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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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But we see he vsed no such speech but as it pleased the Lord to vse these meanes in restoring him to health so he with all thankfulnes vsed the meanes and was restored vnto health Let vs therefore know that it is the Lord onely that deliuereth from death and restoreth vnto life and health and that this he doth sometimes without meanes and most commonly by meanes Let vs therefore in the bed of our sicknesse call vpon the Lord and let vs not neglect the meanes which he hath ordeined for the recouerie of our health Let vs onely trust in the Lord and let vs know that if the meanes be helpfull vnto vs it is because of the Lord his blessing vpon them He blesseth the meanes and therefore we are healed by the meanes so that he healeth and therefore we are healed Now what is the cause wherefore the Lord hauing visited vs with sicknesse doth againe raise vs from the bed of our sicknesse and restore vs vnto health This is not for any thing in our selues but for his owne mercies sake as the Apostle plainely sheweth when he saith but God had mercy on him for it is as if he had said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I gather this note that restoring vnto health is a mercy of the Lord. Which is farther proued vnto vs by that song or psalme of thanksgiuing which Ezechias made after his restoring vnto health where he saith Esay 38.17 Behold for felicitie I had bitter griefe but it was thy pleasure to deliuer my soule from the pit of corruption It was thy pleasure or it was thy loue to deliuer my soule c where that is ascribed to Gods loue whence his mercy floweth which in our Apostle is ascribed vnto Gods mercy So that restoring vnto health is a louing mercy of the Lord. What shall we say then When wicked and vngodly men are restored vnto health is this a louing mercy of the Lord towards them Yes surely ●or albeit so their sinne and consequently their iudgement be increased yet this not comming from this mercy of lengthning their daies but from their owne corrupt nature we are to account that health and life and wealth and whatsoeuer else they haue are temporall mercies of the Lord vpon them Howbeit the mercies of the Lord in restoring his children vnto health and in restoring the wicked vnto health are much different His mercy wherein he restoreth the wicked vnto health is a generall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon all men proceeding from such a loue as whereby he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust But his mercy wherein he restoreth his children vnto health is a speciall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon his children proceeding from that loue wherewithall he loueth vs in Christ Iesus by that the wicked are only restored vnto bodily health by this the children of God are so restored vnto bodily health that farther in soule they are more quickned then before by that the iudgement of the wicked is increased for that they abuse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored vnto the dishonor of God by this Gods name is more glorified in his children for that they vse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored to the praise of the glory of Gods grace In a word by that the wicked are made more inexcusable by this the children of God are made more fruitfull in good works and more assured of Gods loue Albeit then it be a mercy of the Lord both to the godly and likewise to the vngodly that they are restored vnto health for that the Lord might in iustice haue suffered his rod to lie longer vpon them if he had dealt with them in weight and measure yet is it such a speciall mercy proceeding from such a speciall loue which hee vouchsafeth vnto his children in restoring them to health as that the wicked and vngodly haue no part or portion at all therein Is it then such a speciall mercy vnto Gods children that they are restored vnto health Were not death rather a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto them or had not death then beene a speciall mercy unto Epaphroditus Surely it cannot be denied but that it is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children if when he hath exercised them with his rod and prepared them by sicknesse vnto himselfe he take them by death out of the miseries of this life and translate them into the kingdome of his Sonne Ap. 14.13 For so saith the Spirit Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord and why for they rest from their labours and their works follow them They rest from their labors What is that that is by death they are deliuered and freed from such griefes and sorowes and labours and troubles and reuilings and persecutions and hatreds and other manifold calamities wherevnto this life is subiect yea from that grieuious yoke and heauie bondage of sinne which made the Apostle to crie Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death Againe their works followe them What is that That is their good deeds which they did in the the loue of God and in the loue of his truth after death acompanie them and they receiue that crowne of glory which the Lord in mercie hath promised to all them that loue and feare him walke in his waies So that whether we respect the end of wretched miseries or the perfect fruition of euerlasting happinesse which the children of God haue by death it cannot be denied but death is an especiall mercy of the Lord vnto them And in these respects death then had been a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto Epaphroditus and in these respects I doubt not it was that Paul desired in the former chapter to be dissolued and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 euen that hee might bee freed from the miseries of this life and that hee might bee ioyned with his head Christ Iesus to raigne with him in his kingdome for euer in the time appointed of the Lord. But as death so likewise life and restoring vnto health is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children because so they are made farther instruments of his glory who hath restored them vnto health For being restored vnto health both they consider the mercifull goodnes towards them and so breake out into his praises who hath done great things for them Esay 38.18 whereas the graue cannot confesse the Lord neither death can praise him but the liuing the liuing as saith Ezechias they confesse him and sing praises vnto his name againe being restored vnto health they consider that the Lord hath reserued them for his farther glory to be manifested in them or by them and therefore their studie and care is so to lead their liues as that Gods name may be glorified in
them and by them A good nature yee know reioyceth in euery opportunitie that is giuen him whereby he may shew himselfe thankfull and dutifull though it be to his trouble and cost Euen so the children of God though this life be full of trouble and griefe yet when their health is restored and their daies lengthned they reioyce in the opportunitie that God hath giuen them to doe good in the Church or in the common-weale and are carefull therein to shew themselues both thankfull and dutifull vnto their God For answer then vnto the point in man we are to consider briefly these two things the good of himselfe and the good of others vnto the glory of God In respect of the good of himselfe death is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto euery childe of God because then they rest from their labours and their workes follow them And therefore the Apostle said it is best of all to be loosed and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 But in respect of others and of the glory of God it is a speciall mercy of God vnto his children to be restored vnto health because so they are made farther instruments of his glory and of the good either of Church or of Common-wealth And therefore the Apostle addeth 24. neuerthelesse to abide in the flesh is more needfull for you Albeit then death had been a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto Epaphroditus in respect of the good of himselfe yet in respect of the Church at Philippi it was a speciall mercy of the Lord as our Apostle here saith that he was restored vnto health Neither yet would I so here be vnderstood as if I thought or taught that it is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children to be restored vnto health onely in respect of the good of others and not at all in respect of the good of themselues for albeit death bee so a speciall mercy of God vnto them in respect of the good of themselues for that thereby they are freed from the troubles of this life and receiued into euerlasting ioy and blisse yet is health also and life a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto them euen in respect of the good of themselues because the oftener they passe through the fire the more they are purified and made the finer gold the more they are boulted and sifted the finer flower they will be Albeit therefore by life they haue moe troubles yet because by troubles they are made more glorious therefore is life and restoring vnto health a speciall mercy of God vnto his children not only in respect of others good but in respect also of the good of themselues Are then both death and recouerie of health speciall mercies of the Lord vnto his children If then we be the children of God let not our hearts be troubled nor feare in the bed of our sicknesse If it please the Lord by death then to cut off our dayes this let vs know that in mercy towards vs he doth it that so we may not see the euils that are to come that so we may haue rest from all our labours and from all the troubles of this life and that so wee may be euer with our head Christ Iesus and haue the full fruition of those ioyes which eye hath not seene neither eare hath heard nor hath entred into the heart of man to thinke of And againe if it please the Lord to restore vs vnto health let vs know that in mercy likewise he doth it that so we may confesse his name and sing praises vnto him in the land of the liuing that so wee may be further instruments of his glory in doing good vnto others either in in the Church or in the Common-wealth and that so being further tried wee may be further purified to returne as fine gold out of the fire Hath any of vs then cause to mourne for them that doe already sleepe in the Lord Let vs mourne but not as men without hope for the Lord hath had mercy on them and in his mercy towards them hath deliuered them out of prison into a most glorious libertie and hath brought them from a most troublesome sea of miseries vnto the most happy hauen of euerlasting blessednesse Againe hath any of vs beene restored from sicknesse vnto health Let vs remember that the Lord herein hath had mercy on vs as hee had on Epaphroditus For this mercy let vs shew our selues thankfull vnto the Lord and our thankfulnesse vnto the Lord let vs testifie vnto the world by walking worthy of this mercy He hath reserued vs vnto his further glory Let vs glorifie God both in our bodies and in our spirits for they are Gods Let vs be faithfully and painfully and carefully occupied in the workes of our calling whatsoeuer it be vnto the glory of our God And in particular as this time requireth as God hath had mercy on vs by restoring vs vnto health and bringing vs from the gates almost of death vnto life so let vs take pitie and compassion on our poore distressed brethren and by our morsels of bread and other releefe let vs saue their liues from death As our liues were precious in Gods sight so let their liues be precious in our sight who happily are as deare vnto God as wee are For know this that blessed are they that consider the poore and needie c. Psal 41.1.2.3 And not on him onely but on mee also Wee haue heard of Gods mercy on Epaphroditus in restoring him vnto health which was both a worke of the Lord and a worke wherein the Lord shewed his mercy on Epaphroditus Now see the riches and the bountifulnesse of Gods mercy herein for in restoring him vnto health Gods mercy was not shewed on him alone but on the Apostle Paul also The note which hence I gather is this that in the mercies of the Lord vpon his children there is oftentimes a blessing not for them alone in particular but for others of his children also So sometimes hee sheweth mercy on the childe and kee●●h him aliue for his parents sake to be their staffe of comfort in their old age and againe sometimes he sheweth mercy vpon parents and keepeth them aliue for their childrens sake to bring them vp in the feare of God and in the knowledge of his will So likewise sometimes he sheweth mercy on the Pastor and from sicknesse restoreth him to health for his peoples sake both that they may be kept safe from scattering by the Wolfe and that they may bee taught in the wayes of the Lord and againe sometimes he sheweth mercy on the people for their Pastors sake lest that punishment which should iustly light vpon them should bring too much sorrow vpon him So we reade that he shewed mercy vnto that good King Ezechias being sicke vnto death 2 Reg. 20.1 in restoring him vnto health neither vnto him alone 7. but euen therein likewise he shewed mercy vnto the
thy heart vnto thy God and how soule-rauisht thou art with the loue of thy Christ by meditation in the word consider I say and see these things and hereby thou shalt see whether thou dost truly reioyce in the Lord. Ioh. 15.11 These things saith our Sauiour Christ I haue spoken vnto you that my ioy might remaine in you and that your ioy might be full If then thus we be affected toward the word of Christ that we long and thirst thereafter euen as the chased heart after the water brookes if wee finde in it such peace and comfort and contentation of soule if through it we belieue in Christ though we see him not and in his promises if we loue him reioyce in him with ioy vnspeakable and glorious this is a certaine effect and so a sure proofe of our reioycing in the Lord. Nay if wee haue a good measure of this reioycing in and through the word though not such complement as we haue spoken of yet euen this is a sure argument of our reioycing in the Lord for then alone shall this reioycing be fully perfect when wee shall see him face to face and when wee shall know euen as wee are knowne not in part onely Another effect of this reioycing in the Lord is that it causeth vs to reioyce in tribulations in afflictions in tentations euen in death and in the panges and paines thereof Consider then and see how thou art affected in the day of thy trouble what comfort thou findest in thy soule when in the world thou dost suffer afflictions what ioy thou findest in thine inner man when thine outward man is compassed about with sorowes consider I say and see these things and therby thou shalt also see whether indeed truly thou dost reioyce in the Lord for as the Apostle saith by Christ wee reioyce in tribulations knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience Rom. 5 3. and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed If then when wee suffer afflictions in the world we can be of good comfort because our Christ hath ouercome the world if when wee are reuiled and persecu●ed and all manne● of euill words are spoken against vs falsly for Christ his sake wee can reioyce and be glad for that reward that is laid vp for vs in heauen if in the sorrowes of death wee can patiently wait for the Lord and gladly desire to be loosed and to bee with Christ this is a certaine effect and so a sure proofe of our reioycing in the Lord for therefore are wee not ouer come of sorrowes in the middest of troubles because of that our reioycing in the Lord which is within vs and which no man can take from vs. A third effect of thi● reioycing in the Lord is that it causeth vs to count all things losse and dung in comparison of Christ so that wee seaze him and possesse him not of a part alone of our reioycing but of our whole reioycing which is the effect spoken of in this chapter as hereafter wee shall perceiue Consider then and see whether thy reioycing be entire in thy Christ whether thou canst finde any sound ioy but in thy Christ whether thou stand so fast as that nothing shall take away any part of thy reioycing in thy Christ and giue it to any other consider I say and see these things and thereby also thou shalt see whether thou reioycest truly in the Lord. When many of Christ his Disciples went backe he said vnto the twelue Will yee also goe away I●hn 6.67 68. Then Simon Peter answered him Master to whom shall wee goe Thou hast the words of eternall life If then we whosoeuer reioyce in other things yet wee reioyce in Christ Iesus if wee cleaue stedfastly vnto him knowing that there is no sound ioy without him if wee make him both the deskant and the dittie of our song and the whole matter of our reioycing this is also a certaine effect and sure proofe of our reioycing in the Lord for by our reioycing in him wee die vnto all other ioyes knowing that there is no sound ioy but in him Let vs remember what great things hee hath done for vs and what cause we haue to reioyce in his holy name He that gaue him to vs and him to death for vs he hath together with him giuen vs all things also Let vs therefore reioyce in him and let our reioycing in him shew it selfe by our reioycing in and through the word by our reioycing in all our tribula●ions and afflictions and by dying vnto all other ioyes which are without him In him is sound ioy and in him is all ioy if we beleeue in him wee will reioyce in him if we reioyce ioyce in him wee shall not feare death but when death comes we shall desire to be loosed and to be with Christ LECTVRE XLIX PHILIP 3. Vers 1.2 It grieueth me not to write the same things vnto you and for you it is a safe thing Beware of dogs beware c. IT grieueth me not c. The Apostle thought that thus the Philippians might conceiue and thinke with themselues when you were with vs and taught vs and preached vnto vs Christ Iesus you ceased not to warne vs of f●lse teachers such as would seeke to seduce vs from that truth which you taught vs and we haue beene diligent so to doe neither haue we giuen place to any of their doctrinea And therefore you needed not to haue troubled your selfe this admonition needed not to vs. In these words therefore the Apostle meeteth with this and excuseth the matter and telleth them that for him it was no griefe or trouble at all to him to write the same things vnto them which before he had taught them by word of mouth and for them he telleth them that it was a sure and safe thing for them to be often admonished of false teachers th●t so they might be the more warie of them Now before wee proceede any farther let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our vse and instruction 1. In that the Apostle beats so often vpon that which he thought was so good and so profitable for them to heare vrging and pressing euen the selfe same things both by word and also by writing Hence we that are Ministers of the Gospell may learne this lesson not to be grieued to teach them that heare vs often the same things but as we perceiue the things whereof we speake to be good and profitable to them that heare vs so to goe ouer them and ouer them and not to leaue them till they may make some good impression in them There must be precept vpon precept as the Prophet speaketh Esay 28.10 precept vpon precept line vnto line line vnto line there a litle and there a litle we must tell them one thing oftentimes and beat vpon the same thing so long till at length they may catch some hold of it For
appeareth that their ioy is not Christian because it is not constant but ebbeth and floweth according to the ebbe and floud of aduersitie and prosperitie What shall we say then when the Lord afflicteth vs with pouertie sickenesse and the like crosses must we reioyce in the Lord Yea verily 1. Sam. 2.6.7 for it is the Lord that killeth and maketh aliue that woundeth and healeth that bringeth to the graue and raiseth vp that maketh poore and maketh rich that bringeth low and exalteth Amos 3.6 There is no euill in the Citie which the Lord hath not done No euill that is no crosse or affliction no plague or punishment which he sendeth not And whatsoeuer crosse or affliction it is vnto his children it is but either a probation that the triall of their faith being much more precious then gold that perisheth may be found to their praise and honour and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ such as was Iobs affliction or else it is a fatherly correction that being chastened of the Lord 2. Sam. 12.14 they may not be condemned with the world such as was the death of Dauids child for Dauids sin and such as was the weakenesse and sickenesse and death of many of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11 30. for eating and drinking vnworthily at the Lords Table Are then our crosses of pouertie sickenesse or whatsoeuer they be from God Then are they good and we are to reioyce in them For all things fall out for the best for those that loue and feare him Are they for the triall of our faith My brethren saith Iames James 1.2 count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into diuerse tentations and trialls c. Are they to correct and chastice vs If we endure chastening Hebr. 12.7 God offereth himselfe vnto vs as vnto sonnes for whom he loueth he chasteneth O but sometimes he shutteth vs euen vp in despaire and infidelitie how shall we then reioyce in the Lord I demand then Dost thou know it and lothe it and long to be brought againe into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Thou hast good cause to reioyce in the Lord for he hath onely hid his face from thee for a while that he may haue mercie on thee for euer And what if thy faith or hope be but as a graine of Mustard seed what if being as it were couered vnder the ashes they seeme not to be Christ Iesus is most plentifull to helpe them that are most weake and he is all-sufficient to supply all wants If any seede of God be there in thy weakenesse he will perfite his praise Yea but in that our Sauiour pronounceth a blessing vpon them that mourne Matt. 5.4 it appeareth that we are not alwayes to reioyce Not so neyther for euen then when we sigh and mourne for the affliction we haue in the world we are to reioyce in the Lord and to be of good comfort in Christ Iesus because he hath ouercome the world euen then when we mourne through a sence of Gods iudgements we are to reioyce in his tender mercies that he deales not with vs after our deseruings euen then when we mourne in the body because of affliction we are to reioyce in our soules because of our strong consolation in Christ Iesus and because our light affliction in the body causeth vnto vs a far most excellent and an eternall weight of glorie And therefore our Sauiour in the same place where he saith Blessed are they that mourne exhorteth also to reioyce and be glad in persecution for that great is our reward in heauen Let this then teach vs to take heed how we murmure against the Lord for pouertie sickenesse or any crosse whatsoeuer They are from the Lord whatsoeuer they be and if we be his children they are onely eyther for the triall of our faith and patience that patience hauing her perfect worke we may be perfect and entire lacking nothing or else as a louing correction of a mercifull father that we may be reclaimed from the wickednesse of our wayes And if we do not now reioyce in the Lord when he seemeth thus to hide his face from vs certainly whatsoeuer shew we made before of reioycing in the Lord we plaied but the hypocrites Howsoeuer therefore looking vnto our selues vnto our sins vnto our infirmities vnto our afflictions vnto the world we may sigh and mourne yet let vs reioyce in the Lord. We are not bid to reioyce in our selues Nay in our selues we shal be sure to haue cause enough of mourning We must therefore go out of our selues vnto the Lord and we must reioyce in him We must looke vnto him and remember that he is good and therefore whatsoeuer he doth is good that he is Almightie aod therefore can raise vs out of the dust of death and set vs with the Princes of the earth that he is mercifull and therefore will not suffer the rod of the vngodly to rest on the lot of the righteous And againe we must remember that he was poore that we might be made rich in him that he was weake that we might be made strong in him that he was tempted that he might be able to succour them which are tempted What cause therefore soeuer of mourning there be in our selues let vs looke out of our selues and let vs reioyce in him alwayes If he blesse vs then we thinke and yeeld easily that we haue cause to reioyce in the Lord and if he crosse vs with any plague or trouble then we haue also cause to reioyce in him because it is for our good and his owne glorie Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes LECTVRE LXXIX PHILIP 4. Verse 4. Againe I say reioyce 5. Let your patient mind be knowne to all men The Lord is at hand THese words are as we heard the last day an exhortation vnto the Philippians to reioyce not as the world doth but to reioyce in the Lord not with a momentanie and flitting ioy but alwayes both in weale and in woe not vnaduisedly made or about a light and easie matter but seriously made and about a matter very needfull and yet hard to be perswaded and therefore doubled Againe I say reioyce in the Lord alwayes Now see how it pleaseth the Lord that as the Apostle comes againe and againe vnto this holy exhortation and leaues it not with once or twice but euen the third time also exhorteth them to reioyce in the Lord so I should come vnto you againe and againe euen three seuerall times with the same exhortation to reioyce in the Lord. Againe saith the Apostle I say reioyce euen in the Lord alwayes for that is to be added and resumed to the former place From which doubling and redoubling of this exhortation I obserue both how needfull and withall how hard a matter it is to perswade this constant reioycing in the Lord to reioyce in the Lord alwayes For to this end doth the holy Ghost often in
vs. And thus also and for these causes I take it he is called in the Epistle to the Romanes Rom. 8.9 and the spirit of the Sonne in the Epistle to the Galathians But to omit many things which might here be noted vpon this occasion Gal. 4.6 that the spirit is called the spirit of Christ Iesus because they are not things specially here intended by the spirit the principall thing to be noted is that the Apostle saith that he knew that this which he suffered by his bands and by the practises of the wicked should turne to his saluation by the helpe of Gods spirit by whom the Father and the Sonne worke in vs and for vs. Whence I obserue the true cause indeed whereby the sufferings and the wrongs of Gods children turne to their saluation and that is by the helpe of the spirit of Iesus Christ The Lord by his spirit helpeth them and turneth their heauinesse into ioy and their sufferings into the quiet fruit of righteousnes in the heauenly places Thou Lord saith the Prophet hast brought my soule out of the graue Psal 30.3.11 thou hast kept my life from ●●em that goe downe to the pit thou hast turned my heauinesse ●●to ioy and thou hast loosed my sackcloth and girded me with ●●adnes Where the Prophet sheweth that it is the Lord ●hat helpeth vs and deliuereth vs when troubles compasse 〈◊〉 about that it is the Lord that lifts vs vp from the gates ●f death and putteth an end vnto all our troubles that it 〈◊〉 the Lord that wipeth all teares from our eyes and turneth ●ur heauinesse into ioy And so Peter Act. 12.17 being deliuered out ●f prison through the praiers of the Church professed that ●he Lord had brought him out of prison Through their ●raiers he was deliuered but it was the Lord that deliuered ●im their praiers were the meanes but the Lord was the ●uthor of his deliuerance Againe Behold saith our bles●ed Sauiour it shall come to passe Apoc. 2.10 that the deuill shall cast some ●f you into prison that yee may be tried and yee shall haue tribu●ation ten dayes be thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue ●hee the crowne of life Which words were spoken imme●iatly to the Church of Smyrna but so that they serue also ●or our vse Wherein the godly are both warned of perse●ution and affliction which they are to looke for in this ●ife and perswaded likewise by sundry motiues not to ●eare them Behold it shall come to passe that some of you ●hall be cast into prison here is the aduertisement of such ●fflictions as they are to suffer But the exhortation is feare ●one of those things which ye shall suffer And the motiues to perswade vs not to feare them follow As first who is the contriuer of all the persecutions and troubles which we suffer Euen the diuell the Deuill shall cast you into prison Hee alwaies kindles the fires of persecutions against the Church as also it is said in another place Apoc. 12.15 that he casts out of his mouth water after the woman like vnto a floud He blowes the bellowes vnto all the practises of the wicked Secondly what is the end wherefore we suffer affliction and trouble not for any harme vnto vs but that wee may bee tried That the tryall of our faith being much more precious then gold that perisheth though it be tryed with fire may be found to our praise 1 Pet. 1.7 and honour and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ as the Apostle Peter speaketh Thirdly what is the durance of our afflictions We shall haue tribulation ten daies a while a short while an euening doth heauinesse last and then ioy commeth in the morning 2 Cor. 4.17 as also the Apostle saith that our afflictions are but light and but for a moment in comparison of that farre most excellent and eternal weight of glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Lastly what is the reward of our afflictions The reward which our blessed Sauiour in mercy promiseth is this that he will giue vnto vs the crown● of life Iam. 1.12 As also Iames saith Blessed is the man that endureth tentation for when hee is tryed hee shail ●eceaue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to all that loue him Whatsoeuer then our afflictions be they turne ye see to our saluation by the helpe of the Lord. Sometimes in the day of trouble he breaketh the cords of the wicked and deliuereth vs and sometimes hee suffereth them that hate vs to haue their wils ouer vs but suffereth vs not to bee tempted aboue that wee able but giueth the issue with tentation that wee may bee able to beare it And alwaies so hee prouideth that in the end he turneth our troubles to our saluation He doth it euen he alone doth it and none but he can doe it A point wherein we will all of vs seeme very loath but to be throughly perswaded For who is he that will not seeme to giue full assent vnto that truth which hath beene deliuered that it is the Lord that helpeth vs in our troubles and that he turneth them to our best But tell me I pray you whence is it that in the day of trouble we faint and droope and hang downe the head Whence is it that when we are persecuted reuiled slandered oppressed imprisoned and hated of men we sinke vnder the burthen and are ready to fall away from the hope of our good profession Whence is it that in the dayes of pouertie sicknesse or other aduersitie wee are oppressed with heauinesse and hardly will be comforted Is it not for that we haue not yet learned this lesson that all this shall turne to our saluation by the helpe of God Yes surely the taking out of this lesson would rid vs of all such passions when any troubles doe assault vs. ●●r how could the things cast vs downe which wee know ●ould turne to our saluation by the helpe of God Let vs ●●w learne it and let it teach vs to feare none of those ●●ngs which we doe or shall suffer but seeing by his helpe 〈◊〉 shall turne to our saluation let vs abide faithfull vnto the ●●th Againe let this teach vs in the day of our trouble to lift vp ●●r eyes vnto the Lord. Let others say as it is in the Pro●●et I will lift vp mine eyes vnto the hils Psal 121.1 from whence commeth 〈◊〉 helpe That is let others looke for helpe from the arme 〈◊〉 flesh but let vs say with the Prophet Our helpe standeth 〈◊〉 the name of the Lord which hath made both Heauen and ●●rth Let others flie vnto other meanes and neuer looke ●●to the Lord when troubles doe assault them but let vs ●●vse other meanes that principally we look vnto the Lord ●●d put our whole trust in him For by his helpe whatso●●er is said or done against vs shall turne to our saluation ●●d let this
it would and should As then it is better to be out of prison and to liue at libertie so is it better to die and to be with Christ than to liue in the body 5. Because in the body wee only know in part beleeue in part loue in part liue in part ioy in part and are blessed in part with all such graces of the spirit but when wee remoue out of the body then that which is in part shall be abolished As then it is better to know to loue to liue to ioy c. perfectly than only but in part so is it better to be loosed and to be with Christ where all these shall be perfected than to liue in the body where they are neuer but in part Lastly to passe ouer the rest in silence because it is better to be with God than with men in heauen than in earth in a state freed from sorrow sinne and temptation than in a state subiect to them all Job 14.1 for man that is borne of a woman is but of short continuance and full of trouble as Iob speaketh yea his life is as a warfare 7.1 Matt. 6.34 as the same Iob speaketh and as our Sauiour speaketh euery day of his life bringeth griefe enough with it neither hath his griefe an end till his life haue an end But blessed are the dead that die in the Lord Ap. 14.13 euen so saith the spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them They rest from their labours inasmuch as all teares are wiped from their eyes no more death nor sorrow nor crying nor paine doth take hold of them and their workes follow them inasmuch as they are had in remembrance before God when all other things of our life leaue vs and forsake vs. I spare to enlarge this point further at this time Ye may easily conceiue what might be added Let this serue for a iust reproofe of them that are vnwilling to die For come now and let vs reason the case together What man is there among you that if hee were clothed only with ragged and torne and patched and worne and bad cloathes would not be willing to be vncloathed of them and to be cloathed with better And what else is this mortall and corruptible body but as ragged and rotten cloathes wherewith wee are cloathed Why should wee not then be willing to be shifted of those cloathes of this mortall and corruptible body and to bee cloathed with our house which is from heauen euen with incorruption and immortalitie Againe what man is there among you that if hee were in prison would not be willing to be set at libertie or being in a place where he is but a stranger would not be willing to be at home And what else is this sinfull bodie but as a prison of the soule wherein it is so shut that it hath no libertie till it returne vnto him that gaue it Or what else is this world but as a place wherein wee wander as pilgrims and haue no abiding Citie Why should wee not then be willing to remoue out of this prison of the bodie and to bee receiued into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God or to loose anchor from this land wherein wee are but strangers and by death to saile towards heauen where is our home and our abiding Citie Where should the members ioy to be but with their head Where should the spouse desire to bee but with her husband Where should man whose breath is in his nostrils delight to bee but with him that is his life to see him as hee is and to liue in his continuall presence Surely whosoeuer thou art that art vnwilling to die thou doest not yet conceiue nor beleeue the blessed estate of them that die in the Lord thou hast not yet throughly learned this lesson that Christ is the husband of the Church that Christ is the life of his body that in the presence of Christ there is fulnesse of ioy and life for euermore for then wouldest thou willingly desire with the Apostle to bee loosed and to bee with Christ which is farre the best If the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts were euen as one condition vnto them so that in their death there were indeed no difference or if after death there remained nothing but a fearefull expectation of iudgement then indeed thou haddest some reason to be vnwilling to die But now that Christ by death hath triumphed ouer death and made death vnto thee if thou belong vnto him a passage vnto life without death vnto ioy without sorrow vnto all blessednesse without any miserie why shouldest thou bee vnwilling to die Nay now a chip for death nay now most welcome death And so beloued let it be to euery one of vs. If wee belong vnto Christ there is no cause why wee should feare death and great cause there is why wee should embrace death Let vs therefore neuer feare death nor be vnwilling to die but whensoeuer the Lord his will is let vs be willing to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all LECTVRE XIX PHILIP 1. Verse 23. Desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all NOw to proceed Against this which hath beene said it may be obiected that as no man is to put asunder the things which God hath coupled together as the soule and the body so no man is to desire that the things which God hath coupled bee sundred and therefore no Christian is to desire to die Whereunto I answer that it is true that no Christian is to desire simply to die nor to die to this end only that he may be rid of the miseries of this life nor to die otherwise than when the Lord his will is but yet he may desire to die and to be with Christ to die to this end that hee may bee with Christ to die when the Lord his will is and when his death may be for his glory 1 Reg. 19.4 So it is to be vnderstood of Elias that he desired to die when he praied and said It is enough O Lord take my soule for I am no better than my fathers And so wee say that a Christian may desire to die when the Lord his will is not for that death in it selfe is to be desired but because he desireth to be with Christ So that the thing which a Christian desireth simply and in it selfe is to bee with Christ neither doth he otherwise desire to be loosed but that he may be with Christ and so wee say he may desire to be loosed when the Lord his will is And thus much for this which is the chiefe point in these words whence ye see that a Christian in respect of himselfe may desire rather to die than to liue Other things there are which may not vnfruitfully bee noted in these words which I will only briefly touch
good and so may he ioy in the continuance of his life i● he looke vnto the end wherefore it is continued Whatsoeuer therefore we be let vs remember that we are to liue vnto him that hath called vs out of darknes into light and in whatsoeuer perill our life is preserued let vs remember that it is continued for the glory of God and the good of our ●rethren And as we are by our calling Ministers or others ● let vs labour that our abode in the flesh and continuance ● life may be to the furtherance and ioy and comfort of ●ur brethren in euery thing that is good And let this bee ●oken touching the end wherefore the life of Christians in ●enerall and of Ministers in particular is preserued and ●ontinued viz. for the glory of God and the good of his Church Which as it serueth for the instruction of all to ●each vs euer to looke vnto the end wherefore our life is ●ontinued vpon earth so for the reproofe of such as whose ●●fe doth no good and for the comfort of such whose life ●rues for the good of the Church Now followeth the other end wherefore the Apostle ●ith he should abide and with them all continue viz. that ●hey seeing the mightie power of Christ Iesus in deliuering ●im from the mouth of the Lion from the crueltie of Nero ●ight more abundantly reioyce in him in whom already ●hey d●d reioyce for sauing him from death and bringing ●im againe vnto them Whence first I doe obserue the great ●eioycing which ought to be in the people for their Pastors ●eliuerance out of perill and for the continuance of his life ●mongst them their ioy should euen abound in Christ Ie●us as in his great blessing and mercy vpon them So wee ●eade that when Peter was deliuered out of prison by an Angell there was great ioy among the Christians which were ●ssembled in the house of Mary Iohn Marke his mother Act. 12.12 ●nsomuch that it is said of the maid that came to the doore when Peter knocked at the entrie doore 14. that she opened not the entrie doore for gladnesse as one so surprised with ioy that ●he could not rest till she had told it and when the doore was opened and the rest saw it is said of them 16 that they were astonied partly through wondering at and partly ●hrough reioycing for his deliuerance And so should they that are taught in the word abundantly reioyce when their Teacher is freed from trouble or danger and his life or libertie is continued vnto them for whether it be life or libertie that is granted vnto him it is for their sakes o●● whom the Lord hath made him ouerseer and there●●●● they are to honour him and to reioyce for him as p●●●ued for them and the furtherance of their faith Such then as grieue at the life or libertie of their faithfull Pastors such as practise what possibly they can against the life and libertie of their godly Teachers such as wash and watch euery aduantage against them to get their mouths stopt or depriued of their ministerie such as reioyce in their trouble imprisonment or banishment let such I say and all such like looke vnto it whether they belong to the sheepe-fold of Christ Iesus Luk. 10.16 He that heareth you beareth a● saith our Sauiour Christ and he that despiseth you des●●● mee To refuse then to heare the Ministers of Iesus Christ is much because it is to refuse to heare Iesus Christ likewise to despise the Ministers of Iesus Christ is very much because it is to despise Iesus Christ but what then is it ●o practise mischiefe against the Ministers of Iesus Christ 〈◊〉 reioyce in the losse of their life or libertie and to band men selues against them Surely this is plainly to bewray themselues not to belong to Christ Iesus As for vs if wee will know that wee belong vnto Christ Iesus let vs reioyce in the life and libertie of our faithful● Teachers The life and libertie of Gods faithfull Minister cause ioy in the hearts of them that belong vnto the Lo●● Let vs therefore by this token discerne what we are good or bad Gospellers The second thing which hence I obserue is the effect which the examples of the power and goodnesse of Christ Iesus in the deliuerance of his Saints out of their troubles ought to worke in vs such examples should confirme vs daily more and more in that reioycing which wee haue 〈◊〉 Christ Iesus For when we plainly see as in a spectacle before our eyes by the deliuerance of his Saints out of their troubles that our King and our Sauiour beholdeth vs from his holy heauens lookes vpon our sufferings our wrongs takes our matters into his owne hands auengeth vs of o● enemies and deliuers vs out of the will of them that hate 〈◊〉 this should adde much vnto that reioycing which before ●ee had and cause vs farre more abundantly to reioyce in ●hrist Iesus because thus wee see that which before we be●●eued that our King liueth and raigneth and hath all ●●wer giuen vnto him both in heauen and in earth But how little such examples worke with vs doth ap●eare by our little reioycing in Christ Iesus All our reioy●ng is in the vanities and pleasures and fooleries of this ●●e neither doe wee euer vouchsafe to consider the power ●●d the mercy which the Lord sheweth in his Saints And ●●erefore wee reioyce not as wee should but as wee should ●ot O let vs consider the great things which our Iesus hath ●one and still doth for vs. Let vs not be so negligent as to ●asse ouer or to forget the things wherein hee sheweth his ●ower and his mercy towards his Saints but let vs religi●usly regard and remember them that so we may haue our ●eioycing in Christ Iesus LECTVRE XXI PHILIP 1. Verse 27. Onely let your conuersation bee as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ that whether I come and see you or else be absent I may heare of your matters that yee continue in one spirit and in one minde fighting together through the faith of the Gospell HI●herto wee haue heard the Apostle his Exordium and his Narration Now that which followeth both in this chapter and in the rest of this Epistle is for the most part matter of exhortation A little in the third chapter hee furnisheth them with matter of doctrine against certaine false Teachers which were crept in amongst them But because they were well grounde●● the truth by his ministerie and Apostleship the spe●● thing wherein the rest of this Epistle is spent is exhorta●●● vnto a Christian life In this remainder of this chapter 〈◊〉 the Apostle setteth downe that generall exhortation vn●● Christian life which is indeed the great and maine exhortation whereof all the rest are but branches and secondly 〈◊〉 insisteth particularly in some of those things wherein th● life whereunto he exhorteth consisteth His generall exhortation is generally
dwelleth the loue of God in him As if the Apostle should haue said Whatsoeuer shew this man makes the loue of God dwels not in him neither he loueth God nor God loueth him Men and brethren what should more stirre you vp vnto this holy worke of releeuing of Gods poore Saints a thing so needfull now to be vrged and pressed what I say should more stirre you vp vnto it then this which hath already beene said It is a worke of Christ which Christ commandeth which hee loueth and liketh which Christ highly rewardeth and vnmercifulnesse to the poore he hateth and detesteth As euery man therefore wisheth in his heart so let him giue vnto the poore Saints not grudgingly or of necessitie for God loueth a cheerefull giuer 2 Cor. 9.7 If it be a worke of Christ it well beseemeth thee if thou be a Christian if he haue commanded it it stands thee vpon to obey it if he loue and like it thou hast great cause to moue thee to it if for his mercies sake he reward it thou hast great reason to be occupied in it and if he so hate the neglect of it it behoueth thee not to be negligent in it As therefore euery man hath receiued of the Lord so let him be ready to giue according to that he hath Hee that hath mercy on the poore Pro. 19.17 lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him that which hee hath giuen And blessed is hee saith Dauid Psal 41.1 that considereth the poore and needie the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble Consider what I say and the Lord giue you a ●ight vnderstanding in all things and fill your hearts full of all knowledge that yee may abound in euery good vnto the glory of God the Father to whom with the Sonne and the holy Ghost c. Laus omnis soli Deo THE THIRD CHAPTER LECTVRE XLVIII PHILIP 3. Vers 1.2 Moreouer my brethren reioyce in the Lord. It grieueth me not to write the same things vnto you and for you it is a sure c. THe holy Apostle hauing in the first chapter of this Epistle first signified his good minde towards the Philippians by retaining them in perfect memorie by his longing after them all from the very heart roote in Iesus Christ and by his praying for them and hauing afterward exhorted them that they should not shrinke for his imprisonment because thereby the Gospell was confirmed and not diminished In the second Chapter as we haue heard he first exhorted them vnto humility that putting apart all contention and vaine glory they would haue euen the same minde that was in Christ Iesus who being God humbled himselfe to be man and became obedient to the death euen the death of the Crosse and was therefore highly exalted c. 2. Hauing grounded certaine exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience as 1. That they would runne forward in that race of righteousnesse wherein God had freely placed them through Iesus Christ making an end of their saluation with feare and trembling and then that they would doe all things with their neighbours without murmuring and reasonings that they might be blamelesse and pure and the sonnes of God c. The Apostle I say hauing grounded these exhortations vpon that example of Christ his humilitie and obedience 2. For their comfort and confirmation against certaine false Apostles crept in amongst them hee both promised to send Timothy shortly vnto them and likewise that himselfe would shortly after that come vnto them and besides sent their Minister Epaphroditus presently vnto them Now in this 3. Chapter the Apostle instructeth the Philippians in the things wherein the false Apostles laboured to seduce them and so armeth the Philippians against them till his comming vnto them by confuting that false doctrine which they deliuered The doctrine which the false Apostles deliuered was that not Christ alone and faith in his name but circumcision also and the workes of the law were necessarie vnto iustification and saluation Which doctrine the Apostle doth at large confute in the Epistle to the Galathians because they had suffered themselues to be seduced and bewitched by it But here because the Philippians had manfully withstood it and giuen it no place amongst them the Apostle very briefly confuteth it and proueth that our righteousnesse is onely by Christ and faith in his name not at all by the works of the Law The principall parts of this Chap●er are three 1. He exhorteth them to beware of false Teachers verse 2. and instructeth them in that truth which the false Apostles gainesay vers 3. 2. The Apostle proposeth himselfe as an imbracer of that truth touching mans righteousnesse which they were to embrace à vers 4. ad 15. Lastly hee exhorteth them to embrace and hold fast the same truth with him and to walke as they haue him for an ensample from vers 15. to the end of the Chapter Now before he come to the handling of any of these principall parts 1. He setteth downe this exhortation reioyce in the Lord as a conclusion of that which went before as a ground of that which followeth 2. He excuseth h●mselfe for writing now the same things by epistle which before he had taught them by word of mouth That the exhortation is set downe partly by way of conclusion of that which he had spoken before may appeare by the entrance vnto it in that he saith Moreouer c. For it is as if the Apostle had thus said hitherto ye haue been full of heauines partly for my bonds and imprisonment Phil. 1.12.14 partly for Epaphroditus your minister his sicknes Now for my bonds they ●s I haue told you haue turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell inasmuch as many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bonds to speake the word and now so it is that I am in good hope shortly to be deliuered from my bonds and to come vnto you Again for Epaphroditus God hath had mercy vpon him and now he is returned vnto you in good and perfect health What therefore now remaineth my brethren but that ye be glad and reioyce in the Lord in the Lord I say whom before I haue described vnto you in that Lord who being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to be equall with God yet made himselfe of no reputation and tooke on him the forme of a seruant c. Reioyce for that there is no other cause but that ye should reioyce but reioice in the Lord who became man for you died for your sinnes rose againe for your iustification setteth at the right hand of God to make request for you vnto whom euery knee in that day shall bowe and confesse that he is the Lord reioyce in him Againe it is partly set downe as a ground of that which followeth as if the Apostle should thus haue said I haue already as in a glasse
we weane men from this worldly reioycing as much as we can What is then the reioycing which we teach As the Apostle saith of sorrow 2. Cor. 7.10 that there is a worldly sorrow which causeth death and a godly sorrow which causeth repentance vnto saluation so I say of reioycing that there is a worldly reioycing when men take more pleasure in the vanities of this life and the pleasures of sinne then in the things which belong vnto their peace which causeth death a godly reioycing when men reioyce in the Lord so that they put their whole confidence in him and count all things losse and dung in comparison of that reioycing which they haue in him which causeth confidence vnto saluation The reioycing then which we teach is not the worldly reioycing which the world teaches which causeth death but the godly reioycing which causeth confidence vnto saluation We say that ye may and that ye ought to reioyce in the Lord. So the holy Ghost often exhorteth vs to doe and so the godly haue alwayes done Be glad O ye righteous saith Dauid and reioyce in the Lord. Psal 32.12 And againe Let Israel reioyce in him that made him Psal 149.2 and let the children of Sion be ioyfull in their King Let him that reioyceth saith the Apostle out of the Prophet reioyce in the Lord. 2. Cor. 1.31 And in the former chapter My brethren saith the Apostle reioyce in the Lord. Esay 61.10 So did the Church in Esay saying I will greatly reioyce in the Lord and my soule shal be ioyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of saluation c. So did Mary saying Luke 1.47 My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit reioyceth in God my Sauiour So Peter giueth testimonie to the strangers to whom he wrote that they reioyced in the Lord with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Pet. 1.8 And so the godly haue alwayes reioyced in the Lord as in the onely rocke of their defence and strong God of their saluation And now see besides these exhortations and examples so to doe what great cause we haue to reioyce in the Lord and how litle cause there is to reioyce in any thing else for what haue we that we haue not from him or what want we which if we haue he must not supply Haue we peace in all our quarters and plenteousnesse in all our houses haue we a blessing in the fruit of our body in the fruit of our ground in the fruit of our cattel in the increase of our kine and in our flockes of sheepe are our wiues fruitfull as the vine and our children like the Oliue branches round about our tables haue we health strength foode rayment and other necessaries of this life Iames 1.17 And whence are all these things Euerie good giuing and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neyther shadowing by turning But to come nearer vnto the causes of Christian reioycing Doth the Spirit witnesse vnto our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Is the darkenesse of our vnderstandings lightned the frowardnesse of our wills corrected the corruption of our affections purged Do we feele in our selues the vertue of Christ his resurrection by the death of sinne and the life of God in our selues Are our soules fully assured of the free forgiuenes of our sinnes by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus dare we go boldly vnto the throne of grace and crie Abba which is Father Do we know that Death shall not haue dominion ouer vs and that Hell shall neuer be able to preuaile against vs Behold then what cause we haue of our reioycing in the Lord for abundance of spirituall blessings in heauenly things for our election in Christ Iesus vnto euerlasting life before the foundatiō of the world for our creation in time after his owne image in righteousnesse and true holinesse for our redemption by the bloud of Christ Iesus when we through sinne had defaced the image wherein we were created and sold our selues as bond slaues vnto Sathan for our vocation vnto the knowledge of the truth by the Gospel of Christ Iesus for our adoption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God for our iustification and tree forgiuenesse of our sinnes by the bloud of Christ Iesus for our sanctification by the Spirit of grace vnto some measure of righteousnesse and holinesse of life for our regeneration vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus and for the assured confidence which we haue of our glorification after this life with Christ Iesus who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie c. All graces of Gods Spirit and for them all such matter of reioycing in the Lord as may make our hearts dance for ioy and may rauish our soules with gladnesse And as we haue all things from the Lord that we haue whether for the body or for the soule for this life present or that that is to come so what is it that we want which he doth not supply Want we riches The Lord maketh poore 1. Sam. 2 7. and maketh rich and he is rich vnto all them that call vpon him faithfully Want we preferment Psal 75 6. Promotion cometh neyther from the East nor from the West nor yet from the South God is the Iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another Want we wisedome If any man lacke wisedome let him aske of God Iames 1.5 which giueth vnto all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him Want we patience in troubles That is the wisedome which Iames specially speaks of in the place mentioned wisedome patiently to endure whatsoeuer God laieth vpon vs which ye see God liberally giueth to them that lacke aske Want we comfort in our soules God is the God of patience and consolation Rom. 15.5 which comforteth vs in all our troubles and turneth our heauinesse into ioy as also himselfe saith saying I will turne their mourning into ioy Ierem. 31.13 and will comfort them and giue them ioy for their sorrowes Yea whatsoeuer it is that we want it is the Lord that must supply our wants He openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing with plenteousnes Psal 145.16 such as he best knoweth to be most meet for them and good for his glory 84.11 The Lord will giue grace and glory saith the Psalmist in another place and no good thing will he withhold from them that walke vprightly no good thing which he knoweth to be good for them and also good for his glorie Haue we then whatsoeuer blessings we haue from the Lord and doth the Lord supply whatsoeuer we want fo farre forth as he sees it to be expedient for vs and good for his owne glorie See then what cause we haue to reioyce in the
in the Lord alwayes both because by our reioycing which we haue in the Lord we stand against whatsoeuer otherwise might quell vs and because through the want thereof it is that wee fall and are vtterly ouercome whensoeuer stormes arise and troubles assault vs. And as thus it may appeare how needfull a thing it is that we reioyce in the Lord alwayes so it may easily also be seene how hardly we are perswaded to reioyce in the Lord always Euery man complaineth where his shoo pincheth him and euery man layes his hand vpon his sore But very few in such cases when the hand of the Lord is vpon them when they are humbled and brought low through oppression through any pl●gue or trouble can be brought vnto this to reioyce in the Lord. Nay tell one wicked and vngodly man when his troubles are multiplied and when his sorrowes are increased that he is to know that the Lord his hand is in all these that he is not to murmure against the Lord but to reioyce in the Lord doth he not say of them that thus speake vnto him that they are mad doth he not with indignation aske what cause he hath to reioyce in the Lord doth he not stil crie out vpon his crosses and miseries and vexations and paines and doth he not within a while belch out most impious blasphemies And hence it is that many with Iudas in such cases fall to despaire ●nd that many with him become their owne butchers Yea ●et the children of God themselues say whether their afflictions and their sorrowes do not sometimes sinke them so far that their soule euen almost refuseth comfort in the Lord very few like vnto Iob that mirrour of patience who when they heare of the losse of all their goods and of their seruants and of the death of their children can be content to frame themselues to the will of God and say Iob 1.21 Naked came I out of my ●others wombe and naked shall I returne againe the Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord Or when they are smitten with sores and boiles from the s●l● of their foote to the crowne of their head can with the sam● Iob comfort themselues and say What shall we receiue good at the hands of God and not receiue euil And yet this most rare patterne of patience into what sharpe fits of impatiencie did he sometimes breake out crying out in the bitternesse of his soule 3.3 4. c. and saying Let the day perish wherein I was borne and the night wherein it was said There is a man child conceiued c. And thus it fareth often with the deare children of God that they sinke so farre that their soule almost refuseth comfort in the Lord. Their sense and feeling of their paine and affliction is sometimes so great that they haue almost no sense or feeling of God Which yet I do not so speak as if the children of God might not be touched with sorrow and heauinesse for the crosses of this life for no doubt they may but to shew that sometimes they are so cast downe with heauinesse that it is a hard matter to reare them vp againe For as Iobs friends disputed against him so they against themselues that they are punished of God for their sins and iniquities and that therefore now he hath shut vp his louing kindnesse in displeasure And then they stand prying and looking into their sinnes and hardly can they be drawne to lift vp their eyes vnto the Lord that in him they may find comfort vnto their soules I wil not stand vpon the further enlarging of this point By this which hath bene spoken ye see how needful it is we should reioyce in the Lord alwaies and withall how hardly we are perswaded to reioyce in the Lord alwaies and consequently vpon what cause the Apostle doubled and redoubled this his exhortation Now this may first instruct vs in the merciful goodnesse of our God towards vs who in things so needfull for vs and whereunto we are so hardly drawne ceasseth not to stirre vp our dull minds and againe and againe to call them to our remembrance Esa 28.10 Precept vpon precept precept vpon precept line vnto line line vnto line here a litle and there a litle Euen as yong schollers are dealt withall so dealeth he with vs he goeth ouer and ouer the same lesson with vs and gladly he woul● beate it into vs. Secondly this may teach vs our dulnesse to conceiue and slacknesse to embrace the things that belong vnto our peace Such things must be doubled and redoubled vnto vs and ye● we will not learne them they must be often vrged and much beaten vpō and yet we wil not receiue instruction The Lord must euen draw vs vnto himselfe by his holy Spirit and yet we will not runne after him he must send his holy Prophets and Ministers vnto vs early and late and all litle enough to stirre vp our dull minds Thirdly this may teach vs to hold fast that reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus For is it so that the holy Apostle doth so often exhort vs to reioyce in the Lord alwaies is it so that it is so needful for vs to reioyce in the Lord alwaies that only by our reioycing in him we stand fast against whatsoeuer troubles and sorrowes and without it we are quite affright and vtterly ouercome of them is it so that we are so hardly drawne to reioyce in the Lord alwaies How are we then to hold fast that reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus euen so fast that nothing take it from vs Let vs therefore reioyce but let vs reioyce in the Lord let vs reioyce in him alwaies that so no man nay that nothing take from vs our reioycing in him A ioyfull heart maketh a cheerfull countenance and if the heart be ioyful in the Lord it cheeres the heart and quickens the soule howsoeuer the countenance be appalled Other ioyes in riches in honours in friends in the vanities of this life and in the pleasures of sinne haply haue their moment of time and their appearance of good but their time is but only a moment and their good but onely an appearance and outward semblance onely the reioycing in the Lord is the true and sound reioycing and which causeth good health vnto the soule Let vs therefore reioyce in the Lord and let vs reioyce in him alwaies not onely when he feedeth vs with the floure of wheate but when he giueth vs plenteousnesse of teares to drink For whether he blesse vs or crosse vs it is for our good and his glorie and therfore he is to be blessed in both Yea whatsoeuer crosses or sorows we suffer let that remembrance of Christ his blessed death and passion which this day we celebrate be sufficient to cause vs to reioyce in the Lord. For what are all our sufferings or sorrowes vnto those
to anger abundant in goodnes and truth reseruing mercie for thousands and not making the wicked innocent the most mightie God vnto whom al power is giuen in heauen and in earth who sitteth in heauen and beholdeth the earth and seeth whatsoeuer is done among the sonnes of men our Lord by right of creation in that he made vs of nothing when we were not our Lord in the right of redemption in that when we were bondslaues vnder hell death and damnation he payed the ransome of our redemption and freed vs from the bondage of sinne and Satan and our Lord in the right of soueraignty to rule and gouerne vs by his Spirits to saue and defend vs vnder his wings he is at hand neare about our paths and about our beds pitcheth his tents round about vs and giueth his Angels charge ouer vs he is at hand neare to behold our sufferings and our wrongs Exod. 3.9 as himselfe saith I haue seene I haue seene the affliction of my people which is in Egypt where●nto the Egyptians oppresse them Neare to heare vs when we call vpon him as himselfe saith Call vpon me in the day of trouble Psal 50.15 and I will heare thee and thou shalt glorifie me Neare to deliuer vs from the wrongfull dealings of men and therefore the Prophet prayeth vnto him O deliuer me from the wrongfull dealings of men and giue me not ouer vnto mine oppressours Neare to saue vs vnder his feathers in euery needefull time of trouble for so the Psalmist saith The Lord will be a defence for the oppressed Psal 9.9 euen a refuge in due time of trouble Hereof Iacob had experience when Laban persecuted him in that the Lord curbed Laban when he said vnto him Genes 31.24 Take heede that thou speake not to Iacob ought saue good Hereof Ioseph had experience in his danger by his brethren in that the Lord first by Reuben saued him that he was not slaine and after that he was sold made him Ruler of Pharaohs house and of all his substance Genes 37.41 Hereof the children of Israel had experience when Pharao oppressed thē in that the Lord Exod 3. when their crie for their bondage came vp vnto him deliuered them out of the house of bondage by the hands of Moses and Aaron Hereof Daniel and his companions had experience when they were traduced vnto the king in that the Lord shut the mouthes of the lions that they hurt not the one Dan. 6.22.3.27 and abated the heate of the fire that it had no power ouer the bodies of the other Hereof the Disciples of Christ had experience when they were cast into prison in that the Lord sent his Angell vnto them and deliuered them out of prison Acts 5.19 And hereof the children of God haue continuall experience in that the Lord helpes them to right when they suffer wrong feedeth them when they are hungrie Psal 146. looseth them when they are in prison giueth them sight when they are blinde raiseth them when they are fallen keepeth them if they be strangers relieueth them if they be fatherlesse or widdowes and maketh all their beds in their si●kenesse And hereupon Dauid resolued and said Psal 3.6.27.3.23.4 I will not be afraid though ten thousands of people beset me round about nay though an hoste of men were laid against me yet shall not mine heart be afraid nay though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I wil feare no euill And why for thou art with me saith the Prophet thou O Lord art with me and therefore whosoeuer be against me in what danger soeuer I be I will feare no euill This then to know that the Lord is with vs and that he is alwaies neare at hand to heare vs and to helpe vs should quiet vs as of all feare so of all perturbations of the minde so that we should patiently brooke whatsoeuer might otherwise stirre vs vnto impatiencie How is it then that vpon euery occasion we are so vnpatient and haue so little hold of our selues If any man thwart or crosse vs if any man harme or wrong vs if any man taunt or mocke vs if any man reuile or speake euill of vs if anie man offer vs any hard measure in word or in deed how do we bite vpon the bridle and stomacke the matter One abuse must be quit with another one wrong with another one mischiefe with another or else we think we haue neuer plaied the men But if we be falsly accused before the Iudge of theft murder sedition treason or the like if we be wrongfully scourged imprisoned racked or tormented if we be cruelly or deceitfully turned out of house and home lands and liuing and all that we haue O how then are our soules disquieted within vs and how do our hearts burnt within vs till we be auenged of such as haue thus dealt with vs Here must reuenge be sought by bloud death and if there be any further reuenge then this And tell me I pray what is the cause of such impatiencie in these and the like cases yea oftentimes when the Lord his hand is vpon vs in pouertie sickenes and the like Is it not euen hence because either we know not or remember not that the Lord is at hand Yes verily it is the ignorance or forgetfulnesse of the Lord and of his prouident watchfulnesse ouer vs that makes vs fret and fume and like the dogge runne vpon the bone that is cast at vs. We know not or we remember not that vengeance is the Lords and that he hath promised that he will repay and reward the wicked after their deseruing and therefore forsooth when we thinke there is cause we will be disquieted we will kill and slay and we will be auenged For if we knew or remembred that vengeance is the Lords and that he wil repay we would patiently passe by the contumelies and wrongs of men and leaue them to the Lord that iudgeth righteous iudgement We know not or we remember not that the Lord is neare vnto all that call vpon him in truth to heare and help vs in all dangers if we patiently waite vpon him that we may be safe vnder his feathers and therefore forsooth when troubles assault vs or the sorrows of death compasse vs about we thinke we do well to be as vnpatient as Ionas was angrie for his gourd For if we knew or remembred that he is at hand at euerie needfull time of trouble to helpe vs our soules would patiently wait vpon the Lord vntill he should helpe vs. Eyther we thinke not of the Lord and of his watchfull prouidence ouer vs to saue and defend vs and to auenge our sufferings and wrongs or carnally we say if the Lord be at hand I wish I might know it I wish I might heare him I wish I might see him as if otherwise we could not discerne of his being neare vnto vs or if we
writer of this Epistle and Timotheus the approuer of it or Paul the inditer of it and Timotheus the writer of it The title of dignitie commune to them both whereby they are described is this the seruants of Iesus Christ seruants both and therefore to attend vpon their ministerie and seruice and both seruants of Iesus Christ and therefore to attend vpon the ministration of the gospell which he had committed vnto them but yet the seruants of Iesus the Sauiour of the world euen of Iesus Christ annointed a King to defend vs a Prophet to teach vs and a Priest to offer vp a sacrifice for our sinnes The persons saluted are generally the whole Church of Philippi and more particularly the Bishops and Deacons there The whole Church at Philippi generally is saluted vnder the name of all the Saints in Christ Iesus which are at Philippi for by all the saints in Christ Iesus he meaneth all them which in baptisme had giuen their names vnto Christ Iesus thenceforth to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto God in righteousnes and true holinesse which was all the Church at Philippi Now this Philppi was a chiefe Citie in the parts of Macedonia Act. 16.12 whose inhabitants came from Rome to dwell there the first Citty in the passage out of Thracia beyond the riuer Strymon At the first it is generally thought to haue beene called Crenida because of the many fountaines about the hill whereon it was built 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being as much as fons and afterward to haue beene called Philippi because of the fortification and enlargement thereof by Philip King of Macedon and now to be called Gricopolis as if yee would call it Chrysopolis a Citty of gold because of the great abundance of gold that is there so great that Philip is said to haue receiued thence yearely aboue 1000 talents of gold which is asmuch as 600 thousand french crownes This Citty is notably knowne as for the great ouerthrow of Brutus and Cassius there by Octauius and Antonie so especially for the preaching of the gospell there by Paul and Silas and Timotheus for the embracing of the truth there by their ministerie and for many other accidents there during the Apostle his abode there for Paul being warned by the spirit to goe into Macedonia hee went thither and first came to Philippi there preached and by his preaching converted Lydia so that shee and her houshold were baptized Afterwards he cast out of a maide a spirit of diuination Wherevpon hee was brought before the Magistrates sore beaten with rods cast into the inner prison and his feete thrust into the stocks Being there in prison the foundation of the prison was shaken by an earth-quake the dores were opened the prisoners bands were loosed the Iaylor was conuerted he and his house baptized and the Apostle deliuered For these things this Citie is well knowne and it was the Church generally in this Citie that the Apostle saluted The persons more particularly saluted are the Bishops and Deacons there Where by Bishops he meaneth the Pastors and Teachers which laboured in the word and doctrine For both the word so signifieth throughout the whole New Testament and here it must needs so signifie because he speaketh of many in one Church By Deacons also he meaneth those that by their office were to receiue and distribute the common liberalitie of the Church according to the necessities of all the poore members thereof such as we read to haue beene ordeined in the Church Act. 6 5. and such as are described by our Apostle 1 Tim. 3.8 c. Vnto whom together with the Bishops the Apostle is thought here to write as to magnifie their office so because theirs had beene the care chiefly in respect of their office to send the Churches liberalitie to him by their Minister Epaphroditus The salutation followeth wherein he wisheth them all good from him which is the author of all goodnesse Where 1. is set downe the thing which he wisheth vnto them which is grace and peace vnderstanding by grace the free fauour of God wherewith he loueth his children and whence as from the fountaine all other goodnesse doth flow and by peace euery blessing corporall and spirituall for this life and that that is to come flowing from that fountaine of grace 2. is set downe vnto whom he wisheth this grace and peace namely vnto all the Saints at Philippi together with the Bishops c. 3. is set downe the author from whom and by whom he wisheth this grace and peace vnto them which is from God our father as the fountaine and first originall from whom commeth euery good and perfect gift and from the Lord Iesus Christ as the meanes by whom euery grace of the spirit is conveyed and deriued vnto vs. Thus much for the purpose of the Apostle in these words and the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction Paul and Timotheus First then for the very name of Paul it should not passe vs reading or hearing of it but therein we should obserue the great mercy of our gracious God towards sinfull creatures For what was Paul that now wrote vnto the Churches here and there to stablish them in the faith Surely he was sometimes a bloudy Saul a cruel persecutor of Gods Church one that hauing receiued authoritie of the High Priests Act. 26.10 shut vp many of the Saints in prison and when they were put to death gaue his sentence 11. punished them throughout all the synagogues and compelled them to blaspheme and being more madde vpon them persecuted them euen vnto strange Cities one that was a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1.13 an oppressor that spared neither men nor women Act. 22.4 but beat them and bound them and deliuered them vnto death Gal. 1.13 one that persecuted the Church of God extreamely and wasted it All which things himselfe testifieth of himselfe Could there well haue beene a more forlorne man a more desperate and godles creature Yet this man was receiued vnto mercy yea vnto such mercy that the Lord called him to be an Apostle and chose him to beare his name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel And that this was a worke of the Lord his owne mercy our Apostle himselfe witnesseth where he thus saith I was a blasphemer and a persecutor and an oppressor 1 Tim 1.13 but I was receiued to mercy And why was he receiued to mercy himselfe tells vs saying for this cause was I receiued to mercy 16. that Iesus Christ should first shew on me all long-suffering to the ensample of them that shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life It was then the Lord his great mercy towards him that of a cruell persecutor he became an holy Apostle of Christ Iesus and this mercy was shewed on him that in him might be an example of Gods mercy
My brethren saith the Apostle be not children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnes be children but in vnderstanding be of a ripe age The Apostle had before signified his owne minde of praying and speaking in strange tongues without vnderstanding and in a knowne tongue with vnderstanding therein taxing their too great admiring of strange tongues and too little regard of knowledge and vnderstanding Now in effect hee tells them that therein they are like vnto little children which if they see faire and great and coloured letters in a booke are in great loue with the letters but care not for the sense and vnderstanding of the words But he exhorteth them be not children in vnderstanding as if he should haue said Children indeed care not for vnderstanding but it may not be so with you yee were children sometimes and cared not for vnderstanding and yee were children sometimes and but yong in vnderstanding and knowledge but yee may not be so still but yee must grow to be of a ripe age in vnderstanding yee must increase in knowledge as in yeeres yee doe increase And lest they should say that Christ would haue them to be like vnto little children he preuenteth that Mat. 18 3. and tells them that he would haue them to be like vnto little children concerning maliciousnesse but concerning knowledge and vnderstanding he would haue them to be no children but of a ripe age So that hence we see that our care is to be that we be not children but men of a ripe age touching vnderstanding .i. that wee may increase and grow forward more and more in knowledge euen from knowledge to knowledge To the like purpose is that of the Apostle where he saith Heb. 6.1 Leauing the doctrine of the beginnings of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection He had in the end of the former chapter somewhat sharply told the Hebrewes that when as concerning the time they ought to be teachers yet they had neede to be taught the very principles of the word of God Now therefore he doth exhort them that they would not be still a learning the principles and beginnings of religion but that they would goe forward from perfection to perfection and abound more and more in knowledge We may not then be as idle loyterers which spend their time and profit not but as our time spent in the schoole of Christ doth require of vs so must our profiting be in the knowledge of his will out of his word Yea looke into our owne practise and we shall finde our owne iudgment to be such If wee haue children and set them to their books we looke that according to their time spent thereat their profiting should be and that they should increase in knowledge and learning as they grow in yeares and in time spent at their booke and if they doe not so profit we take them from the schoole and set them to some other thing So that by our owne iudgement so many of vs as are taught in the schoole of Christ we should increase in the knowledge of Christ and as we spend more and more time in the schoole of Christ so should wee abound more and more in the knowledge of Christ and if we doe not so by our owne iudgements we are to bee excluded as non proficients out of the schoole of Christ And what then becomes of vs Nothing then to set vs vnto but as it was said to the vnprofitable seruant Cast that vnprofitable seruant into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Matth. 25.30 so shall it be said to such non proficients cast that non proficient scholar into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth This then first may teach vs to beware of that leauen of theirs that would haue vs misled vp in ignorance and beare the world in hand that ignorance is the mother of deuotion For such a brood of Sathan there is as will tell you that the Scriptures are darke and hard to be vnderstood and perilous to bee read that will highly commend your modestie if yee presume not to read the Scriptures that will tell you it is enough for you to beleeue as the Church beleeueth though yee know not how to giue account of your faith that will allow well of learning nothing and after many yeares to be neuer the wiser in a word that will the sooner suspect you of heresie the more knowledge yee haue in the Scriptures Such are they that would haue praying singing reading and all other rites of the Church done in a strange language that would haue vs barred from the reading of the Scriptures in a knowne tongue that would haue none but great Clerks and Diuines seene in the Scriptures But what saith the Holy Ghost Search the scriptures saith our blessed Sauiour Ioh. 5.39 for in them yee thinke to haue eternall life and they are they which testifie of me Grow saith Peter vnto the Church in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 and in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ And our Apostle Let the word of Christ dwell in you plenteously in all wisdome Col. 3.16 And in this place his praier is for the Church of Philippi that they may abound more and more in knowledge Now what can be more contrary and repugnant vnto other then this doctrine of the Holy Ghost vnto that doctrine of theirs Our blessed Sauiour sets vs vnto the Scriptures to search them and they would not haue vs to presume to read the Scriptures The Apostle Peter would haue vs to grow in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ and they would not haue vs looke into the scriptures lest we fall into heresies Our Apostle would haue the word of Christ to dwell in vs plenteously and they would haue vs onely to beleeue as the Church beleeueth and care not though we know not how to giue account of our faith Our Apostle would haue vs to abound more and more in knowledge and they tell vs that ignorance is the mother of deuotion See then whether there be not cause to beware of them and to bid fie vpon the beast that speaketh so presumptuously against the word of God As the Apostle saith vnto the Galatians touching the false Apostles they desire to haue you circumcised Gal. 6.13 that they might reioyce in your flesh so I say vnto you touching these false Apostles they desire to haue you close shut vp in ignorance that they may lead you blindfold at their pleasures into all their deuilish errors and that they may reioyce in their aduantage by your ignorance Beware therefore of them and hearken not vnto them lest if yee erre in your hearts because yee know not his waies through your ignorance in the scriptures he sweare as sometimes he did vnto the Israelites in his wrath that yee shall neuer enter into his rest euen to the heauenly Canaan whereof that
skill what is pure what not either in doctrine life or manners and then knowing that let vs care and studie to be pure and sincere and without all leauen of corruption either in doctrine life or manners The third thing wherefore the Apostle prayed that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement was that they might be without offence .1 that they might not stumble at any thing but hold on in a constant course without stumbling or slipping ba●ke or standing at a stay vntill the day of Christ when their constant perseuerance should be rewarded For the Apostles desire was 1. that they might be able to discerne things that differed what were corrupt and bad and what were pure and good 2. That being able to discerne and try all things they might keep that which were good and might be pure from all leauen of corruption 3. That being pure from all leauen of corruption they might keepe a constant course in their puritie without stumbling or shrinking backe or standing at a stay and for these causes he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledg● c. Whence I obserue a third imployment very behouefull for all Christians namely that being in a good course they hold on without stumbling or standing or shrinking being pure and cleare from all leauen of corruption they keep themselues so vntill the day of Christ Are yee so foolish saith the Apostle to the Galathians that after yee haue begun in the spirit Gal. 3.3 yee would now be made perfit by the flesh The Galathians had embraced the Gospell and obeyed the truth but now through certaine false Apostles they had fallen from the pure doctrine of Christ and admitted some corruptions of that doctrine And therefore the Apostle reproues them sharply and tells them that it is no course for a Christian to begin in the spirit and to end in the flesh but hauing begun in the spirit by embracing the pure doctrine of Iesus Christ they should end in the spirit and hold fast that pure doctrine which they had embraced euen vntill the day of Christ So that hauing obeyed the truth we are not to yeeld to any corruptions of the truth or to let our hold slip but to hold fast the same vnto the end It is for the dogge to returne to his owne vomit and for the sowe that was washed to returne to her wallowing in the mire but the man that hauing put his hand to the plough looketh backe Luk. 9.62 he is not apt to the kingdome of God Being in a good way wee must with our Apostle still endeuour to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus But I haue lately spoken to this purpose and therefore now the time being past I will not farther trouble you Onely with the Apostle I pray that your loue may abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement c. LECTVRE XII PHILIP I. Verse 11. Filled with the fruits of righteousnes which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God IT remaineth now that we come vnto the fourth and last end here mentioned wherefore the Apostle praied that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement and that was that they might be fruitfull in all good works set downe in these words Filled with the fruits In which words I note 1. the measure of good works which the Apostle wisheth to be in the Philippians which is pressed downe and shaken together euen that they may be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse 2. The definition of good works in that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse 3. The fountaine whence or author from whom good works if indeed they be good works are and that is Iesus Christ 4. The end whereunto good works if indeed they be good works doe tend and that is vnto the glory and praise of God So that besides the maine point which is the Apostles desire that the Philippians might be full of good works here hence wee may know all the causes of good works The materiall cause or matter and substance of good works is hereby known that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the very matter and substance of good works is those good actions which as good fruit grow and spring out of the righteousnes of God in vs. The formall cause or reason which causeth our works to be good works is hereby likewise knowne that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the reason why our works are good works is because of their conformitie vnto the law of God because they are done in righteousnes according to the righteous law of God The efficient cause or author from whom good works are is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ for this sheweth that Iesus Christ worketh in vs whatsoeuer works are good agreeable to the righteous law of God The finall cause or end of good works wherunto they are to be referred wherfore they are to be done is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God for this sheweth that the end wherefore we are to abound in euery good worke is the glory and praise of God that his name thereby may be glorified These are the things which these words seeme vnto me to conteine Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction The first thing then which here I note is the rich grace wherewith our Apostle would haue the Philippians to abound in good works for he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement as for other ends before spoken of so for this that they might be filled with the fruits of righteousnes that they might abound in euery good worke My obseruation hence is that we are not onely to doe the things that are good and to worke the works of righteousnes but we are to abound in euery good worke to be filled with the fruits of righteousnes To doe good and to haue our fruit in holines and righteousnes is a thing much vrged and often commanded by the Holy Ghost in the scriptures and it is so cleare a case that it cannot be denied or shifted but that we are to do the things that are good to worke the works of righteousnes Yet so cūning are we to deceiue our selues that if at sometimes we haue done some things well we thinke we haue obeyed the voice of the Lord herein though we come far short of being filled w th the fruits of righteousnes The Holy Ghost therfore to meet with our foolish wisdom and to cleare the point plainely sheweth in many places of the scripture that as wee are to shew forth good works so we are to
we suffer with Christ we shall also reigne with Christ Where it i● to be noted that the Apostle saith this is a sure word this is a true saying that if we suffer with him we shall also reigne with him This then is a promise of the Lord vnto his children that loue him that if they suffer with him for his sake and his Gospels they shall also reigne with him and be glorified with him So that either the godly must doubt of the Lord his promises all which are yea and amen most certaine and sure or else the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and their wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus For what better assurance then that which is grounded on the Lords promise Or what plainer promises can there be then these of the Apostle in these places or rather of the Holy Ghost by the Apostle And therefore the Apostle saith in another place that ●t is a righteous thing with God to recompense tribulation to them which trouble others and to them that are troubled rest 2 Thess 1.6.7.10 when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels and shall come to be glorified in his Saints It is a righteous thing with God righteous indeed for his iustice sake to recompense tribulation to them that trouble others and righteous for his promise sake to recompense rest to them that are troubled Because then God is righteous and keepeth promise for euer therfore the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus Here then is a notable consolation for all the godly in Christ Iesus against all crosses persecutions and troubles whatsoeuer As Christ was to suffer many things and so to enter into his kingdome so the godly in Christ Iesus are through many tribulations to enter into the kingdome of God But the comfort is that they shall all turne vnto their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus when they shall be for euer in the presence of the throne of God Apoc. 7.15.16 and serue him day and night in his Temple when they shall hunger no more nor thirst any more nor the sunne shall light on them nor any heat when he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them 17 and the Lambe which is in the middest of the throne shall gouerne them and wipe all teares from their eyes as the Lambe himselfe witnesseth touching them that haue suffered tribulation and washed their long robes in the bloud of the Lambe 14. The flesh I know will suggest and say in the meane while our case is hard no man with vs euery mans hand against vs we hunger and thirst we are reuiled and persecuted we are cast into prison and made the talke and wonder of the world we are driuen to many hard shifts and put to shreude plunges But what of all this when wee know that these shall turne to our saluation Be they what they will how great they will how lasting they will yet they are but light and but for a moment in respect of that farre most excellent and eternall weight of glory which they cause vnto vs as our Apostle witnesseth where he saith that our light affliction which is but for a moment 2 Cor. 4.17 causeth vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory Here is the fruit and consequent of our affliction glory our affliction causeth vnto vs glory and here is both the smallnes and the shortnes of our affliction in comparison of that glory which shall be reueiled be it neuer so great and heauy it is but small and light in comparison of that farre most excellent glory be ●t neuer so long and lasting it is but for a moment in comparison of that eternall weight of glory laid vp for vs in the heauens Howsoeuer therefore when we suffer any crosse persecution or trouble these things for the time be grieuou● vnpleasant vnto vs as no chastizing for the present seemeth to be ioyous but greeuous Heb. 12.1 yet seeing they bring the quiet fruit of righteousnes vnto them that are thereby exercised seeing they cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory seeing they shall turne to our saluation let vs be of good comfort whatsoeuer in this kinde doth befall vs. And let vs 1. as the Apostle willeth runne with patience the race that is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. who for the ioy that was set before him endured the ●rosse and despised the shame and is set at the right hand of the ●hrone of God And whatsoeuer our sufferings be let it be with vs as it was with the Apostle that with him we may say as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs 2 Cor. 1.5 so our consolation aboundeth through Christ Againe here is a good ground and warrant for vs against ●hat vncomfortable doctrine of doubting of our saluation For if we may assure our selues that our sufferings and our wrongs shall turne to our saluation then may wee assure our selues of our saluation Yea but it will be said what an argument and reason is this Paul might therefore wee may I say it is a good one because vpon the same ground that he might we may Yea but he might know this by the reuelation of the spirit which now we are not to looke for True but he might also know this out of the holy scripture where the Lord hath passed his promise for this and so we may on the same promise whereon he might build his knowledge and assurance on the same may we and all the faithfull children of God build our knowledge and assurance the promise being made vnto all that loue God and are in Christ Iesus Many doubts indeed we haue and full of distrustfulnesse we are oftentimes euen the best of vs but yet yee see that vpon good ground of Gods promise by the example of our Apostle we may assure our selues of our saluation if as the Apostle did so we doe belong vnto Christ Iesus at least if we suffer persecution and trouble for his sake for so farre this place will go that if we suffer persecution and trouble for Christ his sake then we may assure our selues of our saluation because we may assure our selues that our sufferings and troubles shall turne to our saluation Suffer not your selues therefore to be deceiued by those vncomfortable teachers of doubting which teach that not any man to whom it is not reuealed by the spirit in particular can be sure of his saluation but onely in an vncertaine hope As this place doth shew that such of the godly as suffer persecution and trouble may assure themselues that their troubles shall turne to their saluation and so consequently may assure themselues of their saluation so many other places
such power with God And ●herefore ye see how often the Apostle requesteth the prai●rs of the Church for him as Ephes 6.18 Colossi 4.3 ● Thes 3.1 And in his Epistle to Philemon there hee pro●esseth as here he doth that he trusteth through their pray●rs to be giuen vnto them by deliuerance out of his bands ●herein commending himselfe to their prayers A good lesson for vs to stirre vs vp vnto publique and priuate prayer both for our selues and for others seeing they are so powerfull with God as to bring his blessings and graces both vpon our selues and vpon others And this lesson is as needfull as it is good especially in this our day wherein there is such neglect both of publique and priuate prayer vnto the Lord. Priuate praier so rare that if it be vsed by any it is noted by many and they straight way censured as thinking themselues more holy then other men And publique prayer so little regarded by some that verie seldome they are present with the congregation in publique prayer I cannot stand of it Only I say he that neglecteth the meanes vnto grace he shall neuer finde grace Secondly hence I obserue a dutie of the Church in publique prayer which is to pray for the afflicted members of Christ Iesu● for the Apostle in saying that he knew that this should turne to his saluation through their praiers therin stirreth them to pray for him And see the points wherein the Church is to commend them in their prayers vnto God As first that the Lord may turne their affliction and trouble to their saluation Secondly that hee will helpe them by his holy spirit in euerie needefull time of trouble Thirdly that they may so stand in the defence of the truth of Christ Iesus that in nothing they may bee ashamed Fourthly that the Lord will strentghen them with strong faith and hope in him Fiftly that Christ may be glorified in their body whether it bee by life or death Thus the Church should pray and thus the afflicted should desire the Church to pray LECTVRE XVI PHILIP I. Verse 19. And by the helpe of the holy spirit of Iesus Christ 20. As I feruently looke for and hope that in nothing I shall bee ashamed but that with all confidence as alwaies so now Christ shall bee magnified in my bodie whether it bee by life or by death ONe thing hence I obserue which is that not for our prayers or for the praiers of the Church for vs but through our praiers and through the praiers of the Church for vs the Lord giueth his grace vnto vs. And therefore the Apostle saith Vers 22. I know that this shall turne to my saluation through your prayers not for your praier And to Philemon I trust through your prayers I shall be giuen vnto you Neither doe wee euer reade that for our prayers as for the merit and worth of them any grace is giuen vnto any Neither doe I build this note vpon this ground as if because it is said through therefore it cannot be for our prasyers For I know that we are saued through Iesus Christ and yet for Iesus Christ euen for his merits sake so that the phrase barely considered canot inferre the note but hereon it is builded taht it is so said through that neither euer it is nor can be said that for our praiers any grace 〈◊〉 giuen vnto vs. For not for our praiers sake not for the ●erit and worth of our praiers doth the Lord heare vs and ●rant vs our requests but for the promise sake which of his ●wne free grace he hath made vnto our praiers He hath ●assed his promise Mat 21.22 that whatsoeuer we shall aske in praier in ●is name if we beleeue we shall receiue it and he hath bidden ●s aske and we shall receiue seeke and we shall finde Mat. 7.7 knocke and ●e shall be opened vnto vs. Because then he hath promised grace vnto our praiers he is intreated for grace through our praiers Aske and haue first aske and then haue and ●he better beggers the greater getters For it is not with the Lord as with vs we say a great begger would haue a good ●ay saier and vnto whom but euen now we haue giuen wee loue not that they should by and by come againe and begge of vs. But I say it is not so with the Lord but of the greatest begger he is most intreated and the oftner wee come a begging to him the more welcome we are vnto him for he loues to be intreated and being intreated he promiseth to giue and so through our praiers he giues euen for his promise sake but not for our praiers sake for they when they are best are so full of imperfections that they merit nothing but to be reiected Seldome but we are troubled with wandring by-thoughts often we pray for things and against things without submitting of our wills vnto the Lords will often we pray not in faith towards God often not in loue towards our brethren often coldly often hypocritically and when not so but that our praiers might iustly be turned into sinne vnto vs Causes therefore they are not for which the Lord bestoweth any graces vpon vs but meanes onely through which we receiue graces needfull for vs for the promise sake made in Christ Iesus Farre be it therefore from vs to stand vpon the merit of our praiers as if for our praiers sake we deserued any grace to be bestowed vpon vs. Let vs as we ought powre out feruent praiers vnto the Lord in faith and in Christ his name and assure we our selues we shall be heard But withall let vs know that it is for his promise sake made vnto our praiers and for his Christ his sake which offereth vp our praiers whatsoeuer be our state and place let vs not slacke this seruice neither let vs presume vpon any merit by this seruice If we lift vp pure hands vnto the Lord in his Temple in our houses or in our chambers he will heare vs though not for our praiers yet through our praiers he will be intreated of vs. Let it be enough for vs that he will heare vs and let this most of all glad vs that for his Christ his sake and for his promise sake he will heare vs. And let this suffice to be spoken touching the first meanes in particular that through our praiers and the praiers of the Church for vs all things worke together for the best vnto so many of vs a● loue God and are in Christ Iesus The next meanes whereof the Apostle speaketh is the helpe of the spirit of Christ Iesus whereby he saith he knew that this should turne vnto his saluation I know c. Where the spirit is called the spirit of Iesus Christ as because of his proceeding from the Sonne so because of his dwelling in him in all fullnes as also because Christ sendeth him into our hearts and by him worketh his will in
his people Wee shall not now need other proofe than this of our Apostle in this place The Philippians had embraced the faith of Iesus Christ they abounded in knowledge and in iudgement they stood fast in the faith notwithstanding their assaults by false Apostles they were carefull ouer him and communicated to his afflictions they were excellent in many graces So that our Apostle had great cause to haue great ioy ouer them But because of some contention and vaine-glory amongst them his ioy was not full A sufficient president for the Pastor that he count not his ioy full so long as any thing is amisse amongst his people Which may serue to admonish the Pastor to labour that nothing may bee amisse amongst his people either touching life or doctrine that so his ioy may be full and that his people may be the crowne of his reioycing in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming But I come vnto that which the Apostle exhorteth in generall The thing which the Apostle exhorteth the Philippians in generall is that they be like minded that is like affectioned hauing their affections likings and desires set on the same things An euident argument that they were not like minded as also the rest which followeth is that some things were amisse amongst them And in that hee dealeth so earnestly with them that these things might bee amended in them it sheweth that these are things which are carefully to be procured regarded and maintained LECTVRE XXV PHILIP 2. Verse 2. That yee be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accord and of one iudgement that nothing bee done through contention c. WE haue heard the manner of the Apostles exhortation and therein foure very patheticall arguments couched to perswade the things whereunto hee exhorteth all so closely followed and so passionately vrged as that the manner of the exhortation could not be deuised more effectuall to perswade the things whereunto hee exhorteth If there bee c. It remained to speake of the matter of the Apostles exhortation Wee spake only of that which I tooke to be onely a motiue prefixed before the matter of the exhortation in these words Fulfill my ioy Now wee are to proceed vnto the maine matter of the Apostles exhortation which is that they be like minded hauing the same loue c. By which matter of the exhortation this in generall appeareth that some things were amisse amongst them there was not that loue and concord amongst them nor that humilitie which should he in them many things were done amongst them through contention through vain-glory through selfe-seeking of their owne things so that though many things were to be much commended in them yet were some things likewise to be reformed in them which hindered the course of that Christian conuersation which becommeth the Gospell of Christ Iesus Whence I obserue in generall what the state euen of the best reformed Churches and so of the most holy men is no Church so reformed no men so sanctified but that many things are amisse amongst them though many things bee much to be commended in them yet some things likewise are still to be reformed in them Looke into all those Churches vnto which our Apostle wrote his Epistles yee shall not finde any of them so commended for embracing the truth and for standing fast in the truth as this Church of Philippi Hee giueth indeed testimonie vnto the Galathians that they were sometimes such as if it had beene possible would haue pluckt out their owne eyes and haue giuen them vnto him so loued they him and the truth which he taught But quickly were they remoued to another Gospell Gal. 1.6 as the Apostle witnesseth whereas the Philippians still stood so fast that the Apostle was perswaded that he that had begunne that good worke in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Yet here ye see that some things were amisse amongst them Againe looke into those seuen Churches vnto which Iohn writeth in the Apocalyps and there yee shall see that some were fallen others decayed some were proud others negligent Of all the rest of those Churches the Church of Smyrna and the Church of Philadelphia are there most commended Yet in both those Churches by the right vnderstanding of those Epistles that were written to them it will appeare that there were some amongst them who professed themselues to be good Christians whereas indeed they were no better than a Synagogue and sinke of Satan Againe looke into the reformed Churches euer since that time vnto this day and at this day and still yee shall see that as in those seuen Churches of Asia so in these there were and are as many things to bee commended so likewise many things to be reprehended And so long as the Church is militant vpon earth it cannot be but that shee should be blacke blacke I say not onely in respect of her afflictions whereby her beloued doth sometimes proue her and sometimes chastise her but blacke also in respect of her blemishes imperfections and sinnes which are the causes of her afflictions For all men while they carry about with them the earthly house of this tabernacle vnto what degree of perfection in faith knowledge or other graces of the spirit so euer they be growne had still neede to pray O Lord increase our faith our knowledge and vnto what perfection in innocencie obedience or the like they be growne yet still they are taught to pray O Lord forgiue vs our debts and trespasses For here we know in part we beleeue in part we loue in part we obey in part and our greatest perfection is but great imperfection whiles we liue here at home in the bodie 1 Cor. 13.9 as that of the Apostle sheweth And so long as we are clothed with corruption if we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues 1 Ioh. 1.8 and truth is not in vs. That which is in part either in knowledge or in loue or in obedience or in the like graces of the spirit shall be abolished our imperfections shall be taken away and we shall be made perfit But where and when Not here otherwise then by imputation but then and there when and where corruption shall put on incorruption and mortalitie shall put on immortalitie as the former place to the Corinthians sheweth ver 10. and the Church shall be presented vnto Christ Iesus her beloued not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but pure and holy and without blame but then when shee shall bee made glorious when her vile bodie shall be changed and be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie Eph. 5.27 as that place to the Ephesians sheweth This then should teach vs to long to be of that triumphant Church to long to enter into the holiest of holies to long to be loosed and to be with Christ Here the father of the faithfull holy Abraham here the man after Gods owne
baptisme one God and Father of vs all for meete it i● that so many as are ioyned together in the vnitie of these be also knit together in one minde and in one iudgment according to Christ Iesus Eph. 4.5 euen as our Apostle vrgeth this same reason to this same purpose else where Secondly because there is not a better remedie against dissensions and schismes the● to be like minded in the Lord as without which it cannot be but that there be dissensions and schismes For what was the cause of the dissensions contentions wherewith the Church of Corinth was troubled Was it not because they were not like minded in the Lord One held of Paul another of Apollos one of Cephas another of Christ one would pray and prophecie bare-headed another with his head couered and when they came vnto the Lord his Supper one was hungry and another was drunken And how can it bee but that there should bee dissensions and contentions when one likes this and another that one would haue this and another that one drawes this way and another that way In a little house yee know if the husband be of one minde and the wife of another the Parents of one minde and the children of another the master of one minde and the seruants of another and euery of them will needs follow their owne minde and fancie their owne way how troubled must needs that house be And therefore our blessed Sauiour being now ready to be offered in that holy praier for all his children praied that we might be all one euen as He and the Father were one Ioh. 17.21 that wee might all be one in the Father and in him euen that we might bee like minded in the Lord. Phil. 3.16 And in the next chapter our Apostle prescribeth it as a remedie against dissensions in the Church to proceede by one rule and to minde one thing If then we will walke as becommeth the Gospell of Christ we are not onely to bee ioyned in one faith and in hope but in all things wee are to be like minded one towards another according to Christ Iesus we are to loue and like affect and fancie will and desire the same things as they are pleasing vnto the Lord being at one with God wee are to be of one minde amongst our selues Here then our aduersaries will aske of vs if this be so necessarie a dutie how happens it that ye are not all like minded What meane the tearmes of Zuinglians Lutheranes Bez. epist 5. Caluinists amongst you How is it that amongst you some are Brownists some Baroists some Puritanes some Protestants How is it that touching ceremonies touching discipline and the like there is such difference amongst you Doth not these things plainely argue that yee are not like minded amongst yourselues For answere whereunto 1. Of them that aske vs these questions I demand of them the like are they all like minded What meane then the tearmes of Thomists Scotists Vide Par. in Iren. cap. 26. Ockamists Canonists and Diuines amongst them How is it that amongst them some are White some Blacke some Gray Friers some Franciscans some Dominicans some Iesuits some barely Priests How is it that not touching ceremonies or discipline alone but touching maine and great points of doctrine there is such difference amongst them Touching the Scriptures doth not Arius Montanus say that the bookes of the old Testament not found in the Hebrue Canon are Apocryphall and doth not Bellarmine denie it Doth not Canus say that the Hebrue text is wholy corrupt by the malice of the Iewes and doth not Bellarmine denie it Doth not Bellarmine himselfe for expounding of the Scriptures sometimes referre vs to the fathers of the Church sometimes to generall Councels sometimes to the Pope and Cardinals sometimes to the Pope himselfe It would be too long to runne through the rest of many points of doctrine where in they dissent among themselues They neede no other to note this vnto the whole world then Bellarmine himselfe who in the beginning of the discussing of euery controuersie betwixt vs and them sheweth how not onely we dissent therein from them but how they dissent amongst themselues First therefore let them plucke out the beame of their owne eye that so they may see clearely the mote which is in our eie le● them cleare the point that they are like minded amongst themselues and then let them tell vs that we are not all of one minde But how doe they shew that wee are not all of one minde If ye be say they then what meane the tearmes of Zuinglians Lutherans Caluinists amongst you But I say vnto them what doe they meane to note vs by such tearmes The memories of these men we honour and reuerence as also we doe other notable lights which haue beene in the Church and are at this day But if we be named after any other name then only the name of Christ Iesus it is through their malice not by our desire Yea but how is it say they that some amongst you are Brownists some Baroists some Puritans some Protestants that touching ceremonies and outward discipline there is such difference amongst you I answere that if there be any Brownists or Baroists amongst vs wee hold them not to be of vs and therefore their distraction from vs ought not to be obiected vnto vs. Now for our difference about ceremonies and outward discipline I wish we were all like minded in these things and it is a fault and blemish of some in our Church that we are not like minded in these things But for the substance of doctrine and grounds of religion wherein is it that we are not like minded If they could no doubt they would taxe vs in the substance as they doe in the accident and as they cannot in the substance so I wish they could not taxe vs in the accident So should the ioy of our Sion be full if we were all like minded both for the substance and for the accident and so many as loue the peace of Sion and wish her prosperitie pray also that this her ioy may be fulfilled Againe this may serue to reproue a fault too too common amongst vs. For if we be ioined together in one faith and in one hope if we agree in the substance of truth we thinke it a small matter to dissent amongest our selues about smaller matters And indeed it is the lesse matter But yet it is a thing which we ought to labour euen to be like minded in the Lord in all things Which our Apostle sufficiently sheweth when in his exhortations vnto vs to be like minded he doth not limit vs vnto these or these things but indefinitely hee would haue vs to be like minded according to Christ Iesus In matters of faith and in matters of ceremonie in matters of doctrine and in matters of discipline in matters of life and in matters of learning in matters of religion and in
also abased not as it is considered in it selfe for so it is immutable but in respect of the vaile of the flesh vnder which it was so couered that it lay hid from the first moment of Christ his incarnation to the time of his resurrection without any great manifestation of his power and maiestie therein Did he then who was both God and man thus voluntarily humble himselfe in his Godhead and in his manhood did he so abase himselfe that he would be borne in a cratch conuerse with poore fishermen eat and drinke with Publicans and sinners be baptized of Iohn be tempted of the Deuil wash his Disciples feete and as a Lambe before the shearer so not open his mouth What should this teach vs my brethren Euen willingly to submit our selues one vnto another and all of vs to decke our selues inwardly with lowlinesse or minde If abundance of wisdome and knowledge if greatnes in honor and dignitie if soueraigne power and authoritie had beene sufficient motiues and inducements for our Sauiour Christ to stay himselfe from thus humbling himselfe his name was wonderful counseller the mighty God the euerlasting father the prince of peace to him did belong all honor and glory in him were hid all the treasures of wisdome knowledge of his fulnesse haue all we receiued grace for grace yet for all this he thus humbled himselfe willingly as yee haue heard Let not therefore the conceit of wisdome and knowledge in our selues let not the conceit of our wealth and riches of our preferments and honors of our birth and friends cause vs to swell with pride of our owne gifts or to lift vp our selues aboue our brethren to disdaine our inferiors let not these be any staies why ●ere should not be in vs the same mindes that was in that ●hrist Iesus Let euery man make himselfe equall vnto them of the ●est degree and let euery man esteeme other better then himselfe ●e God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble ●nd let this be noted touching Christ his humiliation It ●●●loweth And he became obedient or he was made obedient Whence I ●●te the second point which I proposed to be spoken of to ●t Christ his obedience in his life vnto the law to fulfill the ●v For if the question be asked when and how long was ●rist obedient The Apostle answereth vsque ad mortem vn●● the death not as if his death were no part of his obedi●ce but the Apostle plainely implieth thereby that as in the 〈◊〉 of his life he was obedient vnto his Fathers will to fulfill ●e law for vs so was he obedient in his death to redeeme vs ●m death hell and the Deuill Touching his obedience vn●● the law to fulfill the law the Apostle saith that when the ●nesse of time was come Gal. 4.4 God sent forth his Sonne made of a man and made vnder the law that is subiect vnto the law to fill the law And of himselfe thus our Sauiour himselfe ●aketh Mat. 5.17 thinke not that I am come to destroy the Law or the ●ophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them Christ ●n was made subiect to the law and came into the world to ●●fill the law And therefore he was circumcised the eight ●y he was represented to the Lord after the daies of Maries ●●rification and as the text saith Luc. 2.39 all things were done for him ●●ording to the law of the Lord. He gaue sight to the blinde ●●de the deafe to heare the dumme to speake the lame to goe c. Es 35.5 6. ●it was so written of him He preached the Gospell to the ●re bound vp the broken hearted 61.1 2. preached deliuerance to the ●tiues set at libertie them that were bruised preached the accep●le yeare of the Lord c as it was so written of him He was ●uted with the transgressors though he had done no wickednesse 53.12 ●ther any deceit was in his mouth he bare the sinnes of many and ●yed for the trespassers as it was so written of him In a word ●atsoeuer was written of him in the law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalmes all that he fulfilled And therefore when Iohn would haue put him backe from his baptisme he said vnto him Mat. 3.15 Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to first all righteousnesse as if he had said stay not this act of my baptizing for we must render perfect obedience vnto the Father in all things which he hath ordained Now will yee know the reason why Christ thus fulfilled the law as it was written 〈◊〉 him Gal. 4.5 The Apostle giueth it where he saith for this cause 〈◊〉 was made subiect vnto the law that he might redeeme them when were vnder the law Rom. 8.4 or as the same Apostle saith that the right●ousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit .i. that his fulfilling of the law in o● flesh might be imputed for righteousnes vnto the children o● his kingdome as well as if they had fulfilled the law in the owne persons For when as the same Apostle there speake●● by reason of our sinnefull flesh we were not able to fulfill the law and therefore must needs perish by the law then God s●●ding his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinnefull flesh ma●● him obedient vnto the law that his fulfilling of the law migh● be imputed for righteousnes vnto vs which beleeue in Christ Iesus whom he hath sent and walke not after the flesh but are the spirit Againe the worke of our redemption consisted not onely in Christ his sufferings and death but in his ful●●ling of the law also For the sufferings and death of Chri●● considered apart from his legall obedience onely takes a● the guilt and punishment frees man from death and make him of a sinner to be no sinner but that he may be fully reconciled to God and accepted as righteous to life euerlasting this legall obedience of Christ must bee imputed vnto v● Witnes the Apostle Rom. 3.19 where he saith As by the disobedience of 〈◊〉 man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall 〈◊〉 be made righteous where speaking generally of obedience b● meaneth Christ his whole obedience which in all his life time he performed For as in the disobedience of Adam there 〈◊〉 transgressio legis vnde facti sumus peccatores sic in obedience Christi fuit impletio legis vnde sumus iusti the transgressne● the law whereby we are made sinners so in the obedience of Ch●● there was the fulfilling of the law whereby we are made iust And therefore that he might be made of God vnto vs perfect iustication and redemption besides that he suffered and died for ●s that he might free vs from sinne and death he also fulfilled ●he law for vs that so we might be made the righteousnesse
contention and to vse charitable conference one with an other for the taking vp of all such things as may breede strife and contention Againe in an other place saith the same Salomon Pro. 17.14 the beginning of strife is as one that openeth the waters therefore ere the contention bee medled with leaue off Where hee likeneth him that mooueth and beginneth strife vnto a man that by plucking vp a sluce lets in the waters which before were shut vp and so drownes whatsoeuer is in the way But the thing which therein hee teacheth vs is this that we should withstand the beginnings as of all euills in generall so in particular of striefe and contention Beware therefore I beseech you that yee suffer not this canker to spread amongst you Brawling and debate striefe contention becomes not them that haue giuen their names to Christ Iesus Peace and loue kindnesse and gentlenesse one towards another best beseemeth you Follow therefore after loue seeke peace and ensue it Bee kinde and courteous one vnto an other be gentle and louing one vnto an other and haue peace amongst your selues and so the God of peace shall be with you and blesse you That ye may be blamelesse and pure c. Now followeth the reason as I take it of both the branches of the Apostle his exhortation namely why we should both walke in holines of life before the Lord with feare and trembling and why our conuersation with our neigbours and brethen should be without murmuring and reasonings The reason is twofold the one in respect of the Philippians that they might be blamelesse and pure c. the other in respect of the Apostle himselfe that he might reioyce in the day of Christ c. The summe of the first reason in respect of the Philippians and consequently in respect of vs is this we ought to lead a life as the sons of God in the middest of a froward people therefore we ought to passe the time of our dwelling heare with feare and trembling and to doe all things without murmuring and reasoning The reason seemeth to be drawne from the end why wee should so walke why wee should soe doe Why should we so walk why should we so do to what end that we may be blamelesse c that is in briefe that we may be as the sonnes of God in the middest of a froward people But the particulars whereby this is enlarged haue their seuerall vses and are very well worthy our serious consideration That ye may be blamelesse we must walke thus and doe thus that we may be blamelesse that is that we may not giue vnto any any iust cause of complaining of vs or blaming vs. And this is set downe for vs as a marke to shoote at whereat in our life we must leuel as neere as possible we can euen to liue without blame and reproofe amongest men Yea but is this possible Could our Sauiour Christ himselfe or could his Apostles and Disciples escape the reproofe and hatred of the Iewes No they could not neither can we For our Sauiour himselfe hath told vs that the world i. the wicked men of the world shall hate vs aad speake all manner of euill against vs for his sake falsly Ioh. 15.25 Yet therefore were they blamelesse because the Iewes hated them without a cause as our Sauiour saith of himselfe Luc. 1.6 because there was no iust cause of their reproofe And so it is said of Zacharias and Elizabeth his wife that they walked in all the commandements and ordinances of the Lord without reproofes Without reproofe how in respect of God no but in respect of men they were without reproofe inasmuch as they gaue no iust cause of exception against them vnto any man And this is it whereunto we must bend our selues and our studies euen so to liue as that we giue no iust occasion of offence or complaint of vs vnto any man either by word or by deede Yea but this also is impossible so to liue as not to giue many times iust occasions of offences iust occasions of reproofes True it is for who is he that liues so well that giues not iust occasions of reproofes But what then must we not therefore study so to liue as not to giue any iust occasion of reproofe Our Sauiour Christ telleth vs that we must be perfect euen as our Father which is in heauen is perfect A thing altogether impossible for vs to be perfect in this life Yet must we euen in this life striue thereunto that though we cannot come as farre as wee should yet we may endeauour to come as farre as we can euen as our Apostle witnesseth of himselfe where he saith Phil. 3. ●● ●● I forget that which is behinde and endeauour to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke c. Where he plainely sheweth that though he could not come vnto perfection yet he laboured thereunto Right so although we cannot be blamelesse nor happily without iust occasion of blame and reproofe yet must wee studie and endeauour so to liue amongst men as that neither by word not by deede wee giue them iust occasion to complaine of vs or to blame vs. But how farre a great many in these last and worst daies are from this study and endeauour he seeth little that seeth not When the Apostle saith doe all things without murmuring and reasonings that yee may be blamelesse he sheweth plainely that those that are tainted with those faults of murmuring and brawling and contention are not blamelesse but are iustly to be reproued giuing iust occasion thereof by their wranglings and malecontented contentions To go one steppe further the profane swearer is he such a student as now we speake of doth hee study to be without iust reproofe Nay reproue him for his cursed swearing a thing most worthy reproofe yet reprooue him and great oddes but he will heape oath vpon oath to let you know how little he esteemes iust reproofe I speake that I know hauing somtimes my selfe to my great grife heard it And if we should go farther how few such students should wee finde as studie to be blamelesse ye your selues do see it and finde it in the ordinary course of life and common experience Well let vs know that not only Scholers ought to be such students as now we speake of but all generally of what sort or state soeuer they be ought to study so to lead their liues as that they may want iust reproofe amongst their brethren And if we ought then let vs be such students and let euery of vs set such a watch before our lips that we may not offend with our tong and so order our steps that we giue no iust occasion of exception against vs that so we may come as neere vnto this of our Apostle as we can to be blamelesse The next clause is that we may be pure We must walke before God with feare and trembling and
obeyed is called a sacrifice Now what sacrifices be these These be the sacrifices of the new Testament these bee liuely sacrifices and holy and acceptable vnto God and these together with the sacrifice of praise and of the workes of loue are the only sacrifices which now Christians are to offer vnto their God An end of all other sacrifices was then when Christ cried vpon the crosse it is finished These onely remaine and these are our reasonable seruing of God How should not this stirre vp both Pastor and people to doe that they should In the Pastor his burning zeale to giue his life for his people in the people their obedience of faith by the ministery of their Pastors are their holy and Christian sacrifices and their reasonable seruing of God And these sacrifices are now no lesse to be offered by vs in the new Testament then were those sacrifices of beasts and other like things to be offered in the old Testament and surely are farre more acceptable vnto God then were they But I promised only to speak of this in a word Now a word likewise of that that followeth For the same cause c. In these words the Apostle armeth them against sorrow if he should be offered vp vpon the sacrifice of their faith As he would be glad and reioyce with them if their faith should be confirmed by his death so hee would haue them likewise to be glad and reioyce with him if hee by his bloud should seale the testimony of their faith What then must we be glad and reioyce when our best Pastors and teachers are taken from vs Did not the Church well when Steuen was stoned to death Act. 8.2 to make great lamentation for him Yes no doubt they did well and whensoeuer the Church is depriued of any worthy member especially of any worthy Pastor and Teacher there is iust cause of great sorrow And the Apostle alloweth a moderation in lamenting for the dead so that we sorrow not as they that haue no hope 1 Thes 4.13 And it was a part of Iehoiakims plague that he should be buried like an Asse and none to make lamentation for him The meaning then is not that we should reioyce and be glad and not mourne simply at the death of our best Pastors and Teachers but that wee should bee glad and reioyce at the fruite which comes to the Church by their death if they suffer martyrdom for the confirmation of the brethrens faith For seeing their constancie and their cheerefulnesse to seale that truth with their bloud which they taught and preached this should both make vs reioice that God giueth such strength vnto his Saints and likewise confirme vs in the faith of Iesus Christ and further animate vs patiently to endure whatsoeuer tribulations for Christ his sake The Apostle himselfe would not no doubt reioyce simply in his suffering and death but in that onely thereby God should be glorified and Gods children strengthened So we are to reioyce not simply that our Pastors and Teachers are taken by the hands of Tyrants and racked and martyred but in that God vouchsafeth thus to conforme them to the image of his sonne and to make their bloud the seede of the Church so that thereby both the faith of them that are already in the Church is confirmed and others likewise are brought vnto the faith Here only wee are to looke to this caueat that we do not iudge of a martyr only by his suffering but further by the cause of his suffering For not the suffering but the cause of his suffering makes him a Martyr If he suffer death for the testimonie of Christ Iesus his death is well called a martyrdome And in his death we are so to reioyce as already ye haue heard Thus farre of the reasons enforcing obedience to those exhortations which the Apostle inferreth vpon the example of Christ his humility and obedience which the Apostle laid as a most strong and sure ground of his exhortation vnto humblenesse and lowlines of minde LECTVRE XXXIX PHILIP 2. Verse 19.20 And I trust in the Lord Iesus to send Timotheus shortly vnto you that I also may be of good comfort when I know your state c. AND I hope in the Lord Iesus In this latter part of this Chapter the Apostle his desire is to comfort the Philippians and indeed to confirme them that they should not bee troubled though they liued in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation as it appeareth they did ex vers 15. but that they should grow forward from grace vnto grace that when hee should heare of them he might heare of them to his comfort To comfort them therefore he 1. promiseth to send Timothy vnto them a man whom themselues knew to bee a faithfull minister of Christ Iesus and to loue them sincerely 2. He putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly after vnto them 3. He telleth them that now he sendeth their faithfull minister Epaphroditus vnto them and the causes why By all which things as the Philippians were iustly to be comforted so were they so many caueats to warne them that neither Timothy nor hee nor Epaphroditus might finde any cause of griefe or discomfort amongst them when they should come vnto them In his promise to send Timothy vnto them I note 1. his promise to send him 2. the reason why he sent him rather then any other In his promise 1. I note the holy limitation thereof 2. The promise 3. The end of sending him Touching the 1. Paul doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but saith he I hope in the Lord Iesus c. It is to bee vnderstood that at this time when the Apostle wrote these things he was in prison at Rome where Timothy ministred vnto him and serued him in such things as he needed Now it seemes he was in hope shortly to bee deliuered out of prison and then his certaine resolution was first to send Timothy vnto them and then shortly after himselfe to come vnto them But how the Lord would dispose of these things he knew not Onely hee knew that the heart of Nero who had cast him in prison was in the hand of the Lord Iesus to dispose of as seemed best to his godly wisedome and so he loued them that he hoped the Lord Iesus would deliuer him out of prison and bring him vnto them Because therefore he knew not certainely how it would please the Lord to dispose of these things hee doth not absolutely promise to send Timothy vnto them but inasmuch as his loue to them made him to hope the best hee saith I hope in the Lord Iesus c. The lesson which hence wee haue to learne is this in all things whatsoeuer we purpose to doe still to depend vpon the will and pleasure of the Lord Iesus not resolutely to set down this or that will I doe but with these or the like conditions and limitations I
the Lord and his strength and doe first honour him that so he may honour them before all people Nay euery plot is sooner and oftener cast then this and this comes seldome or neuer within their thoughts or if it doe yet this is too slow a course for them God must giue them leaue to climbe vp another way and then when they are where they would be they will serue him perhaps when they thinke of him Againe are there not many that are so couetous that they seeke by all meanes to be rich and to be Lords if it were possible of the whole earth And yet how many of them remembring that the Lord maketh poore and maketh rich doe first seeke the Lord so to become rich by him Nay if fraud oppression vsurie or the like will make them rich they will not wait vpon the Lord but thus they will become rich Yea but these and such like as seeke and delight only in pleasures and idlenesse and riches and honour and the like they seeke these things altogether they seeke not the Lord at all neither is God in all their thoughts but thou seekest the Lord and delightest in his Law And so doe many which yet seeke their owne more then that which is Iesus Christs Wilt thou then see whether thine owne things or the things of Christ Iesus be more sought of thee whether in some things thou preferre not thy selfe before thy Christ and his will Aske thine owne heart and see whether if thy God should bid thee doe as Zacheus did Luk. 19.8 giue halfe of thy goods to the poore and if thou hast taken from any man by forged cauillation to restore him foure-fold whether I say it would not grieue thee so to doe See whether if thy Christ should say vnto thee as he said to the young man in the Gospell Goe sell that thou hast Mat. 19.21 and giue to the poore and thou shalt haue treasure in heauen and come and follow mee whether I say thou couldest be content to doe so See whether in thy care for thy health for thy wealth for thy life c. thy first and chiefe care therein be that thereby thy God may be glorified See I say and looke into these and the like things with a strait eye and this shall be a good rule for thee to know whether thou seeke thine owne more then Iesus Christs And howsoeuer you shall finde your selues in the examination of these things guiltie or guiltlesse this you must know that Christian dutie requireth this of vs that first and principally we should seeke the glory of God and the things that belong vnto our peace and then afterwards the things that belong vnto this life Wee are carefull for many things what to eat what to drinke wherewith to be clothed how to liue and pay euery man his owne how to prouide for our wiues and our children how to maintaine our state and calling c. and so wee may and so wee ought to haue a godly care of these things without diffidence or distrust in Gods gracious prouidence but the rule which our Sauiour Christ giueth that must wee still keepe Mat. 6.33 first to seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnes and then all these things which are outward meanes of liuing and well liuing shall be cast vpon vs. Christ must bee vnto vs health and wealth and life and all things else We must cast our care vpon him and he will care for vs. Aboue all things wee must submit our selues vnto his will and walke after his Law and whatsoeuer things are needfull and meet for vs hee will minister vnto vs. Let euery man therefore so seeke his owne things that first and principally hee seeke the things of God let him so minde earthly things that his affections be principally set on the things that are aboue let him so regard his body that he principally looke vnto his soule LECTVRE XLI PHILIP 2. Vers 22.23.24 But yee know the proofe of him that as a sonne with the father hee hath serued with mee in the Gospell NOw the Apostle in these words to cleere Timothee of that fault wherewith very many of the rest were tainted that hee sought not his owne more than that which was Iesus Christs he asketh no other or better proofe thereof then their owne knowledge and experience of him for that they knew very well that Timothee as a sonne with the father serued with the Apostle the Lord Christ in preaching of his Gospell But yee saith the Apostle know the proofe of him c. As if the Apostle should haue said The rest that are with mee at least very many of them seeke their owne more then that which is Iesus Christs But for Timothee your selues will serue to cleere him of this fault yee know vpon that knowledge and proofe which yee haue of him that hee is another kinde of man that he hath serued with me euen as a sonne with his father whom Christ Iesus wherein in the Gospell that is in the preaching of the Gospell his ministerie is fully knowne vnto you that both he and I haue walked after one rule in preaching of the Gospell of Iesus Christ euen that wee haue walked as the father and the sonne in the selfe same steps vnto the building of the spirituall Temple of Christ Iesus hee walking as hee hath mee for example This I take to bee the Apostle his meaning in these words The notes hence to bee obserued I will rather point at then much stand vpon especially in this place and auditorie 1. Hence I note that Timothy whom the Apostle sent vnto the Philippians was a man of whom they had had proofe and experience before and whose faithfulnesse in the worke of his ministery was so well knowne vnto them that they could not doubt thereof And this was the cause why the Apostle thought it not needfull to labour much in the clearing of Timothy from such faults as had infected the rest or in the enlarging of his commendation they knew that as a son with the father so he had laboured with the Apostle in preaching the Gospell of Christ Iesus A thing whereunto euen all the ministers of Christ Iesus ought most earnestly to striue by their faithfull and carefull walking in the workes of their calling to approue themselues not onely before the Lord but also before men to be the faithfull seruants of Christ Iesus Yea but here is all the skill to do so or rather it seemeth a thing impossible to approue our selues both before the Lord and also before men For if we yet should please men we were not the seruants of Christ And therefore the Apostle in an onother place protesteth against pleasing of men Gal. 1.10 and saith we so speake not as they that please men but God which trieth our hearts 1. Thes 2.4 How is it then possible for vs to approue our selues both before God and before men True
them saith hee that haue the ouer-sight of you and submit your selues vnto them for they watch saith he for your soules c. Againe saith the same Apostle 1 Tim 5.17 The elders that rule well are worthy of double honor especially they which labour in the word and doctrine c. Let vs therefore take heede how we do despise or not reuerence these our spirituall fathers in Christ Iesus Pro. 30.17 For if the eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother shall be a pray vnto the rauens of the valley to picke it out and vnto the young Egles to eate it How much more shall it be so vnto vs if wee despise the instruction of our fathers in Christ Iesus and if wee stop our eares at the voice of their charming charme they neuer so wisely Againe let vs take heede how we doe not obey those our spirituall fathers in Christ Iesus Deut. 21.18 For if the stubborne and disobedient sonne that will not hearken to the voice of his father or of his mother nor will obey their admonition shall bee stoned with stones vnto the death how much more shall the iudgement of God ouertake vs if we will not heare nor incline our eares to obey the voice of our fathers in Christ Iesus if wee will not hearken and obey their admonitions and exhortations which in Christ his steede do beseech vs and admonish vs and exhort vs. Heare the voice of wisedome a voice fearefull yet most true Pro. 1.24 because saith Wisedome I haue called and ye refused c Euen thus shall it be vnto all them that obey not the voyce of wisedome in the mouth of the Minister Hearken therefore and obey for obedience is better then sacrifice Yea and reuerence the person of the Minister for the words sake which he bringeth In a word from this one example of Timotheus commendation let Ministers of the younger sort learne to reuerence their auncients in their ministery let young men learne to honour the person of the aged and let all of vs learne to carie our selues towards them that haue begotte vs in the faith as sonnes vnto their father Now followeth the conclusion of his first promise which was to send Timotheus vnto them in these words him therefore I hope c. Wherein is set downe the repetition of the former promise and likewise a farther signification of the time when he would send him Him saith he I hope to send there is the repetition of the former promise as soone as I know how it will go with me here is the signification of the time when he would send him Before he had said I trust to send Timotheus shortly vnto you now he sheweth what he meant by that shortly that is as soone as he should know whether he should be deliuered from his bonds by Nero which he hoped should bee shortly And the cause why he sent him not presently with Epaphroditus was because as yet he knew not certainely how his matters would go and he was very desirous that at his Timotheus comming vnto them they might bee comforted ouer his deliuerance from his bonds I haue already pointed at such notes as I thought meete to bee gathered from this promise It followeth And I trust in the Lord In these words he putteth them in hope of his owne comming shortly vnto them Which his promise as the other dependeth vpon the hope of his deliuerance out of prison This hope also of his comming vnto them he putteth them in for their farther comfort and likewise for their farther confirmation in the faith Whence 1. we may note the Apostle his great care that they might be comforted and therein obserue the great care that the Ministers of Christ Iesus should haue of the comfort of their people in the times of their distresses of which note wee haue already spoken before 2. We may note the Apostle his great care that they might grow strong in the faith and abound in euery good worke vnto the glory of God the father And this care ought also to be in the Ministers of Christ Iesus towards their people as also I haue heretofore obserued Only here remaineth one doubt to be answered For here some happily will aske how it fell out with this hope and confidence of the Apostle was he deceiued of his hope and confidence or did he as he hoped he should send Timothy shortly after vnto them did he as he trusted he should come himselfe shortly after vnto them Whereunto 1. I answere what if he were deceiued of his hope and confidence doth this at all impaire his credit and authority If it had beene a matter of faith and doctrine it should But this was a thing casuall and contingint wherein he might be deceiued and yet his credit no whit diminished For albeit he had the spirit of truth to lead him into all truth in whatsoeuer doctrine hee deliuered vnto the Church Yet in things that concerned himselfe especially in things future and contingent might he be deceiued euen as we see in this place that albeit he had the gift of healing yet Epaphroditus whom hee dearely loued had like to haue died with him 2. I answere that whether hee were deceiued of his hope and confidence or no I cannot certainely tell because it appeareth not by the Scriptures But very well it might be ●hat both he sent Timothy vnto them and that himselfe came afterwards vnto them For this we must know that hee was twise imprisoned at Rome by Nero. First hee was cast into prison in the third yeere of N●ro and deliuered in the fift Againe hee was cast into prison in the twelfth yeere of Nero and was put to death in the thirteenth of his raigne Writing therefore this his Epistle in his first imprisonment it might very well be that in that seuen or eight yeeres betweene that and his second imprisonment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both he sent and went to Philippie And the word which the Apostle here vseth maketh it very probable that both he sent and went thither being a word which signifieth an assured confidence and is seldome or neuer vsed but when the thing followeth which thus is trusted Howsoeuer hee went or went not it is no matter of our faith or where about we neede to be troubled This is sure hee trusted in the Lord to come vnto them and to see them that so they might bee comforted one in another and that hee might confirme and strengthen them in the faith And let this be spoken touching his second promise LECTVRE XLII PHILIP 2. Verse 25.26 But I supposed it necessary to send my brother Epaphroditus vnto you my companion in labour and follow souldier c. BVt I supposed it necessarie In this last part of this Chapter which concerneth Epaphroditus the Apostle 1. signifieth his present sending of Epaphroditus backe againe vnto them 2. He setteth downe the causes why he sent
God submit themselues vnto his will who will dislodge them when it seemeth best to his godly wisdome and in the meane time let them this know and therein comfort themselues that howsoeuer their fight bee long and great yet that the Lord hath so done with their enemies as Iudah dealt with Adonibezek Judg. 1.6 euen cut off the thumbes of their hands and feet that is so abated their power and broken their strength that though they continually assault them yet can they neuer preuaile against them This therefore I doe not say as if I liked that any should desire to die before his time appointed of the Lord come but rather to lesson vs in this that when our glasse is runne and our time appointed of the Lord come we should not then be vnwilling to lay downe our liues but rather bee then glad and reioyce that our warfare is at an end and that wee shall be ioyned with our head Christ Iesus A man would thinke wee should greatly desire to be deliuered from these miseries whereunto this life is subiect rather to triumph ouer our enemies then to liue still at the staues end with them rather to raigne with Christ in the valley of blessing where there is peace and ioy and life for euermore then to fight vnder Christ in the valley of teares where hee shall beare away many strokes though not any deadly wounds because his life is hid with Christ in God What then should bee the cause why wee should not most willingly lay downe our liues in the time of death Surely in my iudgement it is because in the time of our health wee minde too much earthly things and set our affections too little on the things that are aboue For if in the time of our health our conuersation were in heauen as it should bee wee would most patiently and willingly looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile bodie that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie and when death approched we would cry with the Apostle Come Lord Iesus come quickly To conclude this point therefore when our time appointed of the Lord comes let vs willingly lay downe our liues and let vs be glad and reioyce that our warfare is at an end And to the end that in the time of death we may do so let our conuersation in the meane time in the time of health be in heauen let vs set our affections on the things that are aboue and not on the things which are on the earth For he longed after all you c. In these words the Apostle setteth downe the cause why he now presently sent Epaphroditus vnto the Philippians and did not stay him till either Timothie or himselfe should come vnto them The cause was as appeareth by the Apostle because Epaphroditus greatly longed it is not said after his owne people and them of his owne familie but because he longed after the Church at Philippi neither so onely but after all the Church at Philippi neither did he onely long after them all but so he longed that he was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them And why did he so long after them that he was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them The Apostle saith because the Philippians had heard of his sicknesse Epaphroditus then longed after all the Church at Philippi and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them and therefore the Apostle sent him presently vnto them and againe Epaphroditus knew that the Philippians had heard of his sicknes and therefore he longed after them all and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them To knit vp then both the causes in one and to gather the summe of all the cause why the Apostle sent Epaphroditus now presently vnto them was because Epaphroditus hauing heard that the Philippians knew of his sicknesse longed greatly after them all and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them and comfort them ouer his sicknesse lest they should be swallowed vp of too much griefe for both Pauls bands and his sicknes Here then I note what mutuall loue and affection there should be betweene the Pastor and his people euen the like that was betweene Epaphroditus and his people of Philippi The Pastor his sicknes or sorrow whatsoeuer should be the peoples sorrow and heauinesse of heart and againe the peoples trouble of minde or affliction of bodie should be the Pastors anguish of soule and vexation of spirit So it was betweene Epaphroditus and his Church at Philippi as here we see and so it was betweene Paul and all the Churches at least on his part as himselfe witnesseth saying that such was his care of all the Churches 2 Cor. 11.29 that if any were weake he was also weake and if any were offended he also burned And I wish I could truely instance in the like affection betweene many Pastors and their people in this our day But such examples are not euery where with vs nay in too many places with vs the Pastor cares not if he may haue their fleece though hee neuer see or heare of his people and flocke and againe in too many places the people care not if they may haue their forth in their owne delights and desires though they neuer see or heare of their Pastor Yea so farre are they from this sympathie and mutuall loue and affection one towards another that so the one may haue his profit and the other their pleasure they are not much touched without any further respect either of other Well it should not be so but the ioy of the one should be the ioy of the other and the griefe of the one should be the griefe of the other Now here happily it may be demanded why either Epaphroditus or the Philippians should be so full of heauinesse and take the matter so much to heart seeing his sicknes which was the cause of all this heauinesse came vnto him by the will of God and his gracious prouidence Whereunto in one word I answer that this mutuall heauinesse one for another was onely an argument of their mutuall loue one of another not any argument of their ignorance or doubt of Gods prouidence in his sicknesse Our Sauiour Christ as we read groned in the spirit and was troubled in himselfe Joh. 11.33 and wept for the death of Lazarus This shewed his great loue of Lazarus as the Iewes very well gathered saying behold how he loued him 36. but will any man gather hence that he knew not or doubted of Gods prouidence in his death Nay himselfe plainely said in the beginning of that chapter that that sicknes was not vnto death but for the glory of God that the sonne of God might be glorified thereby So that albeit he knew that his death was by Gods prouidence God so prouiding that his Sonne might thereby be glorified yet such was his loue towards him that
he wept and was much troubled for him Well then Epaphroditus and the Philippians might be full of heauinesse each for other in regard of that loue and tender affection which they had each to other and yet might they well both acknowledge the prouidence of God in his sicknesse which was the cause of heauinesse each in other To the point in generall in one word I say that in that loue which we beare and ought to beare one towards another we may be sorry one for the things that befall vnto another albeit we know certainely of the prouidence of Almighty God therein yet so in loue one towards another we must be sorrowfull one for another that our faith in Gods prouidence must stint our sorrow that it be not exceeding sorrowfull because we know that all things worke for the best for Gods children LECTVRE XLIV PHILIP 2. Verse 27. And no doubt he was sicke very neere vnto death but God had mercy on him and not on him only c. AND no doubt he was sicke c. In these words the holy Apostle 1. confirmeth that report which the Philippians had heard touching their Ministers sicknes that it was no vaine or false reporte but a very true reporte and secondly hee signifieth his recouerie and restoring vnto health That the report which they had heard was true the Apostle doth assure them first affirming his sicknes and no doubt hee was sicke and then the extremitie of his sicknes very neare vnto death In the signification of his recouerie and restoring vnto health which is in the next words the Apostle 1. setteth downe the cause of his recouerie which was Gods mercie but God had mercy on him 2. The extent of Gods mercie herein which was not to Epaphroditus alone but to Paul also and not on him onely but on mee also 3. The cause why the Lord in mercy to Paul also restored him vnto health to wit least he should haue sorrow vpon sorrow i. least his sorow which hee had by his owne bonds and imprisonment should be increased by the death of Epaphroditus their Minister least I should haue sorow vpon sorow The words need no farther opening or explicating being in themselues easie enough to be vnderstood Let vs therefore now see what notes and obseruations we may gather hence whereof wee may make some vse vnto our selues 1. Here we see that Epaphroditus a faithfull seruant of Iesus Christ a painefull Minister of the Church one whom the holy Apostle made that reckoning of that hee called him his brother his companion in labour his fellow-souldier was sick and that very sore sicke Whence I gather this obseruation that the children of God and most faithfull seruants of Iesus Christ are subiect as vnto many miseries and troubles and infirmities of this life so vnto sicknesse and diseases of the body How faithfull a seruant of Iesus Christ Timothy was ye heard a little before vpon occasion of the Apostle his promise to send him vnto the Philippians vers 19. And how subiect he was vnto sicknesse may appeare by that aduise which the Apostle giueth vnto him in his former Epistle vnto him 1 Tim. 5.23 where he aduiseth him to drinke no longer water but to vse a little wine for his stomachs sake and for his often infirmities Of Epaphroditus his sicknesse likewise ye see how plaine testimonie the Apostle giueth in this place Nay what childe of God freed or exempted from bearing of this crosse and drinking of this cuppe What shall wee say then Are not sicknesses and diseases of the body the rodde of Gods wrath a herewithall he doth punish the sinne and rebellion of the wicked Or doth the Lord lay the rodde of his wrath wherewith he punisheth the wicked vpon his owne children and faithfull seruants True it is that sicknesse and diseases of the body are the rodde of Gods wrath wherewith hee punisheth the disobedience and rebellion of the wicked as the Scriptures plainely proue vnto vs. Let that one place in Deuterenomie serue for all the rest where the Lord hauing made great promises of blessings vnto them that obey his commandements afterward threatneth curses and plagues vnto them that will not obey his voice and keepe his commandements And amongst other of those plagues which the Lord would bring vpon them Deut. 28.2.3.15 it is said the Lord shall smite thee with a consumption and with the feauer and with a burning ague and with a feruent heate c. Where ye see plainely that consumptions and feauers and hot-burning agues and such like diseases are reckoned among those plagues and roddes of his wrath wherwith he punisheth the sinnes of that Land 22 or that Countrie or that towne or that people whatsoeuer that wil not hearken vnto his voice nor obey his commandements And may we not iustly feare that the Lord hath taken this rodde into his hand and already begunne to punish vs therewith Looke vnto the disobedience and rebellion and neglect of walking in the waies of Gods commaundements that is generally amongst vs and see whether wee haue not giuen him cause to take this rodde and to punish vs therewith Againe looke vnto such hot agues vnto such sharpe and strange and pestilentiall diseases and sicknesses as are now generally amongst vs and see whether hee haue not begunne to doe with vs as he threatned in his law Surely for our sinnes euen because wee haue not obeyed his voice and done after his commaundements he hath taken his rodde and already begunne thus to punish vs therewith And this rodde of his wrath as wee our selues may see he doth lay euen vpon his owne children and faithfull seruants aswell as hee doth vpon the wicked and vngodly of the earth but yet with this difference Vpon the vngodly he layeth this rodde of his wrath in wrath and displeasure to render vnto them according to the wickednesse of their waies the same rodde also he laieth vpon his children not in wrath but in loue to reforme them and to reclaime them from the wickednesse of their waies Vpon the vngodly he layeth this rodde and the stroke thereof enrageth them against God so that in their sicknesse they are not onely with out all comfort and patience but like vnto cursed Caine they crie my sickenesse is greater then I am able to beare why am I thus what a seuere iudge is this that lieth his hand so heauily vpon me the same rodde also hee lieth vpon his children but he giueth them patience vnder the rodde and strength to beare whatsoeuer he laieth vpon them so that in their sicknes they are comfortable both in themselues and vnto others So that albeit the same rodde lye vpon both yet doth God lay it vpon them with great difference Which yet will better and more plainely appeare vnto vs if wee shall briefly touch some of those reasons why he lieth this rodde vpon his children why his children are visited with sicknesse One reason is as
the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 11.32 that being chastened of the Lord they may not be condemned with the world For such is the louing mercy of the Lord towards his children that when they haue either omitted some such dutie as they ought to haue performed or committed some such sinne as they ought not to haue done he as a louing father towards his tender childe whom hee dearely loueth correcteth and chastiseth them with the rodde of sicknesse or weaknesse or some such like rodde that so they may see their owne error and be healed For this cause saith the Apostle many are weake and sicke among you 30. and many sleepe For this cause for what cause euen for not discerning the Lord his body in comming vnto the communion of the body and bloud of Christ In which place the Apostle plainly sheweth that therefore many of Gods children are weake and sicke and die euen because they doe not duely and diligently examine themselues before they come vnto the celebration of the Lord his supper But saith hee when wee are iudged and punished wee are chastened of the Lord as children of their father that we should not be condemned with the world euen with the wicked men of the world whose portion is in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for euer Sometimes then Gods children are sicke that so their error or their negligence or their wickednesse may be reformed and they brought into the right way wherein they should walke Another reason is that so they may be staied from such inordinate waies as wherunto naturally they are bent and wherein sometimes they would walke if they were not holden backe as with a bridle For whose delight in the waies of the Lord is so entire and so altogether vncorrupt before him That hee maketh as he should do his law his whole delight and his councellour Nay whose pathes are so straight that hee hath not an ouerweening delight in some crooked by-pathes or whose will and desire and affections are so sanctified that they are not often enclined and sometimes caried as it were with a maine streame vnto that which is euill And therefore the Lord only wise knowing best what is best for his children sometimes visiteth them with sickenesse that so being exercised with his rodde they may not runne into such danger of body and soule as otherwise they would A third reason why the children of God are sicke sometimes is that thereby he may make triall of their faith and of their patience to see whether they can be conrent as to receiue health so to receiue sicknes of the Lord and whether as in health so in sicknesse they will put their trust in the Lord and submit themselues vnto his will For both health and sicknesse they are of the Lord and both in health and in sicknesse wee should put our trust in the Lord and submit our selues vnto his will Yet so choise wee are that we can be content to receiue health from the Lord but hardly to receiue sicknesse from the Lord and so weake wee are euen the best of vs that howsoeuer wee doe in health yet in sicknesse we can hardly submit our selues vnto God his will and oftentimes more put our trust in Phisitions then in the Lord 2 Cron. 16. as we read that that good King of Iudah Asa did therein declining from that right path wherein he ought to haue walked Sometimes then as I say Gods children are sicke that the Lord their God may so trie whether they will still cleaue fast vnto him and patiently submit themselues vnto his will A fourth reason why the Lo●d sometimes visiteth his children with sicknesse is that they also may haue a farther triall of the mercifull goodnesse of the Lord towards them For albeit his children are neuer without great experiences of his mercifull goodnesse towards them yet wherein haue they greater experience thereof and wherein their soule more to reioyce then that in the time of their sicknesse he assisteth them with the comfort of his holy spirit and giueth them strength and patience to endure what he laieth vpon them and suffereth not their faith or their hope to faile but so prepareth them vnto him that come death come life they can willingly embrace either because they know that come death come life they are the Lords An especiall great goodnesse of the Lord towards his children Whereof they haue such triall in time of their sicknesse as that thereby not themselues alone but such as are about them are and may bee greatly comforted And sometimes no doubt they are sicke that seeing the goodnesse of the Lord towards them in time of their sicknes they may the rather praise the Lord for his goodnesse and studie to glorifie his name in the time of their health Not to trouble you with moe reasons hereof the last reason why the Lord visiteth his children with sicknesse is to put them in minde both of that sinne which dwelleth in them and also of their mortalitie For sicknesse is both the fruite of sinne and also the Harbinger of death For howsoeuer sinne be not the only cause wherefore sicknesse commeth yet is it alwaies a cause wherefore it is sent insomuch that we see when our Sauiour healed some that were sicke hee would say sometimes vnto them some be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Math. 9 2. In which speach he gaue them this note that sinne was the principall cause of their sicknesse and sometimes hee would say vnto them Behold thou art made whole sinne no more least a worse thing come vnto thee wherein in effect he told them that their sicknesse was a chasticement for their sinne And againe howsoeuer death doth not alwaies follow sicknes yet ought sicknesse alwaies to put vs in minde of our mortality Well it may be that those our houses of clay which in this or that sicknesse threaten to fall may for a time bee patched vp againe yet they which threaten now to fall at length shall fall and downe to the ground they shall be brought For as the Psal mist speaketh who liueth that shall not see death Psa 89 47. or who shall bee able to deliuer himselfe from the hand of the graue Of the dust of the earth we are and to earth we shall returne and so many sicknesses as we are visited withall should be vnto vs as so many remembrances both of that sinne which cleaueth so fast vnto vs and likewise of death which is the fruit thereof Thus then ye see the reasons why the Lord lieth this rodde of sicknesse vpon his owne children namely as a mercifull and louing father to reforme whatsoeuer error negligence or other fault is in them to keepe them backe as with a bridle from inordinate walking to make triall of their faith and patience to giue them triall of his mercifull goodnesse towards them and to put them in minde of sinne dwelling in them
euen the like extremitie of sickenesse that Epaphroditus was brought vnto A step onely betweene them and death or rather no steppel but they deliuered out of the iawes of death as a pray out of the teeth of the wilde beast or as a bird out of the snare of the fouler And this the Lord may seeme to doe for these causes amongst many other 1. Thereby to make his power more to be knowne amongst the sonnes of men For what can more manifest the power of almighty God then to saue vs when the pit is now ready to shut her mouth vpon vs and nothing but present death before vs 2. To encrease their thankefulnesse who being brought vnto the gates of death are thence deliuered For how much neerer they were vnto death so much greater praises are due vnto him that hath deliuered them from death 3. Thereby to humble them for euer vnder his mightie hand by whom they yet liue moue and haue their being For what should more humble vs then plainely to see that it is no way in our selues but in the Lord only to saue our life from death and to deliuer vs from the power of the graue Seeing then it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities as of other dangers so of sicknesse let vs take heed how we iudge them as plagued of God for their offences because they are so extreamly visited Yee know it was the great fault of Iobs friends that still they vrged him that surely hee was a great and grieuous sinner a wicked and an vngodly man because the Lord his hand was so heauie vpon him Nay my brethren though some of our brethren in these hot and sharpe diseases through extremity of paine or otherwise howsoeuer should somtimes breake out into impatient speaches yet let vs take heede how we iudge them as forsaken of the Lord ye know the example of Iob into what execrations and words of impatiencie he brake out through that extremitie of griefe wherewith he was holden who yet was a very choise seruant of the Lord and whose patience is commended in the Scriptures Againe seeing it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities of sicknesse let this be a comfort vnto vs in what extremitie of sicknesse so euer we shall be For no new thing herein doth befall vs but such as oftentimes doth the dearest children of God and he which deliuered them from the hand of the graue when the pit had euen shut her mouth almost vpon them will also deliuer vs if it shall be for his glory and our good Sicknesse and extremitie of sickenesse all are of the Lord and all for the best vnto his children Let vs therefore in all things that befall vs so submit our selues vnto the will of the Lord as that both in heart and voice we euer pray and say thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen LECTVRE XLV PHILIP 2. Verse 27. But God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also lest I should haue sorrow vpon sorrow BVt God had mercy on him Where the Apostle first setteth downe the cause of his recouerie and restoring vnto health which was Gods mercy 2. The extent and bountifulnes of Gods mercy therein reaching not to Epaphroditus alone but to Paul also 3. The Apostle setteth downe the cause why the Lord in mercy towards him also restored Epaphroditus vnto health to wit left he should haue sorrow vpon sorrow .i. lest vnto that sorrow which already he had by his bands and imprisonment there should haue beene added another sorrow for his death The words are so plaine and easie in themselues to be vnderstood that there needeth no farther opening or explication of them Let vs therefore see what notes and obseruations we may gather hence whereof we may make some vse vnto our selues But God had mercy on him By which phrase of speech the Apostle signifieth Epaphroditus his recouerie and restoring vnto health Yet see how the Apostle was not content barely to say but he was restored vnto health but signifying euen this same thing he withall noteth both who restored him wherfore he was restored vnto health saying But God had c. As if he should haue said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I note that it is the Lord that woundeth and maketh whole that both visiteth vs with sicknesse and also holdeth our soule in life and healeth all our infirmities For so the Lord himselfe saith Behold now for I Deut. 32.29 I am he and there is no God with me I kill and giue life I wound and I make whole And againe in Exodus saith the Lord Ex. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee And therefore the Prophet thus praieth Heale me ô Lord and I shall be whole saue me I●r 17.14 Ps 103.2.3 and I shall be saued And the Prophet Dauid thus stirreth vp himselfe to praise the Lord saying Praise the Lord ô my soule and forget not all his benefits which forgiueth all thy sinne and healeth all thine infirmities or all thy sicknesses and diseases It is the Lord then yee see that healeth our sicknesse and holdeth our soule in life yea it is euen he that deliuereth vs both from the first and likewise from the second death Yet I would not here be so mistaken as if I iudged that because it is the Lord that healeth our infirmities therefore in the bed of our sicknes we should onely call vpon the Lord and neglect the meanes ordeined for the recouerie of our health For as he hath appointed the end so hath he ordeined the meanes vnto the end And albeit sometimes he worke without meanes and restore vnto health without any medicine or physicke at all yet most ordinarily he worketh by meanes and restoreth vnto health by medicine and physicke And therefore we are not at any time to neglect the meanes of physicke and such like helps for the recouerie of our health but rather we are to vse them with all thankfulnesse vnto the Lord for them and with all praier and supplication in the spirit for his blessing vpon them We see how that good King Ezechias when it had beene told him of the Lord by the Prophet 2 Reg. 20.5.6 thus Behold I haue healed thee and the third day thou shalt goe vp to the house of the Lord and I will adde vnto thy daies fifteene yeere yet for all that 7. when the Prophet said vnto him take a lumpe of dried figs and lay it vpon the boyle and thou shalt recouer he tooke it and laid it on and recouered He might haue said hath the Lord spoken and will he not performe it He hath promised me heal●h and a lengthning of my daies for 15 yeeres what neede I more then his word what neede I any medicine or prescript from any Physician
in comming to him to Rome in bringing with him that releefe which the Philippians sent vnto him and in ministring vnto him in prison such things as he wanted A seruice well called the worke of Christ because commanded by Christ and performed to the seruant of Christ for Christ his sake Againe in that the Apostle in the end of the verse saith to fulfill that seruice c. the Apostle his meaning is not thereby to note any fault in the Philippians as if they had beene any way wanting vnto him but therein he commendeth Epaphroditus his faithfull and painefull performance of that seruice which they if they had beene present with him would haue done but now could not because of their farre distance from him The whole reason is indeed drawne from the commendation of Epaphroditus His commendation is that he took such paines with him and for him that it had been like to haue cost him his life and that hee made not so much reckoning of his life as he did of discharging that trust that was reposed in him and performing that seruice which the Philippians themselues would haue done if they had beene present This I say is the commendation which the Apostle here giueth him and for this cause he willeth them to receiue him in the Lord with gladnesse Whence I gather this generall obseruation that it is a very commendable thing in the seruants of Christ not to regard their liues vnto the death but to hazard their liues for the worke of Christ which either Christ hath commanded them to doe in their place whatsoeuer or which for Christ his sake they are to performe vnto any seruant of Christ What thing more commendable or memorable in Esther Ester 3.13 then that when the Kings decree was past against the Iewes to roote out to kill and to destroy all the Iewes 5.1 both yong and old children and women in one day she put her life in present danger to deliuer her people For it was a matter of death by the law for one not called to come into the inner court vnto the King 4.11 Yet for this worke of God the deliuerance of his Church from the deuouring sword shee put her life in most eminent danger and went in into the King 16 which was not according to the law We see it likewise registred vnto the view of all posteritie touching the Apostles that their liues were not deare vnto them so that they might fulfill their course with ioy that they were ready not to be bound onely but also to die for the name of the Lord Iesus that howsoeuer they were threatned yet they would not cease to preach in the name of Christ Iesus And whiles this Epistle shall be read Epaphroditus his praise shall not die for hazarding his life for the worke of Christ in releeuing Paul his necessitie when he was in prison and ministring vnto him such things as he wanted Yea and what if we should not onely hazard our liues but giue vp our liues for any worke of Christ Haue we not a sure promise He that loseth his life for my sake saith our Sauiour shall saue it Matth. 10 39. 1 Reg. 17. If therefore Eliah or any of the poore children of God be an hungred want to satisfie their hunger though we haue but an handfull of meale in a barrell and a litle oyle in a cruse for our selues and for our familie and though we haue no more hope of sustenance but euen to die when that is spent and eaten yet let vs with that good widow of Sarepta straine and hazard our selues that they may be somewhat releeued If Paul or any godly brother in Christ bee in prison though our watchings and care and paines and trauaile with them and for them bee not without manifest danger of our health and happily of our life yet let vs with godly Epaphroditus by all these hazard our selues and our liues for their good and such things as may be needfull for them If any brother be sicke though it be with some danger let vs visit him and comfort him If for the worke of our ministerie we be so pressed that in our selues we receiue the sentence of death as our holy Apostle was often pressed yet let vs not shrinke but let vs declare vnto the people all the words of the Lord and speake of all the iudgements of his mouth In a word in whatsoeuer worke of Christ for I doe not now speake of this worke alone here mentioned but in whatsoeuer worke of Christ which he hath commanded vs in our places to doe or which being done for his sake hee accounteth as done for himselfe let vs be bold in the Lord let not our liues bee dearer vnto vs then the performance of his will but let vs hazard our liues for the worke of Christ But here the doubt may be made and the question demanded whether we are alwaies to hazard our liues for the worke of Christ whether in some worke of Christ we may not sometimes withdraw our selues from danger and prouide for our health for our liues As for example whether we may not forbeare the visiting of the sick when the sicknes is pestilentiall and contagious whether in such times we may not prouide for our health for our liues The question I know is hard and the doubt not easily answered neither will I take vpon me the decision of the doubt only I shew my opinion and willingly submit it to the iudgement of others Touching priuate men therefore I meane such as whose place and office doth not necessarily require a more publike care then of themselues of their own family they may in my iudgment spare themselues and not hazard their health or their liues but for the time withdraw themselues from the danger especially if such reasonable order be taken for the sicke as that by comming vnto them they may more endanger themselues others then doe them good My reasons are these 1. By the law of Moses we see that those that were troubled with any contagious disease as with the leprosie Leu. 13 46. they were commanded to dwell apart and to haue their habitation without the campe and in places where they came to cry I am vncleane I am vncleane Which doth plainely shew that all were not to come vnto them but both they were to giue warning vnto others and others were to take warning by them lest happily they should be infected by them if they should come vnto them Againe howsoeuer in such cases we could be content to hazard our selues and our owne liues yet may we and we ought to haue care ouer our owne houshold and ouer that charge that is committed to vs. 1 Tim. 5.8 For if there be any saith the Apostle that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold be denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell We must then prouide for
through the faith of Christ c. he would be clothed in that day with Christ his righteousnesse imputed vnto him by God through faith that he might be iudged by it and receiue his reward according to the merit of it This righteousnesse is sometimes called the righteousnesse of faith because by faith in Christ we are made partakers of this righteousnes sometime the righteousnesse of God because it is the meere gift of God who doth impute it vnto vs through faith in Christ sometimes the righteousnesse of Christ because it is his and onely inherent in him Hee would be found in that day hauing this righteousnesse Hence then I obserue that the righteousnesse whereby wee are accounted righteous before God is the righteousnesse of Christ or of faith or of God which soeuer ye will make it This also the Apostle hath euery where Rom. 3.24.25 We are iustified freely by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus whom God hath set forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud Againe Gal. 2.16.3.11 know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the Law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Againe that no man is iustified saith the Apostle by the Law Eph. 2.8.9 it is euident for the iust shall liue by faith And againe by grace are ye saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe Yea euery where almost the holy Ghost witnesseth that we are accounted righteous before God not for our owne workes or deserts but onely by grace through faith for the merit and obedience of our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus This then is our righteousnes before God that God through faith in Christ Iesus imputeth not our sins vnto vs but imputeth Christ his righteousnesse vnto vs reckoning the righteousnesse of his obedience vnto the Law vnto vs as if wee had fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law in our flesh and for the merits of his sufferings wiping all our sinnes out of his sight remembrance So that Christ his righteousnesse alone is our righteousnesse before God which because God doth impute vnto vs freely by his grace through faith therefore the Apostle saith it is God that iustifieth God then iustifieth his grace onely moueth him not any of our workes Christ and his righteousnes is the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified faith is the instrument whereby onely wee are made partakers of his righteousnesse I know that there are dogges which barke against this truth affirming that the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified is not only imputed vnto vs but inherent in vs. But this one place may serue to descrie this their madnesse It is of God imputed by him vnto vs therefore not inherent in vs. It is through faith therefore not inherent in vs. It is through the faith of Christ therefore really inherent onely in Christ It is not our owne but onely by faith in Christ therefore not really inherent in vs. If they vrge the Apostle Iames his authoritie to proue that the righteousnesse whereby we are iustified is inherent in vs because he saith that a man is iustified by workes we answere that the Apostle there speaketh not of that righteousnesse whereby man is made righteous before God but only sheweth that by a mans workes hee is knowne and declared to be iustified by faith so that the Apostle maketh not workes in that place the causes but onely the fruites and effects of iustification If they reply that it is a sufficient proofe that we are iustified by workes because we are iustified by faith which is a worke we answer that iustification is attributed to faith because of Christ and his righteousnesse which it receiueth not because it is a worke of ours For as it is a worke of ours so it is not without some doubting but is imperfect as also our knowledge and loue are and so iustification is not attributed vnto it but onely as it taketh hold vpon Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse which is our perfect righteousnesse Whatsoeuer therefore they say l●t vs know that the righteousnesse whereby we are accounted righteous before God is only inherent in Christ Iesus and is not ours but only by imputation inasmuch as God doth impute it vnto v● through faith in Christ Iesus Let this teach vs to beware of such Deceiuers as tell vs that we are not iustified before God by Christ his righteousnesse alone but by workes also Rom. 8.1 And seeing it is Christ his righteousnesse alone whereby we are made righteous before God let vs reioyce in Christ Iesus alone and let vs iudge all our best workes whatsoeuer to be dung that we may be found in that day not hauing our owne righteousnesse c. Why should it be thought iniurious vnto man to giue all the glory of our righteousnesse or saluation vnto Christ Iesus Why should it not rather be thought iniurious vnto Christ Iesus to giue any part of our righteousnes or saluation vnto mans works or merits Too much cannot be taken from man neither can too much be giuen vnto Christ for he is all in all vnto vs our wisedome and righteousnesse our sanctification and redemption he is the reconciliation for our sinnes by him and through him and for him we haue all that we haue and vnder heauen there is no name giuen whereby wee may be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus Let vs therefore giue vnto him that which is due vnto him let not man rob him of his honour Let vs follow after peace and holinesse and righteousnes and euery good worke and let vs know that thi● labour shall not be in vaine vnto vs in the Lord. But let vs know that it is God alone that iustifieth vs by grace th●ough faith not imputing our sinnes but Christ his righteousnesse vnto vs and so making his righteousnesse ours as our sinnes were made his to wit by imputation only To knit vp the last obseruation in a word will you know how to be found in Christ in that day A matter worthy your knowledge For there shall be no condemnation vnto them that then shall be found in him If then wee will be found in Christ in that day we must bee found righteous to be iudged by it And thus farre the matter goeth hard with vs all being all of vs full of vnrighteousnesse and vngodlinesse What is then the righteousnes wherein we must be found to be iudged by it in that day Not our owne for that would sinke vs deep but the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus How shall we be found it this righteousnesse in that day If wee renounce all confidence in our owne righteousnesse as losse and dung and trust perfectly on the grace of God that is brought vnto vs by the reuelation of Iesus Christ Let this then be our comfort that we shall not be iudged in that day by our owne righteousnes but
by the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus whose whole obedience in suffering death and fulfilling of the Law shall bee the couering of our sinnes and the cloke of our righteousnesse And let it teach vs to iudge all our workes in respect of that righteousnes whereby we are made righteous before God to be but losse and dung that we may be found in Christ not hauing our owne c. O Lord our God as thou hast vouchsafed to instruct vs in our true righteousnesse so vouchsafe by a true and liuely faith in thy sonne Christ Iesus to make vs partakers of that righteousnes Iudge not O Lord in that day by our own righteousnesse which is full of vnrighteousnes and vncleannesse but passing by our sinnes and our iniquities accept the righteousnes of thy sonne Christ Iesus for our vnrighteousnes that we being clothed with his righteousnes may be of the number of those vnto whom it shall be said Come yee blessed of my Father c. LECTVRE LVII PHILIP 3. Vers 10. That I may know him and the vertue of his resurrection c NOw the Apostle goeth forward and sheweth other reasons why he renounced all his owne merits as losse and dung and reioyced only in Christ Iesus 1. as we haue heard he did so that hee might gaine the righteousnesse of Christ by faith that was the first and principall gaine that he reckoned vpon by doing so 2. He did so for other aduantages that he reckoned vpon by doing so as ● he did so that he might know Christ 3. That he might know the vertue of his resurrection 4. That hee might know the fellowshippe of his afflictions and be made conformable vnto his death 5. That he might attaine vnto the resurrection of the dead What is the reason then why the Apostle hauing cause of confidence and reioycing in the flesh and in things without Christ doth renounce all things without Christ and reioyce only in Christ Iesus The reason is because reioicing in the flesh and in things without Christ is vnprofitable and hurtfull and contrariwise the renouncing of all things without Christ and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus is most profitable Why what profit comes thereby 1. Christs righteousnesse which is by faith 2. The knowledge of Christ 3. The knowledge of the vertue of his resurrection 4. The knowledge of the fellowshippe of his afflictions c. 5. The attaining vnto the resurrection of the dead All these vantages the Apostle reckoned vpon to follow his renouncing of all things without Christ and his reioycing onely in Christ Iesu● For so he saith that he iudgeth all things losse and dung that he may winne Christ and may be found in him c. as if these things could not be vnlesse he should do so All which vantages doe so follow the renouncing of all confidence in the flesh and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus as that these foure last doe issue and spring out of the first For being iustified by faith in Christ Iesus wee know Christ we know the vertue of his resurrection c. These being fruits issuing and growing out of that righteousnesse which is through the faith of Christ Thus much for the generall drift and meaning of these words Now for the more particular opening of these words wee must know that by the knowledge of Christ is here meant not such a knowledge as wherby we are able to talke of Christ of his birth of his life of his doctrine of his death and passion c. but such a knowledge as whereby we feele and proue in our selues and in our owne soules that hee is indeed our redemption our reconciliation our saluation and whatsoeuer else we haue heard or read or belieued of him in the Scriptures not a contemplatiue knowing knowledge of Christ but a liuely and experimentall knowledge of Christ in our owne soules Againe by the vertue of Christ his resurrection the Apostle meaneth that regeneration i. that dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse which is wrought in vs by the power of his resurrection 3. By the fellowshippe of Christ his afflictions the Apostle meaneth that partaking which Gods Saints haue with Christ of his afflictions for the glorie of Christ and the good of the Church and their owne conformitie vnto the death of Christ Lastly by attaining vnto the resurrection of the dead the Apostle meaneth that eternall weight of glory in the heauens which onely they obtaine that in this life know Christ by experience in their owne soules and by the power of his death and resurrection die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and constantly endure such afflictions as the Saints of God are partakers of that so they may be conformable vnto the death of Christ who was consecrated through afflictions The summe of all is this the Apostle tells the Philippians that he hath no confidence in his merits or workes but onely reioyceth in Christ Iesus that so he may be iustified before God by Ch●ist his righteousnesse and that being iustified by his righteousnesse through faith in his name he may know Christ by a liuely feeling of him in his owne soule and may by the power of his resurrection die vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnesse and may constantly with Gods Saints suffer such afflictions as Christ hath suffered and may be made conformable vnto Christ his death and at length may be receiued into that glory which is prepared to be shewed in the resurrection of the iust Thus then yee see that both these are the fruits of the righteousnesse of faith and that both the righteousnesse of faith and these fruits issuing out of it are all vantages which the Apostle counteth he hath hy renouncing all confidence in the flesh and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our vse That I may know him This is one end wherefore the Apostle would bee found in Christ hauing his righteousnesse through faith and consequently wherefore he renounced all his owne merits and works and onely reioyced in Christ Iesus euen that he might know Christ For why iudged he his owne righteousnes to be but losse and dunge That he might winne Christ and be found in him not hauing his owne righteousnesse but the righteousnes of Christ through faith And why would he be found in Christ his righteousnesse through faith that he might know Christ This is the fruit of the righteousnes of faith and both of them are vantages which follow the renouncing of all confidence in the flesh and the reioycing in Christ Iesus But what Did not Paul know Christ Had he preached Christ so many yeares yet knew not Christ Had he planted so many Churches in the faith of Christ and yet knew he not Christ For answer herevnto to omit that knowledge which is by vision in heauen when we shall see him face to face we must vnderstand that there are two sorts of knowledge of Christ here on earth
this knowledge of Christ and withall see and consider with your selues what a longing and thirsting desire you should haue after this knowledge of Christ The knowledge of Christ Iesus euen by hearing and by reading and by faith is as not long since we heard the most excellent knowledge that is but this experimentall knowledge of Christ to know by experience in our owne soules that he is such as by the word we beleeue him to be this is the most sweet and most comfortable knowledge euen so sweet and so comfortable as passeth all vnderstanding If yee haue this knowledge of Christ yee are already entred in part into those ioyes which are reserued in heauen for you If yee haue it not ô thirst after it and giue your soules no rest till yee come vnto this knowledge of Christ Giue all diligence vnto the reading and hearing of the word of life pray alwaies with all manner of prayer and supplication in the spirit that yee may know Christ with a feeling knowledge and with a sweet experience in your owne soules that whatsoeuer yee haue heard and beleeued of him is most true The second thing which here I note is from what roote this experimentall and feeling knowledge of Christ issueth and springeth and that is from the righteousnesse of faith For so we are to vnderstand this knowledge of Christ to be a vantage following the renouncing of our owne righteousnes and reioycing in the righteousnesse of Christ by faith as that this vantage springeth from the righteousnesse of faith Hence then I obserue that onely they know Christ by this experimentall knowledge who being iustified by faith doe by a true and liuely faith happly the righteousnesse and obedience of Christ Iesus vnto themselues For then doe we begin to haue this feeling knowledge of Christ in our owne soules when by faith we lay hold on the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus to be iustified thereby and the more sure hold that we lay by the hand of faith on the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus the more wee grow vp in this feeling knowledge of Christ Iesus We beleeue saith Peter vnto Christ Joh. 6.69 and know that thou art the Christ the Sonne of the liuing God We beleeue saith he and know as if he should haue said we beleeue and in our owne soules by the testimonie of the spirit witnessing it to our spirit we know that thou art the Christ the sonne of the liuing God Faith then in Christ Iesus is the roote whence this feeling knowledge of Christ commeth and the more stedfastly we beleeue the greater feeling of this knowledge doth the spirit of God worke within our soules Many of vs I feare me want this feeling knowledg of Christ many of vs that say thinke that we know him know him not by experience in our owne soules many of vs that haue heard and read of him know not that he is made of God vnto vs wisdome or righteousnesse sanctification or redemption many of vs know not what treasures of wisdome or knowledge or saluation are laid vp in him for vs many of vs I feare mee feele not in our selues the sweetnesse of Christ the fruits of his sufferings the comforts of his promises the riches of his mercies many of vs I feare me onely know Christ as we heare of Christ and read of Christ but know him not by his comfortable presence in our owne soules And what is the cause of all this Surely we haue no roote in our selues we want that true and liuely faith whence such knowledge should spring Wee deceiue our selues flattering our selues and saying we beleeue in Christ we know Christ when as we neither beleeue in him nor know him A smattering faith and a smattering knowledge of Christ we haue but a iustifying faith or sauing knowledge we haue none Is then a iustifying faith the roote whence a feeling and sauing knowledg doth spring Let this then teach vs to vse with all religious reuerence those meanes which the Lord hath ordained for the begetting and increasing of faith in vs that we may beleeue and know and growing in faith we may grow also in the knowledge of Christ Iesus Let vs with reuerence hearken vnto the word preached and celebrate the holy Sacraments two ordinarie meanes which the Lord vs●th thereby to beget and to increase faith in vs. For faith comes by hearing as the Apostle witnesseth where he saith Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Ro. 10.17 Seeing therefore wee cannot know Christ vnlesse we beleeue in him and seeing we cannot beleeue in him vnlesse we heare his word preached that we may beleeue in him and know him let vs willingly flocke as doues vnto the windowes vnto the house of the Lord to heare the word preached Againe as by the word preached so likewise by the vse of the Sacraments the Lord as by meanes strengthneth and increaseth our faith in vs. In the Lords Supper the bread is broken for vs giuen to vs we take it and eat it and digest it and it is made one substance with vs the wine likewise is powred out for vs giuen vnto vs we take it and drinke it and it is made one with vs. All which rites and actions what else are they but so many pledges and seales for the strengthning and increasing of our faith in the benefits of our saluation pu●chased by the death and passion of our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus The bread that is broken for vs in that Supper and the wine that is powred out for vs they are so sure pledges vnto vs that Christ his bodie was broken for vs and his bloud shed for vs as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes So likewise the bread and the wine that are giuen vnto vs by the Minister in the Supper they are so sure pledges vnto vs that Christ by his Spirit giueth vs his bodie and his bloud euen then in the supper as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes So likewise the bread which with the hand of our bodie we take and eat and the wine which with the hand of our bodie we take and drinke are so sure pledges vnto vs that by faith our soules doe feede vpon the bodie and bloud of Christ as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes Lastly the bread and wine which being digested are turned into our substance and made one with vs and we with them are so sure seales vnto vs that by a mysticall vnion and spirituall coniunction we are made one with Christ and Christ with vs members of his bodie flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue this by faith as we perfectly know that by sense Such are the helps
spirit euen we doe sigh in our selues waiting for the adoption euen the redemption of our body i. waiting for the consummation of our adoption and redemption when we shall fully possesse our inheritance with the Saints in heauen This the Apostle commended in the Corinthians that they waited for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.7 1 Thes 1.10 And likewise in the Thessalonians that they looked for the sonne of the liuing and true God from heauen And this is a thing which should be commended in vs all Tit. 2.12.13 For the grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men hath appeared and teacheth vs that wee should denie vngodlinesse c. looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the almightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Againe we I say much more because the creature onely waiteth that it may not afterwards be subiect vnto corruption or vanitie but the faithfull that they may also iudge the wicked and reigne with him for euer and euer Neither onely doth this comparison with the expectation of the creature shew what the expectation of the faithfull is for the second comming of Christ but much more will it appeare if wee shall compare it with the long wished most desired first comming of Christ in the flesh to destroy sinne in the flesh Wee read how greatly the Patriarches and Prophets and holy Saints of God in the old Testament desired and longed for that seede of the woman that starre of Iacob that Prince of peace that righteous branch that Emmanuel Our blessed Sauiour himselfe testifieth of Abraham that hee reioyced to see his day Ioh 8 56. i the time wherein he came in the similitude of sinnefull flesh and he saw it saith he namely with the eye of faith and was glad And in another place he tells his Disciples that many Prophets Luc. 10.24 and Kings had desired to see those things which they saw and had not seene them to heare those things which they heard and had not heard them And that good old Simeon notably expressed his great desire which he had to see Christ in the flesh when taking him in his armes he praised God and said Luc. 2.29.30.31 Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eies haue seene thy saluation c. Was his first comming so much expected and desired by them then and shall we thinke that his second comming is not much more desired by the faithfull now It was ioyful no doubt to see him come in the flesh but shall it not be much more ioyfull to see him come in glorie It was ioyfull to the shepheards and to the wise-men of the East to see the babe with Mary his mother and Ioseph but shall it not be much more ioyfull to see him attended vpon with tenne thousands of Saints and Angels Ioyfull to haue the earnest of our saluation but shall not the inheritance of it be much more ioyfull Ioyfull to haue the sting of death and the victorie of the graue taken away but shall not the vtter exemption from death and corruption bee much more ioyfull Then shall the sheepe be gathered into the fold neuer to be in danger of the wolfe or of wandering then shall the corne be gathered into the barne neuer to be shaken with the winde or mingled with the chaffe againe then shall there be a perpetuall Sabboth and no worke day after it an euerlasting Iubile when all bondage shall cease then shall all teares be wiped from all eies no more sorrow nor crying nor paine shall be but peace and gladnesse and ioy such as eye hath not seene nor e●re heard nor hath entred into the heart of man This is the expectation of the faithfull which maketh them to looke and long for the blessed appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ And now see the reason why the faithfull looke and long for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ Now they are pilgrimes then they shall come to an abiding citie now they are compassed with sorrowes then shall all teares be wiped from their eies now they are in continuall fight then shall euery enemie be subdued vnto them now they are absent in body from Christ then shall they follow the Lambe whethersoeuer he goeth now they know and loue and belieue in part then that which is in part shall be abolished now they walke by faith then shall they walke before the throne and before the Lambe for euermore then shall be the day of their glorification the day of their redemption the day of their saluation the day of their absolute consummation of all blessednes This is the cause why their mindes are euer running their thoughts euer musing their eies euer looking their soules euer longing after the second comming of Christ Iesus in glorie And for this cause they euen reach after it crying with the soules vnder the altar How long Lord holy and true But as for the wicked and vngodly of the earth it is not so with them They doe feare and tremble at the remembrance of it If they do but heare of it their countenance is changed their thoughts are troubled so that the ioynts of their loynes are loosed and their knees smite one against another as wee read of Belshazzar Dan. 5.6 when he saw the palme of the hand that wrote vpon the wall Yea so farre are they from looking and longing after that day that either they wish it might not be at all or else that it might be deferred And no maruell For then shall the Lord come as a swift iudge against them in flaming fire rendring vengeance vnto them which shall bee punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power then shall the wrath of the Lord so fiercely persecute them that they shall crie vnto the mountaines and rockes fall on vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe for the great day of his wrath is come and who may stand then shall they heare that fearefull sentence pronounced against them depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the Deuill and his Angells and then shall they be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where they shall be tormented euen day and night for euermore not for 1000. or 100000. yeare but for euermore This is the cause why they feare and tremble at euery mention of that day and for this cause they wish they might neuer see it Examine then your selues men and brethren how yee stand affected towards the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ at that day whether ye looke and long for it or yee tremble and feare at the mention of it Esa 3.18 Blessed are all they that waite for the Lord saith the Prophet for vnto them that looke for him shall he appeare
Heb. 9.28 as saith the Apostle the second time vnto saluation Is the message then of Christ his second comming gladsome vnto you Is the remembrance of it ioyfull vnto you It is a sure token vnto you that ye belong vnto Christ Iesus and it is a notable fruite and effect of your faith and hope in Christ Iesus It may be that some of you looking more vpon your selues and your owne sinnes then vpon Christ and the bowels of his mercies and being more sharpe and seuere toward your selues then quick-sighted to looke toward Christ Iesus may feele some appalling in your selues or at least not that cheerefulnesse in expectation that should be But let not your harts be troubled nor feare Ye looke not only vpon your sinnes or so on Christ as only a seuere iudge and so despaire in your selues and vtterly abhorre his comming but yee looke for him though not without hope yet without that cheerefulnes which ye ought In this weaknesse the Lord will perfit his praise and vnto these beginnings hee will giue a good issue Only let my counsell be acceptable vnto you turne away your eies from your selues and cast them vpon Christ Iesus He shall be your iudge that is your Sauiour He hath bidde you looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere Joh. 5.24 And he hath said it that hee that belieueth in him hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death vnto life Tit. 2.13 Waite therefore patiently and cheerefully for the Lord for the grace of God which bringeth saluation to all c. The third and last thing which heere I note is in the person of him whom the Apostle saith that they looke for from heauen which is the Lord Iesus Christ the Sauiour Wherein I obserue a reason both why wee should walke in this like as citizens of the heauenly Ierusalem hauing our conuersation in heauen and why wee should looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For why should it seeme strange vnto any man that liuing here in the body wee should haue our soule-conuersation in heauen Is not our Lord and King mightie in power to saue and defend vs and to reuenge vs of our enemies in heauen Is not our Iesus who not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renuing of the holy Ghost in heauen Is not our Christ the Mediator of the new Testament that hath reconciled vs vnto God maketh continuall intercession for vs and teacheth vs outwardly by his word and inwardly by his spirit in heauen Is not our Sauiour who in that day shall make vp the full complement of our saluation in heauen where then should our conuersation be but in heauen where should the body be but where the head is where should the spouse be but where the bridegroome is not one of vs all but we are stung with fierie Serpents cursed sinnes and noysome lusts which fight against the soule If wee will be healed and liue we must looke vp vnto the brasen Serpent lift vp for that purpose In heauen is our brasen Serpent euen the Lord Iesus Christ We must therefore while we are in the body lift vp our eies vnto him and haue our soule-conuersation in heauen if now we will be healed of our infirmities and if when we remoue out of the body we will dwell with the Lord. And as this should bee a sufficient reason to moue vs to haue our whole conuersation in heauen so should it also moue vs to looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For shall our Lord and King come which shall tread downe ●he Deuill and all enemies vnder his feete and leading captiuitie captiue shall make vs to triumph in the heauenly places Shall our Iesus come then to be our iudge that first came to saue his people from their sinnes Shall our Christ come that offered himselfe vpon the crosse for vs and opened his fathers will vnto vs Shall our Sauiour come to saue vs from death and corruption by glory which first saued vs from sinne and condemnation by grace What cause then haue wee to hearken vnto the counsell of Iames Iam. 5.7 exhorting to bee patient vnto the comming of the Lord yea what cause to crie with the soules vnder the Altar Apoc. 6.10.22.20 How long Lord holy and true dost thou not iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth Yea to crie with Iohn Come Lord Iesus come quickely Vnto this which hath beene taught the example of our brother lying here before vs may as I heare be a good prouocation My selfe knew him not and therefore I can say the lesse of him But by the report of them that knew him hee was very studious and for his time had profited well in the knowledge of such Arts as he applied himselfe vnto He was also as I heare religiously affected and godly minded hauing in good measure while hee was in the body his conuersation in heauen And in the time of his sicknesse willingly submitted himselfe vnto the will of his God as one that looked for the blessed hope and appearing of the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ in whom his soule reioyced and in the merits of whose death and passion his heart was comforted The Lord grant that wee may all liue in his feare and die in his fauour LECTVRE LXXIII PHILIP 3. Vers 2● Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body according to the working c. IT remaineth now that wee proceede vnto the third and last branch where the Apostle in the behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked as he did maketh Christian profession of their certaine hope of the glorification of their vile bodies by the powerfull working of Christ Iesus set downe in these words who shall change c. They had their conuersation in heauen looking for the Sauiour from heauen euen the Lord Iesus Christ and from heauen they looked for the Lord Iesus Christ knowing that then hee should change their vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body c. The generall point then here spoken is the glorification of our vile bodies in the day of Christ by the power of Christ The particular circumstances which here the Apostle noteth are these 1. who shall glorifie vs namely the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change c. 2. What he shall glorifie in vs namely our bodies whose soule-conuersation hath beene in heauen 3. the condition of our bodies what now they are namely bodies of vilenesse basenesse and abiectnesse i. Vile base and abiect bodies subiect to corruption sinne and all kinde of vanitie 4. The time when he shall glorifie our vile bodies namely in that day when he shall come in the cloudes of heauen to iudge both the quick and
can we except we abide in Christ the Lord. Nay if we continue not in the Lord and in the faith and knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ it is a plaine argument against vs that whatsoeuer shew we make in the flesh yet indeed we neuer walked in the truth So the Apostle Saint Iohn plainely argueth 1. John 2.19 where he saith They went ou● from vs but they were not of vs for if they had bene of vs they would haue continued with vs. But this commeth to passe that it might appeare that they are not all of vs. Where ye see that Apostataes and such as fall away from the faith and from the truth of Christ Iesus are proued plainely to be hypocrites and neuer indeed to haue walked in the truth by this argumen tbecause they continued not in the truth which they had learned and receiued As therefore the precept or exhortation both of our Sauiour and of our Apostle requireth this dutie of vs that wee continue in the Lord and in the faith and knowledge of Iesus Christ so this also that it may appeare that we were truly rooted in Christ Iesus and that we walked in the truth And now see whether the same reason do not vrge vs vnto this dutie whereby the Apostle then vrged the Philippians thereunto for are there not now many that would separate vs frō Christ Iesus Are ther not now many euill workers that teach vs to repose confidence in the merite of our workes and not to reioyce onely in Christ Iesus many that teach iustification to be by our owne righteousnesse which is of the Law and not by the alone righteousnesse of Christ Iesus through faith many that teach perfection of sanctification in this life otherwise then we are taught by the Gospell of Christ Iesus many that teach vs to be otherwise minded touching the vantage and merite of workes touching the righteousnesse of Christ through faith ●ouching the perfection of sanctification in this life then was ●his Apostle of our Lord Iesus Christ Yes many such decei●ers there are as heretofore we haue heard creeping in e●ery corner and leading captiue simple men and women af●er their owne lusts And therefore the vrging of this dutie ●uen for that cause is now necessarie vnto vs that Christi●ns at this day continue in the Lord and in the faith and ●nowledge of Iesus Christ so as they haue bene taught out of the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and so as they ●aue done by the illumination of the Spirit through the mi●isterie of the word A doubt or two will here haply be moued First whe●her it be in vs to continue in the Lord if wee will or it be ●holly and onely from grace without anie power of our ●wne Whereunto I answer Iohn 6.44 That as no man can come vnto Christ except the Father draw him making him of vnwilling ●illing by putting his holy Spirit into him so no man can abide and continue in him but only by the grace of the same Spirit Phil. 2.13 For it is God that worketh in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure of his owne free grace that he may be all in all and that all the glorie of our saluation may be g●uen vnto him alone Why then doth the Apostle exhort vs to continue in the Lord if it be not in our owne power if we will being holpen by grace to continue in the Lord Which is as if it should be said If the fruite and increase of the earth be wholly the blessing of the Lord then why doth the husbandman manure and till his ground and bestow such paines and trauell therein Or as if it should be said If faith be wholly the gift of God then why are we so called vpon to come and heare the word preached For as he giueth corne and wine and oile and all things else needfull for this life but yet by such meanes as he hath ordained thereunto and againe as faith is the gift of God alone but yet giuen vs by the meanes of hearing the word preached 1. Cor. 1.8 so the Lord which confirmeth vs vnto the end worketh in vs this holy gift of perseuerance and continuing in him but by such holy admonitions and exhortations as he will haue vsed to that purpose For admonitions and exhortations are not therefore vsed to imply any power in our selues to doe the things we are exhorted vnto but because they are the meanes whereby God worketh his good graces in vs. And they do and may rather put vs in mind of our vnablenesse then of our ablenesse to do the things that we are exhorted that seeing we cannot of our selues will or do the things whereunto we are exhorted as to come vnto the Lord to continue in the Lord therefore we should flie vnto him and pray vnto him that he would draw vs vnto him that he would confirme vs vnto the end and that he would frame our wils according to his blessed will that we may by him do what his will is To continue then in the Lord is the grace of Gods holy Spirit and the exhortation thereunto is very needfull both because it is the meanes whereby the Lord will worke his grace in vs and to set vs vnto the Lord to beg that of him which of our selues we are no way able to do A second doubt also may be moued Whether it can be that such of Gods children as are in the Lord should not continue in the Lord Whereunto I answer that such of Gods children as are graffed in the true oliue may for some while seeme like vnto withered branches the graces of Gods Spirit may for a time decay in them and lie smothered so that they appeare no more then the fire vnder the ashes or imbers So we may see in Dauid who hauing committed murder and adulterie walked on a long time and was neuer touched with any remorse for such his grieuous sinnes so that for the time he might seeme to be as a withered branch So we may see in Peter many eclipses of the graces of Gods Spirit when he disswaded Christ his passion when he denied Christ his maister and that with an oath when he fled from his Maister when he dissembled for feare of them of the circumcision and drew Barnabas also into the like dissimulation c. So we may see in Demas who for a time left Paul and embraced this present world and yet afterwards became again a fellow-helper with Paul In other holy persons the like may be shewed in whom the graces of God haue for a time decayed and they bene like to withered branches But they cannot finally fall from grace but he that hath begun a good worke in them Phil. 1.6 Ioh. 10.28 will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ For hath not he himselfe said I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them
Lord. Yea and what cause is there why we should reioyce in any thing but in the Lord Riches honour strength beauty and whatsoeuer else the world most esteemeth of what is it else but vanitie and vexation of the spirit Amongst other things most precious in the life of man wisedome is more to be sought after then gold and siluer and not to be weighed with precious stones righteousnes most commendeth man vnto man and holinesse most commendeth man vnto God And yet what is our wisedome what is our righteousnesse what is our holinesse that we should reioyce in them Be it that we haue the wisedome of Salomon be it that we be as righteous as Noah Daniel and Iob be it that we be as holie as Dauid the holie Prophets and Apostles yet for all this if we will come vnto God we must lay all these aside and Christ Iesus he must be our wisedome and righteousnes and holinesse Whatsoeuer our wisedome be it will not leade vs vnto God whatsoeuer our righteousnesse be it will not present vs righteous before God whatsoeuer our holinesse be we cannot stand in it in the iudgement before God Nay when we come vnto God we must renounce our wisedome as foolishnesse we must count our righteousnesse losse and dung we must abandon all conceit of holinesse as also we see our Apostle did who though he were of the kindred of Israel of the tribe of Beniamin an Ebrew of the Ebrews by profession a Pharisie as zealous of the tradition of his fathers as any and as vnrebukeable touching the righteousnes of the law as any yet when once he came to the knowledge of Christ he counted all these things as no vantage at all vnto him but losse and dung for Christ his sake For herein is our reioycing that Christ is made of God vnto vs wisedome 1. Cor. 1.30 and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption as it is written Nay to go yet further what are our faith hope and loue that we should reioyce in them To be strong in faith to be perfect in loue to be stedfast in hope are things for which we should pray alwayes with all maner prayer and supplication in the spirit But if we shall reioyce and repose our confidence in the strength of our faith in the perfection of our loue in the stedfastnesse of our hope then we are abolished from Christ and our reioycing is not good It is Christ Iesus in whom we must beleeue whom we must loue in whom we must hope Our faith must be built vpon him our loue must be grounded on him our hope must be stablished in him and in him we must reioyce Thus then we see that we haue not any thing to reioyce in without vs nor yet in our wisedome righteousnesse or holinesse nor yet in our faith hope or loue We must reioyce in the Lord and in him it well becometh the Saints to be ioyfull Let me therefore in the bowels of Christ Iesus beseech you to reioyce not as the world doth in the pleasures of sinne and the vanities of this life but to reioyce in the Lord the strong God of our saluation Ye see the exhortations of the holy Ghost and the examples of godly men and ye see what great cause we haue to reioyce in the Lord and how little cause we haue to reioyce in any thing else All reioycing in the world what is it in comparison of this reioycing in the Lord It is as the morning cloud or as the morning dew it vanisheth away or as it is in the place of Iob It is short and but a moment Nay in it onely is true ioy and sound reioycing Other ioyes may for a while please the outward sense but the ioy that quickens the heart and cheeres the soule is the ioy in the holy Ghost Other reioycing the more it is the worse it is but this the more it is the better it is and the more we do reioyce in the Lord the more cause we shall finde we haue to reioyce in the Lord. Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes and againe I say reioyce The second thing which I note in the Apostles exhortation is that he exhorts the Philippians to reioyce in the Lord not for a day or for a season not by fits or when he makes his face to shine on them but to reioyce in the Lord alwayes as well in aduersity as in prosperity Whence I obserue the constancie which is in Christian reioycing whereby it is knowne indeed to be Christian The constancy of our Christian reioycing is to reioyce in the Lord always as wel when he seemeth to hide away his face from vs as when he maketh his face to shine vpon vs. This constancie of reioycing the Apostle exhorteth the Thessalonians vnto where he saith vnto them Reioyce euermore 1. Thess 5.16 And herein is the triall of our ioy whether it be Christian indeed for as it is said of some hearers of the word Luke 8.13 that for a while they beleeue but in time of tentation they go away so may it also be said of some that seeme to reioyce in the Lord that for a while they seeme to reioyce in the Lord euen as long so he showreth downe the early and the latter raine vpon them but in time of persecution trouble and aduersitie they hang downe their heads and murmure against the Lord. It seemeth that Sathan thought that Iob would haue beene such an one as appeareth by these words where he saith vnto God Iob 1.10 Doth he feare God for nought And the same may be said of reioycing Hast thou not made an hedge about him and about his house and about all that he hath on euery side Thou hast blessed the works of his hands and his substance is increased in the Land 11. But stretch out now thy hand and touch all that he hath to see if he will not blaspheme thee to thy face But he was deceiued in Iob. Yet therein he bewrayed a disease wherewith many sonnes of men are much tainted which are neuer knowne what they are vntill the Lord send them some aduersitie for we see many that so long as they haue all things at their desire reioyce in the Lord who so much as they specially when their dishes are full furnished O then how well doth it like them to confesse that he is good gracious and bountifull But if the Lord begin to handle them somewhat roughly so that things fall not out to their contentment then their countenance is changed and they take the matter sore to heart And if he proceed and depriuing them of his blessings afflict them in body or in goods then they fal to murmure and oftentimes to blasphemies which blasphemies albeit some of them vtter not with their mouthes yet in their hearts repine they at the Lord for such his iudgements vpon them Now these in triall proue plainly to be hypocrites and by triall it
putting vp some losse and some wrong one at anothers hands But how quite contrary our practise is to this rule and to these good patterns I shewed you For if we thinke that we haue right then we stand vpon it and thus we say with our selues Shall we yeeld of our right so we may be begged for fooles indeed Shall we sit downe with the losse Nay we will haue it if he haue it out of his belly Shall we put vp such a wrong Nay then let them abuse vs at their pleasures We are as good as they or we are their betters euerie way or though we be meaner then they yet shall they not thinke to haue vs vnder their girdles we may not we cannot we will not suffer these and these things And hereupon to go now forward in the point hereupon I say it is that we are so vnpeaceable one with another and so vncharitable one towards another hereupon it is that there are such heart-burnings grudgings iarres debates contentions and diuisions amongst vs we cannot be gentle and curteous and kinde one vnto another we cannot yeeld one vnto another or beare one with another we cannot put vp any losse or wrong one at anothers hands The superiour he disdaines to yeeld in any thing vnto his inferiour and he thinks it is a disparagement vnto him The inferiour he is loath to yeeld in any thing vnto his superiour and he thinkes that if he yeeld an inch the other will take an elle if he yeeld in any thing the other will crow ouer him in all things The equall he cannot brook it to yeeld vnto his equall and he thinkes it is a debasing and disgracing of himselfe to put vp any thing at his hands that is no better then himselfe Thus in superiour inferiour and equall is wanting that patient gentle curteous and soft mind whereunto our Apostle exhorteth and in stead of meekenes gentlenes patience moderation and mildnesse one towards another are entertained murmurings reasonings heart-burnings and vnseemely speaking and dealing one against another This is vtterly a fault amongst vs. Will we then mend that which is amisse and put in practise the rule that hath bin giuen vs vsing in matters of ordinarie life such moderation of our affections amongst our neighbours and brethren as that for vnities sake we will passe by many faults and offences and sometimes yeeld of our right and sit vs downe with the losse put vp the wrong I am sure we should and if we will do so we must obserue these rules that follow First hath our neighbour or brother some faults that are rather naturall then punishable by the lawes as for example is he some what proud somewhat couetous somewhat hastie and angrie somewhat vnsociable somewhat suspicious c. we must in such cases deale with him as Dauid did with his eldest brother Eliab When Dauid being sent of his father vnto his brethren to the battell had shewed his mislike that none would vndertake to fight with Goliah Eliab was verie angry with Dauid and said Why camest thou downe hither 1. Sam. 17.28 and with whom hast thou left those few sheepe in the wildernes I know thy pride and malice of thine heart that thou art come downe to see the battell Now what was Dauids reply vnto these sharpe speeches of his brother He knew his brethrens stomacke against him and therefore onely said What haue I now done 29. is there not a cause and so departed So we should learne to skil of the nature of them with whom we liue and we should beare much with such faults as these To quit their pride with disdaine if they be proud to be euer telling them of their couetousnes if they be couetous to put fewell vnto the fire by ministring occasions of anger if they be hastie and angrie to increase their iealousie by any preposterous dealing if they be some what suspicious is no way for vs to cure their faults or to liue with them in that Christian sort we should This is that which behooueth vs if we will haue our patient mindes knowne we must beare with these and such like faults in our neighbours and brethren and spare oftentimes to speake or do that which their humour cannot brooke The second rule which we must obserue is this such words and deeds as haply sometimes might haue not the best construction or meaning we must make the best of them for if when things are said or done which might be well meant and well taken they be worse taken then they are meant and rather the worst then the best be made of them shall we say of those men that they are patiently and gently minded nay surely this is rather an argument of an exasperate minde which had rather blow the bellowes then quench the fire rather make a breach where there were none then make vp a breach where there were one And therefore the Apostle putteth such as take all things in the euill part Rom. 1.29 in the ranke of them whom God had deliuered vp vnto a reprobate mind If then we will haue our patient mind knowne and be commended for that moderation which our Apostle here requireth we must not interprete such things as are said or done vnto the worst but when they may haue a good meaning we must make the best of them for so indeed do we shew our selues to haue a good moderation in our selues if when things in themselues are eyther doubtfull or not altogether the best yet we make the best of them and rather so construe them as they ought to be meant then as they might be taken A third rule which we must obserue is this Such faults as are secret or committed by infirmitie we must not diuulgate and publish but rather hide and couer them It is the saying of our blessed Sauiour Matth. 7.12 Whatsoeuer ye would that men should do to you euen so do ye to them and it implieth this withall that whatsoeuer we would not that men should do to vs we should not do to them Now then who is it of vs that if we fall through infirmitie if we runne into any secret sin would haue it published in Gath or noysed in the streetes of Ashkelon Iames 3.2 In many things we sinne all and he is the best that offends the least But who can brooke him that whatsoeuer fault he heares in the house by and by tells it on the house tops or how shall he approue his moderation and his patient minde vnto men that whatsoeuer fault he knowes of his neighbor or brother disperseth it abroad and makes it his common talke where he cometh Nay herein is our moderation and mildenes seene and approued if when we know any slip or fall of our neighbour which haply many know not we patiently passe by it and so beare it that as much as in vs lies we burie it out of the sight and speech of men For as
Peter saith of loue 1. Pet. 4.8 that it couereth the multitude of sinnes so it is true in this moderation and patience whereof we speake that it beares with and pardoneth many faults and offences of one man towards another likewise concealeth such faults and offences as secretly or through infirmitie are committed against God If then we will approue our selues to haue that patient mind which our Apostle here requireth we must not publish whatsoeuer fault of our neighbor we he are or know but such faults as either are not commonly knowne abroade or whereinto he hath fallen through infirmitie we must hide and couer them and so beare with them as to burie them out of the sight and speech of men A fourth rule which we must obserue is this when the faults of our neighbour are such as that they may iustly offend vs behouefull it is that we go vnto him and tel him his fault betweene him and vs alone and if thus he hearken not vnto vs then to call vnto vs one or two moe that his fault being here opened againe that which is amisse may be amended and he in the best sort that may be may be reclaimed Which rule is also the rule of our blessed Sauiour touching priuate iniuries and wrongs where he saith Mat. 18.15 If thy brother trespasse against thee he speaketh of priuate trespasses and wrongs for such as are publike and to the offence of the Church 1. Tim. 5.20 the Apostle would haue them rebuked openly but if thy brother trespasse against thee priuately giuing thee cause of offence go and tell him his fault betweene thee and him alone if he heare thee thou hast wonne thy brother and as Iames speaketh hast saued a soule from death and he repenting Iam. 5.20 thou art to forgiue him as Christ in another place warneth and if he will not vouchsafe to heare thee Luc. 17.3 to be sorie for his fault at thy priuate admonition but rather increase his stomack and stubburnnesse against thee then take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three witnesses euery word may be confirmed Otherwise if neglecting this rule of our Sauiour we shall vpon such occasions traduce him or breake out into intemperate heates against him how shall our patient mind be knowne vnto men For this is our patience and moderation that when we haue so iust cause of offence we deale as mildly and quietly with our neighbour as may be first priuately conferring of things b●tweene our selues and then taking vnto vs one or two of our neighbours and friends which may heare and helpe to order things that are out of order And if we will approue our selues to haue that patient mind which here our Apostle requireth we must thus peaceably deale in matters wherein we haue iust cause of offence and in no sort traduce our neighbours or brethren or breake out into impatient heates against them A fift rule which we must obserue and the last which now I will note is this generally in matters of this life we must remit of that which in rigor might be done For if we shall thus stand vpon it that this we may do by right and this the law will beare vs out vnto what proofe hereby shall we make of our moderation and patient mind Gen. 9.6 The law saith Who so sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed Now who will commend the moderation of that Iudge that so oft as bloud is shed pronounceth sentence of death because in rigour of the words it may seem he may do that which indeed in the equitie of the law he may not And so it fareth with vs if in matters of this or that qualitie betwixt vs and our neighbours we shall alwaies do that which in extremitie of right it seemeth that we may and not moderate right by equitie who shall commend our moderation If we haue the losse we must sometimes sustaine it if we haue the wrong we must sometimes put it vp and for peace and vnities sake we must remit and yeeld of our right if we wil haue our moderation and patient mind to be knowne Moe rules might be added vnto these but let these for this time suffice And now I beseech you to thinke on these things and in your liues one with another to practise them that so your moderate and curteous and soft and gentle and patient mind may be knowne Beare one with another in such faults as are naturally in any of you and spare sometimes to speake or do that which anothers humor cannot brooke make not alwaies the worst of such words or deeds as haply might haue not the best construction and meaning but rather when in themselues they are either doubtfull or not altogether the best make the best of them and so construe them as they may be wel meant rather then as they might be il taken Be not hastie to publish whatsoeuer fault of your neighbour you heare or know but such faults as either are not cōmōly known abroad or whereinto he hath fallen through infirmitie hide couer them as much as in you is burie them out of the sight and speech of men Traduce not one another nor breake out into intēperate heates one against another but in matters wherein ye may haue iust occasiō of offence one against another first priuately expostulate your matters one with another and if amends do not follow debate your matters one with another in the hearing of one or two of your neighbours and friends which may heare and helpe to order your matters Be not auerse from sitting downe sometimes with the losse and from putting vp sometimes the wrong but for the maintenance of peace and concord one with another remit and yeeld one vnto another that which in right sometimes ye might haue one of another that so your patient mind may be knowne vnto all And why should I need in many words at this time to exhort you vnto this moderation one towards another May not this day may not that holy table sufficiently exhort you here unto For vnlesse ye be patiently minded one towards another can ye either worthily celebrate those holy mysteries of Christ his blessed death and passion or thankfully celebrate this day in remembrance of his resurrection To celebrate these holy mysteries worthily is not to come hither as to an ordinary table and here to eate and drink but to come hither prepared with all holy reuerence hauing examined our selues before as touching our faith in Christ Iesus whether by faith in Christ Iesus we feele a full assurance in our soules of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and of all other benefites of Christ his death and passion which in this Supper we desire for our further assurance to be sealed vnto vs and touching our repentance whether we be truly grieued in our soules for our sinnes against our God and fully purpose hereafter to
whiles he offereth himselfe and his grace vnto you if ye will receiue it Nay more then so sometimes he is so neare vnto the wicked that he lightens them with his holy Spirit giues them a tast of the heauenly gift Hebr. 6.4.5 of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come But yet because the wicked some of them refuse this grace when it is offered and some of them fall away from it when they haue had a taste of it therefore is he peculiarly said to be neare vnto his children by his grace and might and prouidence and powerfull working of his holy Spirit Againe the Lord is said sometimes to be neare at hand in respect of his last coming vnto iudgement when he shall come in bodily presence in the cloudes of heauen to iudge both the quicke and the dead Iames 5.8 as where Iames saith Be patient and settle your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth neare and likewise where the Apostle saith Hebr. 10.37 He that shall come will come and will not tarry In the first sense the Lord is at hand aswell to the wicked as the godly to giue as well to the one as to the other life and being other good graces of his Spirit In the second sense the Lord is at hand by his prouidence peculiarly to the godly to saue and defend them and to giue the Spirit of sanctification vnto them In the third sense also the Lord is at hand both to the wicked and to the godly to render vengeance in flaming fire vnto the wicked and to crowne the godly with a crowne of glorie and immortalitie in the heauens In the first sense I take it it is not here said that the Lord is a● hand because that could be no such speciall reason to moue the Philippians vnto mildn●sse and patience towards all men hauing no more comfort in it for the godly then for the wicked But whether it be meant in the second or third sense that the Lord is at hand the reason holdeth strongly that they should in patience and mildnes possesse their soules though haply their patience and mildnesse be much abused For be it that the reason why their patient mind should be knowne vnto all men though their patience be much abused be eyther this because the Lord is at hand to heare and help them when they are oppressed to saue and defend them when they are wronged or this because the Lord is at hand to giue vnto them a crowne that haue borne the crosse and to auenge them vtterly of their enemies eyther of the reasons might be sufficient motiues to perswade them to let their patien● minde be knowne vnto all men And whether of them to choose the rather as more agreeable to the Apostles minde I cannot peremptorily affirme Either of them may very we● stand with the meaning of the Apostle in this place And therefore we will see what profitable notes we may gather from either of them whereof we may make some vse for our selues First then admitting this to be the meaning of the Apostle in this place the Lord is at hand by his watchfull prouidence ouer you to heare and helpe you to saue and defend you I note that the Apostles reason to moue the Philippians vnto a patient mildenesse and gentle moderation towards all men yea though their patience and mildenes were much abused is because the Lord is at hand by his watchful prouidence ouer them to heare and help them to saue and defend them when they are abused oppressed or afflicted Whence I obserue a speciall motiue which may and ought to perswade vs to possesse our soules in patience whensoeuer we are abused oppressed or afflicted namely the certaine perswasion hereof that the Lord his prouidence alwayes watcheth ouer vs to behold our sufferings and our wrongs to heare vs when we call vpon him in truth to rid and saue vs from the wrongfull dealings of men and to deliuer vs in euerie needfull time of trouble If we be the Lord his inheritance we must looke for it to haue many trialls of our patience and moderation by many sufferings and wrongs Genesis 31. Iacob shall haue his vnckle Laban to deceiue him to change his wages ten times to persecute him and if the Lord forbid him not to kill him Ioseph shall haue his owne brethren to hate him Genesis 37. to conspire against him to slay him and if the Lord keepe them from killing him to sell him into a strange Land to be a bond-seruant The children of Israel shall haue a Pharao to wearie them of their liues by sore labour in clay and bricke Exodus 1. and in all worke in the field with all manner of cruell bondage to command to kill all their male children and by all cruell oppression to labour to make hauocke of them D●n 3. Daniels companions shall haue some Chaldeans to deuise mischiefe against them to accuse them to the King and to get them throwne into the hot fierie furnace Daniel himselfe shall drinke of the like cuppe 6. And generally the Disciples of Christ which we are if we continue in his word Iohn 8 31.1●.33 shall in the world haue affliction to try their faith and their patience The gold shall go through the fire ere it be purified and the wheate ere it be made fine manchet for the Lord his owne mouth shall be beaten with the fla●le grownd in the mill sifted and haue all the bran bowlted out of it This is the gate of the Lord and the righteous shal enter into it and this is the lot of Gods inheritance to passe through the wildernesse and through the red Sea to the promised land of Canaan And in all this what is the child of God to do Luke 21.19 Euen as our Sauior willes him by his patience he is to possesse his soule and as our Apostle here exhorteth to make his patient minde to be knowne vnto all men O but in such causes of impatiencie how should a man be patient when open foes maligne him fained friends abuse him and troubles hedge him in on euery side when no man beares with him no man yeelds to him but the more he yeelds and beares with others the more he is abused and wronged by others what should perswade him to moderation and mildenes to gentlenes and patience Do we aske what Do we know that the Lord his prouidence watcheth ouer vs alway Do we know that he will not leaue vs not forsake vs nor deliuer vs into the will of our enemies Do we know that all the haires four head are numbred and that not one of them shall fall to the ground without our heauenly Fathers will Here then is or should be enough to perswade vs to be patient and moderate whensoeuer we are abused afflicted or oppressed the Lord is at hand The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slow
Silas it is said Acts 16.24.25 that when they were cast into prison and their feet made fast in the stockes they prayed and sung a psalme vnto God Nay how often do we reade that Christs owne mouth was filled with the praises of God giuing thankes in his miracles of feeding certaine thousands with some few loaues and fishes giuing thankes when he instituted the holy Supper giuing thankes because his Father had heard him giuing thankes for opening those things vnto Babes which were hid from the wise and men of vnderstanding Generally this note hath so well tuned at all times in the mouthes of all Gods children that they haue euer bene ready to giue thanks vnto him in all things euen as ready to offer vnto the Lord the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing for benefits and blessings receiued as to poure out their praiers vnto him for such graces of his Spirit as they stood in need of But is it so with vs Haue our mouthes bene filled with the praises of the Lord and with thankesgiuing vnto our God When our wants haue enforced vs to prayers haue we remembred to praise the Lord for such mercies as we had receiued Or hath not the Song of praise and thankesgiuing bene eyther as a strange and daintie Song vnto vs which we could not tune or as an harsh and vnpleasant Song wherein we haue had no delight Haue we not bene as those ten Lepers Luke 17.18 which being cleansed neuer returned to giue God praise When famine or sickenesse or the sword are vpon vs and our Land it may be that we will call an assembly and fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker and crie and say Spare thy people O Lord and deliuer vs from this sickenesse or famine or sword it may be I say we will do so though to too seldome we do so But when the Lord in mercie hath remoued any of these his plagues from vs what sacrifice of praise and thankesgiuing do we offer vp vnto him Let the yeare 1588 witnesse against vs at which time the inuincible Army as they called it rose vp to make warre against vs. When that mighty and cruel enemy was vpon our coasts and in the sight of our Land displayed his banners against vs thinking to deuoure vs at once and to swallow vs vp quicke then we called an holy assembly and humbled our selues before the Lord and praied vino him for deliuerance out of the hands of our cruell enemies But when he had wrought a mightie deliuerance for vs euen such a one as the world wondered at and for which we might very well take vp that of the Prophet and say Psal 124.2 If the Lord himselfe had not bene on our ●ide when those enemies rose vp against vs they had swallowed vs vp quicke when their wrath was kindled against vs 3.4 the waters had drowned vs and the streame had gone ouer our soule yea the deepe waters of the proud had gone ouer our soule when I say the Lord had wrought such a mightie deliuerance for vs how many of vs like vnto good Iehosaphat and his people assembled our selues eyther the fourth day after or at all after in the valley of Berachah or blessing to giue thankes vnto the Lord in how many places did we meete together to praise the Lord in the midst of the great Congregation whatsoeoer were done in other places no such matter here We indeed of this place whence others should haue all good example are so much afraid to seeme forward in good things that we are hardly or neuer drawne vnto it in time of common danger to fast and pray or after deliuerance from such danger to praise and giue thankes Our prayers for Prince for people for peace for prosperitie for raine for faire weather in time of famine in time of warre in time of common sickenesse and the like which we vse are good and very good And were it not well that our requests were shewed vnto God in prayer and supplication with giuing of thankes If euerie man shall looke into himselfe we shall all of vs finde a great defect in our selues this way For if the hand of the Lord be any way vpon vs then we call vpon him and pray vnto him as for example if we be sicke then we poure out our requests vnto God for health and for deliuerance from that paine wherein we lie But how many of vs do then remember to praise the Lord either for that health which before the Lord gaue vnto vs or for other good graces and blessings of the soule and of the bodie wherewith euen then we do abound Nay surely the paine of our sickenesse takes such hold on vs that onely we remember it and pray to be deliuered from it forgetting the praises of the Lord for other his mercies vnto vs. And afterward when we are restored vnto health how many of vs do sing a new Song vnto the Lord for it We commend our Physition or such a potion that we tooke or such a medicine that was applyed or such a diet that we kept but not many of vs sing the praises of the Lord by whose onely blessing vpon those meanes we haue recouered our health I do instance onely in this one example But the like is to be said of other crosses If we be in pouerty in imprisonment in banishment yea if our head or tooth or toe do ake and the like we poure out our complaints before God and make our prayers vnto him But how seldome are our requests shewed vnto him with giuing of thankes I dispute not the point whether together with our praiers and supplications should alwayes be ioyned praise and thankesgiuing Sure it is that there is none of vs all in any such need or necessitie in any such miserie or affliction but we haue many blessings of the Lord for which we ought to be thankfull So that as we haue need to pray vnto the Lord so we haue cause also to giue thankes vnto the Lord euen then when we pray But this is it which I vrge that as we are to pray vnto the Lord for such things as we neede so we are to giue thankes vnto the Lord for such blessings as we haue receiued For this is true that whatsoeuer it be that we aske we are not worthie new blessings and graces vnlesse we be thankefull for the old And this is as true that so our payers are accepted with God as we are thankfull vnto God Our vnthankefulnesse shuts out our prayers that they enter not into the eares of the Lord God of hoasts And amongst other our sinnes in my iudgement our vnthankfulnesse is one great cause why the hand of the Lord now a long time hath bene and yet is so heauie vpon vs. Of late euen by the space of a twelue moneth he hath giuen vs great hope of remouing one of his plagues of dearth and famine from vs by
Tim. 3.2.3 as selfe-louers couetous boasters proud cursed speakers men disobedient to parents vnholy without naturall affection truce breakers c. And yet how many are there that would be loth to be reckoned among the worst which are as vnthankfull as the most Whose fault soeuer it be it is a foule fault and one that includes all Let vs beware of it and let our thankful mind be knowne to all that any way deserue well of vs. Secondly in that the Apostle saith that he reioyced in the Lord greatly for their care for him I note that the Apostles reioycing was not so much for the bountifulnes of their gift but especially for that the Lord by his Spirit had enlarged their hearts to a Christian care ouer him Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that when any do relieue vs being in prison pouertie need sicknesse or any other aduersitie we are not so much to reioyce in the gift by which we are relieued but especially we ought to reioyce in the Lord for that he hath vouchsafed to touch their hearts with a godly feeling of our wants and a Christian care to supply our wants Thankfulnes vnto them is beseeming and requisite as before we heard but our speciall care should be to lift vp our eyes vnto the Lord and to reioyce in him For he it is that openeth the bowels of compassion toucheth with a tender commiseration of their poore and needie distressed brethren the hearts of them that are enriched with greater sufficiencie And therefore our Apostle in many of his Epistles vsually thanketh God as for their faith in Christ Iesus so for their loue towards all Saints Col. 1.3.4 We giue thankes to God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ saith the Apostle in the next Epistle since we heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and of your loue towards all Saints And he tels the Corinthians that their liberalitie causeth thanksgiuing vnto God 2. Cor. 9.11 God being therefore to be blessed because he openeth the Saints hearts to relieue the necessities of the poore Saints First therefore let me beseech you beloued euen in the bowels of Christ Iesus to giue your poore and distressed brethren cause to reioyce in the Lord greatly for your care ouer them A godly and Christian care of late hath bene taken by the whole States of the land assembled in Parliament for the prouision of the poore and we are all of vs to reioyce in the Lord greatly for it that he put into their mind such an holy care Put ye now on tender mercie and compassion and let your care likewise be shewed this way by a chearfull giuing towards the reliefe of your poore brethren so much as shal be thought meete for you that the backes and bellies of your poore brethren may blesse you and reioyce in the Lord for you If ye shall find in your selues a willing chearfulnesse this way know that it is the Lord that hath opened your hearts stirred vp the bowels of compassion within you and looke whatsoeuer he giues the Lord shal recompence it into his bosome Prou. 19.17 For so it is written He that hath mercie on the poore lendeth to the Lord and he will recompence him that which he hath giuen But if ye shall grudge to set forward so good a worke and think euery litle too much that is required of you to that purpose know that the Lord hath yet hardened your hearts and shut vp all bowels of compassion within you and as now the poore crie and ye heare not so the day shall come wherein ye shall crie 21.13 and not be heard For so it is written He that stoppeth his eares at the crying of the poore he shall also crie and not be heard As euery man therfore hath receiued so let him giue and that chearfully 2. Cor. 9.7 For God loueth a chearfull giuer So shall the loines of the poore blesse you so shall they reioyce in the Lord greatly for you and so shall the Lord make all his graces to abound towards you Secondly let me exhort them of the poorer sort to learne to reioyce in the Lord for the care which he stirreth vp in their brethren for them It is too too commonly seene in many of you that as ye want the wealth of the world so ye want also the grace of God Ye sit and beg almes and reliefe If ye haue it not ye murmure and grudge oftentimes ye banne and curse if ye haue it some of you take it and go your wayes and there is an end others of you say some formal words from the teeth forward but who is he or where is he that hauing receiued reliefe lifteth vp his eyes vnto the Lord and reioyceth in him for that it hath pleased him to worke in their brethren such a Christian care ouer them Who is he or where is he that being sent away without reliefe lifteth vp his eyes vnto the Lord and prayeth vnto him that it will please him to increase their brethrens care ouer them and to giue them bowels of compassion towards them without murmuring or grudging at them Thus should ye do and then surely the hearts of many that are yet hardened would be opened towards you Learne therefore as to be thankfull towards your brethren for their care ouer you so principally to thanke the Lord and to reioyce in him for the care which he stirreth vp in them for you Learne to thinke on him to blesse him to reioyce in him more then any great many of you do Looke not onely to the reliefe which ye receiue but looke vnto the Lord whose worke it is to incline mens hearts to relieue you Thus shall he be well pleased and thus shall he incline men more and more to relieue you LECTVRE LXXXVIII PHILIP 4. Verse 10. Now I reioyce in the Lord greatly that now at the last ye are reuiued againe to care for me wherein notwithstanding ye were carefull but ye lacked oportunitie THe next thing which I noted in these words was the Philippians slacknesse to care for some time for the Apostle For in that he saith I reioyce c. that now at last ye are reuiued c. he implieth that their care had for some time slacked towards him the word here vsed being borrowed from trees which seeming in Winter to be dead flourish againe in the Spring and hauing in it this similitude that as trees which in Winter seeme to be dead and withered flourish and grow greene againe in the Spring so their care which for a time languished and decayed now againe reuiued and quickened in them Whence I obserue this lesson for our learning that euen in the faithfull and dearest children of God loue and charitie and other good graces of Gods Spirit are not alwayes alike orient and eminent not alwayes alike manifest and apparent but sometimes they languish and decay and are as if they were not Gen
hath seized vpon you and stir vp euery good grace of God in you Quench not the Spirit that is within you but striue to grow vp in grace and euery good gift of the Spirit Is your loue towards Gods Saints abated in you Rom. 12.9 Hearken to the Apostle Be affectioned to loue one another with brotherly loue and let your loue be without dissimulation and pray alwayes vnto the strong God of your saluation that your loue may abound daily towards all Saints Yea whatsoeuer good grace is decayed in you giue all diligence that it may be reuiued in you and labour thereunto by all prayer and supplication in the spirit The last thing which I noted in these words of the Apostle was the Apostles excuse of the Philippians slackenesse to care for him For in that he saith Wherein notwithstanding ye were carefull but ye lacked oportunitie he interpreteth their slacknesse to care for him to proceed not from want of good will towards him but from want of oportunitie to send vnto him that which they desired Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that we are not alwayes sharply to censure the languishing of our brethren in faith loue or other vertue but rather charitably to iudge of them and so much as in a good conscience we may to salue and excuse them by a kinde and fauourable interpretation Not the best but they haue their infirmities through which sometimes they so fall that they seeme almost to be dead as already we haue heard both omitting to do such things as they should do and committing such things as they should not do but many causes there may be of such failing in the performance of Christian dutie A defect there may be of zeale yet proceeding rather from feare of disturbing the peace of the Church then from want of enflamed desire to see the house of the Lord wall roofe builded vp in perfect beautie A defect there may be of charitie yet proceeding rather from want of oportunitie then from want of will to performe that dutie And so in other things causes sometimes may be presumed to be of such and such faults which may excuse the faults And therefore we are charitably to iudge of the faults of our brethren and rather in charitie presume of that excuse for them which may be alledged then by sharpe censure to condemne them whom the Lord hath not condemned Where yet we must haue these caueats first that we denie not that to be euill which is euill that to be sinne which is sinne as they do that denie Abraham to haue lied when he said of Sarah She is my sister that deny Ioseph to haue sworne when so often he protested vnto his brethren by the life of Pharaoh that denie Peter to haue sinned at the least mortally when Paul withstood him to his face and they likewise that say of pride it is cleanlinesse of couetousnesse it is thrift of deceit and fraud it is wisedome of hypocrisie it is curteous humanitie of lasciuious wantonnesse it is requisite cheerefulnesse and the like For this is not charitably to beare with a fault charitie being as not suspicious so not foolish to denie that to be euill which is euill neyther is it to excuse but onely by a lie The second caueat is that we do not farther excuse the faults and infirmities of any then in a good conscience we may For if through fauour or affection or how else soeuer we do so what good soeuer we shall do thereby vnto others surely we shall do great wrong vnto our owne soules and howsoeuer haply we brooke it for a time Prou. 15.15 yet in the end shall it sting like a Serpent A good conscience is a continuall feast But if in any mans behalfe or to any purpose we shall do more then in a good conscience we may the end thereof will be bitter as gall and wormwood Here then are three sorts of men to be reproued and condemned first such as vpon euerie slip of their brethren and euery blemish wherwith they can be tainted are ready sharply to censure them and by their censure to condemne them whom the Lord hath not condemned Rom. 14.4 Who art thou saith the Apostle that condemnest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master 2.1 Yea and in that that thou iudgest another thou condemnest thy selfe for thou that iudgest doest euen the same things or the like that thou condemnest in others Let vs not therefore be hastie to censure or condemne one another for euery fault but let vs beare one with anothers infirmities Let vs iudge of our brethren after the rule of charitie euen as we would haue others to iudge of vs when we fall through infirmitie There is one that iudgeth both them and vs let vs commit all iudgement vnto him that iudgeth righteously and in the meane time thinke rather the best then the worst as charitie bids vs then as our sence might leade vs. Secondly here are to be reproued and condemned such as with too too light and slight termes passe ouer notorious and grosse faults For a generation of men there is that to the end forsooth that they may seeme charitable in their iudgements towards their brethren speake good of that which plainly is euill and interprete that vnto the best which in plaine euidence is sinfull and wicked What must charitie be a foole As she is not suspicious so she is not foolish as she will not easily thinke the worst so she will not suffer her selfe to be abused For if when a man should be present at the Sermon he be ordinarily bowling or carding or drinking must I in charitie thinke that he hath necessarie occasions of absence Or when a man willingly and wittingly runs himselfe vpon the rockes by breaking the wholesome Lawes of God or of man am I vncharitable if I interprete not his actions vnto the best Nay rather he misdeemeth of charitie that so thinketh and this will commonly if it be marked fall out to be true that he that so vrgeth a charitable iudgement touching such things and such men as offend these and the like wayes will be most vncharitable in his iudgement touching the best men and the best things As therefore we are not too sharply to censure the falls of our brethren lest we offend against the rule of charitie so let vs take heede lest vpon a foolish conceit of charity we think well of that which indeed is euill and soothe them vp in their sinnes whose sins were to be reproued As the Preacher saith Eccl. 7.18.19 Be not thou iust ouermuch And againe Be not thou wicked ouermuch so I say let vs not too sharply censure the faults of our brethren and againe let vs not too lightly passe ouer grosse and notorious faults let vs keep the rule of charity in iudging our brethren and againe let vs not to seeme charitable thinke of grosse faults as small or no
his owne sake or for the supplie of his want by their liberalitie so neither this his commendation of their liberalitie from the first vnto the last was for his owne sake or that he desired a new gift of them but both the one and the other was for their sakes and that in both he regarded the fruite which might further their reckoning This I take to be the generall purpose of the Apostle in these words Now come we vnto a litle more particular examination of them And ye By this that he saith ye also c. he meaneth that not onely he and the other Churches of Macedonia but they also knew this that he now speaketh what namely that in the beginning of the Gospell that is at my first coming into Macedonia and preaching the Gospell vnto you for he speaketh not simply of the beginning of the Gospell but of the beginning of the Gospell in that countrie of Macedonia whereof Philippi was the chiefe citie Act. 16.12 and the first place that we reade he preached in in that countrey This then saith he ye know that at my first coming and preaching of the Gospell vnto you when I departed from Macedonia that I might preach in other countries also no Church of all the other Churches of Macedonia neither Thessalonica nor Amphipolis nor Apollonia nor any of the rest communicated with me concerning the matter of giuing and receiuing but ye only Where first in that he saith when he departed c. hence some gather that his manner was where first he preached the Gospell to take nothing of them till his departure from them and then to take of them sufficient for his iourney to the next place and for his prouision there till he should depart from them Secondly in that he saith no Church communicated with him concerning the matter of giuing c. his meaning is that whereas he had bestowed on the other Churches spiritual things he had not as had bene meete receiued of them againe temporall things The phrase of speech here vsed is borrowed from merchants or others which haue their books wherein they set downe their layings out and their receiuings in that when they make their counts there may be a proportion in those things So he meaneth that betweene those other Churches of Macedonia and him there should haue bene this proportion that as he had ministred vnto them spirituall things so they should haue ministred vnto him of their temporall things Thirdly in that he saith but ye onely he commendeth them aboue the rest of the Churches of Macedonia In the next verse when he saith For when I was in Thessalonica he addeth this farther to the commendation of the Philippians for their liberalitie that besides their liberality at his departure from them when he was in Thessalonica the metrapolitan city of Macedonia and they had heard that he hauing passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia and being now in Thessalonica none communicated vnto him they sent vnto him once and againe while he was there to supply his necessitie In the verse following when he saith not that I desire c. his meaning is as he said verse 11. that he speaketh not this he commendeth them not thus because he now or at any other time desired a gift of them so much for his owne sake and for the supply of his owne wants but to signifie the very true cause of his reioycing verse 10. and the very true cause of this his commendation of them he saith but I desire the fruite whereby he signifieth that the principall thing which he regarded in their gifts and liberalitie was the fruite which should follow thereupon to further their reckoning for that the Lord in that day should reckon this to their vantage and accept it for good payment The phrase of speech here vsed is likewise borrowed from the merchants counting booke for as in case of the debt of a great summe of money vnto a merchant the more money that is noted in his booke as payed the more his reckoning is furthered that payed it so the Apostle signifieth that the moe of their charitable works towards him were as it were noted in Gods booke the more their reckoning was furthered with God who reckoned that to their fruite which they did vnto him So that the cause of his reioycing and commending their liberality principally was because of the fruite which thence redounded vnto them from God who would recompence it in the heauens into their bosomes and accept it in mercie as some acquittance of their debt This I take to be the true meaning of these words And now that we vnderstand the meaning of the Apostle in these words let vs see what profitable notes we may gather hence for our farther vse And ye Philippians In that the Apostle saith that when he departed from Macedonia none of the other Churches of Macedonia but the Philippians onely communicated to his necessitie hence it may seeme might be obserued an example of great ingratitude in those Churches that withheld their temporall things from the Apostle when he had ministred vnto them spirituall things But I dare not altogether so iudge them because of that notable testimonie which our Apostle giueth vnto them in the latter to the Corinthians Where he proposeth their example vnto the Corinthians 2. Cor. 8.1.2.3.4 thereby to stirre them vp to the reliefe of the poore Saints and testifieth that in their most extreme pouerty they were richly liberall that beyond their power they were willing and that they euen pressed the Apostle to receiue their reliefe towards the poore Saints A rare example of great piety and very tender compassion So that I impute their not communicating vnto the Apostles necessity at this time rather vnto forgetfulnes and some want of care for this time which was sometime the fault of the Philippians as we heard before then vnto vngratefulnesse or any such notorious fault The Apostles purpose I take rather to be to commend the Philippians then deepely to censure the other churches In this then that he saith that when he departed from Macedonia no church c. I note the thing for which he commendeth the Philippians aboue the other churches of Macedonia which was the performance of that Christian dutie towards him to minister vnto him temporall things when he had bestowed on them spirituall things Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that where spirituall things are bestowed vpon vs there we should minister temporall things where the Minister teacheth vs with the word there we should make allowance of maintenance vnto him Which point the Apostle proueth at large in the former to the Corinthians and by many arguments as first by an argument taken from Souldiers 1. Cor. 9.7 Who saith the Apostle goeth a warfare any time at his owne cost How much more should they that fight the Lord his battels fight them at the churches cost Secondly by an argument taken from planters
Paul I note that it was Paules necessitie which the Philippians sent once againe to relieue Whence I obserue that euen the best Ministers of the Gospel of Christ Iesus are sometimes vrged and pressed with necessitie In Paul indeed it was lesse maruell both because that was the infancie of the church and for that he alwaies went about either planting or stablishing the Churches and setled himselfe in no certaine place But now that the Church is stablished and the Ministerie settled that now sometimes the very best should be pressed with necessitie I know not well what to say to it It is certainely one of the shames and discredites of our Clergie that in many places the worthiest labourers want and the veriest loyterers abound Some lights of the church haue either nothing or as litle as litle may be againe some others that either cannot or will not do any good in the Church at all haue liuing vpon liuing dignitie vpon dignitie heaped vpon them Ye see the note which I should prosecute but time will not giue me leaue LECTVRE XCII PHILIP 4. Verse 17. Not that I desire a gift but I desire the fruite which may further your reckoning 18. Now I haue receiued all c. NOt that I desire a gift c. In these words the Apostle signifieth the very true cause of that his ioy in the Lord whereof he spake before verse 10. and the very true cause of this his commendation of their liberality in the two verses next before For as before he signified in verse 11. that the principall cause of his reioycing was not because of his want because his want was supplied by their liberalitie so now he signifieth that the principall commendation of their liberalitie was not for that he desired a new gift of them as some thereby might haply imagine but the principall thing which he regarded both in the one and in the other the principall cause both of his reioycing in the Lord for their care for him and of his commendation of their liberalitie both first and last towards him was the fruite which followed thereupon to further their reckoning in that day of the great account But I desire c. The phrase of speech here vsed is borrowed from the Merchants counting-bookes for as in case of the debt of a great summe of money to a Merchant the more mony that is noted in his booke as payed the more his reckoning is furthered that payed it so the Apostle hereby signifieth that the more of their charitable workes towards him were noted as it were in Gods booke the more their reckoning was furthered with God who in the great account should reckon that to their fruite aduantage which they had done to him What was then the things which the Apostle principally desired euen more then their gifts though he needed them It was the fruite of their liberalitie that they might reape the fruite thereof with God And what was the fruite of their liberality Namely the furthering of their reckoning with God in that day when they should giue accounts of that they had done in their flesh whether it were good or euill for the Apostle knew that this fruite should follow their liberalitie towards him that thereby their reckoning should be furthered with God who would reckon that vpon their head to their vantage that they had done to him And this was it which principally caused the Apostle to ioy in their gifts and liberality Thus much for the opening of the meaning of these words Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence whereof to make some farther vse for our selues Not that I desire a gift The first thing which here I note is the Apostles diligent care to cleare things as he goes In verse 10. of this Chapter the Apostle signified his great reioycing in the Lord for the Philippians great care for him shewed by the things which they sent him by their minister Epaphroditus Whereupon lest it should be thought that before he receiued their gift he had bene cast downe through heauinesse or were not able to endure his want he cleares himselfe of all suspicion of any such abiect mind and tells them in the next verse that he spake not because of want that is that he reioyced not so much because his want was supplied by their liberality but there was another matter in it Againe in ver 11.12 he signified that he could be content with whatsoeuer state he were in that he knew how to be abased and how to abound that he was instructed both to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want Whereupon lest he should seeme to haue boasted himselfe too much of himselfe as if by his owne power and strength he had bene able to do all those things he cleares himselfe of all such arrogant presuming of his owne strength and tells them verse 13. that he is able to do all those things but how by his owne power and strength No but through Christ which strengthened him Againe the Apostle hauing said that through Christ which strengthened him he could endure want and he could be content whether he were full or hungrie hereupon it might be thought that he made small account of their benefit and could as well haue bene without it as with it He therefore cleares this point also and tels them that notwithstanding he could do all things through Christ yet they had well done to communicate to his affliction Againe in verses 15.16 he highly commended the Philippians for their great liberality towards him euen from the first vnto the last and preferreth them before all other Churches of Macedonia Whereupon lest he should seeme to affect a new benefit to desire a new gift he cleares himselfe of any such desire and tels them plainly that he doth not so commend them for that he desireth a gift of them Thus sometimes to cleare the truth of doctrine sometimes to free himselfe from vniust suspitions alwaies to rectifie them that they do not misconceiue of things euermore he cleares matters as he goes Whence I obserue a good lesson for the Minister of the Gospel of Christ Iesus which is that he giue all diligence in his teaching so to cleare things as he goes as that his people may not misconceiue any thing either touching the truth or touching himselfe He is to be iealous of both euen with a godly iealousie of the truth that no speech of his may cause them to erre touching the truth that he speake not any thing against the truth but for the truth that in all simplicitie and plainnesse he deliuer the truth or if at any time he speake something which may be mistaken yet he so cleare it before he leaue it as that there neede to be no doubt of it Of himselfe that no speech slip him nor any action passe him whereby he may be noted of impatience or pride or contempt or couetousnesse or
call him my God and my Lord to brand them with most odious names and to heape on them most opprobrious speeches that shall at any time so speake But if we keepe the true patterne of the most wholesome words which we haue learned of our Apostle 2 Tim. 1.13 as he willeth vs it is warrant enough for vs and if we do so whatsoeuer opprobrious name or speech is cast vpon vs lights as well vpon him as vpon vs and so long we neede not much to moue or trouble our selues thereat The second thing which here by the way I note is that the Apostle saith Vnto God euen our Father God he is the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and he is the Father of vs all And hereupon he saith Ioh. 20.17 I ascend vnto my Father and your Father vnto my God and your God But not any but Christ alone when he speaketh of God can say my Father The reason is in the difference of the manner how he and we are called sonnes For in a large different manner are he and we called sonnes he by eternall generation of the substance of the Father we onely by Adoption through Iesus Christ his Sonne and regeneration by his Spirit he the onely begotten Sonne of God by nature we all the sonnes of God not by nature but by grace nor onely as the Angels in respect of our creation but in respect of our Adoption and regeneration Albeit therefore one God be the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and the Father of vs all yet because of this different manner how he is his and our Father we cannot say as he my Father but onely our Father Neither is it obserued that any saith with Christ my Father 28. as many say with Thomas my Lord and my God The third thing which by the way I note is that in this and other like places where these speeches are thus ioyned together our God is mentioned in respect of our creation and our Father in respect of our regeneration our God in respect of temporall blessings and our Father in respect of spirituall graces and eternall in the heauens For as our God he created vs and made vs but as our Father he adopted and redeemed vs by Christ and renewed vs by his Spirit as our God he gaue vs life motion and being but as our Father he maketh vs to liue vnto his praise to walke after the Spirit and to be new creatures So that the ioy and comfort of our soules is this that our God is our Father euen our mercifull and louing God and tendereth vs as his sonnes and heires of his promises These things I thought good to note by the way by occasion of the first note which here offereth it selfe viz. vnto whom all praise is due namely vnto God euen our Father The second thing which here I note is the thing which is due vnto him which is glory and honour and praise and thanksgiuing as witnesse also the foure and twentie Elders saying Thou art worthie O Lord to receiue glorie and honour Apoc. 4.11 and power For thou hast created all things c. The third thing which I note is the continuance of the time during which this praise is to be giuen vnto him which is for euermore that is throughout all ages from generation to generation The reason of which euerlasting continuance is not onely because of his eternall maiestie and glorie but specially because of his euerlasting mercy and loue that as his mercies endure for euer so his name may be blessed and praised for euer Many notes ye see might hence easily be gathered and not vnfruitfully insisted vpon as first from the person vnto whom all praises is due viz. not vnto Saints or Angels much lesse vnto brutish or senslesse creatures but vnto God onely euen vnto God our Father Secondly from the thing which is due vnto him which is praise and thanksgiuing not with lips alone but from the heart and soule which is the sweetest smelling sacrifice that can be offered vnto the Lord. Thirdly from the time that his praise is not to be temporarie but euerlasting as his mercies are euerlasting But for this time my meaning is to conclude all these in one short obseruation which is this That alwaies in all things God euen our Father is to be praised write we or speake we remember we with our selues or mention we vnto others temporall blessings or spirituall graces for this life present or for that that is to come still he is to be praised And to this the Apostles giue witnesse in euery place Our Apostle concluding his Epistle to the Romanes Rom. 16.27 To God saith he onely wise be praise through Iesus Christ for euer Amen And againe Vnto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly aboue all that we aske or thinke according to the power that worketh in vs be praise in the Church by Iesus Christ throughout all generations for euer Amen 1 Tim. 1.17 And againe Vnto the King euerlasting immortall inuisible vnto God onely wise be honour and glorie for euer and euer Amen 1 Pet. 4 11. And the Apostle Peter Let God in all things be glorified through Iesus Christ to whom is praise and dominion for euer and euer Amen In which testimonies to omit infinite others which might be brought to this purpose ye see also the practise of the Apostles that alwaies in all things they praised the euerliuing and onely wise God And the reason why it should be so is euident and cleare as the foure and twenty Elders yeeld it where they cast their crownes before him and say Thou art worthie O Lord to receiue glorie Apoc. 4.11 and honour and power For thou hast created all things and for thy wills sake they are and haue bene created Rom. 11.36 Or as our Apostle yeeldeth the reason Of him and through him and for him are all things to him therefore be glorie for euer Amen But not to seeke after other reasons then our present text affoordeth he is our God that hath created vs formed vs and made vs for his glorie he is our Father which hath blessed vs with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things in Christ and his mercies towards vs in Iesus Christ his Sonne are for euermore therfore alwaies and in all things his name is to be blessed and praised But who is he that knowes not this that God is alwaies in all things to be praised and that there is great cause so to do If the question be asked one thing will be answered but if the practise be looked into another thing may bee iudged Luk. 12.47 If we know it and do it not it cannot be but that we shall be beaten with many stripes And do we alwaies in all things praise the Lord If ten lepers be clensed amongst vs of their leprosie are there not nine of them that neuer returne backe to giue God praise
in the end of his Letters and Epistles he should so be censured and traduced as now those are that therein follow his example The second thing which hence I obserue is that as all Christians generally so all Ministers of the Gospell in particular should write and speake vnto and account one of an other as brethren For as this is true in generall that we haue all one God for our Father that we are all begotten by the immortall seede of one God in one wombe of the Church that we are all baptized into one bodie and haue bene all made to drinke into one spirit that we are all adopted vnto the same inheritance by the same Spirit through Iesus Christ and therefore are all brethren in Christ Iesus so is it also true in all the Ministers of the Gospell of Christ Iesus that we all build the same house we all preach the same Gospell we are all called to the dispensation of the same mysteries we all seeke the glorie of the same kingdome and we are all shepheards and bishops vnder the chiefe Shepheard and Bishop of our soules Christ Iesus Howsoeuer therefore in degree we go one before another yet should we vse and intreate one another as brethren A good note as for all Christians in generall so for such in the Ministerie as in gifts or degree are before others of their calling A better example then this of the Apostle they cannot follow to be so affectioned towards their inferiors as it appeareth our Apostle was and in all kindnesse to intreate as brethren them that labour with them in the Gospel as it appeareth our Apostle did It followeth All the Saints c. Here he remembreth the salutations of all the rest of the Saints that were at Rome vnto them All the Saints salute you to wit all the rest of the Saints that labour not in the Gospel and most of all they which are of Caesars houshold he vnderstandeth some of Neroes Court which did embrace the truth Which salutation the Apostle no doubt addeth for the ioy and comfort of the Philippians that when they should heare that not only all the Saints at Rome saluted them but the some of the Emperours Court which had embraced the truth saluted them yea and were as forward as the best in saluting them Whence I obserue that the Lord in mercie sometimes in the Courts of wicked Princes raiseth vp faithfull children vnto Abraham and causeth his truth to be loued and embraced and professed euen of their Courtiers What a cruell tyrant and wicked persecutor of Christians Nero was the Ecclesiasticall stories mention He was the beginner of all those wicked persecutions vnder those ten cruell tyrants in the Primitiue Church and grew to such a thirsting after bloud that not onely Paul and Peter and many other Christians but his greatest familiars his dearest friends his nearest kinred his brethren his mother his wife were slaine by his most cruell tyranny Yet euen in this cruell tyrants Court the Lord had some that feared him and fauoured the truth Such a one was Ioseph in Pharaoh his Court Ionathan in Saules Court Obadiah in Ahabs Court and Ebedmelech in Zedekiahs Court. And such is his mercie that he will such is his power that he can and such his goodnesse that he doth cause light to shine out of darkenesse and beget children in the faith where the truth is most oppugned Which may teach vs many good lessons As first not to despaire but that where the truth is most oppugned there the Lord hath some that feare him and worship him in truth No place more vnlike to haue friends vnto the truth then Nero his Court and yet there were such And therefore we may hope that euen there where Antichrist vsurpeth his tyrann●e the Lord hath his children which bow not the knee to Baall Onely we are to acknowledge the glorious mercie and power of the Lord therein that so wonderfully dealeth for his children and prouideth for his owne glory Secondly this may serue to condemne vs of great backwardlinesse in a Christian resolution of a religious profession In Nero his Court was great danger of present death and cruell torture vnto so many as should embrace and professe the truth of Christ Iesus There the same Paul in prison and many continually butchered and killed for a good profession yet there were such as embraced the truth in their hearts and professed it with their mouthes And how shall not this condemne our irresolute resolution of a religious profession We are in no perill of death or of bonds or imprisonment for making a bold profession of Christian religion Nay it is our honour with our most gracious Prince constantly to maintaine the truth against errour and superstition And yet so cold are we a great many of vs in religion as that a man cannot tell what we are Papists or Protestants and so frozen as that a man would take a many of vs rather to be enemies then friends vnto religion Either we are afraid and dare not make that profession which we should for feare of a day or else to serue the time we make shew of one and are indeed another and so cannot make a good profession Howsoeuer it be so it is that many of vs are of no resolution in religion Well it should not be so but though we were in Nero his Court we should make a good profession and though there were no way for vs but to be cast into the hote fierie fornace yet should we with the three children protest Dan. 3.18 We will not serue thy gods nor worship thy golden image which thou hast made and set vp The grace c. In these words the Apostle shutteth vp all and as it were sealeth his letter with that vsuall prayer which he vseth both in the beginning and in the end almost of all his Epistles Where ye see the thing which he wisheth them is grace which when he calleth The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ he therein noteth whence it is deriued vnto his children By grace he vnderstandeth both the first and second grace both the free fauour of God which is the fountaine of all good things and the good things themselues which flow from that fountaine Now this is called the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ because it is deriued from God by him vnto his children by him I say euen by our Lord vnto whom al power is giuen both in heauen and in earth by our Lord Iesus that saueth his people from their sinnes by our Lord Iesus Christ annointed a King to defend vs a Prophet to teach vs a Priest to offer vp a sacrifice for our sinnes So that the Apostles praier here for the Philippians is ye see that whatsoeuer grace our Lord Iesus Christ hath purchased for his Church may be with them all to fill them with all goodnesse Would ye then know how to pray for all good either vnto Gods Church or any of Gods children Learne of our Apostle and pray that the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ may be with them For herein ye pray both for all spirituall grace in heauenly things vnto them and for all temporall blessings which in his gracious fauour he vouchsafeth for the good of his Church and children being all couched in this The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ Againe would ye know by whom all grace is deriued vnto vs be it spirituall grace or temporall blessing the grace of God whereby he loueth vs or the grace of God whereby his loue is made knowne vnto vs Learne of our Apostle it is by our Lord Iesus Christ for therefore is it called the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ because it is deriued by him vnto vs he hauing reconciled vs vnto God and we with him hauing all things giuen vnto vs. Knowing then the exceeding great riches that we haue in Christ Iesus our Lord let vs alwaies in all things glorifie the name of Christ Iesus and as by him we haue all things so let vs do all things to his glorie Laus omnis soli Deo FINIS