxe and after kill it or sell it hee should restore fiue oxen for that oxe The reason why he must pay more for the oxe then for the sheepe was for that his neighbours losse was greater in the want of the one then of the other as bringing more profite to the owner thereof But if they were found with the theefe aliue not solde nor killed then must hee restore but the double of the oxe asse or shepe for that his obstinacie in this euil did not appeare so greate as when hee should make sale of them and turne them into gaine For it might be while they were aliue that he being touched with repentaunce woulde restore them againe but when they were solde or killed the theefe gaue greater token of his impudencie and confirmed obstinacie and the owner also was one degree further from any likelyhoode to come by them againe If the theefe be nothing worth and so not able to make restitution then as it
the eyes of others What shall we say then to those teachers that say there is no daunger nor feare saue when conception is perfected and the will hath wholy relēted and is with delight set downe in it Can there be any conference about the begetting of suche monsters that shall not haue great blame iustly layde vnto it Can thoughts that are married vnto the Lord euer approch vnto the bed of such desires and not bee conuict of faith and fidelitie broken with the Lord him selfe Can she any longer be accounted chaste that admitteth conference of long continuaunce about the enterteinment of others besides her lawfull husband Yet would the Papistes haue such blamelesse howe often soeuer they haue such vnchaste and vngodly meeting if by cōceiuing and fully consenting they bring not foorth sinne The counsel that is giuen vs by the Prophete Dauid is farre otherwise whervnto no doubt the apostle did allude in the place before alledged out of the epistle to the Ephesians for there we are charged that we should shake at such thinges and not perseuere in them but deale earnestly with our heart against them in our chamber and not suffer such continuance in meeting nor continuall meeting whereby this monstrous byrth and conception might iustly be feared There is then occasion offered to stand vpon our watche and to strengthen our affections against suche coueting desires whensoeuer they arise least this cōcupiscence by long dallying with our affections at length get within them and so ouerthrowe them The infection of sinne is so vniuersally dispersed ouer our nature that there is no part free from it for it hath entred and infected the thoughts thē selues and they are poysoned with it so that there is deadly daunger in following and persuing after the will of our owne thoughts The Apostle Paule when he setteth foorth the fearefull estate that hee was in before his conuersion which all men are in by nature for he putteth him selfe in the ranke with others speaketh no otherwise of it but thus That he followed the will of his owne flesh and of his owne thoughts No other guide had hee but run after the direction of his owne thoughts euen then whē his estate was most dānable We must therfore learne to suspect our thoghts if we wil be aduised by the Apostle and not to imagine with the doctours of Rome that our estate is good so long as the will when it shall haue wrastled at length getteth out not hauing wholy yealded nor flatly falne downe Thoughts therfore rūning this way after any thing of our neighbors in so doing make manifest declaration of their poyson corruptiō which if they shal haue no resistāce do carie vs headlong through the broad way into destruction If by grace they shall be stopped and resisted in that grace God is to be magnified yet we in that our corruption notwithstanding iustly are to be blamed and admonished therby to seeke for more ayde in that part of our thoughtes least if the tentation should lye sore vpon vs sathan shoulde that way get entrance into the heart It seemeth a hard doctrine that thoughts wishes and desires should be condemned that lawes should bee made for them and men charged with the ordering of them and no maruel if it appeare so vnto vs for it appeareth that the apostle Paule wold neuer haue suspected any danger in concupiscence lustes and desires if the lawe had not sayde Thou shalt not lust or desire Nay it appeareth plainely in that place that hee thought maruellous well of him selfe before he came to this commandement He tooke him self before to be liuing and in good liking towards God and godlinesse but as he confesseth after he had looked vpon this cōmandement and beheld him selfe a while in this part of the glasse he sawe him selfe plainly to be no body a dead man sold vnto sinne Howe necessarie then is it to sift our selues to examine vs in this commandemēt throughly that we may be humbled vnder the grace of God as apperteineth For if he so singular a man was not throughly cast down before he had wrastled with the iustice of god in this cōmandemēt how requisite is it that we shuld truly trie vs here least that in supposing that to be in vs which we want we becom carelesse in seeking the mercie of Christ without the which there is no hope In this commaundement therefore aboue all the rest it is required that wee be diligent and true tryers of our selues For those who haue no misliking of them selues for the lusting and coueting after the thinges of their neighbours whiche they doe perceiue to be in their thoughts haue no Christianitie in them to be accounted of Euill beeing misliked in trueth will be misliked wheresoeuer it shall be whether in worde thought or deede Euil being truly resisted wil be resisted euē in thought and therfore certein it is that he who neuer hath strouē with euil in his thoughts hath neuer truly strouen with sinne It was meete that the law should vtter all our euil and hide nothing of our vnrighteousnesse from vs that the manifolde corruption therof might force vs to seke the mediatour and peace-maker Christ that we beeing so many wayes conuicted of corruption in our selues might wholy giue ouer the opinion of our owne workes and meriting and so make much of the mercie offered by Iesus Christe which is so muche the more made of by how much we doe more cleerely see our vtter vndoeing without it If onely the acte of murther adulterie thefte and false wittnesse-bearing or the deliberate and setled consent vnto any of those should alone come in question in the cause and matter of sinne against our neighbour many an euil man would hope to make good shifte but when thoughts and desires vnto any of those are called for and examined it will cause any man to cast downe his courage and to fall a pleading of his pardon As before we were endaungered by the doctrine of Rome to conceiue sinne when they notwithstanding bad vs liue without any feare in that respect of sinne so long as we keepe our consent cleare in the matter So here if we shall hearken to their doctrine we come in daunger neuer to magnifie rightly the mercyes brought vs by Christ Iesus while we see not halfe the neede that we haue of him nor the halfe parte of the miserie that we are in without him For a mā may make good shifts if onely deedes and full consents be asked after and so in his owne iudgement no great benefite is obteyned by him that shall supply that whiche is lacking in his behalfe and therefore he maketh no greate haste to seeke after him But when thoughts desires are sifted he must of necessitie acknowledge him selfe greately befriended if so great want of his shal by an other be found answered We must looke in this glasse of the commandements and into this infinite nature of
while we were yet sinners and enimies vnto him Christ died for vs. The scripture beareth recorde that Christe died for the vngodly but as it is there affirmed hee is scarce to bee founde that will die for a good man What good man hathe euer beene found that would haue suche compassion as to offer himselfe to die for a godlesse person The Sonne of God giueth his life for vngodly men Meruell not at these wordes neither thinke there is any thing too muche spoken in this matter For in that Chapter it is saide plainely that Christe died for the vngodly for sinners for his enimies and al to commend the greatnesse of his loue It will be graunted of all men that in deede before the death and passion of Christ we were godlesse vngodly enimies to God without any hope of a better life But all men are not persuaded that we doe nowe come suche men into the worlde and continue so vntil by the special grace of God working with his worde we be reclaymed and refourmed whiche for that chaunge is called regeneration or newe birthe All men are not persuaded that when Christe beginneth Christianitie in any he doeth beginne with his enimie Yet doeth the Apostle S. Paule affirme that he as others was by nature the childe of wrath that before his calling he as other men was dead in trespasses and sinnes walking after the course of this worlde after the spirite that woorketh in the children of disobedience but GOD sayth he whiche is riche in mercie throughe his great loue wherewith hee loued vs euen when we were dead by sinnes hathe quickened vs. There is no doubt of it but that he who liueth the moste blamelesse life of all men in the worlde is an enimie vnto God and without all hope of any better life before this especiall woorking and calling of god I doe call Christianitie a speciall woorke of God because it is not to bee founde in the nature of any man how great good thing soeuer it seeme to haue in it but is a peculiar worke of god This is a matter needefull to stande vppon because it giueth vnto God the commendation of that loue whiche is not to be matched in the worlde And in denying this greatest kinde of louing dealing we darken and diminishe the glorie of his mercie appearing so clearely and so aboundantly herein we deale vnthankefully with GOD not giuing vnto him all the praise that of duetie belongeth vnto him If two seruauntes had receiued equall commodities and benefites of one maister the one hauing beene a verie profitable seruaunt to his maister the other a verie vnthrifte and not onely not profitable but also a waster of his goods should the vnthrift sufficiently acknowledge the liberalitie of his maister if he should confesse that he had receiued as muche of him as his fellowe-seruaunt making no mention in the meane time of his vnworthinesse in respect of his fellowe Euerie man seeth the good will of the maister to appeare more in the one then in the other and therefore he should iustly bee accounted vnthankfull if hee woulde not bothe thinke and confesse that he were more beholding to his maister then the other For true thankefulnesse causeth the benefite receiued after a certeine manner to remaine still in the benefactour by thankefull remembraunce not onely of the gifte but also of the maner and qualitie of the gifte especially when it addeth any thing to the worthinesse and deserte of the giuer The cause therefore is great and a parte of our thankfulnesse vnto God is in it to withstand with the Churche of Rome herein that not onely wee haue had these benefites that we haue from God but also that wee haue had them contrarie to our deseruing which vtterly ouerthroweth those workes of preparation and setting our selues in a towardnesse for the Lorde and maketh the benefite to remaine in God by his iust praise not only for the deede dooing but also for tne mercifull maner of dealing with vnworthie men wherin his loue is tryed to haue more in it then any affectiō that hath beene hearde of amongest men that we may truly say with the holy Ghoste not only that God hath loued the worlde but as it is saide in this place So God loued the world noting in that word So no common affection but the highest and greatest degree of loue By this that hathe beene saide before wee doe learne that God did beare tender affection towards his not onely before any deseruing hadde gone before to procure the same but also when as yet they were enimies vnto him and therefore the Apostle in the Epistle to the Ephesians bringeth the benefites of GOD to be considered in his free good purpose and gratious good will towardes vs beeing the head and spring thereof whiche addeth greatly euen to the greatest of his benefites And if the consideration thereof be omitted the whole deseruing of the benefactour is not acknowledged nor deserued praise rendered therevnto When the Apostle had giuen praises vnto God the father of our Lorde Iesus Christe for that he had blessed vs with all spirituall blessinges in heauenly things in Christe immediatly in the verse following which is the 4. in number he hath these wordes As he hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the worlde c. As if his loue towards vs had not begonne then first when those benefites were bestowed vpon vs but that his good will whereof those were testimonies and fruites was bent towardes vs before the beginning of the worlde whiche is the cause why he letteth vs to see those fruites not barely in them selues alone but in that good will which so long before was inclined towards vs And good will the longer it hath continued the more it is to be esteemed and the benefites of an olde friend and welwiller of long time haue iust occasion in thē to be the more accounted of It is not to be merueyled then why with the gift he bringeth in also the good will of the giuer For the gifte is made thereby the greater bothe for that the good will hath beene of long time continued and also for that it is his goodwill onely and not any thinge either had allready or else hoped for from vs that hath brought all these benefites vnto vs as it followeth in the nexte verse in expresse wordes That he hath predestinate vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christe according to the good pleasure of his will by whome as it is there in like manner affirmed we haue redemption through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his riche grace In all these places we are let to vnderstand that all our benefites euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes came from the good pleasure of his will and the riches of his grace and not as hath beene saide before from any thing of ours either had already or else hoped for Let vs learne therefore to set his loue before
lawe to be found in like manner within his heart that prayeth in trueth vnto the Lorde For if the keeping of the lawe be vnto any his delighte the transgressing of the lawe in like manner must bee his griefe It is plaine then that true prayer must not onely be directed by the lawe and commandement of God but also must ioyne in desire and affection with the same The glorie of God is coupled to his word and therfore must praiers being the desire of the heart goe in desire after the same according as we haue the example and practise of the Prophet Dauid at large in the Psalmes where it is apparanr that hee placeth all the honour of God in his word sometimes praying to haue his petitions graunted that he might keepe his commandementes some times taking comfort assuring himselfe that he should he heard because he had a loue vnto his law plainly affirming as appeareth in that Psalme that saluation is far from the vngodly because they seeke not his statutes wherein his glorie consisteth as we may learne if we goe no further for profe therof then vnto the Lords prayer it selfe For after mention made of hallowing of his name comming of his kingdome there followeth the request of doing his will here in earthe because his honour glorie and dominion is seene in the obedience to his will reuealed in his worde Herein we may clearely see sentence giuen against all such prayers as proceeding from a heart ignorant of the word of God go after their owne good deuotion whiche is the honouring of them selues and not after his good will reuealed in his word which they are vtterly ignorant of Where we may clearely see what account is to be made of Popishe prayers where the woorde of God is not knowen of the moste and not regarded of the rest holding it for a sure principle that ignorance is the mother of deuotion To all suche prayers the Lorde doth answere according as it is written in the Prouerbes They shal call vpon me but I will not answer they shal seeke me early but they shal not finde me because they hated knowledge and did not choose the feare of the Lord. A iust recōpence of reward not to be heard when they in their distresse shal by prayer speake vnto the Lord because they refused to heare the Lorde speaking to them in his word Here also are the prayers of all suche reproued notwithstanding they haue knowlege of the word and followe not their good intents in praying vnto the Lorde as haue no affection ioye delite nor good liking to see the lawe and the dueties thereof perfourmed in their life nor yet any vexation or griefe in themselues for transgressing the same For prayer is a desire of the minde and therefore most desirously affected after that which it seketh whiche is the lawe and commaundement of the Lorde Whereby it appeareth also how fruitelesse those prayers are that come but from the lippes alone the heart being altogether holden with other matters and occupied wholy about other delightes The thirde thing that is required to prayer is that it proceede from an emptie heart whiche findeth want in it selfe of those thinges that it beggeth For if a man feele no want of that which he asketh he can neuer be earnest in asking The daunger heereof is then moste to be feared when we pray for those thinges the meanes wherof we haue at home as when a man prayeth for successe in a matter hauing either such wisedome in him selfe such wealth or such friendes that it is likely their nede to be no doubt made of the successe It is hard in such like causes to come to God with an emptie heart to begg it as earnestly of him as if we wanted all such helpes And yet is all our prayers but a dallying with God when wee shall nourish a secure opinion in our harts that we haue that helpe within vs for the which in wordes we are become sutors vnto him in our prayers Whē a wise man goeth aboute matters that vsually are compassed by wisedome or a rich-man about that that commonly we see compassed by riches a learned man about that which is perfourmed by learning and the like is to be thought of all such like matters cōmonly there are either no prayers at all to God for the accomplishing of suche matters or if there be any they are so colde and fainte as bewraieth this secret opinion to be nouseled within that they shall not do greately amisse though there come no helpe by their prayers For surely if the help at home were in truth doubted not to be sufficient the sute for relief abroad would be earnest The importunate sutor is hee that speedeth of his sute as we reade in Luke and he that is pinched with want wil spare no speech for his relief but he that feeleth no want is to learne as yet how to beg The prayers therefore of such as seldome or neuer examine themselues by the lawe and commandementes of God are greatly to be feared nay are plainely to be charged with dallying in their petitions with the lord For there is the sight of all our pouertie plaine and euident and all the sight that we haue of it otherwise is but a false light had in the shoppe of sathan to vtter counterfet wares withal The fourth thing required to praier is that we haue an assured hope of helpe from the Lorde a sure beliefe to obteine that which we doe aske for therefore is prayer an acceptable worship to God because it ascribeth vnto him that honor of mercie to be helpful to our miserie whē he is called vpon neither tying his mercie to good deseruing nor yet his power to secōd causes as if where they had no deseruing he had no mercy or where they had no instrumēts of helping he had no hand or power to helpe God is not truely honoured of the wicked where either he is taken to be but a vaine name dead thing in whom there is neither mercie nor power to be found in our necessitie as the Epicures bellie-gods think whatsoeuer they say or else suche weakenesse and imperfection in bothe as cannot goe but by holdes and helpes from vs. Our sinne then may not weaken our faith be it neuer so greate when there is true repentaunce for it For that should darken the praise of his mercie nor yet the want of all those meanes that haue any likelihoode to helpe the matter must driue vs to despaire for that were to abridge and diminishe his power The praier therfore that is ioyned with faith cannot but be acceptable vnto him giuing him the honour that is due vnto his name and because of that being an acceptable seruice and sacrifice vnto the lord But prayer without faith despayring to be heard dishonoureth the Lorde and is returned without any comforte or hope of helpe according as it is saide by the Apostle
tempest or health doeth succeede sicknesse when deliuerance commeth after imprisonment or plentie after pouertie These are so often sene by experience to come one after an other that notwithstanding men haue in their distresse prayed for them yet hardly can they be brought to think that they are blessings graunted to faithful prayer but rather imagine that they are thinges cast heere and there vpon men at aduenture And therefore where men are in those or such like distresses they hardly or not at all conceiue any hope to he heard Seldome doe they make any sute vnto God in faith especially if those afflictions lay sore vpon them but the children of God knowing that they are promised to haue the Lorde neere vnto them in all that they shall call vnto him for and that they shal be heard for the thing of the day vpon his day as their occasion requireth so doe they seeke vnto the Lord beeing sure in continuance to finde comforte at his hands and why they knowe assuredly that the Lord will haue his mercie and power tryed and seene heere vppon the earth in hearing the requestes of his in their distresse that by that meanes hee may bee truely feared and honoured of them according as it is proued in the booke of Kinges and also that by his hearing of their petitions in those their distresses they may be confirmed in the persuasion that GOD fauoureth them remitteth their sinnes and beeing at one with them is fauourably inclined vnto them in all their needfull demaunds Whosoeuer shall diligently consider of the places of Scripture in the olde Testament applied by the Apostle to the forgiuenes of sinns shall easily perceiue that the godlie haue taken their deliueraunce from their distresses as pledges of the remission of their sinnes and assuraunces that God for Christe was at one with them For their temporall blessings were not receiued of them but as confirmations of his reconciliation with them whiche proueth that which was said before that the Lord heareth the prayer of his in their necessitie to strengthē their faith in the remission of sinnes and persuasion that GOD for Christ is beecome fatherly affected towardes them his promises being visibly confirmed to them In Deuteronomie there are promises made vnto them that do giue diligent heede vnto the law and commandements of God to obey them that they shal be blessed in the fruit of their body in the fruit of their cattel in their comming in and going out in all that they shall put their handes vnto in causing their enimies that rise against them to fall before their face and the cause is added in the tenth verse in these wordes Then all the people of the earth shall see that the name of the Lorde is called vppon ouer thee and they shall be affrayde of thee It is therfore moste assured that the Lord will be seene to bee the GOD of his and to haue a kingdome heere vppon earth by graunting them their requestes when they shall call vppon him in their distresse by leauing outwarde blessings as plaine confirmations of his inwarde heartie good will that he beareth towardes them And for this cause doe his people craue those temporall benefites euen that it may bee seene that he ruleth vppon earth standing by his as he hath promised Wherefore whensoeuer their enimies oppresse them or by the want of any his accustomed benefites they seeme not to bee regarded of the Lord they cōplaine vnto him not so much in the consideration of their necessitie as in regarde of his glorie vsing these such like kind of speeches Wherfore should the Heathen say Where is now their GOD As if their chiefe care were to haue the Lorde his glorie vpholden in the confirmation of his goodnesse promised vnto his whiche is called into doubt of the vngodlie while they see those that accounted thēselues for his in affliction and oppression necessitie and want as if they were not regarded of him wherby the vngodly are imboldened the more to oppresse the righteous by calling into question the trueth of his promises made vnto his confirmed the rather in the continuing of their disobedience Very fitly therefore is the hallowing of his name the comming of his kingdome and the doeing of his wil set before the request of outwarde necessities because wee should demaund them rather in respect of his glorie that he might therby haue a name and kingdome here in earth and his wil perfourmed rather then wee to haue therein our alone necessitie releeued The godly in like manner returne the whole praise vnto him euen whē those things are graunted vnto them that seeme to be moste casuall and to come at aduenture Therfore in that Psalme before mentioned they are willed to praise the Lord and to tel vnto others what he hath done for thē when those things which seeme to be meere casuall and comming by fortune and chaunce are obteyned which clause of praysing the Lord and telling vnto others what thinges he hath graunted at the requestes of their prayers is added in the psalme vnto the end of euery seuerall benefite graunted vnto thē But al men cōceiue not this doctrin they are his children alone who in hart are assured that these which cōmonly we cal casual things are disposed by him at the pleasure of his will graūted as pledges of his goodwill to those that in trueth call vpon him and therfore in the last verse of that psalme it is said Who is wise that he may obserue these things because they be onely his children that haue this wisdome to obserue this to mark it to knowe that he disposeth these outwarde things to the good of his as pledges of his fatherly goodnes towards them and therfore they onely call vpon him for them in faith and in receiuing them doe assuredly in their heart reckon them as benefites receiued of him confirming their faith therby in the assurance of his especiall goodwill towards them By this that hath bene said it doth appeare that when we are oppressed with anguish of heart or vexed with any calamitie either of bodie or minde wee haue to seke our remedie at the hands of the Lord by prayer in assured hope to receiue no smal comfort thereby if in faith and hope of his mercies we continue in calling vppon his name It is a very hard matter and the worke of faith alone when a man is sore distressed seeth no means to escape then to call vpon God with faith and hope of beeing heard and if help shall come it is as hard a matter to ascribe it vnto the mercies of God as the fruit of prayer and an assured token of his goodwil rendering from the ground of our hart the praise that is due vnto him for it and strengthening our faith therby in the persuasiō of his mercies towards vs The seruāt of God glorifieth God in these things acknowledging from his hearte that God is the giuer
necessitie whatsoeuer indureth longer then they wishe or increase vpon them after their suite made for deliueraunce because the Lord wil worke a more glorious worke in their deliuerance for the comfort and increase of their faithe notwithstanding it be some long time after shall we say the Lorde hathe reiected their prayers because he hath delayed so long God forbidde For the Lorde according to the good counsel of his will hath not iustified the innocencie and good causes of his sometimes no not before their death And as it hath bene said of the time so likewise is it to be thought of the meanes maner of helping relieuing vs if that hath ben other then we coulde haue prescribed shall we denie the Lord to haue hearde our suites because the helpe that we haue had hath not beene in the same manner that we haue conceiued to be best This one thing we haue often to call to remembrance that before the request of these outward necessities there is the desire of doing his will here in earth to teach vs that the Lord is thus helpful in outward necessities oppressing them vnto the prayers of suche as haue not onely the knowledge of his will but also the desire to do it For that goeth before the other in our prayer therfore in our desire in as much as true praier goeth not without the desire of the hart vnto the request of the tongue Those therfore that looke for these outward blessinges when they call vnto the Lord must learne both to know what his will is reueled in his word also to haue a desire to doe the same For vnto those that thus worship him the Lord hath promised to incline his eare according as it is written in these wordes We knowe that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God doth his wil him heareth he putting them in hope of beeing heard that be worshipers of him making those the worshippers not that do vnto him whatsoeuer liketh them but that are doers of his liking wil which is opened to vs in his word To the confirmation of this may be added that which is written in the first Epistle of S. Iohn in these wordes whatsoeuer we aske we receiue of him because we do those thinges whiche are pleasing in his sight By this it appeareth that witches sorcerers whiche wil haue the name of wisemen and wise women who are thought to do so many things with prayer cannot preuaile with the Lorde to obteine these outward thinges of him in fauour and goodwil for of all people they are the most ignorant of his will therefore of his worship But as euen nowe it was proued if any man be a worshipper of God and a doer of his will him heareth he Those are they to whō the Lord hath made promise that he wil be mercifully inclined vnto in their prayers petitions he is nighe vnto al that call vpon him in trueth he wil fulfil the desire of thē that feare him he wil heare their crie and will saue them The Lord preserueth all them that loue him saith the holy Ghost It may so fal out that the prayers of witches such like may be instrumentes of his iustice for the punishment of sinne in others and for the hardening of their own harts but it is as sure as the lord liueth that they neuer obteine any thing by their prayers to their good in fauour good liking of the lord But as for the seruants of God they are in assured hope to haue their prayers heard whē they shal cal vpon the Lord in their outward distresses for they are persuaded as the truth is in deede that it standeth vpō the name glorie of the Lord to stand by his in their necessities for to succour and help them as the matter shall require Wherefore they require it as a part of his owne glorie as an argument and assurance that he reigneth here in earth as a matter that is agreeable to his good pleasure and will according as they haue learned out of his word whiche giueth them an assured hope of beeing heard and maketh them bolde to call vppon him knowing that his owne glorie the renoune of his owne kingdome and a matter that is agreeable to his owne good liking and will is in hande while their distresses wants are brought before the Lord to be holpen relieued by him A manifest confirmation proofe of this is to be found in the Psalme In the whiche place the prophet speaketh much in the beginning of extolling the name of God of meditating the beautie of his glorious maiestie of shewing foorth the glorie of his kingdome and speaking of his power after this it followeth that the Lorde vpholdeth all that fall that he fulfilleth the desire of them that feare him that he wil heare their crie and will saue them as if the glorie of his name and renoune of his kingdome were seene in this to lift vp his that fall to heare their crie and saue them And no doubt the Lord will haue it knowen here vpon earth that he is Lorde ouer all true faithfull in his word by the helpe and defence that he will graunt vnto his whensoeuer in their distresse they shal by faithful prayer resorte vnto him His meaning is to leaue manifest and plaine profe that he ruleth herein earth euē by that mercie that he hath to bestowe vpon his who cal and crie vnto him in their necessitie with an assured hope of being heard For the glorie of his name the honour of his kingdome and the good pleasure of his will go ioyntly together with the hearing regarding of their cause according as they are set before this petition in this fourme of prayer that is prescribed by the lord Where before we make mention of daily bread there is request made for the halowing of his name the comming of his kingdome and dooing his wil because euen then when he relieueth the necessities of his that call vpon him his name is hallowed his kingdome commeth and that is perfourmed which is agreeable to his will. This cannot but minister hope and comfort vnto vs in all our necessities that his honour and glorie is after a manner darkened in our distresse and as it were suffereth in the same which the lord God cannot but erecte and aduaunce and therefore fauour our distresse wherevnto his owne honour is so neerely ioyned Nowe let vs pray c. ¶ The xvij Lecture vppon the 12. and 13. verses 12 And forgiue vs our debts as we also forgiue our debters 13 And lead vs not into temptation but deliuer vs frō euil for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for euer Amen IN this petition we do require the forgiuenesse of our sinnes wherein wee are to vnderstande that by this worde sinne is not onely ment the guiltines that we haue brought in
distresse he sendeth his word and healeth them deliuereth them from their graues It were an infinite worke to recite those places in the booke of Psalmes that proue the mercies of God to remoue punishmentes from the offenders when they shall in true repentaunce turne vnto him It is a harde matter in great affliction to persuade the man that is sore afflicted for his sinne that there is mercy with the lord to remoue his punishment if he shal truly humble him selfe in repētance for his sinne yet we see what plaine proofes there are of the same to increase our faith in the persuasion to haue our sinnes forgiuen when we are truely grieued and penitent for the same This is a doctrine most needefull to be stoode vpon because the blessing that the Lord hath promised to bestowe vpon his by reason of our corruption are rather deliueraunces from euill then preseruations in any continuall course of prosperitie I say they rather come in after our affliction then stande continually with vs to keepe affliction from vs whiche many mistaking haue stumbled at the afflicted estate of the children of God but the worde of the Lord doth guide those that be his to looke to the end of the vpright man Marke the vpright man and beholde the iust for the end of that man is peace saith the Prophet And almoste all those requestes that Solomon maketh for the people of God are to haue blessinges benefites procured vnto them after their troubles afflicted estate We see therefore howe needefull it is to holde this doctrine of forgiuenesse of sinnes that we stumble not at the crosse of Christ that we do not murmur or despaire in our affliction that we should not shake off hope notwithstanding our grief whatsoeuer haue had long continuance and abode with vs that we nourishe no wrong iudgement of the estate of the Church and children of God that we decide not with the vngodly against the seruants saints of god A tentation that had almost shaken the faithful seruant and prophet of God Dauid vntil he went into the sanctuarie of the Lord to inquire the end of those men This doctrine ouerthroweth the heresie of the Nouatians who do denie the forgiuenes of sinns after baptisme That which is ioyned with this petition of our forgiuing them that trespasse against vs noteth not any deseruing to haue our sins forgiuen by reasō of our forgiuing of them that offend against vs for then we should not pray to haue them forgiuen seing we remoue them by deserte but is added for our instruction and for our comfort For our instruction to teache vs that the Lord requireth this at our handes that we should be mercifull because he is mercifull For our comforte to tell vs that if we whiche be men can remitte the wronges and iniuries done against vs much more will our heauenly Father who is without comparison aboue man in mercie and compassion forgiue the offences sinnes of his seruants when they shal in true repentaunce seeke vnto him For the same it is needefull for our infirmitie to receiue persuasion of his mercie especially when his iudgement shal be vppon vs and punishment which is the assured signe of his displeasure shall presse vs it is then a harde matter to conceiue hope that the Lorde will forgiue vs For infidelitie is as deepely rooted in our heartes as any sinne or iniquitie whatsoeuer therefore the Lord hath left vs who are taught by his spirite to forgiue vnto others their offences cōmitted against vs an assured hope to finde fauour at his handes who will neuer be found inferiour vnto man in mercie Therfore is it thus written in Luke Forgiue vnto vs our sinnes for euen we forgiue euerie man that is indebted to vs And as it is necessarie that we should bee vpholden with this hope so is it requisite that we remember that which is written in Matthew If ye doe not forgiue men their trespasses no more will your father forgiue you your trespasses to admonish vs that the Lorde will haue his to resemble him and heare this his image of mercie before the world If we be taught to remitt and forgiue offences vnto others when they shall haue done vs any wrong we may easily perceiue that the Lord will not haue vs to cherish our selues in the hope of beeing heard when wee shall offer vnto other iniurie and wrong For if a Christian be admonished in this petition so far to profite that hee learne to forgiue iniuries done against him much more would the Lorde haue him to be farre from offending others by iniuries done vnto them The last petition wherin we craue that the Lord would not leade vs into temptation but deliuer vs from euill doeth admonish vs that the almightie vseth to punish sinne with sinne that when men shall haue long continued in sinne they shall become so blinde and hardened therein by the iuste iudgemente of GOD that hardly sometime after muche affliction they can bee cured of the same That the godly are subiecte vnto a kinde of hardnesse of heart which is a punishment for their former sinnes laide vpon them from the Lord as may appeare by that prayer of the church of God whereof wee reade in the Prophet Isaie in these wordes O Lorde why haste thou made vs to erre from thy wayes and hardened our heartes from thy feare returne for thy seruaunts sake and for the tribes of thine inheritaunce It is not that hardnesse of heart whiche is peculiar to the reprobate that is mentioned in this place but to bee so taken with the snares of sinne and so ledd into temptation and blinded intangled therein as the godlyest that lyueth may bee and yet afterwarde by affliction or some other meanes deliuered from the same For when it pleaseth the Lorde to lay affliction vpon his no doubt there is in them this erring from his wayes and hardnesse of hearte from his feare which the Churche of GOD complaineth of in this place and whiche the Lorde purposeth to cure For he is not cruel to punish when there is no cause but his meaning is to mollifie their harde heartes thereby that they may be humbled vnder the gouernement of his holie worde We pray therfore in this petition that we may not bee hardened through the deceiptfulnesse of sinne for the auoyding wherof the children of God are admonished in the Epistle to the Hebrues to exhorte one another Exhorte one another sayeth the holie Ghoste while it is called to day least any of you bee hardened through the deceiptfulnesse of sinne This petition of not leading vs into temptation but deliuering vs from euil doth wel followe that of forgiuenesse of sinnes For when it pleaseth the Lord to forgiue sin he deliuereth them from beeing hardened therein giuing them the sight of the deceipt that is in it and also power and maisterie ouer the rage thereof In that prayer of Solomon whiche
that might prouoke me thervnto It was a saying sometime of Asia that it was no prayse neuer to haue seene it but to haue liued temperately in Asia was praise worthie so many were the allurements so great was the intemperancie thereof I thinke we may nowe altering the words reteine the trueth of the matter if we should say it were no great matter neuer to haue seene the Courtes of Princes but to haue liued Christianly in those Courtes were a special work of Christ in his And therefore Madame as sometimes I spake in the hearing of your honour so nowe I say againe that where the assault of the aduersarie lyeth sorest against any there wisedome would that the instruments to beare off and to beate backe the same should be more in number and stronger in effect And for this cause we do reade that in the Courte of Israel the Prince himselfe who for the number and weight of affaires was as may be thought by some iust title to be priuileged aboue the rest might not be exempted from keeping this diligent watch and warde in his owne person by reading all the dayes of his life in the lawes of his God against the dangers that by reason of that place he was in great danger of diuers wherof after they are recited in Deuteronomie immediately the holy Ghost giueth the medicine for them whiche is to be occupied in the lawes of his God all the dayes of his life If any by daily meditation in the lawe of God shall thus exalt wisdome that is the word of God by making it the chief delighte of their heart beside the auoyding of these daungers and suche like there is a promise passed from the Lord that wisedome shall exalt them If they shall sett her in place and estimation aboue all other things she will requite it againe by aduauncing their honour and estate aboue the condition of others but if they shall make no more of her but as a common thing she wil answer them in like measure againe to leaue thē in place estimation with the common worst sort of men The honour therfore of aduauncement which all men are giuen to haue so great lyking of commeth neither from the East nor frō the West but from the Lord him self this true honour wayteth vpon all of them whom imploy them selues their countenance and their credite to honour and aduaunce this wisedome which is the worde of god Which thing that it may abound in you Madame daily more and more and in his honour to whome the Lorde hath ioyned you and that by the meanes thereof you may so continue your life as that you shall not feare to dye as in dutie I am for many benefites receiued moste bounden so I doe moste humbly craue it of our mercifull GOD to whose fatherly prouidence ceassing to adde any thing further and remayning to perfourme all duties from time to time that I shall bee enabled vnto I do most humbly committee your Honour ¿ ¿ Your honors moste humble to commaund in the Lorde Iohn Knewstub ❧ THE LECTVRES of Iohn Knewstub vpon the twentith chapter of Exodus and certeine other places of Scripture The first Lecture vpon the firste and seconde verse of the same Chapter THEN God spake al these words saying I am the Lord thy God 2 Which haue brought thee out of the lande of Aegypt out of the house of bondage IT hath alwayes beene and now is a frutefull trauaile of men to drawe arts and sciences plentifully laide out into briefe heads and some few general rules and principles not onely for memorie whiche in many and long discourses becommeth so intangled as it can hardly with any fruit get out but also for practise whiche of necessitie muste be so much the later as it shall be longer before we learne the matters to be practised and the slower we are in perusing matters to be done the slacker must we be in the performance therof But yet all this notwithstanding aswell reason as the practise of the learned might easily be auoided bicause all is but the reason and practise of man if the onely wise God had not leafte vnto vs the whole doctrine of Christianitie comprehended in verie fewe words examples whereof we haue diuerse bothe in the olde and newe Testamente whiche may be a sufficient warrant for enterprising thus briefly to comprehend Christianitie If any shall take exception against the preaching and opening of the lawe in this cleare lighte of the gospell calling it as it is called in the seconde Epistle to the Corinthes the ministerie of death the killing letter let him vnderstand that the holie ghost in the same place speaketh of the lawe without Christe what it worketh in our infirmitie whereas otherwise of the law being considered in the couenant that is in Christ it is truely saide by the Prophet in the Psalme The lawe of the Lorde is perfect conuerting the soule the statues of the Lorde reioyce the heart c. At the publishing of this lawe of God there was great terrour feare on euery side For as appeareth in this former chapter the mount Synai was all on smoke and the Lorde came downe vpon it in fier and the smoke thereof ascended as the smoke of a fornace and all the mount trembled excedingly The people hearing the thunders and lightnings and the sounde of the trumpet seeing the mounteine smoking and feeling such terrible trembling and shaking of the earth fled and stoode a farre off making earnest suite vnto Moses that he would speake vnto them and that they might not heare the Lorde least they died so great was their feare and so woonderfully were they amased at the matter It was very requisite and necessarie that this maiestie of the lord should come in with the entrance of his worde For we are giuen to make small reckoning of it lightly to reiect the authoritie thereof For doe not thousands imagine that they sufficiently reuerence the maiestie of the Lord when notwithstanding they liue without all awe feare and reuerence of his word Nedeful therefore was it nay most necessary that the maiestie of the Lord should visibly come forth after a glorious maner at the deliuery of the word that men might vnderstand that the neglect of the worde is the contempt of the maiestie and honor of the Lorde For the Lorde hath coupled his honor and glorie to his word so that they can not neglect the one but that they must in so doing cōtemne and despise the other Those plentifull testimonies that are recited to the Hebrues to aduaunce the dignitie of Christe prouing his diuinitie and giuing him superioritie aboue the Angels are in the seconde chapter applied by way of exhortation to the reuerencing of his worde telling them that if the worde spoken by angels was ratified and that euery disobedience receiued a iust recompence of rewarde how could they
the sinne aboue all other to offend againste his owne bodie whiche doth committe it Neither are these two especiall braunches of filthinesse forbidden alone in this commandement but also all other vncleannesse and losenesse of life in this kinde and degree The meanes also whiche bring them on and do begett them or being begotten doe cherrish and mainteine them are here forbidden in this commandement as the want of temperaunce and sobrietie in apparell meate and drinke idlenesse euil companie euil speche and filthie communication in the which whiles we doe cherrishe our selues not bridling our affections we do tempt the Lord and running vppon the rockes that he hath forbidden doe hazarde our chaste behauiour For we haue no warrant of his safe conducting of vs vnder those sayles of vncleannesse but threatening that in so dooing we shall make shipwracke of all honest and chast behauiour For to walke in such wayes hathe no promise of protection from him they are not the wayes which he hath promised to prosper It doth become a christiā which loketh for mercie from Christ to humble himselfe vnto all suche conuersation as he is well assured that the Lorde imbraceth that hee may stande vnder certeyne hope of fauour and mercie from his handes For these thinges before recited and suche like are we forewarned of in the Scriptures to beware of as those thinges that lie in waite to deceiue vs and lay siege vnto our good conuersation to giue it an ouerthrowe Neither is the assault so weake as we suppose commonly that it neede not to be feared but so strong as beeing continued it preuaileth and corrupteth our good conuersation according as it is written to the Corinthes Be not deceiued saith the Apostle euill speeche corrupteth good maners By this one example of euil speech we may learne howe to iudge of all the rest It is not lightly to be passed ouer that he willeth vs not to be deceiued herein For this watche-woorde signifieth that our nature conceiueth not so hardly of the matter and therefore is the sooner to be deceiued by it This forespeeche I say pointeth out the ticklenesse of our corrupte nature and is vsed of the Apostle elsewhere after he hathe giuen admonition to the faithful for auoyding of the like matters as filthinesse foolishe talking and iesting concluding with these wordes Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for for such things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience We suspect no danger in these thinges but the onely wise God biddeth vs take heede that we be not deceiued Can we nowe continue without feare of these enimies when the holy Ghost hath descried the daunger of them with so many blastes of his owne trumpet or dare we say there will followe no harme when the holy Ghost saith in plaine words that it doeth corrupt good manners and that for suche thinges the wrath of God commeth vppon the children of disobedience And euen in this commaundement we see that the holy Ghoste doth vouchesafe them none other name then the name of adulterie For sure it is that vnder this word they are forbidden by the testimonie of all the learned therefore it is well to be considered howe the holy Ghoste doth terme it and his reason whie he will haue it knowne by that name Sure it is that he is well acquainted with our nature which is accustomed to make small accompt of great euils and therefore to giue them names accordingly he is constrained to name the childe himselfe and cal it adulterie willing vs so to take it and to thinke no better of it whensoeuer we shall let the reyne goe to our affections not restraining them in these and suche like thinges The Prophet Ezechiel saieth in expresse wordes that pride fulnesse of bread and aboundance of idlenesse were the sinnes of Sodome that brought downe fire brimstone frō heauen vpon them Thus the holy Ghost writeth the meanes of vncleannes and filthinesse blameth them for al that punishment that followed their abhominable vncleannesse and filthinesse not to be named teaching vs thereby that we may not mainteine this excessiue eating and drinking proude and wanton attyreing of our selues and surfetting vnder the name of good fellowshippe ciuil behauiour and suche like titles but that we knowe them by the names whiche the holy Ghoste hathe giuen vnto them who knoweth better then we what they are and therefore hathe giuen them their names accordingly Our nature if wee knewe it as the trueth is needeth not to be made tame vnto sathan by any such meanes We are of our selues inclined too much to imbrace him and nothing so wylde that way as were to be wished Being therefore so ouertractable of our selues what madnesse is it to offer him those blockes of aduauntage wherby his temptations with more spede ease may mount vpon vs and thus willingly to holde the stirrup to our owne destruction The heart of man beeing the founteine from whence commeth good or badde may not be suffered to goe at libertie after vnchaste thoughtes but must be kept in with the feare of god For out of the heart of man as sayth our sauiour Christ proceede euil thoughtes adulteries fornication vncleannesse a wicked eye All these euils come from within and defile a man They are not therfore to be cherrished and followed after but to be repressed and beaten backe of so many as feare the Lorde The daunger is not only of the soule in time to come but as experience telleth vs in cherrishing of vncleane thoughtes there is perill towardes the reason and witte of man For howe often falleth it out that men by giuing themselues ouer vnto these thoughtes become madde voyde of witte reason not able to gouerne them selues like other men And therefore hathe that vertue whiche represseth these affections a name with the Graecians which carrieth with it the signification of that fruite and effecte whiche doeth followe it whiche is the preseruation and safetie of the minde For moderation and temperance in this part is the health and soundenesse of the minde and witte of man which while it is wanting is either vtterly ouerthrowen or else so feeble and weake as euerie one may descrie it for the dulnesse and feeblenesse that is in it Adulterie being forbidden the godly chaste life of married folkes must needes be commaunded which that it may be perfourmed Almightie God requireth of his children that they do match thē selues with such as feare him and serue him after his worde suche hathe he promised to blesse As for those that marrie for riches beautie and suche outward thinges when there is not the feare and true worshippe of God ioyned withal they haue alwayes tasted of most grieuous plagues from the hand of the Lorde This vnequall matching of the godly and godlesse for so I call all of them that are not humbled to serue God after his word was the cause of that vniuersal floude whiche
deale in the spirit of meekenesse and mildenesse according as wee are willed in the Epistle to the Galathians Brethren if any man be fallen by occasion into any fault ye which are spirituall restore suche one with the spirite of meekenesse considering thy selfe least thou also bee tempted As the faintnesse and want of loue which leaueth a man in his sinne is iustly reproued so that blustering heate that of a medicine in like manner maketh a poyson is no lesse to bee reproued of want of loue towarde the good name and estimation of our brother For there is no man that can easily growe into any good lykinge of those men in whom he perceiueth there is no affection towards him neither yet can well digest sharpe medicines though otherwise neuer so wholesōe if there shall be no suger to make it sweete withall We must therefore take heede lest the medicine become vnprofitable by our vnskilfull handling it and so we become no couerers of sinne but rather by dealing so rudely make him cast off all care of goodnes letting the raynes go to all libertie of life with the vngodlie while he seeth him selfe so hardly dealt with the godly to haue cast off all hope care of him This is the cause why the Apostle in the Epistle to the Thessalo willeth them to admonish those as brethren who for their euill conuersation did iustly stande excommunicate Haue no familiar companie with him sayth the Apostle that hee may be ashamed yet account him not as an enimie but admonish him as a brother The nature of man is easily carried to offend in this parte euen to seeme to come into some opinion of holinesse by counting all others as prophane and reprouing them in such a blustering māner as carrieth with it no signification at all of louing affection towards them We are therefore diligently to obserue that our heartes wittnesse vnto our selues the care we haue by our admonition to haue them reclaimed from those sinnes and then that we consider what manner of dealing they are moste like to profite by that notwithstanding wee may deale with some more roundly then with others yet euē those may see them selues not despised of vs nor yet altogether despaired of that they should be in a manner caused to fall into the acquaintance and fellowship of the vngodly and lest that they should onely see our affections eased vpon thē without further care of their good If there be good affection towarde thē in deed we shal easily auoyd both the extremes that neither we ceasse to admonish them at al neither yet in admonishing be ouer bitter towardes them It is sure that loue wil moderate both hauing no other end in reprouing opening the euill but to keepe him from persisting in it In the handling also of the matter this louing affection wil direct him to consult what manner of dealing is likely to doe most good for al men are not able to beare alike that after consultation had he may procede accordingly alwayes remēbring that what sharpnesse soeuer either the thing it selfe or the disposition of the man shall require yet it may appeare that we seeke not to haue the man defamed but the sinne cured If in this behalfe the matter shall be cleere bothe in our conscience and the iudgemēt of those who are accustomed to weigh things by the wisdome of the word it skilleth not though those men holde them not contented who would haue sinne touched in whose opinion the mildest proceeding against sinne that can be is too boysterous To conclude this parte let vs be well aduised that wee speake not of the infirmities of our brethren but with this affection and meaning that either they may be reclaymed or others feared from offending in the like while they shall learne the great daunger thereof and that there be no want of loue in vs towarde our brethren that shall sett our tonges a worke that way without meaning of any good either towarde him or them that heare vs. There is an other vice and mischiefe of the tongue reproued in this commaundement when the wordes or deedes of our neighbours are by the want of this loue wroūg either into a sense plaine diuerse from their meaning or else not so well interpreted as they might be taken if they had found any indifferent iudge It is an euil practise mischiefous notwithstanding it be common at this day to bring a mans owne wordes against him chaūged into an other sense purpose and meaning then euer the man had in vttering of them which is not onely vsuall in wordes taken from the mouth of the speaker but also in speeches penned as plainly as may be For what is more vsual with many then to stand so vppon some one or fewe bare wordes of a statute bond or obligation that the meaning of the same shall be cleane altered and the true intent and purpose of the lawe-maker no longer sought for But as it did not acquire the Iewes of false wittnesse-bearing against the Lord Iesus notwithstanding they vsed some of his wordes because they had altered his meaning wringing his wordes to the building vpp of the temple at Hierusalem within three dayes whiche he ment of the Temple of his bodie no more shall it be able before GOD to discharge any man that he hath stood vpon some words of a statute or obligation when his conscience shal accuse him that he hath swarued from the meaning and purpose thereof As for the dealings of those men who are accustomed to expounde those thinges into the worst parte which might haue a good meaning if they were indifferētly weighed or for some infirmitie ioyned with a good action doe disgrace and discredite the whole this commaundement must necessarily reproue them when it condemneth as we haue heard before the carelesse blazing abroade of thinges altogether euil in them selues charging vs with the couering of them by friendlie and priuate admonition If things altogether euil must be cured with a godly and friendly couert of priuate admonition had for that purpose those thē which if they were wel weighed might be well taken must finde more friendship at our hand then to haue open outcryes made against them Neither can it be lawfull for a Christian where some infirmitie or wante hath bene found with a good deed vnder pretēce of hatred had therevnto to worke the discredite of the whole and in so doeing to vndermine the workmanship of God plainely appearing therein It is wonderful to see our corrupte nature what poyson it vttereth in such matters as these be We shal see some men that are litle moued or touched with infirmities and faultes of their owne whiche are not in parte but wholy euil and yet for all that so boyling at these little and as I may tearme them halfe euils of others for so they are in respect of their owne that a man would iudge them to be great zealous men when as
all his benefites as the only cause and spring therof For if we shall beginne at our selues to say that either that which already wee had as a towardenes and preparation to goodnesse or that whiche God did forsee would bee in vs was the cause why the Lorde hath appointed euerlasting life for vs and giuen vs the graces that apperteine there vnto we darken and diminish the greatnesse and goodnesse of the gifte Whiche cannot be so commendable if it come for the deserte of benefites either had already or else hoped for as if it had beene sent from the frank and free good will of the giuer without any such respect of any thing that should proceede from vs This is the reason why the loue of God is heere set before the gifte of the mediatour and redeemer Iesus Christe and also why the benefite of election and all other in the first cap. to the Ephesians are alwayes coupled to the good will of god For we are giuen to imagine that the good things which are supposed to be in vs doe turne his heart purchase his fauour towards vs when in very deede his good wil towardes vs brought all those graces all the goodnes that we haue vnto vs In somuch that both our election and redemption are recited to the Ephe. to haue proceeded from the free good wil of God and are made not as matters purchasing it but as matters purchased of it Whē this free goodwil of God is not acknowledged to be the beginning of all his giftes his giftes must of all men that are so persuaded be lesse esteemed For it is the minde and goodwil of the giuer that doth commend the gift and maketh it to be alwayes the better accepted Men are wont not to esteme the gift so much as the minde of the giuer Therefore the doctrine of the churche of Rome hath and doth meruelously pull away from the benefites of God and the deseruings therof because it doth not esteme of them as fruites of a well willing minde towardes vs and of suche a one as-already liketh well of vs because that doctrine professeth that those giftes of his in vs by our vse thereof do first turne his fauourable countenaunce to vs-ward Moreouer because that loue was bent towards vs when we were bent as enimies against him which maketh his loue so great that it may iustly be said of it So God loued the world as being a rare kinde of loue the like whereof we haue not knowen Therfore that doctrin of the church of Rome that giueth vnto man workes of preparation and making of him selfe fit to meete God to ioine with him in the purchase of his happinesse darckeneth greatly this great degree of his loue that was shewed vnto vs when we were so farre from preparing our selues to mete with him for our saluation that we were vtter enimies both vnto him and vnto it Which is so cōfortable vnto those that are truely turned vnto him that it is the groūd of their 〈◊〉 in their affliction distresse that their end 〈…〉 happie because that if when they were enimies they were reconciled by his bloud much more being now made friends they shall by his life be saued from wrath It hath beene declared at large why the greate loue of GOD is set before the benefite of our redemption and the greate gifte of Iesus Christe giuen vnto vs Now it remaineth after the sight had of his good will to see into the gifte what it is that commeth from so greate good will. The texte saieth that this gifte is his onely begotten sonne For So God loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne Now we knowe the gifte it is his onely begottē sonne which at the first sight doth witnesse greate good will the gifte beeing so greate as to pleasure vs with his onely begotten sonne But yet it is needeful that we vnfolde this gifte that wee may vnderstand of euery commoditie that lyeth hid within it It is written to the Corinthes that Christ of GOD the father is made vnto vs wisedome righteousnesse sanctification redemptiō Behold the seuerall commodities that come with this gifte of Iesus Christ giuen vnto vs from God the father which euery one of them is of that dignitie and worthinesse that I cannot ioyne them all together and in few wordes dispatch them but am inforced seuerally and yet as briefely as I can to stand vpon euery one of them First it is said heere that he is made of God vnto vs wisdome Christe is become the wisedome of his seruants he teacheth his chosen children true wisedome hee is appointed of his father to be their scholemaister as it is written in the Gospel after S. Matthew This is that my beloued sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him And to the Colossians it is written That all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge are hidden in Christ If it shall be demaunded how it cōmeth to passe that so many men in the gouerning of their liues dealings doe followe their owne wisedoms their owne witt going no further but holding them selues well content with that neuer suspecting any want in it and yet another sorte shall so suspecte their owne wisedome and the deuises of their owne head and see such want in it that letting it alone they betake them to the wisdome of God reuealed in his word become paineful traueilers therin and careful framers of their liues accordingly the aunswer is redy that Christe who is made of God the father wisdome vnto his hath laid claime vnto the one sorte and taken possession of them as vppon his owne but not vpon the other This is the cause of this diuersitie and none other thing And therefore the Apostle proueth that the testimonie of Iesus Christe was confirmed amongst the Corinthians because they abounded in all knowledge And here by the way it is manifest that ignorance is not mother but stepmother vnto deuotion and true Christianitie For Christ is made vnto Christians of God the father wisedome teaching them the knowledge of his word and wil. In like manner if it should be demanded why in their religion and seruing of God some followe the inuention of man which hath in it great shew of holines in humblenesse of mind not sparing the body but laying much affliction vppon it in doeing many thinges vnto God voluntarily not beeing bound vnto it by him but frankly and freely of their own accorde And another sorte contenting them selues with the bare and naked simplicitie of Gods worde in the worshipping and seruing of him do condemne and vtterly reiect all those inuentions of men and shewes of holinesse and humblenes of minde which standeth so strongly vpon the wisedome and reason of man the matter is plaine and the aunswere soone made Christe is made of GOD the father wisedome vnto his This is the cause why his seruantes finde no wisedome but in him