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cause_n justification_n justify_v righteousness_n 5,567 5 7.8664 4 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A52355 A brief exposition of the First and Second Epistles general of Peter by Alexander Nisbet ... Nisbet, Alexander, 1623-1669. 1658 (1658) Wing N1165; ESTC R37734 248,842 354

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wrath which they shall get at the day of judgment when they together with all that serve them and follow their counsel shall have nothing else to do but endure torment and shall torment one another for ever for they are delivered in chains of darknesse to be reserved unto judgment Vers 5. and spared not the old World but saved Noah the eighth person a Preacher of righteousnesse bringing in the floud upon the world of the ungodly Followeth the second instance to prove the certainty of God's judgment to come upon these soul-deceivers whereof the sum is That if the old World notwithstanding of their multitude and their long and great prosperity were all excepting a few swept away with the sloud because of their wickednesse those false teachers notwithstanding their multitude of followers and long successe in propagating their errors have no reason to imagine to themselves an escape from the wrath of God with which instance the Apostle doth intermix the example of Noah's preservation as a pledge of the Lord's respect to all who keep the way of Truth and Holinesse in an evil time as is clear by comparing this and the 9. Verse Although there were seven preserved from the sloud beside Noah who is therefore called the eight Yet he only is named because he was mainly respected in that deliverance and the rest for his cause He is called a Preacher of Righteousnesse because even in that time he did hold forth to the people the way of free justification by the Righteousnesse of Christ and the duties of holinesse wherein justified persons ought to walk with both which Noah hath been well acquainted as is clear by comparing Heb. 11.7 with Gen. 6.9 Hence Learn 〈◊〉 The●e are not a few shifts in the hearts of wicked men prospering in their sinful courses whereby 〈◊〉 harden themselves against the threatnings of the Word of the Lord and put the thoughts of His wrath far away from them for after the Apostle hath by the former instance of God's judgment upon the fallen Angels cutted off the hopes of false teachers evading the wrath of God because of any pretended or real excellency they had he doth by this instance prove that neither their multitude of followers not former successe could avail them since God spared not the old World 2. As the Lord useth in times of greatest defection to profanity or error to preserve a few who will bear testimony for His Truth and against the dishonour done to Him by others So He is never so terrible to the wicked but that He will remember to manifest His respect to His own few amongst them who labour to keep themselves free of and mourn for these abominations which provoke Him to let forth His terror For Noah in this instance and Lot in the following are brought in as pledges of a few whom the Lord minded to preserve from that universal infection of error and vilenesse which was to prevail in the Church of the New Testament and whom He minded also to deliver from the plagues to follow thereupon as appears from ver 9. But saved Noah the eighth c. 3. Even in the very infancy of the Church under the Old Testament the way of justification by Christ's Righteousnesse hath been publickly preached and the duties of holinesse prest upon justified persons the study of both which ought alwayes to be much prest upon people by the Ministers of Christ especially in a time of abounding of iniquity and approaching of judgment as the only way to be hid from wrath and enjoy communion with God for Noah in such a time was a Preacher of Righteousnesse both imputed and inherent as was cleared in the Exposition of this Verse 4. The Lord in the dispensation of His Justice is not bound to keep the ordinary course of nature but for the illustration thereof 〈◊〉 may and sometimes doth make the creatures mo●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to their nature there being in them all a stronger ●●●pension so to do for their Maker's service than to move according to their ordinary course in serving their fellow-creatures to His dishonour for here in this instance the Sea cometh out of its channel at His Command to drown a profane World and in the following instance the Fire cometh down out of its region to burn up filthy Cities Bringing in the floud upon the world of the ungodly Vers 6. And turning the Cities of Sodom and Gomorra into ashes condemned them with an overthrow making them an ensample unto those that after should live ungodly Here is the third instance confirming the certainty of God's dreadful reckoning with false teachers and their followers The sum whereof is That if Sodom and Gomorra with other flourishing Cities beside them were for their vilenesse totally and terribly destroyed and so made lasting Copies of Divine wrath to come upon all ungodly persons these soul-deceivers who were guilty of as high provocations and had drawn in their guilt a great number of the Lord's People could not think in reason to escape Hence Learn 1. The judgments of God upon sinful Cities and Incorporations use to be most terrible and exemplary there being in them a confluence of many mercies and so of many provocations powerful examples to sin and bold despising of warnings which provoketh God to make them ensamples of much wrath Turning the Cities of Sodom and Gomorra into ashes condemned with a total and singular overthrow as the word signifieth making them ensamples c. 2. The sins of reasonable creatures provoke the Lord to write His displeasure not only upon the persons of the sinners but also upon the sinlesse and unreasonable creatures which they abuse to His dishonour for here the Cities comprehending both the persons of the sinners and all the plantation store and pleasant things of Sodom are burnt to ashes and condemned with an overth●●● 3. However error or heresie be often looked upon with more charity and lesse abhorrency than profane practices Yet shall not the judgment of Hereticks and their followers be inferiour to the judgment of the vilest of men that ever lived for God's judgment upon Sodom is here brought in as an ensample and pledge of His wrath to come upon all the ungodly amongst whom false teachers and their followers are mainly eyed as is clear by considering the connexion betwixt the third Verse and this 4. However sins and judgments in respect of their special nature and circumstance may vary in several times Yet the desert of every sin and the exactnesse of Divine Justice remaining still th● same former judgments of what sort soever executed upon any kind of sinners are certain pledges of the same wrath or the like for substance to come upon all that walk contrary to the Truth and Will of God though they were never so free of these special sins that formerly did procure that wrath Therfore is this instance of Gods judgment upon the Sodomites as also the two former brought in here as