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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

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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
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
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
God Doct. A carnall man cannot please God because he is not subiect to his Law Verse 8. Doct. 1. Preachers are to apply their Doctrines to their hearers Verse 9. Doct. 2. Those which are regenerate are not carnall but spirituall Doct. 3. The holy Spirit dwelleth in the regenerate Doct. 4. Our vnion with Christ is by the holy Spirit Doct. 1. Though Christ be in the regenerate yet are they subiect to death Verse 10. Doct. 2. Though the bodies of the regenerate be subiect to mortalitie and death yet their soules are not Doct. Those which haue the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them shall haue a ioyfull resurrection Verse 11. Doct. All the regenerate are to liue to God in obedience not to the flesh Verse 12. Doct. Saluation is promised on the condition we liue not after the flesh but after the Spirit Verse 13. Doct. They which follow and obey the Gospell are the sonnes of God Verse 14. Doct. The Regenerate haue the spirit of Adoption whereby they are inabled to cry Abba Father Verse 15. Doct. The holy Ghost witnesseth with them which are regenerate that they are the Children of God Verse 16. Doct. 1. All that are the children of God are heires with Christ Verse 17. Doct. 2. The condition of our heauenly inheritance is the Crosse which glory followes Doct. The glory to come doth euery way surmount the present afflictions Verse 18. Doct. The insensible creature expecteth the Reuelation of the sonnes of God Verse 19. Doct. The creature faileth and laboureth vnder a great burden and bondage of mutabilitie against the naturall inclination of it Verse 20. Doct. The creature shall be freed from corruption into Glory Verse 21. Doct. The children of God because they haue receiued the first fruits of the Spirit doe grone for the present corruption expecting the redemption of their bodies from the same Verse 23. Doct. Hope is a certaine expectation of eternall life with patience expectation Verse 24 25. Doct. 1. God helpeth his children in trouble by his Spirit Verse 26. Doct. 2. Ability to pray is not of our selues but the holy Spirit Doct. 1. God knoweth and approueth the prayers of his Saints Verse 27. Doct. 2. The way to haue our prayers heard is to pray according to Gods will Doct. All afflictions further the good of Gods children Verse 28. Doct. All such as are elected are predestinated to be conformed vnto Christ Verse 29. Doct. The way from Predestination to Glorification is by Vocation and Iustification Verse 30. Doct. Nothing can hurt them for or with whom God is Verse 31. Doct. To whomsoeuer God giues Christ he giues all good things Verse 32. Doct. No accusations can hurt or preuaile against them whom God iustifieth Verse 33. Doct. Those whom Christ dyed for can not be condemned Verse 34. Doct. The Diuell with all his complices cannot separate vs from Christs loue Verse 35. Doct. True Christians are alwaies in danger and ready to die for Christs sake Verse 36. Doct. 1. In all Afflictions Gods children obtaine a Noble victory Verse 37. Doct. 2. Christ is the Cause of our constancy and victory in time of trouble Doct. 1. Gods loue can neuer faile to his Church Verse 38 39. Doct. 2. All other estates and things in this life are vncertaine onely the estate of Gods children is certaine CHAP IX Doct. 1. MInisters are to speake the truth though it displease yet with sobriety of wisedome Verse 1. Doct. 2. It is lawful for Christians in due time cause maner to sweare Doct. 3. They which sweare must sweare by God Doct. 4. A mans conscience beares witnesse of all his words and thoughts either with him or against him Doct. The children of God grieue for the hardnes of heart and condemnation of the wicked Verse 2. Doct. Wee ought to redeeme the saluation of our very enemies with the losse of heauenly ioyes to our selues rather then Christ should lose his glory Verse 3. Doct. 1. The Iewes were a most honourable people Verse 4 5. Doct. 2. The Iewes are not to be hated but to be loued Doct. The promises of God are sure Verse 6. Doct. All beleeuers are the children and seed to which belong the promises Verse 7 8 9. Doct. Where nature is common and alike there grace makes a difference Verse 10. Doct. 1. The Election or Reprobation of men is before they are borne or haue done good or euill Verse 11 12 13 Doct. 2. The purpose of Gods Election and Reprobation is not of workes but of the will of God Doct. 3. The Predestination of God is sure Doct. Though God saue some and condemne others yet he is iust Verse 14 15 16 Doct. 1. Hearers are to receiue nothing but that which is signed and sealed by the hand of God Verse 17. Doct. 2. God is not vniust in reprobating sinfull men to shew his power Doct. The will of God is the cause of Election and Reprobation Verse 18. Doct. The will of God is distinguished to be his secret will or his reuealed will Verse 19. Doct. Corrupt man is not to dispute against God about his Iudgements Verse 20. Doct. 1. Both the Elect and Reprobate are Gods vessels Verse 22. Doct. 2. God is patient towards sinners and Reprobates Doct. 3. The Scriptures describe God angry with sinners Doct. 4. God suffers Reprobates for the manifestation of his wrath and power Doct. The wrath of God shewed on the Reprobates doth amplifie and commend his mercy to the elect Verse 23. Doct. They which are effectually called are elect vessels of glory Verse 24. Doct. The Calling of the Gentiles to the state of grace and saluation was long agoe foretold by the Prophets Verse 25 26. Doct. But a remnant of the multitude of the Iewes shall be saued Verse 27 28 29 Doct. None can be iustified in the sight of God by a righteousnes of their owne making Verse 30 31. Doct. Christ is a Rocke of offence to them which beleeue not nor repent Verse 32 33. CHAP. X. Doct. MInisters are not only to exhort their people to obedience but also to pray for them Verse 1. Doct. Zeale if it be not according to knowledge is not acceptable to God Verse 2. Doct. Ignorance breeds Pride and Contempt Verse 3. Doct. God gaue the Law in writing to bring men to Christ Verse 4. Doct. Faith not the Law makes vs certaine of our saluation before God Verse 5 6 7 8. Doct. Faith and Confession are necessary to saluation Verse 9 10. Doct. He that beleeueth is sure to be saued Verse 11. Doct. The fauours of God concerning Iustification and Saluation are dispensed without any respect of persons to them which beleeue and call vpon him Verse 12. Doct. God will saue all such which call vpon him Verse 13. Doct. Without the preaching of the Gospell there is ordinarily no saluation Verse 14. Doct. Nothing should be so welcome as the preaching and preachers of the Gospell Verse 15. Doct. When the Gospell
for instance to be so also meant of euery Regenerate man and therefore the Syrian Translator reads it Thee 4. The Cause The Spirit The Law of Faith say some which may receiue a good Exposition Others better interpret the holy Ghost hereby prouing the Deitie of the third Person Ambrosius Pareus Chrysost Beza vnderstands it of the efficacie of the Spirit in vs which is saith he the Grace of Regeneration I take rather to bee meant here the roote of that Grace rather then the Grace it selfe The roote I call the Grace of Holinesse in the Humane Nature of Christ which vpon our vnion with him is by the Holy Ghost conueyed vnto vs. For Ioh. 3.34 Ioh. 1.16 hee receiued not the Spirit by measure but is full of grace and of his fulnesse wee receiue grace for grace This I take to be the fittest Exposition This Spirit is two wayes set forth First by the Subiect in whom it is It is radically in Christ Secondly by the effect it is the Spirit of life for if this flowe not vnto vs we are but dead men with this being deriued vnto vs both the worthinesse of Christs obedience and also power for the weakning and abolishing of sinne that it reigneth not in vs nor can condemne vs. And for this I gesse that our Sauiour is called a 1. Cor. 15.45 Quickning Spirit For as wee haue to liue a naturall life from Adam so haue wee to liue a spirituall life from Christ being vnited vnto him The meaning then is this The power of the Spirit which is in Christ hath freed all them which are in Christ from sinne and death So that as sinne could haue no power ouer him to condemne him neither can it haue ouer vs wee receiuing of the same Spirit and liuing the same life which was in him For we liue not a diuerse life from that which is in Christ but the very same as the water in the fountaine and riuers and the life in the head and members is the same doctrine Our vnion with Christ frees vs from the power of sinne and death Ephes 2.18,22 Vse 1. The cause of all our happinesse is this vnion From hence is it that wee serue not sinne from hence is it that wee yeeld not to euery tentation of Satan that wee haue comfort that wee are stablished in Grace is from hence Labour therefore to be vnited the ordinary meanes is the Word preached For as in Graffing so here God is the Husbandman Christ the Stock Beleeuers the Imps The Spirit the Sap The Word the Knife or Saw The Sacraments The Ligatures As therefore without a Knife or Saw to open and riue the Stock and to let in the Imps a man cannot Graffe so Contemners of the Word and Sacraments cannot possibly be in Christ Vse 2. Hath freed Mee There is much Diuinitie in Pronounes said Luther In the first Verse Paul spake in the third Person Them Here in the first Me. Not that hee appropriates this freedome to himselfe by so speaking but to teach euery one to apply it to themselues and in themselues to feele it for which cause the Syrian Translator reads Thee For as the power of sense and motion in the head is deriued to euery the least and farthest member and ioynt Ephes 4.7 so the meanest in the Church as well as the chiefest doe receiue according to their place sutable grace It may be some may think O if I were Abraham Dauid or Paul I should be saued Yea if thou bee in Christ thou art freed as well as they and shalt bee saued as well as they Vse 3. Wee are now freed from sinne and and death not simply so we shall hereafter be deliuered but from the Law of Sinne. Wee be not so deliuered that wee cannot sin or dye but Sin cannot domineere ouer vs nor damne vs nor Death hurt vs. Lay vp this against the Day of tentation It is very grieuous to feele the assaults of Sinne as of Vncleannes Pride c. But all are Beggers we may not choose our Almes wee must remember our measure wee haue such things that we may be humbled not that we should bee ouercome Thou must be content to haue Sinne trouble thee here and to wring from thee sighes and teares but comfort thy Soule with this it shall neuer condemne thee A Snake may be so handled by taking out the sting or teeth that it cannot hurt vs though it touch vs yet wee abhorre it for the nature of it and are afraid to haue it come nere vs and it 's but our feare So sinne is in such sort handled by our Sauiour Christ that though it touch vs and hisse at vs yet it cannot hurt vs It may make vs afraid but blessed be God the feare is more then the hurt For as sinne and death could not hurt Christ so neither can they hurt vs. It is not kild out-right but it is so maymed Iudges 1. that as Adoni-bezek hauing his hands and feet mangled and being in chaines could not endammage Israel so neither can sinne vs. When therefore thou feelest sinne stir in thy heart alas who feeles it not cast not away thy confidence but with a good courage resist it and resort to Christ by Prayer that thou mayst more feele the power of his Spirit Great is the power of sinne but the power of the Spirit is greater The Diuell is strong but CHRIST is stronger Vse 4. Those which haue not obtained this freedome are most miserable They are slaues and that to the basest master in the world which is Sin and shall haue the fearefullest wages which is Death As nothing is more base then sin so nothing is more bitter then death How did sinne Tyrannize ouer Ammon Achab Iudas who could haue no rest 2. Sam. 13.2 1. King 21.4 Iohn 13.30 but are sicke till they haue performed most shamefull seruices to their vtter ruine Thou hast heard of the Gally-slaues of the Turke How sweet is it to bee deliuered from such a bondage But alas What is the Turk to the Diuell What is a Gally to Hell What the labour of Oares to the seruice of sinne and torments of Hell O the happines of them which are in Christ that are deliuered from sinne and death Haue we any enemies to these Yea his happinesse is the more by the assurance of it for once in Christ and euer in Christ let Satan do his worst The lest branch of the Vine which is Christ is too high for Satans reach Such as are in him can neuer want sauing Grace so rich a Root is Christ to maintaine and nourish all such which are grafted into him So long as Christ hath any Spirit thou shalt not want it As possible is it for Christ to want the Spirit as for thee to want it if thou beest in Christ Vse 5. Examine whether thou beest set free If sinne rule in thee it will also damne thee thou
wisely but indeede he played the foole as appeared in his fearefull end Gehezi thought himselfe wifer then his Master 2. King 5.27 when he would saue something by the Leprous Assyrian but this wisedome got him the Leprosie of Naaman Mat. 16.22.23 Peter would be counted a wise fellow and takes vpon him to aduise our Sauiour to auoide his Passion but this was carnall wisedome as our Sauiour told him calling him Satan There is wisedome in a Carnall man as life in one that hath the Falling Sicknesse or sense in a mad man but no more to be compared to the wisedome of the Spirituall then such life and sense is to be compared to the life and sense of sound men Vse 2. Great is the misery of a man vnregenerate for hee cannot thinke a thought or speake a word but it is his death nay the very wisedome of the flesh is so how much more the foolishnesse we pitie naturall fooles and it 's a misery to bee so but it 's more to be a foole in spirituall things So on the contrary the happinesse of them which are spiritually wise is great For whatsoeuer they deuise desire speake or doe according to the teaching of the Spirit is for their great good Euery Sob Teare euery good deede hitcheth them neerer to Heauen Euery Prayer they make euery Sermon they heare increaseth their peace and their assurance of life Surely they are blessed Labour thou to be such a One. Vse 3. In nothing follow the Counsell of the Flesh For it 's a Traitor and seekes thy destruction will a King counsell with a Traitor This were to ruinate himselfe and his Kingdome Many when any thing is to be done Counsell not with the Spirit but with their owne fleshly heart as Rhehoboam with the yong men and so they miserably perish Will any man chuse him for a guide which will lead into a ditch But such a blind Guide is the Flesh will any man commit his body or Goods to that bottome which is steered by such a Pylot which drownes euery vessell he gouernes There was neuer any man followed the wisedome of the Flesh without deadly danger Seeke therefore another Directer which is the Spirit There is no Condemnation to them which walke after this Guide Gal. 1.16 When Paul should take vpon him the Calling of an Apostle hee counselled not with Flesh and bloud For his Flesh would haue said Why Paul this Calling wil bring Persecution pitie thy selfe thou art in place a learned Pharise c. So is there a falling out betweene thy neighbour and thee The Flesh will say Sue him throw him into Prison bee reuenged c. but the Spirit will counsell to meeknesse and forgiuenesse which is pleasing to God Take heed in these and the like thou follow not the wisedome of the Flesh for that is the way to destruction And indeede who shall at any time pray heare the Word doe any good or especially suffer for the Gospell if he counsell with the Flesh As Abraham therefore when he went to offer vp Isaak told not Sarah lest she might disswade him So in all things to bee done or auoyded bee iealous of thy corrupt heart take no counsell of it but of the Spirit by the Word for the wisedome of the Spirit is life and Peace VERSE 7. Because the Carnall minde is Enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the Law of God nor indeed can be IN this Verse is proued that to bee Carnally minded is death or deadly The Argument is from the Efficient Cause Thus That which is Enmity bringeth Death But the Carnall mindednesse is Enmity Therefore c. The Proposition is manifest for as Friendship with God and Reconciliation is the cause of life Deut. 4.4 so on the contrary The Minor is the first part of the Verse and it is proued from the property or Effect of such Enmity Thus That which neither is nor can bee subiect to the Law of God is Enmity But the Carnall man neither is nor can be c. Therefore So that in this Verse are two things 1. A Proposition in the former distinction of it 2. a Reason in the latter First of the Proposition The Carnall minde is Enmitie against God The Carnall Minde That which wee reade Minde or Wisedome some expound Sensualitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the word wil not beare it which notes the best part of Corrupt man euen his wisedome not simply but in respect of Corruption Euen Lady-Reason and therefore Paul hath in another place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coloss 2.18 The Minde of the Flesh Is Enmitie Not as the Vulgar is an Enemy in the Adiectiue or Concrete for that will agree neither with the Gender of the Substantiue nor with the Accenting of it but in the Abstract noting an excesse as if we see a proud man we say There goes Pride so here Is Enmity nothing can be said more For an Enemy may be reconciled but Enmity cannot a vicious man may become vertuous but vice cannot Enmity is a mutuall maleuolence betweene men with a mutuall desire to hurt each other So God hates the Flesh and it hates God and yet man by this hatred hurts not God but himselfe for hee is Gods Enemy not by hurting his will but by resisting it Non nocendo sed resistendo Anselm doctrine All vnregenerate men are Enemies to God and God to them Iam. 4.4 Rom. 5.10 Gal. 1.27 Vse 1. From whence is it that we are Enemies to God and God to vs Not from God but from our Sinne. The Cause is in vs Adam was created in Gods Image The friend of God and God the friend of Adam Hee transgressed Gods Commandement and hence came this Enmitie which wee haue cause to bewayle with teares of bloud But few thinke of it as is meete Vse 2. Here is the Reason why wicked men hate the godly Maruell not saith Iohn though the world hate you One would thinke it should be maruellous But if they hate God 1. Ioh. 3.13 Ioh. 15.18.20 surely they will hate vs as our Sauiour shewes Hee that loues mee loues my Children and friends for my sake And a malicious man will mischiefe euen the Cattell of him whom hee hates Doest thou hate any godly man Ah wretch Thy ill will is not originally and properly to them but to God himselfe Vse 3. A wicked man is Gods Enemy What warrant hast thou to keepe their company to entertaine familiarly their Acquaintance to countenance them Remember that there must be alwaies Enmitie betweene the Seede of the Woman and the Seede of the Serpent Psal 139.21 2. Chron. 19.2 Remember Dauids protestation remember how Iehoshaphat was rebuked Wouldst thou helpe the wicked and loue them which hate the Lord The Iudgement of the Heathen is That friendship is then dissolued when one of the friends becomes notoriously wicked Vse 4. Carnall men are enemies to God
of God and goldlinesse as they came into the world Olde age will steale vpon thee Before it comes learne to liue well when it is come learne to dye well nay alwaies meditate thou of death it will cut the combe of thy pride and make thee neither to glut thy selfe with pleasure nor to be greedy of the world For thou must Dye And I counsell thee to dye quickly vnto Sinne that thou mayst liue euer in righteousnes and euerlasting glory But the Spirit is life for righteousnesse sake Now of the Correction Where wee haue 1. The Thing Life 2. The Illustration 1. By the Subiect The Spirit 2. By the Signe For Righteousnesse sake But the Spirit The Regenerate Spirit say some a Chrys The Regenerating Spirit say b Martyr Aretius others but in my opinion it is better taken for the c Beza Soule because so it holds best correspondence with the words of the Concession yet if we so take it both the other must be supposed For hee meanes such a soule as is Regenerate by the Spirit Is life If Spirit be taken for the Regenerate part Then is made to liue If for the Holy Ghost then quickneth and maketh to liue if of the soule then Is life signifieth liueth for euer For Righteousnesse sake of Christ Imputed to vs Inchoated in vs. That the Cause this the Signe of this life doctrine Though the bodies of the Regenerate be subiect to mortalitie and death yet their soules are not but they doe now liue and shall for euer for Righteousnesse sake Gal. 2.20 Stephen dying saith Lord Iesus receiue my Spirit Act. 5.59 This is confirmed also by the desire of all the faithfull Abrahā is said to be gathered to his Fathers Gen. 25.8 not his body for they were buried in Chaldea he in Canaan but his soule Vse 1. This Confutes beastly Epicures and Atheists who hold a death of the Soule Of which number was I thinke that Lymb of the Pope or of the Diuell which you will the Cardinall of Burbon who said he would not giue his part in Paris for his part in Paradise Vse 2. Thou art pressed with the weight of Sinne Bee of good Comfort Though Sinne cling about thee as Iuy yet by the Spirit of God thy Soule shall liue yea then more when thy Body dyes Iohn 3.36 We are not called forth by that Spirit to destruction but to victory Thou hast euen here euerlasting life And truly hee that hath it not here in the inchoation of it shall neuer haue it in Heauen in the perfection of it This is that which enables vs to ouercome the feare of death Wicked men are afrayd to dye yea they would liue here for euer because they haue no assurance that when they dye their soules shall ascend into Heauen But Gods Children though they feare death yet they ouercome that Feare and desire to dye being well assured that by death their soule as a Captiue shall be deliuered out of Prison and as a Bird escape out of the Cage of the Body into the celestiall Paradise as the Soule of Lazarus not so the soule of Diues which went into euerlasting tormenting flames Vse 3 There are Liuing Soules and there are Dead soules That Soule which hath the Spirit of Christ is a Liuing soule that which hath it not is a Dead soule For as the Soule is necessary to the life of the Body so the holy Spirit to the life of the Soule As the body without the Soule is dead from naturall Actions so the Soule without Christs Spirit from spirituall The Body dyes when the Soule leaues it The Soule dyes when God leaues It Bernard There are two Mansions or Roomes of the Soule The lower which it gouernes which is the Body the vpper wherein it resteth which is God She quickneth the Body God quickneth her She is better then the body God is better then she Therefore Paul saith that widowes liuing in pleasure are dead while they liue 1. Tim. 5.6 Dead not concerning the substance of liuing but the Quality not that they should not be but not be blessed Looke now to thy Soule is it dead or aliue Life of the body is discerned by sense and motion so in Proportion that of the Soule What knowledge hast thou of Spiritual things What taste and delight hast thou in the things of God Dost thou heare and feele that which is spoken out of the Word If not thou art Dead He that is onely asleepe by great noyse and blowes may be wakened Thou art not by the trumpet of the Word nor by the scourge or diuers crosses Certainly thou art dead Art thou starke and stiffe not stirring hand or foote in any good duty Alas thou art dead yea hee is not more dead that is put into his graue then thou art Thou feelest it not The more miserable art thou Thou shalt feele it and when thou dyest before thy Executors can carry thy body to the Graue thy soule shall bee carried to hell by the Diuell Hence is it that the Death of the wicked is called a very ill death We lament the bodily death of our Friends here is cause of lamentation when their soules dye also If a house be burnt with the goods all haue compassion but if the Owner also his Wife and Children be consumed with the fire wee cry out Alas So when the soule and all perishes here is matter of griefe For this as many thinke was Dauids mourning for Absalon 2. Sam. 18.33 because as his body hung fearefully on the tree so his soule might hang in hell for ought hee knew O what a sweet Comfort is it ouer our Friends departed if they haue dyed well with tokens of Grace Labour thou for such a death and be carefull for thy soule A dead body is a gastly thing to behold a thousand times more vgly if it could be discerned with bodily eyes is a dead soule such is euen like the Diuell VERSE 11. But if the Spirit of him which raised vp Iesus from the Dead dwell in you he that raised vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies e Or because of his Spirit by his Spirit that dwelleth in you THe second Consolation in this Verse As the former shewed the happinesse of the Godly in regard of their soules so this in regard of their bodies and it is inferred by an Occupation from the words of the 10. Verse thus I confesse Paul might some say that the soule liues but the Body is turned to dust and perisheth Nay saith Paul Euen the body shall be raised vp and quickned that the Regenerate may be happy in body and soule These words haue two parts 1. A supposition If the Spirit c. dwell in you 2. A Conclusion Hee that raised vp Christ c. If This Conditionall is not to be taken as if the Apostle doubtingly did suspend his Iudgement or call into
liberty of the person is For Adams liberty is taken away but the liberty of the will is not neither can be but that whatsoeuer it chuseth or refuseth it chuseth or refuseth freely The liberty of contrarietie is rather a liberty of the state of a person then of the will and so a necessity of sinning free-will may stand together A necessity I say not of coaction but of immutabilitie both by an inward beginning and also by the decree and a freedome I say of contradiction but not of contrarietie Arminius thinketh that if the will bee determined to one part it loseth the freedome which is manifestly false For God is the most free Agent yet is his wil by a most absolute necessity tied vnto that which is good he being both most freely and most necessarily good The Diuell is now by a double necessitie euill and yet freely euill so our wills are free though determined because they are not compelled And whereas the Arminius auouch Vide Aug. tractat 26. in Ioh. that God cannot determine the will to one part without destroying it it is neere vnto blasphemy If Orators can perswade by their eloquence cannot God by the sweet power of his Spirit so perswade the heart and determine it that it cannot actually resist whatsoeuer the possibility be in regard of nature vncorrected If they say that such possibilitie still remaines in the wil to come into act I would faine know what good they wil say the Spirit hath done in vs whē the nature of our wills is as euill disposed as before grace receiued If God cannot determine our wills infallibly to one part then it shall be possible for the holy Angels and glorified Saints to fall from their happinesse which is horrible to affirme For they hold that the will of man lost nothing of its inward vertue by Adams sinne not receiues any vertue or strength from grace in the way to conuersion But to returne wee thus conclude that the vnregenerate sinne freely and yet necessarily yea by how much the more necessarily by so much the more freely because their wil hath brought vpon them this necessitie Our will is alwaies free though it be not alwaies good Ob. If there be no other freedome vvhy are wee exhorted to chuse the good and to refuse the euill An. The reason is set downe by Leo Ideo datur praeceptū praecipientis quaeratur auxiliū Leo ser 11. de Quadra Therefore saith hee is the precept giuen that perceiuing our weaknes wee might seek for helpe from him that gaue it And indeed hence wee should be admonished to seek the setting free of our wills frō euill vnto good which is onely by the power of God that as in the state of corruption wee haue a free necessity vnto euill so in the state of regeneration perfect wee may haue a free necessity vnto that which is good Voluntas quae libera est in malis quia delectatur malis ideo non est libera in bonis quia non est liberata Aug. contra 2. Epist Pelag. l. 1. c. 2. To the second Question the answere is negatiue though a man that is borne lame is to be excused before men for his halting because he was so borne yet wicked men and reprobates are not excusable before God for their sinning either by the necessitie of nature or of the Decree Not by necessity of nature For its the nature of the diuell to doe euill yet none excuse him It s the nature of an Adder to sting deadly yet we spare them not so we are born in sin yet the Saints excuse not thēselues by it but rather condemne themselues for it as Dauid and Paul Psalm 51. Rom. 7. Besides not God but our selues hath layd this necessity vpon vs. Adam willinglie obeyed the voice of his wife and brought vpon vs this condition which I call necessity Indeed if God had created vs vnder such a necessity or now did compell vs we desiring to doe good there might be some excuse but it is not so nor so Neither doth the necessitie of the Decree excuse For God doth not by his decree force vs to euill but finding vs euill prone onely vnto it of our selues hee decrees wee shall be so and knowes that so we would be though hee should neuer decree And thus he leaues vs to our selues who haue no more power to leaue sinning then a stone hath not to goe downeward if it haue no impediment God forceth not the drunkard or swearer but they voluntarily and with desire commit these sinnes as their owne consciences testifie Iudas did nothing but by the Decree of God yet he was not forced but did that which he did of his own accord most freely his heart being set vpon couetousnesse God gouernes the wils of the wicked but hee takes not away either the will from man or freedome from the will but he moues their wils according to their owne Natures as hee moues the heauens with a circular motion fit for the nature of it And when God moues then the will freely deliberates and willingly of it selfe consents So that wee may conclude this with that of Bernard Bernard ser 8. super cant The will bringeth a Necessitie vpon it selfe so that neither the Necessitie can excuse the Will nor the Will exclude the Necessitie When Adam finned he blamed his Wife and she blamed God himselfe and we haue suckt the same milke But remember thou that God is not the cause of thy sinne but thy selfe If thou smartest for thy faults thanke thy abominable and wicked life of which thou art the Cause GOD the Auenger VERSE 20. Nay but O man who art thou that * Or answerest againe or disputest with God replyest against God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it b Esay 45.9 Why hast thou made me thus 21. Hath not the Potter c Ier. 8.6 Wisd 15.7 power ouer the Clay of the same lumpe to make one vessell vnto honour and another vnto dishonour NOw followes the Answere to the Cauill which is either personall to the Cauiller in these two Verses or reall to the Cauill in the two next Verses following In these two verses the sawcinesse of Cauillers is reproued which appeared in that they submit not themselues as they ought to haue done but out of their pride petulantly word it with their Creator going about to bring the Decree of Gods Predestination vnder the Rule of their blind and Carnall Reason which is as possible as to gather vp all the Sea into a Nut-shell Here are two things First a Reprehension Secondly an Amplification The Reprehension is in these words But O man what art thou that replyest against God Where wee haue 1. The fault 2. The person reprehended The fault is disputing with or replying against God The person noted in these words Thou O Man Where is also couched a reason of the Reprehension from the
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tacit. in Zen. The Children of the liuing God so called in opposition to their Idols which they serued or because of his bounty a●… goodnesse giuing life and all happinesse to such as worship him as the Heathens called their chiefe god by a Title so signifying as the Cause of life doctrine The Calling of the Gentiles to the state of Grace and Saluation was long agoe foretold by the Prophets Osee 1.10 2.23 So also Gen. 9.27 Psal 2.8 Esay 49.6 Haggai 2.8 Micah 4.1 Mal. 1.11 c. Vse 1. In all scruples haue recourse to the Scriptures for satisfaction by the example of Paul The Iewes were offended that the Gentiles were preached vnto Paul tels them that it was so foretold by the Prophets It should not therefore haue bred in them scandall but rather confirmation of their Faith seeing the euent to hold correspondence with the Word Let vs apply it thus Many are troubled and puzzeled because of heresies and erroneous opinions and because such as feare God are mocked and hated This should rather confirme vs in the Faith because such things are foretold These things saith our Sauiour Ioh. 16.4 I haue said vnto you that when they come to passe you should not be troubled Many also stagger because some after long profession fall away But this is no other but that which was by our Sauiour foretold Mat. 19.30 Many which are first shall be last and the last shall be first As therefore in the darke thou lookest not about but to the Lanthorne that thou mightest not stumble so in these euill dayes attend to the Word and thou shalt be satisfied Vse 2. We are Gentiles we ought to consider what wee were that we may be stirred vp to thankefulnesse for the grace we are come vnto Ephes 2.11,12 We were without Christ aliants from the common-wealth of Israel Strangers from the Couenants of Promise without hope yea without God in the world and walked abominably But now we are beloued and the sonnes of the liuing God To be the people of God was not alwayes the estate of England but time was when we were like the Indians and Armenians O the darknesse that was ouer the face of our land about 80. or 90. yeeres agoe What grace and light haue we aboue our Forefathers Be thankefull England and shew forth his vertues who hath called thee both out of the darknesse of Heathenisme and Papisme into his maruellous light Yea let euery one in particular apply it What were thou before thy effectuall Calling It may be a drunkard an vncleane person prophane vnconscionable c. but now a Sonne or Daughter of the liuing GOD. Praise thy God who hath loued thee and deliuered thee out of the power of darknesse translating thee into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne I was saith Paul 1. Tim. 1.13 c. a blasphemer c. but God hath shewed grace Therefore to the King euerlasting c. bee praise and honour for euer Vse 3. Highly esteeme of the Word by which so much grace is conueyed vnto thee Many are like proud Seruing-men which are ashamed to bee seene in their Masters liuery If thou beest not ashamed of thy Master Christ bee not ashamed dayly to wait vpon him in thy liuery vvhich is the hearing of his Word and the receiuing of the Sacraments Vse 4. Examine whether thou bee beloued and the sonne of God indeede or Titular only The Iewes gloried that they were the people of God when hee would not acknowledge them And the Diuell can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light and seeme to be one Wilt thou for his faire shew say hee is a good Angell perceiuing the blacke drifts of his Tentations So many seeme to bee the children of God who in their conuersation expresse the affection not of children but of enemies Thy Conscience tels thee thou drunkard thou Strumpet thou painted Sepulchre that thou art a Pagan though thou hast the outward badge of a son of one beloued Nay thou art so much the lesse beloued because bearing the badge of God thou seruest the Diuell If thou beest Gods Spouse keep thy selfe chaste to him if his sonne or Daughter honour him If of his people learne his Statutes and obey them It is a grieuous thing to bee cast out to bee diuorced from God to bee dis-herited of heauen Hee is the euerliuing God to saue his children and to confound them which are his enemies VERSE 27. * Esay 10.22.23 Esay also cryeth concerning Israel Though the Number of the children of Israel bee as the sand of the Sea a Remnant shall be saued 28. For he will finish the c Or account worke and cut it short in righteousnesse because a short worke will the Lord make vpon the earth 29. And as Esaias said before e Esay 1.9 Except the Lord of Sabbath had left vs a seede we had beene as Sodoma and beene made like vnto Gomorrah IN these verses Paul proueth that not all the Iewes yea not many but a very few shall be saued by two Testimonies out of Esay both which are to the same effect The first is verse 27 28. out of Esay 10.21,22 The second verse 29. out of Esay 1.9 In the first Testimony are two things First the thing witnessed Secondly the Amplification The Thing witnessed is that but a Remnant of the children of Israel shall be saued A Remnant notes a small Number in comparison of the whole Saued The Prophet Esay saith shall returne not onely from the captiuitie of Babylon but from sinne as appeares verse 21. They shall returne vnto God Hence one obserues Gualter that none can be saued but they which returne that is which repent The Amplification is foure-fold First from the Person bearing witnesse which is Esay Paul deliuers not this in his own Name which he knew was odious to them but in Esayes a Prophet of chiefe account Paul was not inferiour to Esay nor his Testimony of lesser Authoritie for they wrote by the same Spirit but he knew they would except against him therefore he takes one against whom lay no Exception Obseruation It was a great corruption in the Iewes to examine truth by the person and a foule fault in many among vs who haue the Word in respect of persons If the Preacher bee of their Cut they will heare him and admire him how sillily so euer he speakes but if he be not they esteeme not the Word though neuer so soundly deliuered 2. From the Manner of the Testimonie He cryed wherein some note the Prophets zeale which also should be in all Ministers but others vnderstand it of plainnesse and boldnesse also as if Paul should say to a Iew What Art thou angry because I speake so plainely and boldly of thy reiection Is not Esay as plaine and bold 3. By a Concession Indeed their number is as the sand of the sea
wants but few the want of faith Vse 5. The Lawe is a heauenly thing and many wonders are contained in it of which wee shall comfortably vnderstand if we studie it aright Study it not as the Iewes or Papists doe to be iustified by it but to bring thee to Christ and then to walk in all obedience with thankfulnesse If thou doest thus thou hittest the nayle on the head If the Lawe driue vs not to Christ as the storme the birds to the Row and the ship to the hauen all other intents and studies are of no value Euery precept must teach vs our weaknesse euery promise must set our teeth on edge and euery curse as the lash of a whip make vs cry peccaui and bring vs down vpon our knees with Iesu thou sonne of Dauid haue mercy as the blind man cried in the Gospell And when thou art come to Christ thou must not cast away the Lawe but vse it still to make thee more to cling vnto Christ and as a rule of righteous liuing Christ is the end of the Lawe not the killing but fulfilling end Finis non interficiens sed persiciens Aug. not to end but to vrge thy obedience When the Marchant is come aboord his ship by boat he drownes not his boat but hoyses it vp into his ship he may haue vse of it another time or as a Noble-man neglects not his Schoolemaster when he is come to his lands but preferres him So certainly if the Lawe though sharpe hath brought thee to Christ thou canst not but loue it for this office if thou doest not thou hast not Christ Yea it will be the delight of a man to be then doing when Christ is with him as Peter then willingly and with successe cast out his net Without Christ the Lawe is an vncomfortable study but with him nothing more delightfull VERSE 5. For Moses describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Lawe that * Leuit. 18.5 Ezech. 20.11 Gal. 3.12 the man which doth those things shall liue by them 6. But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise * Deut. 30.12 Say not in thy heart Who shall ascend into Heauen That is to bring Christ downe from aboue 7. Or Who shall descend into the Deepe that is to bring vp Christ againe from the dead 8. But what sayth it * Deut. 30.14 The Word is nigh thee euen in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the Word of faith which we preach HEre Paul brings an Argument to euince that faith abolisheth not but stablisheth true righteousnesse thus The righteousnesse of faith is that which Moses teacheth vnto Iustification Therefore Iustification by faith abolisheth not righteousnes but establisheth it Paul compares in these verses the righteousnesse of the Lawe and of faith together shewing that the righteousnesse of the Lawe to be performed by vs is vncertaine and impossible and that the righteousnesse of faith is certaine and possible and both these by the testimony of Moses The Iewes thought that faith had been contrary to Moses but Paul shewes that Moses taught faith as Christ himselfe witnesseth Ioh. 5.46 The impossibility of the righteousnesse of the Law vnto Iustification Paul shewes in the 5. verse out of Leuiticus The man that doth these things shall liue thereby that is shall be iust for life flowes from Iustice The Gospell teacheth not a diuers righteousnesse from that of the Law but a diuers way vnto it namely Faith in Christ who fulfilled the Law The Argument from hence against Iustification by the Law is drawne from the Cause To performe the Law is impossible But righteousnesse of the Law is to performe it Therefore This impossibility of our performing the Law is not from the Law but from our selues who are corrupt That the righteousnesse of Faith is certaine and possible Paul shewes verse 6 7 8. that it is certaine verse 6 7. that it is possible verse 8. The Righteousnesse of Faith that is which the Gospell offereth and Faith receiues is certaine This Paul declares by a Negation of contrary doubtfulnesse elegantly compounded by a figure out of Deuteronomie The doubting which presseth sinners is two-fold 1. how they may enter into Heauen and 2. how they may auoid Hel. These two Moses shewes to be taken away by Faith The first because we beleeue the Ascension of Christ for vs. The second because we beleeue his Resurrection whereby hee demonstrated his victory ouer Hell and Death as if Moses had said He that seekes Iustification by the Law must needs be in continuall feare of Hell and despaire of Heauen but he that beleeueth that Christ is risen and ascended is freed from both Christ rose for vs and ascended for vs and before which must be implied liued and dyed for vs he which beleeueth not and seeketh for Iustification from himselfe in effect denies the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ That the righteousnesse of Faith is possible Paul shewes by the facility of it out of Moses vers 8. Faith is easie because it is giuen otherwise the hardest thing in the world for a sinner to beleeue the Gospell In the 8. verse we haue two things 1. Moses Testimonie The Word is nigh thee c. 2. Pauls exposition That is the Word of Faith which we preach The Word is nigh thee The Word of Promise so was the Word of the Law but nigh thee in thy mouth and heart not in Tables of Stone as the Law As if hee should haue said by a Prouerbiall manner of speaking This is righteousnesse before God to beleeue with the heart and with the mouth to confesse the Resurrection and Ascension of our Sauiour Christ for vs. The Generall summe That Righteousnesse is the safest and sufficientest to saluation which maketh vs assured before GOD and succoureth vs in tentation but so doth not the righteousnesse of the Law but that of the Gospell Therefore In this passage many things might be spoken of as of the Law our insufficiencie and impossibilitie to performe it Of the Ascension and Resurrection of Christ But I will onely consider of doctrine The Doctrine Faith not the Law makes vs certaine of our saluation before God Luke 8.12 Rom. 9.33 Ephes 2.8 1. Pet. 1.9 Vse 1. The Law is too weake to iustifie vs but strong enough to condemne vs which thou shalt finde which repentest not of thy sinnes Seeke not that which the Law cannot doe but feare that which the Law can doe Vse 2. Faith takes away but the Law breeds doubting both because we doe but little of that which the Law commands and in that little there is much defect deseruing the curse As then the doctrine of the Iewes so of the Papists who teach men to bee iustified by inherent righteousnesse must needs leaue men in suspence and doubt which doubts Faith ouercomes If our bodies were as hard as an Adamant wee should not feele the sting of Serpents so if the soule
his owne And God can take away thy knowledge and make thee an Ideot or strike thee with madnesse and if thou beest rich in the turning of an hand hee can make thee as poore as Lazarus 5. Doth thy heart tickle thee because of thy knowledge faith patience c Sit downe and cast thy account thou shalt finde vpon thy reckoning that thy wants are more then thy receipts for one thing thou knowest thou art ignorant of ten If thou hast one good thought thou hast a thousand ill ones which arise out of thy heart as the smoke out of the bottomlesse pit As Goliah is bigger then Dauid so for the terme of this life corruption is more then grace Looke vpon thy dulnesse in prayer thy wandering thoughts thy hypocrisie c. Hold thy selfe to this taske and thou shalt finde more cause of mourning then of Pride As ballast is to the ship so will this meditation be to thee that thou shalt not be turned about with the waues of selfe-conceit Pliny records a secret of the Bee Plin. Nat. hist lib. 11. cap. 10. that in a storme it getteth vp a little stone by the weight of it to flye the more steadily and to get home in safety If thou bee in danger to be blowne away with pride let the thoughts of thy wants be to thee as this little stone 3. The parties that stand in need of these remedies are all men specially those which are extraordinarily graced by God euen such as are truely sanctified all other sinnes are in euill this is in that which is good and therefore the harder to be auoided Themistocles We are all of his minde who being asked what song he delighted most to heare said that wherein his praises were set forth when wee passe the streetes how doth it please to heare the people say There he goes a very worthy man it is incredible how this steales vpon Gods best and most sanctified children Euen Paul hauing receiued extraordinarie reuelations must be taken downe with the buffettings of Satan lest hee bee proud Hierom that liued a retired and mortified life said that he could hardlier be brought to want arrogance then gold or siluer Study and pray for Humility the honor of a Christian It is the first second and third thing to bee sought for of a Christian as pronuntiation is of Demosthenes his Orator Moses face shone when he had talked with God Exod. 34.19 and he wist not And excellent degree of grace is it to be excellent and not to take notice of it As boughes the more laden with fruit are the more lowly and as when the Sunne is at the highest our shadowes are at the shortest so the more grace would be adorned with the more humility The Diuell will tempt thee to all vitiousnesse if he cannot preuaile that way he will tempt thee to be proud of thy goodnesse yea to be proud because thou art not proud In the middest of grace pray for an humble heart VERSE 20. But feare THere is a worldly feare and a feare that hath respect to God which is Seruile or Filiall this Initiall or more perfect The filiall feare is heere meant which makes vs carefull not to displease God our Father Feare that is looke to thy standing for feare bringeth forth care and they that feare not are carelesse doctrine He that beleeueth feareth God 1. Pet. 1.17 If you call him Father there is faith then as it followes passe your time in feare 1. Cor. 10.12 He that thinketh he standeth there is faith let him take heed he fall not there is feare Phil. 2.12 The Papists from this and the like places teach that we are vncertaine and must doubt of our saluation He that feareth doubteth say they but he that beleeueth feareth Ergo. We deny the Maior being vnderstood of filiall feare as it must be in this place for filiall feare causeth not doubting but more sure standing Blessed is the man that alway feareth saith the Spirit Prou. 28.14 but alwayes to doubt were no blessing but a rack to the conscience I will put my feare in their hearts saith God Ier. 32.39 that they shall neuer depart from me So then there is a feare of assurance this is filiall as well as a feare of doubting this is slauish He that is in the toppe of a tree if he feare to fall will claspe the better hold He that is carelesse hath no firme securitie but he that feareth may be secure Vse 2. This feare manifesteth faith for where there is faith there is a grace whereby we are afraid to doe any thing which may offend God and weaken our faith Art not afraid of drunkennesse whoredome blasphemie c. then hast thou no faith He that hath a charge of money vpon the way how carefull is he how often is his hand vpon his sword his eye is busie at euery corner and crosse way to discerne dangers and when he comes home is carefull to locke it vp and the more his treasure is the more is his care but a man that hath no treasure in his house leaues open his doores and feares nothing So the want of feare argues the want of faith Remember the pretiousnesse of Gods fauour and of the bloud of Christ whereby thou art redeemed and be ashamed of thy carelessenesse whereby thou squandrest away that which is so dearely bought VERSE 21. For if God spared not the naturall branches take heed lest he also spare not thee IN the 20. verse the Apostle admonished the Gentile thus Be not high minded but feare In this verse is a reason of that Admonition and in the 22. ver the Conclusion of this whole Digression The reason is taken from the effect of the contrary If they be high minded and feare not God will punish them as if he should say Thou standest on the top thou must not hane high conceits lest thou come tumbling downe A man that is on the top of a tree bragges not of his height but lookes to his hold so doe thou saith Paul or else thou shalt fall This is confirmed by an argument a Maiori thus If God spared not the naturall branches much lesse will he spare thee This reason is doubly amplified First from a caution Take heed Secondly by an Antithesis betweene the naturall branches the Iew and the ingraffed the Gentile That which is naturall is surer then that which is ingraffed As a natural child is more affectionately beloued then an adopted If the Iewes were cast off which were borne of Abraham Isaac and Iacob and who had many priuiledges much more the Gentiles if they take not heed which are sublimed with no commendation Nullae commendaetione sublimatur Amb. doctrine All without respect which continue not in grace shall be broken off Luk. 13.3.5 Reuel 2. Vse God is not moued with outward priuiledges to spare any or to tolerate in his orchard those which are fruitlesse and onely
things thy heart with what minde thou prayest hearest more by thee then thou knowest by thy selfe Thou mayst walke in a cloud before men thou canst not before God Beware the hypocrite Vse 5. God is of infinit knowledge and power feare him Thou art asrayd to offend or provoke or iest at a wise man that is skilfull in the law but with a simple man thou art bold And darest thou provoke God whose wisedome is infinit And also his Iustice and power This is Atheisme For didst thou thinke there were a God and that he were wise and iust and able to plague thee thou durst not offend him Will a man keepe a seruant who alwayes angers his Master and laugheth him to scorne So shalt thou be turned into hell if thou darest dispise our infinit God or his word VERSE 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever Amen THis verse is a proofe of the infinite wisedome of God and that being most sufficient to in himselfe he needes not the counsell nor the guifts of any creature but giues all things to all whereby they are and are susteined and ordaynes all things to and for himselfe In these words are two things 1. A proposition All things are of God and through God and to God 2. An amplification To whom be glorie for euer Amen The Ancients from hence proue the Trinitie applying the three propositions to the three persons and it is likely that from hence that Antient depologie had originall which we vse in our liturgy Which Ierom Hier. ep ad Damasum desired to be sayd in all Churches at the end of euery psalme Basil reports Basilius lib. de spi sanct ca. 7.27.29 it as a forme of thanksgiuing to haue bene in vse from the time of the Apostles vnto the which for the more confutation of the Arrians and Macedonians was added by the Counsell of Nice that other versute As it was in the beginning is now and euer shall be world without end Amen Cassianus who liued in Chrysostomes dayes reports Cassianus Monasti Institut lib. 2. qui est de canon Noctur orat et psal mod cap. 8. that it was an auntient custome in the East Churches for that prayer as he cals it to be sayd at the end of the psalme by him that sung the psalme with the silēce of the people but in the West Churches that the people standing vp did vsually with a loud voice repeat the same Which I thought good to shew that it might appeare that this vse in our liturgie is from sound antiquitie and vniuersall prescript of the East and Westerne Church All things are of him as of the Creator and giuer all things of nature and grace all good things not sinne but as it hath entity For sinne is not a thing seperate hauing a being and existence by it selfe as the creature but it is in the creature and a priuation and therefore though the Creature which is euill is from God as from the cause yet the euilnesse and sinne of the creature is not Through him preferring all things in their estate To him to be referred to him that is to his glory as to their chiefe end This proposition is amplified with a comprecation To whom be glory for euer Amen Wherein we haue 1. The thing glory 2. The subiect to whom it is giuen God 3. The duration for euer 4. The affection with which it is giuen testifyed in this word Amen This word Amen is Hebrew growne familiar in all languages it comes of a root that signifies beleife It was vsed of auntient time in the end of prayers Our Sauiour so concludes that diuine forme of prayer which he taught his Apostles Deut. 27.15 seq Nehe. 8.6 1 Cor. 14 16. It was the wont of the people in auntient times to answere Amen at the end of prayers and prayses so loud that it was a noise like thunder which may reproue our fashion arguing great coldnes who some one man excepted qui supplet locum idiotae can scarse be heard to pronounce the same Hieron in prol lib. 2. in Ep. ad Galat. Tertullian Tertul. lib. de spectac prope sinem vseth this as an argument why it should not be lawfull for a Christian to applaud Idolatrous plaies because it is not fit to honour such things with that mouth which hath said Amen in the seruice of God This word may be taken three wayes 1 as a Nowne 2 as a Verbe 3 as an Aduerbe As a Nowne so is it a name of Christ Reuel 3.14 As an Aduerb so is it vsed eyther in the beginning of our speech for confirmation of that which is to be sayd signifiing verily as our Sauiour often vsed it or in the end of our spech as in prayer wherein we aske something of God and then as the speaking of it notes our consent to that which is craued so the substantiall meaning is to shew our faith in beleeuing to receiue that which wee haue prayed for where vppon some haue said that this one word is more excellent then the prayer it selfe as our faith is more excellent then our desire and yet I see not but that faith it selfe is expressely conteined in the prayer otherwise how could we say Our Father Porf in exporat Dom. as a verbe and so it is as much as So be it hauing the nature of a prayer being in this sense principally to be vnderstood at the end of prayses and thankesg uings as in this place noting an affectionate desire that God may be glorified doctrine God is of all his creatures specially of his Church to be praysed and glorified so Psalm 92.1.2 and 95.2 and 96. through the whole Psalme so Psal 148. and 150. So Christ concludeth his prayer For thine is the Kingdome Power and Glory So Paul often Ephes 3.20.21 c. Vse 1. Thy being and preseruation is from God and he hath appointed thee to glorifie him Glorifie him then in thy bodie and soule by a sober and holy carriage and as thou hast receiued thy nature from him so seeke grace also from his hands from whom all good gifts doe descend otherwise the oxe and asse are as neere heauen as thy selfe Vse 2. Glorie not in thy selfe nor in any good thing thou hast for thou hast receiued it from him who though hee hath granted thee the vse yet reserues the glorie for himselfe Art thou rich beautifull these are his gifts Art thou holy it is the Spirit that sanctifieth Art thou wise and eloquent It is God who giueth wisdome to the heart and vtterance to the mouth If thou wert equall to Eliah Paul Apollos thou mightest not be proud but must giue the glory to God As the commendation of the brightnesse of the Sun-beame is not to be ascribed to the wall on which it strikes nor the words of wisdome to the teeth and lips of the speaker nor the fairenesse of the picture to the pencill so nor the praise of any good thing to vs in as much as it is from God as the Author and we but the instruments of the same Vse 3. Glorifie Gods name The first grace which Christ teacheth vs to begge of God is this and it ought to bee the chiefest ayme of our whole life We ought to preferre the glorie of God before our liues yea before the saluation of our soules much more ought wee so to institute and lead our liues that God may be honored by vs. God hath endued thee with life and many good gifts what glory hast thou brought to God or his Gospell If none it had beene better thou hadest not beene borne Be you carefull hereof you professors of the Gospell It is your profession Be ware you commit nothing which may cause God or his Gospell to be blasphemed If you should be couetous proud c. as other men it were as if the Sunne should be darkened and the Moone withdraw her light Euery little aberration in a professor is noted Euen as though a thousand of the lesser starres bee eclypsed none takes knowledge of it but if the Sunne be eclypsed euery man speakes of it So that which is not accounted of in a profane man from whom no goodnesse is expected is intollerable in you whose calling it is to set forth the prayses of God Be you affected with the glorie of your heauenly father as his true and deare children and be you sensible of the dishonor which is offred to his name Put on the affections of Phinees Dauid Eliah and of that holy woman who died for sorrow because of the dishonour which came to God and his Arke 1. Sam. 4.21.22 It was good Hezekiah his sault not to render according to that which he receiued 2. Chro. 32.25 for which God was angry and punished it See that thy praises be proportionable to the causes God giues thee of praysing him It is a signe of emptinesse of grace to be a niggard of our prayses to God who is our Creator Preseruer Redeemer Account no time long enough for this exercise I mitate the Nightingale who spends the night in praysing the Creator as if the day were not sufficient Let thy heart thy tongue thy life prayse God It is hee who hath giuen thee life health food rayment yea his owne Sonne and holy Spirit To him therefore that is to the Father the Son and the holy Ghost one God and three Persons be all glory for euer Amen FINIS