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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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Hee gave himself to deliver us out of this present evil World Gal. 1.4 3 No man hath benefit by Christs death but hee that with the Apostle is crucified to the World and the World to him Gal. 6.14 4 The World as it hath no part of his death for hee dies not for the World so no part in his intercession John 17. I pray not for the World 5 In the entrance of our profession wee have not onely renounced the World but proclaimed and vowed war against it and therefore shall prove no better than runnagate Souldiers yea Apostates if we sight not against it The love of the World is a leaving of Christs colours 3 Consider what cause there is in the World to love it 1 In respect of God it is contrary to his nature Hee is Holy Pure Righteous the World lieth in unrighteousness It is contrary to all his Commandements Hee commands Holiness and Sanctification it incites to all uncleannesse in soul and body Hee commands Truth Sobriety c. It teacheth to Lye Swear Curse Slander and Circumvent Hee commands all fruits of the Spirit it injoyns all the works of the flesh Hee commands to give our goods to the Needy it wills us to get our Neighbours 2 In respect of it self it is changeable variable inconstant and wilt thou affect that which thou canst not hold or injoy 3 In respect of thy self is it not madness excessively to love that which doth thee so much harm pricks as thornes and pierceth with so many sorrows crosses losses persecutions which if thou beest good will fight against thee and pursue thee with mortal hatred and only slayeth those which resist it not 4 Consider wee what strangers and pilgrims wee are in the World and so bee moved to lay bridles upon our affections which is the Apostles argument 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved as pilgrims and strangers abstain from earthly lusts Let us estrange our affections from this World and deal as wise Traveller● that make the greatest Cities but thorow-fares to their own home Use 2. Let this Doctrin moderate our affections in seeking and having yea and not having the things of this life This is the common error that men look altogether upon the Beauty Glory and fair side of the World and wealth of it but never look upon the inconveniences of them and how strong they are to pull us away from God or how apt to make us a spoil to Satan which one consideration would somewhat abate our heat and affection towards them How ambitiously do many affect promotion and great places not considering in what slippery places their feet are set How eagerly doe they desire wealth as though it had no power to draw the heart from God and the wealth of Heaven How unsatiably doe they pursue pleasure not considering how the Devil insnares them and makes them lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God Surely were men acquainted with their own hearts they would not suffer them so to rove in these desires Oh saith one if I were a rich man how liberal would I be to the poor But alas he knows not what spirit he is of the Devil would make no doubt to change his mind it his state were changed and make of this liberal man either a Prodigal or an Usurer or an Oppressor and doe much more mischief than he can in his low estate Oh saith another were I in high place I would right wrongs and set things in order But so said Absalom and yet who did more wrong than he deflouring his fathers Concubines and deposing if he could his father himself And such right would many doe if they were in higher place All which is an argument how open we lye to Satan in such estates To conclude this point observe these few rules 1 Put on the Lord Jesus Christ and care not to fulfil the flesh 2 Vse the world as not using it Rom. 13.14 1 Cor. 7.31 3 Count all things dung for Christ as Paul did Phil. 3.8 whose bloud is set against and above all corrupt things 4 Pray that thy heart may be set upon Gods statutes and not enclined to covetousness Psalm 119.36 First seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness c. 5 Whether thou hast the world or no shew not thy self a lover of it by encreasing thy wealth or bettering thy estate by swearing lying deceiving 1 rejoyce in no part of it which God reacheth not to thee by good means desire none but that on which thou mayest crave a blessing and for which thou mayest return praise hold none but with moderate affection and mind to forgoe when God calls for the whole or any part to good uses use none but with sobriety as not using it and that ever to Gods glory and the good of men Vers 9. All these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me NOw after the preparation standing in the choise of a fit place and presenting a glorious Vision we come to the dart or temptation it self in which there is 1 A profer All these will I give thee 2 A reason For they are mine and to whomsoever I will I give them 3 The condition If thou wilt fall down and worship me And first of the profer Before he had shewed his Wares now hee tells the price All these here is no pinching nor parting of the matter but 1 Christ shall be an absolute Monarch none shall share with him There is the extent of the profer he will part with all 2 The quality of it All these the glory beauty wealth and all that can be desired in the world all that he saw and nothing else he would give him unmixed and unblended glory and honour without sorrow trouble shame or vexation for he saw none of them 3 I will give thee but he will not barter or sell these so dear to Christ as he would to another but he will deal kindly with him he will as good as give them to him if he will but make a legge and thank him for them Doct. Note here the nature of all the Devils promises they seem to be liberal and very fair whereas indeed they are miserably foul and deceitful Who could expect more frank and plain dealing than is here pretended but look a little nearer we shall see it vanishing into nothing but deceit and mischief For 1. What is this great all that he makes profer of A great catch just nothing but shadows and representations of things in themselves nothing at all but the show he had made 2 As this great all was but a show so it was but for a moment for shadows cannot continue and what were Christ the better if he had been put in possession of the things themselves if they so suddenly vanish away before he can give a sight of them 3 His best and largest promises here are but in the transitory Kingdoms of this life which all pass away as a
more plain and sharp than they as appeareth 1 In the title he gives him Satan 2 In the commandement Avoyd First he calls him Satan which is the third name given him in this History for he had before been called a Devil that is a false accuser and a Tempter and now he is called a Satan signifying an adversary or enemy 1 To God directly 2 To man both in his person whom he often possesseth and vexeth Mat. 4.24 and also in his estate which hee doth often endamage and impoverish as we see in Job And Christ doth now so tearm him 1 To shew him that he takes better notice of him than before for he called him by no name before though he was called by the two former tearms by the Evangelist 2 That we should see further into his nature the more to beware of and detest him 3 To shew us how we may detect an adversary and smell a Devil namely when he sets against and opposeth the grounds of religion 4 To teach us that hee is no friend that offering us wealth and honour would draw us from God and religion The greatest kindness here is the greatest cruelty Avoyd 1 This is a word of indignation as we say to a Dogg avant for Christ was much offended and angry against this temptation when he saw and heard Satan so impudent and blasphemous So Christ gives this as a reason of the same speech to Peter Avoid Satan for thou art an offence unto mee Christ shews indignation because Satan shews his blackness 2 It is a word of rebuke and castigation of Satans importunity and impudency who would not bee satisfied at the first and second assault but still renews more hellish and horrible temptations Thus Luke expresseth it Hence behinde mee as one not worthy any longer to behold his face 3 It is a word of dismission or sending him packing and carries in it the force of a Commandement An Heretick saith the Apostle after once or twice admonition avoid Tit. 3.10 Thus deals our Saviour with Satan here who is Haereticorum haereticissimus An Arch-Heretick as a great man talking with a wrangling fellow whom no reason will perswade commands him away hee will hear him no longer Quest Why was our Saviour so angry at this temptation above the former wherein he exercised Meekness and Patience Answ 1 His Wisdome knew how far hee was to bear Satan at this time and how much to suffer from him and then how his mouth must bee stopped which Meekness and Lenity would never do there is no hope to win or overcome a Devil with kindnesse nor to shake him off that way nay rather this will more invite on his malice he will go so far as hee is suffered 2 Christ thirsted after mans salvation and his love to us and our redemption made him so angry with the Devil who sought by all means to hinder it for had hee been defiled with sin the work of redemption had availed us nothing 3 To note the hatefulness and detestation of that sin of Idolatry whether it bee covert or open that if our dearest friends should solicite unto it even the Wife of the bosome wee should pursue them to death and so shew our deadly hatred against it Deut. 13.1.6 4 The two former more concerned himself but this concerned his Fathers Glory directly hee hears him claiming all to bee his quartering the Armes and Royalties of God making himself a God and challenging worship due to God this hee could not bear his tenderness and zeal to his Fathers glory would not endure so vile a creature to carry away no not to challenge any part of his worship Doct. Gods causes must ever more affect us than our own How full of lowliness and meekness was our Lord and Saviour in all his own causes Hee did not strive nor cry neither was his voice heard in the streets Hee would not break a bruised reed nor quench a smoaking flax Isa 42.3 Matth. 12.20 When hee was reviled hee reviled not again When hee was called Glutton Drunkard a friend of Publicans and sinners Matth. 11.19 28. in stead of returning rough Language hee calleth saying Come unto mee all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will case you Hee was led as a sheep to the slaughter and opened not his mouth when they accused him of capital things knowing that his answers would not bee taken hee answered not a word Now hee was in his own cause But when hee takes his Fathers cause in hand how doth hee cloath himself with zeal which even consumes him Joh. 2.15 in purging his Fathers house hee laies about him and whips out the abusers of that holy place Moses in his own private cause was the meekest man upon the earth being contumeliously worded by Miriam and Aaron hee presently pardons it and prayeth for Miriam and gets her cured of her leprosy In Exod. 32. that froward people was ready to stone him yet when God begins to bee angry with them hee forgets all and praies God rather to put his name out of his book than not to pardon their sins But seeing the calf his calm spirit is vanished and hee breaks the Tables of stone that were in his hand The Apostle Paul every where provokes Christians to meekness patience and laying aside of revenge and stirringness of spirit in private causes yet Act. 17.16 when hee saw the idolatry of the Athenians his spirit was stirred up in him 1 The Religion which wee profess Reasons should bind us unto God most straightly therefore Augustine noteth the word either à religando or à relinquendo that where religion is it will leave all for God And hence is self-denial enjoyned as a necessary preparation to him that will profess Religion 2 Gods Glory is preferred by himself above all his Creatures as being the end of them all and therefore must so bee of us even above our selves for of him and through him and for him are all things Wee see in the Common-wealth how the instruments of publike Justice if any service bee commanded from the King must lay aside their own business and ease and execute the Kings pleasure before their own Such a good servant for his Lord was Paul saying My life is not dear unto me so I may finish my course with joy 3 Our Lord Jesus hath more affected our cause than his own what an infinite love shewed hee in descending from his glory to work the great and painful work of our redemption what infinite misery did hee sustain to help us out of it what an happinesse forsook he to recover us to that which wee had forsaken what a dear price did hee pay for our ransome when we were lost Is it not fit now that wee should bee earnest in the cause of such a friend May not hee well disdain that any thing in the World never so much concerning us should bee preferred before him yea or equalled with or loved without him
many and mighty powerful miracles which were signs from heaven shewing that hee was from heaven And yet for all this they beleeved not So Matth. 27.42 the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees said If hee bee the King of the Jews let him come down from the Cross and woe will beleeve him No doubt Christ could but bee would not not onely because it was an hour of darknesse but because hee know they would never have beleeved him Psal 22 2● 23. I will declare thy name to my brethren to the seed of Jacob to Israel Reasons 1 This practice of Christ is answerable to his precept Matth. 7.6 Cast not holy things to doggs nor pearls before swine By holy things and pearls are meant the things of Gods Kingdom Christ and his merits c. so called both to shew the excellency of them in themselves being above all pearls Prov. 3.14 as also our duty to prize and lock them up in our hearts and keep them as we doe our pearls safely in our memories By Doggs and Hoggs are meant malicious and obstinate enemies convicted of enmity against Gods Word of whose amendment there is little hope every man naturally is an enemy to God and his Word and so a dogg and a swine as Christ called the Heathens and Gentiles It is not lawful to take the children bread and cast it to doggs Now to such as these we must preach and offer the Sacraments yea Christ offered himself and came to call sinnets but when his Word and Miracles were rejected and himself evil intreated as among the Pharisees then saith Christ Let them alone they are blind leaders of the blind 2 Christ shews himself unto none but such as he loveth and love him Joh. 14.11 and this was the ground of Judas his speech Lord what is the cause that thou wilt shew thy self to us and not to the world the world sees him not for none seeth him but to whom he sheweth himself and he sheweth himself to none but such as love him and none love him but such as love his word and keep it vers 23. 3 This was one cause why Christ spake so many things in Parables that such as would be blind might not see and such as would not make a right use of his holy doctrin might not understand Matth. 13.13 For many that heard them let them goe without further question in a careless manner whereas the Disciples of Christ inquired of him his meaning and one learned of another and so that which for the difficulty drave others away became in this manner of teaching much more easie and familiar yea much more perspicuous and clear than any other 4 Never could extraordinary means convert such as beleeved not the word the ordinary means and therefore Christ never or seldome gratified the Scribes and Pharisees with Miracles or extraordinary means because they resisted his Doctrin Person and Works or if any wicked men saw any of his mighty VVorks and Miracles they saw not himself in them as Pharaoh what a number of Miracles saw he yet he was never the better he would not acknowledge God nor his servants and in the Wilderness they who saw Miracles every day and moment yet not beleeving the VVord of God in them were never the better the arm of the Lord was not made bare unto them Vse 1 Ignorant persons that know not Christ nor desire to know him are in a woful estate being such as Christ counts unworthy to reveal himself unto and therefore he either keeps the means from them or leaves them without grace to make an holy use of them Numbers of men to whom Christ never revealeth himself Vse 2. In worse case are they that have the means and yet no tast of them no reformation by them their covetousness their pride their drunkenness and uncleaneness will not be left as many that come to Church to hear the VVord and receive the Sacraments and yet are no better than Doggs and Swine and altogether unreformed in their lives and courses Some draw the VVord of God into question and would be taught by Angels or Miracles as Satan here but Christ will not make himself known to them no more than to him so saith Abraham to Dives in Hell when he denied his request They have Moses and the Prophets if they will not beleeve them neither would they beleeve if one should rise from the dead Some are resolved to live as they list let the Preachers say what they can whereas he that is in Christ to whom he reveals himself is a new Creature for Christ speaks to the heart not to the ear only Others say they are decreed to life or death and therefore doe what they can they cannot change Gods mind and hence never goe about to change themselves But had Christ shewed himself to these he would have directed them to the means of saving knowledge namely to the Scriptures which testifie of him Joh. 5.29 and to faith which unites to him and to the fruits of faith which testifie the truth of it to his glory and their comfort Others will be saved by saith alone and by a profession of the Gospel and so neglect the works which justifie it and the power of godliness whereas if Christ in the Ministry had revealed himself to such he had quickned their faith and not left it as a Carkass for faith without works is dead Others poor simple people will be saved by mercy alone and never labour for knowledge faith or true feeling of their own estate and care not how sin abound that mercy may abound much more But had Christ met with them hee would let them see their misery in the causes and effects and teach them to hunger after mercy in the means and having obtained it to goe and sin no more lest a worse thing follow Others disclaiming the doctrin of mortification and self-denial therefore dislike the VVord as too straight a Doctrin stripping them of their pleasures and profits and hence some hold on in their lusts some return with the Swine to their wallowing in the mire they cannot dye to sin they cannot live without laughter mirth and sports Whereas had Christ revealed himself unto them he would have taught them that his yoke is an easier yoke than the yoke of sin Three properties of such as to whom Christ will make himself known and that there is no sound comfort but in mortified affections and actions Vse 3. VVhosoever would have Christ reveal himself fully unto him must labour to be thus qualified 1 He must be humble for he teacheth the humble in his ways Psal 25.9 but the proud hee sends empty away as rain makes vallies fruitful but falls off the mountains which are therefore barren 2 He must long and desire to meet Christ in his Ordinances for Christ is the scope of the VVord and Sacraments therefore desire to know nothing but Christ Crucified goe to the tents of Shepheards where
hee any sluggishness or dulness in his nature to hinder his prayer neither did hee ever make a prayer which did not merit of it self to bee heard or wherein hee was not heard 3 Miraculous which is above the strength of man and is sometime given to the Saints to commend their doctrin as unto Moses Exod. 24.18 and to Eliah 1 King 19.8 And of this kind was our Saviours fast because no man can fast so long or half so long and remain alive and much less can a man fast so long and not bee hungry all the while as it is said of Christ Secondly The reasons of this fast are 1 Negative 2 Affirmative I Negative 1 It was not to commend fasting as the Papists teach for it is no commendation to fast when one hath no stomack or is not hungry as Christ was not Besides it is in it self no worship of God but a thing indifferent and onely commanded and commendable so far as it is an help to religious exercises 2 Much less that wee should imitate him as the Papists do in their Lent-fall For 1 it is none of the moral imitable actions of Christ but effected as other miracles by a power transcending the strength of men and Angels yea by the same power whereby hee gave sight to the blinde and leggs to the lame hee is as imitable in one as in the other 2 If they will imitate Christ they must abstain from all food not onely from flesh and that for forty daies and forty nights for Christ all this while are nothing yea and they must not bee hungry all the while as hee was not Luke 4.2 3 Christ did not fast once a year as they do but once in all his life 4 There is no proportion no agreement between Christs fast and their Lenten fast for 1 Christs was a total fast an utter abstinence theirs is a mock-fast They glut themselves in the time of their fast with most dainty meats and drinks in fulness and delicacy Christs fast disagreeth from Popish fasts in seven things or eight 2 Christs was voluntary theirs is forced against the use of the Primitive Church among whom it was left free to every mans Conscience when and how long it pleased him to use it neither were any Laws set down for the Lent-fast yearly to be kept in imitation of Christ till Gregory the Great or as other write Telesphorus Bishop of Rome about four hundred years after Christ but it was free for the time and kinds of meats 3 Christs fast was for a necessary cause their 's in times of joy when no just cause urgeth for the times sake for custom and superstitious imitation when no publike danger is to be prevented nor any special grace to bee obtained whereas by Christs fast the greatest evil in the world was diverted and the greatest good procured 4 Christs was without ostentation in secret in the Wilderness when none saw him whereas in Cities and societies of men hee ate and drank but these will bee known to fast and with the Pharisee profess I fast twice a week c. 5 Christ fasted not as counting some meats unclean which are all good and ought not to be refused as unclean but received with thanksgiving as sanctified by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.3 4 5. They fast with condemning of flesh and whatsoever cometh of it as unclean for that time which is more Jewish than Judaism it self for even in the Ceremonial Law those things that were pronounced unclean were never to bee refused as unclean in themselves but only in regard of the Commandement But much more now all difference of meats being taken away according to Peters vision Acts 10.11 may all be lawfully used at all times for the nourishment of man and the contrary is a doctrin of Devils 6 Christ fasted not without instant prayer for even the Saints of God alwaies when they did fast joyned prayer which otherwise were but a bodily exercise 1 Tim. 4.8 And hence fasting is often put for fasting and prayer Hester 4.3 16. But they fast in want of extraordinary prayer and when no need or occasion is above ordinary 7 Christ did not fast as placing the Kingdom of God in meats and drinks whereas they account the observation of their fasts a thing meritorious to satisfie for sin and purchase the Kingdom of Heaven which is their common doctrin wherein what else doe they than attribute the Kingdom of God to meat and drink 8 Let them shew where the people of God ever presumed to imitate the fasts of Moses or Elias if they cannot how dare they embolden themselves to imitate Christ and injoyn the meanest of their Disciples so to doe under pain of Damnation for this is the boldness of Bernard saying As Christ forty days after his Resurrection ascended to Heaven so none can ascend thither that fasteth not these forty days And yet here I condemn not the Lent-fast among us so it be observed only as a civil and politick Ordinance and not as any religious fast or observation for I esteem it as lawful for a King for a time to forbid his subjects some sorts of meat and injoyn others as he seeth most fit for his Common-wealth as for a Physician to prescribe a diet to his Patient forbidding some meats and appointing others for the health of his body Much less doe I condemn all fasting in general but wish it were more observed than it is so it be rightly But this fast of the Papists in the institution observation causes manner and end of it is wicked and sacrilegious Christ fasted this fast for four causes II. The affirmative ends of this fast of Christ were these 1 To prepare himself by fasting and prayer to his most weighty calling for although Christ was full of the Holy Ghost and seemed not to need the benefit of fasting and prayer to fit him yet he took on him our infirmities with our nature and as man needed such help as our selves doe 2 To teach us not rashly and headily to enter upon or undertake any calling but by fasting and prayer to prepare our selves who have more need of preparation than Christ had and to get Gods blessing on the same but especially this concerns the Magistrate and Minister Obj. You said this fast was not for our imitation Ans True it was not in the extent but in the end it was in the former Christ is to be admired in the latter to be imitated 3 To set out his Miracles and Divine power for the honour and authority of his Person and Doctrin to shew himself the Son of God Obj. Moses and Elias fasted this fast and yet were meer men Ans They did it by his power he by his own they were upheld by the power of God but he by his Divine power their fasting was but a type and shadow of this But to make every man able to imitate this fast obscures Christs glory and
the Jews his works hee did What a number of Devils are now in the World continual instruments of wickedness alluring and drawing men from God and goodness yea their Trade is to allure unto evil as those that draw men to strumpets and are bawds to that filthy sin so to Ale-houses and there provoke them to drink and to excess Those that draw men to ordinary gaming houses such as stir up mens spirits to revenge such as with-draw men from Gods house and good exercises such as disswade from Religion and strict courses such as commend onely loose and disordered mates for boon companions In all these the speech is true Homo homini daemon one man plaies the Devil with another All of them are plain devils incarnate tempters and as the devils company is to bee avoided so is theirs Use 5. That wee may bee most unlike unto Satan wee must bee continually provoking and moving one another to love and good works Heb. 10.24 and exhort and edify one another 1 Thess 5.11 Every Christian must by holy example and holy admonition bring one another forward in goodnesse if they bee weak to confirm them if slow to provoke and quicken them if astray to revoke and recall them Hereunto consider these motives 1 Shall Satans vassals exhort and perswade one another to evil Four motives to stir up one another to good as Satan doth to evil and bee more diligent to help one another to Hell than wee to set forward Gods work and help one another to heaven 2 Consider the bonds between us and our brethren 1 The bond of nature all are one mold and one flesh and the Law of nature binds us to pitty and releeve their bodily wants and much more their souls if wee can If their beast lay under a burden thou wert bound to help it up but thy brothers soul is under the burden of sin A good Samaritan will not pass by the wounded man like the Priest and Levite but will step near him and have compassion on him 2 The bond of the Spirit which yet ties us nearer for if wee must do good to all much more to the houshold of faith this bond makes Christians to be of one body and therefore as members of one body to procure the good and salvation one of another they are children of one father brethren in Christ who have one faith one hope one food one garment and one inheritance will one member refuse to impart his help his life his motion and gifts to another 3 Consider the excellent fruit that ensueth this godly care of provoking one another to good hee that converteth a sinner from going astray shall save a soul James 5.20 and the fruit of the righteous is as a tree of life and hee that winneth souls is wise Prov. 11.30 4 Consider these dull and backsliding times full of deadnesse and coldnesse wherein wee see a general decay of zeal love delight in the Word sin bold and impudent and piety almost ashamed of her self and name Ah wee have great cause to quicken one another as Travellors will call forward the weary and faint and encourage them both to speed and perseverance and as souldiers will animate and incourage one another against the common enemy so must wee in our spiritual fight against sin and Satan The tempter is so much the more busy because his time is short and wee must bee the more diligent because the time is so dead Came to him Here may a question bee moved How Satan came to Christ being a spirit Satan cometh to a man two waies I Answer Satan commeth two waies 1 Inwardly and more spiritually and that either by suggestion troubling the heart and understanding and thus hee put into Judas his heart to betray his Lord John 13.2 or else by vision worketh upon the phantasy 2 Outwardly and corporally either by some instrument as to Christ by the Scribes Sadduces Herodians and Peter or else by himself in some assumed bodily shape Now after what manner was Christ tempted I answer Howsoever some good men think Christs temptation was onely in motion inwardly and not externally and visibly yet I think it was chiefly externally and in a bodily shape assumed Their Reasons for their opinion are two 1 Because in the words following the Devil shewed Christ all the Kingdomes of the world in a moment which to do in a corporal manner were impossible and therefore it was but in motion and cogitation But that is but to insist in the question and when God shall bring us to that place wee shall see that even this was done really and not only in imagination 2 Reason out of Heb. 4.19 where it is said that Christ was tempted in all things like us now say they our temptations bee inward by cogitations and suggestions and therefore so was his But this is much weaker than the former for if hee were in all things tempted like unto us it is plain hee was externally tempted as wee bee Adam by Sathan in the external shape of a Serpent Saul by Satan in Samuels shape and it is the general confession of witches that their spirits appear in an external shape of cats mice c. Our reasons which probably conclude the contrary for it is no fundamental point necessarily and stiffely to bee held because the Scripture is not plain in it are these Christs temptation external and in a bodily shape assumed for four reasons 1 As Satan in his combate overcame the first Adam in a bodily shape And external temptation so it is likely hee came against the second Adam in some bodily shape And that hee thus externally assaulted him by outward objects is probable by these things in the text 1 Hee spake often to Christ and Christ truely spake and answered 2 Hee said command these stones not stones in general but either offering holding or pointing at them being real stones as Mr. Calvin saith 3 He wills Christ to fall down before him and worship him even by bodily and outward gesture and citeth Scripture for his second temptation 4 He took him and led him to the pinacle of the Temple by local motion neither was the second temptation in the wilderness as the former was but in the holy City Jerusalem and on the pinacle of the Temple as after wee shall see 5 Christ bids him depart 6 How could hee hurt himself by his fall if it were onely in vision 2 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth imply a corporal access by which these temptations differed from the former wherewith hee was exercised in the forty daies of his fast for they were lighter skirmishes and lesser onsets by suggestion sent out like scouts but now hee comes in person with all his strength and thus he now came and not before 3 Some good Divines make difference between Christs temptations and his members which giveth good light in this question that whereas our temptations are chiefly inward
to Hell and made him actually know and confess he was the Son of God but he would not for sundry reasons Christians must overcome adversaries rather by patience than by power 1 To teach us that as he did we must rather overcome Satan by humility and patience than by power as Christ obtained his full victory not by majesty but by abasement and passion 2 To teach us that when wee suffer indignity and wrong of evil men as Christ here of the evil one wee should rather turn our selves to Doctrin and convincing them by the Word than to revenge so did Christ 3 That we might hence know the power of the VVord of God a part of our spiritual armour even the sword of the Spirit put into our hands by God to foyl and vanquish him by for the whole Combate of Christ was exemplary nay hee sustains here our person and wields our weapon for us 4 Christs humility and meekness was now a fitter weapon than power and glory in two respects 1 To the greater vexation of the adversary who thought himself so strong and cunning as no flesh was ever yet able to resist him only he knew God had him in chains but now he is foyled by the seed of the VVoman by the wisdome and weakness of Christ as man and not by his Divine power as God 2 Christs meekness lets him goe on and pass thorough all his temptations to his greater and utter overthrow and silence for if Christ by his Divine power had cut him short at the first hee would have said that God fearing his weakness would not suffer him to be tempted or not to abide in temptation Now his mouth is shut Christ the Son of man foyls him 5 To comfort us 1 By shewing us that there is something else besides Divine power to overcome all hellish and Satanical power withall for else wee that want divine power and are weaker than water could have small comfort but now wee see Satan may bee overcome of weak men by the means that Christ used as fasting prayer and the Word of God 2 By perswading us that if Christ in his humility and abasement could encounter and foil Satan much more can hee now help us being in his glory and exaltation If hee can rescue us out of the mouth of the roaring Lyon when himself is as a Lamb before the shearer much more when hee shall shew himself the mighty Lyon of the Tribe of Judah Hence note that Doct. Christ cut not Satan here so short as hee did sundry wicked men nay Christ not so rough with Satan as with some wicked men nor as with some of his dear Disciples Reasons as hee did some of his beloved Disciples Peter how sharply was he checkt for disswading Christ from Jerusalem and Joh. 21.21 when hee asked curiously concerning John what hee should do Christ said What is that to thee so he might have said to Satan what is that to thee whether I be the Son of God or no but hee doth not 1 Not because hee loves his Disciples and Gods Children worse than Satan but because the Devil and wicked ones must bee let go on to the height of impiety as Satan here and Judas how patiently did Christ bear him all the while yea at his apprehension calling him friend they go on to confusion without check or bands almost in their life and death But he will take up his children in the beginning they must not bee let run too far as good Parents reclaim their children timely 2 God declares his power in taking the wicked at the height as Pharaoh Rom. 9.17 For this cause have I stirred thee up that I might shew my power in thee and that my Name might bee declared to all the world if Pharaoh had been taken at the first the Lord had never had such glory of his overthrow 3 The Lord hereby declares his long patience to vessels of wrath Rom. 9.22 all which bountifulnesse and patience because they abuse and are not lead to repentance by it they are excuseless and condemned justly as having heaped coals of wrath on their own heads Who could so long have indured Pharaoh but patience it self 4 The Lord hereby declares the riches of his glory upon vessels of mercy whom hee hath prepared to glory Rom. 9.23 for as hee hath prepared them that is decreed to glorify them so hee daily prepares them to glorious uses as wee do our vessels by rubbing and scouring separating corruption from them and the rust of sin by his rough handling them judging them in the world not to condemn them with the world Use 1. If the Lord bee not so quick with thee in his corrections as with others thou hadst need bee the quicker with thy self to judge thy self The greatest judgement of all not to be judged at all and see what estate thou standest in that thou bee not in the upper stairs and room of sin Take heed of thy self when God lets thee alone to thy self The greattest judgement of all is not to bee judged at all When a man hath cast off his Son and lets him run his own riotous waies as careless what becomes of him it is a certain sign hee shall never injoy his Land so is it with God and the sinner pacing on without controul in his sin Vse 2. If Christ bee thus meek and patient with Satan himself and God use so great patience to vessels of wrath this commendeth unto us the grace of meeknesse towards our brethren much more 1 This is the Commandement of our Saviour who was a special School-master of meeknesse Learn of mee for I am lowly and meek Hee was herein testified to bee the Son of God because the Spirit descended on him in the likeness of a meek and harmless Dove and thus wee must testify our selves the Sons and children of God by the lighting of the same Spirit of meekness upon us Gal. 6.2 2 A meek spirit is much set by of God and preserveth peace with men by soft answers and readiness to forgive and pass by offences Vse 3. This reproves men of a fiery and furious disposition men as meek as rough Esau right Ismaels their hand is against every man and every mans hand against them like Lamech who if hee bee provoked will revenge a word with a blow a scoff with a stab But others let them alone offend them not you shall have them meek enough tractable enough but move such a one but a little by a word or the least neglect as may bee Oh he is presently as meek as David at Nabals churlish answer hee will kill and slay even all presently in his hot blood But is this Christian meekness to bee so boisterous like a suddain wind which thy self scarce knows whence it is or whither it tends no but a brutish meekness for even the beasts will scarce stir unprovoked nay wee say the Devil is good so long as hee is pleased
good purposes and practices Which is the rather to bee learned because wee have that within us which will make us easily daunted in good things as Peter himself after hee had been long with Christ was so daunted with the voice of a Damosel as hee easily forsware 〈◊〉 Master All Satans instance in evil it to bring us from instance in good against whom wee must every way fortify our selves First In the subdoing of any sin or corruption how will nature recoyl how stirring will Satan bee to keep his holds how many baits and objects will hee present unto thee how many fears and losses and crosses as rubs will hee cast in thy way and all to drive thee from the field against thy sin But now is a time to make use of this Doctrin Are wicked men so constant to the Devil at his instance and must not I bee constant for God at the instance of his blessed Spirit I will hold out by Gods grace and if I be foiled once and again as the Israelites in a good cause against Benjamin I will renew the battel the third time I shall at length carry away the victory this sin is one of Satans band like the captain and I will not bee driven out of the field by such a Craven that will flye if hee bee resisted Secondly The graces of God are as so many precious jewels locked up in the closet of a godly heart the Devil is instant to rob and bereave us of these wee must bee as hardly perswaded to give up these as to bee spoiled of our earthly treasure and riches 1 Our faith were a sweet morsel to Satan but wee must resist him stedfast in the faith Job will hold his faith in spight of the Devil let him lose his goods his health his friends his children hee will hold his faith and professe if the Lord kill him too hee will still trust in his mercy 2 Hee would steal away our love of the Saints and with it the life of our faith and therefore hee sets before us many infirmities of theirs and suspitions of our own and some fear from others but notwithstanding out delight must bee in the Saints that excel in vertue Jonathan will not bee beaten off the love to David though in all outward respects hee had little causes onely because hee saw God was with him 3 Hee layeth siedge to our sobriety and temperance and layeth many baits but Joseph will not yeeld to the many assaults of his Mistris 4 He would make us weary of prayer which is our strength and i● God delay he tells us he hears us not we lose our labour But wee must wrastle by prayer as Jacob till we obtain and as the woman of Canaan begge once and again till Christ hear us if he call us doggs so as wee cannot sit at table let us beg the crums as whelps that ●all under the table 5 He would make us weary of our profession is uncessant in setting the malice of the world upon us yea great ones multitudes and all But the Disciples by no whips mo●ks threats or persecutions could be daunted but rejoyced in them and went on more cheerfully 6 He would have us weary of well-doing and beginning in the Spirit to end in the flesh But as Nehemiah in building the Temple and wall said to his crafty Counsellers Should such a one as I flie so let every Christian say Should I lose all my labour and that crown of life that is promised to all them that are faithful to death No I will not doe it The Devil took him up into an exceeding high mountain In this third temptation we are to consider two things 1 The assault 2 The repulse In the assault two things 1 The preparation 2 The dart it self In the preparation 1 The place 2 The sight represented The dart consists of 1 A profer All these will I give thee 2 A condition If thou wilt fall down and worship me 3 A reason for they are mine and to whomsoever I will I give them First of the place and in it 1 what place it was 2 how Christ came thither 3 why Satan chose that place I. The place was the top of an exceeding high mountain What this mountain was we cannot define and the Scripture being silent in it wee may bee sure it is no Article of faith Some think it was mount Ararat on which the Ark of Noah stood in the floud the highest mountain in the world But without all reason for that was in Armenia another part of the world Gen. 8.4 And there were a number of great Hills round about Jerusalem fit enough for this purpose As 1 There was mount Moriah where Abraham offered to sacrifize his Son Isaac where Salomon built his Temple and wherein Christ stood in the former temptation But the text is plain hee was carried from thence into an higher mountain by farre 2 There was mount Ghi●n 1 King 1.33 34 where Zadok and Nathan at Davids appointment anoynted Salomon King But this was too low 3 There was a mountain over against Jerusalem called mons offensionis the mountain of scandal where Salomon in his age deceived by outlandish wives built an high place for Chemosh and Molec the abominations of the children of Ammon and Moab 1 King 11.7 which high places so hard it is to thrust down superstition once set up continued standing three hundred sixty three years and were destroyed by Josiah 4 There was mount Calvary where Christ suffered but that was not so high as this mount spoken of 5 There was mount Olive● a famous mountain about six furlongs from Jerusalem here David wept flying before his Son Absolom here Christ often watched and prayed and wept over Jerusalem for it was so high as that from the top of it as Josephus reports one might discern all the streets of Jerusalem and see afarre off to the dead sea 6 There was mount Sion higher than all these which was called the Mountain of the Lord for those that have written concerning this City know that the foundation of it is among the holy Mountains and among them all mount Sion was farre the highest and therefore David made a Fort there called the City of David 7 There were besides these without Jerusalem mount Nebo from the top of which Moses stood and beheld all the Land of Canaan and was commanded to dye This is generally held to be the Mount to which Christ was carried and so could I think were it not that it was quite without Palestina and not in the Land of Canaan for Moses only there did see the good Land but must not enter into it 8 There were within Palestina besides these mount Basan and mount Hermon very high Hills in comparison of which Sion is said to bee a little Hill Psalm 42.6 and 68.16 Now it is very probable that this temptation was upon one of these Hills but we must not bee curious to determine
taught to bring them in by evil means both of them accursed by God and the gainer for them 3 All actions which are brought to pass by unwarrantable means are likewise to bee suspected not to bee of God who ordereth due and lawful means to good and lawful ends and hath as many pipes to convey good unto us Zach 4 2. as eyes to provide for it Saul must needs know his condition was unhappy and his business unprosperous when he must run to the Witch to help himself So their cause is worse than naught that run to the Wizard for help in diseases and losses G●d is gone from them and the remedy is farre worse than the disease Yet h●w common is not to seek to them by night as Saul did but even by day as n●t ashamed of it Herod he would not break his oath no that was not for his credit but he might well know it to be a wicked one which could not bee kept but by murther of John Baptist Obj. Why what would yee have him forsworn Ans He had brought himself into such a snare as either he must bee forsworn or a murther Now of these to have broken a cruel and wicked oath should have hindred murther which is a sin in an higher degree against God and man and to keep a wicked oath is worse than to make it This is rather to be thought of because even godly men themselves are too ready to effect good things by bad means as Jacob will get the Blessing by lying Rahab will save the Spies by a lye Lot will save his Guests by prostituting his own Daughters In which how ever the Lord sometime commends the fact and faith of the parties yet he never commends the manner which blemished both the doers and the actions The rule that wee must walk by is in Rom. 3.8 We must not doe the least evil for the greatest good Therefore let us take heed of these base tricks of the Devil to effe●t our desires by wicked means Many condemn good men because they stand nicely upon some small things which if they would yeeld unto they might doe themselves and others great good but they have learned another lesson not to doe the least thing against their Conscience to procure themselves the greatest good God need not their error to glorifie himself and doe his people good by 4 That religion which is set forward by bad and wicked means is to be suspected and condemned true religion was ever maintained by truth simplicity humility patience mercy love meekness c. But the Church of Rome must needs defend a bad cause the means are so extreamly wicked as violence and power trechery and subtilty fire and sword murthers and Massacres King-killing and Powder-plots lyes and equivocations and what not It was once said Omnia venalia Romae at Rome all things are saleable and now it may be said Romae omnia venialia at Rome all things are pardonable One demonstration for memory sake That religion which upholds it self 1 By ignorance as the Mother of devotion 2 By disgracing and reproaching the holy Scriptures abhorring them no less than a Thief doth a pair of Gallows and warning men to take heed of them 3 By upholding Images and Image-worship 4 Perjury by freeing subjects from the Oath of Allegiance 5 Disobedience yea rebellion to Princes and Parents 6 Murder and Massacres of all Princes and people Kings and Kingdoms by sword fire poyson powder ponyard openly or trecherously 7 Adulteries and fornication by their Stews and Sheet-punishments yea with large revenues by them 8 By Lies Legends lying and Straw-miracles notable tricks and collusions as once in the Images of the Heathens the Devil often spake but the Priests in stead of the Devil speak through Images and make them move sweat nod c. to deceive simple people I say such a religion cannot bee of God because the means of advancing it are from the Devil But the Romish is such a religion therefore c. Vse 2. Here is a glass for liars and boasters to see their faces in and their resemblance to their father the Devil He promiseth an whole world when all ptoves but a shadow and image He takes upon him to dispose all things in the world as though they were his whereas we must goe to our heavenly Father the Father of lights for every morsel of bread Wherefore whosoever would any way advantage himself by lying or deceiving it is manifest the spirit of the Devil ruleth in him And therefore cast off lying as a ragge and relick of natural corruption and speak every man the truth to his neighbour Ephes 4.25 It is a received opinion in these days that Qui nescit dissimulare nescit vivere No dissembler no man and plain-dealing is a jewel but he that useth it shall dye a beggar and some men are too honest to thrive in the world such common speeches argue the common breach of this Commandement But know 1. How farre are we degenerate from our fore-fathers they lived simply by their hands according to Gods Ordinance but now many live by their wits whence it is that Trades are called Crafts and Mysteries because more live by craft and the sin of their trade than the trade it self 2 The Lord is the avenger of all such wrong by secret cousnage and lying for he sees that thou deceivest him that trusteth thee and because it is hidden from men his own hand must revenge it 3 What a shame is it and slander to Christian profession that men professing salvation by Christ should so carry their trades as a man that comes to deal with them must come so suspitiously as if he were to fall into the hands of so many Theeves and having dealt with them hath just cause to say that he might find more just dealing with Turks and Infidels Whereas if this vice were put off a childe might traffique in the dark without delusion The same of Boasters who brag of things they have not As Job speaks of the Leviathan of the Sea so may we of the hellish Leviathan He is the King of all the sons of Pride As 1 Many bear themselves out in fine apparrel and bravery when indeed nothing is their own if their debts were paid And if every Bird had his own feather they might well goe naked 2 Others to raise themselves make no bones to lye and magnifie their estate as the often experience of the world shews that Widows and Widowers promise great things of themselves and much wealth whereas the greatest wealth prove debts 3 But if you will see the very natural portrayture of the father the Devil if yee will hear his very voyce look upon the Bishop and Pope of Rome For 1 He hath engrossed all the Kingdoms of the earth into his own hands saying All these are mine yet not directly but in ordine ad Deum 2 I give them to whom I will I can set up and thrust
is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God c. First our Saviour would not yeeld to Satans temptations 2 nay hee repel● it with great vehemence 3 Hee hath just reason so to do I. Christ would not yeeld to the temptation no not for a world Quest Why what hurt had been in it Answ 1 Hee had taken the honour of God and given it to Satan wheras th● Lord hath said I will give mine honour to none other 2 Hee had consented to a Lye viz. that the World was Satans in possession and disposition 3 Hee had partaked and abetted all that injustice and wrong which Satan would offer to all the inhabitants of the earth if hee had yeelded or accepted any thing from him 4 Hee had impeached his own right and present possession of all things whereof hee was right beir already invested by his Father 5 Although the worship required was external yet it was Divine and so in giving it to Satan it had been idolatrous which had intangled the Son of God in sin and unfitted him to the redemption of mankind So as in respect of God of Christ of us and the whole Church it had been every way woful and dangerous as Satan yea our Lord well knew Doct. Hence wee learn From the example of our Saviour Christ to esteem and prefer Gods glory above all the World Christ could not bee corrupted with Gold nor Silver nor Kingdomes nor Glory but as a good Physician sees all Diseases and Eye-sores without contracting hurt to himself the Glory of his Father in his eye is an antidote to preserve him without infection And no marvel seeing hee had formerly preferred the Glory of his Fathers mercy in mans salvation above the glory of Heaven it self which he left and became a man of sorrows and was numbred among the wicked to that purpose Here is an example for us which wee cannot attain but must look on a far off for our imitation to come as near it as infirmity of flesh will afford us Moses That man of God so preferred the glory of God before the world that hee made a strange choice viz. To suffer with Gods people rather than to enjoy the treasures and honours of Egypt Heb. 11.24 25. Nay hee was so set for Gods glory as hee preferred it before his own part in the book of life Exod. 32.32 Rather than thou shouldest not glorify thy mercy in thy people and rather than thou shalt give the enemy cause to blaspheme rather blot my name out of thy book let me● have no part in Heaven The Apostles also following the steps of our Lord for Gods glory and the Gospels cause did Glory in the Worlds contempt and rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer for Christ Act. 5.41 Paul bare in his body the markes of Christ Gal. 6. v. 17. and was a prisoner Eph. 3.1 Reasons 1 Gods glory is the chief good and the utmost extent of all his own Counsels and actions wherein hee manifesteth his Mercy or Justice Rom. 9.22 23. and so it ought to be of ours 1 Cor. 10.30 Whatsoever ye eat or drink or whatsoever yee do do all to the Glory of God An earthly child honours his Father when hee imitates him in good so do wee honour our Heavenly Father in this imitation The first thing in Gods intention must bee the first in ours 2 The practice of this duty is a fruit of Faith and a support of Faith Heb. 11.24 By faith Moses refused to bee called the Son of Pharoahs Daughter The consideration of Gods faithfulness in promising and performing better things makes these inferiour things small in our eye as Moses therefore preferred the rebukes of Christ before the treasures of Egypt because hee looked at the recompence of reward And that the sight of Gods glory worthy to bee set above all things takes the part of faith to foil temptations is apparent in our Text by the practice of our holy Saviour 3 In the Lords Prayer the first Petition is that Gods Name may bee hallowed set before the desire of daily bread yea before remission of sins because all these are but means tending and serving to the main end of all which is Gods glory All our good-spiritual and temporal are or ought to be means tending to that end 4 Gods Glory is the dearest of all things to himself of which hee is most jealous and so ought to bee to all his children as wee professe our selves to be And what can more rejoyce the heart of a gracious and ingenuous child than the honour and high respect of his Parent 5 According to out estimation of God himself is our respect of his glory and so much as wee esteem his glory so much wee esteem himself It is true that Gods glory is eternal and so abides in it self not capable of our addition or detraction and God will bee ever most glorious though wee never had been neither need hee our help to make him glorious The Sun would shine in his brightnesse and glory if all Creatures were blind and no eye saw it But yet hee will try how much glory wee will ascribe unto him and how wee prize it and how industrious wee are to magnify and exalt it not that hee can get any good by it but wee our selves reap the fruit even as the fire is not hotter because wee stand by it but we are hotter so while wee glorify God not God but our selves are become better and more glorious God loveth his glory as hee loveth himself and wee as wee love himself so we love his glory 6 This is the perfection of Christianity and Grace here and of our glory and immortality hereafter to prefer his glory above all the World The Spouse Cant. 2.18 calleth Christ her best beloved which hee could not be if she● loved any thing better than him And our Saviour cashiereth him as unworthy to bee his follower that doth not at least in affection and full purpose forsake Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Goods and Lands for his sake This perfection of grace the holy Martyrs attained who rather than they would dishonour God in yeilding the least shew of Idolatry refused the whole World yea their lives And the perfection of glory in the life to come is that nothing else occupy or distract us from being wholly taken up in the immediate glorifying of God without either satiety or ceasing Vse 1. Let us learn to bee of the same minde with our Lord Jesus in whom wee have a worthy pattern of constancy and heavenly resolution in that all the world and the glory of it could not move him no not by a gesture to impair his Fathers glory The Heathen man could say if hee would forswear himself for any thing it should bee for a Kingdome Absolom for a Kingdome would kill his own Father Jehu for a Kingdome makes no end of Murthers One saith of him What was a basket full of
4 Do wee know that God himself is the chief good and should not wee cast our eyes beyond our selves sinful lumps and heaps of dust that all the springs of our affections might run into this main Shall wee bestow the pitch of our affections upon lower things as earthly-minded men do when wee may satiate them with God himself and the things of his glory 5 There is no loss in neglecting our selves for God but great advantage for his eye is upon us to bee a speedy faithful and royal rewarder of us The preferring of our Lords cause above our selves is the preferment of our selves in the end Hee that loseth his life for my sake saith Christ shall find it And therefore as Caesars eye made his Souldiers prodigal of their blood so Gods eye upon us should make our selves small in our own eyes that his glory may bee maintained and reserved wholly to himself Moses preferred Gods honour before his own for hee looked for the recompence of reward Vse 1. The Use hereof belongs to such as are specially set forth to set up Gods causes The Magistrate is not now a private man to seek himself or to set forward his own designs or to shew his heat in his own private causes but to prefer Gods causes before all mens his own or others David a King how calm was hee in his own case when Shimei trayterously railed upon him and Abishai would have fetched his head Oh no said hee God hath bid him rail c But when Gods cause was in hand Oh then away from not yee wicked and I will have no wicked person in my house I will timely destroy the wicked from the house of God Good Nehemiah neglecteth his own allowance and departed from his own right for the peoples sake chap. 5. but cha 13. how zealous is hee for God hee will not let God lose his right not one whit of the Sabbath must bee allowed to any use but Sabbath-duties Such a courage for God and the Truth ought the Magistrate to have as neither for fear of men nor any mans favour or affection hee neglect any thing which God would have him do especially for the house of God and the Offices of it Alas how many Magistrates are of Gallios minde to think religion but a matter of words as if God made them governours of men only but not of Christians keepers of the second Table to preserve Peace and Justice and not of the first to preserve Piety and Religion and if they bee so why are not Blasphemies and horrible Oaths and innumerable prophanations of the Sabbath severely punished why are not Popish and prophane persons compelled to come into the house of God Shall a pilferer of a trifle of a mans goods know that the Magistrate bears not the Sword in vain and shall not hee that robs God of his Glory by Cursing Swearing contemptuous breaking of the Sabbath know the contrary The calling of a Minister is more specially to promote the causes of God which therefore must affect him above all his own respects How earnest was Christ in his Fathers work when his Parents came to seek him at twelve years old hee rebuked them for interrupting him whereas in all private converse hee gave them reverence Luk. 2. When his Disciples brought him meat hee neglected that also saying It is my meat and drink to do the wilt of my Father And if preferring Gods causes will not suffer us to respect our selves much less will wee bee hindered by others wee cannot tune our songs to mens ears but must deal faithfully and plainly though wee displease men How zealous was Christ against the Hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 23. though it created him much envy and malice When hee saw the invincible hardnesse of Heart in his hearers how did hee mourn in his spirit and looked angerly about him Mark 3.5 Surely if wee go about to please men or set up our selves in the World Gods causes will affect us slenderly Therefore it shall bee our happy portion to set the top of our ambition the glory of God and in our judgements and practice prefer the winning of souls before the winning of the World Vse 2. Let every man learn to consider what businesse God hath put in his hand to do and not bee hindered in that for that is Gods work Gods cause upon which depends some part of Gods glory And whatsoever he may glorify God in for which hee can warrant his calling let him set that forward and let no respect hinder him let him not suffer God to bee dishonoured in his family nor where hee can hinder it let the spirit of patience swallow a number of private and personal wrongs but when God comes to be wronged let him stir up the spirit of zeal and courage Vse 3. Here many are reproved who fail against this Doctrin as 1 Men that follow nature abandoning religion hot and fiery in their own quarrels not a word can bee sooner uttered against them but they are ready to draw and to stab Their own names may not be mentioned without all due respect But for Gods causes and quarrels let others look to that How h●t was Cain in own cause but so much the cooler in Gods causes and service Haman how busy in his own private quarrel to bring Mordecai to death yea to destroy the whole Church had not his gallows caught himself Oh beware by these examples of more zeal in thine own cause than in Gods in thy own name than in God 2 Such Ostriches as can digest any high contempt of God without indignation or reproof and can suffer men to swear and curse by God and Christ his blood wounds and tear him to small peeces It would bee thought disloyalty to hear the Kings Majesties name or title contumeliously spoken of and not bring the party to condign punishment It was an old Law among the Romans that if any man did swear by their God Janus it should bee death unless the Senate approved it or it were made before a Priest why that it might bee either punished or reproved It were well if wee had such a Law amongst us 3 When care of our own houses eat up the care of Gods house Things shall be neat and convenient at home no care how Gods house lies When base trifles are preferred before Gods Word and the good setling of it as stage-plaies and enterludes When Gods Sabbaths and time must give place to our callings or recreations or are passed away in Gods Worship more heavily than holy daies or work-daies Here is a man affected more with his own sin than the highest causes of Gods glory III. The reason of our Saviours denial For it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Our Saviour had sharply reproved Satans impudence in his bold onset this third time but yet because it is not sufficient to thrust off an adversary with heat
shall gild no matters here for what shall gold or silver pearls or jewels doe when Heaven and earth shall bee on a light fire Here shall be no sanctuaries nor priviledged persons or places to hinder the course of justice hence shall be no appeals but every person shall receive an eternal sentence of every cause according to the truth and equity of it for else the Judge of all the world should not doe right Vse 1 To comfort Gods children Gods children who here have all sentences pass agai●st them shall have justice at this day who in this world are herein conformed unto Christ for the most part causes and sentences passe against them and their light is darkned their innocency by the might and malice of the wicked trodde● down but then shall they be sure of the day God will cause their uprightnesse to break out as the Sun in his strength for when wickednesse shall ruin the sinner into Hell righteousnesse shall deliver their souls from death 2 To teach them to possesse their souls in patience when they see the confusions that are in the world to beware of revenge but commit all as Christ himself did to him that judgeth righteously Wee must be content for a while to see our righteous waies depraved our good repaied with evil by evil men and bee so far from thinking hence that there is no providence o● care in God over his Children as that wee must necessarily conclude hence this judgement day Observe the rule Eccl. 3.16 When thou seeest in the pla●e of judgement wickednesse and iniquity in the place of justice think in thy he●rt surely God will udge the just and the wicked for there is a time for every purpose and work and Chap. 5.7 If in a Countrey thou seest oppression of the p●or and the defraud●ng of judgement and justice bee not astonied at the matter for hee that a● higher than the highest regardeth it The same ground do the Ap●stles ●ft●n lay to raise this same exhortation unto patience in induring wrongs as Phil 4.5 Let your patient mind bee known unto all men the L●rd 〈◊〉 at hand Jam. 5.7 Bee yee also patient and settle your hearts for the c●mming of the Lord d●aweth neer As if these holy men had said with one m●uth look not to hav● your right here in this World as neither the wicked have their liv●e but wait the appointed time as the Husband-man doth for the we●ks of Harvest and this time is the comming of the Lord before which ti●e neither is the full recompense of righteousnesse given to the Saint● not punishment rendred unto the wicked in the full measure of it Grow n●t weary of well doing though yee meet with nothing but discouragements not out of love with the practice of piety although the world ha●e you f●r it as it did your head before you for in due season ye shall reap ●f yee faint not 3 This teacheth men carefully to look to all their works and waies that they bee just and justifiable The works and words of men which shall abide the tryal of that d●y must now be tryed before h●nd such as will hold water as wee say For there is a day of tryal when all those causes which they have by Mony Friends or wicked policy contrived and over-wayed in shall be brought about again into a clear light and put into the ballance of equity it self where they shall bee found too light And think seriously with your selves how those cause● words and actions will abide the tryal of that day which even for the present can bring no sound comfort to the heart but rather heaviness to the heart accusation and guiltinesse to the conscience fear in the thoughts and shame in the face if any man should know how impiously and injuriously they have been contrived how many Oppressions Wrongs Cruelties Usuries Revengeful sutes onely commensed to make men spend their goods and lose their peace how much of many mens estates would give a loud witn●ss against their owners but that men will not so long before hand trouble themselves with such thoughts Well look to thy self whosoever thou art If thy conscience now accuse thee or can accuse thee but thou wilt either stifle it or stop thine ears against the cry of it know that it hath a voice and will do good service to this Judge one day a thousand witn●sses cannot do more than it will do it will bring back old reckonings which Christ hath not reckoned for and set them in order before thee when thou that canst find none now shalt have leisure enough to look into them but all to the breaking of thy heart and increase of thy torment that thou didst not till too late look into thy reckonings Now to all such as mind hereafter to look into so main a business as this is The touchst●ne of this tryal is the word of God I will for the present commend onely one rule whereby they may discern whe●her their actions will abide the tryal that abideth them and that is this If the Word of God do now approve them they will then bee justifiable but whatsoever word or action hath passed from thee for which thou ●a●st not bring thy ground thence the same will cast thee in judgement This is that our Saviour telleth the Jews The word that I speak shall judge you at the last day J●h 12 48. The str●ctne●s of th● l st j●dgement 1 In regard o● pe●sons judged Thirdly This judgement of Christ shall bee most strict and accurate 1 In regard of the persons that shall bee judged who shall bee inquired into and brought to give accounts of themselves not onely generally as men or Chri●tians but in special according to the particular places and courses of life wherein they were set in this world For example publike persons must give account for themselves and others that have been committed unto them Magistrates for their People Ministers for their Flocks both of them how they entred how they ruled how they walked in and out before their people what faithfulness they used in discovering and discountenancing sin and ungodlinesse how diligent they have been to draw and force men to the keeping of the two tables how they have acquitted themselves from communicating in other mens sins and whether they have faithfully in their places denounced and executed the judgements of God whilest both of them have stood in the room of God In like manner private men must bee countable not onely for themselves but or all those that are under their charge as Fathers for the education of their Children Masters for the instructing and governing of their Servants and Family Tutors for their care or negligence towards such as are committed unto them for the rule of the Law is general and will take fast hold upon many a soul that think it enough to look to themselves that whosoever hindreth not that sin which hee can hinder
another as brethren bee pitiful 1 Joh. 3.17 Hee that hath this worlds good and seeth his brothers need and shuts up his compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him To stir us up hereunto consider these Motives 1 Say with thy self Motives to the former duty What am not I a member of the same body with him Is not hee of the same family and houshold of Saints This is the Apostles argument Especially do good to the houshold of faith 2 What shall I gain if by word or deed I shall make sad the hearts of good and godly men Cain cast down he looks but God looks on it Cannot Ishmael laugh at Isaac but the Lord arraigns and condemns him of high per●ecution Surely then cannot I carry the like indignities scot-free 3 Do I read Meroz accursed because shee came not out to help the people of God though shee had no hand against them Judg. 5.23 Surely I must not onely have a hand against good men but I must set my hand to help them else is not my heart so right as it should Pilates wife wished her husband to have nothing to do against that just man But happy had Pilate been who was not violent against Christ to have been earnest and resolute for his deliverance the defect whereof was his overthrow And so it shall bee heavy enough in the day of judgement that wicked mens hands have not helped the godly seeing the sentence shall not run because they had hurt them but because they helped them not CHAP. XXX Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men First In general THE general Rule is in Col. 4.5 Rules of wise walking towards evil men Walk wisely towards them that are without that is the Gentiles who were not converted without the border of the Church for even in the Church some are of Gods domesticks some without as strangers that want faith as yet And godly men must walk so much the more warily not onely because they have Gods eye and godly mens eyes on them but even eyes of men y●t unconverted who must n●t bee cast back or confirmed in their errour or hardened against the truth but by all wi●e walking if it bee possible won to the love and liking of it Now towards all unbeleevers and unconverted men in general these particulars are worthy observation 1 Avo●d all just causes of s●andal 1 That every Christian avoid all known evils and offences by which evil men might bee occasioned to abide out of the Church The Law is Thou shalt put no stumbling block before the blinde For this is a fearful judgement of God on men unconverted they would willingly bee blinded and hardened in their natural estate Now our Rule is being our selves pulled out of danger to help others out also nay our light must reprove their darkness their covetousness by liberality their pride by humility their impatience by patience c. 2 All unconverted men hate the light and are prone to blaspheme the Gospel 2 Stop mouths of evil men and to reproach the holy profession of it Wise Christians therefore must cut off occasions from them and take heed of defiling their own nest 1 Tim. 5.14 Give no occasion to the adversary to speak evil And David prayeth that none might bee ashamed because of him Ezek. 36.20 the Lord complains that the Israelites among the Heathen polluted his Name and made them say These are the people of the Lord and are gone out of his land A lend childe saith Solomon dishonoureth the whole house Nay on the contrary the meanest Christian in his place by his wife and Christian walking must adorn the profession of Christ so the Apostle to Titus 2.10 Servants must bee no pickers but shew all good faithfulness to adorn the Gospel of the Lord Jesus An holy course of life will make the Gentiles say as they in Isa 61.9 They are the seed of the blessed of the Lord. 3 Seek to win them 3 All unconverted men esteem of doctrine by the life and the profession by the practise of Professors for they have no taste of the Doctrine in it self and therefore in the carriage of our profession wee must apply our selves if it bee possible to win them So the Apostle 1 Pet. 2.12 wisheth the Jews to have their conversation honest among the Gentiles that they might glorifie God in the day of their visitation And women are commanded so to watch their whole behaviour as their husbands might bee won by their godly conversation Private men must convert others by their private conversation Motives Motives so to do are these 1 Christians are on a Mount set on a Scaffold nothing they do escapeth sight and censure all is marked they stand or fall not alone but to many 2 They have a light with them which draws all eyes upon them and discovers all 3 The eyes of the wicked are not on others but on them to disgrace them and through them to smite Christ himself 4 The will of God is By well-doing to ●lance the ignorance of foolish m●n 1 Pet. 2.15 5 What a glory is it to slaughter envy it self to stop an open mourh and cloathe an adversary with his own shame that he that would accuse us must accuse the Sun of darkness when it shines 6 Hereby wee shall bee conformable to Christ whom when Satan came to sift hee found nothing in him Wicked men shall say as Saul said to David Thou are more righteous than I c. 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXI Rules how to walk wisely towards evil men in special And first for Scorners NOw wee come to special Rules concerning special sorts of evil men of whom some are exceeding evil in themselves some are evil also to good men Of the former rank are scornful persons Of the latter hurtfull For Scorners observe these Rules 1 If wee know men to bee so far naught as they scorn goodness Rules how to carry our selves towards scorners 1 Avoid them good men and good things wee must avoid their company so much as wee may For what comfort can a godly man take in such company where all good and godly communication must either bee banished or derided There is no hope of doing good there is danger of taking harm 2 If wee bee by occasion beset 2 If cast into their company observe five Rules or cast into the company of prophane brutish and scornful persons then observe these Rules First Grieve thou wast not better directed Psal 120.5 Wo is mee that I remain in Meshec and dwell in the tents of Kedar Secondly Bee sure though thou seest no place or opportunity of good that thou hast no fellowship with them in any of the unfruitful works of darkness If they will bee no cleaner by thy company bee not thou defiled by theirs If they will not consent to thee in good consent not thou to them in any sin Thirdly Please them not by