Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n run_v zeal_n zealous_a 12 3 9.1788 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

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

Horeb he goes for more safetie and to meet with the Lord. There passeth by him a mightie wind an earthquake and fire representations of Eliahs zeale But God was not in them Then comes a still voice to teach Eliah patience saying What doest thou here Eliah Eliah answered Lord I haue bene iealous for the Lord of hoasts complaining according to the words here vsed by Paul verse 3. In this storie it appeares that Eliah was a man subiect to infirmities as other men are being ouerheate in his passion his life being in danger by Iesabel yet his zeale in regard of the cause of it is exceeding commendable and for our imitation doctrine We are to be zealous for the Lord. So was Elias Moses Samuel Dauid as appeares in their stories Vse When thou seest God dishonored and religion troden vnder foote be not senslesse Would it not moue a man to see altars throwne downe prophets killed miracles take no effect as in Eliahs time Iames 5. ●7 Or now to see the Sabboth profaned the preaching of the Gospell contemned and many notwithstanding dayly admonitions to runne out some to drunkennesse some to whoredome some to pride c Surely we want an Eliah Whosoeuer hath but a dram of his spirit these things to him are as a dagger at his heart Meeknesse in our owne causes but in Gods zeale and earnestnesse become vs. Yet be not ouer zealous few I confesse are sicke of this disease ●et Elias was and we may be also for we are more sure we haue his passions then his grace Excesse of zeale is intollerable yea it hath bene found lesse dangerous to the Church when men haue come short of the due proportion of zeale then when they haue exceeded Auda Bishop in Persia in an excesse of zeale throwing downe a Temple of the Pagans was the cause that the King thereby insensed threw downe all the Temples of the Christians Theod. lib. 5. There are two things whereby we may discerne whether our zeale exceed due limits and bounds or no 1 If thou make thy selfe a partie so much is it in the wrong Elias was the more hot because his owne life was in danger So if there be a disordered person who hath prouoked vs then wee crie its pitie but he should be presented indited punished But when vnder a colour of zeale against sinne we reuenge our owne wrongs it s more passion then zeale Secondly Zeale should consume the faults not the persons of offenders if thine feeds on the persons not on the faults it s naught Quench it against the person inflame it against the fault Iames and Iohn would haue had the wicked Samaritans by and by to be consumed with fier from heauen but they are reproued by our Sauiour Luc. 9.53 And here Elias was somewhat faultie comming short of Moses and Samuell who made intercession for not against their people Eliah makes intercession against his people Moses and Samuell for them These rather then Eliah are to be imitated of Ministers It s a lamentable thing to see a father wringing of his hands ouer his child and complaining of his stubbornesse wishing he had neuer bene borne So it is very greeuious to heare an Eliah complaine to God of the stubbornesse of his people We are your fathers so liue you that we may haue no cause to sue against you either in the court of heauen or earth but rather to reioyce oueryou which we shall doe with much cheerefullnes praying for you if you forsake your sinnes and turne vnto God obeying his word If we in our prayers haue cause to complaine of you it will be vnprofitable to you for what followed Eliah his complaint The Lord speakes to him as if hee should say Eliah I see thou art in a moode well goe annoynt Hazael King of Aram Iehu King of Israel and Elisha Prophet in thy roome him that scapeth the sword of Hazaell shall Iehu slay and him that escapeth Iehu shal Elisha slay Of such force are the complaints of the Prophets and Ministers of God against their stubborne people as also are their prayers effectuall on the behalfe of such as beleeue and obey Now I beseech you presently to reforme your liues that wee may mutually ioyne together to blesse God you for vs and we for you that we may be all crowned together at the comming of Christ VERSE 3. Lord they haue killed thy Prophets and digged downe thine Altars and I am left alone and they seeke my life IN these words is set downe the complaint of Eliah more particularly in which are two things First the person to whom he complaines Lord. Secondly the matter of the complaint which is twofold First The killing of the Prophets Secondly The digging downe of Altars Both these aggrauated from the miserable estate of Eliah which appeared two waies first He is left alone in his owne opinion secondly They seeke his life also They not onely bellua multorum capitum the vulgar but Ahab Iesabel Nobles Commons and all from the highest to the lowest Especially Iesabel a diuellish and wicked woman who added to the Idolatry of the Israelites the abomination of the Sydonians and whose hatred against true religion was so great that it came into a prouerb such being called Iesabels Apoc. 2. Thy Prophets Thy is added for more detestation of the fact The Embassadors of a meane Prince are not to be wronged but they haue killed Thy Prophets Thine Altars An Altar was a building or Instrument of earth stone or other stuffe reared vp for the offering of Sacrifices Quest But what Altars means he God cōmanded that there should be no Altar in ordinary after the building of the Temple but at Ierusalem where only Sacrifices were to bee offered which is the cause that now the Iewes offer no sacrifices because they want their Temple Ahab could not come by the Altar at Ierusalem being out of his Kingdome What Alter then meanes Ahab Answ Some say that the signe is put for the thing signified and by Altars meant Religion which was by Ahab and Iesabel abolished But as the killing of the Prophets was a matter of fact so also I take this to be rather then of signification only They threw downe material Altars built in Abrahams Isaaks Iacobs Iosuahs and Samuels time before the Temple was builded and the Altars which were by Elias himselfe and other Prophets by speciall commandement after the building of the Temple set vp which were called afterward high Places and the good Kings of Iudah commended for pulling them downe 1. Kin. 18.4.22 Obiect Why should Eliah complaine of the doing of that by Ahab which done by others is commended Answ Those Altars remained as monuments of Gods worship and Elias complaines not simply against their demolishing but because it was done in despite of true Religion that no foot-step thereof might remaine to put the people in minde of the true God which if it had bin done in
the procreant cause of it for the zeale of the Iewes did not make Paul loue them for in this zeale they crucified Christ persecuted the Gospell and Saint Paul cals this zeale in himselfe blasphemie and therefore Paul would neuer commend it Indeede if I see a Papist zealous in his way I pitie him and wish his zeale were wel directed but I commend not his zeale When I read the Story of Alexander Cicero c. I loue their remembrance for some moralities in them as Christ loued that Y●…ng man in the Gospell but this zeale of the Iewes was no moralitie being considered in the manner in which they were zealous And therefore though Paul grant it yet as Chrysostome obserues he reproues it vehemently and takes away all Apology from them Here then I take it the Apostle comes directly to point to shew that Iustification by Faith abolisheth not the Law though their zeale bee cast away because it was not according to knowledge Paul here notably in the first place beating downe as was fit the admiration and opinion they had of their zealous obseruations In this verse there are two things First a Concession Paul grants that they haue the zeale of God Secondly an Accusation or Reproofe of their zeale But not according to knowledge The zeale of God The earnest study of the Iewes about the worship of the true God and standing for Moses Law Paul calls zeale Heb. 10.27 which is a vehement affection as a very hote fire is called the zeale of fire and may thus be described that it is an exceeding vehement affection or loue to a thing with an indignation against whatsoeuer doth hurt the thing beloued and an endeuor to redeeme it from all iniuries and wrongs Zeale of God Not as approued of God but so called because God was the end or obiect of it though they failed in the right way so as this is to be vnderstood comparatiuely in respect of the Heathen who are zealous for false gods So if we compare the Turkes and Papists The Turkes are zealous for Mahomet The Papists in comparison for Christ Not according to knowledge It was according to their owne conceiued knowledge but not according to the knowledge they should haue had by the Gospel and for this doth Paul reproue it The more of such zeale the worse doctrine Zeale if it be not according to knowledge is not acceptable to God The Iewes are a plaine example hereof See also Eccles 7.18 Q. Can a man haue too much zeale A. Not of true but of selfe-conceited A little of this is too much For whatsoeuer is without Faith is sinne Faith presupposeth knowledge Errour in knowledge breeds errour in zeale Vse 1. A good meaning will not iustifie our actions if otherwise euill as appeares in the Iewes who many of them meant well in persecuting the Gospell but they are to this day plagued for such zealous meanings Let vs meane neuer so well if that which we doe be not according to Gods meaning hee regards it not who hath giuen his Law not our meanings to be a rule of our obedience If a Wife play the Harlot and say she meant no harme will this satisfie her Husband And shall wee thinke to worship Images pray to Saints stay at home on the Sabbath day when we may conueniently resort to the Church vnder the shadow of a good meaning No. God will not accept of such bald excuses And if good meaning will not excuse ill doing What shall we say to them which doe ill and meane ill too What shall become of Drunkards Blasphemers Vncleane persons c. What good meaning can be in them Vse 2. Here we haue a rule for the ordering of our zeale that it may be acceptable to God For it is such a thing which if it be well ordered is most beautifull in a Christian but if not a thing of exceeding danger as Fire in moderation is most comfortable in extremitie most fearefull This Rule is sound knowledge out of Gods Word This knowledge must be three-fold First of the thing of the which we are zealous that it be in the Right For if wee be in the wrong the more zeale the worse as in a wrong way the more haste the worse speed Exod. 40.36,37 Therefore Saint Paul tels the Galathians that it is good to be zealous alwaies in a good thing 2. Of the wrong which is done to the thing we are zealous of that in deed there be a wrong done not going vpon hearesay and aduenture but vpon certainty being able out of the Word soundly to conuince the same For here is the indignation and if there be not sound knowledge we may become slanderers of our brethren and as they say beat them with the sword who deserue not to be touched with the scabberd 3. That wee haue some competent knowledge and abilitie thereby to iudge of the proportion of the wrong for the which we haue indignation in our zeale that so our zeale may haue a good temper For all sinnes offences wrongs are not of the same quantitie and qualitie As there is a difference in offences so must there bee in our zeale in greater things to be more zealous in lesser things lesse zealous wee must remember it is of the Nature of fire There is not the like fire for the roasting of an Egge and for the roasting of an Oxe but it is moderated according to the necessities of the houshold By this three-fold knowledge must our zeale be directed where the Word begins there must our zeale beginne and where the Word ends there must our zeale end whatsoeuer our opinion be For as he that trauelleth ouer the Washes or in some dangerous passage without a guide many times perisheth So is the man that is zealous not according to knowledge As therefore in the wildernesse when the cloud ascended the children of Israel set forward in their iourneyes and when that stood still so did they And if the cloud ascended not then they iourneyed not till it ascended Exod. 40.36,37 So is our zeale alwaies to follow our knowledge and to be directed therby There are two forts of men hereby to be apprehended 1. They which haue a desect not of zeale but of knowledge for the ground of their zeale 2. They which haue a defect not of knowledge but of zeale answerable to their knowledge Of the 1. of these may be verified the Prouerbe They set the Cart before the Horse The second may bee likened to Pharaohs Chariots when the wheeles were off so slowly doe they expresse their knowledge in their liues The first are like a little ship without ballast fraught but with a great many sailes which is soone either dasht against the Rockes or toppled ouer The second are like a goodly great Ship well ballasted and richly fraughted but without any sayles which quickly falleth into the hands of Pyrats because it can make no speed sooner making
conclusion That we could feele that which Paul writes Though all which hee writes bee from the Spirit of God yet here hee was more specially inspired And some obserue that Pauls stile is so beautified vvith wonderfull Eloquence and Rhetorick that nor Tully nor Demosthenes could euer haue so spoken For power some haue been affected vvith the reading of Paul as they are with thunder And S. Augustine as is reported of him Augus●…nus Erasmus Paulum quotiescunque lego videor mihi non verba sed audire toni trua Hier. epist 61. ad Pammach wished for 3. things to see Christ in the flesh Rome in the pride of it and to haue heard Paul preach In this verse is a position that no orosses or creatures can depriue vs of the loue of our God Which is set downe in a double Interrogation and that not in plaine manner but with great force that hee might adde life to it and rauish the Readers This position hath a double probation following the one from example Verse 36. the other frō the issues of our troubles ver 37. Who shall separate vs That is none can But he speaks with contempt Who shall Shall tribulation as if hee should say I scorne it As Goliah defied Dauid saying 1. Sam. 17.43 Doest Thou come to Me with a staffe So Paul with a bettor spirit defies all crosses as to be able to depriue vs of Christs loue Separate Such a word is here vsed as signifieth separation of soule and body to note that as it is grieuous for the soule to be separated from the body so much more to be separated from God From the loue of Christ Many of the ancient and of the late Writers especially Popish expound it of our loue to Christ which if it be the Genuine meaning as Martyr saith it is neither vnfit nor impious then I wonder they should say it is presumption to affirme that we are certaine of perseuerance in as much as Paul speakes in the person of all Beleeuers But I take it to be meant principally and most properly of Christs loue to vs or of the sense of it in affliction as some interpret a Piscator Rollocus If it were meant of our loue the comfort were not so great b Grynaeus Also the like phrase elsewhere c Vers 37. cap. 5.5 approues this Exposition Farther the word separate cannot properly bee spoken of our loue For wee are separated from another not from our selues d Oleuianus Vs That is Beleeuers Elect The Syrian Translator reades Mee better Vs Yet thence wee may bee put in minde euery one to labour particularly to apply it and feele it in himselfe Shall tribulation c. He said Who Speaking of persons here he speakes of things because by these things Diuels and wicked men seeke to hurt the Elect. Chrysostome obserues Pauls wisedome in three things 1. That hee saith not Shall the loue of Riches Pleasures c. which haue great force to bewitch vs but shall Tribulation Distresse c. which violence Nature 2. That he begins with the lighter and so riseth to greater troubles placing them in this order not casually but by singular Art 3. That though these which hee heere rehearseth consist of a certaine number yet euery one as a Generall hath speciall Tropes vnder it As when hee saith Tribulation he saith Imprisonments Bonds Slander Banishment c. Tribulation The word fignifieth any thing that presseth or pincheth vs. Distresse The word is translated from the straightnesse of the place to the estate of the minde when wee know not which way to turne vs as Dauid was in a strait 2. Sam. 24.14 Persecution When wee are pursued from one place to another and banished Famine and Nakednesse Which follow such as are banished and are grieuous weapons Perill of life The Sword Death it selfe noted by the instrument of it doctrine The Diuell with all his Complices cannot with all their Threatnings and Persecutions separate vs from Christs loue This is grounded vpon the Immutabilitie of Gods loue Ioh. 13.1 Reu. 2.10 Esay 43.1 Vse 1. The disposition of godly and godlesse men are different Where the godly are most bold there wicked men are cowards and where the godly are most afraid there the wicked are most bold In sinne the child of God quakes and feares there the wicked man is bold In Aduerfitie the childe of God is bold there the wicked mans heart is in his hose as we say When Moses comes to Pharaoh that hee should let Israel goe Hee knowes not nor cares for God nor will let them goe But when the plagues come Then Pray for me Moses Goe your wayes Take what you will euen the wealth of Egypt In sinne let mee alwayes bee a Coward but vpon grounded assurance of Gods loue bold and resolute in Affliction Vse 2. The Beleeuer is Assured All bitter things cannot quite extinguish the sweetnesse of Gods loue to them Tribulation cannot nor Distresse c. For as the Whale deuoures the lesser Fishes so the loue of God ouercomes these Shall Tribulation Distresse Persecution No. They are blessed which endure these things Shall Famine Hee which feeds on Christ cannot perish for hunger Shall Nakednesse Christs Righteousnesse is my clothing I shall willingly follow him euen Naked who when he was clothed with infinite Glory as with a Garment was content to be borne Naked and to be stript on the Crosse for my sake Shall Perill I know the hardest Shall the Sword Christ is to mee in life and death aduantage When the Tyrant shall take off my head my soule shall flye out vnto Christ The sense of the loue of Christ made the Martyrs esteeme Tyrants as Gnats or Fleas and torments as the flea-bitings 1. Tyrannos ipsumque adeo Neron velut quosdam Culices aestimabat Chrys Hom. 2. de laud. Pauli Tertullian of his times saith Accusatio votum est poena felicitas Tert. aduersus Gentes non procul ab initio Apolog. that to be accused was the wish of Christians and punishment for Christ they accounted felicitie A certaine woman running in all haste with her child in her armes being asked the cause O saith shee I heare a great sort of Christians are appointed to be martyred and I am afrayd lest I and my little one come too late When the Emperour Valens banished Basil and the Tribune threatened death I would said Basil I had any thing of worth I would bestow it on him which should cut Basils wind-pipe And when he had that Night giuen him to deliberate answered that he should be the same man to morrow and wished that the Tribune would not be changed Chrysostome being in banishment by the meanes of Eudoxia the Empresse wrote to a Bishop called Cyriacus and vpon occasion tels of his resolution before he was banished I thought with my selfe saith he that if she will banish me The earth is the Lords If she will
proceeds as a Lord who manumits of his bond-seruants whom he pleaseth Saint Augustine compares God to a Creditor and vs to Debtors Aug. ad Simplicianum lib. 1. q. 2. We are all indebted to God If thou payest not thy debt thou hast whereof to reioyce if thou doest pay it yet hast thou not whereof to complaine I will haue mercy and compassion This mercy and compassion which in man is with a passion of the mind grieuing for the harme of another is in God a will without griefe or perturbation to help the miserable The first word signifieth freely to loue the other to put on motherly bowels as the true mother did toward her child before Salomon So then c. v. 16. This is the conclusion the sum whereof is as if he should say That which God ascribeth to himselfe is not to be ascribed to the will or power of any Creature but God ascribeth wholly to himselfe our Election and saluation therefore It is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that sheweth mercy It is not in him that willeth or runneth Some apply this to Esaus running but it serues not his turne for Iacob by the mercy of God obtained the blessing Some apply it to Iacobs but it was not that but Gods mercy which holp him But the best is to vnderstand it of Election That Election is not of Iacobs or of any mans willing that is free-will or good desires or running that is good works but of Gods will and mercie which was auerred before ver 11. The cause of Gods mercy is his mercy doctrine The Doctrine out of these three verses Though God saue some and condemne others yet is hee iust Gene. 18.25 Rom. 3.5,6 Math. 20. Vse 1. Imitate Pauls zeale when God is challenged by vniust persons God forbid saith hee hauing indignation Alas our coldnes If it be a matter touching our owne Reputation wee are red-hot but though God be a thousand waies dishonoured we are key-cold Vse 2. In all things acknowledge God to be iust though thou vnderstand not the reason of things done by him Search not into the reason of his will but submit thy selfe For hee will haue mercy on whom he will haue mercy Hee iustifieth the Theese vpon the Crosse and condemneth some Infant Here chamber thy tongue remembring that GOD is the chiefe Lord. Stat pro ratione voluntas is good in God he willeth it so to be therefore it is iust For a thing is not Iust and then God willeth it but God willeth it and then it is Iust his will being the cause of things and the rule of all right Say not Why wil he elect this and reprobate this The thing is manifest but not the reason The manner of Gods dealing may sometimes be hidden but it can neuer be vniust If hee reprobate sinners it is iust because it agrees with their deseruings If he elect the sinfull it is iust because it agrees with his goodnesse A Carpenter hauing diuers trees before him of like bignes marks one to be sawne into boord another into sparrs c. If we aske him why he lines out one tree thus another thus hee will answere that hee meanes to imploy one of them for timber for the roofe another for other vses in the building But if you aske why he chose this tree for such vse rather then another all being of like goodnes he wil iudge the question vnreasonable and alledge his will so beyond the wil of God no inquiry must be made of the cause of the Election and Reprobation of men To this wee may apply that of Augustine Si non vis errare noli velle Iudicare Aug. tract 26. in Iohn in a matter not much vnlike God chuseth this man refuseth that both being a like guilty before him If thou wouldest not erre inquire not the reason Let whoso will search this deepe but let him take heed he break not his neck Thou seest some are rich some are poore some Englishmen some Spanyards some Noble some base Thou seest this and accusest it not vvhy then accusest thou God to be more vniust in willing this man to be an elect that man to be a reprobate Let vs praise that which is done because it is safe to be ignorant why it is done God hauing hidden the reason from vs. Vse 3. Mercy presupposeth misery therefore when we were elected we were considered as miserable Vse 4. The state of the Elect is certaine noted in this phrase I will haue mercy vpon whom I will haue mercy Euen as Pilate by the like manner of speaking denied to change that which hee had written Iohn 9.22 That which I haue written I haue written Which manner of speech we vse both when we wil not haue the reasons of our doings inquired after nor that which wee haue done to be altered Vse 5. Arminius who holdeth that it is in mans power to be saued if he will and that grace is effectuall by the euent is here confuted plainely vvhen all is attributed to the will mercy of God and nothing to the wil of man Grace is not effectuall because free-will willeth but free-will willeth because grace is effectuall VERSE 17. For the Scripture saith vnto Pharaoh Exod. 9.16 Euen for this same purpose haue I raised thee vp that I might shew my power in thee and that my Name might be declared throughout all the earth THat God is not vniust in electing appeared verse 15.16 That hee is not vniust in reprobating others of equall condition with the Elect is shewed in this Verse and in the next verse both are concluded This verse is to be referred to these words ver 14. God forbid For the Scripture saith c. The profe is from a testimony of Scripture where we haue first The Quality of the testimony and secondly The Substance The Quality is that it is vvritten Hence is to be obserued that Paul plainly proues these darke points by the Word of God Vse 1. Pauls practice is for the imitation of Ministers doctrine Vse 2. Hearers are to receiue nothing but that which is signed with the hand and seale of God as we receiue no money but that which hath the armes and seale of the King Vse 3. The Scripture is a competent Iudge of cōtrouersies of faith because it saith to Pharaoh it speakes to vs it is no mute letter as the Papists affirme For indeed it speaketh not onely of things contained in it but to vs As the statutes of the Land not onely containe the will of the King but call to vs for obedience The substa●…e of this testimony is taken out of Exo. 9.16 vvhere is declared how God deales with Pharaoh For this purpose I haue stirred thee vp c. I haue stirred thee vp That is I haue raised thee vp * Beza or I haue created thee b Culu super Exod. or I haue raised thee
Indefinite Proposition is equiualent to an Vniuersall 2. The Restruction of the generall Whosoeuer belieueth Whosoeuer concludes all Belieuers Belieuers excludes all vnbelieuers 3. The obiect of Faith In him To belieue on Christ is not onely to belieue that Christ is and that what he saith is true but to rest vpon his Righteousnes for Iustification and to trust him with our Saluation as Paul 2. Tim. 1.12 I knowe whom I haue belieued On him notes Faith and Confidence 4. The effect of Faith Not ashamed The contrary denied for the direct effect As if he had said Shall be saued For the denying of one contrary is the affirming of the other They shall not be frustrate of their end therefore not ashamed Ob. But wee account it a good thing to be ashamed and the contrary a fault Diogenes thus incouraged a young man blushing Feare not it is Vertues colour Yet the Philosophers wisely distinguish of it counting it a grace in young folkes but old folkes should commit nothing which might make them blush A. Here is a Figure The word is not vsed in the ordinary signification hee meanes not that beleeuers shall not be ashamed of their faults for none are more and the wicked are noted to be shamelesse Ier. 3.3 but the sence is they shall not misse the end of their faith and so be ashamed A man boasts of a matter and in the end vp starts iust nothing then is he ashamed as profane people bragge of their hope to bee saued but when their Crakes faile they shall bee confounded vvith shame Esay saith Shall not make haste that is shall not betake themselues to shamefull courses to bring their desires to passe but shall wait vpon God and in the end haue assured deliuerance but as such who runne hastily often stumble and fall and so are ashamed so they which will not stay Gods leisure fall into many inconueniences vvhich cause their shame doctrine He that beleeueth is sure to be saued Ioh. 3.18 Psal 22.4 Rom. 5.5 1. Pet. 1.6 The promises are called sure Rom. 4.16 The counsell of God stable and the consolation thereby strong Heb. 6.17,18 Vse 1. Whosoeuer trust in any thing but in Christ shall be ashamed The Iewes of their confidence in the Lawe The Papists though they now bragge and face out the matter that they be the only men and the true Church shall one day bee ashamed of their religion because they build their saluation on a rotten foundation as masses pardons indulgences pilgrimages prayer to Saints their owne merits c. They are like him in the Gospell who began to build a Tower but not being able to finish it was ashamed Those which trust in horses and armed men in the day of battell shall be ashamed They also which with King Asa trust in the Physicians and not in God in the day of sicknesse so they which trust in their riches contrary to the commandement of the Spirit whom Christ calls fooles 1. Tim. 6.17 Luke 12.20 These also who seek in losses to Wizards and not to God Many trust in outward things without God but there are few who trust in God without outward things Vse 2. There is much feare and doubting where faith is but in the end beleeuers shall not be ashamed This makes them confident against the obloquy and reproach cast vpon them by the world The children of God are laughed to scorne as the Philistims mocked Sampson What then Though Saul loue not Dauid nor his Religion yet he will speake of Gods testimonies before Kings wil not be ashamed Psal 119.46 and though the Gospell bee spoken against in euery place yet Paul will not be ashamed of it Rom. 1.16 This also comforts against the guiltinesse of sinne which is the true cause of shame following it as the shadow doth the body How profane wee were before our conuersion and how weakely we haue walked since our conscience knowes and is ashamed Here is our helpe faith obtaines pardon of sinne and therefore we shall neuer bee put to shame for our faults we are sinners but as when the light comes the darknesse departs and the more light the lesse darknesse so faith driues away shame and the more wee beleeue the lesse doe we feare confusion and shame Peter walked vpon the water and shamed himselfe for he began to sinke What was the cause Not the winde or waues but the defect of Faith Abraham beleeued and left his countrey and offered vp Isaac and yet was not ashamed Ob. Abraham had a great Faith but my faith is little Ans If thou hast true Faith though neuer so little thou shalt not be ashamed A childe cannot take vp his meate so strongly nor eate so much as doth a man yet that little which he takes weakely and eates nourisheth him as well as more meat doth a man So though thou be but a child in Faith thy Faith shal saue thee as wel as Abrahams Faith saued him For a man is not saued by the quantitie of his Faith but by the preciousnesse of that which Faith receiues which is the righteousnesse of Christ which a weake and little Faith will as sauingly apprehend as a strong Faith as a Begger that hath a shaking weake hand can make shift to take an almes as well as he that hath not such infirmitie Ob. But I am pestered with much doubting and cannot be rid of doubts A. Like enough But doest thou beleeue Beleeue still It is not the commendation of Faith to bee without doubtings but to ouercome them Thou shalt ouercome in the end and shalt not be ashamed Hee that kils his enemy at the first blow shewes himselfe valiant so doth he also shew a great deale of valour who being often knockt downe and wounded yet stands to it So though the field seeme doubtfull betweene thy Faith and doubting yet in the end thou shalt ouercome and thy victory shall be famous Make precious account therefore of thy Faith and labour to increase it A certaine Captaine d Epaminondas being in a hote skirmish was striken downe sore wounded and taken vp for dead as soone as he came to himselfe hee first asked if his Target were safe being loth his enemies should get that so looke to thy Faith for the Diuell thy enemy will looke to it and thou shalt not be ashamed Vse 3. Wicked men and vnbeleeuers are miserable because of the shame which followes them There can bee almost no stronger Argument against sinne then to say it will make ashamed then which there is nothing more grieuous to a generous minde therefore diuers haue rid themselues of their liues that they may be rid of their shame as Samson For to dye is naturall but to liue in shame is more then nature can endure and yet the wicked must eternally endure it Some like shamelesse beasts glory in their shame seeking no corners nor muffling themselues as Thamar but as Absolon
and vnto workes are no workes or bad workes contrary So that the contrarietie here to be holden is not simply but in the case of iustification and saluation Vnderstand not here workes themselues but the merit of workes and yet not the merit of all workes as Christs but of Our workes And then the rule of contraries here takes place that one being put the other is taken away The nature of grace is to be free the nature of workes to be of due debt so that if it be free it is not of debt else were grace no grace if it be of due debt it is not free else were workes no more workes The legerdemaine of the Papists is here to be noted who leaue and wipe out the last halfe of this verse And if of workes then not of grace else workes are no more workes blasphemously saying that it is superfluuos But we can easily spie out the reason of this their doing namely because their doctrine of merit is hereby ingulated As they haue dealt with the bookes of other writers so haue they attempted here purging and curtailing off that which makes against them And then they would make vs beleeue that their absurd vulgar Translation is perfecter then the originall Greeke text it selfe As if a man hauing but one eye or oneleg should thinke all others deformed that had two eyes or legs The summe is that what is of grace is not of workes and è diuerso doctrine Election and saluation are of grace not of merite Act. 15.11 Ephes 2.8.9 Tit. 3.5 and this that God might haue al the glorie but if it be of merit then corrupt flesh will boast Vse 1. The Popish conceit of Merit of their workes of congruitie which they say it is fit that God should reward and of condignity and supererogation which it is iust that God should reward is by this text like chaffe blowne away and blasted The finite creature cannot merit of the infinit Creator The Papists haue three shifts for this 1. They say that Paul is to be vnderstood of the workes of Nature not of grace If so then the Pharisee also the Pelagian is not to be blamed for he acknowledged his goodnes in which he trusted to bee a gift of God Luk. 18.11 I thanke thee Lord that I am not c. And all merit is contrary to grace Besides our Sauiour bids his disciples Luk. 17.10 when they haue done all they can to thinke themselues vnprofitable seruants I trow they will not deny that the Apostles were in the state of Grace 2 Their second euasion is that saluation is of grace indeed but also of workes making a mingle-mangle of grace and workes which is as if a man should attempt to make fire and water agree But Saint Augustine takes away this in a word Grace saith he is grace no way if it be not free euery way It is all of grace or no whit at all of grace This golden saying is digged out of this mine 3 They exclaime against vs that we are enemies to good workes Why doe they so Not because we doe those euill works which they auoid but because we doing good works which they neglect yet ascribe our saluation only to grace They deale with vs as the Pharisies with Christ He tels them that Harlots shall goe before them into the kingdome of heauen and they presently say that hee is a friend of Publicans and sinners and an enemie to good workes Concerning good workes this wee hold that they are necessary to saluation not by a necessity of efficiency but of presence and that in three respects 1. Of worship for God is serued by doing them 2. Of good conscience which is lost by the neglect of good works 3. Of duty to our neighbors who is hereby to be wonne to God we must do good works if we will be saued but we must not looke to be saued by their merit Vse 2. Many ignorant soules say they hope to be saued by their seruing God and their good prayers They know no other Diuinity but this which is Popish and naturall These are not past grace they are not yet come at it Alas if there were no other way to come to heauen but this no flesh should be saued but only the humanity of our Lord Iesus The Diuels prime desire is to draw thee to abominable courses if he cannot preuaile this way but thou wilt be doing good workes this will please him if thou wilt be conceited of meriting thereby For a trust in thine owne righteousnesse will bring thee to hell as well as vnrighteous living Trust perfectly on the grace of God saith Peter 1. Pet. 1.13 if wee trust to any thing else it wil lay vs in the dust and bee as a broken reed which if a man leane vpon it the shiuers runne into his hand Vse 3. Gods children onely discerne a world of wickednesse in themselues for which they are much cast downe comfort thy selfe God elected thee freely to saluation and not for thy worthinesse If we were to be saued for our workes then wee had cause to doubt because of their defects This must be wel learned it is soone said but not so soone practised if a man haue fruit of his own planting he thinkes there is no fruit like to his So by nature wee are opinionated of our owne goodnesse Hence is it that God suffers many times euen his deare children fouly to fal to cure them of this pride as Peter or to suffer them to be sore tempted and buffeted that they may giue God the glory as Paul Vse 4. This teacheth vs humility because all is giuen of meere grace Vse 5. The grace of God teacheth to be gracious not gracelesse because of the mercies of God we must offer vp our selues to his seruice Rom. 12.1 Then cōclude thy selfe to be of the number of the saued when thy conuersation is godly If you sayest thou hopest to be saued by Gods grace and yet liuest in vile sinnes thou art a presumptuous and blasphemous Atheist Presumptuous because thou lookest to be saued in an estate to which is threatned damnatiō blasphemous because thou deniest God in thy life whose grace thou wouldest seeme to implore VERSE 7. What then Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but the election hath obtained it and the rest were blinded Or hardned IN these words and so to the end of the 10. verse is the last part of Pauls answer which is the determination of the question in hand namely that God hath cast away onely the reprobate Iewes but the Elect obtaine the promises God casteth away the chaffe but loseth not one kernell of good corne Paul enters vpon this in this 7. verse by a Prolepsis for thus some Iew might obiect If God cast not away the Elect and yet they obtaine saluation not by workes but onely by free grace Then Paul you make a faire hand
vetustatemque non sentit Ioh Bapt. Neap. vil l. 6. c 9. This notes soundnesse The nature also of the oyle is not to be mixed with other things if you mixe it with wine or water it will be vppermost you may as soone mixe light and darknesse as grace and sinne An Hypocrite is no branch of this tree Farther the nature of oyle is to keepe mettalls from rusting so the vertue of this grace preserues the conscience from sinne which otherwise would eate in and perish the soule If thou hast a cankard heart rusted with the loue of sinne and of the vanities of the world thou hast none of this fatnesse and by consequence art not graffed in 2. Thy words will be sutable to thy engraffing Flores Oliuae suauiter redolent Frater Iohannes a S Gemimano lib. 3. qui est de vegetabilibus et plantis c. 37. The blossome of the oliue is wonderfull sweet so if thou beest of this tree thy speech will be sauoury and gatious to the hearers If thou be a blasphemer a lyar c. Thou art not graffed into this oliue The sweete oliue yeelds another manner of sent A dead mans graue doth not more annoy men then thy filthy and rotten communication Iam. 1. It s a vaine thing for a man to seeme religious if he refraine not his tongue 3. If thu beest ingraffed thou wilt bring forth much fruit for the oliue is exceeding fruitfull The fruite of the oliue is both for God and man 1. For God Oyle was consecrate to the Lord was vsed in sacrifice and for the holy lamps for it is a nourisher of light so thou wilt be religious a keeper of the sabboth a worshipper of God a fauourer of the Gospell 2. For man It is both for medicine and meate Kings Preists and Prophets were annoynted with it Our liues must be fruitfull and profitable to the Church we must not be for nothing or onely to spend stouer as they say Let ours saith Paul learne to shew forth good workes for necessary vses that they bee not vnfruitfull Tit. 3.14 If we liue without doing good we are no oliue branches Our obedience must be to God and man to the first and second table of the law The properties of our obedience are foure according to such properties of the oliue That is 1. Speedie 2. Peaceable 3. continuall 4 chearefull Cito comprehendit et fructificat Ioh. Bap. Por. Nea. vil l. 6. c. 5. 1. The oliue is a quick bearer so we must bring forth fruit quickly like the Almond rod of Aaron that presently budded and brought forth ripe Almonds The theife vpon the crosse presently shewed the fatnesse he had rceiued by confession prayer c. 2. Our fruit must be peaceable An oliue branch was a token of peace as a palme of victory Iames sayth that the fruit of righteousnesse is sowne in peace Iam. 3.17 pride disdaine quarreling and contending with our neighbours is a note of a bramble not of an Oliue branch If you powre out water it maketh a noise dasheth and besprinkleth you But the powring out of oyle is without noise falling downe softly and with great silence So the seruants of God must be peaceable 3. Our obedience must be continuall once and alwayes to beare fruit The Oliue alwaies flourisheth is alwaies greene and neuer castes the leaues noting the constant tenour wee should keepe in our obedience Dauid saith Psal 92.14 That they which bee planted in Gods house still bring foorth fruit and flourish in their age If thy obedience bee not continuall it is not sound 4 Our obedience must be cheerful thy loue to thy neighbor must be free Anointing with oyle makes vs lithe and nimble so if we haue receiued hereof we wil not come to the Church as though we were stiffe in the ioynts like a beare to the stake but with Dauid we will runne in the wayes of the Commandements The Oliue requires no great cost to make it fruitful nor a man truely sanctified great intreatie to perswade him to doe good As the Sunne naturally giues light so a true Christian ingraffed into the naturall Oliue willingly and cheerefully is exercised in Gods seruice VERSE 19. Thou wilt say then the branches were broken off that I might be grafted in 20 Well because of vnbeleefe they were broken off and thou standest by faith Bee not high minded but feare THe Admonition is heere repeated in other words vpon the occasion of an insolent obiection of a Christian Gentile which obiection is set downe vers 19. and is the first part of these words The second part is Pauls answere vers 20. The Gentile taking in some scorne that Paul in the 17. v. had auouched the Iew to be the naturall Oliue and the Gentile a wilde Oliue obiecteth as if he had said Tell not mee Paul of these things let the Iew bee what he will I am as I am yet by your leaue he is broken off that I might be graffed in which shewes that God saw more worthinesse in mee then in the Iew The merchant parteth not with his present fraught but for better lading neither will any man suffer an incision or scarifying in his armes or feet but for preseruation of a more noble member as the eye or head His Argumēt may be framed in an Enthymeme thus They are broken off that I might be grafted in Therefore I may boast To this Paul answeres vers 20. which his answere is either to the Antecedent Well because of vnbeleefe they are broken off thou standest by faith or to the consequence Be not high minded but feare His answere to the Antecedent hath two parts 1. A Cōcession Well 2. A correction in the rest of the words Well Some take this word ironically and by way of increpation as we much vse it in our English tongue saying Ansel well well when we meane that it is not well But heere it is taken for a Concession Paul grants the thing viz. That the Iewes are broken off that the Gentiles might come in But he addes a prouiso alwaies remembred that the proper cause of the breaking off of the Iew was his infidelitie not the comming in of the Gentile For this came to passe by a second accidētal consideration and the proper cause of the comming in and standing of the Gentiles is faith that is the grace of God The Gentile then vnderstood not himselfe being like a foolish seruant that runnes away without his errand for if he had taken all with him he would haue discerned cause of humiliation not of boasting herein The Gentiles Argument is a meere paralogisme alledging that which is not the cause for that which is The vnbeleefe of the Iew being the cause of their breaking off not the letting in of the Gentiles So that Paul answeres as if he should say Learne thou Gentile to distinguish betweene the cause and the euent It fell out that the Iew being cast