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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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The just He is the just one as God holiness it self as man filled therewith above Men and Angels Just not as Job Zachary and Elizabeth They were Righteous by his Righteousness imputed to them as Abraham also but he by his own they by Sanctification imperfectly Holy and Righteous he most perfectly nor as Adam who though perfectly Holy and Righteous by his own Righteousness yet was mutable therein and lost it not so in Christ but immutably so There was no guile found in him none could accuse him of sin nay he was the light and glory of the world yet suffered he gross things We then though never so just and innocent must not think much if we suffer altogether without cause It s the better it s but as Christ did But alas we are very faulty before God and deserve far greater things then we meet with yea cannot be innocent towards men how much less towards God The meditation of this point will much help us in our sufferings For the unjust That is for us wretched and miserable sinners and his enemies who could do nothing for him to deserve such kindeness How much rather ought we to suffer for him that just one and for his sake especially considering our sufferings are nothing to his The meditation of this also will much help us in suffering For sins that he might bring us unto God Christs sufferings were altogether for our good and if it had not been for them we had been utterly lost But for ours they be nothing to him he is never the better for them neither be they for his benefit but for our own even the purging of our souls the tryal and proof of our faith and patience and the preparing of us to the greater glory in Heaven Let 's think of this also and it will make us suffer the more willingly and patiently Lastly as he after his sufferings and death rose again and entred into glory and sits at the right hand of God So if we shall sow in tears we shall reap in joy having fought the good fight we shall receive an incorruptible crown of glory 1. This reproveth our notable tender daintiness that can endure nothing for Christ but as if we were too good to suffer though in company we should hear never so much spoken against Gods Servants and sincerity of Religion we can be silent and pass by the same and there are many that would be forwarder but for fear of being counted Puritans O cowardly fearfulness No wonder if such be never called to that honor to suffer for Christ What if to please the world we be luke-warm and God vomit us out of his mouth What if for our zeal the world hate us and God approves of us what do we lose Shall we make friendship with the world Know we not that its enmity with God He is praised that is allowed of God 2. Let us take heed of all preposterous zeal and rash unwarrantable causes whereinto some run●under colour of zeal and be zealous for God we cannot hate sin too much nor love goodness too much nor the Word too much nor keep the Sabbath too carefully nor govern our families too religiously Let us go on in a zealous godly life and if this offend any let them pardon us we would do no other then God requires and for this we must pray our Landlord or whosoever to give us leave we have served the Devil a great while tell them Its time now to begin to serve God and to look about us for our souls good thus in suffering for well●doing we may be comforted and by these reasons kept from being discouraged Now of Christ sufferings death and resurrection particularly Christ hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God In handling the sufferings of Christ observe 1. The circumstance of time or how often he suffered once 2. Who he was or the quality of the person suffering Christ the just 3. For whom he suffered for the unjust 4. Why he suffered even for sins and 5. To what end that he might bring us to God and hereinto our Apostle is again willing to fall as we should be to hear and often meditate thereof as hath been already shewed in the end of the last Chapter namely from verse 21. to verse 24. Much profit follows on it For 1. It sets out a notable mixture of justice and mercy 2. It shews what a mighty Savior we have in whom we may trust and to whom we may have recourse 3. It may wound our hearts for sins past and make us hate sin for the time to come 4. It sets out Gods infinite love and accordingly of all that have assurance of their part therein requireth unspeakable love 5. It s a comfort to all that mourn in Sion 6. It shews that all that miss of Christ must bear their own burthen 7. It provokes us to labor to know whether Christ hath dyed for us or not and for our assurance thereof to finde that we are truly humbled hunger after Christ and are ready to take up his yoke O that all ignorant persons which do not in any measure know the grounds of Religion that all civil persons which trust to their own righteousness that all worldlings whose hearts are altogether glewed to the things which are here below and do not so much as minde those things which are above the same being out of their element that all prophane persons which go on in open notorious lewd courses and that all Hypocrites not to speak of Turks Jews and Papists which content themselves with shews and common gifts would but duly meditate on Christs sufferings that so they might have part in Christ Assuredly all they that believe not shall be condemned but of all others they that have lived under the Gospel shall have greatest judgement and to make up all it will increase their torment to think that they had offer made of Christ and yet had not the grace to apprehend it that they were so near and yet missed and that some that sate with them were converted and are now in Heaven and they careless or wilful are now in irrecoverable damnation This will make them gnash their teeth gnaw their tongues curse themselves and the day wherein they were born Let such see feel confess and fly to Christ there being no other way of Salvation besides him I come to the particulars propounded The first concerneth the time how often he suffered Once It s true Christ suffered throughout his whole life and that diversly but all make up one perfect suffering and he suffered so as at once he finished al never to suffer again wherein his suffering is opposed to the sacrifices of the Law which were continually renewed because of their imperfection whereas he suffered once for all for being God
good work 117 Verse 18 19. 1. THe third reason of the foregoing Exhortation 118 2. A man may know himselfe redeemed 119 3. Redemption presupposeth bondage and slavery ibid. 4. There 's a way whereby to come out of our bondage 120 5. The whole life of an unregenerate man is vain 121 6. Children readily follow the evil example of their Parents ibid. 7. Whom we are here to understand by fathers ibid. 8. Popish Religion stands in patches 122 9. Parents must give their children good example ibid. 10. To follow the example of our Ancestors is no sure rule 123 11. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage ibid. 12. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 125 13. Christs blood the true price of mans redemption 126 14. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb 129 15. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear 131 Verse 20 21. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 132 2. Christ was ordained before the world 133 3. The world shall not always continue 135 4. Christ how manifested ibid. 5. God is constant and unchangeable ibid. 6. Gods promises are unchangeable 136 7. Christ was then exhibited when God decreed he should so be ibid. 8. What God hath decreed shall be in dwe time accomplished 136 9. Three differences of times and why this called the last 137 10. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done ibid. 11. We now live in the latter end of the last times ibid. 12. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world 138 13. What we are to do that others may think well of us ibid. 14. We cannot believe in God but by the Son ibid. 15. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand 139 16. The benefits which they reap that believe in Christ ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHere there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love 140 2. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love ibid. 3. There 's uncleanness in us both in soul and body 142 4. Where there is sanctification of the soul there is also sanctification of the body 143 5. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing ibid. 6. Why the Word is called Truth ibid. 7. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification 144 8. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty ibid. 9. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works ibid. 10. What love is ibid. 11. The properties of love 146 12. Two caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magigrate 147 13. There 's little love in the world 148 14. The causes of the want of love 150 15. The effects of the want of love 151 16. Reasons inciting to the duty of love 152 19. The fruits of love must accompany the profession thereof 153 20. Brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections ibid. 21. Love must reach to all ibid. 22. How we ought to love the wicked 155 23. Love must be without faining ibid. 24. Love must be mutual 156 25. The properties of pure love 157 26. A Christians love must be earnest 158 27. Love must be constant ibid. Verse 23. 1. NO unregenerate person can truly love 159 2. Such as are born again must needs love ibid. 3. What Regeneration is ibid. 4. The Lord the Author thereof 160 5. The Lords will the cause thereof 161 6. Without Regeneration all things else we have are nothing ibid. 7. Regeneration of absolute necessity 162 8. The effects of Regeneration 163 9. A regenerate man is not the same he was before ibid. 10. A regenerate man groweth by degrees 164 11. Why men grow no faster in goodness ibid. 12. A caveat for such as complain they do not grow 165 13. There 's no perfection here in this life ibid. 14. Regeneration cometh not by nature 167 15. Gods Spirit by the Word changeth mans heart ibid. 16. Gods Word is the instrumental cause of our conversion 168 17. God doth not always tye himself thereunto ibid. 18. The Ministers of the Word are appointed of God the instruments to convert souls 169 19. Whence it cometh to pass that the Word worketh Regeneration 170 Verse 24 25. 1. VVHerein mans life may be compared to grass 171 2. How to be prepared for death 172 3. The glory of a carnal man but a vain thing 174 4. Nothing in an unregenerate man can abide the Lords examination 175 5. Gods Word the means whereby to live for ever ibid. 6. The Word by preaching made the instrument of Regeneration 176 7. The Word ought to be preached in every Congregation 177 8. The Word must be so preached as that it may be avouched to be indeed the Word of God ibid. CHAP. II. THe Coherence of this Chapter with the former with the sum thereof and of the first three Verses 179 Verse 1 2 3. 1. REgeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together 180 2. There 's no perfection to be attained unto here ibid. 3. To be is a Christian a work of great difficulty 181 4. Under those here named all other corruptions are included ibid. 5. Most of the corruptions here named are inward 182 6. That 's nought which is forbidden in Gods Word ibid. 7. What malice is with the difference between it and anger 183 8. What we are to understand by guile ibid. 9. Guile is to be avoided as well in smal as great matters 184 10. What Hypocrisie is 185 11. What Envy ibid. 12. What evil speaking ibid. 13. The Word of God cannot thrive in an unsanctified heart 186 14. Our desire toward the Word must be earnest ibid. 15. Our desire toward the Word must be constant 187 16. Our desire toward the Word must be impartial 188 17. Ministers must have store of milk for their spiritual children and store of love and much patience ibid. 18. The Word why compared to milk 189 19. Nothing sweeter to Gods children then the Word 189 20. The Word is the common food of all Christians ibid. 21. The Word why called sincere ibid. 22. Why Christians are to desire after the Word 191 23. Christians must daily grow in grace ibid. 24. Such as finde the Word powerful for their Salvation do the more desire it and affect it 192 25. Christ is sweet to a Christian and sweetens all that he hath 193 26. Christ is every way bountiful to his ibid. Verse 4 5. 1. VVHerein Christs bounty doth appear 194 2. A comparison between the Temple of Jerusalem and that which Christ maketh of all that believe in him ibid. 3. Christ why compared to a stone ibid. 4. To believe in Christ which is to come to him is a great priviledge ibid. 5. Christians must come to Christ 195 6. Christ the foundation that bears up his Church 198
in the way to it will he now disappoint thee No assuredly If he would not have saved thee he would have let thee alone as thy companions and many others and never have done this for thee O but the Devil is so strong and subtile and I so weak and simple He that hath pluckt thee out of his hands will never suffer him to get thee captive again It were else a disgrace to Christ Except therefore he be stronger then God and Christ thou needest not fear At the revelation of Jesus Christ. He plucks these Jews from Moses Law and the Ceremonies which were out of date but they could hardly be so perswaded and brings them to the Gospel which discovers Christ He was in that Law covered with Vails of Sacrifices and Ceremonies c. All these be done away in the Gospel where Christ is laid open without any covering Note We have the excellency of the Gospel that doth uncover and lay open Christ Jesus unto us brings us tidings of him who is the Way the Truth and the Life and the onely Savior of the world So that the Gospel is the glory of the World The Sun is not so necessary in the Firmament as the Gospel is to the world This teacheth us Christ which is life eternal and St. Paul desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified and counted all dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord O how welcome should this be It is well called glad tidings so it is indeed The Gospel is our pardon If we should finde evidences of great Lands and Inheritances to come to us or a Will wherein were bequeathed great Legacies to us how glad would we be of the same How often would we revise and read them over The Gospel brings us tidings and tells us the way to come to an everlasting inheritance and therein are bequeathed such blessed Legacies Item I give thee forgiveness of thy sins by my Sons death Item Eternal life by his obedience Item I give thee assurance that thou shalt be raised here from sin and that thy body shall be raised at the last day by my Sons Resurrection Item I give thee assurance of a place in Heaven by my Sons Ascension 1. Is it not a marvel then that the Gospel is so hardly entertained and that the World cares so little for it It s welcome to most people not as if it brought them news of a blessing but as if it would spoil them of all they have 2. How should they that want it be set on work to labor to get it as without which there 's no Salvation Its light food armor without which darkness famine spoil If the Sun should be wanting to a Town and could be procured how would all joyn to get it Or rain for a dry and barren ground who would not wonder at any that should be against it yet who joyns who labors for the Gospel 3. If the Gospel be the revelation of Jesus Christ then are the Ministers revealers of this blessed Secret therefore worthy to be acknowledged for their works sake for the greatness of their work and the excellency thereof Pharaoh reverenced and advanced Joseph for smaller matters O how beautiful are the feet of such Most people either rate them or at least set light by them not reverencing their calling but esteeming them more base then the meanest Tradesman But that grieves us not so much as that unkindeness that we meet with from them from whom we look for most comfort and encouragement Verse 14. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance TO Faith he addeth Repentance and Sanctification by the one to testifie the other as in the second Epistle he wills them to adde unto their Faith vertue as if he should say You that sometimes were the Children of wrath and are now by grace made Gods Children walk obediently as becomes such a mercy This Sanctification hath two parts and stands 1. In renouncing evil or the lusts which before grace we were wont to be led by 2. In putting on and embracing holiness of life that we may resemble the disposition of our Father who is holy and looks for holiness in his yea holiness in all maner of conversation For the order first goes Faith then Obedience and Sanctification for as the light and Sun-beams comes from the Sun a river from the Spring head fruit from the tree so doth obedience from Faith Till a man be pardoned and believe he cannot repent nor obey the will of God no more then a dead stick can bring forth fruit When by Faith we are ingrafted into Christ then we receive power not before one that hath never been humbled aright for sin cannot hate and flie from sin as he should He that seeth not the love of God to him cannot love God nor set upon a good life to deny his lusts being as dear as his life and to yield obedience is irksom to nature for this cause the Devil is such an enemy to our Faith and labors to shake it for then he knows he damps our care of a good life 1. This condemns Papists that boast of holiness of life and yet overthrow the foundation of it viz. A true justifying faith They may stir up good moods and a blinde devotion by scaring men with the pains of hell and telling them of the joys of heaven but no sound Obedience godly Life renouncing Lusts c. without the work of Faith from that will be Obedience even to suffering 2. It confutes them that think Repentance is before Faith they are indeed wrought at once and Repentance sheweth it self first but in order of nature Faith is as the root Many humble souls hold off and dare not believe O say they if I could repent so heartily as I see some and could serve God as I would then I could believe 3. It teacheth men that if ever they will set upon a good life indeed and in time they must begin at the right end and lay a foundation of true justifying faith for want of this many deceive themselves that have some purpose to do well being afflicted or somewhat stirred at the Word and fall out of a bad course to leave this and that evil or take up good duties and many that never had experience of the work of Faith that think they live well or some that upon some occasion thus promise You shall never hear me swear more I le never play more Never come in an Alehouse yet this lasts not but they fal to their old byase by and by because they took not the right course Many also purpose to repent and do great matters but this is a greater matter then the world thinks off a man must first be the childe of God ere he can obey and Faith must be wrought first ere he can
are married by the Lord and none can divorce them Therefore if any man seem to have the one and not the other he hath neither in truth If therefore any leave evil and do not good or if any do some good and hate not all evil he is but an hypocrite For the order here used he sets renouncing of our lusts first before imbracing of holiness men put off their old rags ere they can put on new apparel purge the stomack of ill humors ere they take good nourishment dig up the weeds ere they sow or set herbs so in this case Where therefore there remaineth the love of any lust or sin there is no true grace in that heart neither will any grow till that be rooted out God will not plant any of his grace there till the Devils planting be pluckt up Many think they be Christians and do many things well though they keep the love of some sin no mark the love of grace and goodness and the love of any sin cannot be in one heart they are so contrary the one to the other therefore while thou livest in any known sin and lovest any lust as sure as God is in heaven thou art an hypocrite and let me perish if there be one dram of true grace in thee but thou standest in the state of damnation Therefore renounce and bid adieu to thy lusts and seeing you make a profession and do many things will you lose heaven for your lust for one sin so run that you may obtain lose not heaven for a little make either something or nothing of thy profession banish from thee all sin that God may work some true grace in thy heart In your ignorance He fathers their following of lusts on their ignorance and ignorance is the cause and root of a wicked and bad life For till men know the will of God out of his Word how can they do it and what are we prone to by nature but to all the evil in the world Therefore the devil labors by all means to hold people in blindness of all books hath most been an enemy to the Bible and to sincere and diligent reading and preaching the Scriptures for were those away he knows all iniquity must needs abound as there did in Popery when people were nuzled up in blindeness O what abundance of sin was committed but it did not so much appear because they were in the dark and the light of Gods word discovers sin which was then very rare As if one come into an house at midnight he ●ees no faults but when the morning comes then he sees a number of things out of order so in this clear light of the Gospel we see the wickedness that then appeared not in the dark Whether will not our nature run and whether may not the devil and world lead one when he hath no eyes to see whether he goes The blinde eats many a fly and a man may lead a blinde man into the deepest pit As the Raven first picks out the Lambs eyes and then kills it at his pleasure when it cannot see to escape away so doth the devil by people Ignorance is often compared to darkness and they that go in the dark often stumble fall and hurt themselves Sampson when blinde was led to any thing as to grinde to make Sports c. 1. This teacheth us to desire that the clear light of the Word may shine more and more brightly into all places of this land for there are many places that have either no preaching or else very seldom So as for want of knowledge people wallow in a number of lusts most fearfully the Lords day most grievously Profaned preachers slighted c. 2. Every Minister is to endeavor to the utmost of his power to bring their people to the knowledge of their duty that so they may be either truly converted or at least hereby restrained 3. People are to labor for knowledge else they must needs be captives of many lusts Think not as many do because ye are poor and not book-learned therefore you shall be held excused many think their very ignorance shall be a good plea because they know nothing God will hold them excused Is light come into the world and shall mens sin their ignorance hold them excused its otherwise 4. All parents are to have a special care where and in what Towns and houses they place their children they must place them where they may learn to know God to discern between good and evil and if it prevail not with them by and by yet there 's hope it shall lie as seed in their hearts that will shoot up in time But how can he say In their ignorance seeing they were well instructed and expert in the Law having it read among them daily and had they not good knowledge in the Law and in the Prophets True yet he justly calls them ignorant 1. Because though they were so cunning in the Law and Prophets yet they knew not Jesus Christ the end of the Law and so the sum of all 2. Their knowledge was onely in their brain and not effectual in their hearts to renew and reform them but they were carried away by their lusts notwithstanding of their knowledge 1. Then all the knowledge in the world without the knowledge of Christ Jesus is nothing If a man could measure the heavens tell the number of the stars had skill in all Arts and Sciences whatsoever yet without the knowledge of Christ it were vanity Paul knew much being brought up at the feet of Gamaliel But he counted all things else loss and dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus He desired to know nothing but Christ Jesus and him crucified If a man were the wisest in a County to arbitrate and compound controversies yet all this were nothing without the knowledge of Christ. 2. All the knowledge of the world if it reform not a man is but ignorance So much a man knows as he obeys That is not knowledge that is in the brain but that which soaketh down into the heart and transformeth a man into the similitude thereof so much men know as they mortifie their lusts He that lives after his lusts let him have never such store of knowledge he knows nothing yet as he ought to know what if a man know he should not Swear Lye commit Adultery c. yet doing these is he any whit the better Is he not rather much worse Yea the Devil himself hath more knowledge then any man The world wonders many times to see men of great knowledge do such and such things Alas Knowledge and Conscience are two several things and often sundred in the subject 1. Then let no man boast of his Knowledge Many love to hear themselves talk but look what power they have over their lusts what mastery over their affections 2. Do not we
opposites 1. Prophaneness when men dare live as they list and their lust is their Law 2. Security when men live carnally and wretchedly contenting themselves that they be none of the worst they be not such and such kinde of persons yet go on without regard either to God or his Word The evil they abstain from as it is not from the fear of God so if good come in their way they do it after their fashion and evil also as comes to hand they dare commit sin in hope of mercy and think they shall do well enough 3. Hypocrisie which hath more shew of Religion but resteth in the outward ceremonious performance of duties and looks not to do them in the right maner and so are not guided by the fear of God in their lives 4. Slavishness when men fear indeed but never but under or in expectation of the rod they then will flie to a book have good words golden promises c. at other times they care not what they do or at least be as before Contrarily the true fear of God is known by these notes 1. To hate evil and not leave it off onely for some sinister respects 2. Not onely gross and open evils of the hand but inward corruptions of the heart as Pride Arrogancy Hypocrisie Hardness Frowardness Wordliness of the heart c. spying them out mourning for them and striving against them as being seen to God as well as gross sins to men 3. All evil the evil way every evil way 4. Such evils as a man may go closely away withal as Joseph might with uncleanness with his Mistress but would not as fearing God 5. Such as a man may carry out by strong hand by might and authority and no body to control him yet dares not do it because there 's an higher who hath forbidden it 6. It will make a man watchful to avoid evil as the Hare hath an eye to passengers as she sits 7. It will make men avoid the occasions of evil 8. It is ever joyned with the fear of his Word and as is the one in us so is the other If it be thus then I may too truly and plainly conclude That there is but a little fear of God in this Land for how few hate evil secret corruptions all evil such as they can go cleanly away with such as they can carry away by might and colour of Law How many live prophanely as if there were no God no Law no Judgement day no reckoning to be made but do what their lust leads them too and that which some would not nor durst do for a world they make no bones of Another sort live securely and carelesly not so bad as the former but such as look not to God nor set him before their eyes in their deeds Others perform more duties to God but so as they regard not why nor in what maner but rest in the work wrought not casting with themselves how they may do them aright and thereby taking notice as well of their own weakness as Satans malice Others slavishly fear in their misery but in their prosperity regard nothing but their own will These being called out a few there be remaining that truly fear God for which he may justly have an heavy controversie with this Land that after so many happy means so few should be found that truly fear him though many think they do How few keep Gods commandments all alway with delight let every man examine himself carefully by these notes If any be loth and would have a wider sieve truly I can give no wider God hath given me no wider to let Hypocrites Prophane Persons c. scape through I try you but by the Word and by it you must be judged at the last day But for those that do indeed fear God there 's abundant comfort for them they have that which is better then all the world yea Gods mouth pronounceth them blessed Both the quoted Psalms are a storehouses of promises made to such there are others also in Psal. 25 12 14. 34. 9 10. 84. 11. Mal. 3. 16 17. which are duly to be weighed Such as fear God need fear neither Man Death Devils Hell Day of Judgement c. which are indeed the terror of the world only let them be provok'd to fear him more and more for even of Gods children not a few have but a small measure hereof whereby it comes to pass that they hate not sin so heartily in themselves and others as they should neither are such enemies to privy corruptions but that they break out often and so pull many a sorrow and gripe of Conscience upon themselves which more fear of God would have prevented Our often falls argue too little fear as may appear by our small zeal to duties and our little trembling at the Word of God therefore labor we for more that it may be said of us as of Obadiah That we fear God greatly that so we may be preserved from evil Oh this is the keeper of all vertues holding all in good order a watchman indeed to look to our heart if it be there and temptation comes up starts it and says Nay This will keep the heart clean hold out ill set us on to good Means to attain hereunto may be these Let us often set before our eyes our own baseness Gods greatness power and justice with the effects thereof on Adam the old world and others especially do we consider what God hath done for us that so our care and resolution may grow how to please God If this religious awe be in us O how it will keep our lives from innumerable evils and replenish them with all goodness that having finished them well we may come to the Lord in peace at our latter end O if we did consider the unspeakable mercies of God towards us we should see cause enough though there were no hell yet to fear more then death it self to offend God but because our nature is so exceeding lewd and prone to sin its good to think often that that God under whose power we live hates all sin and will not let any go unpunished What cause have we then to grow in the fear of God that have seen his greatness and just displeasure against sin so much every year one punishment or other What cause have we also to fear God that have such experiences of his goodness in 88. when he delivered us from the Spanish Armado and after from the Gun-powder Treason and now of late hath begun to relent towards us and gives us some showers of rain But alas if we will prove our selves by the notes before mentioned it will be evident that most have not the fear of God which is a fearful thing As no better testimony can be given of a man then this that he feareth God as Job and Obadiah so none more
places where you live and in all good Works Disallowed indeed of men Here 's shewed how this foundation is esteemed both of Men and God He first speaks of men and that by way of prevention No marvel you speak of Christ to be such a Foundation might they have said we are sure when he came into the world a number cared not for him would none of him and those none of the fools or simple ones but Wise Politick Learned Clerks True saith he but what then yet I have that which will weigh it down namely that he is chosen of God and precious to him and them that shall believe on him Disallowed he was indeed of men They called him the Carpenters Son a Samaritan Wine-bibber deceiver They would have no other King but Caesar never left him while they put him to death with them Barabbas was meeter to live then he What was the cause or how should they disallow him when it was so plain that he was the Christ foretold by the Prophets who came at the same time in the same place and after the same maner whose Life Preaching and Works did well declare him so to be what might be the cause hereof They looked for one that should come as an earthly Prince to deliver them out of the hands of the Romans but his Kingdom was not of this World They looked also for one that should have upheld their Customs Law and Traditions but the date of them was out See by the way what it is to have an old conceit setled in ones brain O how hardly is it removed Again How came they to this height of disallowing him at the first of ignorance and blindeness but after of malice so men grow when they desire not to amend and see the Truth from one degree of wickedness to another The Jews disallowed him and do to this day though the hand of God be heavily upon them according to their own Imprecation His blood be on us and our children whose case is most fearful So is the case of all others that disallow him whereof there be multitudes among us Why nay all we allow him O most of Pharisees disallow him and will perish Yes most among Jews and Turks but all we shall be saved unless it be here and there an adulterer or horrible drunkard c. Consider that of four sorts of grounds Professors three are naught O most among us disallow Christ while they will not come to him embrace him as their Savior and renouncing all evil take up his yoke as their Lord most amongst us allow a kinde of Christ but not a true Christ They allow a Christ that will save them though they never be humbled though they live still in their sins but Christ is no such Christ will save no such O let all such look to it that will not come to Christ as he hath appointed you think the Jews Judas and the Soldiers have a fearful account to make so they have and how shall they appear before Christ at the day of Judgement but even thousands in our Parishes are in no better case that break his bonds and despise the offer of his blood Such are all Apostates that have profest the name of Christ and fall away all fearful ones that deny him out of fear and all that will not embrace him being offered Disallowed Was not this no ill sign of Christ that he was disallowed O no Even that may be disallowed of men which yet is allowed and highly accounted of of God nay the more Spiritual any thing any course any person is the more and the sooner will the world disallow him and it For they be carnal therefore savor the things of the flesh not of the Spirit they be in darkness therefore care not for the light The more Spiritual any thing is the higher is it out of their reach Those courses and persons that be carnal the world allow well of four hundred false Prophets maintained at Jezabels Table good Micaiah and Elias abused of those that wandred up and down in sheep-skins and goat-skins the world was not worthy yet did not the world think them worthy to be among them but thrust them among the wilde Beasts Others also were racked as the vilest Malefactors yea our Savior himself was so accounted so the Apostles men wonder at them as at a thief Hence learn 1. That we are not to esteem the worse either of our selves or others because of the worlds mislike many be so weak that if they see the most and especially any great ones or any learned cry down a man or an action c. they are carried away and open their mouthes wide against them but if that might have gone currant Christ himself had been naught we must not go upon any such rule but examine whether they be allowed of God or not if they be then are we not to regard what the world saith The world wil prefer Barabbas to Christ call evil good and good evil There 's no more heed to be given thereto then to be judged of a blinde man concerning colours As they that have sore eyes cannot abide the clear light and Sun-shine so cannot the wicked abide that which is pure and Spiritual yea the things that they highly allow are abominable in the sight of God 2. That they which disallow that and those whom God alloweth are in a miserable condition they cross God and he will cross them The time shall come when they shall finde by woful experience that he disalloweth them when they shall be glad and desire to be in the number of those whom they have most despised but to no purpose Ye also as lively stones are built up Now of the rest of the building that is reared upon this Foundation Every Believer is a stone of this building a lively stone and all together make up a spiritual House for the Lord to delight in as many stones go to the making up of a material House Now in that Christ is compared to the Foundation and believers to stones built on him it sheweth the near conjunction that is between Christ and them as stones are joyned to the Foundation by morter so are believers to Christ by the Spirit Accordingly he is compared to a head and the Church to the body he to the Vine and the Church to the Branches Such an Union is between Christ and Believers as is between the husband and the wife no more twain but one bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Before a man have Faith he is as a dead stick or stone by Faith he is united to Christ which is signified by these and the like speeches eating Christs flesh and drinking his blood which is to believe in him shewing that as the meat we eat is turned into our substance and nearly
need of it what is become of our Forefathers they were honest people and had no such stir about hearing of Sermons I Answer They were in woful danger lying in ignorance and unbelief which because they saw not they thought not thereof but some whose eyes God hath opened bless him who hath brought them out of that state and wonder that ever they could be so careless in such deadly danger and plainly see that if they had so dyed they had gone to Hell who yet then thought their case as good as you wherein they would not now be for all the world As if one in a dark night or asleep on his horse should come over a narrow Bridge standing on a deep River or a steep dangerous place then he fears nothing for he sees no danger but when he views it in the day his heart is ready to fail him and he would not so go again for the whole Town And for our Fathers we know not what their state was but know that God let in light to sundry of them by small means as by reading some small parts of Scripture some small Books Primmers and the like so by conferring with others c. which how small soever God was pleased to bless but if they had no light and true knowledge of Christ we know that they could not be saved We cannot say this or that we may not belye the Scriptures for their sakes but whatsoever became of them it behoves us now to whom God offers greater grace and such blessed means as preaching that we take hold and embrace it that we may come out of ignorance to the true knowledge of our Savior Christ Jesus who is indeed the way to Heaven The time of that ignorance God regarded not but now he admonisheth every man every where to repent 2. Others say This preaching brings stirs where it goes and unquietness the Towns and places that were very loving before it came there after fell into divisions Its wonder that the Gospel of Peace should breed Dissention and that that which makes Peace between God and man should break Peace between man and man Indeed it s an occasion through mans corruption no marvel though it breed stirs considering what maner persons we are to be wrought on to good how hard to convince our judgements and consciences of the things of Gods Word and the Truths therein contained how hard to work upon our crooked wills and rebellious affections no marvel though men startle when they be put out of their byas But its good when the Devil stirs for then there is some hope and likelihood that he will be cast out And for Divisions its true our Savior said He came not to bring peace namely in evil but a sword and debate but the fault is not in the Gospel but in them that embrace it not for they that do not but are obstinate they fall out and contend with them that do because they by word and deed reprove their ill works whereas if all would obey it would make a blessed peace as it doth between good Christians that were as Lyons and Tygers but better this Division yet then that all should go hand in hand to Hell as those do that consent easily in evil better two Souls of five saved though they have much unquietness withal then all five perish Where the Gospel is embraced it breeds not such a carnal love as was in Popery to consent in Superstition in Vanity Pastime Good-fellowship Belly-chear and the like but a Christian and godly love in the Spirit furthering one another to Heaven and in the setting forth of Gods glory howsoever a just War is better then an unjust Peace Hereto this Objection may be added That if a man be never so well beloved before if he become a Professor and goer to Sermons he shall be hated of most men therefore I would be none of those will some say I would have the goodwill of my Neighbors But let such know that that is a wicked love and a woful which a man gets by living in sin better be hated of men for good then of God for ill-doing yea to be thus hated is a good sign 3. I cannot tell say some but since there hath been such preaching and such a stir for preaching and running after Sermons I see people never a whit the better but there is more sin now then was before now such Pride Covetousness Craft c. whereas before there was Love Good-neighborhood Plain Dealing c. A. 1. The Devil had them who lived in Popery and Blindness so fast in the main as he did not greatly strive to bring them to gross sins because he was sure enough of them otherwise now he fears he shal lose them therefore labors this way the rather because he would discredit the Gospel He knew their civility could do their Souls no pleasure and that being void of Faith it pleased not God therefore he let them alone and the rather that that Religion might be the better thought of now to disgrace the true Religion he perswades many to rest in hearing yet drawing them to all evils 2. There is not more nor so much as seems but because the Gospel and Light hath discovered sin more for a number of things that were counted vertues now the Word findes to be vices and rebukes as Carnal good-fellowship idle and vain spending of time Idolatty and blinde Superstition None were counted bad then but those that were notoriously so now the Word descryeth many smaller things so that the Gospel is no more in the fault though it discover faults then a Looking-glass is to be blamed for shewing any the spots in his face the fault is not in the glass that there be spots they were there before If in a dark night we come into a house we see nothing out of order though there be never so many things amiss which in the light we do yet is not the light in the fault as only discovering that which before was unseen 3. No marvel though there seem more evil because when men are forbidden evil and call'd upon for good they are more eager on sin then before as a melancholly man hath most minde to those meats that his Physician forbids him 4. No marvel also though some prove as bad or worse then ever before through Gods judgement on them for the contempt of the Gospel For if God gave up men to a reprobate minde for despising the light they had though but the light of nature and that which they had by the works of God what will he do for the contempt of the light of the Gospel 5. Yet there 's no cause of offence at this though there should be more sin now for there be many infinitely amended who before were ignorant superstitious prophane but now zealous Christians True and Religious worshippers of God and such as live justly and righteously with their Neighbors
ordained most men to destruction then is his justice greater then his mercy We must not measure his justice and mercy by the number of the one or of the other for if there had been but one onely saved it had been as great mercy as his justice in condemning the rest for if but one had been saved it must have cost the death of the Lord Jesus such was our misery Now what a mercy it was that the eternal Son of God equal with the Father and in whom he was well pleased should not onely abase himself to our nature but to our infirmities yea to sorrows and great indignities nay to death yea a cursed death O who can express this love It was a wonder he did not rather suffer us all to perish then his Son to endure the least of these Then he hath ordained the means of their condemnation namely sin and so is the Author of sin True he ordained and decreed that there should be sin in the world as he did of the fall of Adam but not as is sin and evil but as whereby and out of which God draws glory to himself and it was necessary that there should he evil in the world as well as good that a way might be made for setting out Gods mercy in pardoning some and his justice in punishing it in others but so as the Lord is no way faulty He ordained willingly to permit it as it hath respect of good in it but as no actor of it He put no evil in Adam nor any man but onely willingly permitted his fall c. 2. This should and may stay our mindes when we see any great Professors and men of excellent parts fall away It s no other then that an Hypocrite and one that never was sound nor elect of God is now discovered and let none that can prove their election be overmuch troubled onely walk reverently but never be dismaid with deadly fear They fell because they were not elect and you being elect shall be therefore sure to stand and thus our Savior comforts his Disciples That none was lost but Judas who was the son of perdition so did Paul the Christians notwithstanding the revolting of Hymeneus Philetus Alexander c. If it were not for this what a deadly fear might this breed in weak Christians to see those so far their superiors in knowledge and gifts to fall away Thus of the first The second is this That This was of his own will and for no cause out of himself for the Lord infinite in wisdom and holiness needs not as man to fetch the reason of his purposes forth of himself He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth He doth all things according to the counsel of his own will Is it not said O Israel thy destruction is of thy self and He that beliveth not is condemned and Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Cursed be the mouth that saith not so even that every mans destruction is of himself and his own just desert but we must put a difference between the decree of God and the execution of it God condemneth no man upon his bare will but his own just desert Sin comes in between the decree of God and the execution of his Decree as the cause of Damnation If then it be asked Why is any man condemned For his sin But why did God decree to condemn any Because he would As no man is saved but by Faith in Christ and Sanctification of life which yet is not the cause why God appointed him to Salvation but because he would so there 's none condemned but for his sin yet God ordained him not thereto because of sin but because of his own will If any ask further and why would he That a note too high for man or angel to sing but there in humility we must rest and not put the Lord to render a reason of all his decrees or doings which even princes will not do to their subjects he raised up Pharaoh c. even because he would get glory out of him and by his means This condemneth the Opinion of foreseen works good or bad as of this because he foresaw some would be bad and refuse grace he therefore Reprobated them c. but God loved Jacob and hated Esau not onely before the had done good or evil but before there was any thinking of good or ill If foreseen sin be the cause of Reprobation then on the contrary foreseen grace of Election but the Epistle to the Ephesians sheweth the contrary hereof Faith and Sanctification followeth upon Election as fruits thereof therefore go not before as any causes so do Infidelity and impenitency follow after Reprobation If foreseen sin had been the cause of Reprobation then we should all have been refused for he could not see us but all sinners But as the blinde man was not so born for his own or Parents sin but that the work of God in curing him by a Word might be seen so was it in this business Thus of the second The third is this That The Lord hath done this most justly His will is a rule of Righteousness and he can do nothing but most holily and justly Is there unrighteousness with God God forbid Though we cannot see into the justness of it yet we ought to acknowledge it The Sun may shine and that brightly too though a blinde man see it not Man was made holy and having free-will by his willing sin lost his state and still sins willingly It seems cruelty in the Lord to appoint most part of mankinde to Destruction He did it not as ayming at their Damnation but at his own glory which is more to be regarded then all the World And shall the Clay say against the Potter Why hast thou made me thus and thus may not he do as he list So may not the Lord get glory by his own creatures which way he will And do men for their pleasure hunt the Hare and Partridge or kill not onely Flyes and baser creatures but also Fowls with their grins in like maner appointing Sheep Oxen c. for the slaughter and shall not the Lord have as much Soveraignty over men the work of his hands we cannot make a Fly or Flea yea it s more reason that the Lord should be glorified if he would with the Damnation of all mankinde then that the killing of a Hare nay a Fly should serve to the honor or pleasure of the greatest Potentate of the world What if he had ordained none to Salvation who had had cause to complain Besides with what patience bears he with them and their blaspheming of him every day What marvellous benefits and comfortable good things bestows he upon them houses lands wealth health peace who might destroy and send them to
we are dead in trespasses and sins 2. This should make the world weary of their part O that a man had but wisdom enough to perswade all ignorant persons that they be in darkness and going to Hell nay all persons of what parts soever that being void of Faith and not sanctified they are in this case It s not because they are not so but because they are so deep in darkness as all that can be said to them from God about the same cannot so perswade them but that they love darkness more then light cannot away to be called out of it think their case as good as others Awake thou that sleepest and stand up Christ shall give thee light Who would abide in a dark Dungeon that might be abroad in the light in Egypt when he might be in Goshen with Gods children Men think because they have the light of the Sun and their eyes to see they think that they be not in darkness but their Souls be in most woful darkness Never think to work the works of darkness and yet come to the light of Heaven Into his marvellous light This is opposed to darkness therefore hereby is meant saving knowledge of Christ which is life Eternal and true Light Holiness and Sanctification the hope of Heaven and the inheritance of the Saints in light This is not onely light but marvellous light either in respect of the contrary darkness or in respect of it self This is the estate of every Believer of every sanctified person 1. This shews the infinite oddes between the true Christian and those that be not so and that not onely between Pagans that have no means who be deep and every way in darkness but even between Christians and them that have both means and it may be knowledge yet are still unconverted and unsanctified persons The one is in light the other in darkness the one have fellowship with God the other with the Devil O that men saw the oddes they would not onely not judge their own case so good and despise the servants of God as they do but would reverence them and take hold of their skirt and say We will go with you 2. It teacheth Christians brought into this marvellous light how to walk as children of the light and to have nothing to do with the unfruitful works of darkness but to reprove them nor with the workers of iniquity But how few thus walk O let our conversation be honest and our light so shine that we may lighten others Being herein like God we may be assured we are going to everlasting light Verse 10. Which in time past were not a people but are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy HE addes to the heap another mercy to stir them up to the thankfulness he speaks of and to the end the mercy and benefit may be seen to be the greater he sets it out by the contrary comparing the time present with the time past when it was far otherwise with them and as he compared them with others before so he compareth them now with themselves Which in time past c. Here the Apostle alludeth to Hos. 1. 10. where the Lord setteth out both the sins and punishment of the ten Tribes under a Typical marriage of the Prophet with a notorious Strumpet which was not a thing verily done but to set the more lively before their eyes their Sins and Idolatries as under the name of those supposed children were set out the punishments that God meant to send upon them for the same as That they should be scattered abroad That God would have no mercy on them and lastly which was worst of all That they should not be his people all which were accordingly fulfilled For first they were carried Captive of the Assyrians and there retained some remnants of the Worship of God in a corrupt maner and kept together but after when the Medes and Persians prevailed over the Assyrians they were then scattered over the Nations so far and wide as they had no part of Gods Worship remaining among them but were so mingled among the Heathen as they became no people of God at all but altogether wrapt in all the maners of the Heathen Nations with whom they lived This is that here meant when he saith They were not the people of God c. And lest the good among them should be altogether dismaid as though God had broken his Covenant he promiseth That the time should come that he would receive them into his favor again which was now accomplished as the Apostle saith When by the Gospel they were gathered to the Faith of the Lord Jesus In that he sets before them the time past and what they were Note That for a people or particular persons to look to their beginnings is of good and singular use As for us who since Christs coming are admitted to the same priviledges with the Jews have the Gospel Preached Christ Jesus offered Grace given to receive him the Word and Sacraments to assure us of him Heaven opened to us as well as they for us I say being thus and having the truth and onely way of Salvation Preached to us by Jesus Christ To consider what we were will be of great use as that we were aliens from the common-wealth of Israel Strangers drown'd in Idolatry and all Sin without knowledge of the true God but woshiping the Devil in stead of the true God that in the days and under the Tyranny of Antichrist we were held in blindeness made to worship Images taught to believe that we must be saved by Masses Mans Merits Popes Pardons scared with Purgatory thinking that then we did God high service when we most dishonored him So to consider with our selves what we were before our Calling Ignorant in Unbelief Prophane the servants of Sin slaves of Satan in Darkness loving Sin as our lives hating the Word and all goodness c. and what we are now through Gods mercy will be of great use For This serves 1. To make us humble and take down our pride Therefore when the Israelites would so brag of Abraham and Jacob or Israel that they were their Seed and Posterity the Lord by his Prophets would tell them and what was Abraham but a poor Idolater in the Land of Ur of the Caldees and a lone man a dry stick and Sarah barren and what was Israel was he not a fugitive as it were fain to flie for his life into Mesopotamia and so poor as he went onely with his staff in his hand there served for wages following the sheep at his return ready to be devoured by Esau what great cause then have you to brag of your Progeny 2. To stir us up to thankfulness when we see we were most wretched and miserable poor and blinde and naked having no dram of any good in our selves this is a
to our selves or the use of any lawful means If he set open the door then we may go out but not break away but be content so long here to stay as God shall see meet The world cannot abide to think of death or of the day of Judgement would buy them off yea but to be deferred with much money an ill sign nay many of Gods Servants be much to blame some so addicted to the world as not willing to part with it O ye be of little faith It s base that any thing here should take up our affections from longing to be with our true Inheritance Nay thus some Christians are held lingring indeed and that for wife and childrens sake especially namely to see them brought up and kept from evil courses seeing often the contrary through the want of Parents the wrack of many children As for the most part this argueth weakness of faith in Gods providence especially if their desire be excessive for God can provide for them without us moderately to desire life for this cause or only to do God some other service is tolerable always provided that it be the love of nothing here below that detaineth our affections but that we so esteem of the world and all that is in it as we see no cause in it why it should take up our hearts and make us linger here The causes that should make us desire to be hence should be sin and the desire to be with God sin to chase us hence and the love of God and Heaven the excellency of that place and state should allure us thither Some desire to be gone but it s most ignorantly and desperately for its onely because they be in trouble full of pain have many crosses Thus many make away with themselves others impatiently wish to be gone poor mad fools not knowing what is a coming onely looking to be eased of the present grief O our poor folly also and the earthliness of many of Gods people that are not wearied hence by sin and by their corrupt nature and continual spring of sin that they cannot be rid of but annoys them daily and continually Therefore God is pleased to send them sorrows and pains and with a week or fortnights pain they are made willing to dye that were not so before A great fault of sundry Christians that have their hands and heads so full of business as they cannot desire to be gone nay had need of a twelve-moneths warning to set their matters right This is not Pilgrim-like they may hap not have a week therefore so walk as you may ever be willing to be gone and be ever of this minde that to be gone is most happy and most to be desired 10. Pilgrims the nearer their Journeys end they are the gladder So ought Christians that have passed many years and are grown old to thank God highly that now their salvation is nearer then when they first believed it that they would not their time were to begin again and that they were yong again c. but thank God they draw nearer the shore where they shall arrive at the Haven of rest Ancient Christians near their end have this advantage that they have almost past the Pikes yong ones know not what remaineth for them yea every day a Christian at night should thank God that hath brought him safely one days journey nearer his end then in the morning Many think they grow old too soon too fast if they could make their years stand still as Joshua's Sun they would be glad Verse 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation VNto the former Exhortation of purging the heart he adds this of looking to our outward behavior and conversation among men namely that it be honest good godly and every way such as may not onely not be offensive but may be of good example yea to the very wicked that though for a time they speak evil of us as our nature is to do of every one that differs from us thinking our own courses still to be best yet at last they looking more narrowly and seeing our constancy in well-doing may be enforced to think well of us and whensoever God shall touch their hearts with his grace they may glorifie God and say This is the onely true way of worshiping God and thank God for it and all the means that have brought them to the sight of it The parts are two 1. The Exhortation 2. The Reasons thereof The Exhortation is to godly life and that is inlarged by the circumstance of persons or company before whom namely the Gentiles that is the Idolatrous Wicked and Unbelieving The Reasons 1. That they may be prepared to their conversion by beholding our good life which is set forth by the contrary in former time namely their speaking ill of us 2. That they may glorifie God which is set out by the time namely when God shall please particularly and in a special maner to bestow his grace upon them so that by our innocent godly life led among the wicked we shall provide for our own credit their good and Gods glory which is the thing we should chiefly aym at in all our actions Here observe we first our Apostles order He begins at the right end as a wise Builder he lays a good Foundation then builds on it as a skilful Chyrurgion he first purgeth out dead flesh then heals which else would heal and break out again Reformation if ever if be good must begin at the heart No man can have a good conversation whose heart is Unregenerate and Unsanctified for from the heart proceeds the life if sin and lusts be nourished there they will break out as fire hid in straw or dry wood for our bodies are as apt to execute as our hearts to broach evil For one to purge the Channels and leave the Fountain foul were to lose his labor for one also to pull off the tops of the weeds and leave the roots still were to no purpose The heart must be washen kept cleansed from inward lusts else no godly life 1. This confutes the Papists that talk of good conversation and yet regard not the heart either seek after true justifying faith whereby to purge the same 2. This shews and rebukes the folly of those that think to frame a good life as civil persons and yet never knew the corruptions of their hearts nor what Faith means that purifieth the heart nor make Conscience of their inward lusts Hence it is that they shamefully deceive themselves especially in the first Table and in the sight of a true Christian that can tell what belongs to good conversation Numbers think upon occasion they will never do as they have done but promise great amendment as upon
unquiet man with thy wife for a proud person rash censorious idle and one that followest not thy calling especially being a Professor and hereof causest the people of God to speak with grief thou hast cause to grieve and shame for giving them such cause who would gladly they had not the cause to speak thus of thee Yea but the wicked speak ill of me wilt thou say But why If it be justly and deservedly whosoever they be that 's no matter more shame that thou hast discovered thy nakedness to the Chams of this world to scoff at and at the Gospel withal fie upon it It s too usual in these days Christians give too much cause of offence howsoever the wicked speak not thus out of any hatred of the fault but of ill will to the Gospel O therefore take heed let us not suffer as evil doers look we so warily and narrowly to our conversation that if they should watch us as narrowly as the Nobles did Daniel yet they might finde nothing against us but in the cause of our God yea might be enforced with Saul of David to acknowledge our innocency If they will needs speak ill of us let it be falsly and for well-doing If any should be smitten by Sea or Land travelling on the Sabbath or any lose their lives at a Play no cause to rejoyce no comfort in it Note further That If there be no patience in suffering but when it s deserved its counterfeit patience and hath no reward of God it s in comparison nothing it s that which reason teacheth but to bear patiently for well-doing is a lesson for an high scholler Howsoever being simply considered its good and commendable as for any being justly afflicted or punished by God or man meekly to submit themselves to confess their faults and be desirous to amend thereby Aaron held his peace Eli and Hezekiah were submissive in theirs the Thief at the right hand acknowledged that he suffered deservedly Thus when Delinquents are punished by the Magistrate people be rebuked of their Ministers for their sin servants and children are of their Masters and Parents corrected for their faults they must take it patiently and learn to amend But if it be no great matter having done a fault and then being punished justly to bear it patiently are not those to be condemned which be impatient under deserved corrections Some being afflicted of God fret rage and boyl curse blaspheme run to Witches or use other unlawful means to get out What a beast art thou hast thou not deserved the same and yet wilt not thou be patient Is not this in effect to say What hath the Lord to do to punish me I have not deserved the same if I can get out of his fingers any way I will not abide to be thus used thus take they the rod by the end and pull it out of Gods hand What do those but desire there were no God to see them or that hated sin or that would punish sin Belike they would have God like but he will be like himself who at the beginning joyned punishment and sin together and so will do to the worlds end you will not get any thing by resisting by humble confession hearty Prayer and promise of amending you may Again there are others who being punished of the Magistrates for their faults do as well curse and rage against those their Rulers as those that informed against them Thus when honest men tending the glory of God and good of the places where they live knowing that Alehouses for the most part are Pest-houses Devils houses Breeders of all mischief Receptacles of the scum of the earth and means to encrease the number of sinners complain of such ryotous persons as would there keep Revel-rout and endeavor to suppress the same O how do drunkards and such others the friends of sin rage and fume would not such wish that there were no Law nor Magistrate to punish but that all might do as the list but this would bring all to confusion Are there not some also who being reproved by their Ministers fret and rail at them fall out with them and with Ahab account them for their Enemies nay sometimes will sue them at Law to their utter undoing And are there not also such servants and children which being corrected by their Governors will murmure or resist or run away a sign of a proud minde of a lewd heart and far from grace Such resist God and shall receive to themselves condemnation they provoke the Lord to take the rod nay scourge in his own hand or give them over into the hands of the Magistrates whence it cometh often to pass that not a few despising the rod and correction which giveth life and wisdom have been whipt burnt in the hand imprisoned yea hang'd up and that justly Thus daily too many seek their own ruine But if when ye do well c. Here 's the praise of patient suffering for well-doing There 's a suffering wrongfully and without cause which yet differeth from that which is here laid down namely suffering for well-doing Suffering wrongfully is when men are accused of that they are not guilty of or are punished without a fault whether it be onely in words or proceed to deeds David was unjustly censured of his brother when he came to the camp Hanna unjustly censured of Eli and John the Baptist of the Scribes and Pharisees so Mephibosheth Naboth and Stephen were wrongfully both slandered and punished Thus in these days days monstrous lyes and slanders are raised especially against Christians and godly Ministers It s an unrighteous world calling the best of Gods servants Proud Hypocrites and laying vile things to their charge which they never deserved as that they are enemies to the State would put down Kings c. Hence sometimes men are punished by Magistrates without cause as also Children and Servants of their rash and inconsiderate Parents and Masters In this kinde Papists are exceeding expert what lyes have they spread of Luther Calvin Beza Junius and such others And had their horrible villany in the Gunpowder Treason taken effect the blame would have been by them laid on the Puritans But as God hath at no time done wrong but judgeth the world with righteousness giving every man according to his works so will he be revenged of them that wrong others For them that sharply censure others let them know that what measure they mete to others it shall be measured to them again For Magistrates that punish any wrongfully if it be wittingly they prophane the sacred seat of Justice and what in them lies make God a wrong doer for nothing should be there done but as God would and lest they should fail of ignorance or through negligence with Job they must search out the matter diligently For slanderers that devise lyes of men they are fools they are
special Reason and that not too suddenly and then to hold it so constantly as to make it our own by continuance what new-fangledness is there now the French is in request within one quarter the Italian not long after the Spanish Dutch Polonian c. so that one were as good make a garment for the Moon as for our Countrey women How garish also and gawdy are most in their attire thereby declaring the vanity of their mindes How immodest are some going so mannishly that they can scarce be discerned from men as others by their naked necks and breasts do as it were set their own honesty to sale And whereas costly apparel should be used but seldom with most its made their every days wearing And thus hath our plenty and peace bred a great deal of pride and wantonness and that is the recompence which the Lord hath at our hands which may justly make us fear some heavy hand of God against us this being one of the sins of Sodom as every one that thus sinneth in particular may fear Beggery Deformity or some grievous sickness Let us therefore repent of that is past and labor to reform our selves herein and for those that be as yet free let them so keep themselves For 1. God hath forbidden garishness and excess in apparel and therefore except we will shew our selves not to regard his word we must take heed of it A grievous thing it is that people can come into the very house of God and there sit and hear what is said against it and yet are not moved but still continue in this vice which is as if they should say We will do it whatsoever is said against it They come to be reformed but will admit no Reformation 2. If we consider the coming in of apparel we shall have little cause to be proud of it for we had none in the state of innocency nor none needed neither hear nor cold could annoy us but now by reason of sin both do Besides we were naked and not ashamed when apparel would have been to mans body as a cloud to the Sun not to deck but to darken it for the beauty of Gods workmanship had been better then the Taylors workmanship but when we by sin had wounded our selves God was fain to cover it with a plaister our apparel then is a badge of our sin and ought to humble us in the remembrance of sin It s as a plaister that shews there 's a sore underneath now who is proud of a plaister but rather humbled upon the sight of it A grievous thing it is to turn that into sin that is given us to put us in minde and humble us for sin If any were adjudged to wear a halter all the days of his life would he be proud of it thought it were of silk or boast if he were to wear a silver or gold shackle Apparel is a badge of sin small cause have we to wax proud thereof how gorgeous soever They that thus do are proud in their own shame 3. It s a most unseemly thing for Christians to put excellency in apparel and to be so careful in these outward toys It becomes the the world well enough that know no better clothing neither looking for grace here nor glory hereafter but for Christians thus to do its base The other have their portion here and know no better thing therefore no marvel though they be very careful about this and as the Gentiles seek after the same and the like but Christians should think themselves best when they are modestly and lowly attired attired with grace We professing our selves Pilgrims here ought to live as Pilgrims and not follow the fashion of this or that Countrey in every fangle or garish apparel and so live as Citizens or Courtiers of this world We professing our selves to be travelling to Heaven must be humble and stoop low for the gate is straight we must not load our bodies and mindes with these things for they will hinder us in our journey 4. It s absurd to place excellency in such a thing as apparel for we borrow it of poor creatures which be far inferior to our selves The best silk is the excrement of crawling Worms the finest cloath but of the fleece of the silly Sheep so we borrow the skin of one the bones of another the hair or fleece of another Will any Nobleman borrow apparel of a mean Yeoman or if he were put to such a shift would he be proud of it or not rather be ashamed seeing we be put to borrow of the creatures so far our inferiors for our clothing having nothing of our own but nakedness we should not be proud of it Besides when we have done all we can there be sundry Heathens have better then we and many Players Dancers and Strumpets have as good and better yea there 's put upon Horses velvet gold c. and when all is done we are not so fine as the lilly of the field 5. When the outside is so much decked commonly the inside is neglected lightly both are not well lookt to but the soul the inside should be best cloathed the body is but the case of the soul and the apparel but the case of the body we never make the case of a thing so good as that we put up therein Presents of good worth are often lapt up in papers and so sent They that give themselves most to gay clothes have no leisure nor care to deck themselves inwardly therefore are like painted vessels having a fair outside but an empty and mean inside like a Jade with a velvet saddle and gilded trappings Will any man esteem the Horse because of them or will he not rather pull these off him and then try what mettal he is of In many men and women their outside is fairest but if an house were neatly painted without and like an Hogsty within who would not mislike it 6. Whereas such as set their minde so much on brave apparel look to be hereupon highly esteemed regarded and reverenced God notably crosseth their pride so as they miss their aym some laugh at them some envy them some are angry at them some speak against them O there 's a notable proud woman yea those that crouch to them yet in heart mislike them and the poor say Since gay clothing came up they could get but little relieve So whereas hereby they thought to please all they please none neither God nor man 7. It betters not them that wear it whether they be beautiful in body or deformed vertuous in minde or vicious If beautiful what needs such a deal of stir which doth indeed hinder their natural beauty If deformed hereby their deformity is not hid but rather made more known then else it would If vertuous it s not gay cloaths but their vertues that sets them out no more then a candle light gives
the King of Heaven That your prayers be not hindred The third Reason Using them ill will breed Contention and so make them unable to pray at all or pray amiss Here note 1. That the husband should pray with his wife God takes it here for granted and that also constantly the course of their prayers must by no means be broken off This is their daily homage to God they have daily need of pardon grace protection direction in all their affairs all which must be prayed for This hath promise of blessing and herein all Religion is contained This condemneth most husbands that never pray with their wives they have no skill nor will hereto an argument of a prophane man void of all Religion dead in sin for where there is the least spark of grace there will be crying to God How do these live as much Religion in their Hogs-coats as in their houses they live like Swine most Families in stead of being little Churches be Heards of Swine which live as if there were no God How do these look for a blessing God hath promised none but to them that ask it what common blessings they enjoy they enjoy not as fruits of their Prayers If we desire to be accounted religious and would have any blessing of God let 's learn to pray 2. That whatsoever would interrupt our Prayers is carefully to be avoided Thus as we are to avoid worldliness an ill conscience and the like so also contention and wrangling both with our neighbors and wives That party is unfit to Pray whose heart is poysoned with wrath and malice the Prayers of such are loathsom being thus our Sacrifices will not be accepted at Gods altar O what a grievous thing is it to lose our prayers What else have we to help our selves with What judgements doth not prayer remove What blessing doth it not obtain greatly doth he lose that loseth the benefit of his prayers Therefore let us beware of contention and strife especially with our wives Let us always keep our hearts calm and fit to pray Who knows what need he may have of prayer and that more then ordinary As men keep their Horses for service in plight and breath so keep we our prayers in good tune keep we them as a Pinnace ready to send out speedily and come home laden else we may miss many a good purchase Verse 8. Finally be ye all of one minde having compassion one of another love as brethren be pitiful be courteous Verse 9. Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing but contrariwise blessing knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing NOw he comes to certain general Exhortations that concern all sorts and states whatsoever and they tend to love and a peaceable and comfortable living together one with another Be ye all of one minde Not that he would have these Jews to be of one minde with the Idolatrous and prophane Gentiles amongst whom they lived but that being converted and believing Jews they would all consent and agree together in the matters of Faith and Religion of Christ that they would all embrace the Lord Jesus the onely Foundation and that some onely should not look for Salvation by him some by the Law and some by both but that all should seek unto him alone And as they were thus to agree in matters of Faith so also in their Civil affairs avoiding contention and strife The vertue then which is here exhorted unto is Unanimity a joyning together in one minde and one heart in one judgement and one affection For Unity in Religion though Errors be many yet there 's but one Truth which every one must know believe and walk in to Salvation Other foundation besides Christ there 's none all that believe in him shall be saved as they that miss of him building beside the foundation fall to the ground shall be ashamed and confounded We were all created in the Truth but since the fall become prone to error Christ is the Truth the Way and the Life and this are we to buy this is contained in the Scriptures for which we are to search Some foolishly imagine that every one shall be saved by his own devotion but its life eternal to know God and Christ Jesus whom he hath sent To be thus in one judgement in Religion is a great mean of peace as the contrary a great cause of dissention even disagreement in small matters makes alienations of affections much more in Religion This Jeroboam knew well he would not suffer the ten Tribes to come up to Jerusalem to worship as God commanded lest agreeing together they should fall from him but chose to set up a new kinde of worship at Dan and Bethel thereby to set them at oddes It s lamentable that so many are distracted into divers and innumeral Heresies and but a very handful have the Truth and be of one minde Some disagree from the Truth in the very foundation as 1. Heathens and Pagans living in strange kindes of idolatry being altogether ignorant of God and Christ. 2. The Jews that look for another Savior acknowledging the Father but not the Son but he hath that not the Son hath not the Father 3. The Turks that acknowledge the Old not the New Testament the Father not the Son 4. The Papists that hold some not all points tending this way as in the matter of our salvation parting the same between Christ and our selves 5. The Arrians and that base Atheistical Sect of the Family of Love c. Some though they differ not in foundation yet erre from the truth Such were the Donatists Novatians and such like of old as in our times the Lutherans beyond the Seas and amongst our selves the Separatists Those are led with a Spirit of pride and preposterous Zeal They were bred up in the Church and as soon as they were able to shift for themselves they spit in their Mothers face and call her Strumpet These be ungracious children they were never thus taught of Christ or his Apostles As we are to pity and pray for the former and that the Lord would deliver his poor people from the tyranny of the Turk and Antichrist giving the Gospel a free passage among them that with one minde and mouth they may glorifie God in Christ Jesus so for these Seeing there is little to prevail with them as having a proud conceit of themselves and their opinions le ts take heed we be not led away with them for herein they hazard their souls greatly that they forsake the means the Ministery of the Word and so may revolt or at least stand at a stay Whiles they be so quarrelling about matters of Controversie they neglect matters of Sanctification and Government of their lives Besides even among our selves that tarry in the Church there is odds and difference and thereby carnal worldlings
happy indeed but Moses had respect hereunto and did clearly discern the same Q. May we then offer our selves to trouble A. Ordinarily we must not If any in extraordinary times should feel an extraordinary zeal and desire hereto as it seems the Apostle Paul had when he would needs go to Jerusalem questionless they should have joy in their sufferings we must tarry till God call us Q. May we flee persecution A. If God make make us a way we may as who haply are not as yet so fully fitted and resolved to suffer as were meet or who know not whether God will have us scatter his truth further or remain to be as feeds thereof for afterwards but if we see that its Gods minde we should be s●ffer then it s our duty willingly and chearfully to put forth our selves This confuteth the foolish world that judging it to be a most miserable thing thus to suffer will therefore never come at it either not professing Religion at all or else revolting therefrom in time of trouble yet would they be happy but they take a contrary course they being ashamed of Christ here he will be ashamed of them hereafter In saving a transitory life they lose life everlasting yea how do we our selves shun sufferings as if they were miserable which do suffer whereas the Spirit of God hath pronounced them blessed Happy are they that suffer for a good cause for righteousness for Religion for conscience sake such as stick fastest to the truth provide best and most wisely for themselves what can their enemies do to us If they take away our goods we shall have a thousand fold more in this world and in the world to come life everlasting If they mangle our bodies God will raise up the same gloriously If they separate our souls from our bodies by death the Angels will carry them into Abrahams bosom If our cause be good we have cause to rejoyce in our sufferings so are we enjoyned so did the Apostles in their sufferings so also the holy Martyrs I might to this purpose alledge the story of Alice Driver of Priests wife in Exeter of the Christians in Edessa c. but that they may be read at large in the Book of the Martyrs O that we should be so discouraged at a mock at a frown of our betters O that we should be as soon ready to give over as to begin to do well though the more religious we are the more we esteem of the word the better both God his angels and people like us yet is it not so with the world they liked us better before but do not now approve of our course howsoever this is our duty hereof shal we have the benefit yea to be disliked to suffer for this will be our honor our advancement As David being mocked of Michol resolved to be yet more humble so should we be so much the more for goodness as we see the world oppose it and set themselves against us because of the same We must not be discouraged at the very greatest much less at small trials We know not what we shall suffer For yet we have not resisted unto blood onely let us be careful that we suffer for Righteousness and for a good cause for though we have some good things in us yet haply we may be brought to suffer for some fault in us and therein we can have small peace Beware we suffer not as Separatists that flie out against and from the Church that we suffer not for contempt or usual neglect of our Ministers if they preach the Word truly that we suffer not for rash heady hasty and violent carriage of our selves that we suffer not for our censuring for our meddling with things or persons wherewith we have nothing to do or for passing our bounds in things beyond our reach Servants must beware that they suffer not for their carelesness in their places as those which having liberty granted them to hear the Word upon their not profiting thereby are restrained therefrom so if they shall suffer for being negligent untrusty sloathful stout in answering again c. they suffer deservedly not for righteousness sake yea this their carriage makes the godly housholders to grieve and those that be not so well seasoned to think ill of the profession and it makes the name of God and his Gospel ill spoken of and hereupon many say Oh I le never meddle with these Bible-wenches c. fie upon it what a fearful thing is this The like may be said of the poor which neglect their callings and are caraless of their Families c. Note further That A godly man is blessed happy in what condition soever He is happy not onely in prosperity but even in sufferings even in the very lowest abasement nothing can make them miserable having God and a good conscience though they meet with affliction from God or persecution from men as here yet are they happy Imprison him fetter him let no creature come at him put Lyons to him c. yet he is still and shall be the childe of God the member of Christ the heir of Heaven a Kings son c. and how can he be miserable that hath the Comforter within For the wicked nothing can make them happy let a wicked man have Sampsons strength Absoloms beauty Ahasuerus his wealth Nebuchadnezzars stately Babel Dives his costly apparel c. yet is he miserable he is under the curse of God there 's but a step between him and Hell As Jonah was asleep whilest God was offended with him the winds raged against him the Whale was ready to swallow him so do the wicked eat sleep and are jovial while God is offended Heaven is shut up against them Hell gapes for them and the Devil waits on them as his prey Their security will end in a fearful wakening they shall be snatched from their beds of ease and cast into everlasting torments 1. This may encourage Gods servants to suffer for righteousness They shall not be the less happy let the world do its worst it cannot make them miserable They are every way happy in poverty sickness persecution and the like O who would not labor to attain this honor and happiness 2. It may disswade the wicked from their mischievous plotting against Gods servants For why do they pursue them To make them miserable its impossible They may indeed make them the more to shine forth through their constancy in Faith and increase their glory in Heaven and so make them more happy but to make them miserable they cannot O that they would break off this their course and be weary thereof for so long as they be wicked how rich soever or how high a pitch soever of honor they have clambered to they are miserable yea these and the like make them more miserable as being fuel to their lust being to
couragious in a good cause then stomackful if patient then blockish if wise in their matters then subtle fellows if diligent in their place very officious busie medlers troublesome if they run not to the same excess with others then precize fools c. Thus even for their godliness do they speak evil of them and so call light darkness and darkness light 1. Therefore Gods people must walk wonderful warily 2. They must not think it over-strange nor be discouraged if notwithstanding all their care of well-doing they be ill spoken of 3. We must not readily believe of men that have carried themselves well all that we hear but try it out ere we censure or change our minde 4. For ill speakers It s a woful badge of Ishmaels generation that shall be shut out of Heaven and of Satans brood who accuseth the Brethren Cursed are they God hath appointed a time to judge them for their cruel speakings Nay the world will not only speak ill of Gods Servants but do ill to them slay them as Cain dib Abel imprison them and pinch them as Ahab did Micaiah cast them into a dungeon as the people did Jeremiah into the Lyons den with Daniel spoil them of their goods as those in Heb. 10. 34. rack them torment them torture them even such as the world is not worthy of and that for their good works so Herod dealt by John Baptist and thus were the Apostles served and after the Martyrs in the Primitive Church and since multitudes under Antichrist If therefore we meet with hard dealing and doing as well as speaking we must not think it strange If we can hardly bear a few ill words how shall we bear stripes how Imprisonment and loss of all yea toturings and death ye have not yet resisted unto blood or undergone the fiery tryal we have infinite cause to be thankful together for our governors for if they were so minded as many particular persons there would be no peace for any zealous Christian If I had authority will some say I would hang up all these Puritan knaves c. Neither must we think the worse of those that be troubled for the the very best have been thus dealt withal They may be ashamed c. The best way to stop the mouthes of the world and to make them think well that they have done otherwise is not by goodly great words but by a good and constant godly conversation Thus David convinced Saul for he spared him when he could have once and again killed him Thus have many who have thought very hardly of such and such upon reports which they have heard of them upon the view of their godly and innocent carriage been much grieved that they were so far abused Thus were the Martyrs thought well of by the common people yea by great ones yea by their very Jaylors 1. As therefore we would muzzle and stop the mouthes of our adversaries that they may have nothing to say against us nay may be brought to acknowledge and love the truth and be converted and glorifie God in the day of their visitation let us live holily and innocently else if they finde us halting we set open their mouthes to speak ill continue them in their ill minde and hard conceit and set them further off from all goodness Too too many professors fail this way either they fall into foul sins or live not so christianly or else at least with zeal they are very rash and indiscreet by every of which much hurt hath been done from time to time 2. This sheweth them to be odde persons that knowing and seeing the innocent conversation of Gods Servants yet cannot be satisfied nor quieted but still speak evil of them a sign of a very bad heart who therefore will hate them because they be good whereas those that be but indifferently minded and civil seeing their good conversation will think and speak well of them Cain had no other cause to kill Abel but for his godliness nor Ishmael to mock Isaac but because he was the Son of the promise nor these to speak evil of those but because they are godly Assuredly a life agreeable to their profession should stop their mouthes Verse 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that ye suffer for well-doing then for evil doing NOw follow some reasons to perswade to willing suffering for righteousness sake which was then common and the profession of the faith dangerous 1. For that this being a world wherein we must suffer its better a great deal to suffer for well then for ill doing 2. Because the Lord will have it so to whose will we must be subject For its better c. Naturally we will chuse the better if we know it so should we in this seeing we are subject to suffering and that we are apt by nature to evil and so to suffer for it we must chuse rather as being far better to suffer for well then for ill-doing It s every way better better as being more pleasing to God he delights in the one not in the other pronounceth those blessed these accursed Besides it s no credit to suffer for ill doing but matter of shame and reproach whereas its honor to suffer for a good cause That of the penitent Thief seems to import so much we indeed justly for we receive the due reward of our deeds and so have cause to be humbled but this man hath done nothing amiss Again there 's no comfort in suffering for ill-doing as there 's for well-doing Suffering of it self is ill and grievous therefore there had need be somewhat to mitigate it but if it be for well-doing a good conscience will bear it out it s for Gods sake it s that wherewith all his servants have met and hereof the conscience takes notice and that to this there 's a reward none at all for the other 1. This rebukes those that suffer for their foul offences Theft Adultery and the like howsoever they be punished yet have they cause of hanging down the head not for the punishment but for the cause O how many refusing to be ruled by God and his Word bring misery upon themselves and ruine The Gaols are full the gallows catch many It s a fearful thing when they go to their punishment impudently and be not ashamed and humbled it s but the forerunner of fearful judgements When therefore men have brought themselvs into trouble justly their best way is to be humbled and repent so shall they finde favor with God and men We must avoid evil as we would avoid suffering for ill-doing avoid the sin if we would avoid the punishment We are also to be careful that we suffer not for Railing Slandering Backbiting Meddling with other folks matters 2. This may comfort them that suffer for well-doing its pleasing to God they
8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. as from the first so far forth as its a punishment and piece of the curse and the nature of it is changed to believers for whom Christ hath dyed it s become a Serpent without a sting yea a blessing as being hereby freed from sin and not before Hereby the soul is let out of the prison of this body into the liberty of Gods Servants and put into the possession of life Hereby also the body is freed from all toils labors infirmities and pains waiting in the Grave for an happy and glorious resurrection In which respect death is termed a sleep an advantage to the Saints and is better in the day wherein they were born So from all forerunners hereof which are curses plagues and punishments in body minde goods and name all which Christ hath born what crosses we meet withal they are to further our Sanctification and Salvation but not punishments for sin or parts of Gods judgement as they be to the wicked 2. We are hereby made partakers of all good God is reconciled to us which is more then to have our sins and punishments quite removed yea and sheweth us the light of his countenance not as David who though he staid his wrath from Absolom at his return home to Jerusalem yet was not fully reconciled to him of two years The Creatures also are at peace with us The Angels become Servants and ministring Spirits for our good in life to direct us protect us comfort us c. and at death to carry our souls to Heaven so all other Creatures the very Devils and wicked men shall do us no hurt we have also right and title to this life we lost it in Adam but have it restored in Christ. 3. Hereby he conveyeth power into the hearts of all that believe in him to enable them to dye unto sin and to mortifie their lusts more and more This is a singular comfort to all that believe in Christ who onely partake of the benefits of his death we need not fear Hell condemnation nor any enemy of our Salvation nor any curse or punishment in this life all shall be for our good we need not fear the first death but rather have cause to desire it O the happiness of such God is at peace with them all Creatures in Heaven and Earth are their friends they have right to whatsoever they have little or much therefore may they rejoyce O happy that ever we were born what pains soever we have taken to come to the knowledge of Christ Jesus by whom we obtain such unspeakable things whatsoever the world esteemeth of believers they are the onely happy persons in the world yea we shall have power to mortifie our strongest corruptions and lusts fear it not beg it and use the means if all these be put together O how happy is a Christian who can value his riches On the contrary they that have not their part in Christs death are most miserable their sins are not removed they lye under them so under the curse of God in this world and the world to come so in danger of the first death which will rend the soul and body asunder that the soul may be cast out into Hell so also of the second O that such would labor for their part in Christ Christ came into the world Christ is now Preached and offered unto us men be in a woful case and are told of it and yet how few regard to embrace Christ how few customers hath Christ one would think that all that hear of Christ should be heartily glad of him and embrace and flye unto him but alas most men for profits pleasures or love of their vile lusts are content to let go Christ and he lies as a dead commodity and they that bring him to the world be unwelcom and so indeed few have part in Christ. The consideration hereof might make us mourn for our sins the cause of Christs death might be a corrasive to eat our sin and make it odious to us might make us serve God zealously and faithfully all our days yea to suffer for his sake and rather to dye with the Martyrs then any way to dishonor him and besides to labor to finde the vertue of Christs death working mightily in us the death of sin and sinful lusts Thus of his death But quickned by the Spirit Now of his Resurrection His body and soul that had been sundred were by the power of his Godhead reunited and he made alive so continuing with his Disciples until his ascension into Heaven Touching it consider that it was so the Reasons thereof the place maner and time with the benefits flowing from thence and the duties thereupon to be performed That Christ rose again is so plain that none needs doubt thereof The Angels that rolled away the stone the Soldiers that watched the Sepulchre Mary Magdalene and the other Mary that came to see the Sepulchre the two Disciples going to Emmaus the eleven Disciples being together c. all were witnesses hereof So his appearances were many as to Mary Magdalene then to her and that other Mary then to two Disciples going to Emmaus then to them all save Thomas then both to Thomas and the others another time to Cephas another time to seven of them at the Sea of Tiberias as at another to Five hundred Brethren at once so when he was to ascend he was taken up in the sight of all those there present all which are so many evidences of his Resurrection Reasons 1. That it might appear he had fully discharged our debt 2. Because being the Son of God and Author and Lord of life it had been unmeet nay it was impossible he should be held under of Death 3. By reason of the second part of his Priesthood which was yet to fulfil One part was to offer himself a Sacrifice Propitiatory to God for the sins of his people this he did by his death now the other is to make intercession for his Church and to apply the vertue of his death to those for whom he dyed This he could not have done if he had not risen again The maner When they had rolled a great stone to the door of the Sepulchre sealed it set Soldiers to watch yet he rose They could as well have hindered the rising of the Sun in the Firmament as his rising An Angel was sent that caused a great earthquake and rolled away the stone c. No counsel or strength can hinder the work of the Lord. Place The same where he was laid which was by Gods providence to avoid cavils in a new Sepulchre hewen out of a rock wherein never man had been laid Time It was the third day early in the morning on the first day of the week the third day as was foretold by Christ himself for he was buried the evening before the Sabbath and rose
be stopt it runs so violently so small beginnings in sin grow to excess quickly and by degrees till they are past hope Let no man therefore give way to them stop them at first If Peter a good servant of God having made a breach in his conscience and sinned once in denying his Master was thereby stirred up to adde another breach and another thereto what shall become of the wicked Do not therefore say Is this such a matter c for one sin draws on another Speaking evil of you It is the nature of the wicked to speak evil of Gods servants they not onely think ill but they speak ill too it shall out It were good that we were so wise when we have good things in our minde that we would utter them we sometimes mislike things that be amiss but we will say nothing though we both might and ought Verse 5. Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead HEre is the answer to the objection whereby he heartneth on the good not to be discouraged at all for the wonderments and ill speakings of the world even for that they shall one day answer for this when they shall not be able to stand though they can now abuse Gods servants at their pleasure yet they shall answer it before him that will judge quick and dead at the last and dreadful day when they shall receive the dreadful sentence of eternal destruction for their labor From the whole note we thus much that The enemies and hard dealers with Gods servants shall not escape unpunished nay even they that do but speak ill of them shall not go scot-free Michol mocking David was stricken with barrenness and David often comforts himself in this case that God would take the matter into his own hand If he that calls any one fool and Raca deserves Hell fire what do they deserve which speak evil of Gods children If they shall answer for every idle word then much more for every railing reproachful word against the Saints of God it s to speak ill of the way of God to speak ill of them that walk in it for so doing as he that calls one an Heretick calls his Opinion and Religion Heresie and he that calls men fools calls their course foolishness It s to hinder men from coming to God or to drive them away being come Now this must needs be fearful for if they that win souls to God shall be rewarded in Heaven what shall become of them that do the contrary And if he that gathereth not scatters and he that brings not to God by words counsel encouragement and example is counted as an enemy and such shall be punished at the day of judgement how much more they that have professedly hindred men from heaven what are those but Factors for the Devils Kingdom deep enemies they are to God that will not onely not serve him themselves but mislike and would hinder them that do like the Devil who fell himself and then would perswade man so to do that God might have no Creature to serve him He were an odde servant and whom his Master would assuredly call to an account who neither would work nor suffer his fellows The conversion of a sinner makes the Angels rejoyce therefore the putting them from God makes them heavy and the Devils merry He that converts a sinner saves a soul as he that puts men from God destroys them Besides whatsoever is either done or said against any of Gods children it s accounted as done to God himself and if they that have done them no good shall be condemned much more they that have injured them 1. Let those repent in time that are guilty this way else they shall be called to a reckoning when they have forgot it and where shall they appear when God shall come to judgement O they shall wish the hills to fall on them It s a fearful thing to fall into his hands he is a consuming fire wo unto them if his wrath be kindled but a little They that have not been helpers of the servants of God have a fearful answer to make what have they then that have misused them assuredly a deep place in hell 2. Let all take heed that they never give their tongues leave no nor move their lips against a childe of God as to mock them revile them term them precise fools humerous people Puritans c. Do it not on any ground for lightly God suffers not such to go unbranded even in this life but to be sure there 's a day they shall not escape 3. This may well stay the mindes of God servants not onely not to be discouraged but to persevere God will take their parts and right their wrongs their day is a coming when both before Angels and men they shall be arraigned convicted and condemned and we shall lift up our heads and receive our full reward It would be no small comfort and encouragement to us if we would thus live by faith Ver. 6. For for this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are dead that they might be judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit HEre he returns to his former matter his Exhortation to Sanctification pressing the same by another reason from the end of the Gospel and the preaching thereof that wheresoever and whensoever it hath been preached this hath been the end thereof to bring men to Sanctification and holiness of life to dye to sin and live to God by the Spirit of grace By Gospel we are to understand Christ Jesus and the onely way of salvation by him By Dead we are to understand their forefathers that lived before Christs coming who were then dead when the Apostle spake this not that the Gospel was preached to them when they were dead but when they lived here By being judged according to men in the flesh understand dying to the flesh namely the lusts and corruptions of their sinful nature As by living according to God in the Spirit to live a spiritual godly life to Gods liking by his regenerating sanctifying spirit For this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead Here note That the gospel was preached before Christs time as to Adam in Paradice so to Abraham so to those under the Law in their Sacrifices Washings Sacraments c. See Gen. 3. 15. Joh. 8. 50. 1 Cor. 10. 3 4. Heb. 11. Those then and we now are saved by one the same Christ He is the Way the Truth and the Life Yesterday and to day and the same for ever There was never but one Covenant since the Fall God never altered his minde The distinction of old and new is not in respect of substance but of the maner of Administration to them more darkly to us more clearly
that are all for themselves as for any other either they will not bestow any thing at all or no more then needs must and most Christians are too nigardly For the worship of God some think that any thing bestowed this way is too much that this is the worst and idlest money bestowed this may be they could be content with a blinde Sir that would live of crusts and if they can pull away the Tithes and make a bargain with a Minister half for nought they think it well gotten and many that might procure the Preaching of the Word to them onely the want is their hearts are so glued to the world they had rather have their Hogs then Christs company among them The blinde devotion in times of Popery to build Churches and Religious Houses will condemn the wretchedness of our times If a Church be but decayed in our days there must be a Collection all over the Countrey if not many Shires for the reparation hereof And how do men hide and conceal their Estates that they may be freed from the paying of Subsidies and Taxes and so deceive the King of his due And what wincing is there for the payment of the poor the true poor If it were not out of the fear of Law and Justice they would pay nothing or as good as nothing Hath not God made many promises what unbelievers are these that will not take Gods word Their goods thus spared prosper not long for God will be true hence come so many changes of owners even because men get and keep their goods unlawfully Thus many instead of wealth leave their children an heap of chaff that blows away God will rifle in such goods and besides at the last day what account and bills will these be able to bring in that they spent all on themselves or wasted all in riot or spared all from those good uses they should Their bills will not be taken they shall hear this sentence O evil and unfaithful servant thou hast been untrusty in a little who shall trust thee with more take him hence binde him hand and foot c. but to those that have employed them well it shall be said Come ye blessed of my Father Well done good and faithful servant thou hast been faithful in a little enter into thy Masters joy O then let us learn this sobriety We have an enemy to resist who if we be drunk with the love of the world will assuredly have his will of us and is not the end of all things at hand If we be drunk when our Lord and Master cometh what shall be our portion we must dye we dye daily in our neighbors And watch unto prayer This is not to be understood of the bodily waking of the eye from sleep though the Papists so transfer it and therefore keep certain Vigils and Watches for Saints certain nights of the year though upon occasion we ought with David to keep our eyes waking in the night that we may praise God and pray unto him but it s meant of a spiritual watchfulness whereby we have an eye to our hearts and ways that we do nothing against the will of God but may ever be doing that which is good and acceptable in his fight which is a notable help to further a man in a godly life to the kingdom of heaven and this is performed by those onely who having obtained mercy of God and assurance of pardon see cause why they should turn to him serve him and give themselves wholly to him This watchfulness is well put after sobriety as sobriety is set before it to make way for the same for as a man drunk with wine cannot keep awake but sleeps like a Hog so he that is drunk with the cares of this life cannot watch spiritually This watching is a looking to our hearts and all our ways that we may be always kept from evil and ever in a good course Therefore as Watchmen use to examine all Passengers and accordingly deal with them so ought we to watch against all enemies which are evil thoughts evil words and evil deeds which do either directly proceed from our own ill heart or by the temptation of Satan and the world To prevent evil thoughts we must keep the heart with all diligence This is the fountain that sends forth such streams the furnace from whence comes such sparks If our thoughts be wicked impatient unclean proud c. we must suppress them and beat them down but if good holy and pure let them pass for true men so we must take heed to our ways that we sin not with our tongues Our tongue is a slippery member an unruly evil able as little as it is to do much hurt and he is a perfect man and able to rule all his body that can rule his tongue we must therefore set a watch before the door of our lips and examine all our words And for evil actions we must also beware of them we must take heed to our ways watch all parts and members of our bodies that no ill action break forth and accordingly as Job Covenanted with his eyes we must with every member We must examine every action at our going about it if any evil one pass from us and break as it were through the watch we must be grieved and repent and thereafter be more watchful As the eye-sight and eye-lid are necessary in the body so is watchfulness in the soul we are continually in danger of falling the Devil the world and our own lusts be our enemies if we suffer them to break in upon us we dishonor God and spoil our selves of our peace and comfort And as we must watch against all evil so must we especially against those we be most subject to as wise and careful Watchmen will have most care of the weakest parts of their City And as we must watch to keep out evil so must we to do good and that both privately and publikely towards God our selves and our brethren And not this onely but watch that we do good as we ought to do in a right maner we must look to our hearts in our callings and in our best duties for even then they will beguile us and the right maner of performance is all in all Thus in prayer we must watch against private pride hypocrisie wandering thoughts c. so in the Word against Infidelity prejudicate Opinions c. this must be all the day through and in our particular actions for it s not enough to have a general purpose of well-doing or of a godly life but we must look to every particular action through the day we must not be good by wholesale but by retale not in the sum and gross but even in particulars there must not at any time be an evil heart in us we must be in the fear of the Lord continually As in journeying suppose to York we
and Pharaoh's Officers were imprisoned but he unjustly they justly Such as are reviled are blessed provided it be for the Name of Christ and for Righteousness sakes 1. This rebuketh all that suffer for ill-doing especially such as rejoyce therein as 1. The Papists who keep a Kalender of Martyrs I warrant you that have suffered in our late Queens days and since but they be the Devils Martyrs if they be any If they had not impudent faces they would be ashamed of them for why have they suffered for their Religion no such matter Have they been asked what say you to the Mass to Worshipping of Images to Justification by Works c. if you will not recant these you shall dye no such thing but they have been convicted by Witnesses or their own Confession of Treason and Mischief against the Prince State and Common-wealth and for these have they according to the Laws of all Countreys and Kingdoms as pestilent instruments been cut off Yet if they had been put to death for their Religion they had been no Martyrs for it had not been for the Truth or Gospels sake but for maintaining Lyes and Errors None can dye the death of a Martyr who hath not first lived the life of a Christian which they did never they are even as good Martyrs as those of our own that be executed for their theft and murther They have a multitude of Saints in their Kalender that be Fire-brands in Hell 2. Such as for their crimes and faults bring sufferings upon themselves as thieves murtherers c. woful wretches they have cause to hang down their heads both in respect of their sin and the punishment that doth befal them they are herein companions with the Devil and Reprobates that they suffer for their sins Others bring punishments upon themselves for their Drunkenness Whoredom Cousenage Oppression Quarrelling Idleness c. Others bring an ill report upon themselves being noted and ill-spoken of for Lyars Backbiters Slanderers Tale-tellers Covetous Pinehers Hard Dealers Gamesters Company-keepers c. 3. Such as are professors of Christianity and it may be have some good things in them which yet are justly blamed for some faults for one may be a Christian and be blamed and yet not for his Christianity but for something he did before he was a Christian or for some fault that is yet in him As some be justly blamed for being such deep censurers of others so for separating from the Church living in no Church at all but setting up any ignorant persons to take upon them the office of Preaching So some among our selves are justly blamed for being too proud given to censuring and medling with matters that concern them not So some poor men that have nothing but their Labor and a Family depending upon them that yet be negligent in their Callings and look to live of others and it may be go to three or four Sermons in a week and tarry abroad a day or two here three or four there or as some go from house to house and live of others who though they can talk well yet must not be negligent in their Calling or of their Families So a number of Servants that profess Religion are very desirous to hear every Sermon who yet are idle lazy careless and untrusty thinking that a little profession of goodness should bear out all when-as thereupon there 's more required at their hands These cause the Name of God to be ill spoken of fie upon it it is your Masters duty to let you come to the Word and is it not as well your duty to give them an account when you are come home which some of you do not at all and to shew the fruit of your hearing by your faithfulness in your particular places 2. Let all beware of these kindes of sufferings and those that have besmeared themselves thus seek to wash themselves clean again by repentance to God and better conversation to men let us walk so warily that we may not in any case grieve the Servants of God and that the wicked may finde nothing justly to speak ill of us as thus He is a Professor but covetous idle proud c. as the Princes though they watched Daniel narrowly could finde nothing against him but in the cause of his God Yet if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Now of the other kinde of sufferings whereof no man ought to be ashamed If a man suffer for Christs sake his Christianity godliness for that very cause and in that onely respect for his goodness for holding the truth of the Gospel for yielding obedience to the Word Hereof none need be ashamed but rather thank God for the same Here note That Sufferings for godliness be glorious they be the marks of Christ Christs sufferings no shame belongs to them for no shame belongs to Christianity The Cause is good and glorious accordingly must the sufferings so be No shame belongs to goodness no shame among Turks to be counted and known a Christian among Papists to be a Protestant among common Protestants to be a zealous server of God that desires to bring into practice that which we outwardly profess we need not care who know we be such shame came in with sin and belongs to sin to suffer for goodness whether it be by word or deed as to be Apprehended Imprisoned put in Irons Whipped c. is not shameful but glorious the Apostle Paul might have boasted more of his iron Chain then others could have of their golden Chains No suffering is base if it be for a good Cause If one should be put in a vile Dungeon dragg'd at an Horse tale c. yet being for the Cause of Christ he needed not be ashamed 1. This rebuketh all such that are ashamed of goodness and to be ill spoken of for it not onely the common sort who are ashamed of no evil as of Covetuosness Swearing Sabbath breaking c. but do even strive who should exceed others therein are ashamed of the least goodness and would not be seen with a Bible in their hand or in good company or to speak a good word lest their companions and betters should upbraid them No beware well they are not worthy of the honor they shall not need to fear it But others that have some goodness in them as one would hope that are yet so ashamed of being seen to be too forward would hear oftner but for fear they should be counted Puritans have their Landlords frown c. and accordingly grieve if they have a rebuke for their forwardness Alas poor Creatures that see not what is their glory are ashamed of that they should glory in namely their goodnes which is the thing that commends every man even Kings in the Scripture are not otherwise commended but for their goodness Others as great as they are either branded with reproach or passed by in silence that had no goodness
in my minde But I will not spend any time to approve or disapprove the one more then the other but speak something of both as in some such cases is not unusual nor amiss when both may very well stand and it be difficult to say which is the true meaning of the place this or that For the first The duties of people towards their Ministers laid down in the fifth commandment stand in these four things 1. They must reverence them for the dignity highness and excellency of their Calling in which respect they are termed Angels Stars the light of the world Gods Ambassadors 2. They must yield obedience to them in their Ministery 3. They must willingly allow them a sufficient maintenance that they may wholly without distraction attend on their souls 4. They must pray for them both that their Ministery may be fruitful and that they may long continue amongst them of those the second is the principal Namely that People must submit themselves to the Ministery of the Word in the mouths of their Ministers as we stand bound to preach so do you to hear and obey For Blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it that are doers as well as hearers God hath not appointed us to Preach in vain but for the conversion of people The Ministery is ordained to work faith to convert souls it was the peoples request with promise to hear and do God hath yielded and sanctified it to be the onely ordinary means not reading not preaching by an Angel even the foolishness of Preaching by the hand of men to save them that believe If Ministers must be called to an account for Preaching shall not the people how they have profited and if a wo to us if we preach not is there not to them if they repent not For this cause our Savior upbraided those Cities wherein his mighty works were done not because they would not entertain him nor hear him as the Gadarens but because they repented not we have done you no good nor have you heard well till you have repented and be converted till you have obeyed from the heart the form of Doctrine delivered you The Law humbleth the Gospel wo●●th Faith both bring to a reformed new and godly life we hear aright when we go away pricked in our hearts Till then there 's no good wrought on us as appears by the Prophets complaints Isaiah 49. 4. and 53. 1. Jer. 6. 10. else no mark of Election faith being a demonstration hereof we make sure our Election by our effectual calling The Apostle also termeth the Thessalonians Elect of God because the preaching was not to them in word onely but in power and they received the word in much affliction and became followers of us c. and that they received his preaching not as the word of man but as it is indeed the Word of God not to hear and obey is rather a mark of reprobation as in Eli's Sons If we be Christs sheep we hear his voyce in the Ministery and follow him O what an excellent harmony would this make if Ministers preach faithfully and the people become converted and then built up in all obedience thereby 1. Then this rebuketh the woful contempt of the world at most hands for how few yield obedience thereto look in all Towns how many ignorant persons that have no knowledge neither will have any give their mindes to none but pul in their heads that they might not see the light that would glister in their faces who so blinde as he that will not see These are far from conversion This is condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkness rather more then light So how many prophane persons that live in some known sin though some more outragiously then others as in Drunkenness Whoredom Malice c. That hear not though the Charmer charm never so wisely and do even stop their ears God knocks at the door of their hearts but they will not open his Ministers cry out against their sins yet they rush on every one after his own hearts lust and hateth to be reformed having a pardon brought and offered them if they would come in they stand out What will become of these having refused to hear a gracious voyce offering mercy they shall hear a fearful voyce denouncing judgement not hearing a voyce calling them to him they shal hear a voyce commanding them from him and as he called and they refused so shall they call but not be heard or regarded What shall these have to say for themselves Their iniquity shall stop up their mouth How many civil persons are there also that be not converted if they so continue they shall perish unless they be born again truly humbled planted into Christ obey in all things not in the duties of the second Table onely giving men their due but of the first also giving God his they cannot be saved What should I speak of worldlings that are so glued to the world as they savor not at all of Heaven or heavenly things no such thing can enter into their hearts either they hear not the Word at all or the thorny cares of the world quickly choak that seed What of Hypocrites some professing outwardly and yet living in some known sin others not so bad that yet fall far short having gone some steps and hoping that all is well These were never as yet truly humbled and so not converted so had not that that accompanieth Salvation these hear but not aright Every man therefore must examine himself how he hath heard and whether the Word hath been a means of his true conversion and whether he make conscience to submit himself to the precepts thereof They that can prove themselves thereby converted how comfortably may they go on walking in obedience thereto Contrarily the care of others is dangerous for think not that our preaching will go away unregarded or that it s no matter how you have heard Oh! Preachings and Sacraments be dangerous things life or death can do a great deal of good or as much hurt to them that obey its Salvation but to the disobedient it s the savor of death unto death This is a fearful sin in this Land and the cause of all our plagues by reason whereof we may fear worse Remember the wo pronounced against Chorazin and Bethsaida 2. This may be for exhortation to all that as they come and hear so to submit themselves and pray God to make his word effectual by his Spirit So shall God be glorified if of Lyons we become Lambs If won from Satan to God The Ministers shall rejoyce as having the greater Crown The Angels in Heaven will rejoyce having new fellow Servants yea God himself will rejoyce the Father as having a new Son Christ as having another member the Holy Ghost another
a Hammer a Sword and sharp Arrow they are like the Devil who both slandred God to Adam and Eve and Job to God and to this day is the accuser of the Brethren Such shall not be established on Earth neither shall they come into Heaven no place fit for them but Hell yea not onely the devisers but spreaders of Lyes so common a thing is fearful Thou shalt not walk about with tales among thy people saith God by Moses The receivers also of a false report are excluded out of Heaven and they that love lyes Oh! let none wrong their Neighbors any maner of way Magistrates Informers or whosoever Let none devise or spread abroad lyes no nor truths to their Neighbors discredit without a calling But alas what more common all folks talk then to talk of other folks matters and many times of their faults not at all of any good that 's in them We must not rashly believe what we hear against any especially having before given good testimony of their goodness yea as we would have God deal with us and ours we must not wrong any do right even to our poorest servant For them that suffer wrongfully it s their duty to behave themselves patiently looking up to God as David did when Shimei railed not fretting or raging or saying as its usual It would never have grieved me if it had been so rather say It grieves me much less because it is not so I thank God for the same it might have been if God had not kept me it was of him and not for any goodness in me more then in others I le bear it patiently for though I have not deserved it of men yet of God I have even to be made a threshold for all to tread on and a by-word and though I have not deserved it of men in this yet in some other things I have I have been faulty towards my Neighbors good name and now it s come home to me I pray God I may make a good use of it Besides it may be the Lord sees I might have faln into that or some other sin and hath sent this to prevent it preventing Physick is good blessed be his Name or he doth it to keep me humble c. Thus God that brought light out of darkness teacheth us how to bring good out of evil Thus we may make use of a slander Neither must we think that because it is wrongul we may fret and rage and make a stir and rail so should we make our selves guilty who were innocent before but may open our innocency and clear our selves as Job yea if it should concern us nearly but especially the Gospel then may we have recourse to the Magistrate for redress Thus of suffering wrongfully Touching suffering for well-doing Abel Isaas Joseph Micaiah are pregnant Examples hereof So David met with enemies because he followed goodness so our Savior Christ so suffered the Prophets Apostles Martyrs Thus many at this day even for their goodness they are hated and the better they be the worse they are hated They are not of the world and the world hateth them As sore eyes cannot abide the Sun so cannot the ill lives and consciences of worldlings who wallow in their works of darkness abide the light of Gods Word or the good conversation of godly men it makes their wickedness the more seen and they must mislike either themselves or the others but themselves you are sure they will not nay so wretchedly minded are they as to hate those that they know not but as they have heard of their goodness and rail on them and its pity they live or are suffered will they say who notwithstanding if they were put to it were unable to say one word justly against them By this time the Gospel ought to have been so beloved as that all that have shewed any good countenauce thereto should have been the better thought of but now Oh fearful that 's become a Reproach which should be every mans glory Oh you are a Professor of the Word c For those that thus hate men for their goodness it s as dreadful a sign as can be They be like the Devil are in darkness shall not enter into Heaven they are of Cains generation and Ishmaels brood God loves men because of goodness and the Angels rejoyce at a sinners conversion but these hate them for their goodness and so are unlike unto God If such as give but a cup of cold water unto a disciple in the name of a disciple shall not lose his reward shall not they be extremely punished which mock and despise them which hate and persecute them and that for their goodness They that do the least wrong to them in that respect or eo nomine shall not go unpunished For they that will smite with the tongue now would with the fist if they might yea carry to the Prison and to the Stake if times would give leave Well let them know the persecutors reward belongeth to them and how hath God from time to time dealt with such The examples of Cain Ishmael Ahab Jezabel Herod c. witness the same Besides when they would be glad to have part with the Children of God they shall be banished and have their portion with Devils and Reprobates and that in a fearful maner For if they shall stand on the left hand and hear that dreadful sentence Go ye cursed c. that have not given them meat and drink c. What shall become of them and what place shall they have in Hell that take away their meat and drink that cast them into Prison and do there deal cruelly with them The Papists are notable in this kinde who have even been drunk with the blood of the saints God will recompence tribulation to them that thus trouble his For those that are hated and punished for well-doing let them learn to bear the same patiently It s not without Gods will that hereby they might give glory to him and a seal to his truth We must not flinch away when trouble comes as many and most have done and so save themselves whole and leave Christ and his cause to shift for it self the world count them fools that will suffer any thing for his cause and themselves wise that can carry themselves so as they will be for all assays but Moses was not of that minde He chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season These will prove fools at last that for a few days of short life in pleasures and profits transitory have sold away their part in that which is eternal For he that saves his life shall lose it and they which deny Christ before men them will he deny before his heavenly Father When we suffer for well doing we must not suffer frettingly with raging against them
and with ill speaking as it were with revenging our selves but in meekness commend our selves and the cause to God It s a fault in some Christians that being hated at some hands for their profession and forwardness and yet some need not be so much if they would walk more wisely and discreetly they then fall to taunting of them again calling them by● names and thus use this carnal weapon of the world this becomes not Christians what would they do if they should suffer great matters The Martyrs gave no ill language Christ and Steven prayed for their Enemies we must abating our ranco● imitate them neither must we write bitter enveighing things against them in a carnal scoffing or railing maner as Martin Mar-Prelate but behave our selves patiently yea joyfully we are Gods witnesses an high honor few called thereto Is not the Gospel the truth Is not the Word of God the onely true Religion we must then testifie the same to the world and set our seal to it yea to dye for it O it s a great advancement and so have Gods children acknowledged it It s a token of Salvation to them that thus suffer Great is their reward in heaven The souls of them that are slain lie under the altar The holy Martyrs went singing to the stake and thought that there they were as in a sweet bed of roses and St. Paul boasted of his Chain and of the marks of the Lord Jesus Verse 21. For even hereunto were we called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps FOr even hereunto were ye called Another Reason taken from the Ordinance and wise disposition of the Lord who hath so ordained that all his shall suffer troubles therefore we are to look for them and bear them patiently Through many afflictions we must enter into the Kingdom of Heaven here in this world we must undergo manifold troubles and sorrows All Gods Servants finde the truth hereof as the Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles did in their days less or more some one way some another God knoweth how ill we can bear prosperity but are ready to surfeit thereof as Children do of sweet-meats Who can long enjoy prosperity and not be the worse David that in all his troubles spent his time so holily and made many Psalms in his prosperity foully forgat himself so Solomon Standing waters gather mud as the Israelites in their journey to Canaan suffered much so must we in this wilderness before we come to Heaven thus is God pleased to exercise us for his own glory and our good Therefore 1. We must not think the worse of any because of their afflictions or conclude them to be bad men and hypocrites which was the fault of Jobs friends and of the Disciples of Christ. 2. We must not think the better of our selves for prosperity God can afford the dogs the bones the things of this world Of hated Esau came twelve Dukes the fatness of the Earth and the dew of Heaven is but a Reprobates portion the Legacy of Ishmael nay no worse sign then to prosper in an ill course 3. We must not dislike our selves for our afflictions It s an argument of Gods love and not of his hatred Whom he loves he chastens and they are Bastards that be without affliction to have afflictions and to profit thereby is the sign of an happy man 4. We must prepare for afflictions not dreaming for ease or continuance of Peace but looking for troubles in this valley of Tears they are the better born when they be lookt for and be the more grievous when they come unexpected In the midst of prosperity its good to think of affliction as in health how we shall do if sore or long sickness or pain come upon us so in wealth of poverty whilest we enjoy our liberties of Imprisonment and banishment yea after our affliction we are to look for another If we be spared for a while we must take it for an advantage and labor to be better prepared against it comes 5. We must bear them patiently as being of God They come not onely from him that hath Soveraignty over us but from the hand of a merciful father for our good They are far less then our deserts or then others have had and we have many comforts mingled therewith 6. We must bear them thankfully as whereby we are furthered in holiness Hereby we are was●ed and purged the Cross is physick though not toothsom yet wholsom We thank and reward the Physitian for loathsom pills and potions that have even for the time made us sick at the heart as being the means of our recovery Our fault is that we look upon our troubles not to the benefit that comes thereby our greatest losses are oftentimes our greatest gains 7. We must bear them joyfully in respect of the eternal happiness and immortal glory we shall be shortly brought to Because we look not at this end we are so unwilling to undergo troubles as one that would go over a water without fear must fasten his eyes on the shore over against him so must we in affliction fix our eyes on Heaven 8. If the children of God get not to Heaven but through many sorrows and are often so grievously afflicted in this life what shall then become of the wicked and ungodly Have those been chastened with rods and shall not these be tormented with scourges Those have been afflicted for a time that they might live for ever and not dye eternally These shall perish eternally in Hell torments If they that serve God night and day with all carefulness and are zealous in his service and yet are grieved that they can do no better nor as they would what shall become of those that blaspheme him daily without ceasing and their grief is that they cannot dishonor him more and rejoyce when they most despite him More particularly and most specially in this place the Apostle meaneth of sufferings that are for well-doing and for a good conscience of the men of this world Hereunto hath God called us He that will be his Disciple must take up his cross All that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution They shall be hated of all men for his name sake In the world we shall have trouble If we be not of the world the world will hate us This way hath the Lord sanctified as the way to glory and herein have the Prophets Apostles and Martyrs gone before us It s impossible it should be otherwise considering the implacable malice of Satan and of the seed of the Serpent God also will have it so 1. That his true servants may be distinguished from hypocrites and time servers Every body will serve God in prosperity a man is not tryed till affliction comes as a Soldier in the
will but either will live in all their sins or onely yid in what they list and so trample the precious blood of Christ unde●●eir feet and despise the gracious offer of mercy One would think th●very man hearing such a gracious voice and offer of a Savior sh●ld flie to it and that it should suffer violence every one saying O ●me embrace it let me as they did at the Pool of Bethesdai O ●t at the stirring of the water some might step in There might b●ne at once but here if an hundred would they should all be closed 2. O then me your benefit of the Gospel by yielding obedience thereto Belie and repent and then happy are ye that ever ye heard else you shall c●t the time that ever you heard the Gospel O ungrateful world unhappy company It will vex them and encrease their torment ●ee that mercy was offered so often and yet they like woful caytiffs despise the same to obey the Gospel is the note of a good christian let appear by thy hearty obedience thereto that thou art such a one Verse 18. And if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear HE proceeds still in the foregoing reason taken from the comparison between the good and the wicked whereof the former though they have many troubles and afflictions yet they shall in the end be eternally blessed and saved in Heaven though with some difficulty the latter though they flourish and prosper for a while and many of them persecute the former yet they shall end their life with misery that cannot be expressed and have a fearful appearance before God on the last day If the righteous Servants of God get hardly to Heaven the wicked how glorious soever in this world shall never be able to appear in Judgement before God but in a most fearful maner which is not set down by a bare affirmation but by way of interogation for the greater force where there is comfort for Gods Children notwithstanding their troubles and the wickeds prosperity they shall be saved and terror for the wicked notwithstanding all their present jollity their end shall be fearful Speak we first of the position The righteous are scarcely saved then of the comparison if it be so where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear If the righteous Hereby we are to understand not such as be perfectly righteous in themselves and without sin for if there be any such as there is none they should not scarcely and with difficulty be saved but according to that do this and live easily and without stop Even the most perfect have not been without their own failings there was impatience in Job infidelity in Zachary c. not meant the righteous in their own conceits for these shall never be saved as for whom Christ came not nor such as having attained some common gifts as of knowledge to profess to reform some things c. seem to themselves and others righteous but yet are not so truly but as the seed sown on the stony ground and the house built on the sand but such as be truly righteous though not perfectly yet in some respect perfectly to namely 1. By the righteousness of Christ Jesus imputed unto them by Faith They that have their sins pardoned in his death and his righteousness imputed to them are truly righteous yea and perfectly too as ever they shall be in heaven 2. By inherent righteousness wrought in the hearts of Gods Children and Believers by the Spirit of Sanctification whereby they be sanctified throughout though not perfectly yet those God vouchsafeth to call righteous though they be but so in part and have remnants of corruption abiding in them yet they are so called from the better part as an heap of corn that lies on the floor though there be chaff in it and that much 3. For that they endeavor and daily labor after more righteousness as one is called a Schollar or by the name of the trade he is entred into though happily he can do but a little onely endeavors for skill and knowledge therein Of which elswhere 1. This setteth out the exceeding goodness and mercy of God that vouchsafeth thus to come and call such poor and sinful creatures as we be pestred with such a deal of blindeness and so manifest corruptions yet seeing he seeth an heart in us to hate them and suppress them he will not reckon of us after them and though we have but a little grace yet because it is true and of his own working that we have and that we would fain have more he accounts of us according to that we would be and not that we are 2. This is an exceeding comfort to Gods true Servants can we believe Christs righteousness imputed to us and feel we an universal and true change in us then may we rejoyce God calls us by glorious names Saints Holy ones Righteous let us not then be dismaid at our imperfections or corruptions which we labor to mortifie le ts not say with some because of them we are none of the Lords we have such sinful hearts c. Neither let us suffer the Devil to pluck our Crown from us or rob us of our comfort making us believe that we be none of the Lords as some few be thus in danger especially at first though many Christians make too light of their sins as long as God speaks so graciously let us not believe what Satan our adversary saith onely let us care to grow more and more in grace 3. This rebuketh those wretched mockers that reproach the Servants of God that labor to please God and dare not do as they O you be of the righteous you be so righteous c. Is not this right like Ishmaels mocking of Isaac O you be the Son of the promise you are the dainty one c. Such shall be shut out with Ishmael unless by repentance they prevent it Why say you thus because you think it to good a name for them Is thine eye evil because Gods is good what hast thou to do seeing God calls them so or is it because thou wouldst not have them so Yes but if thou beest not also so thou shalt never inherit the Kingdom of Heaven Scarcely be saved Hereby is not meant rarely or that but a few righteous ones shall be saved For whosoever believeth shall be saved and to every one that doth good shall be glory and honor and immortality and There is no condemnation to them or any of them that are in Christ Jesus Nor is it meant that there will be difficulty at the day of Judgement whether they should pass or no have or miss Salvation no for God knoweth who be his and their names be all written in the Book of Life and if they were righteous here and had the Spirit the seal of their Redemption and earnest of their Inheritance as they
pass to it at death so shall they have no stop at the day of judgement Among earthly Judges when a cause hath gone current on a mans side a great while yet at last either by corruption of Jury or Judge or by some evidence come to light not seen before all may be dasht and turn'd the other way It shall not be so at Gods judgement seat there will be question made of the damnation of some but no question made of the salvation of any of the godly But the difficulty is in this life it s an hard thing for a man to get to heaven called therefore a Straight gate and Narrow way a hard thing to come to be a Christian a converted person and an hard thing to continue therein and grow forward God hath much ado to bring us to grace and then much ado to hold us therein as he had a great deal ado to get his people out of Egypt and into Canaan sometimes themselves by murmuring lingering c. and sometimes others as Pharaoh the Red-sea c. proving hinderances thereto so hath he to get one of us out of the bondage of the Devil out of the Egypt of sin The Devil holds the world hinders yea our own wretched nature is not willing to come out What a stir hath he how many Sermons Threatnings Promises secret gripes of Conscience Warnings of the Spirit purposes to come out and yet keep in still ere we will yield yea how is God fain almost to pull us out by some crosses or sharp afflictions as the Angels pulled Lot out of Sodom how hardly are we throughly humbled for our sins when cast down how hardly comforted when we have got it how hardly do we keep it what a stir with our hearts to leave our old courses and take new and when we have begun yet what ado to hold out what revolting and backsliding hearts have we ready to wax cold and to linger after our old lusts so hard it is to do any good duty well The Devil like Pharaoh pursueth us and labors by all means possible to hinder us from all good altogether or from the right performance of it so also to draw us to all evil Then the world like Pharaohs Soldiers labors to hinder us by their ill example by ill counsel by vails of profits and pleasures and if these not by reproaches and troubles that it will raise up Our own Nature is worst of all as having a lingering after our old sins as the Israelites after the fleshy pots of Egypt sometimes we think like them we shall never hold out there be such lets in the way high walls and Anakims c. so that we get forward hardly as a man that were to go up a steep hill and had three great weights hung at his back so that we have such continual need of the Word Sacraments Prayer Meditation Conference Watchfulness that unless hereby we wax cold and grow out of order nay notwithstanding all these yet what ado to keep our hearts and lives in order and our selves within compass but we slip and stumble and grieve and up again and down again yea if the Lord to all these means should not adde some one or other affliction it would be yet more hard The Lord is fain to pull us with that strong cord also and this is chiefly meant here they are scarcely saved even because they are forced to be brought through many troubles so that as a man that is to climb such a steep hill as he cannot fasten his feet but is fain to get Daggers in his hands and sticking them into the ground c. may be said hardly to get up and as when two Armies fight for a Town one while one part prevails another while the other at last the better side prevails but notwithout much pains many wounds shrewd blows and continual labor we may say They got the Town hardly the like may be said in this particular Who knoweth not the truth hereof in his own experience how hardly canst thou be humbled how hardly drawn to renounce thy lusts how art thou fain to wrestle before thou canst do any good what continual need hast thou of prayer good company c. yea who knowing any thing seeth not he hath need of his crosses and that it was good for him that he was afflicted 1. This crosseth the most gross and yet most common conceit of the world that its an easie matter to be saved that there 's no need of such preciseness but that if men mean well God will be content and though one have lived badly yet at what time soever they repent for which a quarter of an hour is enough it shall be well with them and hence it is that the Word and our Preaching is of such small account and that so few take any pains to be saved but take pains for the belly and back and to grow rich c. Ignorant persons look not out but content themselves with a blinde good meaning without any part of a good life so prophane persons so worldlings so civil ones Though the Scripture requires us to labor strive give all diligence study seek yet will not they take any pains nay not onely so but they laugh and gibe at them that labor herein as fools or idle persons What art thou woful wretch that darest cross the Lord so directly He saith It s a strait way and few finde it and to this end bids Strive Thou sayest it s no such matter If it were as thou dotest Christ might not onely have spared those speeches but indeed the whole Scriptures for what use of any but to bid people live as they list and at last cry God mercy and all is well No God must make new Scriptures and chalk a new way to Heaven ere ever thou shalt finde that thou lookest for But what art thou that neither wiltst take pains to save thine own soul nor canst be content that others should Dost thou think that they be idle persons that take pains to hear the word O they could follow the world and that too hard but that they know one thing is needful Could they not sit at home in their chairs or keep their beds as well as rise and toil c. but that they know that they cannot so get Heaven but that they have need to use all means and that little enough though thou seest no such thing Indeed to lead a careless life to do good if it come in the way and if ill come in the way to be as fit for that c. a few Sermons and little hearing may serve for such a life but this is not the way to get Heaven If ever thou wouldst be saved thou must change thy minde and practice and believe the Scriptures that its a strait way and accordingly bend thy self to begin to take pains to see and confess thy sins to labor for faith to turn