Moses to name only Moses and the Heathen Law-givers against whom the Prophet Isaiah denounceth a wo Chap. 10.1 Wo unto them that decree unrighteous decrees and write grievousness which they have prescribed And truly both these would follow were it so that the Law per se directly and properly were the cause of our passions and motions stirred up in us by the Law and of the fruits brought forth unto death The Apostle therefore wisely and timely distinguisheth between what the Law directly and properly doth and what sin doth by occasion of the Law 1. First he tells us what the Law directly and properly doth vers 7. What shall we say is the Law sin God forbid and he proves it For that which discovers sin to be sin is not it self sin But the Law discovers sin to be sin And therefore the Law it self is not sin Now that that which discovers sin to be sin is not it self sin appears from hence because no man on set purpose doth that which he knows to be sin but what he thinks good saith Dionysius Areop because either true or apparent good is that which all men naturally desire Seeing therefore the Law discovers sin to be sin yea forbids sin yea accuseth the sinner for sin it cannot be the cause of sin but rather indeed the cause why a man should not commit sin and therefore the Law is not sin no the Law is holy just and good vers 12. But how then comes it to pass that the motions of sin are stirred up by the Law This comes to pass by accident not causally but occasionally therefore 2. The Apostle shews what sin doth by occasion of the Law vers 8. Sin taking occasion by the Commandment it wrought in me saith he all manner of concupiscence and vers 11. sin taking occasion by the Commandment deceived me and vers 12. Sin by the Commandment became exceeding sinful For greater manifestation of this he transfers the business as to himself by a particular and personal instance which is the Text I was alive without the Law once wherein we have a two-fold estate of the man 1. Before the Law came 2. after the Law came 1. Before the Law came and herein for explication two things must be opened 1. Of whom the Apostle speaks this of himself or some other man when he saith I was alive without the Law 2. How he is to be understood when he saith he lived without the Law 1. Who is this I and of whom speaks the Apostle this Who this I in the Text is and of whom to be understood there hath been and yet is among some great disputation such a strife as was for Homer by the seven Cities My purpose is according to my profession and my engagement when I first entred upon this argument without taking part or siding with flesh and blood and without acrimony or bitterness which commonly attend on controversie to endeavour according to the irrefragable dictates of Gods everlasting truth to compose the differences among us concerning the Law And therefore I shall not name the Disputants lest I should revive their disputes They say Juvenal occasioned at least many to be lewd and vitious by too open and plain discovery of their vices Some of the Ancients that I say not also some of latter times who have presumed by their Authority to be Mallei haereticorum to beat down hereticks and their heresies have in the event proved Mallei haereticorum in a worse sence the forgers and contrivers of heresie And whereas they thought to beat down a few they have hammered out a many 1. There are who understand this man in his pure naturals But in what man can any one instance since the fall that was in his pure naturals that this Text may be understood of him 2. There are who understand this man to have been a rational man since the fall but was there ever any such rational man since the fall without a law to regulate his reason for surely he had either the written law or the law of nature born of him 3. Others conceived him to be a man under the Law but that he could not yet actually be as he saith himself I was without the law once and we now speak of him as such as without the Law for the avoiding therefore of further disputes we may understand That the man here mentioned is the earthly the natural man who although he have had some knowledge of the Law though the Law hath not hitherto wrought upon him it hath not yet made any discovery of his sin it hath not come home pressly to him like Nathan to David and said Thou art the man And if we understand the man in the Text thus It matters not much of what person definitly the Apostle speaks this of himself or of some other since he himself and all others have been in the very same condition But you 'l say he speaks of himself yea vers 25. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã I my self what more plain Answer He doth so yet this may be docendi gratiâ as we speak as we are wont for instance sake to name our selves or some other Thus in the Civil Law Titius and Sempromus are the subjects of many Law Cases And we have persons also in our common Laws who are the subjects of many Cases But doth the Apostle use any such kind of Rhetorical Figure Answer You shall judge 1 Cor. 1. The Apostle reproving them for the contentions and divisions among them vers 11. It hath been declared unto me saith he that there are contentions among you Now this I say that every one of you saith I am of Paul and I am of Apollo and I of Cephas and I of Christ Were Paul and Apollo think you two of the persons whom the Corinthians strove for ye shall hear him speak for himself 1 Cor. 4.6 These things brethren I have in a figure transferred to my self and to Apollo for your sakes that ye may learn in us not to think of men above that which is written that no man be puffed up for one against another a sin too too usual among us and I fear more frequent than it was in Corinth However this may be true that the Apostle spake of himself in the Text or of another I contend not so we understand himself or some other to have been in this condition as most certain it is the Apostle and every man else hath been he lived without the law once But 2. How can this be understood that he lived once without the law What law is here to be understood Here is again a controversie what Law is here understood the Law Natural or the Law Moral It is not material whether Law we understand since the moral or written Law is founded in the Law of Nature But the question here is how the man could live without the Law since the Law followeth the sin close at the heels as Jacob did
while I speak only of private bloudshed the Text leads me to no other than the professed guilt of these penitent men in that they had shed the bloud of Christ Yet it is a sad thing and worthy the Humiliation of the whole Kingdom this day to consider how deeply 't is engaged in a most unnatural war Writ in the time of the civil war when the sword devours one as well as another as David saith as well the good as the bad the holy as the prophane Wo unto us for our hurt our wound is grievous truly this is a grief and we must bear it as the Prophet Jeremy complains Jerem. 10. and Ezech. This is a lamentation and it shall be for a lamentation But how doth the heavy hand of God upon the Kingdom countenance thy private rancor and revenge Thou wilt say thou hast a good cause a just ground of thy private quarrel and darest countenance it with Davids example when he was to duel with the Philistin as he said to his brother is there not a cause 1 Sam. 17.29 True it is David had a good cause whom God armed against the Philistines and was with him whithersoever he went yet must not he build God a Temple because he had shed much bloud 1 Chron. 22.7 8. But what warrant hast thou for thy bloody and revengful Spirit Canst thou alledge as David could that God sets thee a work Vengeance is his and wilt thou dare to take it out of his hand I beseech the Lord to give thee understanding in this and all things I speak not of publick and necessary defence without which in hac faece Romuli peaceable and innocent men cannot live in safety making war or peace belongs to the Governours and Magistrates of the Kingdoms and Common-wealths I thank God I have learned more manners than to intermeddle with their great and important affairs otherwise than by praying to God for them and being obedient unto them as in conscience we are all bound and in making good construction and intetpretation of all their actions according to a Rule I have ever walked by De Magistratu Semper optime praesumendum We must ever conceive the best of the Ruler I speak of those beautefeus and incendiaries which St. John saw in the Spirit Revel 16.13 14 15. Vnclean spirits like froggs came out of the mouth of the dragon they are the spirits of Devils which go forth unto the kings of the earth c. to gather them to the battel of the great day of God Almighty O that now while Gods judgements are in the earth The inhabitants of the earth would learn righteousness Esay 26. O that we would learn the true Christian warfare we read Eph. 6. Of spiritual wickedness in heavenly things And St. John tells us of a war in heaven Revel 12.7 which some well-meaning men understand of outward war This book is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith one of the Ancients And shall mystical and hidden Scripture be the rule to expound plain Scripture or plain Scripture rather the rule of Mystical But what is this war in heaven it is said to be waged by Michael i. e. Christ with the Dragon i. e. the Devil so expounded vers 9. The war then in heaven is the strife between Christ the wisdom of God and the Devil with his seeming wisdom or true subtilty about heavenly things Thus we read the two Wisdoms opposed Jam. 3.15 16 17. we read the same Wisdom of God making war Revel 19.11 His weapon and all his weapons we read of here is a sharp sword that goeth out of his mouth vers 15. which is the word of God Ephes 6. Heb. 4.12 which because it is accompanied with the Spirit of God Christ is said to destroy Antichrist with the Spirit of his mouth Esay 11. 2 Thess 2. Nor do we read of any other weapon And mark what his Soldiers are vers 14. The Armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses cloathed in fine linnen white and clean What that linnen is ye read vers 8. The righteousness of Saints If ye will have a more particular enumeration of the Saints Armory ye find it Ephes 6.13 18. Were this war waged in us as the war of our lusts is Jam. 4.1 Sathan should be overcome Revel 12.11 and no weapon of outward foes should prevail against us yea that of the Prophet should come to pass Esay 2. We should then break our swords into plowshares we should learn war no more which now the malicious practices of unpeaceable men enemies of God and his peaceable people and kindom compel us and enforce us to learn Observ 5. Observe the horrour of conscience guilty of shedding the blood of Christ They kill Christ in whom his word hath no place Joh. 8.37 1 Joh. 3.15 Who so hateth his brother is a murderer And ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him Gal. 3.1 How among you Was Christ crucified in Galatia ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in you Heb. 6.6 Jam. 5.5 6. Is it not so with us Have not we crucified Christ But they repented and thereto we are called Now this duty is a sincere and through change of mind and heart or a turning from Sathan and all unrighteousness unto God and his righteousness wrought by God and accompanied with humiliation fasting weeping and mourning This description contains in it 1. The Essence and Nature of true Repentance 2. The cause of it And 3. The Adjuncts or attendants on it 1. The Nature of it consists in change of mind and heart or in a turning of them which appears from the name of this duty in the Text ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã as also from the Hebrew name of it ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifieth turning which is here also used in the Syriack So much is signified by the word in the Low Dutch This change or turning must be to the better So the French word here signifieth amendment of life In this change or turning two things must be considered 1. The Subjects to be changed or turned And 2. The terms 1. The Subjects the mind and heart 1. The mind included in the first word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã So the Apostle exhorts to a renewing of the mind Rom. 12.1 Ephes 4.23 2. And the same Apostle tells the Jews of ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã their impenitent heart Rom. 2.5 And these in the Text were pricked at the heart 2. The terms of this change or turning are 1. A quo from which viz. from Sathan and all unrighteousness as Heb. 6. from dead works 2. Ad quem to which viz. unto God and his righteousness Repentance towards God Act. 20.21 Of both which we read Act. 26.18 I send thee to open their eyes and to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Sathan unto God 2. The cause of true repentance is God 2 Tim. 2.2 25. 3. The Adjuncts of it humiliation and sorrow which is
not only mente tenere to hold in ones mind and think well of them nor is it a Believers duty only to dispute for them plead and reason for them To maintain good works is not only ore or lingua-tenere to hold good works in mouth and tongue To maintain good works is manu tenere to practice them whatever our hand finds to do to do it with all our might Observ 4. Works though good honest fair profitable unto men both to bring them to the faith and to the end of their faith the salvation of their Souls yet find opposition in the World they need maintenance and defence Yea because they are good Many good works have I shewed you from my Father for which of these works do ye stone me saith our Lord Joh. 18.32 The Jews were ashamed to own that for a cause but as many at this day because they have no true cause why they hate those who plead for Faith and good works accuse them of erroneous judgement false doctrine c. as the Jews accused our Lord of Blasphemy But St. John speaks home to this purpose 1 Joh. 3.12 Wherefore did Cain slay his brother but because his own works were evil and his brothers righteous See Notes on 1 Thess 4.1 Observ 5. Hence appears a great difference between those works which are commonly accounted such and those which are truly and really such and so to be esteemed Men commonly conceive of Liberality and some works of Charity as the only works which we call good works And yet indeed such a man may do and sin in so doing as our Laws make mention of a Corrodie which was an allowance to eat and drink given to some slow bellies and idle persons who refuse to labour God is infinitely more merciful than all men yet hath he commanded that he who will not labour shall not eat yea it is possible that man may do such good works yet perish 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. Whereas the true good works are of a far greater latitude Godliness is profitable for all things The true good works which have Faith for their Principle the Word of God for their Rule good will for their Motive Grace for their Strength the Glory of God for their End These are they that are profitable unto men to Faith to the end of their Faith the salvation of theiâ souls These are generally all virtues and virtuous actions which are common to all men and such as are more special and proper to certain orders of men both which are comprized in these two words which meet us often in Scripture justice and judgement Justitia est omnis virtus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã c. Justitia in sese virtutes continet omnes Judgement I conceive to be every mans duty in his own place and calling And thus some conceive ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to be used 1 Sam. 8.11 which we render the manner This will be the manner of the king that shall reign over you for so Kings Princes Governours and all Magistrates have their office in governing the people and such are their good works The Minister hath his duty also in teaching the people So St. Paul gives charge to Timothy Preach the word in season and out of season c. Be thou totus in his He must not leave the word and serve tables Act. 6. And although the Deacons office was about ministring to the poor yet they preached the word also This seems to be the Reason why the Levite must have no portion among his brethren his whole business was about the service of God And these are their good works Every one of the people hath somewhat or other to do in his own special place or calling his trade and profession of life and herein he ought to be employed And these are their good works Generally Magistrate Minister and People every Believer who believes God and Christ and so dwells in him he hath his good works He who saith he abideth in him ought himself so to walk as he walked 1 Joh. 2.6 Observ 6. Hence it 's evident that our Church according to this sence maintains good works and that in a greater latitude than they do who most contend for them for they summ them up to seven kinds whereas good works are all virtues and virtuous actions of the Christian life yea we maintain them in a better place degree or order than they do who place their justification in them we maintain them to be the soul and life of Faith and inward justification not as the causes of the same as will appear if we compare the Text with the words before Observ 7. Note hence what is the true Faith of those who believe God See Notes on Gen. 15. Observ 8. Some there are under the means who believe not aright in the living God Act. 17.4 5. 2 Thess 3.1 2 3. And may we not averr the like of many at this day For although all know there is a God yet all do not honour him with right thoughts will affections belief love Rom. 1.21 22. yea Titus 1. ult Repreh They are therefore hence blame worthy and justly to be reproved who content themselves with a barren and dead faith without the life and righteousness of good works Jam. 2.14 24. Much more are they to blame who abound in all manner of evil works 2 Pet. 1.9 Surely there are such yet they will pretend good works also that 's ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã The word in the Text but in another sence for however they contend for good works and plead for them that they ought to be done yet in the winding up when they speak home to the matter their maintaining of good works is only in pretence and in words when there is no necessity of them to Salvation for they are justified and saved without them And then what remains but that all obedience and good works be meerly arbitrary and left to our discretion among the consequents of Salvation See Notes on Jam. 1.22 To maintain good works may prove chargeable we are said to maintain that which we are at charge withall If they who believe God be saved what need they maintain good works if less will serve the turn c. Vide Notes ubi supra Exhort To maintain good works There is a kind of maintenance in our Law used in evil part a seconding a cause depending in suit between others against Law But the maintaining of good works of Faith Hope Love Joy Meekness Temperance Patience c. Against these things there is no law Gal. 5. These have the countenance of Law Divine and Humane of good Angels and Men. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã To maintain good works may be more specially understood and rendred as our Translators turn the word vers 4. To profess honest trades for so ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is used Eph. 4.28 To work with their hands the thing that is good and the following words that he may
tediousness Aquila and Symmachus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Apollinarius ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã I hated others yet ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã I did abominate Austin and Bernard render the Greek word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã by proximus fui in an ill sence I was near viz. in an evil sence as to visit punish revenge Thus the Lord threatens the Church of Ephesus Rev. 2.5 I will come unto them quickly All these different Translations may be reduced to that of our last Translation I was grieved Others render the word dissecari to be cut in pieces 1. As we are wont to express great grief when we say we are cut to the heart It repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth and it grieved him at the heart Gen. 6.6 Ratio All grief proceeds from either absence of good or the presence of what is inconvenient and contrary Now what is contrary unto God but sin and sinful men provoking and tempting God and hardening themselves against the good motions of his spirit striving with them when men walk contrary unto God Levit. 26. And both sin and sinners are here in the Text Wherefore i. e. for the sins cause I was grieved with this Generation of sinful men Doubt Can God be said to be grieved Is not grief a turbulent weakening yea a destructive passion By sorrow of heart the spirit is broken Prov. 15.13 and 17.22 A broken spirit drieth the bones yea sorrow hath killed many Ecclus. 30.22.23 Can these effects of grief be given to God Yea we see how men are over-swayed by passion to act things contrary to reason I answer Far be it from us to ascribe unto God such passions and turbulent affections as blind reason and precipitate men into actions unworthy of wise men how much more unworthy of the only wise God Yet where Almighty God is said to be grieved at his heart Gen. 6.6 And the like Esay 43.24 Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins and hast wearied me with thine iniquities Amos. 2.13 Eph. 4.30 These and such like Scriptures do not signifie nothing nor can they so be satisfied as if upon the matter a man should say God is not grieved For I beseech you consider is not sin 1. Most contrary to God's nature who is the most essential righteousness it self What agreement between righteousness and unrighteousness 2. Can any thing afflict us more than to be requited with evil for good and with hatred for our good will 3. Is it not a great condolium a rending of the heart of a loving and a tender Father to lose his child in destructive ways 4. And what more just cause can be alledged why God should eternally torment the souls of incorrigible sinners than that they have contrary to so great love and mercy patience and forbearance grieved his most righteous and gracious soul and that so many years as here this Generation of men grieved him forty years together Object But if God can be said to be grieved then may he who is most blessed be made miserable I answer none can be said to be miserable but he whose grief is unsufferable without intermission and everlasting and so far be it from us to think that he who is most happy yea happiness it self should be miserable But out of mercy and pity to his creature to be grieved and afterward to be comforted in his Justice doth not at all render him unblessed yea hence he appears the more truly blessed because he is so good so merciful so compassionate towards his creature Doubt But how can this grief be said to be in God I answer 1. Not properly in himself or out of the creature but in the creature and through the creature 2. Christ in all men takes a suffering flesh by which he suffers grief persecution death it self to redeem us from sorrow and death if we repent of our sins and suffer with him 3. Certain it is if God no way suffered by sinners he is so just that he would not make them thereby to suffer we may say of this as of many other Divine truths De re constat de modo non constat Observ 1. God grieves not for any act of his own no for where there is no evil there is no grief Observ 2. He rejoyceth in his works Esay 65.19 For as grief proceeds from evil present so joy from what is good since therefore all the works of God upon review of them are good Gen. it cannot but cause joy Observ 3. The Lord grieves at the evil actions of his creatures when therefore he is said To endure with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction Rom. 9.22 It 's unreasonable to say that he should fit them to destruction for if he so fitted them how can he be said to endure them with much long-suffering Ohserv 4. God was grieved with the whole generation of Israel some few excepted who stood in the gap Observ 5. God was and is grieved with those who believe not in his power that he is able to bring men unto the rest by the mortification of their spiritual enemies Observ 6. Note hence what a God we Christians worship even such an one as grieves at and suffers long the sins of his people even forty years long How long hath he born thy sins and mine See Notes on Heb. 1.3 He spares us out of his meer mercy he could consume us in an instant as he saith to Moses and Aaron Separate your selves from this congregation that I may consume them in in a moment Numb 16.21 Thus he could do but the Omnipotent God is Omnipatient See Notes ut supra Observ 7. As the provoking and tempting God and hardening our hearts against his fear grieves our God so on the contrary the converting and turning from these sins and walking before the Lord to well-pleasing of him with a soft and tender heart ready to receive all Divine impressions from the holy Spirit of our God such a frame and disposition of heart rejoyceth our God Zeph. 3.13 Luk. 15. Observ 8. Grief may befall a wise man it befalls the only wise God The Stoicks are said to deny all passions to a wise man but their tenent is not ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Psal 119.136 139. If our God be grieved at the sins of ungodly men surely we ought to be alike affected with him I beheld the transgressors and was grieved because they kept not thy Word saith David Psal 119.158 where we have the very same word I am grieved with those that rise up against thee Psal 139.21 Thus David was a man according to Gods heart and so was Paul Phil. 3.18 Exhort If others by hardness of heart grieve the Lord let us by our repentance return unto him and comfort him There is joy in heaven at the conversion of a sinner They who harden themselves and thereby grieve the Lord he will be comforted by their
so or so as Moses had commanded Joshua 11.14 Neither left they any to breath What else is hereby to be understood but what the Law and Will of the Lord is that 's Moses who is ordinarily taken for the Law that Jesus the true Joshua fulfilled Obs 3. The Law and Prophets continue in their strength and are as firm and strong obligations in this time of the Gospel as formerly they were The Moral Law in the Letter and Spirit The Ceremonial according to the spiritual understanding of it for Ceremoniale aboletur Spirituale manet The Judicial Law according to the Equity of it This will appear from the two next Verses to my Text v. 18 19. So that the Gospel requires of us as much obedience as the Law for measure and degree Obs 4. They who live dissolutely and loosely They neither have the doctrine of Christ nor his life or practice nor end of his coming to countenance palliate and cover their vitious lives withall Reprehension of those who destroy the Law and the Prophets 't is the cause of their destruction and destruction of the people Malac. 2 1-9 and 4.4 5 6. 2. Think not that I come to destroy c. By these Words the Lord puts a bar against all Opinions all Tenents and Disputes of men concerning the Law as if by him or his doctrine it should in the least be diminished Rat. The Thoughts are the Basis and Foundation of Counsels Wills Affections Actions Works and Words And therefore our Lord thought it necessary to give caution concerning them He knew the present Surmises and Suspitions of the Scribes and Pharisees He foresaw the false conceits and opinions that would be received in the World concerning his doctrine as we find at this day Obs 1. The Law and Prophets are empty and voyd until Christ come to fulfil them There is a Vacuum where obedience and fulfilling of the Law and Prophets is not Vide Not. in James 1.22 Jer. 4.22 23. Obs 2. Note hence what an exact and perfect life our Lord Jesus came to bring into the World even the fulfilling of the Law and Prophets A life opposite unto that generation of men he met withall in the dayes of his flesh and as opposite unto this present generation in the dayes of his Spirit for all those he dealt withall beside his own Disciples who were of one will with himself all the rest were either Pharisees or Sadduces of which sort were also the Herodians The former sort the Pharisees fulfilled only the outside of the Law and Prophets whose righteousness consisted only in the obedience unto the outward commandment The latter sort the Sadduces and Herodians were a prophane people who were so far from fulfilling the Law and Prophets by their obedience that by their outward and inward disobedience they made voyd and emptied the Law and the Prophets Of one or other sort of these the true Disciples and truly called Christians only excepted consists this present Generation As for the Sadduces and prophane persons their sins prevent judgment 1 Tim. 5.25 The Pharisees are the men who most of all deceive themselves and are in greatest danger of deceiving others And therefore our Lord tells his Disciples Matth. 5.20 That unless their Righteousness exceed the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees they should not see the Kingdom of God The Scribes were the great Teachers of the people the Pharisees were the most religious followers of their doctrine ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã our Lord hereby teacheth his Disciples wherein consists that Righteousness which God requires and accepts wherein else than in obedience to the Law and Prophets Now the Law saith Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit Adultery c. The Scribes and Pharisees did not kill did not commit Adultery and therefore they thought themselves just and despised others Luke 18. And the Reason is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and he who obeys the Law is righteous But our Lord Jesus denies that the Scribes and Pharisees obeyed the Law as appears every where throughout the Gospel especially Matth. 23. And the reason because it is not enough that a man do not kill nor commit Adultery c. but that also he have a mind abhorring and loathing murder and adultery for since the mind is so much the more excellent than the body that the man is named from the mind as ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which is the Soul signifieth the whole man in the Hebrew and Anima in the Latine foelices animae quibus hoc cognoscere primum inque domos superum scandere cura fuit Whence Anima cujusque is est quisque every man's Soul is himself Hence it undeniably follows that he is a murderer who hath a murdering Soul that he is an Adulterer who hath a Soul inclined to Adultery He who hates his Brother is a murderer He who looks upon a Woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart If any one here except and say the Law is not so severe to punish hatred or lust with death 't is true for the Lord hath committed the inflicting punishment for breach of the Law to Magistrates which being but men they punish the evil work done not the evil will they punish the dammage committed not the thought or purpose at least while it is unknown for how else can the Magistrate convince the minds of men by the testimony of two or three Witnesses without which he cannot proceed to punish an offence Would therefore a man be safe from the Magistrate It 's enough for him that he do not kill that he do not commit Adultery although his mind and heart be murderous and adulterous And thus the Scribes and Pharisees were just and righteous who performed outward obedience to the Law and Prophets And if the Kingdom of Christ had been of this World he should not nor would have taught any other doctrine But since the Kingdom of Christ is not of this World not an earthly but an heavenly Kingdom The Judge also is not earthly but heavenly the Witnesses also must be spiritual and heavenly and the judgment spiritual and heavenly in which the mind cannot be hid According to this Righteousness not only the murdering body and the adulterous body is punished as in earthly and bodyly Kingdoms but the murdering and lascivious mind or soul also shall be punished Would we therefore avoyd the eternal punishment we must then no doubt not only obey the outward Law in shew only as the Scribes and Pharisees did but inwardly also truly and from the heart as in the sight of God who searcheth the heart and reins and punisheth hatred for murder and lust for adultery And what I have said concerning these two Commandments is also to be understood of all the rest Obs 3. If our Lord Jesus Christ came not to destroy the Law and Prophet but to fulfil them Hence it will follow that they who boast of Christ's fulfilling
true you will say these indeed were of old time but was it said to those of old time Thou shalt not kill c. Ecclus 17. The Wise-man speaking of the Creation of mankind and what endowments man received from God in the beginning v. 14. He said unto them beware of all unrighteousness and he gave every man commandment concerning his Neighbour These are the two precepts that God gave to the first created persons 1. To beware of all unrighteousness i. e. all sin for all unrighteousness is sin 1 John 2. He gave every man commandment concerning his Neighbour i. e. touching the preservation of his life chastity goods and good name This knowledge was no doubt instilled by God in our first Parents for he made him according to his Image v. 3 11 12 17. And there is no question to be made but that Adam taught his Children these Lessons He was not so negligent a Parent as too many of us are who teach not our Children the Commandments of God But though Adam had taught his Children these Commandments yet his eldest Son as commonly mens eldest Sons do forgat them as appears Gen. 4. by Cain's expostulation with God Am I my Brother's keeper He was no doubt his Brother's Keeper for God had given him Commandment concerning his Brother And as Cain forgat his precepts so did his Posterity the old World and therefore the Lord complained as in Gen. 6. The whole duty of man c. See Notes 2 Pet. 2.5 There are two parts of the sensitive appetite the principles of sin against our Neighbour especially Eccles 11. The old World had sinned against their Neighbour in respect of both in regard of their lasciviousness Gen. 6.2 in respect of their injustice and cruelty v. 11 13. the Earth was filled with violence Now as Cain had forgotten and broken these Commandments so had his Posterity who walked in the way of Cain Jude v. 11. And that these are they of old time to whom this was spoken will appear farther by God's express prohibition of murder after the flood Gen. 9. which is one of the seven Precepts given to the Sons of Noah whereby is implied that by murder they had provoked the wrath of God who for that cause with others sent the Sin-flood as the Dutch call it Besides this is farther evident in that it is not said it was written but ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it was spoken as the whole Law of God was delivered by tradition unto those of old time until the writing of it in Tables of Stone for so Abraham is said to have kept the Commandments of God his Statutes and his Judgments Gen. 26. When yet the Law was not written till more than four hundred years after It was said to them of old time The reason they of old time wanted a rule touching the mutual preservation of life God would not be wanting to that old World Axiom 4. Christ saith to his Disciples We have heard that it hath been said to them of old time thou shalt not kill c. Hence it appears that our Lord intended not by these words to confute the false Glosses of the Scribes and Pharisees Had he intended that he would have said rather ye hear what the Scribes and Pharisees now teach you or the like Yea this Speech of our Lord had rather confirmed than confuted such Doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisees because they might have pleaded antiquity for their doctrine God hath had his witness against murder even from all antiquity Cain knew it and all his Race before the Flood But I say unto you whosoever is angry with his Brother shall be in danger of the Judgment These words contain our Lords seeming opposition and true exposition of the Sixth Commandment This exposition of the Commandment contains the supposition of a Law and the breach of it and the penalty or punishment of the Law broken The Law supposed is thou shalt not be angry And so it answers to that Law outwardly understood Thou shalt not kill So that in this exposition of our Lord we have these divine Truths 1. No man ought to be angry with his Brother without a cause 2. Whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause shall be liable to the Judgment 3. Christ saith this to his Disciples 4. It was said indeed unto them of old time thou shalt not kill but Christ saith to his Disciples Whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause shall be in danger of the Judgment 1. No man ought to be angry with his Brother without a cause Herein we must enquire 1. Who is our Brother 2. What it is to be angry 3. What to be angry without a cause 1. Brother according to a known Hebraisme is as large as Another as the Etymologist saith frater is quasi ferè alter he that loveth another Rom. 13. For all meet in one common Parent Adam c. See Notes on Acts 2.37 2. That we may know what it is to be angry we must understand that there are three notable potential parts of the Soul the Rational Concupiscential and irascible See Notes on Matth. 15. 3. What is it to be angry ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which we terme without cause as above Yet although those Ancient Latine Fathers read it not others of the Greek Fathers did as St. Basil in his Tractate ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and St. Chrysostome and Enthymius both upon the place acknowledge it and so may we for since God made man a living Soul wherein he implanted the Passions and among them Anger if it might be never lawfully exercised certainly it would be in vain contrary to that Rule Deus natura nihil faciunt frustra God and nature do nothing in vain Now surely it may be exercised without sin since he is said to have been angry who had no sin as appears Mark 3.5 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã therefore which we turn without a cause is of larger extent and signifies also a certain undue measure for our better understanding of this we must distinguish these three ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the passion of anger is a thing in it self indifferent but when it becomes unruly it 's carried unto those things and persons which it ought not and then it 's violent and hath the nature of ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã impetus or violence if yet it become more unruly and casts off the bridle of reason and moderation it becomes habitual and draws forcibly to it self the reason and rational appetite The will which consents unto it and so it 's called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã approbation and consent here it rests it self and becomes ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã an abiding and continued anger which is inveterate and degenerates into hatred and malice These two latter degrees are here to be understood The reason of this will appear from the more profound understanding of God's Law for whereas God himself is
a Spirit he expects of man a spiritual worship and accordingly gives him a spiritual Law which reacheth to his heart and spirit and requires of him a proportionable spiritual service and obedience Obs Hence we learn that whereas outward effects only seem to be forbidden by the Law of God as killing or murdering hereby are principally to be understood their impulsive causes as wrath and hatred So that murder is first in the heart saith our Saviour Matth. 15. whence it proceeds and is acted by the hand and tongue but the heart is murdrorum officium c. See Notes on Matth. 15. Obser 1. 2. Hence it appears that there are divers kinds of murders outward and inward The Jewes took notice only of the outward So one of them Thou shalt do no murder ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã with thy hand or tongue But our Lord teacheth us that there is a murder committed in the heart and therefore out of the heart proceed ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã murders the word is Plural c. See Notes Matth. 15. Obs 3. A man may possibly be a Murderer who yet layes no violent hands on any one himself or another and that in regard of a threefold object 1. Himself 2. His Neighbour 3. His God Vide Notes as above NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW V. 22. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã c. But I say unto you that whosoever is angry with his Brother without a Cause shall be liable to the Judgment c. IT is locus difficillimus The words contain our Lord 's spiritual exposition of the Sixth Commandment Herein we have 1. A Supposition of a Law broken 2. An imposition of a penalty for the breach of that Law The Law and breach of the Law and penalty or punishment of that breach are all considerable in three degrees proportionable one to another The Law prohibits 1. Anger 2. The effects of anger in reproachful words 1. Less as Racha 2. Greater as Fool. The breach of this Law is likewise in three degrees 1. Anger unadvised undeserved 2. Calling our Brother Racha 3. Calling him Fool. The penalty of this threefold breach of the Law is also considerable in three degrees 1. The Judgment 2. The Council 3. Hell fire All which we may reduce unto these following divine Truths 1. No man ought to be angry with his brother without a cause 2. Whosoever is angry c. shall be liable unto the Judgment 3. No man ought to say to his Brother Racha 4. Whosoever shall say to his brother Racha shall be liable to the Council 5. No man ought to say to his Brother thou Fool. 6. Whosoever shall say unto his brother thou Fool shall be liable to Hell fire 7. The Lord saith this to his Disciples 8. Ye have heard indeed that it hath been said to them of old time c. But the Lord saith to his Disciples Whosoever shall be angry with his brother c. I spake of the first of these before come we to the 2. Whosoever is angry with his brother undeservedly unadvisedly shall be liable to the Judgment Wherein 1. What a Brother is 2. What to be angry with him 3. What without a cause or undeservedly to be angry with him I shewed in opening the former point it remains that I shew what the Judgment here is 2. What it is to be liable to the Judgment By ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã here we are to understand not the Act of judging but the Judges themselves and their sentence Now the Judges among the Jews may be considered either according to their objects or things and persons whereof they judged or according to the subject places where they judged 1. The objects or things and persons which they judged were either civil as mony-matters or capital as those that concerned the life 2. As concerning the places of Judicature what City or Town soever had a number of Inhabitants fewer than one hundred and twenty that Town or City was judged by the Triumviri or three Judges only who handled only civil businesses as matters between man and man But if the Inhabitants of any City or Town were one hundred and twenty or exceeded that number their number of Judges were three and twenty who took cognizance of criminal and capital businesses and these Judges sate in the gates of their Cities of which Amos 5.15 Whoever therefore had slain a man wilfully he was liable unto this judicature Besides these two less jurisdictions there was the great Synedrion or Session of Judges which consisted of 72. Judges of which our Lord speaks in the next words Now as in the Civil Affairs as the Crimes were greater they belonged to greater and higher Judicatures which took cognizance of them So our Lord here saith that in spiritual businesses as the crimes were greater so they were to be judged by greater Judges and liable to greater penalties As here he whosoever he is that is angry with his Brother shall be liable to the Judgment The word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifieth subject obnoxious or liable unto something as Hebr. 2. subject to bondage See Notes on Hebrews 2. He then that is angry with his Brother undeservedly and unadvisedly is liable unto the Judgment 1. The censure of his own Conscience 2. The Judgment and censure of the spiritual Judges or Judges of spiritual things And 3. The final censure and judgment of the great and universal Judge Reason Is in regard of 1. Our Brother 2. Our Elder Brother or 3. Enemies to both 1. In regard of our Brother with whom one is angry unadvisedly and undeservedly He who is so angry with his Brother is a murderer of his Brother and his anger may be called Murder for whereas every sin hath the name from the end whereat it aims See Notes on Matth. 15.19 20. And there is reason and justice for this severe proceeding among men for if the Act it self were as possible and feasible to the Traytor as the will and passion is he would as soon perform the Act and deed as plot and will it 2. In regard of our Elder Brother the Lord Jesus Christ for when we are angry with him we go about to kill him and when we are angry with any of our brethren for his sake we then also go about to kill him 1. When we are angry with him our Lord told the Jews John 7.20 Ye go about to kill me c. See Notes on Philip. 2. ad finem 2. And the like may be said of our anger against our Brethren for his sake For when we sin against our brethren and wound their weak consciences we sin against Christ 1 Cor. 8.12 And so he becomes wounded of our iniquities and bruised of our transgressions Esay 53.5 And therefore the Lord complains that Saul persecuted him when he persecuted the Church 3. There is reason also if we shall consider the enemy of both the Devil himself who is Abaddon and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Rev.
9.11 a Destroyer And he who is angry with his Brother unadvisedly and undeservedly he doth the destroyers work and yields up the power of himself unto the destroyer This the Apostle well knew when he gave that good counsel to the Ephesians Be angry and sin not Let not the Sun go down upon your wrath neither give place to the Devil that subtile and malicious enemy who is alwayes ready to do us mischief And as in all things he seeks and catches at occasions to hurt us so especially in our wrath and therefore when by our wrath we have caused the Son of Righteousness to set and go down in us then the darkness and the Prince of darkness ariseth invelops and covers the faithful Soul and so we give place to the Devil No marvel then if our Lord here say that he who is angry with his Brother without just cause and undeservedly is liable to the Judgment Doubt Whether is any thing added by the outward Act yea or no See Notes on Matth. 15. Note hence that the Law is Spiritual Circumcision Passover all the Ceremonial Law but more of this in the following Points The Spiritual Law takes cognizance of the heart and spirit and the spiritual motions of it It taketh notice of our wrath the Spiritual Law reforms the heart and Spirit it consumes the spiritual wickedness which is in heavenly things and therefore it 's compared to the fire which is a figure of the Spirit and it 's said to come out of the midst of the fire Deut. 5.22 and it 's called the fiery Law Deut. 33.2 c. See Notes on Romans 7. When now the people by reason of the sin of Manasseh that is forgetfulness of God they were more incorporated as it were into the evil one and become members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Then Hilkiah the Priest having found the Law c. there must follow Reformation Josiah a figure of the Spirit which is fire is said to be the Son of David i. e. the love and this fire burns up and consumes the flesh and the bones upon the Altar and patience of Jesus Christ Thus when the true Josiah or Christ is risen he began at Moses c. ibidem Obser The horror of a guilty conscience it binds a man over to the Judgment of God Much more and greater is the terror of a blood-guilty conscience See Notes on Acts 2.37 Repreh 1 and 2. See Notes on Matth. 15.19 Consolation I have crucified c. ibidem Exhort If he that is angry with his Brother be liable to the Judgment let us cease from wrath let us mortifie the first motions of it See Notes on Matth. 15.19 Whether is any thing added by the outward Act yea or no Beloved this is no subtile contemplation or needless Scholastick Quere which may be determined either way without notable inconvenience No this Quere is practical and by so much the more dangerous because some have reasoned thus in good earnest If the inward Act be sin in God's sight then the outward Act adds nothing hereunto So that he who is angry with his Brother is as guilty before God as he who kills him This is a dangerous and a false consequence for the outward Act adds much unto the inward for proof of this let the first murder be examined See Notes on Matth. 15. 3. No man ought to say to his Brother Racha Our Lord raised three who were dead one in the house another in the gate of the City and the third who had been dead four dayes Hitherto we have heard of the man dead in the house Anger in the heart Come we now to the second when wrath breaks out of doors in evil words in reproachful language against a Brother Now what is Racha Chrysostom tells us it is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a reproachful word as when a man conceives himself slighted and out of contempt he saith Racha i. e. saith he ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã tu thou as if a man say to his servant ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã away thou So Chrysostom But although thou may be used contemptuously yet Racha hath no such meaning St. Augustine and St. Anselm and all who follow him say that Racha is an interjection of indignation But indeed it signifieth no such thing St. Hierom comes nearer the matter and tells us that Racha is all one with sine cerebro inanis voyd of wit But neither doth this sence answer the word fully Racha is a reproachful word yet less than ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã following It may be doubted whether it come from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifies to spit upon or else from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that signifies Idle Vain Empty if we refer it to the former it implieth not only wrath but pride also and contempt of him to whom a man saith Racha as by spitting much more by spitting upon him Num. 12.14 If her father had spit in her face c. Job 30.10 They abhor me they spared not to spit in my face Esay 50.6 If we refer the word to the other Original it implies contempt also of him whom a man calls Racha as when we would signifie him to be a vain fellow as the Poet saith Vane Ligur And St. James ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã vain man Judg. 9.4 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã vain persons which are discovered by the next word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã light unstable rash hardy fit for the enterprize of any desperate design The reason why our Lord forbids us to say to our Brother Racha may be considered in regard of the causes of it and the object of it it proceeds from wrath and therefore sith he forbids the effect of wrath 2. Wrath it self proceeds from sleighting ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or contempt provokes men to wrath when they perceive that that high opinion of worth which they conceived to be in themselves is undervalued by others they then wax angry and break forth into contemptuous language so that reproachful Speech proceeds from pride and wrath See Notes on 1 Peter 2.1 2. 2. In regard of the object against which this sin is committed it is the Lord himself and his Spirit for whereas he invites us to humility and meekness Learn of me for I am lowly and meek c. Matth. 11. Pride and wrath which commonly go together they render us most unlike unto him whose example we ought to follow for pride and proud and reproachful Speech is opposite unto humility and wrath with scorn and contempt is contrary to the Spirit of meekness And therefore the Wise-man puts both together Prov. 21.24 Proud and haughty Scorner is his name who dealeth in proud wrath or in the pride of wrath Margin Object But may I not speak that which is true See Notes on 1 Peter 2.1 2. Obser 1. How tender the Lord is of the peoples reputation and
good name among men 2. As the will of the Lord is that no man should say to his Brother Racha so neither is it his will that any man should receive such an evil report of his Brother Exod. 23.1 Thou shalt not take up or receive a vain report 3. If to be called Racha be thought worthy of the Judgment and that he be liable to it who saith so to his Brother how much more liable is he unto the Judgment and worthy of it who is Racha who is a vain man 4. Whosoever shall say to his Brother Racha shall be liable to the Council These words contain the penalty due to the second breach of the Law viz. to be liable to the Council And what is the Council The word is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã This word is common to all Sessions of Judges as well to that of 23. and of that three Judges as that of 70. or 72. which is here to be understood As the twelve Sons of Jacob gave names to the twelve Tribes as also the Heads and Princes of those Tribes and afterward the like number of Apostles was appointed by our Lord who had promised to judge the twelve Tribes of Israel So in memory of the LXX Persons who came with Jacob into Egypt Gen. 46.27 They ordained so many Elders and Governours over them and afterward our Lord sent forth the like number of Disciples Unto those seventy Elders the Lord sends Moses Exod. 3.16 and he reported the Lord's message unto them Exod. 4.29 Unto these Moses by the advice of Jethro committed the less matters in controversie to be judged reserving the greater and more difficult to his own cognizance Exod. 18.22 Afterward when Moses complained of his burthen the Lord himself ratifies the Counsel of Jethro and commands Moses to take seventy Elders whom he enabled with the Spirit of Judgment Numb 11.16 This Sanhedrim or highest Council consisted of Priests Levites religious and devout Israelites as appears 2 Chron. 19.8 This Council judgeth of all causes divine and humane civil and capital Reason The spiritual Judge looks at the root of bitterness which is envy pride anger impatiency c. He looks at the fruit growing or like to grow from this root of bitterness this root bears gall and wormwood even bitter words He looks at the direful issue of wrath even death it self Psal 57.3 He shall save me from the reproach of him that would eat me up swords are in their lips Psal 59.7 I have reserved a doubt here to be answered which was proper in part to the former point but here it may receive a more general satisfaction 1. Whether he who was angry with his Brother were liable to the Judgment or who saith Racha to the Council It may be doubted because jus gladii the power of putting Malefactors to death was taken away from the Jews by the Romans according to that of John 18.31 It is not lawful for us to put any man to death Josephus tells us that when Festus was dead Ananus the High Priest called a Council before Albinus came to be President of Judea and cited James the Lord's Brother and many others whom he condemned to be stoned to death But for this he was accused before Albinus the Governour because he called a Council without lieve of the President Now if the Council might not be called without lieve obtained of the Romans how much less might any man be put to death by Authority of the Council Yea the Jews themselves confess that forty years before the Second Temple was destroyed all power of judging criminal and capital causes was taken from the Jews All which if true how then saith our Lord that he who is angry with his Brother shall be liable to the Judgment and whosoever shall say to his Brother Racha shall be liable to the Council How could this be true when our Lord spake this When the power of judging and sentencing all capital offenders was now taken from the Jews I answer some go about to satisfie this doubt by saying that although the power of judging capital causes were taken from the Jews yet the manner of Judgment was well known out of the Law Deut. 16.18 and other places and the practice of it This answer I conceive no wayes satisfieth the doubt for our Lord doth not tell them only of what was past but warns them of the danger to come Nor doth our Lord go about to terrifie his Disciples with inania terriculamenta causeless fears and scare-crows No our Lord here saith That he that is angry with his Brother without a cause shall be guilty of the Judgment and he who shall say to his Brother Racha shall be liable to the Council Hereby our Lord warns his Disciples that although all civil power were taken from the Jews of judging criminal and capital causes yet there remained a spiritual power of judging and condemning wrath and reproaches proceeding from wrath as murder Yea by these very words our Lord doth constitute a Spiritual Judicature in his Church for otherwise it cannot be shewn what Judgment or what Council the angry man and he who calls his Brother Racha shall be liable unto Doubt 2. But it seems our Lord forbids any such power of judging or ruling among his people Matth. 20.25 26 27. Answer Here is utterly a mistake Our Lord by these words doth not take away Superiority of one over another or Spiritual Judicature since he is the God of Order and the Supreme Judge But he forbids such abuse of power as was among the Gentiles They abuse their power and authority over others looking only at their own Soveraignty without aiming at their good whom they rule This is understood by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which we turn to exercise dominion and to exercise authority whereas ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in this composition imports the abuse of dominion and authority Obs 1. Take notice from hence that there is or ought to be a Spiritual Judicatory a power of judging spiritual things in the Church of God How doth this follow Surely undeniably for if whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause be liable to the Judgment and there were then no Civil Judicature Our Lord by these words necessarily supposeth a Spiritual Judicature unto which every one who is angry with his Brother without a cause is obnoxious and liable Otherwise our Lord the Judge and great Governour of his Church should be wanting to his Church in a matter of the greatest moment such as a power of judging spiritual things is such as Government is in the Church 2. There are or ought to be spiritual men in the Church who are meet and fit to judge of spiritual things as rash and unadvised anger The Apostle tells us that the spiritual man judgeth all things i. e. all spiritual things whereof he is a competent Judge Why then is there not such a Judgment such a
as angry with thy brother without a cause Obser 1. Note here with what Authority the Lord Jesus speaks to his Disciples Matth. 7.29 at the end of his Sermon as one having authority ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Obser 2. What power Christ hath What a Law-giver the Lord Jesus is he gives Laws to the hearts of men his authority reacheth to the ruling of their affections and passions Hebr. 4.12 The word of God is quick and powerful c. Obser 3. There is then in all Believers a possibility a power not to be angry Surely the Wise-man would not say Remove anger from thine heart if we had not a power imparted unto us of doing what we are commanded to do much less would the wisdom of God here who is that one Law-giver say unto every one every one who is angry with his Brother undeservedly and unadvisedly shall be liable to the Judgment c. He is so wise and knoweth so well what we are able to do that unless he knew we have power to forbear wrath and reproachful Speeches He would not threaten us with the Judgment the Council yea with Hell fire He hath power to save and destroy James 4.12 Obser 4. Not only that this was testified by Christ in the dayes of his flesh But the same hath been and is now testified by his Spirit whose voice is that which whispers to the wrathful Soul 1. Cease from anger and forsake wrath 2. Psal 37.8 It was spoken ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it was dictated unto David as the title hath it and the same is spoken to thee and me and every one in his wrath if he have an ear to hear it It was he that said to Cain why art thou wrath And why is thy countenance fallen Gen. 4.6 'T is he that speaketh to thee when thou art pettish and froward Reprehension If Christ say this to his Disciples if the Law-giver commands this to those who profess subjection unto him where is our obedience The Disciples of Pythagoras had no greater testimony than their Masters if ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that was enough If the Disciples said but ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã He said so it was believed all was hush they then obeyed what he said Exhort If the Lord Jesus the truth testifie this be we exhorted to believe it it is a divine testimony and therefore to be believed above all other arguments Hebr. 12.25 from Heaven Our Lord having asked the Pharisees touching the Baptism of John whether from Heaven or of men They answered if we say from men c. If we say from heaven he will say why then do ye not believe him But our Lord speaks to us from heaven Hebr. 12. a greater witness than that of John the Baptist if he speaks to us from Heaven why do we not believe him Signe If we believe him we will obey him we will not be angry with our Brother The Historian reports of Augustus that while he was yet a Child he commanded the Frogs to leave their croaking and they presently obeyed him And shall not the true Augustus have so much authority with us in reverence to whom Caesar would not be called Lord because now the Lord of heaven and earth was born shall he not have that power with us to silence our rage and fury and the croaking of those Frogs who say it is impossible Rev. 16. Shall not he who saith to the Sea be still and there followeth a great calm Shall not he have so much power with thee as to quiet thy fury and passion so that there may follow a great calmness of Spirit Surely the Lord will make good what he saith Psalm 76.20 The fierceness of men shall turn to his praise and the remainder of wrath shall he restrain Axiom 8. It was said to them of old time c. But I say unto you that whosoever is angry with his brother c. This point ariseth from the diversity between the teaching of the Law to the Ancients and the teaching of it to the Disciples of Christ The Law was taught to the Ancients outwardly and an outward punishment annexed thereunto The Law is taught to Christ's Disciples inwardly and established and ratified not only by outward and temporal but also by inward punishments The reason therefore of this diversity will appear from the consideration of the different Teachers and Disciples of the Law for so the Father hath his Disciples Esay 8. Seal the Law among my Disciples And the Son his also who have heard and learned of the Father John 6. the Father imparts his mind and will unto men by a gradual communication and revelation Thus he spake unto the Fathers ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã There was a necessity for this i. e. in regard of God himself he is infinite c. See Notes on Hebr. 1.1 2. in regard of those of old time Disciples of the Father ibid. 2. Reason also there is in regard of the other Teacher the Son of God and his Disciples the Father sent the Son to finish the work which he gave him to do John 17.4 He imparts a greater measure of light and life wisdom and righteousness unto men He came that they might have life and have it in more abundance John For since the Father was pleased to reveale his mind and will his light life wisdom and righteousness unto men more fully and perfectly How could he impart it more conveniently than by his Son who is the very light life wisdom and righteousness Now as the Father was pleased to communicate his mind and will more fully and clearly so he prepared Disciples such as should be capable of farther illumination and revelation For whereas the condition of the Father's Disciples was but a Spiritual Childhood which differs little from Servantship Gal. 4.1 For the Heir while he is a Child differs nothing from a servant though he be Lord of all The Father was pleased to advance the servile condition of his Children and Disciples to Sonship and freedom Gal. 4.1 2 3. Rom. 8.14 15. And therefore whereas the Teachers under the Law had said unto the Father's Disciples Thou shalt not kill Christ the Son saith to his Disciples whosoever is angry c. Objection If hell fire be the greatest punishment of the damned and he who shall say to his brother thou fool be liable to hell fire what punishment then shall he be liable unto who kills his Brother Which no doubt is a greater sin than to be angry with him than to say unto him Racha than to say unto him Thou fool It is a doubt that troubled one of the ancient Fathers of greatest reputation who starts the Objection and the only satisfaction he gives to it is this doubt saith he forceth us to understand esse differentias Gehennarum that there are differences of Hells And so he leaves the Objection But we read of no more Hells than one though it cannot be denied but that there are
degrees of torment in the hell of the damned for Matth. 11.22 It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sydon than for those Cities wherein most of his mighty works were done and they repented not and verse 24. It shall be more tolerable for the Land of Sodom in the day of Judgment than for Capernaum We read also of the lowest hell Deut. 32.22 My wrath shall burn to the lowest hell and deliverance from the lowest hell Psal 86.13 Thou hast delivered my Soul from the lowest hell and the depths of hell ProV 9.18 Her Guests are in the depths of hell Besides there are seven names of Hell as I shewed before ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã All which imply that there are divers degrees of punishment in Hell And so although he that saith to his Brother Thou fool be liable to hell fire yet there is a lower hell and the depths of hell prepared for him that murders his Brother because murder is a greater breach of the Sixth Commandment than being angry with our brother without a cause than saying to our brother Racha yea than saying to our Brother Thou fool as I shewed in the example of Cain And sith it is a greater sin in all reason and justice of God and man there must be a greater punishment than for any of these three Yea and saith he who saith to his Brother Thou fool shall be liable to hell fire He who shall murder his brother shall be liable to the lowest hell or the depths of hell This I believe is and seems probable reasonable and just to any understanding man yet if any should deny it or question it I know not how to prove that there be exactly such degrees of torment in hell the murderer shall be cast thereinto What then is there a greater punishment than Hell Surely there is what is that The lake of fire of which we read Revel 19.20 The beast and the false Prophet and they who worship his image shall be cast alive into the lake of fire burning with brimstone But happily this may be Hell it self No for the Devil himself shall be cast into the lake But why may not the Devil himself be cast into hell also That cannot be for Revelations 20. verse 14 15. Ye read that death and hell it self are cast into the lake and whosoever is not found written in the Book of life But yet we read of no murderers cast into the lake See then Chap. 21. 8. There ye find the murderers with all their Companions The fearful and unbelieving and the abominable and murderers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death So that although he who saith to his Brother Thou fool be liable to hell fire the angry and reproachful murderer who really and actually murders his Brother is liable to a greater Judgment than he who saith to his Brother Thou fool Obser 1. But I say unto you he that is angry with his brother c. Though the truth of God hath been delivered from all Antiquity to all Ages of men yet hath not the truth been taught ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã all at once unto any Age. But it hath been wrapt up in conceptu confuso in dark Speeches and Parables and mystical Representations until the time of Reformation appointed by the Father Thus we read divers names which had Mysteries in them which were not known till after Ages made them manifest The Scripture is full of them Melchizedeck is interpreted by St. Paul Hebr. 7.1 2. The Coathites were to carry the Utensils and Instruments of the Sanctuary but they must not touch the Utensils themselves nor see them Numb 4.15 17 20. The Coathites signifie stupid and dull men such as were not able to see to the end of that which was to be abolished 2 Cor. 3. Obser 2. The Lord expects a greater measure of obedience under the Gospel than he did under the Law I say not that the Lord required not the same obedience under the Law No doubt he did but the Law was weak by reason of the weakness of our flesh and the Spirit that is in us lusts unto envy But under the Gospel God hath given more grace He hath sent his Son in the similitude of sinful flesh c. that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. Obser 3. The Law is not only literal and binding the hand from killing and the tongue from reproachful speaking but it 's spiritual also and binds the heart and Spirit from evill thoughts and passions This was meant by Exodus 32.15 See Notes on Rom. 7.12 Obser 4. Hence it appears how great a difference there is between the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees and indeed all them who look at the Commandments of God as purely literal and outward and that righteousness which Christ himself teacheth It is no doubt a far greater sin to kill our Brother than to be angry with him yet to kill our Brother according to Pharisaical righteousness makes a man liable to the Judgment only But according to the righteousness which Christ teacheth He that is angry with his Brother without a cause is liable to the Judgment which of all the three penalties is the least as hath been shewn and there remains two greater the Council and Hell Fire Hence it 's evident that there is a dispensation doctrine and discipline of the Father preceeding that of the Son whereof there is yet very little notice taken while men huddle all things together without distinction Men are loath to yield to this least they should for like reason be forced upon the third dispensation of the Spirit Obser 5. The Lord doth not reveal to man his whole duty all at once The generality of men of old knew no other breach of the Sixth Commandment than outward murder Our Lord reveals unto his Disciples a new Law Thou shalt not be angry with thy brother without a cause Not but that the Law-giver would be understood also that his Law was spiritual and reached to wrath which accordingly he blamed in Cain as also the sign of wrath the fall of his countenance Gen. 4. And the Wise men in all Ages knew that wrath and hatred were forbidden by that Commandment And therefore Abraham would have no strife between Lot and him nor between their herds-men Gen. 13. But while the Heir was a Child he was to be brought up under fear And therefore Solomon tells us Eccles 12. That to fear God and keep his Commandments is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the whole man or the whole duty of man and this is the first degree of wisdom Job 28.28 and Exodus 20.20 The Lord is come to prove you that his fear may be before your faces So saith Moses when he had delivered the Law for the fear of God was the common state of all men under the Law
come to us let us draw our selves to it by the cords of love Psal 139. Examine me whether any way of wickedness be in me and lead me in the way everlasting 3. There is danger lest thine adversary deliver thee to the Judge This is the first degree of danger implyed in ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã nè quando lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the Judge 1. Literal 2. Spiritual 1. Who is the Judge 2. What is it to deliver one to the Judge And why doth the Adversary so deliver the Debtor to the Judge 1. The Judge is either Ordinary or Delegate Ordinary who by his own right or by the Authority of the Prince can exercise Jurisdiction 2. A Judge delegate is he who by Commission from another takes cognizance of some certain cause either of them may be here meant Both ought to act omnia secundum legem jus all things according to Law and Equity Who ever the Judge is he ought to be a good man and to fear God and that according to the Civil Laws and the Law of God For he that rules over men must be just ruling in the fear of God 2 Sam. 23.3 1. Who is the Judge The Father hath given all Judgment to the Son 2. What is it to deliver to the Judge The word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã sometimes signifieth simply tradere to deliver Matth. 25.14 He delivered to them his goods Sometime to deliver to be cast into prison Matth. 10.19 When they deliver you up Acts 22.4 Binding and delivering into prisons sometime to deliver by treachery Luke 21.12 He that betrayes me ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Luke 22.48 Now because sometime the Creditor by the fraud of his Debtor is put upon shifts to take him Vulpinari cum vulpinatore deliver to the Judge the Evangelist here useth ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã lest he deliver thee or betray thee Sometime the Creditor is forced by the wilfulness of his Debtor to use violence to apprehend him and therefore the word used by St. Luke 12.58 is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to draw lest the adversary draw thee to the Judge 3. Why doth the adversary deliver the Debtor to the Judge Apprehension and citing the Debtor to appear before the Judge is the beginning of Judicial Process 2. It is the Judges office to enquire examine determine and decide according to Law what is justice and equal yea by sentence and due execution of sentence to compel and enforce the Debtor to that which with his own will and by fair means otherwise he will not do Doubt But can a Brother be so unkind as to turn such an adversary as to deliver yea draw me to the Judge and so to be the author of all the ensuing dangers Men are apt to reason very favourably in behalf of themselves and lay the whole blame upon another But who ever thou art deal equally in this business between thy brother and thy self Thou sayest can thy brother be so unkind c. Reason now on thine own part Can I being a Brother be so unjust as to offend and provoke my Brother as to detain his right from him Whether of the two is the greater offence thy Brother's unkindness to thee or thine injustice which provoked thy Brother to be unkind And this unkindness of thy Brother renders him but just when he delivers thee to the Judge such differences as these are among the younger Saints Obser 1. Take notice here that there are divers kinds of Spirits one sort of those which are acted by men under the Law and Prophets another of those which are acted by the Spirit of Christ and his Apostles 1. They who acted by the Spirit of the Law and Prophets are of an austere fierce and rigorous Spirit as they who revenge themselves of the sin and sinners which have deceived them So zealous was Abel his blood cried Eliah who called for fire from Heaven to consume his adversaries so zealous was Jeremias 11.18 19. Let me see thy Vengeance 20.3 4 6 12. And Zachary 2 Chron. 24.22 The Lord look upon it and require it and Job who hath his name from his enmity against sin and iniquity Such effects are found in men when they know and are grieved that they have been beguiled by the deceitfulness of sin 2 Cor. 7.11 By this Spirit our Lord supposeth men acted while yet under the Law 2. But there is another Spirit wherewith they are acted who are led by Christ and his Apostles and are his true Disciples for the blood or Spirit of Christ speaks better things than that of Abel James and John were acted by the Spirit of the Law and Prophets and would have brought fire from Heaven to destroy the Samaritans as Elias did But our Lord told them they knew not of what Spirit they were or ought now to be And therefore Christ prayed for his Persecutors Father forgive them c. And St. Stephen Lord lay not this sin to their charge And St. Paul prayeth for the Colossians that they might be acted by the same spirit Col. 1.1 and Gal. 6.1 2 Tim. 2.25 26. With meckness instructing such as oppose themselves According to this Spirit our Lord did not condemn the Woman taken in Adultery to be put to death But what then did he approve of her God forbid no he bid her go and sin no more John 8.1 3. The Lord doth not disallow of legal process and proceedings at Law nor doth the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. simply forbid going to Law one with another He knew while men were yet in their younger spiritual age there would be differences one with other and therefore be regulates those differences 4. Our Lord doth not altogether disallow of coercive power when men are not willing yea when they are opposite unto what is right malo nodo malus quaerendus est cunaeus an hard knotty block requires an hard wedge 2. In this point three are met who make the Judgment complete The Adversary delivers thee to the Judge Judgment is the Act of three Judicis Actoris Rei The Judge the Adversary the Actor Plaintiff or Creditor and the Reus party accused Defendant or Debtor Mysticé This hath a truth also in the Mystery when the Adversary which is the Law of God and Prophets delivers him who will not agree with it unto the Judge And who is the Judge Who else but Christ And by what authority is he so John 5.22 The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Judgment unto the Son v. 27. The Father hath given the Son authority to execute Judgment also because he is the Son of man Dan. 7. Unto this Judge the Law and Prophets deliver obstinate men Ye have one who accuseth you even Moses John 5.45 And the Law reproveth corrects accuseth convinceth condemns Reason 1. In regard of Justice every transgression and disobedience must receive a due recompence of reward Hebr. 2.2 And he who despised Moses's Law must
of Elisha See Notes on Heb. 1. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã 2. Hearken to the Lord's rod. 3. Pray unto him Psal 69.15 Let not the pit shut her mouth upon me and Psal 142.7 Bring my soul out of prison c. Job 33.26 30. NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW V. 31 32. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã But it hath been said He who shall put away his wife let him give her a writing of divorcement But I say unto you that whosoever shall put away his wife saving for the cause of fornication causeth her to commit adultery and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery I Told you in the Preface to the opening of vers 27 28. That our Lord expounds the seventh Commandment and somewhat annexed thereunto having now expounded the seventh Commandment and given directions for the avoiding of Adultery and Fornication to extinguish the evil concupiscence which might foment and nourish this sin implied by plucking out the offensive eye cutting off the offensive hand and foot and all this at our utmost peril even of being cast into hell He now propounds and then expounds somewhat annexed to the seventh Commandment and that is concerning Divorce in the words I have read I shew'd in the beginning of our Lord's Expositions That it is not generally true which some conceive it to be That our Lord in this Sermon on the Mount intended only the confutation of the Pharisees false glosses and mis-interpretations of God's Law for we have seen hitherto that both the first and second instances are no other than the very Law of God in the sixth and seventh Commandments and our Lords Expositions of them have no way confuted them but added their inward and spiritual meanings thereunto that whereas the Law against Murder and Adultery was understood only to restrain the outward Act our Lord shews that those Laws reach even to the heart also wherefore it could not be his general scope howbeit I deny not but he meets with false glosses and misunderstandings of God's Law and such was this custom and practice of the Jews which we have now before us The words contain our Lords third instance wherein we have 1. A Law or pretence of a Law it hath been said 2. Our Lords exception and limitation of that Law or pretence of a Law in the former we have these particulars 1. It was usual and customary for the Jews to put away their Wives 2. Who so puts away his Wife must give her a writing of divorce 3. This was said usually among them 1. It was usual and customary for the Jews to put away their wives This is evident by what our Lord supposeth in his exception and limitation of this usage in the next verse But I say unto you c. as also by the Pharisees question put unto our Lord Mat. 19.3 Is it lawful for a man to put away his Wife for every cause They had no doubt such an usage but we must here enquire quo jure by what right they so did It 's true among men a long custome an usage of long time may become a Law But Nullum tempus occurrit Regi No time can prescribe custome to the Prince much less can the longest time introduce a custome against the King of Kings Was this his Law or not that men should put away their wives The Pharisees would intimate so much Mat. 19.7 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Moses mandavit commanded to give her a Bill of divorce No saith our Lord Moses ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã permisit permitted you to put away your Wives it was not then any command of God but a permission But every permission is to be reduced to one Law or other either Moral Judicial or Ceremonial To which of these was divorce to be reduced Surely it was a Politick and Civil Ordinance and Dispensation which is to be reduced to the Moral Law and to the seventh Commandment and therefore our Lord having discovered inward Adultery even by lusting after a woman he now shews who give occasion to commit Adultery even they who put away their Wives But for our more distinct proceeding we must know that this putting away was to be understood of Wives of the stock of Israel for otherwise a Wife taken from among the Captives might be put away Deut. 21.14 2. Nor doth this extend to all the Hebrew Wives for she who was forced before marriage by her Husband might not be put away Deut. 22.29 3. This permission or license of putting away was by reason of the hardness of their hearts Mat. 19. which may be understood two wayes either that the Lord and his servant Moses remitted somewhat of the strictness of the Law for a time lest the Husband should complain that he was yoaked without release or remedy 2. because men by their hardness of heart by their own Law or Act did love to be cut off This permission was not allowed in any Case except some nakedness or uncleanness as Deut. 24.1 2 3. The reason why men put away their Wives among the Jews and why there would be the like Divorces made among other Nations if the Laws did not hinder them the reason is because the parties are not duly and as they ought to be united and joyn'd together And this comes to pass by reason of a two-fold defect 1. One in regard of God 2. The other in regard of Nature 1. In regard of God marriage ought to be in him i. e. according to his Will and in his Fear in his Name wherein all things ought to be done especially Wedlock 1 Cor. 7.39 Let her marry to whom she will ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã only in the Lord. 2. There is also a defect in regard of Nature when Complexions and Constitutions are not considered but other causes and reasons incline parties one to the other of which more anon Obs 1. Here is presupposed that marriage is an Union and Knitting of Man and Wife together and that an intimate Union insomuch that Man and Wife is said to be one flesh Mat. 19. which words of our Saviour have reference unto that first Institution of Marriage Gen. 2. where we read That the Woman was taken out of the man Obs 2. How prone men are to break the Law of God as it appears in that most of God's Laws in the Decalogue are negative and above all Laws men are most apt to break the Law of Love one to another which yet the Lord himself in special is said to teach Thes 4.9 Ye are taught of God to love one another for having made of one blood all the Nations of men there is or ought to be in all men such a love as is wont to follow Consanguinity and Kindred and of all the Laws of Love men are prone to violate that which should bind them most which God gave to the Man in his Innocency upon the first contracting of marriage he shall cleave unto his
them of old time our Lord tells us as much Mat. 19.8 That because of the hardness of their hearts Moses had suffered them to put away their wives but from the beginning it was not so therefore he saith not here ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã as formerly it was said indeed to or by them of old time Thou shalt not commit Adultery but it was not said to or by them of old time if a man put away his wife c. That this is the true reason why ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is not here added will appear beside what hath been said if ye compare herewith Jer. 3.1 where the Prophet speaking of the very same argument he puts first ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which our Translators turn they say or saying whereby is implied That this was not said from the beginning but since the hearts of men have been hardned by unbelief and disobedience Mysticé There is a lawful and a necessary divorce to be made between us and our sinful thoughts and memory which spiritually are signified by a Wife as I have shewn heretofore out of 2 Cor. 11. These are the Female part of the man as the life is the Male and these are adjoyn'd to the Male even to the life as a meet-help unto it as a Wife which lodgeth in his bosome if she prove unquiet if she be a scold if she gad abroad like an idle huswife if she be an harlot it 's the Wise Mans advise cut her off from thy flesh and let her go Ecclus. 25.26 And this seems to be intended in Deut. 24. If the Husband find ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a word of uncleanness in his wife then let him give her a bill of divorce what is this word of uncleanness there is a pure word and an holy word the word of the Lord is pure but there is a word of Belial saith the Wise Man even the word of Antichrist which opposeth and exalts it self against God and whatsoever is of God and Christ in us God grant saith the Wise Man that it be not found in the house of Jacob c. Ecclus. 23 12 13. This is that which our Saviour calls ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which we render for cause of fornication there is an inward word of fornication and adultery this is that which is to be divorced and put away from us O let it not be found in us Exhor Let us rather heed and obey that which was said to them of old time and by them of old time than that which was only by them of later time rather by the precepts of the Lord than his permissions with the Ancients is Wisdom See Notes on Job 12. Mat. 5.32 Hitherto we have heard the pretended Law come we now to our Lord's exception and limitation of this Law or pretence of a Law But I say unto you that he who shall put away his wife saving for the cause of fornication causeth her to commit adultery and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery 1. A man may put away his Wife for the cause of Fornication 2. Whosoever shall put away his Wife saving for the cause of Fornication causeth her to commit Adultery 3. Whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth Adultery 4. Our Lord Jesus saith this Whosoever c. 5. It hath been said indeed if a man put away his Wife c. but the Lord Jesus saith c. 1. A man may put away his Wife for the cause of Fornication This is clear in that our Lord names this cause and excludes all others So that his exceptions of this hath the force of an affirmation 2. By Fornication which otherwhere is understood of single persons is here to be meant Adultery for so the words are used promiscuously as I have formerly shewn 3. Reason Fornication or Adultery which is here understood is a real breach of that Sacred Bond whereby Man and Wife becomes one flesh and therefore putting away in this case is but a declaring of that or a perfecting of that by the man which was done before by the woman Further Reason may be this since the most Holy God excludes Adulterers and Fornicators from the Kingdom of Heaven Gal. 5. It seems equal that they should be excluded also from the Saints society upon earth and therefore Adulterers were adjudged by God's Law to the most extreme kinds of punishments among the Jews as burning Gen. and stoning John 8. A man may but must he so do But here it may be doubted whether the man even in this case be bound to put away his Wife even for the cause of Adultery I believe he is not bound to put away his Wife no not for the cause of Adultery and my reason is I do not read any Law of God that enjoyns the wronged man so to do Besides in regard of God he is a witness of the mutual Faith plighted one to the other it is his own reason Mal. 2.14 The Lord hath been witness between thee and the Wife of thy youth and secondly she is thy Companion and the Wife of thy Covenant It is thy Covenant and the Lord is witness to it 3. The Lord hates putting away Mal. 2.16 And we ought not to do the thing that he hates Jer. 44.4 2. In regard of men though it be true that Adultery were a capital crime and to be punished by the Judges as Job 31. if the business were brought before them and proved yet we read not any where that the Husband was bound to prosecute his Wife if he saw her penitent or thought good either to retain her or put her away more privately by bill of divorce We find not that Jacob put away his Wife or Hand-maid which was a secondary Wife whom Ruben abused And Joseph in his ignorance conceiving his espoused Wife to have been an Adulteress being ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã i. e. a merciful man he would not make her a publick Example but thought privately to put her away by bill of divorce Mat. 1. Obser 1. Adultery is here called Fornication as the highest degree of it Obser 2. Adultery is one of the greatest crimes as that which dissolves and unties that knot between Man and Wife and nulls that union betwen Man and Wife above all other causes which otherwise is inseparable Obser 3. Note hence what wisdom is required what providence and circumspection what care in the choice of such a Companion as must live and converse with us and be one with us all our life time Quod semel faciendum est id deliberandum est diu The choice of such an associate is like a stratagem in war wherein a man can err but once Ye are wary in your bargains and buying your commodities which yet ye intend not long time to keep or lie by you but presently to put off for gain and advantage how much more circumspect and wary ought men to be in making a bargain for life in purchasing a
rule for our inward communication When Christ the ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the Word speaks unto us answer it with Yea with our consent thereunto When the evil one speaks answer it with Nay Christ speaks in Righteousness mighty to save Esay 63.1 His yea is yea and his nay is nay He is Amen the Faithful Witness Exhort Let our yea be yea and our nay nay to Christ speaking in us he speaks in Righteousness Esay 63.1 He speaks peace Psal 85.8 He speaks to hinder man from his work and hide pride from man Job 33.14 16 17 18. That having purged his Temple he might dwell in us and speak in us and be our ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã an Oracle in us The Roman God Locutius spake to the Romans until they had built him a Temple and then ever after he held his peace The Lord Jesus he speaks in us that we may prepare him a Temple and a dwelling place in us Exod. Let them build me a Sanctuary and I will dwell in the midst of them When we have built him a Temple He will then be an Oracle in us Ecclus. 33.3 Then what was before in Letter and History and much pains taken for the understanding of it it shall be an inward word Our Saviour tells the Woman of Samaria John 4. He who shall drink of the waters that I shall give him he shall thirst no more but it shall be in him a well of living waters springing up unto everlasting life The Woman said Sir Give me this water that I thirst not nor come hither to draw Who would not desire this when we are the Lord's Temple He speaks what with great trouble and pain men have studied and gathered out of Books he turns Cyriath Sepher into Deber Josh 15.15 How shall we know what word speaks in us surely if the Living Word he withdraws us from Evil and puts Good in the place and increaseth it if it be the Evil Spirit he withdraws from the Good and puts Evil in the place and increaseth it Means Would we hear the ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the inward word speaking to us Let us then turn unto our heart Psal 85.8 Let us not add unto his words Prov. 30.5 6. Every word of God is pure He is a buckler to them that walk uprightly add not unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a liar What is more than these comes of evil What is here meant by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã what by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which we turn more signifieth excess redundancy superfluity whereof there are two sorts 1. Of Good Mat. 5.47 2. Of Evil Jam. 1.21 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the word we render evil is taken personally for the Evil One the Devil So in the Lord's Prayer Deliver us from evil Mat. 6.12 and 13 19. then cometh ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã See the Essay It may also be taken really as from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã iniquity or wickedness Reason From the nature of the Rule adequate unto the mind and will of God which if it be exceeded Vltra citraqué nequit consistere rectum Since therefore there are two great Principles 1. The chief Good the Original of all truth and goodness 2. The chief Evil of all falshood lies sin and wickedness what exceeds the bounds of the one falls under the other Now because all humane actions thoughts and words are to be conformed unto the Divine Rule what exceeds that Note cannot proceed from the Principle of it but from the contrary Be not deceived little children he that doth righteousness is righteous as he is righteous he that commits sin is of the Devil 1 John 3.7 8. Object From hence some reason as they think strongly against Swearing and taking lawful Oaths as conceiving that from this Divine Testimony it 's proved unlawful for a Christian man in any case to swear why because what ever is more than Yea yea and Nay nay is from the evil one and therefore unlaw and evil I Answer this follows not but this indeed follows from hence that usual and customary swearing in our Communication is utterly unlawful and sinful how much more false swearing and lying Object 2. But some will say this which exceeds or is more than Yea yea and Nay nay is from the Evil One and therefore an oath which is more than Yea yea and Nay nay is from the Evil One and so it must be evil I Answer our Lord saith not whatsoever is more than these is evil but it cometh of the evil one A thing may come from the evil one Two wayes 1. Directly and per se 2. Per accidens and indirectly 1. Directly and per se and so an effect naturally flows from the cause of it so wickedness is from the wicked and the evil one is a liar and the father of lies Thus customary swearing comes directly from the evil one 2. Indirectly and by accident a thing may come from the evil one whereof truly and properly he is not the cause but the occasion only And thus the Devil directly and on set purpose excites tempts and stirs up men to sin but that which follows upon sin he is not the cause but only the occasion of it and in this sence a good effect may proceed from an evil cause as repentance from sin But sin is not properly the cause of repentance but of wrath so we say a Fever brings temperance this is no effect per se of a Fever but only by accident for per se a Fever rather tends to death and thus Ex malis moribus ortae sunt bonae Leges Good Laws proceed from evil manners Evil manners properly do not produce good Laws but rather tend to further wickedness as like begets like but occasionally the Magistrate makes good Laws for the repressing of evil manners And thus an Oath though lawfully taken may be said occasionally to come from the evil one As when the Devil the evil one takes away the word of truth out of the heart as he is said to take away the good seed Mat. 13.19 he ingenders in such an heart a lye And because this his work is too frequent and usual hence ariseth in men a fear suspicion and doubt of falshood and lying in those with whom they deal Hence an Oath was introduced and enjoyned by the God of Truth for the clearing and discovering of truth But directly per se a lawful Oath cannot proeed from the evil one because a part of God's worship Deut. 6.13 Obser Swearing any Oath is more than bare affirming or denying Obj. 1. What is more than Yea and Nay is unlawful but an Oath is more c. The communication must be Yea yea Nay nay and no more but an oath is more than these This Objection if well considered brings an answer with its self whether we consider communication or your communication For no doubt but the Christian Communication ought
not able ex tempore to perform such eminent Duties as these are but he ought to begin with the beginning of the Divine Wisdom the Fear of God and sit down in the lowest room and when he is well exercised in humility and the fear of God the Lord will then say to him Amice ascende superiùs Friend sit up higher Obser 1. Hence we learn what it is to love another not only to have a complacency in him not only to speak well to him and of him but also to do him good what we can wherein he is capable and we are able Obser 2. The Disciples of Christ have their enemies what great matter is that you 'l say Who is there but he hath his enemies Who can hope to be beloved of all There is a kind of wild love and wild hatred in the world but the Disciples of Christ have their proper enemies as such Christ's Disciples and the world they and their love and hatred are not only ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã whatsoever is in the world the lusts c. Marvel not that the world hates you it hated me first John 15.18 19. If the world hate you ye know it hated me before it hated you c. Obser 3. Hence a man may know whether he himself be a Disciple of Christ and a Christian yea or not If he be 1. The world will hate him 2. The world will hate him because he is a Disciple of Christ 1 John 15.18 19. This is not alwayes an adequate and proper sign One hath customers which another hath lost One is of this opinion another of that These are enmities of the world within it self Does the world and worldly men hate thee because thou testifiest that the works thereof are evil Ahab spake out when he said There is one Michajah but I hate him because he speaks no good of me 1 King 22.8 Because ye rush not with them into the same excess of riot speaking evil of you ye are covetous ye are proud 1 Pet. 4.4 The Lascivious world which follows the lusts of the flesh hates them because they testifie by their chast and holy life that the works thereof are evil Herod hated John Baptist because he said It is not lawful for thee to have thy Brothers wife Thus some are called Legal Preachers because they testifie against the fleshly sensual and voluptuous Generation that it is not lawful for them to follow their debaucht courses their surfeitings and drunkenness their chambering and wantonness c. Obser 1. The Gospel requires harder duty do good to them that hate you i. e. that shew it by evil deeds than those of the Law the Law love thy neighbour the Son of thy people but hate thine enemy the Gospel do good to them that hate thee The reason is because the Promises of God hold forth more Grace Help and Strength than Nature affords Rom. 12.19 20. Avenge not your selves and therefore the Gospel requires 1 Pet. 2.19 This is thank-worthy if a man for Conscience towards God endure grief suffering wrongfully for what glory is it if when ye be buffetted for your faults ye take it patiently but if ye do well and suffer for it or take it patiently this is thank-worthy and then our Calling and Christ's Example is added vers 21. Note hence with what boldness and confidence the Lord Jesus imposeth upon his Disciples the seeming most unreasonable absurd duties and most abhorring to Nature yet if well considered the most consonant unto Nature and Reason they suit best with the end of all pure Religion and undefiled they render us like unto God they are not contrary to the Divine Nature They render us like unto Christ they are consonant to the ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to our Divine Reason 3. The Lord would advance his people above the very best of those who were acted with a legal spirit Nehemiah I curst them Elisha did so So vain is their reasoning who alledge examples of those who were under the spirit of the Law ye know not of what spirit ye are or ought to be of if Christians Luke 9. How much more should we love our friends The Disciples were called friends and though they have other names in Scripture ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is the last we read of 3 Joh. 1. These are they who love one another as Christ hath loved them c. John 13.34 and 15.12 But do we not urge this Comparison beyond the drift of it Answer See Ephesians 5.1 2. Be ye therefore followers of God as dear Children 1 John 3.16 Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not Repreh 1. Those who will do no good lest they should merit how hardly shall we perswade those men to love and do good to their enemies when for fear of meriting they will do no good to their neighbour Repreh 2. The ungrateful world to whom much good is done by Christ's Disciples yet will not be won to God no not by God's last remedy and expedient Saul would not be won though he acknowledged all David's good deeds towards him c. 1 Sam. 24. If a man find his enemy will he let him go well away this is a Paradox Repreh 3. Those are so intractable that they will not suffer themselves to be kindly dealt withal Extrema linea odii nolle ab inimico adjuvari The highest degree of hatred is to refuse to be holpen of an enemy Sons of Belial Exhort 1. Not only bear love and good affection to them that hate us but also do all possible good we can for the worst and most mischievous of them So did David Psal 7.4 I have delivered him who without cause was mine enemy Exod. 23.45 Prov. 25.21 Rom. 12.21 22. Exhort 2. Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth lest the Lord see it and it displease him and he turn away his wrath from him Prov. 24.17 18. Means Pray unto the Lord Thou art good c. O teach me thy Statutes Psal 119.68 Axiom the fourth Pray for them that despightfully use you and persecute you Herein our Lord commands his Disciples to express their greatest love to their greatest enemies in what they can procure of God to be done for them Wherein Quaere Who these are who are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which encreaseth the signification so it signifieth to vex one by War Psal 55.21 So Elisha advised Joram to set meat before the Syrians ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã persecutores ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to persecute with all manner of venom inward and outward if wanting in the former word added in this 2. What Prayer for them Intercession Reason They have great need to be prayed for 1. They cannot pray for themselves God hears not sinners c. John 9. 2. What they do they do ignorantly 3. Their wickedness
good to them that hate him and to excite and stir us up who call our selves his children to be like unto him herein Obser 6. The course of Nature is not unalterable which conceit is one ground of Atheism The world is not so disposed and set in such an immutable course but that it may admit of changes according to the will of its Maker a free Agent in whose hand and power it is God makes the Sun to arise he can make it to stand still or go backward or forward profer was made of both by Esay to Hezekiah And whereas Ahaz was bidden to ask a sign in heaven surely that had been in the Sun or Moon or other heavenly bodies as unalterable in course of Nature as the Sun is Obser 7. Hence we may justly wonder at the large bowels and compassions and mercies of our God towards his enemies He makes his Sun to arise upon the evil and upon the evil first the evil are first named and indeed 1. because there are more evil than good and the wicked prosper more in the world than the good and have a greater share in the world than the good have in this respect he may be said to make his Sun to arise rather on the evil than on the good Mysticé Christ is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã The brightness of his Fathers glory God is light and Christ is light of light Exhort 1. To the Evil that they sin not against the light 2. To the Good that they walk as children of the light Mysticé The Lord makes his Sun of Righteousness to arise upon the Evil and upon the Good for the Son of God who is the Sun of Righteousness enlightneth every man that cometh into this world John 1.9 In them hath he set a Tabernacle for the Sun c. as ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a Giant to run a race Psal 19. Rom. 10.18 Vpon whom doth not his light arise saith Bildad Job 25.3 Obj. But here some will except and say that the Sun of Righteousness only ariseth upon those that fear the Lords Name Mal. 4.2 Answ Know we therefore that the light of the Divine Sun is either his preventing or following Illumination his preventing or consequent Grace both Joh. 1.8 9. His preventing Grace appeareth to all He hath shewn thee O man Man is taken as largely as Adam for that 's the word there Mich. 6.8 what is good to do justly c. The Grace of God that brings salvation hath appeared unto all men That is John the Grace of the Lord as his name signifieth if this Grace did not appear unto the evil how could it be said that he enlightens every man coming into this world and Titus 2.11 How could evil men be unexcusable before God unless they had some Grace vouchsafed unto them which should take away all excuse How could they be said to sin against the light unless the light had shined unto them Joh. 15.22 If I had not spoken unto them they had had no sin If a man will rather yield himself to be hood-wink'd and blinded by the Prince of darkness than that he will open his eyes and see the light of Life as those do in whom the God of this world hath blinded their eyes c. If a man wilfully shut his eyes against the light or shut the casement or draw the curtain and keep out the light surely he makes himself unexcusable that he sees not the light and may be truly said to sin against the light if he oppose or turn from such illumination the means of knowing God as God affords him As for the following words ye read it in the next words Looking for the blessed hope of the glorious appearing of the grace of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Tit. 2. The Sun brings with it all the active and seminal vertues and powers of all Herbs and Plants in the earth and draws them forth so doth the Son of Righteousness bring with it all enlivening and quickning power to elicite and draw forth all what is good in us That our light may shine before men Obser 2. All things fall alike to all men Eccles 9.2 Obser 3. It is no certain adequate evidence of God's Child that these common gifts of God are given to him The Lord raineth upon the just and unjust Reason The same as in the former the same care of all the same necessity of the Creature the Lord here testifieth his love Acts 14. He gives men rain from heaven and fruitful seasons filling mens hearts with food and gladness that they might seek out God and his goodness might lead them to repentance In regard of the good and just that they might be more confirmed and know the end of these outward dispensations of God Psal 4.6 7. Object This is not alwayes so for Amos 4.7 8. there the Reason is given that men should turn to the Lord. Obser 4. Natural effects are ascribed to the God of Nature Pluit tonat ningit grandinat Rain thunder snow and hail Proceed from him that ruleth all We ought to acknowledge these Can any of the vanities of the Gentiles give rain Jer. 14.22 Rain is either 1. Natural or 2. Spiritual and that 1. either Good or 2. Evil. Mysticé The Lord makes his Spiritual rain the rain of his Word to fall upon the Just and upon the Unjust even his Word which is as the rain Regeneration and the New Birth that we are born again is from above John 3. Except a man be born ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã from above I am from above saith the Son of God Obser 4. Sun and Sun-light and Rain are from above from God Every good and perfect gift the fruits of the earth Repreh On whom the Lord rains yet they bring forth no fruit Heb. 6. Rain stands and sinks not in either stony places or where the earth is full Consol This is my condition many so complain when there is no cause when by their good fruits they are known Exhort Neglect not the Word Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepè cadendo Sic homo fit justus non vi sed saepè monendo The drops do wear the stone by often dropping on 't So men become reform'd when God is minded oft Obj. But I am that earth that is near unto burning Answ Wherefore doth he say near but that we should be awakened and stirred up to prevent it that we come no nearer whose end is to be burned The Servants of Benhadad watched for a word out of the Kings mouth Such is this of burning Obser 6. Consider both together Sun and Rain the greatest blessing this is soon discerned if either apart without the other an heavy judgment The Sun scortcheth and burneth up the fruits of the earth The rain is also sometimes a curse Ezech. 38. Exhort Do good to them that hate you Hereby we advance God's end 2. It 's the most powerful and effectual way 3. If it do not
him in the Margin they asked him of peace This Salutation was wont to be of equal extent with their love being confined to their own Nation so was their Salutation also 4. If Christ's Disciples salute their Brethren only what do they more Our Translators add here a Supplement than others which although it be true yet ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã as I shewed in opening vers 20. is somewhat that is excellent and so we may understand the words here what excellent thing do ye Obser The Lord requires and expects of his Disciples that they be an Excellent People that they do somewhat more than others do Hence it appears that the Lord requires Salutations not only of our brethren and friends but also of others They are such as win and maintain love among men how else had the people of God lived among their enemies how else did Paul become all things unto all men had he not complied with them 1 Cor. 9. Repreh Those who are wanting and faulty in this duty of Salutation and bring in among Christians an unfriendly and unchristian behaviour without common expressions of love and friendship directly contrary to what our Lord here requires He requires a greater measure of love and expression of love in honouring of men 1 Pet. 2.17 Loving all men saluting all men These restrain their love to a few of their own and their expressions of honour and love in salutations What they are wont to say that they bear an inward love and honour unto all it 's as much as if they said nothing at all for the nature of honour is outwardly expressed in the signs of it and the inward love and affection is declared in outward salutations suitable thereunto as 't is evident to common sence and needs no further proof so that such behaviour is at least a great weakness And truly I pity them who needlesly yea contrary to the Rule of the Word bring inconveniences and mischiefs upon themselves and scandalize the Christian Religion as if it were a rugged unmannerly and uncivil Religion whereas it is most civil and debonaire and lovely and winning in the whole world What they say that men ought not to look for and receive honour one of another is true and they scruple to give that which others may not receive I Answer let men do what becomes them whatever becomes of what they do But if men do what they do out of Judgment and pretence of Reason let them know it's scandalous to the Christian name and utterly a fault among them that whereas they would seem to bring in a greater eminency and excellency of Christinity among men then hath been before in the world they render themselves blame-worthy in that they make men believe that the Lord required a rude inhumane morose and cynical behaviour yea and they cause that which is good in them to be evil spoke of Be ye therefore perfect as your Father which is in heaven is perfect These words contain the conclusion of our Lord's Exposition of the common Law of Love especially the love of enemies which contain these Five Divine Truths 1. Your Father is in heaven 2. he is perfect 3. be ye perfect 4. be ye perfect as your Father which is in heaven is perfect 5. your Father which is in heaven makes his Sun to rise upon the evil and upon the good c. patrizate igitur be ye like your Father Be ye perfect therefore as your Father which is in heaven is perfect I might thus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but I shall for brevity sake speak of them all in one Divine Truth as it is inferred out of the former doctrine of which I have already spoken as it lies in the words Because your heavenly Father is perfect be ye therefore perfect as he is perfect Wherein we must enquire 1. what is meant by perfection 2. how we are to understand perfection as our Father in heaven is perfect 1. By perfection here we are not to understand only sincerity which is opposite unto hypocrisie But here must be understood a full compleat and absolute perfection for our Father which is in heaven is here said to be perfect and so he is both in his Essence and Attributes and in his Works Deut. 32. His work is perfect our Translators were well advised of this and therefore they could not here juggle with us and impose other names upon this most eminent duty as elsewhere they do when they turn Jacob was a plain man which is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a perfect man and turn ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã undefiled unspotted unfeigned upright Perfectum est in quo omne illud est quod melius est esse quà m non esse For Sincerity and Integrity is a Grace and Vertue opposite unto Hypocrisie and Dissimulation which is understood even in the lowest and weakest Duty as in a good Will it 's required that we be Sincere and not Hypocritical and in the passage out of the sinful Life it 's necessary that we be Sincere and Upright Thus when the Sons of Israel came out of Egypt they brought their dough unleavened which the Apostle interprets Sincerity and Truth 1 Cor. 5. There is a Perfection 1. according to Time and 2. according to Nature 3. according to Universality 1. Perfection according to time is a resemblance in all the parts unto our Father who is in Heaven As a Child new born hath all the parts and members inward and outward of a perfect man and he may be truly said to be perfect in his kind 2. A perfection according to Nature when whatever is due to their Nature is in it 3. A perfection according to Universality so God alone is perfect 2. How must we understand that comparison Be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect I Answer even as it lies in the Text what need any other Exposition of it Such a one is perfect as God is perfect when he hath attained to that due to his Nature as God hath that which is due to his If the Child now like his Father in all parts and members inward and outward should so continue and not grow up in stature and birth and quantity and in some good measure should be like unto his Father what would ye think would ye not believe that he would be a very Dwarf a Monster in Nature would ye not think as some do that the Child were bewitcht and some ill eye or other had been upon him Now then look into thy self and consider whereunto thou art called and what thou professest and whereunto thou pretendest to endeavour even the measure of the stature and age of Christ a perfect man Eph. 4.13 and judge and speak truly of thy self art thou not an arrant Dwarf a Monster in the Divine Nature hath not some or other bewitcht thee Gal. 3.1 that after so much hearing thou art yet like a child of a span long Lam 2. Reason is in the Text
except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no wise enter into the Kingdom of Heaven We are such as deny our Lord and he will deny us at that Great Day our Lord gives us fair and timely warning of it Mat. 7.21 22 23. Luk. 13.26 27. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father Obser 3. Whosoever the Lord is impartial and without respect of persons Obser 4. If our Lord deny those who yet make some outward confession and profession of him because in works they deny him what shall become of those who deny him both in words and works prophane wicked and ungodly men Tit. 1.16 being abominable disobedient and unto every good work reprobate The Apostles prophesie of such to come 2 Pet. 2.1 2. Repreh 1. Do we thus requite the Lord foolish people and unwise that we are Is not he thy Father that hath bought thee c. Deut. 32.6 2 Pet. 2. 1. Jude 4.18 Obser 1. Observe how the Noble Nature of man is abased and degenerate it needs motives promises and threats of the highest nature to move it but to it 's own duty and threats to terrifie it from its own greatest misery needs consolation for a spur to Divine Glory Christ is the Glory of his people Israel Luk. 2. And shall we who are his people be ashamed of our Glory Shall we turn our Glory to shame Psal 4. Whose Glory is their shame Phil. 3. Christ is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã honour 1 Pet. 2.7 Will a Bride forget her Ornaments Jer. 2.32 Dehort That we would not deny our Lord. Motive He is our Lord shall we deny our Lord He is our Lord that hath bought us He is our owner Even the Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Ass his Master's crib and shall not Israel know his Owner Shall his people deny him the Lord that bought them now God forbid 2. Motive The turpitude of it ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã for ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is turpitudo Sign Thou deniest him not thou believest that he was born of the Virgin c. and what great matter is it that thou so believest The Devils believe saith St. James But thou confessest that Christ is come in the flesh and the Devils confess so much I know thee who thou art thou Holy One of God Such a belief as this such a confession may consist with a wicked with a diabolical life and he who confesseth Christ so denies him Both contraries work the same effect fulness and emptiness Prov. 30.8 9. Fulness of any thing but God and Christ inclines us to deny him Fulness of Wealth Prov. 30. Lest I be full and deny thee Bread and abundance of idleness holding the Truth in unrighteousness Honour pleasure when thou hast eaten and drunk to the full then take heed Emptiness and appetite of temporal things they confessed him not because they loved the praise of men more than of God Contraria contrariis curantur Contraries are cured by contraries but herein is required Athletica habitudo Our Lord fills the hungry with good things and the rich he sends empty away Lest your beasts be overcharged with surffetting Therefore Sodom was over-thrown and our destruction comes from the same cause Pray unto the Lord to heal our backslidings Hos 14.4 Obj. But this may discourage some weak and misgiving Soul when it shall consider that Christ is denied by a sinful by a disobedient life and that Christ will deny those who so deny him Alas I have denied the Lord. But so did Peter he denied his Lord yea he forswore his Lord yea he cursed himself if he knew his Lord But Peter went out and wept yea he went out and wept bitterly for it yea by a threefold confession through the Grace of him who looked back upon him and caused him to weep bitterly he expiated his threefold denial of his Lord And if thou have denied the Lord that bought thee either in words or works haply for fear as St. Peter did and now thy Lord looks backupon thee and remembers thee of what thou hast done Go out as Peter did go out of thy lewd company such as he was engaged in but above all go out of thy self deny thy self the worst company of all deny thy worldly wisdom thy vain thoughts thy perverse will and affections which have caused thee to deny thy Lord deny ungodliness and worldly lusts follow St. Peter's Counsel as well as his Example Acts 37. The Spirit was not yet come upon Peter Excidit intrà charitatem non a charitate Therefore our Lord looked on him and he upon Christ O but I have been a Persecutor and Blasphemer yea and as they Act. 3.13 14 15. Hear that other great Apostle St. Paul 1 Tim. 1.16 which happened to him ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã See Notes on Mat. 12. in the beginning Consol To those who confess Christ before men They must displease men there is no help for it If they have persecuted me they will persecute you saith our Saviour Joh. 15.20 the same life being professed by both Wherever men confess Christ the Life there follows the persecution of the world As he that was born after the Flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit so it is now Wherefore did Cain hate Abel but because his own works were Evil and his Brothers Righteous Saul what evil hast thou done c. See Notes on 1 Thes 4.1 Mel exulcerata mordet Honey is sharp when it meets with ulcers but sweet to them that are in health and sound saith the Oratour Therefore the Cynick spake I know not how truly of Plato What profit saith he can be in that man who having long read Philosophy among us was yet never troublesome to any Doubtless in a mixt Auditory as most are the honey meets with many an ulcer Men will wince when they are galled and therefore no marvel if the Devil cryed out he was tormented by the Lord Mar. 1. how thinkest thou to escape ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Another ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Jer. 26.14 15. I am in your hands but know that if ye put me to death ye shall surely bring innocent blood upon your selves Notes on Exod. 20.7 to the same intent with the former MATTHEW 10.32 33. IT is some refreshing to the weary Traveller when he looks back upon the way he hath past I shall therefore in a few words shew you how far we are gone in the way of God's Commandments and where now we are I have hitherto endeavoured to open the Affirmative part of the Third Commandment the Sanctifying and Glorifying of God's Name in sundry special and principal Acts belonging thereunto The Precept is now Negatively to be considered as it lies in the Text. In the words are these severals 1. The Lord's will is That we take not his Name in vain 2. The Lord will
guilty of a sin measures another by himself as the Mother in Whoredom suspected the Daughter or else when a man hates another and wishes sin in him and because quae volumus facilè credimus believes he is so evil as he suspects him to be 2. Suspicion is evil in regard of the end why a man suspects when the person suspecting hath an evil opinion of another that he might seem to have a cause why he makes him no requital of some good turn he owes him does him no good Or that he might have a pretence to do him a mischief either in word or deed Now Job had no such motives either from without or from within nor any such ends Great cause he had from without of suspecting and fearing that his Sons might sin against God as I shewed in the reasons of the point His Motives from within were his own Conscience of his own infirmity which yet he hated v. 1. and love unto his Children whom out of love and tenderness he suspected As for his end what was it and why was it but that he might amoliri that he might remove evil from his Sons both of sin and mischief and that their sin being expiated both God and he himself might have occasion to do them greater good Obser 3. We learn then from hence that all suspicion proceeds not from want of charity This is the rather to be considered because the true Job's the upright men who fear God and eschew evil they suffer under the imputation of being uncharitable because they judge things as they do appear even out of the evidence of fact or strong and violent presumption And why Charity thinks no evil I answered that Cavil before But doth Charity think that good which is evidently evil There is no Law of God binds a man to be a fool nor is Charity blind though sensual and bruitish love be If I see a streight stick lying in the water and it appear crooked Videtur per duplex medium It is seen by a double medium Obser 4. It 's possible a man may commit a sin yea and that one of the greatest sins also even cursing and blaspheming of God when yet there is no outward appearance at all of it There is a cursing with the heart so Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God Psal 62.4 They bless with their mouth but curse ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in their inward parts as Job's Sons were suspected by their Father to curse God in their hearts Psal 41.6 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã his heart speaks vanity and this is the breach of his Spiritual Law the cursing and blaspheming with the heart And this is more properly the cursing of God who is a Spirit and deals with the Spirit Obser 5. Hence it follows that cursing especially blasphemy and cursing God is one of the greatest sins This follows from the use of the phrase when after the genus is named some one principal of the kind peradventure they have sinned and cursed God in their hearts All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven but c. Mat. 12.31 But it follows in reason for if sanctifying blessing and glorifying our God be one of the greatest duties then prophaning cursing and blaspheming God by the Rule of Contraries must be one of the greatest sins so much is implyed in the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which is to vilifie to disesteem and make light of As the Sons of Ely made light of or cursed the Lord 1 Sam. 2.30 A piercing of God the Father or the same as Zach. 12.10 the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifieth or treading him under foot A sin so hainous that it should not be named Levit. 24.11 He blasphemed the Name i. e. of Jehovah Such wickedness as this it is a shame even to speak Eph. 5.12 13. here 't is hid under the contrary word it appears no less than by the punishment such an one was to be stoned v. 15. Obser 6. Observe the perverse nature of man Job's Sons were at a feast and he suspects them the rather that they had sinned and blasphemed God The goodness of God should lead a man to repentance and amendment of life yet when men partake more liberally of God's goodness they are the more ready to sin against him and blaspheme him Take heed of this at your feasting Deut. 11.2 and 8.10 and 32.15 Remember how that Jeshurun kicked The wise man preferred the house of mourning before it Eccles 7.2 Obser 7. This consideration may somewhat moderate and allay our harsh censures of outward and manifest execrations and cursings Think with thy self hast not thou thy self cursed God in thy heart Eccles 7.21 Obser 8. Job's Sons were not wont to curse and blaspheme their God nor to be drunk at their meetings with Wine nor afterward to go to the Stews for then Job had not said peradventure but without all peradventure no doubt but they have cursed God Obser 9. A good man and such an one as fears God he so hates sin in his own Children Friends or Servants that he fears that even then when there appears no sin for there are secret sins Blessed is he that fears alwayes Obser 10. If Job said thus of his own Sons piously and religiously brought up peradventure they have sinned at their feast What shall we say of the Sons of Belial who sin and blaspheme God and that use lightness in the time of a publick Fast in the time of publick humiliation such indeed is this whole tract of time What will such do on their gaudy dayes in festival times Repreh Those who are Parents or in place of Parents exposing their Sons to the violent and beastly temptations of sensuality and voluptuousness like the Ostrich Job 39.14 17. Yea many there are who go before them by a lewd Example yea encourage them and teach them to curse and swear I have heard of such revel and riot such excess as hath not been practised among the Heathen Esth 1.8 O how unlike are such to Holy Job here Exhor O that we all took example by him and what he said of his Sons every man would say of himself peradventure I have sinned c. Blessed is he that feareth alwayes Motives Consider we have the same enemy Satan powerful malicious hating God envying man his Image Sagacious furnished with the experience of more than 5000 years and our own natural corruption Obser 11. He saith not certainly my Sons have sinned He hoped better of their pious education that his many documents and instructions had not been spent in vain 'T was possible they might not have sinned there is no necessity of sinning God hath no need of the sinful man saith the Son of Syrach He saith not certainly my Sons have not sinned he feared their slippery age and the strength of temptations He spake of young men as Plato wrote of one of his Schollars whom he had first largely
dispensation and appease their clamourous Consciences with one form of Godliness or other and are outwardly minded measuring God's love by outward favours which may befall alike the good and evil as well him that sweareth and blasphemeth as him that feareth an oath Eccles 9.2 while men know no other worship of God then what may be seen or felt the holy Spirit of God puts forth its self and would work in us but finds no compliance no acceptance in us Lo he goeth by me and I see him not he passeth on also and I perceive him not Job 9.11 and 33.14 Exhort 1. Speak not evil blaspheme not the Spirit of God He deserves our best words speak good of his Name Exhort 2. Consider the danger wherein we are even of the greatest sin Prov. 22.3 if we be wise we will take heed not onely of that sin it self but of whatsoever leads thereunto as Adam charged our first Mother that she should not touch the Tree of Knowledge and the wise man his warning of us to take heed of the strange woman Prov. 5.8 Seeing therefore our standing at a stay and withstanding the holy Spirit in the good motions of it which would lead us unto Repentance Faith and new Obedience even to the subduing of all our Spiritual enemies we had need beware Obser Note the greatness of the sin When that Mongrel Levit. 24.11 had blasphemed the Name of God though there were officers among the people Rulers of Thousands of Hundreds of Fifties and Tens The people understood this sin to be none of the smaller matters to be judged by them but among the greater matters Exod. 18. and therefore they brought the blasphemer unto Moses 2. Nor held Moses the business to be other than of the greatest consequence in that he durst determine nothing of himself but appeal to the Majesty of the most high God 3. The Lord himself sentenceth the blasphemer to be stoned by the whole Congregation and Decrees for the future That whosoever blasphemes his God shall dye the death 4. His Parents are described of what Nation and Family they were and his Mother named that a brand of infamy might be set upon them who had neglected their Sons education and not brought him up in the fear of God Add hereunto what signal punishments were inflicted on blasphemers Cain despairs as thinking that God either would not or could not forgive his sin had a mark set on him And Pharaoh perished for his blasphemy Antiochus confesseth that all his troubles came upon him for the same cause 1 Mach. 5. and Nicanor that blasphemer his Host was wholly routed and himself first slain in the battel 1 Mach. 7. And the Constitutions and Lawes of Kingdoms and Common-weals have ratified this but of this before We have not to deal with such a God as judgeth superficially Heb. 4.12 Jud. 14.15 Wisd 1. When the Lord Jesus heard the Jews blasphemy against the Spirit Mat. 12.24 being to denounce this Sentence That their sin should not be remitted vers 25. He is said to have known their thoughts But is there not a Blasphemy beside that which is uttered by the mouth No doubt there is both in the heart and in the life for the fool said in his heart there is no God And since Blasphemies are reckoned among those unclean things which come out of the heart and defile the man surely they were in the heart before Mat. 15.19 Mark 7.22 Mat. 9.4 Mark 2.7 8. Act. 8.22 Simons blasphemy was in his heart There is also a blasphemy in the Life for as there is a denying of the Lord in Works even by them who in their words confess him Tit. 1.10 So is there also a blaspheming of the Lord in Life and Works even by those who bless him with their mouths Esay 66.5 Jer. 50.7 Zach. 11.5 Thus 1 Macchab. 1. we read of many abominations wrought by Antiochus as Idolatries Murders prophanations of the Temple c. but few words spoken throughout that Chapter Cap. 2.6 Matthias is there said not to hear the blasphemies that were spoken but to see the blasphemies that were committed And truly these seem to be the greater blasphemies as those which cause others to blaspheme The Lord judged David and gave him his life but because he had made the enemies of the Lord blaspheme his Child must dye 2 Sam. 12.13 14. And as truly as it was spoken of the Jews that through breaking of the Law they dishonoured God so that his Name was blasphemed among the Gentiles through them So no doubt by our sleighting of the Law of God as not belonging unto us and by our disobedience unto the Gospel and walking unworthy of it the Name of God and Christ and his Holy Spirit is blasphemed among Jewes Turks and Heathen Justinian the Emperour punished Blasphemers with death Lewis the Ninth of France stigmatized Blasphemers with an hot Iron and when sute was made in behalf of one Guilty he would not hear any Intercessor for commutation of the punishment but made this Answer I should count it an honour to me saith he if I should receive the same brand in my forehead if by that means I might free my Kingdom from the guilt of such a damnable sin Others have condemned them to shame in the Stocks or Pillory others have sentenced them to be cast into the Sea The Apostle who better knew the heinousness of the sin delivered over Alexander and Hymineus unto Satan that they might learn not to blaspheme It is observed by Historians that when punishment of this sin is omitted and blasphemers winked at the Great Judge of all the world takes the business into his own Cognizance and involves Houses Cities Kingdomes and Common-weals in a common ruine NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW XIII 11. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã vel ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Vnto you it is given to know the mystery or mysteries of the kingdom of heaven but unto them it is not given AN Argument I hope that 's fit for this present Auditory and the occasion of this meeting for all men desire Knowledge saith the Philosopher and these are the times whereof Dan. 12. foretold that men shall run to and fro and knowledge shall be increased And the Text is a Text of Knowledge but every man is not a meet Auditor nor able to attain unto the knowledge of mysteries They are more proper for Disciples for to them this Text was directed and I hope there are many such and so fit for this Learned Assembly And if there be among you any such Athenian strangers who spend their time in nothing else but either to tell or hear some new thing which is the business of most men now a dayes the Text is fit for them too for it contains no less than matters of State the mysteries and secrets of a Kingdom And how seasonable is it now when the Lord is about shaking all the Kingdoms upon earth
study of the heavenly mysteries ex tempore and without more adoe repentè sic Theologi prodiere They suddainly start up Divines and presume themselves able Ministers and preach with as much facility and confidence as if they had studied Divinity but if they have gotten a smattering in the Original Tongues they have no patience till they be in the Pulpit and then less Nay may it not truly be spoken of their Seniors that they have as mean an opinion of God's Word when they think they have time enough to serve the world prog for their Childrens Children yet study Divinity Nay if they have Tongues and Arts and quote Scriptures and Fathers how learned Clarks soever otherwise they be turn them loose for profound and dissolute absolute Divines Alas they consider not that there are mysteries hidden mysteries of the Kingdom of God and that it 's given to the Disciples only to know the mysteries 2. This points us to the object or matter of all Controversies and Contentions in the Church viz. the Mysteries or hidden Truths of the Kingdom of God for men differ not in Opinion touching things openly and manifestly known for who but a mad man or stark blind would dispute whether 't were day or no when the Sun shines forth bright and clear at high noon Some Divine Truths there are as clear and evident as the Sun shines so that no question can be made of them they give testimony of themselves and need no other argument to prove them to be these prevent all controversies and strivings of men about them But other Divine Truths there are mystical and hidden and about these and these only men differ and hence proceed all Controversies which distract and divide the Church of Christ at this day which when we hear we may well conclude that the Truths where about they differ are not known for were they known there would be then no further difference about them We will not quarrel but pity a blind man if he saith 't is dark when the Sun shines Of such as these St. Paul speaks they are turned aside saith he unto vain janglings desiring to be Teachers of the Law yea and the Gospel too understanding neither what they say nor whereof they affirm 1 Tim. 1.7 and 6.20 he called Controversies ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the oppositions of Science or knowledge falsly so called For did they truly know the Truths where about they differ they would not strive and contend about them as they do and therefore when Controversies are started and hotly pursued in the Church 't is a good Rule not to be over-hasty in siding or adhering unto Spirits of contradiction but rather to do as I have heard the safest course is for a man that travels in a dark night and is in danger to be misled by the ignis fatuus or fools fire to set him down and wait upon the Heavens for light The Prophet Esay gives us the same counsel for avoiding the like âools fire of Contention kindled by undiscreet Zelots and carried about like a wisp to brawl and scold at Chap 50.10 11. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his Servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light Let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God Behold all ye that kindle a fire that compass your selves about with sparks walk in the light of your fire and in the sparks which ye have kindled This shall ye have of my hand ye shall lye down in sorrow It 's given to the Disciples and who are they It 's a question like that of our Saviour Mar. 5. Who is that that toucheth my cloaths and may be answered as he was Thou seest the multitude thronging thee and sayest thou who toucheth me What a throng what a crowd of Disciples there are in the world and do we yet enquire who they are Alas beloved Multi Dominum comprimunt ac una tangit saith St. Gregory An innumerable multitude of Carnal men throng and crowd our Lord by an outward profession of Christianity yet few very few of that great crowd truly touch him and draw virtue from him and therefore when great multitudes followed him as now there do pretending to be his Disciples Luk. 14.25 He turned about and said unto them if any man come to me and hate not his Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Brethren and Sisters yea and his own life also he cannot be my Disciple and whosoever doth not hear his Cross and come after me cannot be my Disciple vers 33. Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath he cannot be my Disciple And how few alas how few are there such among the great throng of those who are called Christians but unto these and only these it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven By Knowledge in the Text is to be understood not Historical which is by hear say and rather credulity than knowledge but approbative and experimental knowledge and according to this it is given to these and only these to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven And why to these O these are the only men in the world that are qualified for entrance into Christ's School of mysteries that 's the first reason and a second is this God the revealer of Mysteries vouchsafes to none but these the Revelation of them That this is the qualification of all those who can possibly be admitted to the knowledge of the heavenly mysteries 't is evident by the testimony of God himself They seek me daily saith he and would know my wayes as a Nation that did Righteousness and forsook not the Ordinance of their God Esay 58.2 it is a tanquam or quatenus specificativum as specifieth the qualification of him that the mysteries of God's wayes are to be revealed unto viz. an unlearning of our selves and ceasing to do evil and a learning of Christ to do good This the Prophet Jeremy defines by doing judgment and justice Did not thy Father do judgment and justice He judged the cause of the poor and needy and is not this to know me saith the Lord Jer. 22.16 Thus St. Paul requires that we walk worthy of God pleasing him in all things and being fruitful in every good work and then followeth encreasing in the knowledge of God Col. 1.10 and vers 26. of that Chapter The mystery of the Gospel saith he which hath been hid from Ages and from Generations is now revealed what to all without exception without qualification No no it is made manifest or revealed unto the Saints unto the Disciples for the secret of the Lord is with the Righteous Prov. 3.32 Unto them the great ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the great revealer of mysteries as he is called more than once in Dan. 2. he makes known the secrets of the Heavenly Kingdom So saith the wise man That God giveth unto the man that
is good in his sight Wisdom and Knowledge Eccles 2.26 If we look into the Principles whence this great Revealer of Mysteries is moved to open them unto the Saints they are either 1. Outward and these not only persons qualified for the present but also those who shall be such hereafter upon those terms God revealeth a secret unto Abraham Gen. 18.17 18 19. and our Saviour Joh. 17.20 prayes not for those alone who were qualified for the knowledge of the heavenly mysteries but for those also that should believe on him through their word that the world might know the mystery of Christ vers 23. 2. As for the inward Principles whence the great ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã opens the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven the Fountain of them all is the unsearchable wisdom of God that manifold wisdom Eph. 3. whereby he knows all mysteries and all those who are fit to know them and all the means and manners of conveying them unto the Disciples Heb. 1.1 This wisdom is accompanied with power and that not only Potestas or Authority but Potentia Might also So saith Daniel having received a mystery I thank thee O God of my Fathers who hast given me Wisdom and Might and hast made known unto us the Kings matter Dan. 2.23 Add but to this Wisdom and Power the Will of God and there 's nothing more required to the Revelation of the Heavenly Mysteries which our Saviour ascribes unto the good pleasure of God for so he thanks his Father that he had revealed mysteries unto his Children For even so saith he O Father it seemed good in thy sight Mat. 11.26 And hitherto St. Paul also refers it Eph. 1.8 9. He hath made known unto us the mystery of his Will according to his good pleasure All which howsoever it be most true and demonstrative of the present Truth and and that by the best demonstration from the causes yet since many a Novice prying into Christ's School pretends to the knowledge of all mysteries A question may be moved whether all the Disciples know all the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven or no Surely they do not but for a more full and clear answer to this question we must distinguish of 1. Mysteries 2. Disciples 3. Degrees of Knowledge 4. And God's Dispensation of divers Mysteries unto divers Disciples in divers degrees of Knowledge 1. There are Two kinds of Mysteries 1. Some are easie Truths such is the mystery of the Gospel hid from none saith St. Paul but prophane men who perish in sin for if our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4.3 2. Other mysteries there are which the Scripture stiles great mysteries and such is the mystery of our Conjunction and Union with God Eph. 5. These and such as these are called Wisdom ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Apoc. 13. proportionably to these two sorts of of mysteries 2. Of Disciples also some are young and weak and of little understanding ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã unskilful or rather according to the Margin having no experience in the word of Righteousness Heb. 9.5.13 Non expertus pauca recognoscit Ecclus. 34.10 like men of weak and squeezy stomacks such as can digest only light nourishment as milk and honey Esay 7. 1 Cor. 3. Heb. 5. That is the first Principles of the Oracles of God the Word of the beginning of Christ as the Apostle interprets it Heb. 6.1 Such is the Title of Psal 46. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which the LXX render ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã out of which the Vulgar pro arcanis St. Hierom Cajetan and others pro juventutibus mysteries fit for young men to know whose property is strength 1 Joh. 2. which they have by faith in God which is the Argument of that Psalm Others are stronger and of larger understandings such as by reason of use habit or perfection can discern between good and evil like men of good and strong stomacks who could digest the bread the meat indeed Joh. 6. where ye have examples of both kinds of Disciples These stronger Disciples who know the wisdom and greater kind of mysteries are called in Scripture Wise and perfect men We speak wisdom among those that are perfect 1 Cor. 2. confer 2 Esdr 14. Of the knowledge of this Wisdom in proportion to the Two sorts of Mysteries and of Disciples there are different degrees both 1. Of Extension in respect of the object when it is of few or more or all mysteries and 2. Of Intension in regard of the Act when it is either 1. Wavering and mixt with ignorance and doubting or 2. Firm certain and full of assurance for as among the Gentiles there were ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã So among us Christians there is a seeing face to face a knowing imperfectly and a knowing as we are known 1 Cor. 13. A walking by faith and a walking by sight 2 Cor. 5.7 A knowing and a knowing surely Joh. 17.8 2 Tim. 3.14 A knowledge of the grace of God in Truth Col. 1.6 And a full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ Col. 2.2 Phil. 1.9 Answerable to these divers Mysteries Disciples and degrees of Knowledge God's Oeconomy and dispensation of them is considerable and that according to the Three persons of the Trinity for so 1. God the Father by his Law instructs his Disciples Joh. 6.45 Such as tremble at his word Esay 66. for so the secret or mystery of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant Psal 25.14 and reveals unto these his Babes the hidden things of his Law Mat. 11.25 These Babes thus Discipled by the Law the Father brings unto the Son Gal. 3. for so he promiseth To him that orders his conversation aright that he will shew him ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Psal 50. ult the Salvation or Jesus of God He that hath thus heard and learned of the Father he comes unto the Son Joh. 6.45 To such as these Christ himself saith If any man will do the Fathers Will he shall know of my Doctrine whether it be of God or no Joh. 7.17 And when these Children of the Father become fruitful in every good work to the doing of the Fathers Will Christ thus speaks unto them Herein saith he is my Father glorified that ye bring forth much fruit so shall ye become my Disciples Joh. 15.8 2. In these Children of the Father now Christ's Disciples Christ finisheth the work which his Father gave him to do Joh. 17.4 What 's that the acknowledgement of the Father and the Son vers 6 7.8 3. Now as the Father by the Child-like obedience unto the Law opens the mysteries of his Kingdom and brings his Children unto Christ so by the humble and obedient demeanour of Christ's Disciples unto him he reveals the mysteries of the Gospel unto them and brings them unto
man will confess it 's so generally granted in all Ages ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Justitia in sese virtutes continet omnes In Righteousness all Virtues and Graces are contained we must then depart from evil Now though all grant this yet they will have the evil without them yes by all means if such great men were removed if all the Pictures and Images were broken Truly Beloved many great Ones and their Power hath been removed it was conceited if the High Commission and Star Chamber were put down and the Bishops deprived of their Robes all would be well All this was done and that perhaps deservedly yet look into the lives of men are they not as unrighteous as ever they were is' t not notoriously known and do not some speak it out boldly that they may now whore be drunk do any thing and no man will call them into question Have not your selves heard it and truly too spoken out of this place by another that the lives even of Professors hath been worse since that power to curb and check them hath been removed O Beloved except that great man of sin within us except our own unrighteousness our pride our enmity our malice cover them with what specious names we will except our unrighteousness be removed it 's to small purpose unto us what ever is removed without us we may for all that be no subjects to Christ 2. The second Imperial City is Peace a peaceable life wherein we must serve Christ the Laws of this City are extant before hand Mat. 5.22 I say unto you whosoever is angry with his brother shall be in danger of judgement ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã without a cause is not extant in any old Copy saith St. Austin and Jerome nor is it extant in the Vulgar Latin or if it be added as in some Copies it is it signifieth rashly and without measure as well as without a cause vers 39. I say unto you resist not evil vers 44. I say unto you love your enemies c. Rom. 12.17 21. These Laws are indispensible by any power on Earth Do we in these things serve Christ then are we his Subjects then he reigns otherwise not I appeal therefore to thee whoever thou art Can'st thou be a Subject of Christ and yet hate any man it 's impossible St. Paul reckons these Affections among those who are without the Kingdom of Christ Tit. 3.3 4 5. Can'st thou say yet that thou art a subject of Christ yet nourish and harbour contention and bitterness against thy brother The Apostle gives thee the lye Jam. 3.14 If ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts glory not and lye not against the truth But thou wilt say thou may'st hate God's enemies 't is true begin then with thy self why am I one of Gods enemies The Apostle Col. 1.18 19 20. having spoken of Christ and his Kingdom vers 21. he tells us who are his enemies and vers 22. who are his friends let me therefore ask thee dost thou commit evil works questionless thou art Christ's enemy and wilt thou hate Christs enemy when thou art in the same condemnation Object But I am reconciled Then thou art an holy man unblameable and unreproveable in Gods sight if so thou wilt hate no man Tit. 3.3 4 5. O Beloved our unpeaceableness hatred envy declare plainly we are not Christs Subjects nor doth he reign over us who then reigns over us His Servants and Subjects we are whom we obey surely if we be such as delight in unpeaceableness war and contention we are the Subjects of Abaddon and Apollyon Apoc. 19.11 But we serve Christ So the Samaritan woman thought Joh. 4. but our Saviour tells her vers 22. Ye worship ye know not what surely we worship not the Son of God but the Son of Tabeel Esay 7.6 who this is no man knows Chald. Paraphrast Regem qui nobis bonus sit commodus a God that will fit our condition such a God as we our selves are we think wickedly that God is such an one as our selves Psal 50. We worship Rezin Esay 8.6 who is that even our own pleasure and delight the Son of Remaliah the great high God of our own choosing and neglect Siloah i. e. by interpretation Sent Shilo which is the same this King whom the Father hath sent to reign over us And if our own pleasure rules we crown Christ with thorns and make him serve with our sins and say in our life we will not have this man to reign over us Luk. 19.14 yea we say as they in Jeremy 44.16 yea we Crucifie our King Jam. 5.5 6. and then that fearful threatning belongeth to us Esay 8.5 6 7 8. and that Luk. 19.27 The same Subject continued on JEREMIAH XXIII 5. He shall reign a King and prosper and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth IN which words we have the promise of a King and the manner of that King how he shall administer his Kingdom 1. As touching himself He shall prosper 2. As concerning his Subjects He shall execute judgment and justice in the earth 1. The word in the Original is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which our last Translators turn here He shall prosper they turn it elsewhere to deal wisely or prudently and indeed the word signifieth both and is accordingly rendred by the LXX sometimes by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to understand and divers words of that nature sometimes by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to prosper or have good success The very ancient English Translations have it thus He shall prosper with wisdom and so it comprehends both the sences of the word and yet they express not the full meaning of the word for we may add hereunto that signification which ariseth from the conjugation here used Hiphil according to which it signifieth to make wise and prosperous And so the full meaning of the word is this He shall prosper with wisdom and shall make his Subjects wise and prosperous wherein though I vary somewhat from our last Translation yet I hope no understanding Auditor will take exception since the word is of larger extent as the very same Translation testifieth in divers places And I follow the Example of three Ancient English Translations which I tell ye the rather because some suspect danger of Popery so often as they hear any differing from the last Translation not considering that there were Learned and pious Protestants before the last English Translation was in being and they Authors of very excellent Translations nor that while they avoid one kind of Popery they run into another It is one main part of Popery to adhere to the Vulgar Translation so that though the Original it self differ from it yet the Authority of that must not be questioned Evertit in that is for everrit domum so it seems do these men adhere to the last English Translation what 's their Argument because we shall then resolve all into the Authority of
the evil that it is good and say of good that it is evil who put darkness for light and light for darkness who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter and do we not find the same false judgement and justice among us What 's more ordinary then to say of evil that 't is good and of good that 't is evil ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it 's a common fallacy wherewith wise men suffer themselves to be befooled when we call things evil by good names As Jehu exceeding his Commission which was to cut off Ahabs house he invites Jehonadab to go with him 2 King 10.16 Come with me saith he and see my zeal for the Lord he was exceedingly zealous with a bloody zeal against more than he had Authority to destroy yet mean time allowed himself in Jeroboam's idolatry v. 31. as many now-a-dayes are extreme rigorous and zelotical against the sins of others yet as extreme indulgent toward themselves and allow themselves in debaucht and sinful courses Most terrible is the judgment of God against such unrighteous judgment Rom. 2.1 2 3. And therefore though Jehu had a good cause God's warrant yet whereas he judged others yet did the same things the Lord denounceth the like judgment against Jehu's house that he had against Ahab's by Jehu Hos 1.4 A just ground of reproof of those who set up a judgment and righteousness of their own as did the Pharisees of old Rom. 10.3 They went about to establish their own righteousness This is the Religion of every several Sect as Mirandula speaks of Sects of Philosophy magnum est aliquid in omni Secta Some propound unto themselves a bravery of Religion outward pomp and ostentation of Ceremonies and if that can be obtained and the Pope acknowledged the Infallible Judge of it they have their Judgment and Righteousness that they care for Others think Christ's Judgment and Righteousness erected if they have no Ceremonies at all Others would have somewhat they have not but what I know not nor I am perswaded do they themselves but if they had not something they have and had some new thing instead of it then they were in their Kingdom but all this while Christ is not in his for while every man strives to set up his own way his own justice and judgment God's way and Christ's way of judgment and justice must be trodden under foot Put away lying thus saith the Lord Keep ye judgment or equity and do justice Esay 56.1 He hath shewn thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God Mich. 6.8 Zach. 8.16 These are the things that ye shall do speak ye every man truth to his neighbour execute the judgment of truth and peace in your gates and let none of ye imagine evil in your hearts against his neighbour and love no false oath Are these the things that we should do Alas these are poor things Without these no salvation Esay 56.1 This was the old way of the Lord wherein our Father Abraham the Father of the Faithful walked and taught his Children Gen. 18.19 and teacheth us if we be his Children to walk in it If any man have found a shorter cut than this to salvation let him have it but I wish he be not believed upon his own bare word but that he shew plain Scripture for what he saith this is the true knowledge see Jer. 22.15 This reproves those who sit in place of Judicature and judge unrighteous judgment who turn judgment into gall Amos 6.12 what a fearful aggravation is that of the Apostle Act. 23.3 Sittest thou to judge me according to the Law and commandest me to be smitten contrary to the Law God shall smite thee unto such Jer. 21.12 Execute judgment in the morning and deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor lest my fury go forth like fire and burn that none can quench it because of the evil of your doings Potentes potentèr tormenta patientur Mighty men that are wicked shall be mightily tormented for if he shall have judgment without mercy that shewed no mercy what judgment shall he have who shewed no justice Mercy it self in some cases must not be shewn Exod. 23.3 Thou shalt not countenance a poor man in his cause but Justice is alwayes to be done that which is altogether just shalt thou follow Deut. 16.20 what a fearful judgment then must they expect who neither do judgment nor justice Consol To the people of God Christ executes judgment and justice in them He hath set up his Throne in them and in them he condemns ãâã for sin and justifies the righteous for righteous Hence is that security observable among the Subjects of Christ 1 Cor. 4.3 4. It 's a very small thing for me to be judged by you or of mans judgment He who judgeth me is the Lord Who art thou that judgest another we must all stand before the judgment seat of Christ when every man must be judged according to what he hath done in the flesh whether it be good or evil Exhort To yield unto the Government of the King Christ let him execute judgment and justice in us Prov. 21.3 There is much debate about an outward form of Government in the Church of Christ and some one seems to some more glorious than another yet surely the very best which most men aim at and desire and endeavour with the hazzard of many thousand souls their very great Diana they stir for yea what ever that outward form is which God himself hath appointed in his word for certainly he hath not left his Church without Government if men knew what it were yet even that form in respect of this inward Regiment and Government of Christ in the soul it 's but like a dead carcass without the soul but like an empty shell without a kernel yet extreme contention is for that outward for the inward little or none at all as our lives speak it plain enough Sign Habits are discern'd by affections which follow the actions Ethic. 2. as if water were forced upwards its contrary to the natural course of it but it flows downward with delight Amos 5.24 Prov. 21.15 Gods judgment is without respect of persons Esay 24.2 Every man doth what is good in his own eyes and therefore there is no King in our Israel Where Christ's Government is it is an easie matter to discern mitto te tibi where he executes judgment and justice He reproves the world by his spirit of their sins because they believe not in him who takes away the sins of the world also of righteousness false and pharisaical righteousness Mat. 5.16 and judgment false judgment which proceeded from the Prince of this world whom he judgeth and casts out Hence it was that the Scribes and Pharisees most of all opposed Christ in his Government with their false judgment and
Tertul. Men may know these things how else can they judge of them yet not be guilty of them as it 's said of Câto Intravit in floralia ut tacet I know well that ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Adultery and Fornication differ and are distinguished Mat. 15.19 Heb. 13.4 Whoremongers and Adulterers God shall judge yet withal its clear that ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Fornication is but for ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Mat. 5.32 Except it be for Fornication i. e. Adultery Obser 8. Note hence that not only ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Adultery but even ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifieth Fornication is reckoned among the sins which are forbidden by the Eternal Law of God I know well that the Learned Jews herein differ much among themselves some would have that Commandment ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Thou shalt not commit Adultery to be understood only of persons married but others with better reason in the same Commandment understood Fornication also yea all manner of uncleanness to be forbidden though it cannot be denied but many of the Jews and Gentiles also have straitned the Commandment of God and understood it only of Adultery That their lusts might the more be enlarged and widened when they would not understand Fornication to be forbidden by the Everlasting Law of God This is the reason why Fornication is put among the Canons of the first Council Act. 15. And St. Paul reckons it in the Catalogue of those sins which exclude men from the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6. Gal. 5.19 Repreh Those who make light of Adultery and Fornication and esteem them as tricks of youth and say their Age will need them are not these they who make a mock of sin Do they not consider that they are forbidden by the great God and must they be so lightly accounted of as tricks of youth One such trick of youth cost all the Sechemites their lives Gen. 34.25 26. And it is very rare that such wasting sins committed in youth are reformed in old Age Vitium primae concoctionis non corrigitur in secunda for have ye not observed the grey head who goes on still in his wickedness though strength of Nature be decayed yet the old Adulterer and Fornicator hath as adulterous an heart as the very worst therefore they easily connive at those sins in their Children Non est scelus in adolescente scortari c. Ego feci ibidem isthaec in adolescentia saith that old Lecher in the Comedy and what they cannot act they will talk as savourly and with as great delight as they could then they commonly shut up all they hope God hath forgiven them Whence comes this smoke but from the fire of Concupiscence which even yet burns in their hearts whence this foam but from the sea of wickedness yet working in them and foaming out their own shame And shall we think that therefore the Lord hath pardoned these old Adulterers and Whores because they say they hope so Then sin is pardoned when it is forsaken and left and not till then Will God punish this sin in a young man when strength of Nature seems to make Apologie for him and will he not much more punish this sin in an old man in whom Nature is decayed if he yet retain his fire and his flame vigorously in his snuff though now going out with a stink No doubt but the judgment of such is much greater if the Apostle reasons right Rom. 1. and the last Mysticé Obser 1. There is a Spiritual Marriage between Christ and the Believing Soul whereof the Lord speaks Hos 2.19 I will betroth thee unto me for ever c. Zach. 8.8 Obser 2. The Lord gives himself to the obedient Humanity See Notes on Mat. 25. And the Virgin-Church is united to the Deity the Virgin Church goeth forth to meet the Bridegroom Vulg. L. Syri the Bridegroom and the Bride See Notes as above Obser 3. The Lord makes Covenant and Contract of Marriage with his Church I am the Lord thy God I am thine thou shalt have no other God but me thou art mine for so the Lord speaks to all his People as to one Spouse See Notes on Exod. 20.21 22. Obser 4. There is a Spiritual Adultery the breach of Wedlock between the Lord and the Soul even such between the Lord and the Soul joyned unto him by Covenant as is between the Husband and the Wife Jer. 3.20 Surely as a wise treacherously departeth from her husband so have you dealt treacherously with me O house of Israel saith the Lord. Obser 5. As Vnio is the cause of all good so Binio is the cause omnis mali of all evil of this breach the Lord often complains Ezech. 16.7 I am broken with their whorish heart which hath departed from me chap. 16. Exhort To the Lord's precept he saith not I counsel I advise thee not to commit Adultery or Fornication the Precept is absolute proceeding from the absolute Commandment of the most high God Thou shalt not commit Adultery or Fornication The Motives might be many 1. From consideration of the sin it self it 's a bruitish sin 2. It unmans the man takes away his heart and understanding Hos 4.11 it makes him a very fool The Harlot is called the foolish woman Prov. 9.13 and young man void of understanding taken by her fair speech he goes after her stait-way as an Oxe goeth to the slaughter and as a fool to the correction of the stocks Prov. 7.22 Therefore the Natural Philosophers observe that every Beast and Fowl the more lustful it is the more foolish as the Sparrow as the Ass Ezech. 23.20 And therefore Sechem Gen. 34.2 who ravished Dinah the Daughter of Jacob he is said to be the Son of Hemor i. e. an Ass vers 7. He is said to have wrought folly in Israel and the woman that played the harlot is said to have wrought folly in Israel Deut. 22.21 The man speaks to the men of Gibeah who forced the Levites Concubine Do not saith he this folly Jud. 19.23 and so again cap. 20.6 10. folly in Israel Thus Thamar saith to her Brother Amon 2 Sam. 12.13 No such thing ought to be done in Israel do not this folly and vers 13. Thou shalt be as one of the fools in Israel Obj. But folly seems to be pitied Sol. This folly is Wickedness as the same word signifieth both Josh 7.15 Margin And the man in Gibeah said first do not so wickedly Judg. 19.23 do not this folly this folly is wickedness yea a great wickedness Gen. 39.8 9. As all words sound the abomination of this sin so the last the greatest as in the thunder crack the last is commonly the most horrible and fluctus Decumanus is observed to be the greatest ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã And as it is a great wickedness so it hath a proportionable punishment If my heart hath been deceived by a woman
right hand without drinking of Christ's Cup without conformity unto his death whereas the true Predestination is to be made conformable to the Image of the Son of God Rom. 8.29 2. Observe hence the unavoidable necessity which lies upon all the Disciples of Christ which would be saved by him and sit at his right hand and his left in his Kingdom that they drink of his Cup. The Lord Jesus is the Author of Eternal Salvation but to those that obey him Heb. 5.9 And he is able to save to the uttermost but those who are able to drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism to those who come unto God by him Heb. 7.25 And there is no other name by which we can be saved Act. 4.12 Nor is there any other way but that living way Heb. 10.20 All Power and Authority in Heaven and Earth is given to him yet hath he no Authority no Power to give the Honours and Dignities of his Kingdom to any other than those who drink of his Cup and are baptized with his baptism The necessity of drinking this Cup Nonne haec oportuit Christum pati atque ità intrare in regnum suum Would God they who are too often in other Cups would seriously and sadly think of this Poculum Salutare this Cup of Salvation that they who strive for an outward baptism would as much or more endeavour after this Alas do they not know that whilst we are sinners Christ dies Rom. 5. Do we not know that the wisdom of God is crucified by our foolishness our errours our lies that the life of God is slain by our deadly sin That the Patience Goodness Mercy Love of God c. all which is Christs suffers from our iniquities Esay 53.4 5. So Arius Montanus and Tremellius Repreh Those who refuse to taste of Christs Cup to be conformable unto his death in dying to sin such as refuse to be baptized into his death This no doubt is the reason even because we refuse to suffer the death of the sin and drink of the Cup of Christs sufferings that the Lord hath given and is yet giving to all Nations the Cup of his fury to drink Thus ye read Jer. 25.15 where the Lord threatens his Judgments unto his own People and all the Nations round about for their disobedience unto the Law and Prophets That they turned not from their evil wayes and the evil of their doings which he signifieth under the metaphor of a Cup vers 15. This disobedience hath brought the Sword among us this continues it yet with us This Judgment Esay 66.14 15 16. applyes to the Nations under these Times of the Gospel as also Zach. 13.7 8 9. the same is the reason of all other Judgments of God as the manifold diseases among us Many of us have often professed to shew forth the Lords death by dying to sin and so have taken the Cup of Salvation and have called upon the Name of the Lord yet have we continued in our sins And therefore the Lord hath caused many to taste the Cup of his Judgment Thus he tells the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11. Therefore many are sick and weakly among you and many are fallen asleep i. e. die the death even because they have not died unto sin And to what other reason may we refer the present Judgment of God upon us even this immoderate and unseasonable drought what else may be the cause of this but because we refuse to be obedient unto the Law and Prophets we refuse to drink the Cup of Christs passion we refuse to be baptized into his death Say I this or saith not the Scriprure the very same The Astrologers refer our present drought unto the late Eclipse and it cannot be denied but that hath been Gods Instrument in second Causes whereby he hath brought this evil upon us as the like hath been observed in manifold other Eclipses of the Sun in former times But what is that that hath provoked the Lord to send this Cup of his fury unto us to Eclipse the light and beams of his countenance towards us What hath moved the Lord to stop the bottles of Heaven Job 38.37 that he hath not in their season emptied them upon the Earth Jer. 9.12 And doth not the Prophet Zachary refer the same Judgment unto the same cause under these times of the Gospel Zach. 14.16 17. What is it to come up to keep the feast of Tabernacles It cannot be meant literally for that among the rest of the Ceremonies is ceased What then is signified by a Tabernacle or Tent what else but our humane flesh and body 2 Cor. 5.1 4. 2 Pet. 1.13 14. To keep the Feast of Tabernacles then what is it but to have our Tabernacle our dwelling our house with Christ Joh. 1.14 The word was made flesh ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and dwelt in us They therefore who refuse to suffer with Christ in the flesh to imitate his death to drink the Cup of his Passion and Suffering with him They shall have no rain of Blessing no rain of Gods Living Word which is compared to rain Deut. 32. Heb. 6.7 no outward rain for as that is one of Gods blessings upon the obedient Deut. 28.12 So is the want of it a Curse upon the disobedient vers 23 24. and for the sin of his People he shuts up Heaven 1 King 8.35 3. They say unto him we are able How able they were appeared soon after when being in company with our Lord when he was now to drink of his Cup they all forsook him and fled What boldness was this what presumption and confidence of their own strength But their confidence and presumption so much the more condemns the despair and unbelief of many of us James and John were yet Carnal they had not received the Spirit of God they knew Christ only according to the flesh As for many of us we perswade our selves that we are Spiritual and know Christ according to the Spirit and believe in his Mighty Power yet when the Cup comes to us when it 's offered to us to drink of it we cannot away with it we have no power no strength at all to drink of it while we are not yet tryed while the Cup is not yet come to us O how valiant we are the Elect the Chosen of God i. e. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Chosen men and Mighty men of valour But when now temptation comes either from the world hope of gain or fear of loss or desire of honour and reputation or from our own flesh or from the Devil what ever the temptation is what arrant cowards we are we lye down like great Lubbars and let Satan buffet us Repreh How justly doth this reprove the present Generation of men who look at Christs drinking the Cup of his Passion and Baptism as suffering his ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã his fore-suffering and his principal passion from the Jews and
gross ignorance or pride or the child of both unthankfulness But he that knoweth not the Psalmist will tell him That the Lord hath made us and not we our selves And the Apostle That God hath made of one blood all Nations of Men that in him we live move and have our being and that an excellent Being Whether we consider 1. Those endowments of Wisdom Power and Virtue whereby we are inabled to know and love the Author of our Being Or 2. The Prerogative and Dominion over the works of Gods hands Thus loving the Lord is to every man and thus the Lord our God prevents every man with an argument to love him again by Creating him and Creating him such and giving him such unto himself and that the rather because he perpetuates this our Creation and as it were Creates us anew every moment by his continual preservation of us As the Sun every moment sends forth as much light into the air as it doth the first moment when it riseth So that Beloved every one of us owes as much love unto the Lord our God for every moment of his life as if every moment of his life he were anew Created which may be made evident almost unto sense if we consider the manifold wayes whereby the Lord our God preserves us which summarily may be reduced to two heads 1. Removing of evil and so God is properly called a Saviour a Deliverer c. and 2. by conferring of good and so he is stiled a Father a Shepherd a King c. These are funiculi Adami Hos 11. the bonds and cords of love wherewith the Lord our God draws every Son of Adam to a reciprocal affection and answerable love of himself For thus loving the Lord our God is unto every man and even Nature it self teacheth every man this reciprocal affection insomuch that the Heathen of old time loved and adored the Sun and Moon for giving them light Juno or the air for their breathing Ceres for their bread Bacchus for their wine Osiris and Isis for their ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith Diodorus Siculus and lest they should not love the Author of their preservation they made a Deity for almost every particular good thing they enjoyed and for every particular evil they avoided whence came that ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the plurality of Godlings into the world A bad effect of a good cause they loved the Author of their preservation And shall not we who know him better than they did David gives us an example of love for the former kind of preservation in himself I will love thee O Lord my God The Lord is my stony Rock and my Defence my Deliverer c. Psal 18.1 2. St. Paul of the latter God doth us good Giving us rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons feeding our hearts with food and gladness Act. 14.17 and 17.25 He gives to all life and breath and all things that they might seek the Lord if happily they might feel after him and find him So that had we but a meer Natural Estate and a life that is but a vapour given us and preserved unless we be more unthankful than the Gentiles were we must love the Lord our God our Creator our Preserver Nay every unbeliever is inexcusable if he love not the Lord his God with all his heart with all his soul and with all his mind even for these reasons since even the reliques of Natural Justice dictate thus much unto every man that he ought to love him with all he hath of whom he hath received and to whom he oweth all âtâ hath and therefore that we ought to love the Lord our God with all our heart who is the God of our heart Psal 73. That we ought to love him with all our soul and mind whose all souls and minds are Ezech. 18. That we ought to love him with all our strength who is the God of our strength Psal 27. But such is our unthankfulness we either altogether neglect or at lest divide common Obligations 'T is true indeed God preserves both man and beast herein they agree in respect of meer Natural Estate let us consider him in a state above meer Nature God is pleased to condescend to enter a Covenant of Crace to be his God in comparison of which he is said not at all to care for the beasts 1 Cor. 9. But we have unthankfully and unfaithfully broken the Covenant of our God so that he might most justly hate us who hated him first yet see the riches of Gods goodness even when we were enemies God the Father so loved the sinful world that he gave his only begotten Son that whoso believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And greater love than this hath no man saith the Son than that a man should lay down his life for his friends Joh. 15. for whereas scarcely for a Righteous man will one die yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die But God commendeth his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us Rom. 5.7 8. And the Father and Son send the holy Spirit to teach us all things to lead us into all Truth to excite and stir up the love of the Lord our God in our hearts Thus the Father the Son and the holy Spirit loves us thus God loves us with his whole self and as I may so say with all his heart with all his soul and with all his mind How reasonable and just a thing it is and yet what a great matter is it if dust and ashes by way of requital to the great God for his exceeding great undeserved love love him again with all his heart with all his soul and with all his strength with his whole self for what could God do more for us to merit our love and what can we do less for him than to love him again his merit callengeth no less no nor our duty more I told ye before of Gods condescension to Covenant with us and this is the condition of the Covenant yea all the Duty of Man unto his God for what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God to walk in his wayes and to love him and to serve the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul Deut. 10.12 And howsoever as in this place so elsewhere many other duties are enjoyned yet this Love of all the rest is the most excellent I shew unto you a more excellent way saith St. Paul 1 Cor. 12. ult Not only 1. Because it is more lasting and durable than all the rest and therefore preferred before Prophesies Tongues Knowledge yea before Faith and Hope also 1 Cor. 13. ult But also 2. Because the best and greatest duties otherwise performed towards men as to bestow all our goods to feed the poor or towards God as to yield our bodies to be burned they are not only not
enemies of God 1. Neminem contra justitiam amare 2. Nulla vitia blandiendo palpare 3. Ea quae mala sunt audacter redarguere 4. Nulla propter haec damna vel adversa formidare 1. To love no man against right 2. By flattery to cover no vice 3. Boldly to reprove those things that are evil 4. For these things to fear no loss or hurt This is perfectly to hate Gods enemies Vt nec propter vitia homines oderis nec propter homines vitia diligas That thou neither hate the persons of men for their sins sake nor love the sins for the persons sake to hate them as wicked but love them as men thou must know and that assuredly who they are that hate God If thou know âot Gods enemies 't is possible thou mayest hate him whom God loveth and love him whom God hates if so thou art like him who aimed at a beast and slew a man for he that hates his brother is a murderer 1 Joh. 3.15 'T is possible nay exceeding probable that thou mayest hate that which is good and consequently love that which is evil such a gross errour we read of Esay 5.20 thou mayest hate him for Gods enemy who may be a better friend of God than thy self 4. The second is like unto the first Our Lord calls the former Commandment the first that more conveniently he may infer the second which cannot be divided from it this is like unto the first 1. In the object 2. In the act about it 3. The latitude of that act 1. God is aimed at in both he himself in the first Commandment his Image in the second God in thy neighbour Esay 45.14 1 Cor. 1.4.25 for if we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfected in us 1 Joh. 4.12 2. There is the same duty enjoyn'd in both LOVE both require not outward acts only but inward also 3. Like in the amplitude and largeness of the act for as the first comprehends all the rest so doth the second Yea so like the one is to the other that the Holy Ghost useth one for the other and puts one for both Rom. 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love God what only so without love of our Neighbour that comprehends that and all for this is the love of God that we keep his Commandments 1 Joh. 5.3 the second Rom. 13.8 9. the whole Law is fulfill'd in one word Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Yea whereas it might be conceived that in this latter is understood only the second Table the Apostle adds if there be any other Commandment it 's briefly comprehended in this saying Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self The reason is evident from that necessary connexion and coherence of one to the other and with the other they are interwoven one with the other so that he who loves God keeps his Commandments among which is the love of his Neighbour and he who loves his Neighbour as he ought he loves him in God and for God and therefore he must love God above his Neighbour one love is carried unto both so that one cannot be truly without the other for if a man saith he loves God and hates his brother he is a lyar 1 Joh. 4.20 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã These and all other Graces are knit together ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã The Lord refuseth that service done to himself which as performed without love unto our brother he hates robbery for a burnt offering He will have Mercy and not Sacrifice Go first and be reconciled unto thy Brother and then come and offer thy gift Mat. 5.24 He requires that we first forgive our enemies before we ask forgiveness for our selves Obser 1. This discovers a great deal of hypocrisie hid under pretence of the first Commandment as if the love of our God might excuse us from the love of our Neighbour as Matt. 15.5 Your brethren that hated you and cast you out for my names sake said let the Lord be glorified Esay 66.5 what Brethren these were ye read vers 3.4 they hated Gods friends for his sake they hated them for the love of God Jer. 50.7 Their adversaries said we offend not though they devoured them because they have sinned against the Lord the habitation of justice in their giving God glorious Titles that under them they may devour and vex their Neighbour Zach. 11.5 Whose possessors slay them and hold themselves not guilty Blessed be the Lord I am rich Joh. 16.2 Thou lovest thy self for God in God and in order to God even so love thy neighbour as thy self thou would'st do thy self all the real good thou canst Obser 2. See the transcendent excellency of the Second Commandment it is like the First and great one in the First man loves his God in the Second he loves God's Image as in himself so in his neighbour wills and does him all the real good and so one man becomes a kind of God to another Homo homini Deus Antiquity conceived of God no otherwise than as he who doth good unto mankind and therefore all those particular Authors and Inventors of good unto men were accounted Gods Such were they who taught the use of the Plough the way how to plant and dress Vines ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith the old Poet hence came that ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã among the Heathen An ill effect of a good cause Dei proprium servare vel benefacere Tully It's Gods own property to save from evil and do good God left not himself without witness wherein In that he did good Act. 14.17 that is his property and to do good it 's a testimony and witness of the Deity The like Act. 10.38 of Christ in that he went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him Thus Paul and Barnabas were accounted for Gods Act. 14.11 Yea whereas it is indeed the work of God to save from evil and to do good yet for mans encouragement to love his neighbour and do him good the Lord imputes even the proper actions of God unto man God saved Lot But the Scriptures imputes this to Abraham and his prayers for Lot Gen. 19.29 It came to pass when God destroyed the Cities in the Plain that God remembred Abraham and sent Lot out of Sodom Neh. 9.27 It is God that saves yet he maketh men Saviours one of another Thou sentest them Saviours Obad. v. 21. Saviours shall come up upon Mount Sion and judge the Mount of Esau and the Kingdome shall be the Lords Prov. 29.8 God himself turns away his wrath from a penitent people but he imputes this to wise men 1 Tim. 4.16 Take heed to thy self and to thy doctrine continue in them for in doing this thou shalt save thy self and those that hear thee Nor is this peculiar to the Minister but common to every good Neighbour for what knowest thou
and yet speaks so that if all should be written the world would not contain the Books that should be written Him the Lord hath given us for a pattern That we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2. Look unto Jesus the author and finisher of our Faith the Scribes and Pharisees say but the Lord Jesus Christ does they propound words unto us Jesus Christ holds forth works But wherein should we follow the Lord Jesus Christ who did no sin Hear this thou Scribe thou Pharisee thou Hypocrite wherein is this glorious pattern to be followed in that which thou sayest is impossible He did no sin Patterns and examples are ridiculous absurd and unreasonable if they be impossible why because they are propounded to us for this end to shew that the Rule whose examples they are is possible and practicable If therefore it were impossible to follow this pattern this example and to do no sin it would be propounded in vain and to no purpose Thou blind Pharisee dost thou not perceive how thou blasphemest thy God and wrongest his wisdom and goodness who hath therefore propounded his Wisdom Righteousness and Holiness his Son his Christ to be our pattern yea Jesus Christ the power of God to enable us that we should follow his steps who did no sin and thou sayest it is impossible but we must sin Dost thou not perceive how injurious thou art unto the only wise God how thou wrongest his Love and Goodness to thee Exhort To those who sit in Moses's Chair to learn the Law for themselves write a good Copy for themselves to become taught to the Kingdom of God that they will do the work of Moses And what is the work of Moses He bears it in his Name The Name of Moses is not as some conceive given him because he was taken or saved as Josephus would have it or as our Translators explain it in the Margin drawn out of the waters not but that he was so saved and drawn Exod. 2.10 for accurately to speak if his Name were given him from hence because he was taken saved or drawn out of the waters his Name should not be ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but Pharaoh's Daughter gives the reason why she called him ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã because saith she I drew him out of the waters And ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifieth not one who is drawn but one who draws out of the water They therefore who sit in Moses's Chair ought to do the work of Moses they must draw men out of the water Moses was and is such a drawer for Moses or God the Father by Moses draws men out and from something unto something out of the Sea of wicked and ungodly men as Socrates drew Alcibiades out of a debaucht and lascivious company a company of roaring and ranting Companioâ The wicked are as the raging Sea Esay 52. But what is it to draw out of the company of wicked men unless we be drawn also from out of the wickedness it self If a man be drawn away from wicked and lewd Company and be himself drawn away by divers Lusts and Pleasures wherewith he is tempted and ensnared To what purpose is his being drawn out of this loose Company He may as well perish alone in the sink of his own sin as when he runs with the herd of Swine into the Sea The Spiritual Moses therefore draws us out of the stream of our own Lusts and Pleasures What else are our foolish and hurtful Lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition 1 Tim. 6. these are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã extracti drawn out of the Sea of Sin Thus Moses is God's Fisher of men under the Law He draws them out of the Sea of Sin 2. And he draws them unto Christ No man can come unto me except the Father draw him Let us all resolve to Pray Lord draw us and we will follow thee The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses 's Chair Therefore all things whatsoever they bid you observe and do The reasoning is thus framed the Philosopher saith truly ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in mans reason what ever is the medium or argument which concludes the question is the cause of that conclusion And therefore since our Lord Jesus who is the true ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Joh. 1.1 and the Author of all true Logick and Art of Reasoning hath thus reasoned Let us with reverence enquire into that which Scaliger calls Ratio Causandi the ground of this reasoning and cause of this inference why because the Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses's Chair therefore why because they teach the Law should we observe and do what they bid us Both of these seem to me very reasonable grounds of this inference 1. Because the Law is the subject of their Doctrine they teach the Law of God therefore 2. Because they who by custome are the ordinary Teachers of the Law they teach it therefore all things whatsoever they bid you observe and do 1. They teach the Law of God The Law of God or Law of Moses is either veiled or unveiled veiled as the Ceremonial Law and much of the Judicial Law unveiled as much of the Judicial and the Moral Law which is the dictate of the Law of Nature Thâ Law is the Will of God either hiding himself as in the Ceremonial Law or part of the Judicial or reveiling himself more clearly Psal 40.8 Because it is the Will of God it is to be done by whomsoever it is taught and therefore Mal. 4.4 enjoyns all these three several Laws to be remembred and observed 2. The Scribes and Pharisees had now gotten the Chair of Moses and were the ordinary Professors and Teachers of the Law and therefore all things whatsoever they shall bid you observe that observe and do For undoubtedly the God of Peace and Order gives some special assistance unto those whom he sets or permits to be set over others if not for their own sakes who possibly may be vicious and wicked yet for the peoples sake and the preservation of Order and Peace among them for although there were somewhat extraordinary in those Examples of Governours in Scripture yet some though a lower degree of assistance may be hence probably collected unto all As when Saul was advanced to the Kingdom he is said to be turned into another man See Notes on Rom. 13.1 And therefore though our Lord Jesus very frequently reprehended the People and their Teachers yet ye shall not find in all the Gospel that he reproved by Name the High Priests or Priests but only the Scribes and Pharisees the great professors of Knowledge Life and Holiness But he never names the High Priests or Priests in his Reproof that he might maintain the due reverence and respect unto the Priests which were indeed the ordinary Teachers of the People as I shewed lately Doubt 1. Our Lord here seems to put no difference between Teachers no not between Good
and Evil Teachers since he enjoyns the dictates and doctrines even of the Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites to be observed and done and what greater observance and obedience can be given to the doctrine of the best Teachers I Answer Our Lord Jesus commands not the Scribes and Pharisees to teach the Law or to sit in Moses's Chair the Lord commands the Multitude and the Disciples to observe and do what they bid them observe For There is a great difference between those whom our Lord authorizeth to teach and those who set up themselves for Teachers those who are authorized by our Lord to teach are chosen Vessels such are the Scribes taught to the Kingdom of God who are taught by God what they teach the people But to the wicked saith God why dost thou teach my Law or take my Covenant within thy mouth Psal 50. The Lord expostulates with wicked Teachers for usurping the Chair of Moses and teaching the Law which he did not authorize them to do They whom the Lord sends to Teach He himself furnisheth and prevents with Grace as the Word of God is said to come to the Prophets Joh. 10.35 which is the Day-star 2 Pet. 1.19 which false Teachers want and for that they speak not according to the Word because no Morning-light is in them Esay 8.20 2. They whom the Lord sends to teach they seek not their own Honour but the Honour of him that sends them Joh. 7.18 Doubt 2. The Lord Jesus seems to make do difference between his own Disciples and the Multitude He commands both to hear and obey the Doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisees The Law of God is a common Lesson to be learned by all good and bad those within and those without the Church as well the Multitude as the Disciples But is there no difference Yes no doubt Quicquid recipitur recipitur ad modum recipientis and therefore according to the different dispositions of the Multitudes and of the Disciples they learn different Lessons and in a different manner The Multitude have a veil upon their heart in the reading of Moses so that they are capable only of parables and literal understanding of the Word as the Scribes and Pharisees taught The Disciples heart is turned unto the Lord and the veil is taken away 2. The Multitude are under the Law and the compulsion of the Law and are brought to obedience by the terrours and threatnings of the Law Oderunt peccare mali formidine poenae Evil men hate to offend for fear of punishment 2. The Disciples are not under the Law but under Grace They willingly obey the Righteousness of the Law without any compulsion at all Justo non est Lex posita the Law is not made for the Righteous ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Oderunt peccare boni virtutis amore Good men hate to offend for the love of Virtue Observ The Lord will have his Law learned as well by his own Disciples as by the Multitude Obj. The Disciples of Christ believe in the Lord Jesus Christ We are in such a Babel like that Gen. 11. that we understand not one anothers speech What mean we here by belief in the Lord Jesus Christ Mark what belief the Apostle propounds to us in himself Phil. 3.9 10 11. That I may be found in him not having mine own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ c. Mark what belief he exhorts the Colossians unto read Col. 2 6-12 Faith in the operative power of God Rom. 6.8 Faith and Obedience are all one See the Notes on Esay 3.10 Exhort I have already exhorted those who sit in Moses's Chair to do the work of Moses But we are now exhorted to yield to the attraction and drawing of Moses See Notes on Gen. 1.28 NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW XXIII 23. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Wo to you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites for ye pay tythe of mint and annise and cummin and have omitted the weightier matters of the law judgment mercy and faith these ought ye to have done and not to leave the other undone PAying Tythes was never yet any Argument of my Discourse in this or any other place although perhaps in regard of some I have as just cause to complain as another man But if I had a purpose to speak of that Subject this place of Scripture gives no countenance to it but ranks paying of Tythes among minora Legis the less things of the Law though our Lord saith that those things ought not to be left undone These words contain a denunciation of a wo to the Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites for a breach of their duty Wo c. And 2. A direction of them for the due and orderly performance of their duty These ought ye to have done and not to leave the other undone Their breach of Duty consists 1. In Commission an intense performance of smaller Duties ye tythe mint c. 2. In Omission a remisness and neglect of greater Duties ye have omitted the weightier things of the law 1. An exactness and overdoing of the less Commandments ye tythe mint c. 2. An underdoing or rather a not doing of the greater Duties ye have omitted the weightier matters In the words we have these three Axioms 1. The Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites paid Tythe of Mint Anise and Cummin 2. They omitted the weighter things of the Law Judgment Mercy and Faith 3. Our Lord for these sins denounceth a wo to the Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites 1. The Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites paid Tythe of Mint Anise and Cummin The word we render Anise is in the Greek ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which doth not signifie Anise but Dill which in the V. Latin is rendred Anethum as the High and Low Dutch have Dylle which is quite another herb different in kind from Anise which in the Greek is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and in Latin Anisum yet herein all our printed English Translations are out which our last Translators have followed That which seems to have misled them was the old English word Anet which signifieth the same which we call Dill and is in the French Bible and in our English Manuscript The Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites tythed Mint and Dill and Cummin Who were these Scribes Who else but the great learned men in the Letter of the Law Learned they were for ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a Scribe and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a Teacher were all one Their Learning was altogether in the Letter of the Scripture and therefore they are called in the Text ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and the Low Dutch fitly turns the word Scriftgeleerden Learned in the Letter This Learning of the Scribes was in the Letter of the Law and therefore they are called sometimes ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Lawyers sometime ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Teachers of the Law Such as these are all Teachers of the Letter only whether of Law or Gospel The
finish his work the Porch David prayeth Psal 119.73 Thine hands have made me Oh give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandments These imprint the Fear Exod. 20.20 Lord increase our Faith Pray that the veil of the Temple may be removed that we may behold with open face the Glory of the Lord c. 2 Cor. 3.18 Observ 8. In the ruine of the Temple at Jerusalem read also the ruine and destruction of all like places of worship which are not of so Divine a Foundation nor of so holy a representation as the Temple at Jerusalem was though these were built by devout and religious persons and dedicated to Holy Uses If men be wicked yet trust in Churches and the Services performed in them and think hereby to palliate and cover their evil consciences in their sins These buildings and worships in them are prophaned and abused and lose the end for which they were made and so must follow the fate of the Temple at Jerusalem In the first times after the Shepherd was smitten when the sheep were scattered and Gods hand turned against the little ones when as yet there were no outward Churches nor places of publick worship built Every believing Soul was a Temple of the Holy Ghost wherein they worshipped God in Spirit and Truth But when as now the People of God had a breathing-time under Constantine and the outward persecution ceased and that pious Emperour gave encouragement to the building of Churches and places for the publick worship of God Men then began a sad and evil effect of a good cause to place all their Holiness all their Religion all their Piety in the Church and going to Church and performing some outward Service in the Church while mean time they became worldly-minded ambitious of worldly honours c. like the prophane world Then stood the abomination of desolation where it should not Then began the daily Sacrifice to cease Dan. 12. Then began that prophesie of the Apostle to be fulfilled 2 Tim. 3.1 The last dayes shall be perilous for men shall be lovers of themselves proud boasters lovers of pleasures more than of God c. Now beloved let us bring the consideration of these things a little nearer home Have our Churches and places of Religious worship been used to any better end Have not men placed all their Holiness in them and the Services performed in them Hath it not been a character of a Religious man that he keeps his Church well that he keeps the Sabbath well Yet who sees not but that the same men who keep their Church so well keep their old sins as well they carry them to Church with them they come to Church and pray and the sin remains they hear and hear but the sin remains they receive the Sacrament yet the sin remains and they the same men that ever they were c. With these things men may blind the eyes of men for a time but God knows our hearts and punisheth our hypocrisie for where in all the world hath the hand of the Lord been more heavy than upon those which we call the Reformed Churches that especially which called it self Philadelphia though most unworthy of that name and eo nomine exempted themselves from the hour of temptation that is come and yet coming upon the whole earth And hath not now a long time the Lord dashed us and broken us one upon another and doth not now the Church made as an help to lead men to God and Christ mislead them from God and Christ whereby do men cover their envy their pride c. but by going to Church and performing some outward Service there Did not Sheba the Son of Bicri take Sanctuary in Abel-beth-maacha will our God think ye who is most just do any such execution among those who call themselves by his Name without a just cause Shall not the Judge of all the world do right Beloved when the mystical Temples of God are so wholly defiled in the Porch and Holy what must the issue needs be Both they and the outward Temples and Churches must to ruine together the Lord hath dealt so with places of worship of his own Institution and with the People called by his Name and shall we escape Read I beseech ye seriously and sadly what the Lord saith Jer. 7. from vers 3. to the 15. Facinus quos inquinat aequat Those whom wicked Acts defile The same in time sure do them spoyle There is no man unless extreme partial but must confess this to be our case The second Temple here threatned to be destroyed as afterward it was was built under the Dominion of the Gentiles and while the Jews were in thraldom and servitude and was a type of Christ's Kingdom among the Gentiles if that Temple was laid waste because the inward Temple was destroyed what can we expect but the like destruction outward destructions commonly follow inward if our inward house be desolate what shall become of the outward Observ 1. If the Lord spare not his own Temple shall the Devils Temple escape See Hos 8.14 Ezech. 9.6 1 Pet. 4.17 Exhort Let us labour to get the Lords Spiritual Temple set up in us Psal 5.7 I will come into thine house and in thy fear into the Temple of thy Holiness and 27.4 5. One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple and 118.19 Open to me the gates of Righteousness and I will go into them and 138.2 I will worship toward thy Holy Temple All outward Temples and Churches were made for the inward and all their Services were configurations of what should be within us in Gods Spiritual Temple and therefore the Lord conditions the standing and falling of the outward Temple upon the sanctification or prophanation of the inward and therefore those words of the Lord to Solomon 2 Chron. 7.14 they were spoken upon occasion of the dedication of the Temple If my people which are called by my Name shall humble themselves and pray and seek my presence and turn from their wicked wayes Then will I hear in heaven c. Wherefore let us pray to the Lord to finish this good work of Grace among us NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW XXIV 3 4 5. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã And as he sat upon the mount of Olives the disciples came unto him privately saying Tell us when shall these things be and what shall be the sign of thy coming and of the end of the world And Jesus answered and said unto them Take heed that no man deceive you For many shall come in my Name saying I am Christ and shall deceive many THe Disciples thought themselves well entered into the Principles of Christianity they now desire to hear prophecies of the Lord Jesus and
Lord was crucified Rev. 11.8 But all men have not the true Faith for our Lord foretels that when he cometh He shall not find Faith upon the Earth from whence we may note that all professors of the Faith in all Ages have been and are an enlightened people and lights to the rest of the world especially the Saints of these latter dayes in whom the true light shines The Use hence is for reproof of those who would seem to go forth to meet the Bridegroom yet indeed stay at home In discovery of this will appear the grand imposture of the false Christianity for what is that which in the Christian world is commonly reputed the going out of our selves but this that we look into our selves and see there a world of errours a mass of corruption a sink of sin c. and then go out of our selves to Jesus Christ who hath made satisfaction and expiation for the sin why what fault find you with this Alas when we have seen this mass of corruption we are content that it continue there still yea we commonly believe that it must be there still and therefore we so go forth to meet the Bridegroom believe in him and take him home to us for the covering of our sin like a Strumpet that marries an Husband for the covering of her Adultery with other men 3. They took the Lamps the reason of this is from the usual Ceremony which was wont to be performed in the night by torch-light so that our Lord abstains not from making use of Customes usually taken up in the world for the illustration of his Truth where we may note a necessity of humane learning for discovery of ancient customes among the Heathen used and supposed as known in the world many whereof we find in Scripture which cannot otherwise outwardly be known than out of Humane Authors Moses was well learned Act. 7. divers points of the Civil Laws as also the Greek Poets full of many good Examples as well as Documents require good learning St. Paul's Epistles to say no more of the necessity of Tongues herein as well as in Arts. Mysticé Then they took the Lamp what is the Lamp but the Divine Doctrine of the Law and Gospel Psal 119.105 Prov. 6.23 John Baptist a Light Joh. 5.35 What is it to take these Lamps but to believe the Divine Doctrine Joh. 1.12 13. so Joh. 12.36 the Virgins take their Lamps they believe the whole Word all the People of God at least in profession believe the Law and Gospel to be Divine Doctrine and the Word of God Thus have they their particular Faith and with these Lamps they go forth But what reason can be given for the distribution of the Text of those who profess Christianity that five are wise and five of them foolish It 's a short cut to referr the difference to the influence of the Stars at mens Nativity or to fatal destiny which is the common refuge of ignorance But we are not here to enquire concerning the cause why some are Natural Ideots others have Natural Sagacity but we are here to search into the reason of this prudence and imprudence the cause of this practical wisdom and the want of it why some are provident and so wise others improvident and so foolish much might be said concerning this it shall be sufficient to refer this difference unto the true or false judgement of men their partial or impartial election and choice according to their true or false judgement As when an unerring Rule is set before all men even the Holy Word of God according to which they may judge Righteous Judgement and choose what is good some do so others become judges of evil thoughts and choose those things which the Lord delights not in Now that the Lord inclines no man to folly or is the cause of it is apparent by that of the Wise Man Ecclus. 15.11 Say not thou it is through the Lord that I fell away for thou oughtest not to do the things that he hateth so vers 17. Before man is life and death and whether him liketh shall be given him so Deut. 30.15 See I have set before thee this day life and good death and evil c. also Mich. 6.8 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy and to humble thy self to walk with thy God So that they who are wise are such by the grace of God and they who are foolish they become such by their own perverse judgment and their own partial election NOTES and OBSERVATIONS on MAT. 25.2 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Five of them were wise and five of them foolish THe Order is inverted in the Vul. Lat. What wisdom what folly is here meant How are we here to understand the wise how foolish There are five intellectual Virtues which we may reduce unto this verse ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Which in the Language of the School are Art Science Wisdom Intelligence and Prudence I shall not spend time in distinguishing these the last of these is here meant when we say That five of these Virgins were wise the word here used is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifies not properly wise but rather prudent and so indeed it ought to have been rendered as the Latin hath here Prudentes for wisdom is properly about the highest causes and reasons of things whereof it judges and enables us to judge Prudence is busied about the expedients and means conducing to the end Wisdom is conversant about the highest objects as the Kingdom of God and Christ the Bridegroom of the Church Prudence is busied about Faith Knowledge Love and good works the Lamp and oyl in the lamp needful for admission into the Kingdom of God But here may arise a doubt what are there but five foolish Stultorum plena sunt omnia numerus est infinitus To which I answer The Lord Jesus speaks here only of such enlightened men and women 1. who had in good measure kept themselves unspotted from the world 2. Who had saved themselves from the untoward Generation 3. Who had gone forth to meet the Bridegroom 4. Who had made some good progress in the wayes of the Lord these the Lord Jesus calls fools because they wanted oyl in their Lamps c. Our Lord speaks not here of the unbelieving world but of the negligent and foolish professors of Christianity But still the question remains why there are five wise and five foolish 1. Why five wise Because that was the custom of the Romans Grecians and Jews as also 't is evident by this Parable that they had five Lamps lighted at their Nuptials this appears by the Problem of Plutarch ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Why saith he do they light five Lamps neither more nor fewer His reasons are not for our purpose But since five was the customary number of those who were to carry Lamps and to be
more properly understood by the word paenitentia Ye have most of these together Joel 2.12 13. Turn ye even to me c. This sorrow was figured by the sowre herbs which they must eat when they kept the passover at their coming out of Egypt i. e. In transitu à peccato ad justitiam In the passage from sin to righteousness A potentia Satanae ad Deum From the power of Sathan to God A Pharaone spirituali ad Jesum From spiritual Pharaoh to Jesus which is the true Pesac It is necessary we be then afflicted and mourn for the loss of our delights and pleasures we have parted withal for all our sins committed against our God For our parting with our dearest friends in the flesh as the milch-kine carrying the Ark lowed as they went toward Bethshemesh 1 Sam. 6.12 our last translation refers to this Text and that upon good grounds then this is fulfilled Zach. 12.10 11 12. Hadadrimmon is a loud out-cry and Megiddo is the Gospel When the Gospel is first preached and the only Son of God known to be slain by us it causeth Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo Josiah is slain the Christ of God in the Spirit is slain among us Revel 1.7 There former sorrow was a sorrow to repentance and preceding it Godly sorrow causeth repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 The other sorrow is the Concomitant or attendant on repentance The Reason of this Duty is considerable either 1. In regard of God from whom we have deeply revolted Esay 31.6 who invites us again unto himself Jer. 4.1 2. In regard of us who have a double necessity lying upon us both 1. Of Duty which answers to that which is called necessitas praecepti 2. And of means which is called necessitas medii 't is a means so necessary to Salvation that without it its impossible to be obtained as he who is the Author and Dispenser of it forewarns his Disciples Matth. 18.3 Now whereas there is a dispute whether Faith or Repentance precede This I conceive may reconcile the difference that so much Faith is necessary as to believe that without Repentance we cannot be saved Numb 14. Heb. 3. Thus the Ninevites Repentance is famous but it 's said expresly that first they believed God We must know therefore that there is a kind of legal Faith which propounds the ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã of God unto us That God is Heb. 11.6 which belief must necessarily precede And therefore of the Gentiles that Faith is necessarily prerequired Thus of the Ninevites and of the Jaylor in the same condition with these in the Text Act. 16. yet him Paul bids believe and Peter bids repent He knew not God these did Act. 3. ult A Memoire worthy the transmitting to Posterity DR Jo. Wincop in a Sermon before the House of Commons at the Fast Jan. 29. 1664. being the Day before the Treaty atVxbridge began published by Order of that House the Text was Esay 22.12 printed by Robert Leyburn for Samuel Man in Paul's Church-yard at the Swan 1645. pag. 10. hath these words We all talk of Reformation But still where is it Shew me one lust thou hast mastered one passion thou hast conquered c. Talk not of Reformation only but shew it was there ever more lying cousening malice oppression than now Nay God be merciful to us I know not what kind of new cheat and hypocrisie the father of falshood hath taught some kind of men whereby to cloak all their fraud and villanies by a new way of pretending they are for the Cause Then they think all is well thereby discrediting a good Cause dishonouring a good God abusing your good intentions to work their own sinister ends by Let not men talk of Reformation only but shew it indeed and in truth NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON ACTS II. 47. And the Lord added to the Church daily such as should be saved The Original Greek words are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Which word for word sound thus in our English But the Lord added to the Church daily those who were saved A Translation that differs very much from the other But it is the Wisemans counsel Blame not before thou hast examined the truth Ecclus. 11.7 which that we may the better do we look back to vers 14. from whence to the end of vers 40. we have either two Speeches of St. Peter to the Jews or one interrupted vers 37. In the former St. Peter after he had desired attention vers 14. he removes and confutes their slaunder who mock'd the Apostles and other Disciples and said They were full of new wine 2. He informs them in the truth 1. That the Apostles spake by the holy Ghost 2. That God had raised up Jesus from the dead whom they had crucified 3. That he was ascended into heaven and sate at the right hand of God 4. That he had poured forth his holy Spirit upon the Apostles 5. That God had made that same Jesus whom they had crucified both Lord and Christ And these or most of these the Apostle confirms by divine Testimony out of the Prophets The effect of this speech was compunction vers 37. sorrow and fear which fear because it is Consiliativus and puts men upon enquiry how they may escape the evil which they fear They desire Peters and the rest of the Apostles counsel what they should do Then follows Peters advice That they repent and be baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus for the remission of sins If this they should do they should receive the holy Ghost which promise belonged to them and to all a far off c. vers 38 39. And that they might perform those duties and receive the promised Spirit âhe concludes his speech with exhortation to be saved or as we render the words Save your selves from this untoward generation The effect of this exhortation in these new Converts is seen in a new conversation and that for the present vers 41. They who gladly received the word repented and were baptized and saved themselves from the untoward Generation and so were added to the Church daily vers 41 47. and for the future they who according to the Apostles counsel were saved or saved themselves from the untoward generation they accordingly obtained a like gracious act from the Lord to that which was vouchsafed unto others before vers 4. The Lord added to the Church daily such as were saved or saved themselves from the untoward Generation Thus the Syriack Interpreter and Martin Luther understood and turned the words The Lord added to the Congregation those who were saved and Piscator so the Low-Dutch Translation hath it thus the Old English Manuscript The Lord encreased them that were made safe each day And the truth of this appears Act. 5.14 Believers were more added to the Lord multitudes of men and women And Act. 11.21 And the hand of the Lord was with them and a great number believed and turned to the Lord. In the
said seeing ye shall see and not perceive yet this blindness proceeds from themselves Act. 28. and then it is just with God to give them up Observ 2. Note the reason why Gods Kingdom comes not in these last dayes but the Devils Kingdom that prevails and is set up almost universally The true reason is the want of Faith men believe not I know well we all boast every one of his Faith See Notes on James 2.21 The world is full of such a false Faith but where is that Faith whereof the Lord said Luk. 18. Men believe not the great design of God Amos 9.8 See Notes on Zeph. 1.7 Thus because men believe not the Lord works his work he sends the Chaldeans See this in some Examples Covetousness prevails c. Repreh The great unbelief in these last dayes the Lord as he works a work of judgement and wrath and that in our dayes so he works a work of mercy and grace in our dayes also And what is that work of Grace This is the work of God that ye believe Joh. 6.29 This work wrought in us is imputed and ascribed unto us 1 Thess 1.3 Your work of faith and therefore it is Gods command unto us that we believe in Christ 1 Joh. 3.23 Now what is that which we are to believe 1. That God gives us the Eternal Life Tit. 1.2 1 Joh. 2.25 2. That the sin which intervenes and hinders us from the Eternal Life is done away or doing away through Jesus Christ This object of our Faith is proposed unto us vers 38 39. Exhort Take heed what we hear See Notes on Hebr. 2.1 Observ 4. The Rabbins in the end of the Books of Holy Scripture are wont to write these words ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã be strong and of good courage It is the common and most usual farewell among men ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã in the Greek so in the Latin Vale i. e. properly be strong be valiant Ye believe through Christ his merit and his power and efficacy the remission the putting away of sins ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã be strong ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã vale It is the Apostles method 2. Pet. 1. ye have obtained ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Add to your faith vertue Exhort Believe the remission of sins it 's the glad tidings which the Apostles bring The Gospel of remission of sins was preached to the Antiochians Who were they in their mystery Who else but such as were contra currus averse and opposite unto the chariot of war they were peaceable men and the Doctrine of Peace was to be preached unto the house where the Son of Peace was and therefore the Apostle calls them Men Brethren Abrahams argument unto Lot Gen. 13. Acts 13.26 Men and Brethren Children of the stock of Abraham and whosoever among you feareth God to you is the word of this salvation sent They walked in the steps of Abrahams Faith Some Additional NOTES on ACTS 13.38 39. With a Conclusion of this Third Volume in an humble Prayer to God in the words of the AUTHOR ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Be it known unto you therefore men and brethren that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses THese words are part of a Sermon of the Christian Faith preached by the Apostle The Analysis see before and in Zeph. 1.10 His doctrine is touching the remission of sins cleansing from sins The Author of both Means of obtaining both His Application is 1. Instruction 2. Commination 1. Instruction that by David is meant Christ. 2. Commination that we take heed All which are comprised in these Axioms 1. Remission of sins is published by Christ to believers 2. We cannot be justified from sin by the Law of Moses 3. Every one who believes in Christ he is justified from all things from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses 4. The Commination with Exhortation followeth That we take heed lest upon our unbelief and disobedience that befall us which is spoken in the Prophets 1. That Remission of Sins is published by Christ and that we cannot be justified from sin by the Law of Moses is agreed upon by all but how every one who believeth is justified from all things from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses This I doubt is not believed by all though it be necessary to be known to all I shall therefore spend no time in handling the two former but speak only of the latter and the Commination and Exhortation 3. Every one who believes in Christ is justified from all things from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses Quaere 1. What is here meant by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to be justified 2. What by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã all things 1. Vulg. Lat. hath remissio peccatorum annunciatur ab omnibus 2. Interlin Peccatis 3. English Manuscript from all sins 4. I conceive it 's better read in the largest sence all things because hereby may be understood all whatever the believing Soul is justified freed and cleansed from See Notes on Job 19.25 but so that principally also sins be here meant which are the true evils and causes of all the penal evils for so Matth. 1.21 Rom. 6.7 3. The Law of Moses We cannot be purged by the Law of Moses The Law of Moses is here set down ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã by way of distinction we read of a three-fold Law 1. The Law of Man as the Law of the Medes and Persians 2. The Law of God which is the Law 1. Of the Father by Moses 2. Of Christ Gal. 6.2 3. Of the Spirit of Life Rom. 8.2 3. The Law of Sin Rom. 7. Reason 1. In regard of the Law of Moses which consisting in Carnal Ordinances is weak Hebr. 7.19 it makes nothing perfect and 10.4 impossible by it to do away sin Reason 2. In regard of Christ and of the Law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Reason 3. In regard of Faith Rom. 8.3 4. 1 Joh. 5.4 Observ 1. An unbeliever is an unclean an unjust person he hath not received the justifier and cleanser Tit. 1.15 16. where defiled unbelieving and disobedient are all one quae immergunt homines in perditionem Observ 2. Moses is commonly rendered drawn out of the water Vide Onomasticon Exhort To believe in Christ Joh. 1.12 Rom. 3.28 and 5.1.9 1 Cor. 6.11 Gal. 2.16 for so a man is justified by the faith of Christ and 3.2.24 Reason Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth Rom. 10.4 The Apostle there puts the difference between the righteousness of the Law and the righteousness of Faith and makes Moses in whom the Jews trusted the Umpire and Arbitrator between them The Law saith He that doth shall live The
two sorts Either 1. Infants who know not the Law of Nature as Adam did 2. Or else the Gentiles who have not the knowledge of any outward Law as Adam had Gen. 2. They sin not out of desire of Knowledge as Adam did but out of inordinate desire of some inferiour temporal seeming Good And thus Esau did who by the Holy Ghost is made a pattern of such sin Hebr. 12.16 lest there be any fornicator or prophane person as Esau c. Reason The different wayes of transgressing proceed from the different objects and powers of the Soul conversant about them and the Serpent busie in all kinds to promote sin The objects some more noble other some more vile and base The powers of the Soul are proportionable to the different objects of it 1. The bruitish desire is carried downward Proclives sumus à labore ad libidinem We are prone to forsake labour and follow our lust Accordingly the Jews tells us of two kinds of Spirits 1. The one dwelling in the superiour Appetite inclining the mind and will to ambitious and froward thoughts and desires spiritual wickedness in heavenly things This moved Adam to leave the plain and simple way of life and obedience that he might become ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã some great one like to a God knowing Good and Evil. 2. Another kind of spirit lives in the inferiour and bruitish appetite This moved Esau or Edom to despise even his birth-right Gen. 25.33 that Dignity to which he was born that whereby he was Consecrate to God as the first-born were Exod. 22.29 and was next in Honour unto his Parents Gen. 49.3 and had a double portion of his Fathers goods Deut. 21.17 and had right to succeed in the Government of the Family 2 Chron. 21.23 and to administer the Priests Office Numb 8.14 17. Which Dignity endeared him to his Father as Exod. 4.22 and rendered him higher than his Brother Psal 89.28 but above all these by this he was a type of Christ Rom. 8.29 All which he undervalued and sold for one meals meat and that of the vilest and coursest fare bread and pottage of Lentiles or Vetches and so despised his birth-right and therefore the Holy Ghost calls him a prophane person Heb. 12.16 So much the bruitish spirit prevailed with the Natural Man Edom who is therefore said to dwell in Mount Seir Gen. 32.3 the Land of Seir the Country of Edom i. e. the Devil as Levit. 17.7 They shall not offer their sacrifices any more ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã unto Devils So 2 Chron. 11.15 He appointed Priests for the High Places and for the Devils the word is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã So true is that 1 Joh. 5.19 the world ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the evil world of Esau or Edom the earthly minded world lies in the evil one or in the Devil Observ 1. Here are then manifold patterns and wayes of transgressing 1. The similitude of Adam pride and eager desire of knowledge 2. The similitude of Edom earthly worldly desires 3. The way of Cain Jude v. 11. bloody mindedness 4. As Nimrod violent hunters of men 5. Like Sodom and Gomorrah pride fulness of bread and abundance of idleness such as declare their sins as Sodom 6. As the Idolaters Exod. 32. figuring excess and riot 1 Cor. 10.7 Be not ye Idolaters ãâã were some of them as it is written the people sate down to eat and drink and rose up to play 7. Those whose carkases fell in the wilderness because they believed not that they were able through the power of God to subdue their outward enemies they were an example to such as believe not that it 's possible for them through the power of Christ to subdue their inward enemies And therefore the Apostle exhorts the Hebrews to labour to enter into rest lest any man fall short after the same example of unbelief or disobedience as it is in the Margin Hebr. 4.11 8. The false Prophets and Teachers of Old were patterns to the false Prophets and Teachers who as St. Peter foretold should be in these dayes 2 Pet. 2.1 Who have forsaken the right way vers 15. following the way of Balaam the Son of Bosor who loved the wages of unrighteousness 9. The way of Ismael Gal. 4. as he that was born after the flesh c. even so it is now Many other patterns there are and wayes of transgressing and there must needs be so for when we fall from Unity we necessarily fall into Multiplicity whence Vnio is the cause of all Good Binio the cause of all Evil God made man upright c. The Creator is one the Creatures manifold and all their perfections participated of that one when therefore Adams Child hath lost his happiness in the one and only God he runs and wearieth himself in picking up his lost happiness among all the Creatures as Esau hunts in the field i. e. the world for Venison which Jacob found neerer home Observ 2. Histories of Scripture were not written only for the knowledge of things reported in them but also yea principally that they might serve as types and similitudes unto us To that purpose was the history of Adam as our Apostle makes use of it the history of Cain and Abel Psal 78. 1 Cor. 10. Exhort Since there are patterns and similitudes of Good and Evil yea the greatest Good and the greatest Evil set before us let us be exhorted to choose the Good and refuse the Evil it 's the Lords exhortation towards the end of the Pentateuch though there be so vast a disproportion between them yet how often to our shame be it spoken have we refused the Good and chosen the Evil rejected Christ and chosen Barabbas O Beloved how far short come we of that pattern set before uâ the Lord Jesus Christ and his righteousness Ezek. 43.10 11. As there are divers patterns of sin so there are divers kinds of sinners 1. Some according to Adams Transgression 2. Some according to Edoms 3. Some who wallow in the mire of intemperance c. 4. Some others soar up aloft prying and searching into Divine matters out of curiosity and desire of knowledge and vain glory by it and ambition to be great in this evil world c. See Notes in Zach. 7.5 Our Saviour resembles these to dogs who will not abide strangers and bark at every thing that was unknown unto them before if it sute not with their spirit and opinion which they have entertained for truth 2. Others he resembles to Swine who trample the precious Truth under their feet Matth. 7.6 So that a man may sin and that heinously yet not infamously not notoriously Edom's sin hath more shame with it Adam's more of the nature of sin in it There is a drunkenness and not with wine Isa 29.9 They are drunk but not with wine they stagger but not with strong drink they are drunk with the spirit of Opinion Observ As there are patterns of sin so of punishment
built up for ever Mercy and Truth pretence of Truth without Mercy that would reign It is commonly said that the pride and covetousness and ambition of the former Governours brought the world to that pass wherein it was and truly I dare not excuse them but we are much wronged abroad whether we be teaching or such as would be ruling Elders if we be not altogether as proud and ambitious and covetous as they were and therefore let us take heed lest we continue and increase Gods Judgements among us and provoke him to take away this and all other Government from us Truly the sins of all ranks and orders of men bid fair for such an Anarchy or want of all Rule as ye read of Isa 3 1-8 and therefore we may justly fear that the Lord will make us as the creeping things that have no Ruler over them Hab. 1.14 Consol Here is singular Consolation unto the weaklings the Children that are partakers of flesh and blood who are righteous as yet by the righteousness of the Law and desire to be justified by the righteousness of the second Adam God the Father by his Law hath begotten in them a good will unto Jesus Christ the second Adam and his Righteousness But alas the Law is the strength of sin 1 Cor. 15. and occasions sin to reign more tyrannically and death by sin And because the Children are partakers c. Heb. 2.14 When Pharaoh is most tyrannical the people cry out unto their God and then he sends the true Moses Let us hear holy David speak his experience Psal 18 1-4 The sorrows or the cords Marg. of death compassed me about the floods of Belial i. e. the Devil that hath the power of death Hebr. 2.14 15. vers 5. The sorrows or cords of hell ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã vers 6. In his distress he calls upon the Lord and what comes of it vers 16 17. the like ye have Psal 116.1 and Psal 142 1-7 Rom. 7.24 25. Repreh 2. Those who in this very nick of time when the Kingdom yea the whole Christian world is in a suffering condition are yet so unseasonably ambitious of Rule that even now they contend for it as the Disciples of Christ when he told them of his passion strove among themselves who should be the greatest Luk. 9.46 This is just Adams property ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is it not much more seasonable to suffer with him As he taught his Disciples upon that occasion Can ye drink of the Cup c. Matth. 20.20 To die with him that we may live with him to suffer with him that we may reign with him Repreh 3. Those who sleight and despise the life See Notes in Col. 2.12 Repreh 4. Those that despise the true sent Ministers of God Luk. 7.32 to be sure the fault is in the Minister If of an austere life as John then he lives like a Monk or if loving and familiar then who is he acquainted with but men without any Religion in them John comes in the way of Righteousness but men will not go out of their own way to meet the Lord in his way And may not this be truly applyed to the men of this Generation who disparage and vilifie the Life that must Reign so far are they from admitting it to reign over them Men are not ashamed to say that the Heathen live better lives than we do Yea that the Jesuites that the Pharisees Difficile est dissimulare diu Death reigned from Adam to Moses These words contain the duration and continuance of the Tyrant Deaths reign with the terms when it began and when it ended I must here remember ye 1. Who this Tyrant is 2. What his reign is 3. What is here meant by Adam 4. What by Moses 5. How Death is said to reign from Adam to Moses 1. This Tyrant Death is not only Natural but also Spiritual and Infernal the first-born of sin the Nephew and Grand-child of the Devil as ye find his Genealogy Jam. 1.15 Job 18. it is otherwise called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which we turn Rom. 8.6 to be carnally minded according to the extent of the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã we may turn it the mind and affection of the flesh and so our Translators Col. 3.2 render ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã set your affection and in the margin mind so that according to them ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is the mind and affection of the flesh which is said to be death So that a carnal mind carnal thoughts reasonings imaginations carnal will love desire hope fear joy grief all these are Death 2. This Death is said to have reigned The word is taken ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã indefinitely ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã so that we may understand it so to have reigned that it doth reign as I fear we shall find it doth for wheresoever there is such a carnal mind will and affection there is the reign of Death 3. By Adam we understand not only the person of Adam the first but the nature and that corrupted in every man which is called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the souly man or natural man 1 Cor. 2.9.14 and this is here meant 4. Moses may be understood 1. Properly and personally 2. Figuratively 1. Properly according to the history of him Exod. 2. and so ye have his Name and Etymologie of it Exod. 2.10 2. Figuratively and so by Moses we understand 1. The Law given by Moses Luk. 16.29 Joh. 5.45 2. Christ the end of the Law 5. How did Death reign from Adam to Moses The word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã from may note a time or Epocha and a cause 1. A time and so the reign of Death from Adam's transgression unto Moses's Law is Two thousand four hundred and fifty years 2. 1 From Adam as a cause as a Common Parent polluting and defiling his Posterity vertually contained in him as a common Root So Levi was in Abraham's loyns c. 2. As a common polluted nature in every one propagated from Adam and inclining and disposing every one to the same transgression and it is true That Death reigned from Adam to Moses 'T is also true that sin and death and he that hath the power of sin and death i. e. the Devil reigned from Adam to Moses yea and yet reigns in every man from Adam that common sinful nature in him till Moses till the Law Varro tells us a story that when the Sabins entred Rome the Fort on the Capitol was committed to one Tarpeius He had a Daughter a Vestal Virgin called Tarpeia she let in the Sabins and she covenanted for what they bare on their left arms understanding their bracelets of Gold and Jewels and precious Stones which they wore on their left arms but they cast all their shields upon her and so destroyed her and entred the Fort. So our Mother Eve was taken with the lust of the eyes Gen. 3.6 Adam and every one of us have a Fort to
and the Vulg. Latin Castellio and Erasmus have reâixit and the ancientest English Manuscript that I believe is extant turns the Text thus When the Commandment was comen sin lived again which may be understood according to the mans knowledge of it Jerem. 31. according to the power and strength of sin 1 Cor. 15. Sin therefore is said to revive when having been dead as it were she now puts forth her strength and sheweth her self to be alive but how upon the coming of the Commandment doth sin revive Not as if the Commandment caused the life of sin and so positively quickened it and enlivened it as a cause of it for the Law is the greatest enemy of sin and most contrary to it and in all things opposeth it and tends to the destruction of it but as by Antiperistasis one contrary is by another intends and strengthens another as in the summer time while the weather is hot the heat of the fire doth not put forth it self but when the cold winter comes then the heat encreaseth so while we live without the check and correction of the Law sin puts not forth it self in its strength but when the Law comes which is contrary to the sin as cold to heat then the heat of concupiscence discovers it self The fire lies hid and raked up in the ashes and appears not but if you cast water on it then it discovers it contrary nature And as contrary is the Law to sin as water is to the fire and though it lie hid while the man lives without the Law yet when the Law comes then sin shews it self then iniquity burns like a fire as the Prophet speaks The Lion when he walks as also the Cat which resembles him he puts not forth his talents but when a prey appears The reason in regard of Satan all his goods are in peace Luk. 11.21 till the Law come to disturb his possession and then he perceives that his kingdom in the man is toward an end and that he hath but a short time Revel 12.12 which is not to be understood only of some certain time of the Church though so it be very true but in respect of every man it 's when he rules and the Law comes therefore he bestirs himself the more his free-hold the mans mind heart and will is called into question and therefore so he deals with us as we with him Mar. 9.17 20. He cast down him that was possessed and some said he was dead In regard of his Serpentine subtilty for whereas the Law consists most what of prohibitions forbidding such and such acts to be done Thou shalt not steal commit adultery covet c. The subtle spirit in the man suggests unto him a suspicion it is not for any evil in the act forbidden but rather surely it must be some notable good pleasure profit or credit in the doing that act which is prohibited otherwise it would not be forbidden him and that it is not love but envy in the Law-giver which made him forbid the act unto him As for example in positive Lawes if men of mean rank and quality being forbidden to play at Cards or Tables which others of greater rank might do should suspect that it is not for any evil in the Game but rather there might be some singular pleasure in them which therefore the great men envied them and would keep proper to themselves Such a suspicion as this was conceived by the Mother of all Living and is inherited by her Apostate Children who live without the Law The Serpent deceives us also by his subtilty and makes us suspect that the Law-giver inhibits us the eating of the forbidden fruit meerly out of envy lest our eyes should be opened and we should be as Gods knowing good and evil and so we should be too wise and therefore maugre all prohibitions we will taste of the forbidden fruit though it cost us a Fall as it cost them 2. In regard of this false assumed freedom for the man that lives without the Law is impatient of any curb or check from a Law but conceits that the most equal and just laws of God infringe the liberty of the Subject and this is the condition of our first birth we are born as the wild Asses Colt saith Zophar Job 11.12 and we can by no means endure to be tyed by the bonds of the Law but when they are laid upon us then we will not be bound See Notes in Psal 94.12 3. In regard of the Law which howsoever weak and impotent and not able to expel sin yet an enemy it is unto the sin and though not able altogether to rout it yet it can discover it trouble it and tye it provoke it and stir it up like a weak purger c. As it is said that the children of Israel could not drive out the inhabitants of the Land which were too strong for them Josh 13. Observ 1. Observe here how the Scripture warily distinguisheth between a true cause properly so called and an occasion the Commandment coming is not a cause that sin revives but an occasion only for if we look at it as a cause being directly adverse and contrary to sin it would rather kill the sin then quicken it and give life unto it and therefore the Apostle saith not That the Commandment coming gives life or quickens the sin but upon the coming or appearing of the Commandment sin revived This distinction is of great consequence and for want of observing it we are subject to run into manifold and great errours for oftentimes it comes to pass that the Lord puts an occasion into our hands which for want of right distinction we take for a cause Thus the King of Babylon's Present was the occasion not the cause of Ezechiah's Fall 2 King 20.12 Deut. 13.1 2 3. The Prophet perswades to other Gods and this he doth by giving a sign and this sign comes to pass is not here then a fair occasion of following of other Gods No saith the Lord for the Lord your God tryeth you c. For this end the Lord left of the Canaanites to prove the children of Israel Judg. 2.22 whether they would continue in the ways of the Lord and walk therein as their fathers had yea or no and Judg. 3.1 5. Did this concern them only or us also Surely these things were written for our Examples which yet we understand not aright but mistake these as if they were a cause which indeed are only an occasion for what is more ordinary than to say that the reliques of sin which are the Nations remaining in our Land are left to humble us The Lord saith otherwise as that they were left as occcasions thereby to prove Israel whether they will keep the way of the Lord to walk therein as their Fathers did or not They were left there to prove Israel by them That the children of Israel might know and teach them war Judg. 3.1 2. For though the
check of the Law without remorse of conscience heretofore was this a liberty or a wildness was this a soundness or a sickness was this a life or more truly a death Afflict not thy self too much poor soul for these unruly motions of sin but consider with thy self if these be wicked sinful abominable and loathsome to thee What wert thou when thou wert one and the same with them when thou livedst in them without the Law thou wert one with them thou wert incorporate with them into the body of sin O rather magnifie the grace and goodness of thy God who looseth the bonds of thine iniquities who discovers thy sin to be sin and for sin condemning sin Rom. 8.3 who now undertakes the cure of thy spiritual ulcers This large suppuration and mattering this abundance of filth proceeding from thy wounds is an argument of strength and soundness in the inward parts that thou now feelest the deadly darts of Satan it s a sign of some life in thee where there is sense there is life and è contrà if thou perceivest thine own unrighteousness endeavour to find it more if thou seemest filthy to thy self be more filthy so we understand that Revel 22.11 Exhort Doth the Law come Doth thy sin revive Then let us be exhorted to live no longer without the Law but let us entertain the Law as we would welcome a guest For Motive hereunto consider the manifold blessings upon the obedient Deut. 28.11 The Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods spiritual goods the holy Spirit it self he shall bless thee in the land which the Lord gives thee the holy land or land of holiness Consider the curses upon the disobedient upon the out-laws The penalty of an out-law according to our Laws is loss of goods loss of the graces of Gods Spirit loss of lands loss of the holy Land Yea the out-laws caput gerunt luporum any one that meets thee may kill thee saith the Lawyer They are out of protection of the Laws for meritò sine lege periunt qui secundùm legem vivere recesserunt And such out-laws are we all while we reject the Laws of our God no better than Cain conceived of himself like fugitives and vagabonds upon the earth without any benefit of Gods Laws that who ever findeth us may slay us Aliens from the Common-weal of Israel strangers from the Covenant of promise having no hope and without God in the world Eph. 2.12 O Beloved As knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men Let us let us I beseech ye so many as are yet out-laws in-Law our selves before the Decree go forth ye know the out-law if sought and called in five several Counties refuse to come in and answer to the Law pro exlege tenebitur he is held as an out-law and those penalties pass upon him O how long how often hath the great King of kings himself sought his out-laws who ought to have sought unto him By how many Messengers hath he rising up early and sending them wooed us to come O how lowly how infinitly below his state hath he stooped to winn us to be merciful to our own souls What a low condescent is that that 2 Cor. 5.20 We are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christ's stead be ye reconciled unto God NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON ROMANS VII 10. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã I dyed and the commandment unto life was found to me unto death THE coming of the Law hath a double event 1. One in regard of sin 2. Another in regard of the man 1. In regard of the sin that revived 2. In regard of the man he died I call these events not effects of the Law for effects proceed from and depend upon causes truly and properly so called and so it cannot truly be said that the Law coming caused sin to revive and caused the man to dye but occasioned both for an event answers to an occasion or a cause by accident as an effect answers to a cause per se and truly and properly so called In these words therefore we have two events of the Law coming to the man 1. Sin revived 2. The man dyed I spake of the first I now proceed to the second event of the Law 's coming The man dyed Herein for our berter proceeding we may enquire 1. How he may be said so to dye 2. What death the man dyed 3. How upon the coming of the Law the man dyed 1. What death the man dyed privations are best known by their opposite habits and therefore as life is three-fold so likewise is death There is a life of 1. Nature 2. Grace 3. Sin And there is a death opposite unto that life of Nature Grace Sin 1. Of the first death these words are not to be understood for the man lives his natural life both under the life of Grace and the life of sin The question therefore lies between the two other deaths whether of them two is here to be understood whether the man may be said to be dead unto the life of Grace upon the coming of the Law or rather 2. dead unto the life of sin I find most Interpreters both Ancient and Modern agreeing that the former is here to be understood namely that the Law coming occasioned the death unto the life of Grace and that the Law coming the man dyed from his life of grace But under correction of better judgements I conceive that that death cannot here be meant by the Apostle for if we should understand that upon the coming of the Law the man then dyed from the life of grace then before the coming of the Law the man should have lived the life of grace for he is said to dye from that life which before he lived but that cannot be For before the commandment came he lived not the life of Grace as appears evidently out of the Context for before the commandment came he lived a lawless life a life without the law the life of sin And therefore when the commandment came he is here to be understood to dye from his sinful life which is that life which he lived before the commandment came 2. How may the man be said to dye The man is said to dye when the sin offers it self as a life unto him and he is a dead man unto the motions of it When therefore sinful thoughts represent the objects unto the man and he rejects them he is said to dye unto them Thus when envy pride covetousness c. present themselves unto the man for so many lives and the man still continues in the denyal and rejection of them He may be said to dye so many several deaths As when the Law comes sin revives and puts forth all her force so it comes to pass that the man dyes every day as the Apostle protesteth 1 Cor. 15.31 and 2 Cor. 11.23 he tells us that he was in deaths often 3. But
Porch that 's the fear of our God and the fear of the Lord is clean and holy Psal 19.5 through that we depart from evil if we stay in the Porch we shall never enter into the HOLY the second part of the Temple yea we must first come to the Laver the water of Regeneration and there wash our hands in innocency and so come to the Altar of our God the patience of Jesus Christ and offer up our selves as a lively sacrifice to our God Here offer we up our trespass-offering and our whole burnt-offering such guests the Lord welcomes to his Table Eat O my friends drink yea drink abundantly my well beloved our bodies being washed with pure water and we abstain from fleshly lusts 2. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã The Commandment if just or righteous 1. The word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith the Philosopher is from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that signifieth two wayes or severally implying that Justice is more properly that Virtue which is not exercised by one alone but with reference to another as Aquinas saith of it it 's aliena virtus a virtue in us whereof our neighbour hath a share According to the thing it self we must know that justice is either ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã 1. 'T is either ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that which is such according to that light of God in us which we call Natural Reason whether there were any written Law enjoyning it or no as not to kill not to bear false witness c. 2. 'T is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that which is such by positive institution such as we call our positive Laws ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã This epithet or adjunct of the Commandment disposeth and setteth the man in order to his neighbour whch that we may the better understand we must enquire what is meant by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the word in the Text which we turn just and righteous and what the thing it self is signified by it First 1. Justice or Righteousness ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã by nature or natural reason is either general and universal righteousness or special 1. General of which that well known Verse is understood ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which Tully turns thus Justitia in sese virtutes continet omnes This is defined by some to be all and every grace and virtue Justitia est omnis virtus or more largely est virtus secundùm quam aliquis vult operatur rectè So the Philosopher defines it Eth. 5. Others Justice is the greatest beauty and splendor of all virtues and graces according to which men are called just and righteous ones and indeed it signifieth no other than Christ himself unto us who is made unto us righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 According to this large notion righteousness and holiness are oftentimes taken promiscuously one for the other as Hebr. 12.10 11. what is called holiness vers 10. is called righteousness vers 11. whence it is that 1 Cor. 6.11 Ye are washed ye are sanctified ye are justified The special righteousness is that which is contained in the Moral Law which we shall have occasion to speak of in the next adjunct of the Law where the Apostle saith the Commandment is good Mean time that Justice which is here intimated unto us where the Apostle saith the Commandment is Justice is the righteousness of the Judicial Law that which is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã by positive institution that which hath the force and obligation not from the nature of the things enjoyned though much of these be said but also from the Authority and Ordination of the Law-giver who enjoyns them For as by the Authority of the Law-giver and prescript of the Ceremonial Law the man is disposed and set in order towards his neighbour so that as the Ceremonial Law is figurative so likewise is the Judicial Law according to that which we read 1 Cor. 10 11. Omnia in figuris contingebant illis c. not omnia haec sed omnia as it is read in all ancient editions and cited by the ancient Fathers Now that we may know the fabrick and sphere of the Judicial Law the just Commandment here spoken of and how it orders one man unto another ye may understand that the Judical Law respects the Common-wealth of Israel and Society of the Jews and that either 1. In it self or 2. In regard of the strangers and enemies of it 1. In it self and so it prescribes rules 1. For those who live in luce communi vita the duty of 1. Superiors towards Inferiors 2. Inferiors toward Superiors 3. Equals among themselves 2. The duty of those who live a private and domestick life wherein we have three ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or combinations and the duties of every one of them to the other 1. Of an Husband toward his Wife and of a Wife toward her Husband 2. A Father toward his Children and a Child towards his Father 3. A Master toward his Servant and a Servant toward his Master And this is a Synopsis a view of the Kingdom and Common-wealth of Israel in it self considered 2. Being considered in respect of others they are either friends or enemies unto them and accordingly there are Judicial Laws informing them in their duty toward them In respect of every one of these the Lord hath prescribed Laws and those just ones for whereas the second great Commandment is love to our neighbour so great that he who loves another hath fulfilled the Law Rom. 13.10 The cords of this love bind the Superiour to his Inferiour and the Inferiour to his Superiour equals to equals private combinations among themselves and the whole Common-wealth in defence of it self and its friends and allies and against the enemies of both According to this Law of Love judgement ought to run down like waters and righteousness as a mighty stream from the superiour to the inferiour To this purpose is the just Commandment touching the Election and Duty of a King Deut. 17.14 The choice of Judges and Officers in all their gates beside that great Judicatory at Jerusalem the Commandment touching their duty to hear the causes between their brethren to judge righteously between every man and his brother and the stranger that is with them Deut. 1.16 Laws for the due progress of justice preventing occasion of injustice as taking bribes and rewards commanding justice to proceed secundum allegata probata by testimony of two or three witnesses prescribing punishments according to demerits of evil doers As righteousness runs down from the head and hath an influence upon the body so it is derived by the holy Commandments as by veins unto the several parts and members of the body allotting and securing unto every man his own possession and prescribing rules of communicating common cases of our neighbour and his goods Deut. 22.1 If thou seest thy brothers oxe or his sheep go astray thou shalt in any case bring them again to
God's Love of Righteousness and the propagation and preservation of it which could not be wrought by any means so convenient as by writing the great things of the Law 1. As for tradition that might fail or be corrupted by the Apostacy of some Age as we know de facto it hath been 2. Ancient wayes of conveying the memory of things past to posterity Tradition Hierogliphicks 1. The means of conveying by Hierogliphicks and Pictures was too obscure which although the Aegyptians used and it was that learning wherein Moses was brought up Act. 7. yet experience taught after Ages that such kind of learning was not clear and manifest but left much to uncertain conjectures and therefore however the Romans used it in their Coyns yet knowing how dark an expression it was they added the superscription or writing over or about their Hierogliphicks to signifie what was meant by them The reason why God wrote these great things are 1. In regard of the great things themselves 2. In regard of God the writer of them 1. The things are so great honourable excellent hidden and mystical that they could not be written or dictated by any other than God himself for they are the counterpart of Gods will so the Will of God is expounded by the Law of God Psal 40.8 I am content to do thy will thy Law is within my heart Now who hath known the will of the Lord but the Christ who could state or dictate it but himself 2. In regard of God the writer of them 1. His impulsive cause moving him to write them 2. His end It remains therefore that the only means to propagate them is by God writing them 2. God wrote them out of Love unto his people from his right hand went a fiery Law for them yea he loved the people All his Saints are in thy hand they sate down at thy feet c. Deut. 33.2.3 Psal 147.19 20. He sheweth his Word unto Jacob his Statutes and Judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation nor have the Heathen the knowledge of the Law i. e. of the written Law The end of all other Arguments is most various but the end of writing these great things these multitudes of the Law is for the premonition or forewarning of all Generations and for the signification of Gods will unto them if rebellious and disobedient that it may stand upon record as a Divine Testimony against them Deut. 31.24 25 26 27. if plyable and obedient that the generations to come might know them even the children that were yet unborn c. Psal 78.5 6 7. when the Heathen should be made partakers of these great things when the Lord should build up Sion and when his Glory should appear This shall be written for the generation to come and the people which shall be created shall praise the Lord viz. the new Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 Whatsoever things were written were written for our learning that we by patience and consolation of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15.4 All Scripture was by Divine Inspiration and is profitable that the Man of God may be made perfect 2 Tim. 3.16 The very gift of Writing it self is so wonderful so excellent that it can referr to no other Author but God himself Plutarch tells us that Mercury taught the Aegyptians to write the Latins referred it to Saturn saith St. Cyprian but he and St. Basil referr the gift of Letters unto the true God and he taught his own people first For besides Pliny tells us that the Assyrians Syrians and Phoenicians and Canaanites had the first skill in writing Amaius according to the Churches tradition tells us that Adam taught his Son Enoch Letters who wrote that Prophesie part whereof is extant Jude vers 14. and some other parts are recorded by the Fathers But as the gift of writing must needs be Gods gift so most certain it is that the great things themselves could be written by no other than God himself That a man should signifie his mind unto another one thousand miles hence and one thousand years hence no distance of time or place hindering it it 's a rare invention things not considered are neglected being considered provoke admiration Observ 1. Hence it follows That Gods Commandments are everlasting and shall endure for ever Psal 119.114 This is true but how doth it follow from Gods writing of his Law It 's a Rule in Plato and Plotinus Whatsoever things proceed immediately from God without the intervention or mediation of any second cause they are incorruptible and everlasting But we have a greater than both to confirm this Eccles 3.14 I know that whatsoever God doth is for ever Psal 119.89 Zach. 1. 1 Pet. 1.25 Exhort If the Lord hath written them it 's our duty to read his Letter it concerns the greater or the greatest matters c. It 's a love-letter of our God our Maker unto his Spouse The Spouse if she receive a Letter from him whom she loves she will read it over and over again she would be much in it for therein she reads his mind cold love to read them but once and lay them by but once repeat them lay them up in a precious Cabinet as Alexander did Homers works as the King of Morocco the imitation of Christ as we bind up our Bibles costly and beautifully Books make not a Scholar nor a great deal of reading a Christian if we bind up the Law to observe and keep it we do well Observ 2. See the gracious condescent of the Almighty to his Apostate Creature the Man falls and see his God he stoops to take up the fall'n Man his Wife goes a whoring from him and he vouchsafes to write her not a Bill of Divorce to reject her but a Love-letter to return Jer. 3.1 2. They say if a man put away his Wife and she go from him and become another mans shall he return unto her again No he might not by the Law Deut. 24.4 Yet the Lord offers reconciliation and wooes his Church Thou hast played the harlot with many lovers yet return even unto me saith the Lord his love and mercy transcends the rigour of his Law he hates putting away Mal. 2.16 He sues her by his Love-letter to return unto him Observ 3. Observe with what Authority the word of our God comes unto us it 's God's Chyrographum his own hand-writing and therefore with what reverence and observance ought it to be read it's a Letter that comes from our Superior from the Supreme from the Highest with what love he deals with us as with his familiar friends I have not gone back from the Commandments of his lips I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food Job 23.12 Such it ought to be unto the obedient people and ministers of it as it was to Ezech. 2.10 A roll of a Book or letter was sent unto him and a Commandment to eat it and it was in
departs from his own right only for peace-sake and withall he leaves us this Rule for our learning practice and imitation in our travel toward the Spiritual Land of Canaan to part with our own proper interest for peace sake for as Charity seeks not its own so neither doth Peace which is of equal extent with it A greater than Abraham the Prince of Peace himself for peace sake dispensed with his own Right and wrought a miracle to pay tribute lest he should give offence Matth. 17.27 And that which St. Paul saith 1 Cor. 6.7 seems reasonable only to such as he himself was a grown peaceable man an Ambassador of peace why do ye not rather take wrong why do ye not rather suffer your selves to be defrauded Love seeks not her own That difference between Paul and Barnabas was jurgium not lis in Charity not with breach of Charity and that not so great as our Translation makes it if well looked into like the division of the Sun-beams which immediately come together again and we hear no more of it Now if differences arise between a believer and an unbeliever a son of peace and an unpeaceable man it is lawful ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã to make use of the Laws which are in force and use that so perverse unpeaceable and refractory spirits which will not be inclined to peace may be forced and bound to it Nor doth this misbeseem a Son of Peace for as his Father is the God of Love and Peace yet is he severe toward unpeaceable men Deut. 20.12 So may his Son be and that without any wrong at all for 't is no injury done to any man to be compelled to be good and just as much as may be by lawful power when of himself he hath no will no inclination to be so The Law was made for the lawless And as he may make use of the Laws so of the Magistrates though unbelievers for even such a Magistrate by Divine Ordination is the Minister of God for thy good Rom. 13. bono defensionis reparationis Thus whereas the Romans of old had enacted a Law That a Freeman of Rome should not be bound or scourged or imprisoned or put to death under a great penalty We find St. Paul making use of this Law against the Magistrates of Philippi and by that means he escaped imprisonment Act. 16.37 38 39. And the same Law he pleads for himself Act. 22. vers 25. and escapes the scourge and when he was in danger of death from the Jews he made good use of this Law by appealing to Caesar Act. 25.10 Nor is there any doubt but when unjust men who pretend Religion go about to muzzle the Oxe that treads out the corn and as much as lies in them to starve him out of his place when they cannot storm him out of it he may no doubt make use of the Laws Nor ought they to take it amiss herein to be accounted unbelievers because they believe not that Precept of the Apostle Render to every one their due c. Owe nothing to any man but to love one another c. But all this while fictis verbis contendimus come we now to enquire 2. Whether it be lawful for a Son of Peace to go to War yea or no It is disputable whether War in the general for a Christian man be lawful yea or no But for our better understanding of this distinguish between Wars Offensive and Defensive Offensive is either 1. for Religion or 2. Civil Causes 1. Offensive War for Religion is utterly unlawful and therefore our Lord sent forth his Disciples unarmed so much as with a staff Matth. 10.10 c. commanded Peter to put up his sword Matth. 26.52 though drawn and used in behalf of Christ himself for Christ's Kingdom is not of this world Joh. 18.36 Object But this perhaps was because as then the Church had no Power so Bellarmine answers in defence of bloodshed procured by his Faction and I wish it were his errour alone but Christ himself had power enough more than twelve Legions of Angels if he had thought fit to have asked his Father Matth. 26.53 He is a God saith Jerubbaal let him strive for himself He is a Spirit and needs not the help of flesh and blood 'T is proper to the Mahumetans not for Christians to propagate Religion with fire and sword But curse ye Meroz Judg. 5. If the Lord shall raise up Deborah and Barach If he shall raise up Christ to be our Captain If the life of Christians falsly so called become generally so debauch'd so Unchristian so Antichristian so Cainish so Cainaiticall why may it not then please God to raise up a Captain who may execute judgement upon such as he did when he sent Josuah to destroy the Canaanites But what mean time have we to do with types and figures the Lord hath made all old things to pass away and all things become new temporal things become spiritual new enemies new weapons Ephes 6. The Ceremonial Temple was shut when Christ was born as Augustus the Emperour shut the Temple of Janus which was wont to be opened in times of War the very year before John the Baptist was born the forerunner of the Prince of Peace as Orosius tells us that the Gospel of Peace might not be hindered but might run and be glorified As it is observed by the Naturalists that while the Halcyon builds her nest at Sea there is alwayes a calm So while Christ builds his Church his Nest where he may lay his young ones and gather them by his Gospel of Peace as an hen her chickens God then vouchsafes peace on earth But not only for Religion but for Civil Causes also Offensive Wars are unlawful He who sheds mans blood Gen. 9. and all they who take the sword shall perish with the sword Matth. 26.52 and Exod. 20. Thou shalt not kill is a Law yet yea explained to be now much more in force than heretofore when even anger is forbidden by our Saviour Matth. 5.22 and hatred it self is accounted by St. John Murder 1 Joh. 3.15 From whence come wars and fightings Jam. 4. And therefore not only outward murder but also hatred variance emulation wrath strife and envying they are reckoned among the works of the flesh Gal. 5. and they who do them shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven vers 21. But this may be understood without provocation but what if one be provoked I know no Reason but that still we persist in the Negative that Vindicative War is not lawful the Rule is general Avenge not your selves for vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord Yet I deny not but that the Magistrate may yea ought to punish Malefactors and lawful it is for Christian men to serve him in execution of Justice provided alwayes that they serve Justice it self and aim at it not at any private and bloody revenge of their own But whether may a Christian
man wage a Defensive War yea or no In some case he may not Our Lord hath said I say unto you resist not evil Matth. 5.39 for our Calling is unto Peace 1 Cor. 14. and unto Patience 1 Pet. A Christian man unless in extreme and imminent danger of losing his own life ought not to take away the life of another no not of a robber on the high way Ne tollat locum poenitentiae And our Laws are so tender of a mans life that he who shall kill another assaulting him se defendendo though in his own defence yet he shall lose his goods As for the lawfulness of a Defensive War in special causes in this or any other Nation it is to be judged by the Civil Magistrates according to the Laws of every Nation for albeit all Nations have but one and the same Divine Law and Gospel yet every Nation hath several municipal Laws according to which Wars and all other Civil Affairs are to be ordered But in what Case may a Christian Man without violation of the Peace on his part wage War In Rebus Repetundis so did Abraham Gen 14. And this Example is so large that it may be followed almost in all things Negatively and Affirmatively 1. Negatively this did not Abraham Joh. 8. 2. Affirmatively as in Josuah's War with the Canaanites which seems to be de Rebus Repetundis for Canaan had invaded Shem's portion viz. Palestin And so much for answer to these Questions Observ 1. The Justice of God observable 1. He doth not put us upon impossibilities but requires of us only ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã 2. Anothers fail must not excuse us though it be not possible to maintain peace with all men in respect of others yet for our part we must do our endeavours Hos 4.15 Though Israel play the harlot yet let not Judah offend Hos 11.12 3. He requires whatsoever we are able to do toward the maintenance of Peace Object But I might flatter fawn lye c. Answ No thou canst not do so if thou be a Son of Peace Id potes quod jure potes and therefore know that Peace is coupled with Truth and therefore neither must I seek Peace with another in his evil way for what peace so long as the whoredoms of thy mother Jezebel and her witchcrafts are so many saith Jehu nor must I accept peace in mine own evil way Christ in both respects came to send division what 's then to be done I must seek Peace as a thing lost between us and enquire for the way of Peace which is the way of the Lord between both and endeavour to agree and walk in that to do Gods work and Christs work among men to follow after those things which make for peace to endeavour to guide their feet who are strangers from it into the way of peace As for the proper interests and wealth of men in Temporal and Civil Affairs our Lord would not intermeddle with them Luk. 12.14 when one of the company said unto him Master speak to my brother that he divide the inheritance with me Man saith he who made me a judge and divider among you His Gospel his Doctrine usurps not the Office of Magistrates and Governours of the Common-wealth it belongs to Christ and so to his Ministers to divide the Word aright it belongs to the Temporal Magistrate to divide Inheritances and appropriate to every man his own right and interest in Temporal things as Mr. Calvin saith well Reproves Those who would have others to be peaceable with them yet will not they be peaceable with others A man must go somewhat of anothers way who would have another go his way but thus men deal with men as they do with God himself they call cry sigh mourn c. yet continue still in their own wayes and unhappiness and destruction are in those wayes and the way of peace they know not nor will go one jot out of their way to come to God himself Example Thou art a drunkard John Baptist comes neither eating nor drinking he calls to thee to come into his way of sobriety and temperance Thou sighest and wilt not go out of thine own way thou wouldest have him come to thee and be a good fellow Thou art Covetous Proud c. God calls to thee to walk with him Mich. 6.8 To humble thy self to walk with thy God Christ he is humble and lowly Matth. 11. thou must humble thy self to walk with him But the Rule is Jer. Let them come to thee go not thou to them 2. Reproves Those who endeavour after peace ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã but it 's not coupled with Truth as a peace in Opinions Thus many accord in the same mind but not with the truth and holiness ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Ephes 4.15 the truth is neither thou nor I but a third thing 3. Those who agree neither in Opinion nor Holiness but dissent and are at discord in all as if a company of travellers tending to the same end of their journey should quarrel about the way they see many beaten paths but all in the broad way and one saith this is the way another that 's it and when they know somewhat of the way yet they walk not in it but speak evil of the way which they know not and what they know therein they corrupt themselves The end of the Commandment and of our way is Love and Peace from which some turn aside unto vain jangling 1 Tim. 5.6 dote about questions and strifes of words whereof comes envy strife railing evil surmising perverse disputing of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth 1 Tim. 6.4 A certain Dame going abroad commanded her Maids to sweep the house the one bids the other fetch a broom the other saith it is not a broom but a beesom c. so they quarrel and the house is unswept and not only unswept but overturned Vt in parabola mulieris everrentis domum Vulg. Lat. it is evertentis Luk. 15.8 Mean time while they quarrel they know not the way which they contend for for did either know the way he would not contend No man will quarrel with a blind man if he say this or that is the way which is not Repreh Who as much as lies in them live peaceably in sin these seek peace where it is not This is a Covenant with hell and death ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã nomen habent à motu quibus non est pax Isai 48.18 and 57.21 Cain dwelt in Naida i. e. in terra instabilitatis when he went from Gods presence Gen. 4.12 Then they rest in evil Sedent in Cathedra pestilentiae Psal 1. Agunt impiè cum gaudio ut dives epulo in Evangelio Ede bibe c. This night c. Luk. 12.10 for till they rest in evil Gods patience continues and he expects conversion Thus God tells Abraham that the wickedness of the Amorites ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it is not
upon that which is not Prov. 23.5 Not as if indeed they had no being at all but emphatically shewing that mens high opinions and admirations of them had put another being on them than God had given them Thus as St. Paul call'd an Idold nothing though made of silver or gold So Solomon calls silver and gold nothing when they are made an Idol Yet such is the Idolatry of Mammons servants that they account them ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã their substance whereof their life consists their very being which are indeed but only a better kind of non entia but little better than nothing Non entis nullae passiones effecta nulla if their nature it self be non ens non bonum if it be deficient their qualities and effects must be deficient also And so our poor man hath discovered them to be falling every where far short of what good they promise and paying their owners home with an evil which they threatned not Those effective qualities whereby they most commend themselves unto our appetite and bid fairest for our confidence may be reduced unto these two generals 1. Sufficiency which includes fruition of all good 2. Security which excludes all cares and fears of evil 1. Sufficiency promiseth all satiety in them and all profit by them But our poor man rather hearkens unto Solomon the rich the richest of all Kings who had silver as plentiful as stones 1 King 3.13 and the wisest of men chap. 10.27 12. Therefore he of all men knew by experience how fully they could satisfie desires he that loveth silver saith he shall never be satisfied with it Eccles 5.9 For outward things have in themselves no power to fill but an insatiable emptiness and such a fruitful one too as begets another vacuum in the soul that loves them a spiritual dropsie swallowing a whole Kingdom yea a thirst for a Vineyard a greedy ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or hunger-starv'd desire of having ever longing and ever getting yet like men sick of those diseases they are never satisfied And the reason 's drawn 1. Partly from the subject because the appetite the mouth of the soul is vitiated and corrupted with evil affections fear of want distrust of providence and the like as the mouth of the stomack in those diseases is affected with evil humours 2. Partly from the object because the thing desired being corporal and earthly as corn and wine and oyl and money are matter fit to fill a barn a tun or a purse not a spiritual appetite Whence Clemens calls such a one ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a dirty purse as those that are affected with those diseases and women with child long sometimes for coals and dirt and tiles as Actuarius speaks matter fit for fire or to be trodden under foot not to be eaten Wherefore our poor man soon satisfieth himself and his desires for longing after those things which cannot satisfie and though he have not as Solomon in abundance silver as stones yet he hath learn'd to account it so nor envieth those that have them but pittieth us rather and wonders any man should so eagerly pursue them What profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind Profit is the next promise wealth and honour make comprehended in the general of sufficiency Profit notes a respect unto an end Now although there are particular and crooked ends God knows too many yet all as I conceive aim at these two general ends 1. Contentment in this life 2. And assurance of that to come Satiety is a good step unto contentment in this life whither as ye have heard wealth and honour cannot bring us for they are vain and empty things and cannot profit saith Samuel 1 Sam. 12.21 much less assure us of Gods favour For outward things are neither causes nor signs of Gods grace and favour 1. Not causes for he accepts no mans person and cannot be brib'd 2. Not signs for although they come down indeed from the Fountain of goodness yet so doth his rain although from the father of light yet so doth the Sun which fall and shine alike upon the just and the unjust so that no man knows Gods love or hatred by all that which is before him Eccles 9. Now as argumentum ab utili is most commodious to perswade so argumentum ab inutili is most powerful to disswade wherefore our poor man having tryed their sufficiency and found it emptiness and unprofitableness goes on and examines their security Security is a freedom from cares and fears grounded upon confidence repos'd in something ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Plenty of money strength of body friends and the like saith Aristotle Rhet. lib. 2. This confidence in wealth breeds in a rich man suppos'd security and but suppos'd The rich mans wealth is his strong City and as an high wall in his own conceit saith Solomon Prov. 8.11 and but his strong City and but his own conceit For our poor man hath found wealth and honours and all such props of temporal prosperity weak and unable to uphold security and not only so but the only matter and fuel of cares and fears For as the main prop of security is certainty in things and fidelity in men So the main object of cares is uncertainty in things and unfaithfulness in men Of both these though one seem not capable of both yet the holy Ghost attributes them both to riches and that in the abstract too And therefore Timothy must put rich men in mind of ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the uncertainty of riches in regard of doubtful events And our Saviour tells us of ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that is by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã as Piscator notes The cares of this life about deceitfulness and unfaithfulness of riches Uncertain they are like a bird in the bush either they have wings or certainly they make themselves wings saith Solomon and they make them not for nothing for they fly away and that speedily too they fly away like an eagle Unfaithful they are promising their owners much good as ye have heard but paying them home as I told you before with an evil that they threaten not And that evil is of two sorts 1. Distracting care of temporal goods and fear of temporal evils 2. Drowsie security or want of care of the eternal good and want of fear of the eternal evil As Jothams bramble not only not shelter'd as it fairly promised but a fire came out of the bramble to devour and consume those that put their trust under the shadow of it Such a fire of thorns of thorny cares comes out of wealth cura quia cor urit saith Festus to burn and consume the hearts of the owners of it flattering their owners till they have won their confidence and then wounding their souls as Joab peaceably stab'd Abner to the heart inviting them as to a Sanctuary and place of refuge so Jael allured Sisera into the Tent and then piercing their hearts through with
well pleased so likewise in his Saints who receive of his fulness according to their measure and degree of abounding he may be truly said to be well pleased also Matth. 3.17 Whence it followeth that there are divers steps in the way of life diverse degrees of latitude extension and intension in the Divine Virtues and Graces they consist not in indivisibili there is an increase of faith Luk. 17.5 Rom. 1.17 an abounding in hope Rom. 15.13 a walking and progress in Love Ephes 5.2 Phil. 1.9 1 Thess 3.12 a growth and abundance in all Grace 2 Cor. 9.8 according to which we may out-go one another and exceed our selves The path of the Just is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day Prov. 4.18 And they who love God are as the Sun when he goeth forth in his might Judg. 5.31 and rejoyceth as a Gyant to run a race So that to stand at a stay and not to walk on in Gods wayes is not to please God walking is a progress and going on a patient continuance in well doing to walk and to live the Christian life are all one and therefore our Apostle expounds living by walking Gal. 5.25 and walking by living Coloss 3.7 They who continue in well doing they who abound more and more they who thus walk please God And 't is happy for them that they please God for of all men in the world they most of all displease men for though God and Men be often opposed in Scripture yet they are never so diametrically opposite as in this point of walking and abounding For Gods thoughts are not mans thoughts nor Gods wayes mans wayes and therefore they who walk and abound in Gods wayes and please him cannot please men who walk and abound in their own evil wayes and please not God And therefore the Apostle reasons should I please Men I should not be the servant of Christ so should I be the Servant of Christ I cannot please men their wayes lie contrary the one to the other so that they who walk after the flesh cannot please God saith the Apostle nor can they who walk after the Spirit please men And according to an higher degree of walking abounding and pleasing God ariseth an higher antipathy and a more intense disaffection and displeasure of men against those who thus walk and abound and please God Insomuch as did any man walk as Christ walked which is the Duty of all who are in Christ 1 John 2.6 he would be hated as Christ was hated and persecuted as he was persecuted John 15. which evidently appears from hence that if any man endeavour to follow his steps he draws after him from the world envy hatred malice and all uncharirableness yea murdering burning massacring persecution for righteousness sake and that among such as are pretenders unto righteousness Gen. 26.16 Cain religious Cain murdered his own brother wherefore but because he offered a more excellent Sacrifice than he did and better pleased God Wherefore slew he him saith S. John but because his own works were evil and his brothers righteous And when Jonathan asked Saul why David should be slain and what evil he had done That was evil enough Saul cast a Javelin at him to kill him Thus when our Saviour appealed to the Jews which of you convinceth me of sin That very question was conceived to be a very great sin and occasioned another Say we not well that thou art a Samaritane and hast a Devil Nay their malice ended not in reproachful words for when Pilate asked them What evil hath he done 'T was evil enough to have done no evil the Text saith They cryed out so much the more let him be crucified Matth. 27.23 'T was sin enough in St. Paul to have abounded so that he could say I have lived in all good Conscience before God until this day then Ananias commanded those who stood by to smite him on the mouth Acts 23.2 't was well he escaped so Nor is this observable only in the visible Church of God but in every nation Whosoever fears God and worketh righteousness and so is accepted of him even for that very reason he is not accepted of men That Hermodorus was banish'd from Ephesus Aristides Themistocles Alcibiades and others from Athens by Ostracism no other reason is recorded but only that they were excellent men and abounded more than others in doing good Nor is there any other cause alledged by Lampridius why Heliogabulus was displeased with Alexander his adopted Son but only because he was continent chast and temperate Nor why the same Emperour put Vlpian out of his place but only because he was an upright honest man in it Indeed other reasons are commonly pretended as against Socrates and others but the only true one was that which the Ephesians as Strabo reports used when they banished Hermodorus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã we will not that any of our Citizens be too good And that Country Fellow had not learned the art of speaking fair and meaning no such matter when unwittingly he gave Aristides account why he banish'd him and spake out bluntly mihi non placet istud nomen justi But why stand we on particulars Solomon long since discovered the general design of ungodly men against all those who abound and please God Wisd 2.12 Let us lie in wait for the righteous because he is not for our turn and he is clean contrary to our doings he upbraideth us with our offending the Law and objecteth to our infamy the transgressings of our education he professeth to have the knowledge of God and he calleth himself the child of the Lord He was made to reprove our thoughts he is grievous unto us even to behold for his life is not like other mens his ways are of another fashion we are esteemed of him as counterfeits he abstains from our ways as from filthiness he pronounceth the end of the righteous to be blessed and maketh his boast that God is his Father And that 's reason enough for that which followeth Let us now see if his words be true and let us prove what will happen in the end of him for if the just man be the Son of God he will help him and deliver him from the hand of his enemies Let us examine him with despightfulness and torture that we may know his meekness and prove his patience let us condemn him to a shameful death By all which it appears that walking and abounding most of all displeaseth men however it be most pleasing unto God and mans duty so to do That 's the second point which adds but only one word unto the first and that only a Monosyllable ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã we ought so to walk and please God that we abound more and more But its like ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã wherein there is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã there is a great deal of matter in it for ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is ãâã
Commandment without spot unrebukable until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ which the blessed and only Potentate shall shew in his several seasons I have looked for this saving health and done after the Commandments what then if thy season be not yet come it behooves thee to keep the Commandment of God without spot and unrebukeable until the like appearing unto thee which the Lord will shew in his special season unto thee Mean time is thy work done hast thou learned the first Lesson of the Grace of God hast thou denied thy self c. and the second hast thou taken up thy Cross daily and the three special Rules to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Be confident and fully assured of what the Apostle saith Gal. 6.2 I have heard thee in a time accepted in the day of salvation have I succoured thee behold now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation Let us be exhorted to believe the glorious appearing hope and look for it 1 Pet. 1.13 Love his appearing 2 Tim. 4.8 Mortifie our earthly members cleanse our selves from all pollution both of flesh and spirit for the Grace of God that brings salvation to all men hath appeared teaching us like children let us then humble our selves as a little child Vnless we receive the kingdom of heaven as a little child we shall by no means enter thereinto O let us humble our selves and learn these Lessons as little children to deny ungodliness c. in this present world then may we with confidence and infallible certainty hope and assuredly look for the glorious appearing of the Great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Amen NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON TITUS III. 8. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã This is a faithful saying and these things I will that thou affirm constantly that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works these things are good and profitable unto men THe words are part of an Epistle and contain in them these parts 1. Exordium ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã c. a faithful saying 2. Narration ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that they who have believed might be careful to maintain good works 3. Epilogus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã these things are good unto men The Text contains an Apologie for 1. the Preacher and 2. his Doctrine 1. For the Preacher it is a faithful saying or saying of faith confidence and boldness and therefore the Preacher must be bold in the delivering of it these things I will that thou affirm constantly 2. It 's a faithful saying and an Apologie for the Preachers Doctrine that they who have believed in God be careful to maintain good works To the practice of this Doctrine the Preacher invites us by motives so powerful that they move all men for whereas ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that which is good draws all to the participation of it And whereas good is honestum jucundum aut utile honest pleasant or profitable good The two former kinds are contained in the first word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã these good works are honest also fair beautiful pleasant and delightful But whereas a thing may be pleasant and delightful which yet is not profitable but rather hurtful and destructive for so sensual delights are as a bait with an hook and extrema gaudii luctus occupat these things are good and profitable unto men For our orderly proceeding in the handling of all these we must begin where the Apostle ends 1. Good works are honest pleasant fair and profitable unto men 2. They who have believed in God ought to be careful to maintain good works which are good and profitable unto men 3. St. Paul gives charge to Titus that he affirm constantly that they who have believed in God ought to be careful to maintain good works 4. This is a faithful saying and the Apostle wills that Titus affirm constantly that they who have believed in God be careful to maintain good works 1. Good works are honest fair and beautiful pleasant and profitable unto men This Divine Truth according to the Epithets of works cannot be dispatch'd all at once but may be divided into these two Axioms 1. Good works are honest fair or beautiful for so ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifieth both 2. Good works are profitable unto men 1. Good works are honest fair or beautiful Where we must enquire 1. what good works are 2. what the property honest is and 3. what is fair or beautiful 1. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã good works are all virtues and virtuous actions all holiness and righteousness in general generally the duties of the whole Moral Law of God according to Matth. 5.17 Not to destroy the Law but to fulfil it 7.21 Not he that saith Lord Lord but he that doth the will of my Father and 19.17 There is none good but God but if thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandments 2. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifie also honest works Honestum est bonore dignum 3. The same ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifie also works fair or beautiful Now a thing or person is said to be fair or beautiful which hath the comely proportion of all the parts one towards another whence proceeds a lustre or shining And works are said to be fair or beautiful when all the causes and circumstances concurr whence ariseth a like spiritual lustre and shining and loveliness so every good act is ex integra causa it hath all the causes and adjuncts good otherwise malum ex quolibet defectu any one defect renders the work evil as alms-giving with a trumpet Mat. 6. The reason of this why good works are honest they have something that proceeds from God as the honour that comes from God only Joh. 5.44 even the participation of his goodness which is his Christ Hos 3.5 the honour of God 1 Pet. 2. and point us to his honour Phil. 1.11 the Apostle prays that they may be filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Jesus Christ to the glory and praise of God And to what other Original can we refer the beauty of good works than to the same God who puts his comeliness upon his people Ezech. 16.14 Thou art fairer than the children of men why Grace is poured into thy lips Psal 45.2 Observ 1. Note hence what is the principal and truly amiable and lovely beauty in the eyes of God Angels and good men what else but the beauty of good works the beauty of holiness this was that which David desired to see Psal 27.4 One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after to behold the beauty of the Lord. This is most desired of the Lord himself and most delighted in Psal 45.10 when we relinquish our own people and our fathers house so shall the King greatly desire thy beauty the beauty of the Bride most lovely see how the Bridegroom adorns her Ezech. 16 9-14 Observ 2. If good works be fair and
beautiful and render those who act them such then are evil works ugly and deformed and make those who do them such in the eyes of God and good men Repreh This justly reproves our blind eyes who look upon these beauties and those wherein they are as uncomely and without beauty as Isai 53.2 reports the opinion of the Church concerning him who is the fairest of ten thousand he shall grow up before him as a tender plant and although the adorning of a meek and quiet spirit be in the sight of God ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a garment of great price 1 Pet. 3.4 yet it 's a dress quite out of fashion and men and women are commonly ashamed to be seen in it but the time shall come when that prophecy of Isa 3.18 shall be fulfilled when the Lord shall take away the bravery of their tinkling ornaments c. and their men shall fall by the sword c. and Chap. 4.1 Seven women shall take hold of one man c. vers 2. In that day shall the branch of the Lord be beautiful and glorious the words are otherwise to be rendered the branch of the Lord his Christ shall then be ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã for beauty and glory That which was esteemed deformity before shall then be esteemed beauty and glory Exhort To adorn our selves with the beauty of holiness with the ornaments of good works how doth every one endeavour to be as fine as a bride It is the ambition of every one even the meanest the Maid will be as fine as her Mistris and every one will be called Lady and as gay as a Lady she will be There is an honour that every one is capable of an honour that comes of God only even Christ himself who to believers is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã honour 1 Pet. 2. Marg. There is a perfection of beauty the beauty of good works fair and beautiful works whereof every one may be partaker Zion the Church is the perfection of beauty Psal 50.2 and God's comliness is perfect Ezech. 16.14 and God's will is and the Apostle prays for the fulfilling of it that we may be filled with the fruits of righteousness Phil. 1.11 And our Lord gave himself for us that he might sanctifie and cleanse us and present us without spot or wrinkle or any such thing This is the beauty which the Lord requires to be in his believers 1 Tim. 2.9 10. as women professing Godliness with good works for the obtaining of this beauty the Apostle exhorts the Philippians 4.8 9. and the Psalmist prays Psal 90.16 17. Let thy work appear unto thy servants and thy glory unto their children and let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us and establish thou the work of our hands upon us yea the work of our hands establish thou it Rom. 13.13 2. Good works are profitable unto men A thing is said to be profitable which is useful or conducing as a means to the end as Physick is a means to procure health Now a means commodious to an end is either 1. Such as without which the end cannot be obtained as a ship to pass the Seas or 2. Such as without which the end may be attained unto as a staff is profitable for a journey but not necessary If therefore it be here enquired in what degree of profitabless good works are here to be understood I doubt not to affirm that the former degree is here meant and so good works are so profitable unto men that without them men obtain not their end Now the end is either Mediate or Ultimate 1. Mediate and that is Faith whereunto men are won by good works 1 Cor. 9.19 20 21. 1 Pet. 3.1 2. 2. The Ultimate end is also advanced by good works in respect of this Faith it self is a work Phil. 1.6 which tends unto the end even the salvation of our souls Hebr. 13.7 whose faith follow considering the end of their conversation and what end is that 1 Pet. 1.9 the salvation of their souls and is there not an higher end advanced by these surely there is even the glory of God Mat. 5. The reason why good works are profitable unto men may appear from hence that they are of the same nature with the life and salvation it self Joh. 3.36 He that believeth on the Son hath the everlasting life And therefore the Apostle calls good works ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Heb. 6.9 Good works are the old way of the Lord wherein he hath appointed Abraham and all the sons of Abraham to walk Gen. 18.19 And to walk in this way the Lord hath created us Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works Object But if good works be profitable in such a degree it should seem that they may be rested on without Christ and by vertue of them eternal life obtained Answer We ought not to divide the effect from the cause Good works from the Author whence they proceed It is the Lord who works all our works in us Esay 26. yet not without us for we co-operate with him Acti agimus we act being acted by him Therefore the Psalmist who saith He that doth these things shall never be moved Psal 15.5 He saith Psal 16.8 The Lord is on my right hand I shall not be moved Or as St. Peter quotes the words out of the Greek He is on my right hand ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Act. 2.25 for this end that I should not be moved Observ 1. Cui bono of what excellent use good works are Psal 19.10 11. Prov. 3.13 18. Wisd 8.7 1 Tim. 4.8 Observ 2. Note the sphere and bounds of good works They are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã not so to God Job 22.2 Can a man be profitable unto God and 35.7 8. Exhort Let us deal in this profitable Commodity See Notes on Psal 112. 3. They who have believed God ought to be careful to maintain good works Which for our more distinct proceeding we must resolve into these particular Axioms 1. We ought to believe God 2. They who have believed God ought to maintain good works 3. They who have believed God ought to be careful to maintain good works 1. We ought to believe God Belief is an assent unto a testimony which because it is either Divine or Humane answerably the belief is either an assent unto the Testimony of God or of man The former is here to be understood which the Apostle describes Heb. 11.1 See Notes in Gen. 15. Now whereas Faith is either in the Father Son or Spirit as we say in the Apostles Creed I believe in God the Father c. Faith is required in every one of these 1. Belief in God the Father is required of which the Apostle speaks Heb. 11.6 He that cometh unto God must believe that he it c. The words are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã They who have believed God Here is neither ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã nor ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã
Sacerdotes i. e. indelebiliter imprimatur Means 1. Overcome Revel 3.12 He that overcomes shall inherit all things Revel 21.7 Means 2. Pray that the Lords Name may be hallowed in us Reprove Those who obtain names by inheritance but far less noble than their Ancestors left them yet glory in an out-side a bare name and title Psal 47.5 Sign 1. Whether doest thou take Gods Name in vain in words thou swearest not 't is well but doest thou not curse We have heard some teach to curse of late dayes and that for Christ's sake when yet as he saith swear not at all so his Doctrine is also curse not at all Rom. 12.14 and lye not at all see the force of this Argument Ephes 4.20 25. He is properly the Saviour Jesus Christ to those who will not lye Isa 63.8 Children that will not lye so he was their Saviour Rom. 9.1 I speak the truth in Christ I lye not for no lye is of the truth 1 Joh. 2.21 not only known evil words but for every idle word he must be accountable 2. Doest thou do all to the Glory of God 1 Cor. 10.21 Confer with Coloss 3.17 If any suffer as a Christian for doing well let him glorifie God hoc nomine i. e. in the Christian name So Syriack Christ among the Romans was called Chrestus which yet is neer a kin to it ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã being becoming Motives Now beloved if by either doing or suffering we make not good this worthy Name by which we are called we take it in vain for whosoever names Christ must depart from iniquity we cause Gods Name to be blasphemed Rich Christians by their Pride Covetousness Oppression cause the name of Christ to be blasphemed Jam. 2.7 as if he taught so we wrong our brethren for what is more ordinary than to say they are all such Creatures lying proud c. Christ obtained this most Excellent Name by Inheritance the Heir had a double portion so hath Christ as Elisha petitioned that Elias spirit might be doubled upon him so the Son brings a greater measure of Peace more Grace and Life in more abundance How great then is the humility of Christ yea how great his love toward us who humbled himself and made himself lower than the Angels yea ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã yea a worm and no man Psal 22.6 Object Is it possible for us to obtain so excellent a name Hear the Psalmist Psal 8. What is man saith he that thou remembrest him for thou hast made him a little lower than the Angels If the Psalmist wonder at Gods goodness toward man that he hath made him a little lower than the Angels shall we think that man can obtain so Excellent a Name that he should be more excellent than the Angels yea that he should obtain the same name with Christ We must therefore first enquire whether it be possible to be obtained before we exhort men hereunto For answer to this doubt we must consider a three-fold estate or condition in man according to which he may have a three-fold Name 1. an estate by Nature 2. an estate by Sin 3. an estate by Grace According to these three Estates he hath three names 1. According to his estate by nature he is earthly made of the earth and so called Adam from Adamah which signifieth the earth nor is this name only proper to the first man but common to his whole race and posterity Psal 36.7 Thou savest both Adam Man and Beast and Psal 39.6 Every man ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is altogether vanity 2. The second estate of man is his estate by sin that as it began in Adam's Apostacy so it continued and grew up with his Posterity and Misery with it which is an individual companion or attendant upon sin whence it is that man hath a second name a name of sin and misery by sin that 's Enosh which name is not proper to the Son of Seth only Gen. 4.26 but common to all such Lord what is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and Psal 9.21 put them in fear that they may know themselves to be but men ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and Psal 144.3 This name implyed his sin it signifieth perverse and 't is added then men begun to call upon the Name of the Lord it may be rendered then profanely to call upon the Name of the Lord or profanely began in calling upon the name of the Lord but by reason of his perversness it signified miserable and sorrowful 3. The third estate of man is his estate by Grace and so he is called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a name of dignity and nobility whereby man excelleth others of his kind as appears Psal 49.1 2. Hear ye this all ye people both sons of Adam and sons of ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã i. e. Sons of base men and of noble men i. e. according to the Chaldee the sinner and the righteous for it is Sin only that makes a man base and Grace only that makes a man truly noble We must therefore know that howsoever the earthly and much more the sinful man be inferiour to the Angels in estate name and dignity yet by Grace he is advanced to the same estate and name yea a more excellent name than the Angels themselves have 1. He is advanced to the same estate with the Angels ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã they who shall be accounted worthy to obtain the new world are equal unto the Angels and are the children of God Luk. 20.36 2. The man by Grace shall be advanced unto a more excellent estate dignity and name than that of Angels for the Saints shall judge the Angels 1 Cor. 6.3 and we have great and precious promises whereby we are made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 1 Joh. 4.17 As God is so are we in this world Thus Adam was but a type of him that was to come Rom. 5.14 Adam was Lord of the Creatures which was but a figure of the Lord which the true Israel should obtain As we have born the Image of the earthly so we shall bear the Image of the heavenly 1 Cor. 15.47 48 49. So ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Portemus so let us bear the Image of the heavenly so it is in a most ancient English Manuscript Translation Observe then who is the better man this question is soon answered according to Gods Heraldry the righteous man is better than his neighbour Prov. 12.26 where we may observe he saith not that he who imagines himself a righteous man is so but he who is righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Many there are who fancy themselves righteous men and would be accounted so and out of that strength of imagination prefer themselves before others and if they could perswade others to have as strong an imagination of them then they were righteous as they are in their own thought but the Apostle foresaw such a generation and forewarns us of it 1 Joh. 3.7
man That which is rare and precious is kept under locks and keys and great watch is kept over it Such an one is called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a rare and precious Jewel Such St. Peter saith the Saints are ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã God himself keeps such an one He that keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep Psal 120. What shall I do unto thee O thou preserver of men Job 7. He keeps him within the Law of Nature within the Divine Law and the Laws of men as within a triple wall or as within a wall a trench or Bulwark And lest we leap over this wall he hath bound us to himself with the cords of his love with tyes of infinite both temporal and spiritual blessings And lest we should break these cords he hath given every man a charge of his Neighbour saith the Wise man Ecclus 17. That every man should have a care of all and every man of every man It was a speech befitting Cain a self-lover Am I my brothers keeper But lest one should despise and contemn or neglect or deceive his own or anothers trust and care or help one another to do mischief earnestly with both hands The Lord hath set about his Saints a strong guard of Angels who can neither be corrupted with bribes because they are good nor be deceived because they are wise nor be forced because they are strong nor be surprised by swiftness and speed because they are Spirits nor be opposed by number because innumerable What then though the dragon and his angels fight with Michael and his angels If Michael be our Prince and stand for us even that great Archangel in whom Gods name is if he with his angels be for us who can be against us What if Achitophel whose name sounds ruine and destruction being a figure of Abaddon and Apollyon What if that evil spirit who hates both God and Men suggest his wicked counsels That great Counsellor who is Consilii magni Angelus Esay 9. He can infatuate his Counsel and turn it into foolishness What if he come upon the true David and those with David with his twelve thousand yet knowest thou not saith the true David that if I ask my Father he will give me more than twelve legions of angels What if Esau match against Jacob with an Army of earthly spirits Jacob hath Mahanaim the hosts of God a guard of Angels Gen. 32. Angels inferiour to Christ as Messengers to those who send them Exhort That we would imitate the Angels in our swiftness and speed to do the Lords will We read them standing before the Lord as servants before their Master ready for a command and winged for execution Motive The shortness of our life the great business we have to do Ars longa vita brevis The words of this life Med. Obey the motions of the good Angel But here we meet with an objection which may retard our motion The race is not to the swift neither he that willeth nor he that runneth It is true that he that runs his own race according to his own will the race is not unto him Yet is not this ground to slack our motion for we have a rule so run that ye may obtain Observe then a pattern of notable obedience That power and speed which the Angels have in their operation is Gods workmanship in them Reproves Our slowness and slackness How readily good and evil Angels 1 King 22. comply with the will of God Lot lingred Gen. 19.16 David delayed not Psal 119 60. Gal. 1.16 ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã When the Lord calls us we run to Ely when the Lord called the Wise men they went to Jerusalem and lost the Star Now we must know that this great Angel is the Fountain of motion and action to all created Angels from whom they proceed as the beams from the Sun by whom through whom and in whom he works all things So that it is not the Angel him self that acts but God or his Divine Spirit in the Angel by and through the Angel He saith not that the Cherub or the wind causeth rain c. But the Lord himself did or doth this Thus the Lord works in Meteors Elements Angels Psal 78.43 49. By sending evil angels among them Psal 148.8 fire and hail snow and vapours strong winds There are spirits created for vengeance Ecclus 28. Zach. 6.8 Act. 12.23 An evil spirit from the Lord afflicted Saul There is more depends upon this than perhaps we are at first aware off because men heed not this general truth that the highest God is the sole worker and agent qui operatur omnia in omnibus and the Angels good and ill are his instruments and act but by permission yea concurrence of the supreme cause Hence it comes to pass that many have ascribed actions originally to Angels Stars Elements mixt Bodies and Mâteors as they had a center of radical and original operation in themselves whereas indeed none of all these neither good nor evil Angels c. have any operation of themselves or by themselves but only God alone in and by the Angels which without the divine operation in and by it is but as a dead thing which duely considered discovers the gross and palpable Idolatry of the Heathens I am ashamed to say of Christans also in worshipping of Angels More NOTES upon HEBREWS I. 7. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã His ministers a flame of fire 1. THe angels are Gods ministers 2. Those ministers are a flaming fire 3. God makes them such Those whom before the Psalmist and Apostle called Angels here he calls Ministers ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã those whom before he made Spirits for their celerity those here he makes a flame of fire in regard of their execution Let us therefore enquire what is meant by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã First let us examine the word then enquire we into the truth of the thing 1. The word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã comes from ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã i. e. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and sounds as much in our language as a minister or officer It is not all one with a servant there are two words in Hebrew ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã and ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which answer to two words in our tongue a servant and a minister 1. A servant hath a common reference to his Master whom he serves in any employment 2. A Minister is of nearer reference to the Lord to whom he Ministers in some special affairs For proof and illustration of this See Gen. 39 1-4 First Joseph was Potiphars servant bought with his money but vers 4. he was ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã his minister Numb 8.24 25 26. So that it appears that the name of Minister is an honourable title as being given sometimes to 1. Kings and all in authority Rom. 13.4 6. And sometimes to 2. Priests 2 Chron. 29.11 Hezekiah speaks unto the Priests The Lord hath chosen you
Jews Acts 7.51 Ye have alwayes resisted the Holy Ghost nay not only they but their Fathers before them how gracious was the Lord unto them Surely they are my people Isai 63 8-10 but they rebelled c. surely the Lord draws man with the cords of a man even with such as the man is fit to be drawn by he does not tow him on with violence or draw him against his will as with cart ropes like an horse or mule Psal 32. yea a beast is more easily allured and encouraged with love and gentleness than violently forced and driven Much less can the man be drawn by other cords than befit a man There is a generous principle in man rather to be gently perswaded induced and led than to be forced by violence as indeed he cannot be No you will say what Grace then was that wherewithal Paul was drawn was not that force and violence Surely no let us examine that Grace Paul had a light from heaven that shined round about him Act. 9.3.18 and was not this violence Surely no what if I shall demonstrate the like in the conversion of any sinful man in thine The Holy Spirit saith to thee To day if thou wilt hear his voice the day light now shines unto thee thou hearest the Lords voice outwardly and inwardly and that reproves thee that thou hast persecuted Jesus even crucified him and slain him for while we are sinners he dies Rom. 5. This voice of the Lord mollifieth and melts thy hard heart and causeth a sweet compliance with the Lords will Lord what wilt thou have me to do The Lords voice directs thee to Ananias and what is Ananias but the Grace of the Lord which indeed by Metathesis is the same name yea and the same nature with Johannes the Grace of the Lord. This Grace of the Lord preventing thee there falls from thine eyes as it were scales even the false notions the misunderstandings of the Scriptures and thou receivest thy spiritual sight Yes but was not this an irresistible work No the Apostle himself making relation of his own conversion Act. 26.18 19. I was not disobedient saith he unto the heavenly vision To be obedient or disobedient all men know is purely voluntary and such was Paul's Conversion here otherwise surely Paul might have said as Tully Fatalis quaedam calamitas incidisse videtur humana consilia divina necessitate esse superata O Agrippa this was a force and violence that came upon me against my will I could not withstand it it was an irresistible work No he saith not so but I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision I did not by contumacy resist the heavenly vision as the Syriack hath it He was left free as thou and I am To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart The Day light shines unto me the voice of the Lord sounds unto me admonisheth me reproves me c. I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision Observ 7. If we would still be taught by Christ and effectually hear the voice of our Teacher we must not willingly and willfully harden our hearts by known sins these cause our Teacher to depart from us Jer. 6.7 8. As a fountain casteth forth her waters so she casteth forth her wickedness Be thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soul be loosed from thee Hos 4.4 Hebr. 10.38 39. The just shall live by faith but if he the just man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him Repreh 1. Who harden their hearts against means c. Repreh 2. Who hear the voice of the beast yea of the Devil 3. The Holy Ghost saith to the Hebrews that in the provocation or in the day of temptation in the wilderness Their Fathers tempted him proved him and saw his works forty years Herein the Holy Ghost sets down the sins vers 8. and the sinners vers 9. As for the sins they are two here named and these set out by the place where they were committed in the wilderness As for the sinners vers 9. we have them set down in relation to the Hebrews their Fathers and their sinful acts they tempted God they proved him and the aggravation of these sinful acts 1. From their knowledge of what might have inclined them to better they saw Gods works 2. From the duration and continuance of time forty years all which we may resolve for our more distinct handling into these particulars 1. The Fathers of the Hebrews hardened their hearts in the provocation in the wilderness 2. They hardened their hearts in the day of temptation in the wilderness 3. Their Fathers tempted God in the day of temptation and they proved him in the wilderness 4. All this they did though they saw his works 5. All this they did though they saw his works forty years 1. The Holy Ghost saith that the Fathers of the Hebrews hardened their hearts in the provocation in the wilderness Who these Fathers of the Hebrews were ye read in Exod. 17.1 where the story is related 2. What it is to harden the heart I have shewn in handling the former words So that there only remains to enquire what the place was wherein they hardened their hearts which is set down 1. Generally in the wilderness 2. Specially in Meribah or in the provocation in the wilderness ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a place rarely if at all inhabited The word used by the Psalmist is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which is one third part of the lower world which the Jews divide into three parts ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã 1. The habitable part of the world called by the Greeks ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã because inhabited 2. the wilderness 3. the sea 2. What part of the wilderness was this Ye find it was Rephidim Exod. 17. the 11th station of the Israelites Numb 33. that 's called in the Psalm ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã denoting a special place which here the LXX render appellatively ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã from their bitter contention and chiding with Moses whereby they provoked him to wrath by contending with him and not only Moses but the Lord himself also Exod. 16.8 Numb 20.2.13 Hereby also may be understood all the provocations wherewith Israel provoked the Lord and Moses Deut. 9.7 vers 22.23 24. The Reason why they hardened their hearts here or because no true good reason can be given for sin the occasion they took here was their want of water as appears Exod. 17.1 And this want of water gives aim to our whole present business and was there not a cause they were come out of Aegypt a plentiful Land and were brought by Moses into the wilderness a barren and dry land where no water is and now they and all their children and cattle were thirsty and of all natural desires men and beasts are most impatient of thirst but lay all these together they will not amount to a reason sufficient to warrant any man to sin Observ 1. Note here a
fail or as 't is in the Margin fall from the grace of God unless there were a possibility of falling why should we be so often warned of it Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall Observ 3. The Apostle saith ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã lest any one seem to fall short he saith not ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã lest all seem to fall short it is true indefinites imply one as well as other yet they do not always imply an universal possibility much less a probability for where things are contingent and arbitrary between two events as here to come short or not to come short of entrance into Rest not only God's providence but also what is of God in man as fore-sight prevents the evil that might fall out and secures the good that was but possible which may answer their ensnaring cavil who ask if any one indefinitely may fall away from the grace of God and come short of entring into the Rest if we say yea any one may then they infer then may all fall away and come short and so it will be possible that none shall be saved in the end I answer it is neither possible nor probable because of a double divine providence one watching of us and another implanted in us Add hereto that the Lord is not only able to keep us from falling who believe on him and obey him and endeavour to run the way of his commandments but also he doth actually lay hold upon all such and stay them from ruine Heb. 2.16 the words are not well turn'd in the Text they are better in the Margin The Verb is in the present tence The seed of Abraham are they who walk in the steps of Abrahams faith Rom. 4. Believers and obedient ones those who run the race that is set before them These the Lord lays hold upon and keeps them from falling Observ 4. The believing Saints and they who for the present are upon the way to God's Rest and Kingdom ought every one of them wisely to fear and take care lest in the end he should fall short of it until he be entirely possessed of it we read that all above six hundred thousand fell short of entrance into God's Canaan or Rest who yet had made good progress towards it The Apostle gives the believing Gentiles warning by the example of the faln Israelites Rom. 11.20 Because of unbelief they were broken off and thou standest by faith be not high minded but fear and with this fear he teacheth the Philippians to proceed toward the Land of Rest work out your salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2.12 Therefore St. John warns the Elect Lady that though the truth be for the present in us yea and shall be in us for ever 2 Joh. 2. yet vers 8. Take heed saith he that we lose not those things that we have wrought but that we receive a full reward and accordingly he minds the Church of Sardis Remember how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent Revel 3.3 for he that now thinketh he standeth may possibly fall 1 Cor. 10.12 Observ 5. Fear is not suddenly cast out no not of believers it is true that love casts out fear but what fear is that what other but that which hath torment which yet must make way even for love it self as the needle that pricked to the heart Act. 2.37 It draws after it the thred as the cords of love which unite and joyn the heart unto God and then the needle is cut off but that is not until the love be perfect 1 Joh. 4.18 yea the reverential fear remitti non potest as not toward our fathers upon earth so much less toward our Father which is in heaven The state of Bliss is by Divine Wisdom figured by Jerusalem which hegins with fear and ends with peace and rest Observ 6. The eminent Saints of God in their exhortations oftentimes put themselves in the number of those whom they exhort although themselves indeed are not concern'd in the duty whereunto they exhort and this they do out of lenity condescent and desire to gain those whom they exhort Thus doth our Apostle in Titus exhort ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Let us fear So Neh. Chap. 5.20 Thus St. James Chap. 3.1 and St. John 1 Joh. 1. 2 Joh. 2.8 Now the Apostle did not fear himself vers 3. being one who had entred into God's Rest vers 10. Observ 7. Fear is not a needless or useless affection if rightly ordered yea it 's very profitable and necessary Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long and 28.14 Happy is the man that feareth always as Job said Verebar omnia opera mea they who are in the race toward the everlasting Rest may and ought always to fear their enemies and their own weakness yet hope firmly on the Lord and on his help and grace in Jesus Christ Psal 11.11 Answer O Lord O God forget not the poor especially while a good will is present to please him and a fear to offend him remains in us for this is a Godly fear Hebr. 12.28 29. and hereby we perfect the holiness 2 Cor. 7.1 2. 1. Hence those are to be reproved who think there is no cause nor need of this fear when we are once brought to the state of Grace in any measure Let such remember the condition of these in the Text the people were then in Kadesh Barnea the unconstant or unsettled holiness of the Child 2. They are to be reproved who are secure and fearless in their passage toward Gods Rest Example whereof we may read of the people of Laish they live at ease securely 3. Reproof is of those who reason from the promise of God absurdly that therefore they may do unjustly be careless and fearless There is a promise left c. God will be true in keeping his promise it is true He is most true but then must we be obedient to his Commands Gods Promise is part of his Covenant with us and a Covenant requires both parties to observe their several engagements Shall God Almighty be bound by his Promise yea by Oath unto us and shall we be loose dissolute and regardless of our duty toward him Mark how the Lord reasons with his people Jer. 7 3-10 Amend your lives c. trust not in lying words saying the Temple of the Lord c. Observe the Lord he requires our endeavours to the fulfilling of his promise Psal 32.8 9. I will instruct thee but be not like the Horse and Mule c. Gods promise to teach us requires that we be docible and plyable to his Doctrine Ezech. 43.7 8. and 36.37 They shall pollute my Name no more but then he requires that they put away the carcases of their Kings and then he will dwell in the midst of them The Lord having promised Crowns unto the followers of Christ Zach. 6.12 13 15. he conditions the performance of
unto Faith where there are fruits and works contrary unto faith 3. Abraham offered up his son Isaac upon the Altar The History is very well known Gen. 22. Doubt But how can he be said to have offered up his son who yet was not offered up but preserved alive To offer therefore is here taken pro actu destinato inchoato non perfecto as much as lay in him he offered up his son he bound him he laid him on the Altar he drew the sacrificing knife to slay him He did all he was commanded which he had not done unless he had done also what he was counter-manded Reason 1. In regard of God his precept unto Abraham 2. In regard of Abraham his Faith and obedience complying with Gods Precept Observ 1. The mighty power of Faith it conquers the greatest temptations The Jews observe that Abraham was ten times tempted of God 1. To forsake his Country 2. To go into Egypt 3. When his Wife was taken from him 4. When severed from Lot 5. When he overcame the Kings 6. When he cast Hagar out of doors great with child and that by him 7. When being old he must be circumcised 8. When his Wife was taken away by Abimelech 9. When again both Hagar and Ishmael must be put out of doors 10. When he must offer up Isaac These were all temptations but not one so called but this the greatest of all Abrahams Faith conquered all Observ 2. Abrahams belief of God's command and that one of the most difficult that ever God gave unto man so many words so many darts so many goads pierce his heart Take now not an Ox or Sheep But 1. Thy son if thou hadst more thou mightest give one for many 2. Thine only Son 3. But ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a son not a son as the Jews proverb is let him sink or swim O but this was thy Son whom thou lovest and he most lovely 4. Isaac thy joy thy delight the son of thine old age in whom all thy hopes all the promises of God were comprised take Isaac 5. Offer him up May not a servant do it No thou thy self 6. And for an whole burnt offering not one part of him left all must be turned into Ashes 7. And all this forthwith 8. Yet he must be tryed three days he must go three days journey tempted sometime with the command sometime with the Love of God love of the flesh present delight future bliss All these were as if Abraham indeed had been to be offered not Isaac by faith Abraham obeyed this most horrible command O with what courage did the good man overcome all this So that we may say of him what Pyrrus said of Fabritius that it 's more easie to divert the Sun from his course than Fabritius from his purpose Observ 3. God accepts the will for the deed He offered up c. See Notes before in Jam. 1.22 Repreh 1. The perverse and presumptuous imitation of the great God in his commands proceeding from his Soveraign Power Herein Satan will be like the Highest Hence came the offering unto Molech Repreh 2. A strong eviction of our great unbelief and disobedience Abraham being commanded believed and readily obeyed this command as to man most horrible most unreasonable though God according to his absolute power might command that same The Lord gives no such commands to us it came not into his heart Jerem. This command to us is unreasonable he propounds to us most reasonable commands what sacrifice so reasonable as the offering up of our bodies Rom. 12.1 our resignation of our selves in our reasonable service yet who offers up this sacrifice who offers up a sorrowful spirit a contrite heart Psal 51. And if we be so backward to offer up our bodies quid dicam in crucem tollere What shall I say of taking up our cross daily and following our Lord if the Prophet Elisha had commanded us some great thing oughtest thou not to do it c. If Elisha God our Saviour command c. Wash and be clean This is so reasonable that Mich. 6.6 7 8. Esay 1 16-20 Love thou the Lord it 's an argument of forgiveness There is no doubt but Simon the Pharisee though a Leper unclean himself yet will condemn thee for a sinner They who are yet under the Law will condemn those who are under grace Eli accounted Hannah ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Like these are those who perform blind obedience to their presumptuous superiours who usurp an absolute power over them Cassian reports of Matius an Abbot who at the command of his Superiour would have cast his son of eight years old into a River and drowned him An Example admirandum nay demirandum magis quam imitandum as that which exceeds all the lawful bounds of precept and obedience for no superiour can command the death of his inferour without just cause warranted by the Law of God And therefore there was more blindness than due obedience in submission to such commands So that to countenance this rash folly of the Abbot there was great need to feign a Revelation declaring how acceptable the fact was to God Hac eum obedientiâ Abrahae patriarchae opus implesse But we have a more sure word of prophecie according to which sammum vitae necisque Dominium The absolute power of life and death belongs to God only Like to these are they who dare impose upon the life of men their opinions and dictates for God's Oracles which they have received from mortal men or false collections of their own out of the Word of God The Apostle who I am sure had more authority than they all he disclaimed all such usurpation of rule over the hearts of men 2 Cor. 2.24 Mysticé Abraham offered up Isaac his son upon the altar The Letter hath offered us somewhat for our edifying but the Spirit will afford us more Who doth Abraham figure but the great and high Father God the Father Who is Isaac but a Type of Jesus Christ whom the Father spared not but delivered up to death for us all Rom. 8.33 And what was the Altar but a figure of the Cross of Christ for so Mount Moriah had three divers tops 1. Upon one of which the City of David was built 2. Upon another Solomon's Temple 3. Upon the third Isaac was offered and afterward our Lord was crucified This is affirmed by divers of the Ancients August de Civitate Dei lib. 16. chap. 32. Hieronimus presbyter scripsit se certissimé à sermonibus Judaeorum cognovisse quod ibi immolatus sit Isaac Adam sepultus ubi postea Christus est Crucifixus Exhort Let us offer up our Isaac upon the altar And what is our Isaac but our joy What is the Altar and what is the Cross but the patience of Jesus Christ Unto thee then be it spoken Abramida O thou son of Abraham if thou wilt prove thy self to be so by doing the works of Abraham offer
thou shalt be justified c. but how should a man full of talk be justified Job 11.2 No for in many words there is vanity Eccles But when he that speaks speaketh as the Oracles of God 1 Pet. 4.11 Christ speaking in me 1 Cor. 9.1 2. so thoughts are works but then we must not think our own thoughts or speak our own words Those who do good works are justified Rom. 2.13 By what works was Abraham justified Even by the works of God wrought in him and by the same works is every Son of Abraham justified Man is said to believe yet is belief Gods work Joh. 6.29 30 33. life and resurrection is operative by works of obedience 1 Joh. 3.23 24. Jer. 51.10 Protulit Dominus justitias nostras Venite narremus in Sion opera Domini Dei nostri For as Faith is the work of God in us even so the works of Faith are wrought in God Joh. 3.21 who worketh all our works in us Isai 26.12 he is the light and the fruit of light which shines forth Ephes 5.9 Vulg. Lat. Syr. The Tree of Life brings forth fruits of Righteousness Ephes 2.4 10. So that neither light nor shining Phil. 1.11 nor Tree of Life nor fruit is ours but Gods Object But this seems harsh to some for how can our works justifie us Are not Faith and Works ordinarily opposed in Scripture Here the Apostles profession Phil. 3.9 10 11. he renounceth his own Righteousness and Works by the Law That which our Lord said Joh. 16.19 Yet a little while and ye shall see me Our Lord seems to allude to that of the Prophet Habak 2.3 whence the Apostle yet a little while and be that shall come c. Hebr. 10.3.7 faith in him that is to come and he becomes a Tree of Life in us whereby the just man lives And that which was Abrahams operative Faith here must also be every Sons of Abraham Hebr. 11.17 18 19. He believed that God was able to raise up Isaac from the dead And it is our belief if we be Abrahams Children that God is able to raise up the true Isaac from the dead Rom. 4. 1 Pet. 1.21 1 Joh. 3.3 the operative faith in the operative power of God who raised up Christ from the dead This conformity unto Christs death and suffering with him works the salvation and justifieth us 2 Cor. 1.5 where Christs works in us are our conformity unto his death That God should raise the dead was the promise made of God unto the Fathers Acts 26.6 7. that appears v. 8. This was no dogmatical point or tenent in Religion but obedience and practice v. 7. Phil. 3.9 10 11. and why should it seem incredible to us c. v. 8. since it 's testified by Moses and all the Prophets v. 22 23. But truly it seems so incredible unto most men that he who shall affirm it shall be thought a mad man as Paul was by Festus vers 24. Object How then doth Faith alone justifie The eye alone sees and the ear alone hears but neither if taken from the body and alone See Notes before on Jam. 1.22 Observ 1 Hence it appears how contrary it is to the Gospel of Jesus Christ that a man should be justified by the works of the Law Rom. 3 20-28 Observ 2. How presumptuous a tenent it is that our works should merit eternal life which is purely out of Grace and the free gift of God when ye have done all that ye are commanded ye are unprofitable servants Observ 3. A Reason of the instant ruine and desolation upon us which yet we heed not regard not but lay the blame every one on that party which is opposite unto us when the true cause is the forsaking of Gods Law and not hearkning to his voice the want of Faith and obedience of faith want of that Righteousness which is testified by the Law and the Prophets this is the true cause of our ruine and we know it not Jer. 9.12 I know well we boast every one of his Faith but where are the works where is the obedience of faith to the Commandments of God where is the most holy faith resâaining us from sin and iniquity where is the shield of Faith that might now protect us Our wicked lives our disobedience our self-love c. these declare plainly that it is not the true and precious Faith we boast of but presumption 1 Kings 14 22-27 The people did evil c. thereupon came Shishack King of Aegypt Rehoboam is interpreted by the Wise Man Ecclus. 47.23 The foolishness of the people ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that broad way wherein the people walk and needs must they be foolish for the broad way wherein the foolish Virgins walk See Notes on Matt. 25. with their Lamps of disobedient knowledge and dead faith This faith hinders not their looseness of life they provoke the Lord to jealousie with their spiritual fornication yea by this dead faith and disobedient knowledge they are puffed up 1 Cor. 8. they build themselves high places 1 King 14.22 23. When they did evil then they rejoyced Jer. 11.15 and were puffed up when they should have mourned 1 Cor. 5. Now comes Shishack poculum laetitiae the cup of our own joy c. this bereaves us of all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge This Shishack takes away all the shields of Gold the shields of their precious faith and Rehoboam makes brazen shields i. e. presumption instead of faith and hence they are bold one against another as Numb 14. Acts 19. Observ 4. Abraham was justified by works it is not said that Abraham justified himself by works the works are Gods and God wrought them It was the sin of the Jews that they knew not the righteousness of God and went about to establish their own righteousness Rom. 10.3 Therefore ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã is not in use in the Active or Cal because it is none of mans business to justifie or save himself He that shall save his life shall loose it i. e. He who by his own wayes and means will go about to save his soul c. Matt. 16.25 Observ 5. Hence it appears that in some sence justification and sanctification are all one for as Righteousness and Holiness are sometime all one and the same so in reason the making righteous and the making holy must be the same Now that Righteousness and Holiness are sometime the same 't is evident Heb. 12.11 12. what he calls Holiness he presently calls Righteousness if not the same left out Rom. 8.30 Thus those whom the Apostle calls justified ones he calls also sanctified ones 1 Cor. 6.11 ye are washed i. e. baptized and being baptized ye have received the Holy Ghost and so are sanctified and being so sanctified ye daily proceed in virtue and virtuous actions Revel 22.11 And as we are justified by faith Rom. 5.1 so likewise sanctified by faith Act. 26.18 Observ 6. Nor Son or Daughter of Abraham is
his work-house But if the man assumeth this unto himself as if this were befel him for some notable worth in himself as he were soul and body c. he is now become spiritually proud And what house wisdom was building folly pull's down with her hands Prov. Like the flye sitting upon the Axel-tree of the Cart O quantam ego vim pulveris excito The Ass that carried the mysteries of Isis prided himself and pricked up his ears as if the people had worshipped him Such a silly Fly such a simple Ass is such an one as arrogates God's works to himself Yea this arrogancy and assuming somewhat to a mans self of the good the Lord doth in him and by him moves him off the centre of his Faith Joh. 5.44 Prov. 20.6 Observ Abraham believed and obeyed and so obeyed that he wrought that heroical work of obedience and that faith that obedience of faith was accounted to him for righteousness He first believed and obeyed and then that operative belief that obedience of faith was accounted unto him for righteousness We see that Abrahams obedience and perfecting of his Faith was in order before his being accounted Righteous his Faith was perfected by works and so the Scripture was fulfilled which said Abraham believed c. Therefore to place obedience and doing good works among the consequents of justification and salvation is to make obedience and the doing of good works arbitrary and then they are like to be well done indeed who will then do any if but gratuitous See Notes before on Jam. 1.22 And there is reason they should be remiss in their obedience and doing good works who conceive it arbitrary so to do for who will go about so difficult a business as obedience if he be already sure of the main by justification And therefore some will grant that good works are necessary but how not as causes but as means c. Vide ubi supra Repreh Who think to fulfil the Scripture by a complete and full justification but fulfil not perfect not their Faith by works of Sanctification And therefore they thank God for their Justification that 's sure and firm because they imagine it so And then thank God for their Sanctification in part They believe that can never be otherwise This is gross unbelief See Notes on Col. 2.12 Observ The reason of that abundance of iniquity which our Saviour fore-told should be in the last days the want of Faith in Jesus Christ And therefore Joh. 16.8.9 The spirit shall reprove the world of sin because they believe not in Christ who takes away the sin There is no belief in the Divine Power of Jesus Christ the Power of God Luk. 18.8 few there are that know him otherwise than according to the flesh Men have thoughts of his humanity and believe in him His enemies acknowledge him a powerful man so did they Matth 13.54 they acknowledged the wisdom and mighty works done by Christ But in that they believed not his Divine Power see what followeth vers 58. So did his friends as they Lvk. 24 19. Spake as much in honour of Christ as might be But vers 25. O fools and slow of heart to believe c. He that believeth in me as the Scripture hath said Joh. 7.38 Thus he is the Lamb passover door vine the fountain They glorified God in me Vnless ye believe that I am ye shall dye in your sin Joh. 8.24 Repreh 1. Their preposterous and imagining belief who boast of a Plerophory a fulness and perfection of Faith before they have the beginning of the true Faith Tantum absunt à perfectione maximorum operum uti ne fundamenta quidem jecerunt build Castles in the air before they have laid the foundation They are in heaven before they have passed by the gates of hell as the Jews would have a sign from heaven whom our Lord points to learn a sign from hell as he calls it Jonah 2. They offer up their Isaac before they come out of Vr they talk of perfection before they know they own imperfection they are familiar with God in the clouds on the top of the ladder before they have lyen down with Jacob at the foot of it Surely these begun their Faith and Religion at the wrong end These are thieves and robbers who enter in another way Joh. 10. Repreh 2. Who deny a possibility of perfecting either Faith or any other Grace Consol What consolation must this needs be to the misgiving soul fainting fearing and ready to despair Act. 16.31 It was the Roman Law that the Jaylor who let any prisoner escape should suffer the same punishment which he should have suffered And therefore he chose rather ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the common effect of despair but a most foolish one stultum est ne moriare mori Do thy self no harm fear not despair not believe in the Lord Jesus It was no new doctrine to the Jaylor but the same which he had now sometime preached at Philippi the obedience of faith But alas I am dead in trespasses and sins Ephes and fear an eternal death stipendium peccati mors he that believes in me although he be dead yet shall he live Joh. 11.25 Psal 138.7 8. Vntil the day dawn c. 2 Pet. 1.19 Be not discouraged there are degrees of Faith there is a beginning of faith Heb. 3. and there is a ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã a fulness of it nothing can be perfected ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã all at once Art and Nature have their gradual increase Nihil simul inventum perfectum est saith Tully in his Publ. and it is true in Rhetorick that the first Orators had a more rugged stile which they of after ages polished and made more terse till at length they brought that Art unto perfection The first Painters nor knew nor used more than four colours which Art yet afterward was perfected by Apelles and others with great variety Et natura nihil magni voluit effici cito Quintil. The greater creatures stay longer in the womb and are born with greater difficulty And even so it is in the Divine Nature and the Divine Art of life Phil. 1.6 Repreh Those who rest in an imperfect faith They think low thoughts of God Herein Abraham and Sarah offended and it is the sin of their children while yet they are young Zachary the father of John for this cause was stricken dumb Can he give bread to his people This offended the great God so much Psal 78 20-30 It is a common sin that men rather propound to themselves the lowest condition of Faith in the believer yea almost the unbelief to be imitated than the highest The reason is there is little or no Faith nothing like love among us that believeth all things were there such a Faith we would believe that we should receive the Spirit of Jesus yea as Elisha did a double portion whatsoever ye ask believing ye shall obtain Matth. 21.23 3.
ãâã ãâã ãâã an hyperbolical greatness of power towards us who believe according to the working of Gods mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Ephes 1.19 7. To believe that the world and other enemies of our Salvation are overcome to our hand without our operative our fighting and overcoming Faith so that we need not overcome them through Faith is to believe a manifest lye And therefore we may justly reprove 1. Those who overcome not the world who pretend it cannot be done and 't is no marvel if they find it otherwise who give the reign unto their lusts and keep under the motions of Christ's Spirit as if we had such a custom as the Jews had at Easter and let loose Barrabbas and hold Christ the truth of God in iniquity 2. Those who overcome not the best part of it struggle they do a little and are a little perswaded to be Christians but Herod was more valiant in God's cause and had more Faith than these men he heard John gladly and did many things Mar. 6.20 3. But others are so impotent and weak and so far they are from over-coming the world that they cannot over-come the least part of it not a toy A little gain though never so little over-comes them and they betray their strength they accuse Judas for betraying his Lord for thirty pieces these think themselves good Christians yet betray him for far less A cup of wine or strong drink over-comes them even to drunkenness and the least injury nay it may be but a seeming injury makes them yield to their passions and lay down the bucklers and cast away the shield of Faith Oh how weak is thine heart Ezeck 16. 4. But what shall we say to those who joyn with the world conform themselves unto it are in league and friendship with it yet notwithstanding perswade themselves that they are born of God O the foolish and fantastical perswasion of these men The world overcomes them yet such fools they are they think that they have overcome the world they think they are born of God when indeed they are born of the Devil Joh. 8. But the very worst sort of men of all other that are overcome are they who joyn with the world eo nomine to oppose the Saints of God yet would they seem to be born of God as that Sorcerer and false Prophet was called Barjesus who withstood Paul seeking to turn away the Deputy from the faith Act. 13.6 7 8. But the Apostle stiles him rightly vers 10. O full of all subtilty and all mischief thou child of the devil wilt thou not cease to pervert the straight ways of the Lord What should we think of such as being sent to war with the rebels if they should joyn with them make the case thine own thou art by thy Baptism engaged in a war against the Devil the world and the flesh and instead of opposing them thou sidest with them Mean time let us all be exhorted to fight the good fight of faith that we may overcome the world The world is weak and the prime enemy we have to deal with is the flesh now to be fleshly and to be weak is all one Esay 31.3 The Egyptians are men and not God their horses flesh and not spirit But the weapons of our warfare are not carnal not weak but mighty through God c. 2 Cor. 10. The Devil hath his darts his temptations Joh. 13.2 Ephes 6.16 But by faith we quench these darts nos cognoscamus ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Satanae 2 Cor. 2.11 2 Thess 2.9 10 11. Faith overcomes the Devil 1 Joh. 5.4 5. Sic ars deluditur arte when St. Paul was overcome by the Archers David bad them teach the children of Israel the use of the bow This is written in the Book of Jasher or the upright as the Margin hath it By Faith Shall the Lord find any of this faith in the earth This is true 1. Really And 2. Personally 1. Really so that thing which is born of God overcomes the world This was signified as by other so especially by those Types of Christ Gideon and Jonathan For so as Gideon and his Soldiers with their pitchers Judg. 7.22 and lights overcame the Midianites So Christ born in us overcomes the world for we have that treasure of light in earthen vessels saith the Apostle So also when Jonathan went against the Philistins so the power of Christ in us proceeds in the conquest of our sins for Jonathans name signifies the gift of God which is the same with Christ who calls himself the gift of God Joh. 4. Now as in both these fights every ones sword was against his fellow 1 Sam. 14.20 So it is in the spiritual combat contrary vices overcome one another covetousness overcomes luxury c. These victories are Christ's but more remotely but more nearly the spirit and the flesh fight together in us good and evil when we would do good evil is present with us and when we would do evil good is present with us And God saith to St. Paul 2 Cor. 12.9 My grace is sufficient for thee And he exhhorts us to overcome the evil with good Rom. 12.21 And therefore Christ's victory over the enemies of Salvation is said to be according to the day of Midian when every one overcame his fellow Esay 9.4 for so sobriety overcomes drunkenness liberality coveteousness piety hypocrisie patience anger and pievishness The efficient cause of this is God's Spirit the Spirit of Christ Gal. 5.17 lusteth against the flesh that ye cannot do the things that ye would The end Gods Glory 1 Cor. 1.27 and 31. God hath chosen the foolish things of this world to confound the wise That he that glorieth let him glory in the Lord. Sign Whether we have overcome the world or no The Apostle expresseth this otherwayes by crucifying the world by crucifying the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 6.14 The world is crucified unto me and I unto the world If lusts now war in our members how are they crucified If we walk in divers ungodly lusts how are they dead do they walk when they are dead do they fight when they are dead It 's no good argument then of a perfect regenerate man that the spirit rebels against the flesh and the flesh rebels against the spirit as some would have it to be for the Apostle applies this measure of regeneration unto those whom he calls little children Look I beseech you if it be not so See Gal. 4.19 cum vers 5.17 Means of being born of God ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Christ the natural Son of God was so from all eternity the adopted Sons of God are not from all eternity such though foreseen they may be to be such and therefore some means are necessary to the effecting of this these ye read Ecclus. 4.10 Matth. 5.43 to
ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã we are his Off-spring we have even him for our Father Joh. 8. we are his people Servus sum filius ancillae tuae Psal 15. His servants purchased he that had saved our temporal life how should we esteem him should we not owe him the residue of our dayes He who had saved but one member how should we serve him with all the rest Thus St. Hierom's Lion served him for pulling out the thorne out of his foot We are saved from sin redeemed from vain conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 Tit. 2.14 But Liberti who were unthankful returned ad servitium so they who serve the Creature more than the Creator are given up to their own lusts Rom. 1. This is the end of our Redemption That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies should serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness all the dayes of our life Luk. 1. We are servi conducti whereby praesentibus praeteritis futuris promissis to which all these are but little Thou good and faithful servant thou hast been faithful in few things Matt. 25. The Beasts serve us for their present sustenance and hope for nothing future Will neither past nor present nor future blessings move us 4. Other Creatures Omnia serviunt tibi omnia nobis 5. Sinful men what pains they take to serve sin other Masters the unprofitable service of other Lords the servants of sin confess it What hath pride profited us Wisd 5. What fruit have we in those things whereof we are ashamed Rom. 6. The wages of sin is death damnosum By this means the Lord himself is made to serve fecisti me peccatis tuis servire If we yield not our selves to serve God willingly we shall yet whether we will or no as he that goes from the East goes nearer to the West c. yet he is still within the heaven He that runs from Gods willing service falls into his compulsive service Therefore the Stoick prayeth Lead me O God that way which thou choosest ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã No blessing can be truly such unto us nor no duty rightly performed of us unless we be servants 1. My servants shall eat and you shall be hungry c. 2. Where I am there shall my servant be 3. If any man serve me him will my Father honour 4. He shall come forth and serve them Joh. 13.4 5. Laudate Dominum vos servi hi siquidem verè Dominum laudant qui bene vivunt Psal 50. last This is proper to Jude the servant of Jesus Christ Sign No man can serve two Masters See Notes in Phil. 4.11 12 13. A servant that followeth two men when they part followeth his own Master Every one that is perfect shall be as his Master Whether aim we at our own praise gain glory Surely if we have other Masters and aime at our own gain or glory we are not the servants of Christ if I yet please men I am not the servant of Christ we do but complement with him and tell him we are his servants when indeed we are the servants of sin serving divers lusts and pleasures Tit. 2. Rom. 6. We do but bow the knee to him and mock him as the servants of the High Priest did and call him Master as Judas Iscariot did not as Judas Thaddeus He that names the name of our Lord Jesus Christ let him depart from iniquity No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost Where then art the fruits of the spirit Gal. As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk in him Break every yoke Isa 58. Let him deny himself Now because upon self-denial we shall meet with strong temptations to return to our old Masters 1. Partly when we remember and call to mind our sensual pleasures of sin as the Israelites their flesh-pots 2. Partly because we are not yet acquainted with the wayes of God There is therefore need of patience that having done the will of God we may inherit the promises How would we have our servants serve us run ride make hast c. So must we worship and serve God who hath more right and title so us This is intimated by the Apostle where he saith Ye have a Master in heaven Exhort Let us ingenuously confess our unfaithful dealing with our God that we have served his enemies Let us say with the Prophet Isaiah Lord other Lords have ruled over us c. But thou art the Lord our God Isai 26. And let us heartily pray that he would pardon all our sins and make us as one of his hired servants or as it is in the Text Servants of Jesus Christ NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON JUDE Verse 3. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã it was needful for me to write unto you and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the Saints Thus our last English Translation But word for word according to the Greek sounds thus I had need to write unto you exhorting you to labour earnestly in the faith which was once delivered unto the Saints or else to help the Saints in the faith once delivered Or if we will have the word Contend to express ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã we may turn the words thus I have need to write unto you exhorting you to contend earnestly with in or by the faith which was once given unto the Saints These are all good sences and the Greek words will bear them THe Apostle after his Salutation and acquainting them with the cause of his writing touching the common Salvation he then comes to his Exhortation in the Text concerning the common Faith and of these three Translations given I reject none of them yet I prefer the last as most harmonical with the Word of God as I shall shew And to this one or other of those divers Translations of the Reformed Churches incline as the Spanish that ye strive to persevere in the Faith c. And in the French Bible although it hath Contend for the Faith yet in the Margin they put against the assaults of Satan so Vatabl. Pagnine the Tygurine Bible Castellio ut fide certetis Erasmus ut in fide adlaboretis sanctis or per fidem auxilio sitis sanctis quò magis proficiant in fide And our Old English Translations sound to the same purpose as that of Coverdale I exhort you that ye should continually labour in the Faith and one other to the same purpose so that the old English Translators were herein in the right if the New Translators could have let them alone As for that sence wherein our last Translators render the Text the words will not bear it for ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã does not signifie to contend for the Faith that would be exprest either by ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã as ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã or ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which is not here read as for other inconveniencies
effect of Righteousness is quietness and assurance for ever Esa 32. And my joy shall no man take from you Joh. 16. Will you see these altogether ye have them Esa 66. where the Prophet hath spoken of the same forming and birth of Christ vers 7 8 9. presently annexeth the peace and the joy of it vers 10 11 12. Will ye see a brief discription of it It is Rom. 14.17 The kingdom of God is righteousness peace and joy And thus at length ye have heard wherein consists the forming of Christ in the Saints both according to youth and according to old age I will briefly name the causes of this forming and fashioning of Christ in the Saints and so end with application of all unto our selves The causes are considerable in regard of God and our selves 1. In respect of God as ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã say some Divines but rather as faciamus hominem import that the whole Trinity was imployed in the making of the greater and lesser World Even so in the forming of Christ in the Saints which as the Apostle intimates was typified by the Creation of the World 2 Cor. 4.6 All the persons of the Trinity are taken up These are the Creators which the Wiseman bids us remember for the word is plural in the Original Eccles 12. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Remember thy Creators in the days of thy youth for according to the oeconomy and administration of these kingdoms observed by Irenaeus God the Father begets these Children Deut. 32.8 And having promised to send the Son unto them accordingly he sends him and by his Law draws them unto him Joh. 6. And thus my father worketh hitherto saith the Son unto him Joh. 5.17 Now the Son comes forth attended by these Children given and brought unto him by his Father and offering them again unto his Father saith Cyril with these words Behold I and the children which God hath given me Esa 8.18 which the Apostle quotes and applys expresly unto the Fathers bringing of Children unto the Son Heb. 2.13 And in these the Son perfects the work which his Father gave him to do Joh. 17.4 For they grow up unto him in all things from babes unto young men and so forth unto old and perfect men Eph. 4. This growth the Father and Son effect by the outward ministration of the Word and inward operation of the Spirit For as the Sun and a man beget a man as the Philosopher speaks so God and the Minister beget the form of the New Man in us whence the Minister is called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Gods Coworker or workman together with God and the Father also of the Saints begotten by his Ministry for as wicked men are the sons of Men and of the Devil for in so many words the sons of Eli were sons of Belial 1 Sam. 3. and our Saviour tells the ungodly Jews That he knew they were Abrahams seed Yet saith he ye are of your father the devil So on the contrary the Children of God are also Children of the Minister For St. Paul calls Onesimus Phil. 10. and Timothy his sons 1 Cor. 4.17 and saith he begat all the Corinthians through the Gospel That 's the seed whereof these Children are begotten for they are not born again of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever This holy Seed is enlivened and quickned by the inward operation of the Spirit of God Zach. 4.6 which moves upon the Seed in this New Creation and forming of Christ in us as it once moved upon the confused seed of the world in the Old Creation And like that ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã that formative power in the womb it forms and fashions Christ in these little Children And as in the forming of an Embryo in the Womb the first form is first abolished and then another introduced And as we put out of the wax the old impression of the seal before we seal it anew So also in the forming of Christ in these Children the precedent form is wrought out and they wrought unto an inconformity with the world Rom. 12.2 And as obedient children they do not form or fashion themselves according to the former lusts in their ignorance 1 Pet. 1.14 And as he is holy which calleth them So are they holy also in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.15 These are the causes of this information of this forming of Christ in us in respect of God The causes in respect of the Saints themselves are Faith in Christ and imitation of Christ 1. Faith in Christ is so necessary to the forming of him in the Saints that these two phrases the Saints to be in the Faith and Christ to be in the Saints are taken for one and the same Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith prove your own selves know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 2. Nor is the imitation of Christ in all his Virtues and Graces less necessary to the forming of him in us for he is the example we must follow the pattern and copy which we must take out and draw to life in us For we all behold as in a mirrour or looking-glass the glory of the Lord with open face So the most ancient authorized English Translations have it and are changed into the same similitude or image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 Nay Beloved This imitation of Christ is of such absolute necessity that all the Faith in the world which worthily we highly prize yet all of it without the following of Christ in love and other graces it 's meerly vain and to no purpose Insomuch as he that could remove the highest mountains of his sins yet grew not up in Charity he is nothing 1 Cor. 13. Nay which may seem strange he that hath obtained like precious Faith with the Apostles themselves if he grow not up into Christ unto a perfect man in all other virtues and graces also all his Faith is dead no more a true faith than the carcase of a man 's a man He that lacketh these things saith the Apostle 2 Pet. 1. that is virtue knowledge temperance patience godliness brotherly kindness charity he that lacks these is blind manu tentans feeling with his hand of faith after Christ like the blind Sodomites at Lots door And this St. Peter speaks to those who had obtained like precious Faith with himself and the rest of the Apostles I beseech ye consider the place well 2 Pet. 1.1.9 And that this imitation hath a necessity upon it as well medii as praecepti appears by vers 11. of that Chapter If ye do these thing ye shall never fall for so an entrance shall be ministred abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ I have done with the causes I promised you an application and I 'l be very brief
with you in it Here 's the opening of that hidden Mystery or the further clearing it That great mystery of godliness God made manifest in the flesh The end of the Law and tenour of the Gospel unto mankind secretly shut up in the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifieth flesh whence comes ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Evangelizavit to preach the glad tydings of God made manifest in the flesh to make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery which is Christ in you saith the Apostle Col. 1.27 Here 's a Christmas that lasts all the year even all that acceptable year of the Lord as the time of Christ is called Here 's a nearer Union with Christ than the common sort of Christians dream of Christ formed in us unless Christ be in us Christ without us profits us nothing unless Christ be in us we are reprobates 2 Cor. 13. Here 's an higher pitch of Christianity than Christians ordinarily attain nay aspire unto Christ not only to be known not only to be talked of Christian Religion consists not in tittle tatle Christ not only to be believed on not only to be desired not only to be called upon but Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith Christ Emmanuel Christ one with us and we one with him Joh. 17.21 Christ formed in us and we conformed to him both in his sufferings and in his Resurrection Phil. 3.10 O suffer then I beseech you the word of exhortation not to content your selves with the childhood and minority of Christ not to stint our selves in the very nonage of Christianity but to grow up unto riper age from grace to grace from strength to strength from virtue to virtue until we be perfect men in Christ Jesus and Christ Jesus be perfectly formed in us O glorious state this yea this is that high pitch of Christianity this is that mature age of Christ which all the Saints of God do and ever have aspired unto this all the Ministers of God setting aside all jarring and jangling Controversies do or ought to preach and warn every man and teach every man in all wisdom that they may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus Col. 1.27 This our Apostle longed for till it were formed in the Galatians But so many pretences there are so many outward shews and counterfeit forms of godliness so many false Christs in the world as our Saviour foretold and growths in them that it 's a very difficult thing to perswade almost any man but that Christ is indeed formed in him But I beseech you since it so nearly concerns every soul consider with me Can the form of Christ be in the body of sin If Christ be in you the Body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life because of Righteousness Rom. 8. He that is Christs hath crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Do lusts war in thy members and yet are they crucified and yet are they dead Can the most lively action for even such is war proceed from a body of sin that 's dead He in whom Christ is formed as he hath a fellowship with Christ in his sufferings suffering as a Christian 1 Pet. 4. and is made conformable unto his death by dying to sin Phil. 3.10 So also is he raised up again with Christ unto newness of life Rom. 6. He lives the life of Christ and Christ is a life to him and lives in him the life of all Virtues and Graces of Love of Joy of Peace of Long-suffering of Gentleness of Goodness of Faith of Meekness of Temperance of Patience of Godliness of Brotherly kindness of Mercy of Humbleness of Mind of Moderation of Obedience and Subjection unto Governmen Here yea here 's a form of Christ indeed in how few alas to be found though we seek it I speak it to our shame even among the crowd of our seeming most forward Christians for when we place the power of Christ in us in hatred in variance in heady undiscreet zeal in wars in strife in sedition in despising of Dominion in presumptuousness in self-will in speaking evil of Dignities in bitter Invectives against Authority in scribling of Pamphlets to disturb the common peace Is Christ formed in us so much as according to Youth much less according to Old Age Alas we are yet but Children For whereas there is among you envyings and strifes saith the Apostle and divisions and factions are ye not carnal and walk according to man the old Adam and not according to Christ for while one saith I am of Paul another I am of Apollos one I am for this Sect and this man another I am for that Sect and that man are ye not carnal The Apostle appeals to their own Conscience in this matter when they called themselves after the names of Paul and Apollos how much more may I appeal unto yours whom ever it concerns who have taken up Leaders far inferour and perhaps some contrary unto Paul and Apollos I appeal unto your own consciences are ye not carnal These dissentions come not of him that calleth you No no the Apostle reduceth them to their own Original Whence come wars and fightings or brawlings among you come they not hence even from your lusts that war in your members wherefore I cannot speak unto you saith St. Paul as unto spiritual those in whom Christ is formed but as unto carnal even unto babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3. But if there be among us as I doubt not but there are many who long as earnestly for Christ to be formed in their souls as those ancient holy women in the Old Testament desired to bear him in their wombs to those I will propound some means and helps for the forming of him and those both before conception of the Seed in the womb and after it 1. And before Conception it 's necessary that if we would have Christ formed in us we be chast Virgins like the holy Virgin Mary I mean untainted and unpolluted by the Serpents Seed 2 Cor. 11.23 that is unperverted by our own worldly wisdom Isa 47.10 a wisdom by which the world comes not to know God 1 Cor. 1.21 Hebr. 10.35 36. 2. And the heart or womb of the Soul as it were thus emptied and prepared must receive the Seed of the Word Matth. 13. the Seed of God 1 Joh. 3.9 to the fit receiving of which faith's required as when the Angel told the Virgin Mary that the holy Ghost should come upon her and the power of the most High should overshadow her she believed Luk. 1.45 and so must every one of us who would have Christ formed in us we must believe the message of the Angel or Messenger of God unto us 2. We must have a good will and desire to entertain this holy Seed such a desire was also in the same Virgin Mary so saith she unto the Angel Be it unto me as thou hast spoken and so must every one of us