Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n knowledge_n zeal_n zealous_a 132 4 9.5616 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09031 A plaine exposition vpon the whole 8. 9. 10. 11. chapters of the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Romans Wherein the text is diligently and methodically resolued, the sence giuen: and many doctrines thence gathered, are by liuely vses applyed, for the benefit of Gods children performed with much variety, and conuenient breuitie: being the substance of neere foure yeeres weekedayes sermons.: By Elnathan Parr, Bachelor in Diuinity, and preacher of Gods Word. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1618 (1618) STC 19319; ESTC S114074 348,782 462

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

a prey for them then a good Voyage for the Merchant Separate zeale and knowledge and they become both vnprofitable but wisely ioyne them and they perfect a Christian being like a precious Diamond in a ring of Gold Let not zeale outrunne knowledge or lagge behinde it but let it ad aequale agree going hand in hand with the same For euen as in an Instrument of Musike there is a proportion of sound wherein is the harmony beyond which if any string be strained it makes a squeaking noyse and if it bee not strained enough it yeelds a clagging dull and vnpleasant sound So is it in our zeale if it bee either more or lesse then our knowledge Among the first sort of these men which haue zeale not according to knowledge are to be placed the Iewes and wee may iustly put the Papists whose zeale for their many groundlesse deuices hath made them bloudy persecutors of the Gospell Likewise the Brownists whose immoderate zeale without warrant hath made them most vncharitable Censurers of all the famous Churches in Christendome Among the other sort which haue knowledge vvithout zeale are our Dullerds in Religion who are like a resty horse that hath metall and strength but will not goe forward Bee zealous and amend the example of Laodicea were enough to prouoke vs. Apoc. 3.19 It is the end of thy Redemption and a very pitifull thing to be a man in knowledge and a beast in life Zeale without knowledge profits not so knowledge without zeale condemnes How farre art thou from the zeale of Phinees Dauid Elias c Thou canst be zealous and hote in thine owne causes thou canst follow thy pleasures with Esau till thou faint Thou wilt spend twenty pound but thou wilt haue thy wil of thy neighbour Alas what wilt thou answere to God When notwithstanding all thy knowledge thou neither hast indignation against sinne Nor art any way carefull to honour God according to his Word VERSE 2. For they being ignorant of Gods righteousnes and going about to establish their owne righteousnesse haue not submitted themselues to the righteousnes of God THat the zeale of the Iewes is not according to knowledge is shewed in this verse The reason whereby it is shewed is brought in by an Occupation Some might say Did not the Iewes abound in knowledge who counted the very Letters of the Bible For answere Paul affirmes that they were ignorant of that which they should specially haue knowne namely the righteousnes of God of which they ought to haue beene zealous In this verse then we haue two things 1. A Iustification That the Iewes are zealous but not according to knowledge They are ignorant of the righteousnes of God 2. A declaration of the effects of such ignorance which are two 1. Pride They went about to stablish their owne 2. Contempt of Gods righteousnesse They haue not submitted themselues vnto it Here is a distinction of righteousnes it is two-fold First Gods Secondly Our owne Gods righteousnes is not abolished but established by faith Our owne righteousnes that is which we haue wrought as I may say home-made righteousnes of our owne vvebbing this is abolished by faith this was the righteousnes which the Iewes boasted of vnable to abide the triall of the Law For they beeing ignorant of Gods righteousnesse not whereby God is righteous in himselfe but which he giues to man that he may be righteous by God This is the righteousnesse of our Mediator They are zealous of righteousnes but they are ignorant of that righteousnes which God approues vvhich is a righteousnes euery way answerable to the Law This we sinfull men cannot performe but Christ hath performed and we cannot apprehend when God giues faith Going about to stablish their owne righteousnesse Their owne that is which they in their owne persons performe To stablish or to set vp A Metaphor from the staying vp of an old rotten house which can be shored vp no longer b Aretius Or from the setting vp of a dead man vpon his feet to make him stand c Pareus Such is the labour of him that goeth about to be iustified by his owne righteousnes Going about The Nimrodians went about to build a tower whose top might reach to Heauen they went about it but brought it not to passe but built a Babel so the Iewes went about to be iustified by their own righteousnes but in vaine working their owne confusion in the sight of God They did not submit themselues This is the issue of pride They will not be beholding to God for a righteousnesse of his appointing They haue not submitted as Rebells which will not be subiect to their lawfull Prince doctrine Ignorance breedes pride and contempt Thus Christ imputes to the Scribes and Pharises Mat. 15.14 So Paul thought hee had no Peere while he was a Pharise and therefore he was mad against the faith and this was through Ignorance 1. Tim. 1.12 Vse 1. Zeale without knowledge is dangerous as appeared in the Iewes as appeareth in the Papists and Brownists It makes them proud and hauing drunke in an opinion they cannot be remoued with reason As a man cannot write in a paper already written or plow in a ground ouer-runne with bushes so is it hard to fasten any reason vpon a mind prepossest with fancy 2. It makes thē vncharitable in abhorring all them which consent not to their deuices so farre that they Iudge their Contraries to be men not worthy to liue persecuting vvith more eagernesse them which renounce their opinions then them which deny God This appeared in the Iewes who crucified Christ for reprouing their Traditions And in the Arrians vvho were more cruell in their time to the Orthodoxall Christians in maintaining their opinions then were the heathen Emperours The Papists doe not exercise so much cruelty against any as against those who consent not with them in the doctrines of their owne deuising A fantasticall zeale Also the Separatists exclaime of the Church of England and can endure any thing saue the gouernment of this Church because it confuteth their fancies I find by my little reading and smal obseruation that too much zeale is more dangerous to the Church then the contrary degree of coldnes 3. It makes men impatient of admonition It will not endure the hearing of any thing that contradicts it as the Iewes would not heare Paul Zeale is erroneous if it vvant charitie humilitie and patience Vse 2. Ignorance is the mother of Error and excuseth not because we are bound to know as a subiect is bound to knowe the Lawes of his Prince Ignorantia Iuris non excusat Regula and if he offend it will not serue his turne to say he knew not the Law If a man be ignorant of that which concernes him not it excuseth him as if a Minister be ignorant of the Art of Physike or to plow an acre of ground or a Physician ignorant of the Art of Nauigation But if
the procreant cause of it for the zeale of the Iewes did not make Paul loue them for in this zeale they crucified Christ persecuted the Gospell and Saint Paul cals this zeale in himselfe blasphemie and therefore Paul would neuer commend it Indeede if I see a Papist zealous in his way I pitie him and wish his zeale were wel directed but I commend not his zeale When I read the Story of Alexander Cicero c. I loue their remembrance for some moralities in them as Christ loued that Y●…ng man in the Gospell but this zeale of the Iewes was no moralitie being considered in the manner in which they were zealous And therefore though Paul grant it yet as Chrysostome obserues he reproues it vehemently and takes away all Apology from them Here then I take it the Apostle comes directly to point to shew that Iustification by Faith abolisheth not the Law though their zeale bee cast away because it was not according to knowledge Paul here notably in the first place beating downe as was fit the admiration and opinion they had of their zealous obseruations In this verse there are two things First a Concession Paul grants that they haue the zeale of God Secondly an Accusation or Reproofe of their zeale But not according to knowledge The zeale of God The earnest study of the Iewes about the worship of the true God and standing for Moses Law Paul calls zeale Heb. 10.27 which is a vehement affection as a very hote fire is called the zeale of fire and may thus be described that it is an exceeding vehement affection or loue to a thing with an indignation against whatsoeuer doth hurt the thing beloued and an endeuor to redeeme it from all iniuries and wrongs Zeale of God Not as approued of God but so called because God was the end or obiect of it though they failed in the right way so as this is to be vnderstood comparatiuely in respect of the Heathen who are zealous for false gods So if we compare the Turkes and Papists The Turkes are zealous for Mahomet The Papists in comparison for Christ Not according to knowledge It was according to their owne conceiued knowledge but not according to the knowledge they should haue had by the Gospel and for this doth Paul reproue it The more of such zeale the worse doctrine Zeale if it be not according to knowledge is not acceptable to God The Iewes are a plaine example hereof See also Eccles 7.18 Q. Can a man haue too much zeale A. Not of true but of selfe-conceited A little of this is too much For whatsoeuer is without Faith is sinne Faith presupposeth knowledge Errour in knowledge breeds errour in zeale Vse 1. A good meaning will not iustifie our actions if otherwise euill as appeares in the Iewes who many of them meant well in persecuting the Gospell but they are to this day plagued for such zealous meanings Let vs meane neuer so well if that which we doe be not according to Gods meaning hee regards it not who hath giuen his Law not our meanings to be a rule of our obedience If a Wife play the Harlot and say she meant no harme will this satisfie her Husband And shall wee thinke to worship Images pray to Saints stay at home on the Sabbath day when we may conueniently resort to the Church vnder the shadow of a good meaning No. God will not accept of such bald excuses And if good meaning will not excuse ill doing What shall we say to them which doe ill and meane ill too What shall become of Drunkards Blasphemers Vncleane persons c. What good meaning can be in them Vse 2. Here we haue a rule for the ordering of our zeale that it may be acceptable to God For it is such a thing which if it be well ordered is most beautifull in a Christian but if not a thing of exceeding danger as Fire in moderation is most comfortable in extremitie most fearefull This Rule is sound knowledge out of Gods Word This knowledge must be three-fold First of the thing of the which we are zealous that it be in the Right For if wee be in the wrong the more zeale the worse as in a wrong way the more haste the worse speed Exod. 40.36,37 Therefore Saint Paul tels the Galathians that it is good to be zealous alwaies in a good thing 2. Of the wrong which is done to the thing we are zealous of that in deed there be a wrong done not going vpon hearesay and aduenture but vpon certainty being able out of the Word soundly to conuince the same For here is the indignation and if there be not sound knowledge we may become slanderers of our brethren and as they say beat them with the sword who deserue not to be touched with the scabberd 3. That wee haue some competent knowledge and abilitie thereby to iudge of the proportion of the wrong for the which we haue indignation in our zeale that so our zeale may haue a good temper For all sinnes offences wrongs are not of the same quantitie and qualitie As there is a difference in offences so must there bee in our zeale in greater things to be more zealous in lesser things lesse zealous wee must remember it is of the Nature of fire There is not the like fire for the roasting of an Egge and for the roasting of an Oxe but it is moderated according to the necessities of the houshold By this three-fold knowledge must our zeale be directed where the Word begins there must our zeale beginne and where the Word ends there must our zeale end whatsoeuer our opinion be For as he that trauelleth ouer the Washes or in some dangerous passage without a guide many times perisheth So is the man that is zealous not according to knowledge As therefore in the wildernesse when the cloud ascended the children of Israel set forward in their iourneyes and when that stood still so did they And if the cloud ascended not then they iourneyed not till it ascended Exod. 40.36,37 So is our zeale alwaies to follow our knowledge and to be directed therby There are two forts of men hereby to be apprehended 1. They which haue a desect not of zeale but of knowledge for the ground of their zeale 2. They which haue a defect not of knowledge but of zeale answerable to their knowledge Of the 1. of these may be verified the Prouerbe They set the Cart before the Horse The second may bee likened to Pharaohs Chariots when the wheeles were off so slowly doe they expresse their knowledge in their liues The first are like a little ship without ballast fraught but with a great many sailes which is soone either dasht against the Rockes or toppled ouer The second are like a goodly great Ship well ballasted and richly fraughted but without any sayles which quickly falleth into the hands of Pyrats because it can make no speed sooner making
Horeb he goes for more safetie and to meet with the Lord. There passeth by him a mightie wind an earthquake and fire representations of Eliahs zeale But God was not in them Then comes a still voice to teach Eliah patience saying What doest thou here Eliah Eliah answered Lord I haue bene iealous for the Lord of hoasts complaining according to the words here vsed by Paul verse 3. In this storie it appeares that Eliah was a man subiect to infirmities as other men are being ouerheate in his passion his life being in danger by Iesabel yet his zeale in regard of the cause of it is exceeding commendable and for our imitation doctrine We are to be zealous for the Lord. So was Elias Moses Samuel Dauid as appeares in their stories Vse When thou seest God dishonored and religion troden vnder foote be not senslesse Would it not moue a man to see altars throwne downe prophets killed miracles take no effect as in Eliahs time Iames 5. ●7 Or now to see the Sabboth profaned the preaching of the Gospell contemned and many notwithstanding dayly admonitions to runne out some to drunkennesse some to whoredome some to pride c Surely we want an Eliah Whosoeuer hath but a dram of his spirit these things to him are as a dagger at his heart Meeknesse in our owne causes but in Gods zeale and earnestnesse become vs. Yet be not ouer zealous few I confesse are sicke of this disease ●et Elias was and we may be also for we are more sure we haue his passions then his grace Excesse of zeale is intollerable yea it hath bene found lesse dangerous to the Church when men haue come short of the due proportion of zeale then when they haue exceeded Auda Bishop in Persia in an excesse of zeale throwing downe a Temple of the Pagans was the cause that the King thereby insensed threw downe all the Temples of the Christians Theod. lib. 5. There are two things whereby we may discerne whether our zeale exceed due limits and bounds or no 1 If thou make thy selfe a partie so much is it in the wrong Elias was the more hot because his owne life was in danger So if there be a disordered person who hath prouoked vs then wee crie its pitie but he should be presented indited punished But when vnder a colour of zeale against sinne we reuenge our owne wrongs it s more passion then zeale Secondly Zeale should consume the faults not the persons of offenders if thine feeds on the persons not on the faults it s naught Quench it against the person inflame it against the fault Iames and Iohn would haue had the wicked Samaritans by and by to be consumed with fier from heauen but they are reproued by our Sauiour Luc. 9.53 And here Elias was somewhat faultie comming short of Moses and Samuell who made intercession for not against their people Eliah makes intercession against his people Moses and Samuell for them These rather then Eliah are to be imitated of Ministers It s a lamentable thing to see a father wringing of his hands ouer his child and complaining of his stubbornesse wishing he had neuer bene borne So it is very greeuious to heare an Eliah complaine to God of the stubbornesse of his people We are your fathers so liue you that we may haue no cause to sue against you either in the court of heauen or earth but rather to reioyce oueryou which we shall doe with much cheerefullnes praying for you if you forsake your sinnes and turne vnto God obeying his word If we in our prayers haue cause to complaine of you it will be vnprofitable to you for what followed Eliah his complaint The Lord speakes to him as if hee should say Eliah I see thou art in a moode well goe annoynt Hazael King of Aram Iehu King of Israel and Elisha Prophet in thy roome him that scapeth the sword of Hazaell shall Iehu slay and him that escapeth Iehu shal Elisha slay Of such force are the complaints of the Prophets and Ministers of God against their stubborne people as also are their prayers effectuall on the behalfe of such as beleeue and obey Now I beseech you presently to reforme your liues that wee may mutually ioyne together to blesse God you for vs and we for you that we may be all crowned together at the comming of Christ VERSE 3. Lord they haue killed thy Prophets and digged downe thine Altars and I am left alone and they seeke my life IN these words is set downe the complaint of Eliah more particularly in which are two things First the person to whom he complaines Lord. Secondly the matter of the complaint which is twofold First The killing of the Prophets Secondly The digging downe of Altars Both these aggrauated from the miserable estate of Eliah which appeared two waies first He is left alone in his owne opinion secondly They seeke his life also They not onely bellua multorum capitum the vulgar but Ahab Iesabel Nobles Commons and all from the highest to the lowest Especially Iesabel a diuellish and wicked woman who added to the Idolatry of the Israelites the abomination of the Sydonians and whose hatred against true religion was so great that it came into a prouerb such being called Iesabels Apoc. 2. Thy Prophets Thy is added for more detestation of the fact The Embassadors of a meane Prince are not to be wronged but they haue killed Thy Prophets Thine Altars An Altar was a building or Instrument of earth stone or other stuffe reared vp for the offering of Sacrifices Quest But what Altars means he God cōmanded that there should be no Altar in ordinary after the building of the Temple but at Ierusalem where only Sacrifices were to bee offered which is the cause that now the Iewes offer no sacrifices because they want their Temple Ahab could not come by the Altar at Ierusalem being out of his Kingdome What Alter then meanes Ahab Answ Some say that the signe is put for the thing signified and by Altars meant Religion which was by Ahab and Iesabel abolished But as the killing of the Prophets was a matter of fact so also I take this to be rather then of signification only They threw downe material Altars built in Abrahams Isaaks Iacobs Iosuahs and Samuels time before the Temple was builded and the Altars which were by Elias himselfe and other Prophets by speciall commandement after the building of the Temple set vp which were called afterward high Places and the good Kings of Iudah commended for pulling them downe 1. Kin. 18.4.22 Obiect Why should Eliah complaine of the doing of that by Ahab which done by others is commended Answ Those Altars remained as monuments of Gods worship and Elias complaines not simply against their demolishing but because it was done in despite of true Religion that no foot-step thereof might remaine to put the people in minde of the true God which if it had bin done in
verse 15 16 17. Therefore as that before is to be vnderstood so is this And as large a sense as Hauing mercy hath so large must hardening haue Then not onely of Actuall hauing but of the purpose it must bee vnderstood He should haue said He stirres vp to destruction whom he will but he saith he hardneth that he may shew how he stirreth vp namely by hardening Hardnesse is an estate of a corrupt heart whereby it is disposed to all euill yeelding no obedience to God and it is threefold First Naturall which is the estate of all men Secondly that which is contracted by a custome of sinning as a path is hardened by continuall trampling of passengers Thirdly Iudiciarie which GOD inflicteth vpon men as a Iudgement This is here meant for finding all in their naturall hardnesse hee hardeneth that is reprobates whom hee pleaseth Q. But all hardnesse is finne How then can God be said to harden A. There is a difference betweene hardnes and hardning Hardnes is sinne but to harden is not alwayes so and this is from God not as sinne but as his iust Iudgement For it is not possible that by him we should sinne by whom wee repent and rise from sinne euen as bitter water and sweet issue not from the same fountaine It is from God that we stand from our selues that we fall God is said to harden properly not by making soft hearts to become hard for Pharaohs heart was neuer but hard nor by putting hardnes into the heart as the Papists vniustly charge vs to affirme nor by only suffering vs to be hardened which is the opinion of the Papists dreaming idlely of an idle permission in God making him like the Poets Iupitor who was feasting in Aethiopia while things went out of order but three wayes 1. By forsaking not making it hard but not taking the hardnes away He hardneth that is he softneth not He hardneth not by putting in hardnes but by not putting in the softning oyle of his mercy as the Sunne causes darknes by with-drawing his light 2. By punishing for finding the heart hard if hee please not to pardon it and to soften the heart hee inflicteth a new hardnes as a punishment of the former And this he instilleth not but effecteth three wayes 1. Either by Satan to whose power hee deliuereth such a heart for him to worke vpon 2. Or by themselues giuing them ouer to their owne hearts ●usts 3. Or by the preaching of the Word For as the middle region of the Ayre is more cold by the Anteperistasis so the heart of a Reprobate more hard by the Word not properly but accidentally as a resty horse the more hee is spurred forward the more goes backward By actuating and exciting the present euill inclination of the Creatures by propounding an occasion to manifest it as the Sunne being in it selfe most cleane by the force of his beames draweth out of a dunghill stinking and vnpleasant vapours Hardnes then is caused by the Commandement Occasionally by our owne malice Meritoriously By Satan Efficiently By God Iudicially So Satan is the Tormentor a sinfull man the guilty person God the Iudge and that a Iust one who knowes how to vse euill meanes well being no wayes the cause of sinne as sinne but alwayes ordering it for his glory and the good of his Elect. For sinne is like a Ship Man the Mariner Satan the spirit or winde God the Pilot at the sterne directing all things to his glory doctrine The will of God is the cause of Election and Reprobation as hath beene shewed before Vse 1. Our goodnesse or ilnesse is not the cause of Predestination In election is excluded the merit of man and the debt of God and yet it is to bee confessed that some way the goodnesse of man is the cause of election Praedestinatio quantum ad principium sine nobis non sine nobis quantum ad finem Paulus de Pala. Gran. in ca. 25. Math. Aliud est principium Actionis abud Cognitionis that is not of the Action of God Electing but of our Cognition and knowledge that we are elected Consider election Compositiuely there is no cause but Gods will Consider it resolutely and our Vocation is the cause whereby we know it In Reprobation our ilnesse is excluded as a speciall personall discretiue cause but not as a necessary condition or generall meritorious cause without the which God will not reprobate any Vse 2. Here also appeareth that man falne is the subiect of Predestination Of election it is because it is called mercy which presupposeth misery and faultinesse It is of Reprobation because it is called hardning Now this is a Rule that God hardens none but such as are hard before Neither can it be auoided by an interpretation of Actuall Hardnes For here is to be remembred that Paul speakes of Gods purpose as hath beene obserued before out of Martyr And if hee actually harden none but them which are hard neither did hee euer purpose to harden but such Also if it bee not here to be vnderstood of the Decree of Reprobation there is more in the Antecedent then in the Consequent This verse being the determination of the point according to the meaning of that which is before deliuered and thus doe most Interpreters vnderstand this secret Augustine often calleth the subiect of Gods Decree The Damned Masse Lege doctissimam Aug. Epist quae est ad Sixt. presb num 105. That Masse saith Anselme Ibi gratuita est indulgentia vbi iusta poterit esse vindicta Ansel to which death is due Hereby is perspicuous both the Mercy and Iustice of God Because there is a free Indulgence where there might haue beene a iust reuenge He loued Iacob by a free Mercy he hated Esau by a due and deserued Iudgement They that against this pretend the absolute right of God obserue not how this way that Absolute right is more excellently manifested when Authoritie is attributed to him among all mankinde being guilty to saue or to damne all or none or some at his owne pleasure An absolute Monarch who hath power of life and death if his subiects should rebell hath by his absolute power iust right to pardon them all if hee will or some and not others whereof hee needeth giue no other reason then his pleasure But sure he could not be counted a iust Lord and Gouernour if out of a plea of absolute command hee should deuoid from his protection and cast off any his subiects without relation to any Rebellion or other crime If you aske whether God can annihilate all things I answere Yes If whether hee can reprobate good Angels or Men for Angels and men to bee neither good nor bad is an idle fiction I say hee cannot by the perfection of his nature which can not but loue goodnesse as Augustine excellently He rendreth good for good because hee is good Euill for euill because he is iust God
which attaines that righteousnesse which iustifieth in his sight Now this must needes be wonderfull harsh to them which had such confidence in their owne righteousnes as appeareth by that Pharisee and the Ruler spoken of in the Gospel Luke 18.11,12 ibid. v. 21. To be both bereaued of the promises and also to be stript of their holinesse to be left naked before the Iudgement seat of Christ must needs be grieuous This Paul knowing and that they would be not a little incensed against him and hauing experience that such preaching caused him great trouble before he comes to the matter he makes a Preface whereby hee endeuours to asswage their minds and to approue his loue to them that he might take away all preiudicate opinions of him So in this Chapter we haue two parts 1. A Preface ver 1. 2. The matter it selfe in the rest The Preface verse 1. is by insinuation or protestation of his loue in which are two things 1. The Thing protested 2. The Amplification of it The thing protested is his Loue. The Amplification is twofold 1. From the persons to whom he protests loue that is to the Israelites 2. From the Arguments of his loue vvhich are three 1. A friendly cōpellation hee calls them Brethren in regard of the same Country and Nation 2. From a desire of their saluation The word translated hearts desire signifieth two things First to haue a good opinion Secondly to wish well vnto Paul thought wel of them and vvished them well whatsoeuer they thought of him This desire is amplified from the subiect of it his heart It was not a fained glozing loue as is the friendship of the world from the teeth outward but euen from his very heart Thirdly from his prayers for their saluation A singular token of loue This is amplified first from the obiect to whom he prayed To God Secondly from the end or summe of his prayer That they might be saued Q. Why doth Paul pray for thē who haue crucified Christ are enemies to the Gospell and hated and reiected of God A. He intends the general calling of the Iewes of which chap. 11. Or with condition of Gods will or onely of the Elect or to shew his willingnesse to wish well euen to his enemies The obseruations from this verse are from the consideration of Paul as an Apostle or as a Christian doctrine Ob. If we consider him as an Apostle we obserue 1. That Ministers are not only to preach against wicked persons to exhort their people to obedience but also to pray for them as Samuel and Ieremy did 1. Sam. 12.23 Ierem. 13.17 2. When Ministers are to speak of a matter that may distaste they must wisely preuent all offence and grudge by preparing the minds of the hearers and shewing that they speake not out of malice but out of loue and a desire of their saluation So Paul mitigates his reproofes with protestations of his loue and gentlenesse which is no dawbing with vntempered morter Paul dawbed not but had Gods Spirit when he spake to Festus and Agrippa and hauing reprooued the Galathians Chap. 3. He affectionatly declares his loue Chap. 4. As Physicians prepare and Nurses sometimes still their little ones with singing So also must Ministers attempt euery way which may profit their people 3. Paul loues the Iewes but tels them plainly of their faults So must Ministers doe Indeed the way to get peace among men is not to reprooue but this is the way to lose the peace of God and to bring the bloud of our hearers vpon our owne soules 4. The condition of Ministers is miserable The labour is great the care to saue the soules of our hearers yea our own that we may giue vp a good account is infinite the discontents not to be expressed as to spend many sleeplesse nights many teares and sighes for their saluation who raile and reuile vs accounting vs vnworthy to liue But indeed our ioy is in the conscionable discharge of our duty 2. Cor. 2.15 and that wee are a secret succour to God both in them which are saued and in them which perish And for such as receiue the Word with reuerence obeying it we acknowledge that we are neuer able sufficiently to praise God for the ioy wherewith we reioice on their behalfe 1. Thes 3.9 who if they continue then do we liue If we consider Paul a Christian we obserue Obs 1. Though the Iewes seeke PAVLS life in their rage and nothing would haue giuen them more content then his bloud yet hee carries himselfe louing toward them his very speeches no way sauouring of Reuenge Loue thine enemies We are Pharises by nature louing our friends and hating our foes but wee are Christians by Grace and therefore must loue our very enemies and pray for them as our Sauiour both taught and practised Amicos diligere omnium est inimicos vero solorum Christianorum Tertul. ad Scap. cap. 1. Chrysost hom 15. operis impersecti Euery man can loue his friend but onely a godly man can loue his enemy and in this doing we doe our selues more good then our Enemies For Christ gaue vs this commandement not for our enemies sake but for our owne not that they are worthy to be beloued but that malice is too vnworthy and base a thing for vs. This is hard but we must beate downe our stomakes that wee may bee the children of our heauenly Father If then in cold bloud and vpon deliberation though not at the instant of thy passion thou canst so rule thine affection as to loue thine enemy and pray for him doing him good in stead of euill it will be a sweet comfort to thy brest for with our heauenly Father hee is not in the communion of sonnes that is not in the Charitie of Brethren Apud summum Patrem qui non fuerit in charitate fratrum non habebitur in numero filiorum Leo. mag serm 11. de Quadrag 2. Pauls loue was hearty so let thine be be it friend or foe Some after a controuersie is taken vp and ended will promise friendship but vvith a Reseruation of reuenge though it bee seuen yeere after Iudas kissed Christ and betrayed him and Ioab saluted Amasa courteously and slue him Remember thou to meane the truth thou makest shew of 3. Let thy loue appeare in kinde words and salutations as Paul calls the Iewes Brethren yea Lot the Sodomites Gen. 19.7 which condemnes the practice of some who if they bee offended shew that they are possessed either with a dumbe diuell they will not speake or with a rayling Diuell if they speake it shall be in bitternesse with taunts and reproches 4. Pray for them thou louest Thou shalt neuer haue any comfort of his friendship for whom thou doest not pray VERSE 2. For I beare them record that they haue a zeale of God but not according to knowledge THis verse hath not a reason of Pauls loue from
Mar. 16.20 Act. 1.8 Col. 1.6 Q. But what may be thought of them which neuer heard of the Gospell are they not to be excused before God A. Yes Of the sinne of vnbeliefe in the promises but they cannot obtaine thereby an acquitall from their other sinnes but shall be condemned for them Vse 1. That is the true Religion which agrees with that which was preached in all the world by the Apostles Vse 2. It was a miracle that the Gospell a doctrine teaching the deniall of our selues and bearing of the Crosse carried by poore and meane persons oppressed by mighty Emperors and Kings should in despite of men and Diuels within the space of forty yeeres bee so published in all the world Let all enemies cease to oppose it by the remembrance hereof Vse 3. Obey the Gospell lest He which sent it take it away and remoue our Candle-sticke for our vnbeliefe and contempt of it For this cause Turcisme and Papisme possesse many places which haue beene heretofore famous for the Gospell Hath the grace of God shined to thee in despight of the Diuell Make much of this light and walke in it Hast thou heard the sound of it Why doest thou liue in lewd practices as if thou hadst neuer heard any inkling of it If thou beest a blasphemer drunken vncleane proud couetous c. what could a Iew or a Turke doe more then thou doest Thou hast not receiued it Where sinne beares rule there is not the Gospell receiued In those Marian times the Gospell made men forsake goods and life and can it not now make thee leaue thy vile and bad courses He that caused the Gospell to be brought with the bloud of his seruants will require the bloud of all the contemners of it Be you carefull that as in all the world so the Gospell may haue a free passage among you and bee glorified which shall be when you suffer it to subdue your vile and rebellious affections VERSE 19. But I say did not Israel know First Moses saith * Deut. 32.31 I will prouoke you to iealousie by them that are no people and by a foolish Nation I will anger you THe Apostle hath in the verses before soundly proued that the Gospell is by the will and counsell of God to be preached to the Gentiles The Iew is mute and hath nothing farther to obiect against that point but falls to excuse his opposition agaist the preaching of the Gospell to them by pleading ignorance that hee did not know it vvas the will of God so to haue it To this Paul answereth What saith he did not Israel know Did ye not know This Why Moses and Esay affirme it in whom you are conuersant And so falls into a plaine declaration of the Abiection of the Iewes and receiuing of the Gentiles as before he had done in the 9. Chapter Here then are two things First a taking away of the excuse viz. ignorance which the Iewes made to couer their malice against the preaching of the Gospell to the Gentiles by a reprehensarie declaration that they were not ignorant Secondly this he proues by the Testimonie of the Prophets Did not Israel know The Geneua Translation supplieth God without any sense which is exceedingly well obserued in His Maiesties Translation and there left out For that vvhich they pretended not to know was not God but the will of God in the matter before spoken of As if hee should say You may be ashamed to say you are ignorant you know it well enough or might or ought to know it doctrine The corruption of our hearts leades vs to the practice of those things which we know to be sinne Rom. 1.31 Iude 10. Vse 1. Abstaine from all sinne specially from sinne of knowledge A regenerate man may through infirmitie or in the violence of tentation sinne against knowledge as Dauid and Peter but beware of cold bloud and continuing in knowne sinne Antecedent Ignorance will not saue a man much more will consequent Ignorance condemne him Ignorantia mollit non tollit rationem peccati Scientia non mollit peccatum sed tollit excusationē peccati Ignorance taketh not away sinne but knowledge taketh away all excuse of sinne Now I haue spoken to them saith Christ they haue no c Ioh. 15.22 colour for their sinne To with-hold the knowne truth in vnrighteousnesse prouoketh the d Rom. 1.18 wrath of God Doest thou not know that drunkennesse whoredome c. are abominable sins And yet thou practisest them Alas what hope canst thou haue A willing practice of knowne sinne and Repentance can nouer stand together nay it is the high way to a reprobate minde and to that vnpardonable offence Though thou canst not but sinne in these daies of thy frailety yet beware of two things First of beeing willingly ignorant of that which God giues thee the meanes to know for this is the marke of a wretch 2. Pet. 3.5 Secondly of doing contrarie to knowledge For hee that knowes to doe well and doth it not and by proportion to auoid ill and shunnes it not to him it is sinne that is his knowledge aggrauates his faults Iac. 4. vlt. Vse 2. The Iewes sinned against their knowledge What was the cause Euen their Enuy that the Gentiles should be admitted to the prerogatiue of Grace This made them deliuer Christ to be crucified This caused the stoning of Stephen this the persecution of Paul Beware of Enuy which is a diuelish sinne the rotting of the bones which makes a man twice miserable For the enuious man is cruciated both with his owne euils and with the good things of his Neighbour The way to auoid enuy for worldly matters is to despise the world and the folly of it and to loue heauenly things and the way to auoid enuy for the grace of God shewed on another is to loue the glory of God which is set forth by my neighbour as well as by my selfe The proofe is from the testimony of two famous Prophets Moses in the rest of this 19. verse and Esay verse 20.21 First Moses Moses is called the first not because of a second Moses but first in time or dignity or first in this allegation The Testimonie is out of Deuteronomie containing a threatning of Reiection to the Iewes for their vile dealing against God wherin are two things to be considered 1. The phrase wherein this Reiection is set downe 2. The Amplification of it I will prouoke you to ielousie and I will anger you This is the phrase The Amplification is two-fold 1. Frō the Author which is God who doth not cause enuy but cause it to come to light being in the heart before nor is the Author of ielousie as a sinne but as its a punishment doing that for punishment which would stirre vp their corrupt hearts to ielousie 2. From the Instruments which God vseth to anger and prouoke them withall Namely No people A foolish Nation That
of our God who when he receiues sinners neuer comes in within odde items back reckonings but forgiueth and forgetteth our sinnes as if they neuer had been done nay vseth vs as if we had ben the best children that could be So when the prodigall child returnes to himselfe and to his father doth his father say Ah sirra haue you spent all c. Well I am content to receiue you but as long as I liue I le thinke on you No no. But he fals on his neck and weepes for ioy Luc. 15. with O my sonne O this my sonne was lost but now is found was dead but now is aline Bring out the best rayment the shoes the ring theiewells kill the fat calfe make a feast send for musick that wee may reioyce All is fogotten Hast thou beene a drunkard a blasphemer an vncleane person c. If thou repentest and turnest to God euen so will he vse thee He will neuer vpbraid thee with what thou hast beene he will remember thy sinnes no more Heb. 8.12 Paule in this is an example to all sinners propounded by God himselfe to vs 1. Tim. 1.16 that from the experience of his dealing with him all might be ambitious of his fauour and be excited to come vnto him If a Surgeon should come among vs and vndertaking to cure some desperately diseased person should make him fish whole as we say and as sound as euer he was and that freely Consule Agust serm 9. et 10. de veibis Apost et Ansel●m in loc Tim. this would allure others to resort to him for the recouery of their paynes or as a Physitian desiring to get a fame would looke out some person euen at deaths dore and cure him that by such experiment be might get a name and come into practise So Christ desires fame and glory he would haue all our custome he would all sicke consciences should come vnto him for cure and for this purpose he takes Paul in the eye of man sicke of incurable desease he physickes him heales him and highly preferres him receiuing nothing but giuing all good things to his patients for he seekes nothing but glory Then consider hast thou any old can kerd soare about thee Art thou a soule leaper or hast thou any or many loth some diseases Yea thou hast And as the woman in the gospell could not be cured by any Physitian though she had spent her whole estate that way so no men nor Angells can cure thee It s onely Christ can doe it and he is most gentle to all that come to him freely healing them and aduancing them to glory Why then dost thou deferre to come vnto him for sauing health Why doest thou rather choose to perish and rot in thy sinnes He that hath receiued Paule and Mary Magdalene to mercie will not reiect thee if thou repentest VERS 2. God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew Here is the third part of Paules answere which is an accurat distinction The Iewes are cast away and are the people of God and yet Paule said verse 1. God forbid that God should cast away his people How can these things agree Therefore Paule distinguisheth of this terme his people which is taken two wayes ae quiuocally in a large sence and vniuocally in a more restrained sence people which are not fore-knowne and people which are fore-knowne that is not elect and elect The first God casts away the second he neuer will cast away This then is Paules meaning Whosoeuer are borne in the Church outwardly submitting themselues to the word and sacraments are in a generall sence the people of God of whom some onely seeme to beleeue but doe not these God casts away Others doe truely beleeue these God neuer casts away Though the Iewes in regard of the outward things of the couenant were counted the people of God yet he acknowledgeth not those which beleeue not neither purposes to saue them A Iew not beleeuing is as far from saluation in regard of hauing it as an Infidell Which he foreknew There is a knowledg attributed to God whereby he knowes all things euen such things which never shal be This is called naked knowledge which is order of nature though not of time is before the decree this is not heere ment for thus he knowes the Reprobates as well as the Elect. There is a knowledge also which is ioyned with his decree and that either going before it or following it Things are from the first the second is from things The first is the of things the second is the effect Of the second is to be vnderstood the saying That the praescience of God causeth not things to be for in this foreknowledge things are and therefore they are foreseene I know the sunne will rise not because I know it doth the sunne rise but contrarily As our remembrance of things past is not the cause that they are past so Gods foreknowledg of things to come in this second sence is not the cause that they shall come This is nor heere ment The foreknowledge ioyned with the decree but going before it Act. 2.23 is the cause of things and this is either largely taken for the prouidēce by which foreknowledg Christ was deliuered or more narrowly forelection so foreknowledge is here to be vnderstood and therefore Saint Austine read it whom he predestinated and so Anselme expounds it so doth the word implye by an Hebraisme signifiing knowledg with loue and care God knoweth his saith Paule and our Sauiour to the wicked I know you not He knowes them well enough but not so as to open Heauen gates for them Whom he foreknew The relatiue is causally put heere and the argument from the efficient cause Quest But how can they be said to be the people of God whom he casts away Answ Reprobates in regard of their being borne in the pale of the Church and their fellowship with the children of God in the outward things of the couenant haue this denomination the people of God Euen as the chaffe while it is growing in the field is raind vpon fenced in and kept as well as the corne and all is called corne doctrine Those that are forknowne that is elected shall neuer be cast away Mat 24 24. Reu 8 33. 2. Tim 2 19. Paule shewed that the Iewes are reiected and then he saith that not those which are foreknowne threatnings of Iudgment though in regard of thepromulgation notice taking belong to the whole Church yet in regard of execution they are to be vnderstood onely of rebels As promises are to be restrained to beleeuers so threatnings to vnbeleeuers Is a iudgment threatned what art An vnbeleeuer a rebell that 's thy part take it to thee But if thou repentest its notment to thee Indeede we deserue to heare haue nothing but the curse But God frees them which repēt for his son Iesus Christ Vse An elect can neuer