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A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

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and imbraced and no otherwise Vse 1 Use 1. See that the many and great afflictions which the Saints of God suffer in this life are no hinderance at all to the truth of Gods promises of temporal blessings and prosperity made to his children in as much as all such promises do include this condition of the Crosse Vse 2 Use 2. See the folly of such Christians who because the Lord hath in his Word made many excellent promises of temporal blessings to his Saints and servants do hereupon promise to themselves a life of ease and outward prosperity free from troubles c. As if God had not annexed the condition of the crosse to all his temporal promises of this life or as if he had not as well ordained his true servants to the suffering of afflictions as to the enjoying of temporal blessings in this life c. These do miserably deceive themselves and separate things which God hath joyned viz. the suffering of the crosse and the enjoying of temporal blessings promised to Gods children in this life Use 3 Use 3. To teach us That as we desire and hope to be partakers of the blessings and good things of this life which God hath promised to his Saints and Children so withall we remember with what condition these blessings are promised namely with the condition of suffering the Crosse and afflictions and therefore to make sure accompt of our portion in the crosses and troubles of this life as well as in the blessings and good things promised of God as well to taste of the bitterness as of the sweetness of a Christians life in this world God will have it so and hath so decreed and appointed that his dearest children in this life shall not enjoy all prosperity and no troubles or all comforts and no crosses but prosperity and adversity comforts and crosses mingled together c. Therefore as we daily receive blessings at the hands of God and look for continuance of them according to the promises of God so must we daily prepare for crosses and troubles to be suffered Job 2. 10. Shall we receive good at the hands of God and not evill Yea the more blessings we receive and enjoy the more cause have we both to prepare for troubles and also to bear them with patience and contentedness when they come Observ 2 Observ 2. One kind of crosse or affliction which a Christian must make account to suffer in this life is persecution or troubles raised against him by wicked enemies of God and of his truth This our Saviour here foretelleth unto his disciples So also he doth elsewhere as Joh. 15. 20. If they have persecuted me they will also persecute you c. And 2 Tim. 3. 12. the Apostle affirmeth in general That all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution This the Saints of God have in all Ages suffered at the hands of wicked men and so must make account to do unto the end of the world that old enmity which God did at first put between the seed of the Woman and of the Serpent Gen. 3. 15. doth still continue and will do to the end of the world And this is the cause that wicked men being set on work by Satan do out of that hatred and malice which they bear to the Saints of God raise troubles against them Which being so Christians in all Ages must make account to suffer this kind of cross viz. persecutions at the hands of wicked men More particularly there are two kinds of Persecution which Christians must make account to suffer from wicked men The first is in word or the persecution of the tongue whereby wicked men and enemies of the truth do speak evil of the Saints of God either mocking and scoffing at them or reviling them or slandering and backbiting them Gal. 4. 29. Ismael in mocking at Isaac is said to have persecuted him The second kind of persecution is in Deed or actual persecution when wicked men do by malitious deeds or practices persecute or pursue the Saints of God labouring to vex and molest them and to stir up troubles against them Thus Saul persecuted David seeking his life c. and thus Paul before his Conversion persecuted and wasted the true Church Both these kinds of Persecution good Christians must make account to suffer from wicked men though not alwayes in the same degree or manner Use 1 Use 1. Teacheth us to prepare and arm our selves before-hand for this kind of crosse and tryal that we may be able to bear it when it cometh viz. to be molested vexed and troubled by the malice of profane and wicked men to be persecuted by them in word and deed c. Pray and labour for Patience and Christian courage to bear this tryal which is very grievous and hard to bear as we shall find when it comes to tryall Use 2 Vse 2. To comfort us when we meet with this kind of tryall viz. persecution by wicked enemies of God and of his truth when such as these do stir up troubles against us when they molest and vex us in word or deed as by scoffs slanders c. Let us not think strange or be dismayed hereat for this is that we must look for and which hath alwayes bin the lot of Gods true and faithfull servants thus to be persecuted and troubled by the wicked of this World Act. 7. 52. Which of the Prophets have not your Fathers persecuted c. The seed of the Serpent hath alwayes bin an enemy to the Seed of the Woman which is the true Church and so will be to the end of the World Here then is no cause of discouragement but of comfort so far forth as we suffer this persecution for the name of Christ and for well-doing Matth. 5. 10. c. Blessed are they which are persecuted for Righteousness sake for theirs is the Kingdome of Heaven c. It followeth And in the World to come eternal life Observ 1 Observ 1. Though we cannot by good works merit eternal life as the Papists falsly teach yet eternal life is promised and shall be given of God as a reward to such as do conscionably practise good works in this life c. Of this before ver 21. Observ 2 Observ 2. Such as forsake things dear to them in this World for the profession of Christ and the Gospell shall not onely be rewarded of God in this present life so far as the Lord sees it good for them as we have heard before but also in the life to come with the reward of eternal life and glory in Gods heavenly Kingdome And this is the chief and principal reward promised to such by our Saviour in this place So before ver 21. he promised the young Ruler that if he would sell all and give to the poor he should have Treasure in heaven And Joh. 12. 25. He that hateth his life shall keep it unto Eternal life Thus the Apostles
then shall they find Satan ready to discourage and hinder them Moses so long as he lived a private life was quiet and free from opposition but so soon as he began to take upon him his publick Calling which was to be the Deliverer of God's People I say so soon as he did but begin this deliverance of God's People in avenging the cause of an Israelite against an Aegyptian presently the Devil so stirred against him that he was fain to fly into the Land of Madian and to live there 40 years The Apostles whilst they lived as private men we read not of any temptations they were troubled with but after when they had lived but a while in their Apostolical Office the Devil desired to winnow them Luke 22. 31. So Paul whilst he lived a Pharisee we read not that he was tempted but soon after his Calling to be an Apostle and when he was exercised in preaching then he was buffeted with the messenger of Satan 2 Cor. 12. 7. So Zach. 3. 1. when Jehoshuah the High-Priest stood before the Lord to minister in his Office Satan stood at his right hand to resist him And this every one shall find true in experience if he will but observe it That the Devil will be most busy in tempting and disturbing him when he is about good Duties Is there any day in the week on which we meet with moe incumbrances to trouble and disquiet us than on the Sabbath What is the cause of this but the Devil whose policy it is thus to stir up hinderances to disturb us in the Duties of God's service upon that Day Again What hour of the Day is there in which we find our selves more disquieted and out of temper than at that hour and that time which we use to set ap●●t for private prayer This is nothing but a practise of Satan then to molest us and to cast stnmbling blocks in our way when we should be best imployed He knows that at such times we go about that which hinders his Kingdom therefore he labours so to hinder us Vse 1 Use 1. Be not discouraged from good Duties though we meet with many hinderances and disturbances at such times as we go about the performance of them Omit not the Duties because of such impediments as the Devil casteth before thee but break through them all rather than neglect a good Duty which thou shouldst perform as private Prayer Reading Meditation c. Let not all the stumbling blocks which Satan throws in thy way stop or hinder thy proceeding in the constant performance of such Duties but leap over all such blocks rather than be stopped by them in thy good course Know that this is usual with Satan to stir up hinderances when we should go about good Duties therefore look for this and withal be careful before-hand to watch against this policy of the Devil and be wise to prevent it Vse 2 Use 2. See the Folly and Ignorance of such who think all is well and that they are in good case because they feel no such disturbances from Satan no such temptations as others complain of But if it be thus with thee thou hast rather cause to suspect thy self and to be jealous of thy estate thou hast cause to fear thy self to be yet under Satan's power and to be yet holden in his snare at his Will and that thou hast not yet begun to set thy self to God's service for whilst the strong man armed keeps the hold the things that he possesseth are in peace Luke 11. 21. If thou be at peace within thy self in regard of temptations it is an ill sign for it argues thee to be yet in the Devil's service for he fights not against his own subjects or servants which are under his power because he hath them sure enough already but he fights by temptations against such as are gotten out of his service into the service of God that he may bring them again into his own service Presume not then of thy estate that it is good because thou art free from the temptations of Satan It is the greatest temptation not to be tempted Luther No sign of Grace to be without temptations but to strive against them to be humbled for them c. Use 3 Vse 3. This is for the comfort of such who are much molested with Satan's temptations and deeply humbled by them thinking themselves to be out of God's favour and to be none of his Children because they are so much tempted by the Devil whereas here we see the contrary that none are so much tempted as those who are most faithful in God's service which do most good and are imployed in the best Duties such as these because they are greatest enemies to the Devil's Kingdom therefore doth he bend his malice most against them Therefore the best men which have done most good in the Church have most complained of temptations So Paul Rom. 7. So Luther and Bradford So much of the circumstance of time when our Saviour was driven into the Wilderness to be tempted I proceed now to the person that drave our Saviour to be tempted viz. The Spirit Observ 1 Observ 1. In that our Saviour was effectually and strongly moved of the Holy Ghost to go to be tempted and did not go by the motion or will or command of Satan we learn That the temptations of God's Children come to them by the Will and Providence of God they come not to them by Chance or by the Will of Man or by the Will of Satan but by God's own appointment and disposing As Christ could not have been tempted of Satan if the Spirit had not driven and moved him to go to be tempted so the Devil cannot by his temptations molest any of God's Children unless God direct and dispose these temptations unto them by giving power and permission unto Satan to tempt them Reas Reas The Devil's power is limited and restrained by God's power and providence which is above him he is Potestas sub Potestate as St. Austin saies He could not molest the Herd of Swine without leave Mat. 8. much less can he tempt or molest God's Children without God's direction and permission We see this in Job whom the Devil could not touch any further than God gave leave to him 1 Chron. 21. 1. It is said that Satan provoked David to number Israel and yet 2 Sam. 24. 1. it is said also that God moved him to do it This shews that Satan cannot tempt or provoke any to sin further than God permitteth him to do it Use 1 Vse 1. Seeing the temptations of God's Children come unto them by God's special providence and appointment this must teach us not too much to fear such temptations nor to be discouraged by them For we may be sure that he which disposeth them to us will assist us in them and inable us to withstand them so as the Devil shall not have his Will of us The Lord directing
but also being in them he can frame and utter an audible Voyce and such as may be understood So here and afterwards Chap. 5. 7. and at other times See Acts 16. 17. So also he can utter a Voyce in other living Creatures which he enters into as he did in the body of the Serpent Gen. 3. Not that the Devil can give an immediate power of speech either to Man or to any other Creature but he doth it by help of some naturall causes or means which he makes use of to this purpose And when he speaketh in any Creature it is in such a Creature as hath some natural abilities and fitnesse either to speak or to utter some kind of imperfect Voyce c. See Perk. Discourse of Witchcraft Chap. 1. Sect. 4. Now to speak more particularly of the Words which the Devil here speaking in the party possessed did utter to our Saviour In which consider three things 1. The Devil beginning now to feel the Divine Power of Christ opposing him doth intreat our Saviour to forbear troubling or disquieting him and his fellows Let us alone 2. He doth expostulate with our Saviour 1. About the Cause of his molesting him and his fellows What have we to do with thee thou Jesus c. 2. About the end of his coming Art thou come to destroy us 3. He doth make a fained and hypocriticall confession of Christ I know thee who thou art c. Touching the first Let us alone Some take the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used here in the Original Text to be onely an Adverb of crying out and therefore they translate it Ah what have we to do with thee c. But it is rather to be taken as a Verb of the Imperative Mode signfying as much as Let us alone The Devil intreats our Saviour to forbear troubling or molesting him or his fellows that is other wicked Spirits which now possessed the bodies of other persons by casting them out of their holds Observ Observ How loth and unwilling the Devil is to forgo his hold or possession which he hath gotten in the bodies of Men at any time very loth he is to be dispossessed c. Therefore here he makes suit unto Christ to let him alone c. And to this purpose also tend the words following which he further useth to our Saviour viz. To move and perswade him if it might be not to cast him or his fellows out of their Possessions Hence also it was that this and other wicked Spirits did so much struggle against the Power of Christ when he was about to dispossesse them See more of this afterward upon Ver. 26. and Chap. 5. 7 8. It followeth What have we to do with thee c. The wicked Spirit doth expostulate the matter with our Saviour about the cause of his molesting him and his fellows and he seems to complain against Christ and to accuse him at least indirectly as if he dealt injuriously with him and his fellows in going about to cast them out seeing they had nothing to do with him that is they did not meddle against him neither had any way justly provoked or offended him q. d. what Cause is there in us why thou shouldest trouble us and go about to dispossesse us seeing we meddle not with thee nor have done thee any wrong c See 2 Sam. 19. 22. the like Speech used by David to Abishai in like sense What have I to do with you ye sons of Zerviah that ye should this day be adversaries to me What Cause is there in me or have I given you why ye should shew your selves enemies to me in molesting me and by provoking me against Shimei c. Thou Jesus of Nazareth This was the usuall name then given to our Saviour by the common People among the Jews The reason whereof was 1. Because his Mother the Virgin Mary dwelt there Luke 1. 26. And there she conceived him in her Womb it being a City in Galilee There also both she and her reputed Husband Joseph lived afterward for which cause it is called their own City Luke 2. 39. 2. There also our Saviour Christ did live and was brought up-under and with his Parents during the time of his private Life untill he was about thirty years of age Hence it was That he was commonly called Jesus of Nazareth and not for that he was born there 〈…〉 born at Bethlehem Matth. 2. Now some do further thin● 〈◊〉 the Devil gave this title now to our Saviour in policy thereby to nourish the common People in that error which they held concerning Christ that he was not the true Messiah because he was of Nazareth whereas the Messiah was to come out of Bethlehem See Joh. 1. 46. and Joh. 7. 52. But this I leave as uncertain although it is not altogether unlikely Observ Observ The Devil here pretends that he did not meddle with our Saviour nor had any way provoked or offended him and therefore implyes that our Saviour dealt injuriously with him and his fellows in going about to cast them out yet all this was false for 1. It was a just offence to our Saviour that these wicked Spirits did enter into Mens bodies to possesse and abuse them at his pleasure 2. It was therefore no wrong at all unto these Devils that our Saviour went about to dispossesse them Here then we see and learn that the Devil is a lyar and a false accuser of others He sticks not here at least indirectly to belye our Saviour and falsly to slander and accuse him as if he dealt hardly and unjustly with him and his fellows in going about to dispossesse them withall pretending but falsly that they had not provoked him or given him any cause thus to proceed against them All was false and herein the Devil shewed himself not onely a lyar but a slanderer and false accuser even of Christ himself c. So he falsly accused God himself unto Eve Gen. 3. and he falsly accused Job unto God Job 1. 9. And Rev. 12. 10. He is called The accuser of the Brethren c. yea he hath his name from slandering and false accusing for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a Slanderer and as his name is so is his nature as was said of Nabal c. Use 1 Vse 1. This must teach us not to believe the Devil when he suggesteth wicked thoughts to us either against God's Justice Mercy Providence c. or against our Brethren and perswades us to ●ntertain such thoughts Remember that Satan is a lyar and slanderer both of God and Men and therefore such thoughts coming from him we are not to believe or give any credit at all to them Use 2 Use 2. Beware of the sins of lying and slandering or false accusing for these are the Devil 's proper sins and the more any is given to them the more like they are to him c. Mark 1. 24. Let us alone What have we to do with
chap. 1. 42. See for proof of it Joh. 10. 25. and Matth. 11. 4. Vse 1 Use 1. This confuteth the Jews who at this day continue obstinate in denyal of this that Jesus is the Christ and do expect another to come which shall shew himself to be the true Messiah But this and all the rest of Christ's Miracles are so many Arguments to confute them See then the fearfull obstinacy and blindness which is come on that Nation for their hainous sin in rejecting Christ and in Crucifying him that was and is the Lord of Glory See Rom. 11. 25. Vse 2 Vse 2. This must teach and move us to seek Salvation in and by this Jesus alone and by no other name in Heaven or Earth Act. 4. 12. Doctr. 3 Doctr. 3. As our Saviour being on Earth had power to cure incurable diseases Miraculously that is without ordinary means So he hath still the same power over all bodily diseases to cure them either with or without means whensoever he will Though he be no longer on earth to cure diseases Miraculously yet being now in Heaven he hath as great power as before over the diseases of mens bodies to heal them even without means Vse Vse This may comfort us in time of dangerous sickness though our disease be incurable and such as cannot be healed by means of Physick or by any Art of man yet in this case remember the absolute power of Christ Jesus our Lord who can cure and heal us without means if he see it good for us Where man's help faileth there Christ's help beginneth Seek to him therefore by prayer in this case and rest on him by Faith and he will do that which is for our good Though we are not now to look that Christ should by his absolute power heal us Miraculously without means neither are we to neglect the ordinary means yet this i● our comfort that Christ's power is not tyed unto means but is far above them and able to help without them whensoever he pleaseth See before chap. 2. ver 10. Doct. 4 Doctr. 4. Lastly in that our Saviour did by his Divine power Miraculously heal this Woman of her bodily Disease drying up the fountain of her bloudy Issue by this he shewed himself to be such a person as is able to cure and heal the Spiritual diseases of our Souls that is our sin● by taking away the guilt of them by the merit of his bloud and by mortifying the corruption of sin in us by his Spirit The same power of Christ which was shewed in his Miraculous curing of bodily diseases is also seen in curing us of our sin● whence is that speech of our Saviour before to the Scribes chap. 2. 9. Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the Palsy thy sins are forgiven thee or to say Arise take up thy bed and walk And therefore also Matth. 8. 17. the Evangelist from our Saviour's Miraculous curing of bodily diseases doth gather that he was that person who was foretold by the Prophet Esay 53. 4. That he should bear our Spiritual sicknesses that is our sins and that with his stripes we should be healed that is by the ment of his sufferings our Souls should be healed of the guilt of our sins Use Use Seek then unto Christ Jesus as the onely Spiritual Physitian able to heal us in Soul of our sins if we do but come to him by Faith as this Woman did c. But of this before upon the two former Verses So much of the Miracle it self Now it follows to speak of the amplification of it 1. By the speediness straightway 2. By the certainty She felt in her self c. Observ Observ In that our Saviour did suddenly and instantly cure and stop this Issue of bloud so soon as she touched him This shews the greatness of his Divine power being able in so short a space of time even in a moment to work so great a Miracle So before chap. 1. 31. so soon as he took Peter's Wives Mother by the hand and lift her up immediately the Feaver left her And ver 42. assoon as he said to the Leper I will be thou clean immediately the Leprosy departed from him c. And this shews plainly that this and other like cure wrought by our Saviour were truly Miraculous that is such as were not wrought by any natural helps or means but onely by his Divine power above and beyond the power of nature the reason is because our Saviour wrought these cures suddenly in an instant whereas in such cures of Diseases as are wrought by natural means there is alwayes some competent space of time required for the effecting of them So much of the speediness of the Miracle Now followeth the certainty of it She felt in her body c. Observ 1 Observ 1. In that she did sensibly perceive and feel her self to be cured this teacheth us the truth of this Miracle that it was not a delusion but a work really and truly done above and beyond the power of nature See Joh. 9. 25. Of this see before chap. 2. ver 12. Observ 2 Observ 2. The disease of this woman is here called a Plague or a scourge to teach us that the diseases and sicknesses which are incident to men and womens bodies are fruits of sin and of themselves so many scourges or punishments inflicted on man for sin See this before chap. 3. ver 10. Mark 5. 30 31. And Jesus immediately knowing c. Dec. 17. 1620. NOw the Evangelist setteth down the consequents of this Miracle which are two 1. The manifestation of the Miracle which as yet was known onely to Christ himself and to the Woman cured ver 30 31 32 33. 2. Our Saviour's comforting and incouraging of the woman being stricken with fear and much humbled ver 34. Touching the first the manifestation of the Miracle to the people this is set forth by the means whereby it came to be made known The first means was Christ's enquiry made touching the person which had touched him ver 30. The second was his looking about to see her ver 32. The third was the Womans comming and relating the whole matter unto Christ before the people ver 33. Touching the first means which was Christ's enquiry after the Woman the Evangelist mentioneth 1. The occasion or cause moving Christ to enquire and ask of her viz. The knowledg which he had in himself that vertue was gone out of him 2. The manner of his making enquiry He turned about and asked after her 3. The matter enquired Who had touched his Clothes 4. The impertinent answer of the Disciples to his question or demand not understanding his meaning and therefore seeming to marvail and think strange of his enquiry as appears by the words of their answer ver 31. Thou seest the multitude thronging thee and sayest thou Who touched me Immediately So soon as the woman was made whole and felt her self to be so
done in secret for this is a property of God to see in secret Matth. 6. 4. Object Object Some meer men have had this priviledg to know things done in secret as Elisha of whom it is said That he told the King of Israel what the King of Syria did in his Bed-Chamber 2 King 6. 12 And 2 King 5. 26. he knew what his servant Gehazi did in his absence So Samuel was able to tell Saul what was in his heart 1 Sam. 9. 19. Answ Answ These did not of themselves or by their own power know such secrets but they were extraordinarily revealed to them of God at special times But our Saviour Christ knew such secrets of himself without any special or extraordinary revelation This therefore proveth him to be God So much of our Saviour Christ's Enquiry after the party that had touched him Mark 5. 31 c. And his Disciples said unto him c. Decem. 24 1620. NOw followeth the impertinent Answer which the Disciples made to his Demand Verse 31. His Disciples said to him Thou seest the multitude thronging thee and sayst thou Who touched me Luke 8. 45. It is said That Peter and they that were with him said Master the multitude throng thee c. Now by this Answer Peter and the other Disciples shew plainly That they did utterly mistake our Saviour and did not understand his meaning when he asked who had touched his clothes for they thought he spake onely of an ordinary outward touching of his clothes such as that was whereby the common people which were about him and thronged him did touch him whereas the truth is he spake of a special and extraordinary touching of his Clothes which was accompanied with an inward and spirituall touching of his Person by faith But this the Disciples understood not and therefore they gave this impertinent answer to our Saviour's question by which they seem after a sort to blame and tax him and to wonder at him for asking who touched him when the multitude did not only touch but throng him But herein they discovered both their own indiscretion and rashness and also their ignorance Observ 1 Observ 1. Hence we learn That even the best Christians such as Christ's own Disciples though they have a special measure of grace yet are not without their imperfections and wants See this handled before Chap. 3. Verse 31. And it hath been often spoken of Observ 2 Observ 2. The Disciples testifie That the multitude not only touched but thronged Christ and it is likely that amongst so many there were some besides this woman which had some bodily diseases or infirmities yet none were healed by Christ but only the woman the reason is because she only touched him by faith whereas the rest touched him only outwardly Hence then we may gather That outward fellowship and society with Christ doth not profit any if there be not also a spiritual union and communion with him by faith As this outward touching and thronging of Christ did not profit the multitude for the curing of their bodily infirmities because they wanted faith whereby they should have touched him spiritually so neither can any outward fellowship with Christ nor any outward approaching to him or touching of him profit any to the Salvation of their Souls if they want Faith to touch and apprehend Christ in a Spiritual manner Luke 13. 26. Many who have eat and drank in Christ's presence on earth and in whose streets he taught yet shall at the last day be rejected of him and shut out of his Kingdome because they had onely outward fellowship but no Spiritual union or conjunction by Faith with him Use Use This must teach us not to rest in any outward fellowship or Communion with Christ as if this alone would avail us to Salvation Think it not enough to come near unto Christ and to touch him in an outward manner as this Multitude did think it not enough to draw near to him in outward Profession of his Name and Gospel and in outward performance of Religious Duties of Prayer Hearing his Word receiving the Sacraments all this is but outward touching of Christ's Garment but labour withall and that chiefly to come near him yea to touch and lay hold on him by true Faith then shall we feel vertue to come from him to heal our Souls and not otherwise But more of this in the 34th Verse when we come to it So much of the first means by which the Miracle was manifested Namely Christ's enquiry after the Woman which had touched him Now followeth the second means which was his looking about upon her Ver. 32. He looked round about to see her that had done this thing This he did partly to stir up the people to take special notice of the Miracle and partly to stir up and move the Woman to come forth before him and to declare the Miracle thereby to testify her thankfullness for the benefit of health restored to her And this shews that the Woman of her self was too slack and backward to come and shew her thankfulness by declaring the Miracle otherwise our Saviour needed not to ask after her and to look about upon her to put her in mind of this her duty Observ Observ By nature we are very slack and backward to shew our thankfullness to God for those blessings which he bestoweth on us We are more forward in our great necessity and distress to come and seek to God for help and mercy then we are to shew thankfullness when we have received mercies from him So was this Woman So also the Lepers cleansed by our Saviour Luke 17. 17. though all the ten came to Christ and prayed him to shew mercy on them yet but one of them returned to give Glory to God This our naturall backwardness to shew thankfulness unto God for his Mercies we must here take notice of and learn to be humbled for it and to strive against it using all good means to stir up our Hearts to this Duty of thankfulness unto God for his manifold favours and blessings bestowed on us daily So much of the second means of the manifestation of this Miracle viz. our Saviour looking about upon the Woman to put her in mind to come and shew her thankfulness by uttering the Miracle Now followeth the third and last means namely the womans comming before Christ and declaring of the whole truth of the matter ver 33. Where consider 1. The manner of her comming 1. With great reverence fearing and trembling which is amplified by the cause which was that she knew what was done in her 2. With great Humility expressed outwardly by falling down b●fore him 2. Consider what she did being come before Christ She told him the whole truth Quest Fearing and trembling Quest What moved her so to fear Answ Answ Some think the feared lest our Saviour should sharply reprove her for comming secretly to touch him and to be cured of him whereas she
should rather have come more openly that others might have taken notice of the Miracle and have profited by it But I take it the principall cause of her fear was 1. The consideration of Christ's Divine power and Majesty shewed in this Miracle and this reason of her fear the Evangelist himself giveth in the next words when he saith she knew what was done in her That is she sensibly felt and perceived how great a Miracle Christ had wrought in curing her and this moved her to tremble before him 2. The consideration also of her own vileness and unworthiness both in regard of her sins as also of her outward condition having hitherto bin a diseased woman for many years and her disease such as by the Law was accompted unclean Observ Observ That when we are to come before God in any special manner as to pray or to give thanks to him or to perform any special service to him we are to come with all reverence and fear of his Divine Majesty See this point spoken of before ver 22. of this chap. It followeth Knowing what was done in her This shews that it was a true Miracle really and sensibly wrought and not in shew onely But of this see also before ver 29. I proceed to the next words She came and fell down before him By this outward lowly gesture she expressed the inward humility of the Heart that she was touched with an inward feeling of her own vileness and unworthiness Observ Observ By her example we must learn how to carry our selves when we come before God to perform any special service to him We are to come in humble and lowly manner our hearts must be humbled in the sight and feeling of our own vileness and unworthiness and this inward Humility must appear by our outward submission and lowly carriage of our selves in the presence of God Thus Jairus a Ruler of the Synagogue though a great man yet came before Christ in humble manner falling at his feet as we heard before ver 22. and the Leper kneeled to him chap. 1. 40. yea he fell flat on his face before him Luke 5. 12. By this outward humbling and abasing of themselves they testified the inward Humiliation of their Hearts in the sense of their own unworthiness And thus have the Faithfull used to come before God with Hearts humbled in the sight and feeling of their own vileness as Abraham Gen. 18. 27. acknowledgeth before God that he is but dust and ashes And Job 40. 4. Behold saith he I am vile c. And Daniel chap. 9. ver 7. O Lord Righteousness belongeth to thee but unto us confusion of Faces c. And thus ought we to come before God in humble manner especially with Hearts inwardly humbled in the sight of our own unworthynesse Reason Reas God doth best accept of such as are humble and lowly in his sight Esay 66. 2. To this man will I look even to him that is poor and of a contrite Spirit c. yea he delighteth in such Esay 57. 15. Thus saith the high and lofty one I dwell with him that is of an humble Spirit to revive the Spirit of the humble c. and Jam. 4. 6. He giveth Grace to the humble Use 1 Use 1. This reproveth such as come before God to do special services to him in the Pride and haughtiness of their Hearts puffed up with conceipts of their own goodness or worthiness Thus that proud Pharisee came before God Luke 18. He boasted of his good works Thus the Papists at this day come before God to Pray and perform other Services with an Opinion of their own merits and good works for which they hope to be the better accepted of God But God rejecteth such and their Services as he did the proud Pharisee Use 2 Use 2. When we are to come before God to do him speciall service see that we come in lowly and humble manner especially labour to have thy Heart touched and humbled with the feeling of thy unworthiness and vileness in regard of thy sins and let this thy inward Humility appear in thy outward lowly carriage in the sight and presence of God Imitate herein the poor humbled Publican Luke 18. 13. who by the lowliness of his Countenance and outward gesture expressed the inward Humility of his Heart The more humble and low and vile thou art in thy own eyes and the more thou art cast down in the sense of thy own sins and unworthiness the more acceptable thou and thy Services are to God and the more highly doth he esteem of thee So much of the manner of this womans comming before Christ Now it follows to speak of that which she did being come before him namely that she told him all the truth Luke 8. 47. She declared for what cause she touched him and how she was healed immediately Now by this she testified her thankfulness to Christ for the benefit of health restored to her so Miraculously Observ 1 Observ 1. Here then we learn by her example that in all mercies and blessings which we receive from God we ought to shew true thankfulness unto God It becommeth the upright to be thankfull Psal 33. 1. 1 Thess 5. 18. In all things give thanks Now our thankfulness must be both inward and outward 1. Inward in the Heart affected with unfeined desire of glorifying God Psal 103. 1. My Soul praise the Lord and all that is within me c. 2. Outwardly testified and expressed 1. By free acknowledgment of Gods mercies to us as this Woman did unto Christ 2. By yielding praise and Glory to God with our mouthes when we have occasion to mention Gods Mercies to us Thus have the Faithful used to do especially David in every Psalm almost 3. By shewing forth the fruits of true Repentance and Obedience to the will of God in the course of our lives without this all shew of thankfulness in word and tongue is Hypocrisy and Abomination before God To such he will say as he doth to the Hypocrite Psal 50. 16. What hast thou to do to take my Covenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest Instruction and castest my words behind thee Use Use See then that we thus shew our true thankfulness to God for all his Mercies This is the onely Tribute which he requireth for all that we receive and enjoy from his bounty and goodness Let us therefore be carefull to render it him duely and conscionably as becommeth us Observ 2 Observ 2. In that this woman did not onely shew her thankfulness to Christ by acknowledging this great blessing of health bestowed on her but did also publish it openly before the people we may gather that it is fit for us in some cases to acquaint others with the great mercies and blessings which we have received from God See this observed before ver 19. of this chap. Mark 5. 34. And he said unto her Daughter c. Dec. 31. 1620. HEre is
laid down the second Consequent of the Miracle which was our Saviour's comforting and incouraging of the Woman being much humbled and cast down with fear of Christ's Divine Majesty and with the sight and feeling of her own unworthiness as we heard out of the former Verse Now he doth incourage her three wayes 1. By calling her Daughter 2. By commending her Faith telling her that she was made whole by it 3. By assuring her by promise of the continuance and constant fruition of the benefit of health restored to her in these words Go in peace and be whole of thy Plague Doctrines generally arising from the coherence of this verse with the former Observ Observ In that this Woman being stricken with fear and trembling at the Divine Majesty of Christ and greatly humbled before him in the sense of her own vileness our Saviour doth thereupon incourage and comfort her Hence we learn that Christ Jesus is the raiser up and Comforter of such as are truly humbled before him in the fight of their own unworthiness and vileness in regard of their sins Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest c. Esay 42. 3. A bruised Reed shall he not break c. Luk. 4. 18. He hath sent me to heal the broken hearted Quest Quest How doth Christ comfort such as are so humbled Answ Answ 1. Outwardly by his Word and Ministery of it especially by the sweet and comfortable promises of the Gospel applyed to them effectually See Esay 50. 4. 2. By the inward consolations of his Spirit speaking peace to their Consciences and assuring them of his favour and of the forgiveness of their sins Use 1 Vse 1. To stay and comfort the Hearts of such as are much cast down before God in the feeling of their sins and unworthiness by reason of them and cannot for the present conceive or feel any comfort or assurance of Gods mercy and favour yet let them not be utterly dismayed or out of all hope of comfort but wait still upon God and upon Christ Jesus the Lord for comfort for assuredly he that is the Comforter of all the humbled and broken hearted will in due time raise up and comfort them with the feeling of his favour c. Vse 2 Vse 2. If we would have the Lord Jesus from Heaven to raise us up and comfort u● we must then first see that we be truly humbled and cast down in his sight with the sense of our sins and wretchedness of our selves Jam. 4. 10. Humble your selves in the sight of the Lord and he shall lift you up If thou wouldst have Christ to give thee ease and rest thou must first travel under the burden of thy sins if thou wouldst have him to heal thee thou must first be broken in heart and bruised in conscience for thy many and great sins So much of this general Observation from the coherence Now to speak more particularly of the words Daughter He giveth her this title of a daughter thereby to testifie his loving affection toward her which was such as is in a natural father toward his child and by this also he implyeth that near spirituall union which was between himself and her in respect of the bond of faith by which she wa knit unto him Observ Observ Here then we are to take notice of the strait and near union that is between Christ and all true Believers they are as nearly united as natural Parents and Children yea much nearer in as much as the bond of grace is straiter than of nature See this before Chap. 3. 33 c. It followeth Thy faith hath made thee whole This is the second thing by which he doth encourage her namely by commending her faith By faith understand not onely a general belief of Christ's power that he was able to cure her but also a particular and speciall applying of his power and mercy to her self being perswaded that he was both able and willing to cure her as may be gathered out of the 20th Verse going before where it is said That she said that is was perswaded in heart that if she touched him she should be whole Quest Hath made thee whole Quest How can her faith be said to have made her whole seeing it was the vertue which went out of Christ that is his Divine power which healed her as we heard before Verse 30. Answ Answ The miraculous cure is here attributed to her faith not as to the efficient cause for that was Christ's Divine vertue but as to the instrumental cause or means by which she apprehended and applyed to her self that divine power of Christ by which she was healed Doctr. Doctr. Hence we may gather That faith is the onely means and instrument by which we receive and apply to our selves all benefits and good things which we have from Christ As this Womans faith was the mean and instrument by which she came to receive bodily health from him so it is also the only instrumental cause or mean by which we receive all other benefits from Christ which he bestoweth on u● or hath purchased for us The reason hereof is because by faith alone we are united unto Christ himself by it we receive him Joh. 1. 12. and by it he comes to be joyned to us yea to dwell in us Ephes 3. 17. We are also married to him by faith Hos 2. 20. Therefore seeing it is by faith that we come to receive Christ and to be united and joyned so near unto his person in a spiritual manner hence it followes that by the same faith we receive all benefits from Christ which we have from him Even as the Wife being by the marriage-bond ●oyned to her Husband comes by this means to have an interest in those things which are her Husbands as his Honour Riches c. So we being by faith married to Christ by the same faith also we come to have interest in all benefits of Christ which he hath procured for us Now the benefits which we have from Christ and by his means are of two sorts 1. Spiritual which concern our souls and the life to come as justification forgiveness of sins God's favour and salvation it self All these and the like we receive from Christ by faith Rom. 3. 28. we are said to be justified by faith c. So Act. 13. 38. Through this man that is through Christ is preached to you forgiveness of sins See Mar. 2. 5. And by him all that believe are justified from all things Joh. 3. 16. Whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have everlasting life See also Mark 16. 16. 2. Temporal benefits which concern this life as bodily health wealth outward peace and prosperity These also we may be said to receive from Christ 1. In that we come to have true right and interest to them in him and by him alone for as in Adam we have lost our right
so commonly called Jesus of Nazareth as we heard before Chap. 1. 24. Sometimes also Capernaum is called his own City as Matth. 9. 1. but that is in another respect namely because there he dwelt after that he left Nazareth Matth. 4. 13. and there also he preached much and wrought very many Miracles Vide Bezam in Matth. 13. 53. Quest Quest Why did he now come to Nazareth his own City Answ Answ That he might do good there by his Doctrine and Miracles as well as in other parts of Galilee and the rather because he had been conceived there and brought up also there so many years and there his Parents and Kindred dwelt therefore he thought himself tyed in special manner to do good in that City Object Object But he knew before-hand that his Countrymen would contemn his Doctrine and take offence at his Person as it came to pass Verse 3. Answ Answ Yet he would go and Preach and work Miracles among them to convince them of unthankfulness and to leave them without excuse that they might not be able to say That if he had come and preached to them they would have Believed in him It may be also that some few of that City might be moved by his Doctrine and Miracles to Believe in him though the greatest part of them were not Observ 1 Observ 1. Here we see it is lawfull and good for us to esteem well of those places and Countreyes where we have received our first conception and birth or have bin brought up especially for some long time together and we may carry a special affection to such places in respect of those great benefits which we have received from God in them yea we have cause to shew our thankfulness for those benefits as occasion is offered by shewing special love to our Countrey-men and doing them good c. Thus our Saviour Christ having bin conceived and brought up at Nazareth many years did therefore esteem well of that place and shewed his good Affection to it by taking occasion to come to it now to do good there by his Miracles and by his Doctrine if they would have imbraced it and not have unthankfully contemned it as they did This we may learn from the Heathen among whom the best were most loving and thankful to their Countrey See also Rom. 9. 3. Observ 2 Observ 2. Our Saviour was not ignorant before he came into his own Countrey that they would unthankfully contemn his Doctrine and take offence at his person and yet he did not forbear comming to Preach and work Miracles there because he had a Calling so to do to teach Ministers of the Word that when they have a Calling to Preach the Word and to do other Ministerial duties in any place or to any people they ought to do their duties though their persons and Doctrine be contemned by that people Such contempt and unthankfulness of the people must not hinder them or discourage them in their duties Ezek. 2. 3. chap. the Prophet is commanded to go and Preach the Word to the Jews and yet the Lord tells him before hand That they would not hearken to him as chap. 3. ver 7. So Jerem. 1. 17-19 and Jerem. 20. 9. Quest Quest To what end should a Minister Preach to such a people as contemn and reject his person and Doctrine Answ Answ 1. To discharge his duty and Conscience before God in that place and Calling in which God hath set him 2. To convince the obstinacy and unthankfulness of such a people and to leave them without excuse So Ezek. 2. 5. Whether they will hear or whether they will forbear yet they shall know that there hath bin a Prophet among them Observ 3 Observ 3. Nazareth is called our Saviour's own Countrey where he was brought up and lived many years and yet it was but a mean and obscure place and contemptible in it self as may appear by that contemptible speech of Nathaniel concerning it Joh. 1. 46. Can any good thing come out of Nazareth and though it be called a City yet that proves it not to have bin any large City for sometime in Scripture small Towns or Villages are called Cities as Bethlehem Luke 2. 4. Joh. 7. 42. And St. Hierome in locis Hebraicis testifieth that in his time Nazareth was a small Village Hence then we may learn not to judge of mens persons and gifts by the mean place or Countrey where they have bin born or brought up as to say or think Such a one is of mean parts or gifts because he was born or brought up in a mean or obscure place or Countrey for God can bring excellent persons and of rare gifts and Graces out of mean and obscure Countreys even Christ himself the most excellent person that ever lived on earth was brought up at Nazareth an obscure place and there his Parents and kindred also lived So Amos 1. 1. So Jeremy born at Anathoth a poor Village Jer. 1. 1. Isai 10. 30. It was the ignorance and errour of the Pharisees to comtemn Christ because of the meanness of the Countrey of Galilee in which he lived Joh. 7. 52. Search and look say they to Nicodemus for out of Galilee ariseth no Prophet So also it was the sin of Julian that wicked Apostate to call Christ the Galilean by way of contempt as he did and the sin of Tertullus to call the Christians Nazarens in way of contempt in regard of the meanness contemptibleness of the City Nazareth where Christ had bin brought up Act. 24. 5. We must take heed we do not contemn or vilify good Christians because of the mean place or Countrey where they have been born or brought up or where they live but we must highly esteem and reverence them for those Spiritual Graces which we see in them whatsoever their Countrey and place of their birth or education have been Not but that there is difference in places and Countreyes and one may be better then another to live in especially in respect of the means of Grace which are more plentifully to be had in some Countreyes then in other but yet the Grace of God is not absolutely tyed or confined to one place or Countrey above another but as the Wind bloweth where it listeth c. so is every one that is born of the Spirit Joh. 3. 8. And Act. 10. 35. In every Nation he that feareth God and worketh Righteousness is accepted with him Et de Hierosolymis et de Britannia aequaliter patet Aula coelestis Hieronym Epist 13. Observ 4 Observ 4. Though Nazareth were but an obscure City yet this is a great honour to it that it was our Saviour Christ's own Countrey where he was brought up which shews that excellent and worthy persons for Spiritual gifts do bring great honour and credit to the places and Countreys or Cities where they live though otherwise they be mean and obscure places Thus our Saviour by his birth and education
c. they hence take occasion to contemn and reject the Doctrine it self which they teach And this is one great and main cause of the contempt of the Gospel and of so little profiting by it in these our dayes Use Use Take heed we be not in this like unto the profane and wicked beware of stumbling thus at the outward quality or condition of the persons of Gods Ministers sent unto us with the Word of Salvation let not this be as a block in our way to hinder and keep us from believing and imbracing the Doctrine it self which they bring to us Therefore let us turn our Eyes from the persons of Gods Ministers and let us especially look at the Doctrine it self which they Preach to us which if it be sound and agreeable to the written Word of God we are to imbrace and yield obedience to it whatsoever the outward quality or Condition of the person be that Preacheth it though he be but a mortall and frail man like our selves and though he be a man of mean outward estate in the World or of mean Parentage Kindred c. The Heavenly Treasure of the Word of God is never the less worth or less to be esteemed though it come to us in Earthen Vessell● as the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 4. 7. If a Message be sent to any of us from some great person we look not so much at the person that brings it as we do at the Message it self So when Ministers of the Word Preach the Word of God to us we must not so much have an eye to the outward quality of the persons that Preach as to the Doctrine it self which they deliver the excellency and Divine Authority whereof must move us to imbrace and yield obedience to it Mark 6. 4 5 6. But Jesus said unto them c. Mar. 11. 1620. THe Evangelist having in the former Verse shewed that the People of Nazareth took offence at Christ in regard of his mean Education birth and kindred and were hindred thereby from believing in him and from imbracing his Doctrine Now he setteth down the events which happened upon this their being offended 1. Our Saviour closely reproveth them for taking offence at him and for contemning and rejecting his person and doctrine shewing them the cause of that contempt which was this That he was their Countryman who having heretofore lived and been brought up amongst them for sundry years together was familiarly known to them and therefore they so contemned him And that it was so he proveth by a common and general sentence or proverbial speech then in use as it seemeth in these words A Prophet is not without honour but in his own Countrey c. The summe whereof is this That the true Prophets of God are usually most contemned where they are most familiarly known as among their own Countrymen kindred c. The second event is That our Saviour being so contemned of his Countrymen did work but few Miracles among them Verse 5. 3. That he marvailed at their unbelief Verse 6. 4. That he left them and went round about the Villages teaching A Prophet This word doth often signifie such extraordinary Teachers as were stirred up and immediately called of God to teach the Church and to foretell things to come But here it is to be taken in a more large sense for any ordinary Teacher or Minister of the Church lawfully called to that Office either immediately of God or mediately by the Church Act. 15. 32. Judas and Silas are called Prophets that is Ministers or Teachers of the Church So also we are to take the word 1 Cor. 14. 32. The spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets Is not without honour Is not contemned and vilified or dishonoured But in his own Countrey In the place where he hath been born or brought up and lived In his own house That is in his own family or among those of his natural Stock or Lineage for so the word house is sometimes used as 2 Sam. 7. 18. David thus speaketh What am I O God and what is my house c. And Luke 1. 27. The Virgin Mary is said to be of the house of David that is of the natural race and posterity of David Vide Bezam in hunc locum Now this proverbial sentence uttered here by our Saviour is not so to be taken as if it were generally and absolutely true in all cases for sometimes a Prophet of God may be dishonoured out of his own Countrey among such as are strangers to him and none of his familiar acquaintance or kindred yea this often commeth to pass as experience sheweth And on the other side sometimes a Minister of God may be well respected and honoured even in his own Countrey and among his kindred and so it was with our Saviour himself for although the most of these Nazarites his Countrymen did take offence at him yet there is nothing against it but that we may think some few of them at least did well respect him and his doctrine and believe in him which is the more probable because it is said Verse 5. That he wrought some Miracles among them which it is likely he did for their sakes who did honour him and believe in him And though some of his Kindred also did not so honour him as they should as we heard Chap. 3. 21. where they said of him That he was beside himself yet others of them did truly honour him and believe in him as those Kinsmen of his mentioned in the former Verse James Joses c. Therefore our Saviour's meaning here is to shew not what comes alwayes to passe but what most usually falleth out to the Teachers of the Church that for the most part they are not so much contemned amongst any as amongst their own Countrymen Kindred c. So much of the sense of the words Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. Here then we learn That good and faithfull Ministers of God are usually most subject to contempt and dishonour in the places where they are most familiarly known as amongst their own Country-men Kindred or those of their own family Our Saviour Christ had experience of this for he was no where so little regarded nor so much vilified as among his own Countrymen of Nazareth as we see here and Luke 4. Though he came twice to preach unto them yet both times he was rejected of them and not only so but they thrust him out of their City the first time he came and would have thrown him headlong down the Hill on which the City stood Luke 4. 29. And as his Countrymen so also some of his Kindred were apt to dishonour him as may appear both by this place and also Mark 3. 21. Joh. 7. 5. In which respect that may be truly said of him Joh. 1. 11. He came unto his own and his own received him not And this also we may see in some other Prophets and Ministers of God
own Power But I proceed to the second principall Action of Christ viz. His blessing the Loaves and Fishes Amplyfied by the manner or gesture used therein He looked up to Heaven He Blessed This implyes two things 1. Thanksgiving See Joh. 6. 11. 2. That he prayed unto his Father for a blessing to be given to the Loaves and Fishes which he was about to distribute And it is likely that he prayed not onely for an ordinary blessing but also for an extraordinary viz. That those few Loaves and Fishes might be so multiplyed that they might be sufficient for so many Thus the word Blessed is sometimes used in Scripture to signifie Petition or Prayer for a blessing from God Gen. 48. 20. Jacob blessed the sons of Joseph that is prayed for them Numb 6. 23. The Priests were to bless the People c. Quest Quest How did Christ pray and give thanks to God his Father seeing Himself was God equall with the Father Answ Answ Though he which prayed was God yet he prayed and gave thanks not in his God-head or according to it but in and according to his Humane Nature See Muscul on Joh. 6. 11. Observ Observ See here that we are not to take and use the good Creatures of God for our nourishment and sustenance of this Life without Prayer and Thanksgiving unto God for them blessing and praising Him for the use and benefit of them and praying for a blessing upon them and upon us in the use of them If our Saviour Christ used to do this being the Son of God c. as we see he did both here and Mark 8. 6 7. and Matth. 26. 26. and Luke 24. 30. then how much more ought we to do it If he that was Lord of all Creatures and had Power of himself to bless them and make them nourishable did yet give thanks for the Meat and Drink he received and pray to his heavenly Father for a blessing on them How much more ought we c. 1 Sam. 9. 13. It was the custom of Samuel to bless the Sacrifice before the People did eat of it at the times of the solemn Feasts which they sometimes made after the Sacrifices Which argues That it was the custom amongst God's People not to eat their Meat without Thanksgiving and Prayer to God The like custom was used in the Apostles times as we see by Paul's practice Act. 27. 35. And it was continued in the Church after the Apostles times as Tertullian witnesseth in these words Non priùs discumbitur quàm oratio ad Deum praegustetur Vide Magdeburg Cent. 3. Cap. 6. Col. 142. Reas Reasons Why it is fit for Christians to use Prayer and Thanksgiving when they receive their Meat and Drink 1. We are commanded to Eat and Drink to the Glory of God 1 Cor. 10. 31. Which that we may do the better it is fit and requisite that we give solemn thanks to God at the receiving of our Food and that we pray for Grace to use the Creatures to his Glory c. 2. We receive all Meat and Drinks from the hands of God He is the Author and Giver of all Bodily Food This Jacob acknowledged Gen. 48. 15. The God which fed me all my Life long c. He it is that filleth our hearts with Food and Gladnesse Act. 14. 17. Therefore it is fit we do by thanksgiving at our Meat acknowledge Him as the Giver of it and blesse his name for his goodness toward us If the eyes of all living Creatures wait on God for their Meat c. Psal 145. 15. much more should we c. 3. By Prayer and Thanksgiving the Creatures are sanctified to us 1 Tim. 4. 4. that is by this means we come to use them in holy and lawfull manner as having right and interest to them by the mercy of God in Christ in that we do not presume to take them without his leave but first asking him leave as it were by Prayer c. 4. Without the blessing of God the Creatures have no Power or Vertue to nourish and do us good Hag. 1. 6. Ye eat and have not enough c. Therefore the blessing of God is called the Staff of Bread Ezek. 4. 5. Chap. and Levit. 26. Therefore when we take our bodily Food we have need to go to God by Prayer for his blessing on it that it may have strength and vertue to nourish c. Vse 1 Vse 1. See the brutish profaness of such as sit down to Eat and Drink and rise up again without a word of Thanksgiving or Prayer to God yea they do not so much as lift up their hearts to God in Prayer or Thanksgiving for their Meat and Drink which they receive But like greedy Vultures or Kites seize upon their Meat and Drink as upon a Prey never looking or thinking whence it cometh or like Swine eating Acorns and never looking up to the Tree from whence they fall or like Oxen devouring their Fodder and never regarding him that gives it them In such brutish sort many fall to their Meat without blessing their Tables by Prayer c. A most ignorant and profane Custom utterly unfit to be heard of among Christians professing the knowledge and fear of God What are such profane Persons but wrongfull Usurpers of God's Creatures which they take and use for their nourishment having no right to them but laying violent hands on them without leave from God the Author c. If one of us should take and use another Man's Goods as his Cattle Corn c. and never ask him leave how great a wrong were it no better then Theft and such a one might have an Action in Law against us c. So for any to take the Creatures of God and to feed on them without his leave it is a high injury to his Majesty it is robbery against God and he may and will have an Action against such c. Use 2 Use 2. Let all remember and be carefull to sanctifie to themselves their Meat and Drink by Prayer and Thanksgiving I say All both Rich and Poor Men and Women Masters and Servants c. For this Duty is most neglected by Servants and by the Poorer sort as if they were exempted from it Contrariwise they in some respect have more especiall Cause to be thankfull for their Meat because they are not so well able to provide for themselves as the Richer sort and therefore they are in more speciall manner bound to God for providing for them And besides their store of Provision being but small it is the more needfull for them to pray for a blessing on it that it may be sufficient to nourish them c. So much of the Action of Christ in blessing the Loaves c. Now followeth the Gesture which He used in blessing them He looketh up to Heaven This Gesture our Saviour most commonly used in praying as we may see Joh. 11. 41. and Joh. 17. 1. and
to with-hold or take from such these pretious means Because these Scribes and Pharisees willfully contemned and rejected Christ's Doctrine at other times therefore now though he reprove them yet he will not vouchsafe to instruct them because they would not at other times learn of Him therefore now he will not teach them but leaves them in their obstinacy and willfull blindnesse and turns to the Common People to instruct them He would not give holy things to such Doggs nor cast such Pearls to Swine c. See before Chap. 5. 18. Vse 3 Vse 1. See how fearful and dangerous it is for any to be willful Contemners of the Ministry of the Word when they enjoy it or have it offered to them saying with those in Job Chap. 21. 14. Depart from us we desire not the Knowledge of thy wayes c. Or with those Amos 2. 12. and Mich. 2. 6. bidding the Prophets not to Prophesie unto them c. It is just with God to deprive such of these means of Salvation for their unthankfulness and he will do it if they repent not speedily of this hainous sin Oh then let every People and Person beware of obstinacy and wilfull contempt of the Ministery of the Word and other means of Salvation lest they be taken from them and they left to themselves to perish in their own willfull blindnesse and hardnesse of heart Of all kind of contempt of the Word beware of willfull contempt lest if thou willfully reject Instruction when thou mayest have it the Lord afterward deny it unto thee and so thou live and dye and perish for ever in thy willfull blindness Hos 4. 6. The Lord threatneth the Priests That because they rejected Knowledge He would reject them c. So will he say to thee If thou be a Contemner of Instruction If thou wilt not learn of Christ he will not teach thee If thou wilt not learn of his Ministers thou shalt not learn of them for he will either take them away or their Ministery from thee or make it unprofitable to thee so as it shall do thee no good giving thee over to such blindness and hardness of heart that all that is preached to thee shall be as if it were spoken in Parables or in a strange Language c. Use 2 Vse 2. Make use of the means while we have them Seek the Lord while He may be found c. Isa 55. See Cant. 5. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour perceiving the Common People to be more teachable than the proud Pharisees doth therefore turn and apply Himself to instruct them rather then the Pharisees We learn That Christ Jesus our Lord is most ready to teach such as are most teachable that is ready willing and fit to learn of him Spirituall and Heavenly matters Therefore he usually passed over the obstinate and refractary Scribes and Pharisees which scorned to be taught of Him and applyed himself rather to instruct either his own Disciples or the Common People which were more tractable and teachable than the Scribes and Pharisees So here and at other times Psal 25. 9. The Meek and Humble will he teach his way The reason is because such are most teachable As on the contrary such as are proud and high-minded are unfit to be taught of Christ Therefore Jam. 4. 6. God is said To resist the Proud and to give grace to the Humble To this purpose also is that Isa 66. 5. Hear the Word of the Lord ye that tremble at his Word c. How forward was our Saviour to instruct the Woman of Samaria because she was teachable Joh. 4. Vse 1 Vse 1. See the cause why many are left and given over of Christ in their naturall ignorance and blindness remaining still in it notwithstanding the plentifull outward means of instruction which they have The reason is because they have not humble meek and teachable minds but are puffed up with conceipt of their own knowledge thinking that they know enough already and therefore desire not further instruction but contemn the means of it that is the Ministery of the Word c. Vse 2 Vse 2. If we would be taught of Christ and desire that he should freely and readily reveal unto us the heavenly Mysteries of his Wlll then let us shew our selves tractable and teachable that is willing and desirous to be taught of Him Quest Quest How can we be taught of Him being now in Heaven Answ Answ Though He teach not now on Earth in His own Person yet He teacheth the Church still by His Pastors and Ministers which He gave unto the Church when He ascended Ephes 4. Therefore in submitting to be taught of them we submit to Christ's teaching Luke 10. He that heareth you heareth me c. Let every one therefore shew themselves willing and desirous to learn of Christ's Ministers especially of their own peculiar Pastor And to this end pray unto Christ Jesus to give us teachable minds desire him to give us a mind to know Him and his Will and withall labour for humble hearts and minds touched with sense of our Naturall blindness then shall we be fit Schollars for the School of Christ whereas on the other side if we be proud and swell with conceipt of our own knowledge Christ will shut us out from his School as he did the self-conceited Scribes and Pharisees Oh then labour and pray for an humble heart and mind willing and desirous to learn of Christ's Ministers Then he will shew himself ready to teach thee not onely by the outward teaching of his Word but also by the inward teaching of his Spirit making the other effectuall to thee Deny thine own carnall wisdom and seek to Christ who is the eternall Wisdom of God the Father to enlighten and teach thee 1 Cor. 3. 18. If any seem to be wise let him become a fool that he may be wise The more thou art humbled in the sight of thine own Naturall folly and ignorance in heavenly matters the fitter Schollar thou art for Christ and the sooner will he teach thee the knowledge of his Will in matters of Salvation Humble thy self therefore even at the feet of Christ as Mary did Luke 10. to learn of him in the Ministery of the Word c. Hunger and thirst after heavenly knowledge then Christ will satisfie thee Observ 3 Observ 3. In that he called the whole multitude unto him to be instructed we may hence gather That it concerneth all sorts of persons to hear the Word and Doctrine of Christ and to be instructed therein of whatsoever Age Sex Condition c. they be whether Young or Old Men or Women Rich or Poor c. Therefore in the words following it is said He bids them all hearken unto Him When the Law was to be given all the People were to be assembled to the Mount Sinai to hear and take notice of it Exod. 19. And so Josiah read the Book of the Law in the
a certain Woman whose young Daughter had an unclean Spirit heard of him and came and June 16. 1622. fell at his Feet c. TOuching the Places where this Miracle was wrought you have before heard Now in the next place I am to speak of the impulsive Cause moving our Saviour to work it which was the sute made unto him by a certain Woman of Syrophoenicia in behalf of her Daughter intreating him to cast the Devil out of her set down Ver. 25. 26. Where we have these particulars to consider 1. The Person suing unto Christ described 1. By her Sex A certain Woman 2. By her outward Profession A Greek or Gentile 3. By her Country Syrophoenicia 2. Consider the Occasions or impulsive Causes of her sute 1. The afflicted estate of her Daughter having an unclean Spirit 2. The Fame she had heard of Christ 3. Consider the manner of her coming and putting up this sute to Christ In most humble sort abasing her self at his Feet 4. The matter of her sute That he would cast out c. First of the Description of the Person And first of her Sex A certain Woman Though she was of the weaker Sex as the Woman is said to be in Scripture yet there was a great measure and strength of Faith in her as appeareth Matth. 15. 28. Observ Observ The Lord sometimes giveth great measure of Grace and strength of Faith to the weaker Sex even to Women which are called the weaker Vessels 1 Pet. 3. 7. So before Chap. 5. 34. our Saviour commended the Faith of the Woman which came to him to be cured of her bloody Issue And in Scripture we find examples recorded of sundry excellent Women indued with a great measure and strength of Faith and other Graces As Sarah Debora Hannah Hester Mary Magdalene Martha Lydia Dorcas c. And especially the blessed Virgin the Mother of Christ Therefore also Paul in his Epistles doth mention and commend sundry Women for the Graces which were in them See Rom. 16. and Phil. 4. 3. So Hebr. 11. not onely Men but Women are commended for the strength of their Faith as Sarah Rahab c. And ver 34. By Faith some out of weaknesse were made strong c. Women received their Dead raised to Life again c. yea the Lord oftentimes gives greater measure of Grace to Women than he doth to Men. So Chap. 5. that Woman which had the bloody Issue shewed far greater Faith than Jairus the Ruler of the Synagogue So Abigail far excelled Nabal her Husband in the Grace of Wisdom and Discretion c. Reason Reason 2 Cor. 12. 9 The power of God is made perfect in weakness c. Use Use Comfort to faithful and religious Women against the infirmities incident to their Sex Though they be naturally the weaker Sex yet if they conscionably use the means to get supernatural strength of Faith Courage Widsom c. the Lord will give these to them as soon as to Men. Let them therefore labour to be strong Men in graces of Faith Wisdom spirituall Courage c. Revel 12. 5. The Woman travelling brought forth a male Child Such should all the Children of the Church labour to be though not by natural Sex yet by supernatural strength of Faith c. The next thing by which this Woman is described is her outward profession being a Gentile and her Country being of Syrophoenicia I will handle both these together A Greek That is a Gentile by outward profession See Gal. 3. 28. one that formerly professed the Religion of the Greeks that is of the Pagans and Heathen which lived in ignorance of the true God and of his Word and of the right manner of his Worship being without God in the World and strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel Eph. 2. I say she had formerly professed and lived in this blind and profane Religion of the Gentiles though now she had no doubt renounced that Heathenish profession and had begun to joyn her self to the People of the Jews among whom was the Church of God at that time A Syrophoenician by Nation That is one that was born and lived in the Country of Syrophoenicia which is so called as is most probable because Phoenicia was part of the Country of Syria or else as others think because it bordered unto Syria Object Object Matth. 15. 22. She is called a Woman of Canaan c. Answ Answ It is most probable as the learned observe That the same Country had both these names and that it was called by the Hebrews and Jews the Land of Canaan and by the Greeks Phoenicia And this Canaan or Phoenicia was the Sea Coast of Syria in which stood the Cities of Tyre and Sidon before mentioned Numb 13. 29. The Spies brought word to Moses That the Cananites dwelt by the Sea and by the Coast of Jordan And Judg. 1. 31 32. it may appear that the Cananites dwelt either in Sidon or near unto it Now Sidon was a City of Phoenicia as hath bin before shewed and is agreed upon by all the learned See Purchas his Pilgrim p. 87. and Scultet Annot. in Matth. Marcum Cap. 43. Therefore it is most probable That this Woman was of the Race and Stock of those cursed Canaanites which were yet remaining in that part of Syria notwithstanding the People of God were commanded utterly to root them out Now the Evangelist doth mention her profession that she was a Gentile and her Country that she was a Syrophoenician or Cananite thereby to commend the singular Grace and Mercy of God in calling her out of that grosse blindness and profaness in which she had formerly lived and in revealing Christ unto her and giving her Faith to believe in him Quest Quest How could she come to know Christ and to believe in him seeing she was a Gentile and a Canaanite which lived out of the visible Church among Pagans c. not having the Word of God among them to instruct them Answ Answ Though she were a Gentile and Canaanite yet it is most likely That many Jews also lived amongst the Cananites or Phoenicians in this Country and were mingled with them See Judg. 1. 31 32. Therefore from the Jews she might learn the Doctrine of the Messiah taught in the Writings of Moses and the Prophets See Matth. 5. 22. and so might be moved to believe in him Besides she had heard of the Fame of his divine Doctrine and great Miracles as we shall see afterward more plainly by which she was also moved to imbrace him as the true Messiah Observ 1 Observ 1. In that this Woman being a Gentile was called to believe in Christ and coming to Him by Faith did obtain this great benefit of having her Daughter freed from the tyranny of the Devil and not onely this Temporall benefit but even all Spirituall blessings which concerned her Salvation as we are not to doubt Hence gather That Christ Jesus came into the World for
stead of all Who hath not heard of the many and grievous Afflictions of Job both inward and outward in his Body Goods Wife Children yea and in his Soul and Conscience too So how grievous troubles did the Lord lay upon Joseph David Jeremy Jonah Lazarus Paul and many others of his most excellent Servants mentioned in Scripture In a word Whom do we read of among all the Generation of the Righteous whom the Lord did not one time or other exercise with grievous Crosses and Afflictions in one kind or another though not all in like measure Hebr. 11. We have a Cloud of witnesses to confirm this Point to us Many Reasons why the Lord thus grievously afflicteth his own Children The principall whereof are these 1. To make them conformable to Christ Jesus their Head and Saviour who was a man of sorrows consecrated through many and grievous Afflictions c. 2. To make thorough-proof and trial of his own Graces in them especially their Faith Hope and Patience and to manifest the truth and soundness of these graces in them So saith Job Thou hast tried me and I shall come forth as the Gold And hence it is that Afflictions in Scripture are so often called Tentations or Trials See Deut. 8. 2. 3. To humble them for sin and to bring them to a thorough-sight of it and withal to cause them to renew their Repentance for such sins into which they have fallen after their Calling through Ignorance Infirmity or Presumption This we see in Joseph's Brethren and in David Psal 119. 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray c. 4. To restrain and keep them back from sin for time to come making them more wary and fearful of it because they have so much smarted for it Job 33. 16. He sealeth the Instruction or Correction of Man that he may withdraw him from his evil purpose and hide Pride from him He keepeth back his Soul from the Pit c. 5. To wean their hearts from the World and to stir up in them a sighing and longing after Heaven and that blessed rest which there is prepared for them in which all tears shall be wiped from their eyes and all troubles shall cease c. Use 1 Use 1. Take heed how we censure any to be wicked or out of God's favour because we see or hear that they have grievous Afflictions laid on them by the hand of God for so we may condemn ●ob David and the whole Generation of the just yea Christ himself But know this that one may be exercised with sharp and grievous troubles and yet be dearly beloved of God and in high favour with him So was ●ob David c. Heb. 12. Whom the Lord loveth he chastiseth c. yea he doth it out of his Love and for their great good Use 2 Use 2. This may greatly comfort God's Children when they meet with sharp and grievous troubles imposed on them of God There is no cause for them to be discouraged or faint under them seeing God deals no worse with them than he hath done with his most excellent Saints and Servants formerly who have drunk as deep of this bitter Cup as themselves Therefore think not strange though God try and exercise us with grievous troubles inward or outward This is no new thing for the Lord thus sharply to chastise his own in this life but it is the ancient course which he hath alwayes used to take with them See 1 Pet. 4. 12. Consider also that the Lord doth thus sharply chastize us for our great good Vse 3 Vse 3. It must teach all God's Children to make accompt before-hand of taking up their Cross and to prepare and arm themselves to bear troubles yea heavy and grievous Afflictions Now in time of peace and prosperity prepare for the evil day and while it is calm prepare for storms hereafter to arise and beat against us else we shall never be able to bear it when it comes upon us but must needs faint in the day of Adversity and sink under the burden of the Cross Oh therefore let us now before-hand think of troubles which may come and make them present to us and arm our selves with Faith and Patience to bear them when they shall come Especially labour for Faith in God's speciall Love and Mercy to us in Christ forgiving our sins and accepting us as his Children that being assured hereof we may patiently and obediently submit to his hand in the most grievous trials which he layeth on us then shall we say with Job Though he kill me I will trust in him Hab. 2. The just shall live by Faith This is true especially of the time of Affliction when God's hand is most heavy on us Faith will sustain and comfort us in the greatest and heaviest troubles that can come On the other side without Faith the leightest Affliction will dismay us and cause Impatiency Pray therefore for more and more strength of Faith against the evill day the want of this is the cause that we are so unfit to bear crosses when they come especially heavy and grievous trials that either we faint under them or grow to inward murmuring or impatiency or to use unlawfull means to come out of trouble c. Again if we would be fit to bear grievous Affliction when they shall come let us now in the mean time enure and frame our selves to the patient suffering of lesser troubles c. Mark 7. 25. For a certain Woman whose young Daughter had an unclean Spirit c. June 23. 1622. Observ 2 OBserv 2. In that this heavy Affliction laid upon this Woman is here mentioned as the cause moving her to come and seek to Christ for her Daughter we may learn that Afflictions sanctified are excellent means to stir up and quicken to Prayer and earnest seeking of God Hos 5. 15. In their Affliction they will seek me early Isa 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they powred out a Prayer when thy chastening was upon them Job 33. 26. The Sinner that is chastened of God upon his Bed shall then pray unto God c. Example Manasseh 2 Chron. 33. The Saints of God have never been so forward and diligent in Prayer never so fervent in it as in time of greatest trouble So David being in the deep cryed unto the Lord Psal 130. 1. and at other times often So Hezekiah in his dangerous sickness Isa 38. Jonah in the Whale'● belly Jeremy in the Dungeon c. Lam. 3. The Israelites Psal 107. See before in the 22. and 23. Verses of the fifth Chapter Use 1 Use 1. See by this how good and profitable it is for God's Children to be exercised with many and great troubles in that these being sanctified are such excellent means to quicken unto that Duty unto which by Nature and of themselves they are so dull heavy and backward that is to the exercise of Prayer Le● us then be willing to suffer
had rashly published that Miracle contrary to his command the People thereupon came so thick upon him that he could no more openly enter into the City to preach but was fain to be without in desert places 3. To avoid all shew of ambition and desire of Vain-glory in respect of himself as he was Man Observ 1 Observ 1. The truth of God is not to be published professed or made known by us unto others out of due time and season Though it be a truth in it self necessary and profitable to be known yet we are not to utter and make it known unseasonably that is to say at such time as the publishing of it is like to do hurt and to tend to God's dishonour or to the prejudice and disgrace of the truth it self The History of this great Miracle wrought by our Saviour upon this blind man was a part of God's truth and such a truth as was in it self necessary and profitable to be known yet our Saviour forbids the same to be published openly and commonly at this unfit and unseasonable time when it was like to do more hurt than good if it should have been made common and publick forthwith To teach us that although we ought to be ready to publish the truth of God to others both the truth of his Word and of his Works so far as we have a calling to do it yet we ought not to do it out of due time and season when more hurt than good is like to come thereof In this case we are rather to glorify God by a wise and discreet silence and concealment of some part of the truth at least for a time till better and more fit occasion be offered for the uttering or publishing of it unto others Eccles 3. 7. There is a time to keep silence and a time to speak For example when we are in the presence and company of such persons as are not fit to hear the truth of God professed or published nor likely to profit by it as before malicious open enemies and scoffers at the truth either of the Word or Works of God here silence is best and by it we more glorify God at such a time than by a rash and unseasonable uttering or professing of the truth Thus our Saviour himself though at all fit and seasonable times he was ready to profess and give testimony to the truth and that even before the enemies of it when there was hope of doing good thereby yet at other times he was silent and refused to answer and to publish the truth as we see Matth. 26. 63. being falsly accused before the High-Priest he held his peace So before Pilate being again accused by the chief Priests and Elders He answered nothing So Luke 23. 9. Mat. 27. 12. before Herod The like Wisdom is to be used by us in concealing the truth of God sometimes before such as are not like to reap good by it but rather to dishonour God the more For we are not to give holy things to Dogs c. Matth. 7. ver 6. Vse Vse To reprove such as do rashly utter or make profession of the truth of God either out of his Word or concerning his Works at unseasonable times or before unfit Persons which tends to God's dishonour and to the hurt and prejudice of the truth it self Therefore take heed of this rashness and indiscretion and learn to make choice of the fittest times to profess and make known to others the truth of God so far as we have a calling so to do that God may be glorifyed and our selves and others edifyed thereby See before Chap. 1. 44. Though we must never deny or conceal the truth of God's Word or Works when we have a Calling to profess or publish the same yet all truths are not to be uttered or professed at all times but then onely when it makes for God's Glory Prov. 15. 23. A word spoken in season how good is it So Prov. 25. 11. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour forbids him so much as to go into the Town of Bethsaida again lest that should occasion him to publish the Miracle there contrary to his command We may learn a Point of Christian Wisdom to be practised by us which is not only to refrain that which is evil and unlawful but also to shun and take heed of the very occasions of evil whereby we are in danger to be tempted allured or drawn to do that which is unfit and unlawful for us as to shun the society and company of the wicked and profane to hate the Garment spotted with the Flesh Jude ver 23. Prov. 23. 20. Be not amongst Wine-bibbers c. Prov. 22. 24. Make no friendship with the angry man lest thou learn his wayes c. Come not in such places where we shall have occasions to draw and tempt us to evil and to do contrary to Christ's Commandment c. Be careful to shun all occasions of sin especially of such sins as we are most in danger of c. If thou be in danger of being tempted to the sin of Unchastity make a Covenant with thy eyes as Job 31. 1. and take heed of society with such as are of unchast or wanton behaviour Prov. 5. 8. Come not nigh the House of the strange Woman The not practising of this wisdom in shunning the occasions is one cause that many fall so often dangerously yea after they have repented or made shew of it yet return to their vomit because there is no care to shun occasions of those sins they have been given unto Mark 8. 27. And Jesus went out and his Disciples into the Towns of Cesarea Philippi and by the way he asked May 15. 1625. his Disciples c. HAving finished the fourth principal part of this Chapter touching the Miracle wrought in restoring a blind man unto his sight near to the Town of Bethsaida Now we are come unto the fifth part in which the Evangelist recordeth unto us a special Conference which our Saviour had with his Disciples by the way as he journeyed to the Towns of Cesarea Philippi touching the opinion and perswasion which the common People and themselves had of his Person This is set down from this 27. to Ver. 31. Where consider four things 1. The Occasion of this Conference Our Saviour's going forth with his Disciples to the Towns of Cesarea Philippi 2. The place where he had this Conference with them It was by the way as they travelled thither 3. The Conference it self consisting of two parts 1. A two-fold Question or Demand of our Saviour to his Disciples touching himself or his Person 1. What was the Common People's Opinion of Him Whom do men say that I am 2. What was their own perswasion Ver. 29. Whom say ye that I am 2. The Answer of his Disciples to this two-fold demand To the former they answer That some of the People held him to be John Baptist some to be
Originall sin and so lyable by nature unto the Wrath and Judgments of God Psal 51. 5. David confesseth That he was shapen and conceived in Iniquity by his Mother Rom. 5. 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's Transgression c. that i● over Infants and young Children who had not actually sinned yet were guilty of Originall sin and defiled with it And this we see by daily experience to be true in that Infants and young Children as well as elder People are chastised by the hand of God with bodily sicknesses and pains and with Death it self which shews them to be tainted with guilt and corruption of sin which makes them lyable to such Judgments of God Quest Quest How come young Children to be thus tainted with sin and so lyable to God's Wrath and Judgment Answ Answ By reason of Adam's Fall and Transgression by which he made both himself and all his Posterity guilty of sin and lyable to the curse of God and so from Adam this corruption of sin and lyablenesse to God's Wrath is derived to all mankind by naturall Birth or Descent by which means even Children and Infants do receive it from their Parents So Rom. 5. 12. By one man sin entred into the World and Death by sin c. Vse 1 Vse 1. See by this the cause why young Children or Infants have need of the Sacrament of Baptism to be administred to them viz. because being naturally defiled with Guilt and Corruption of original sin and liable to God's wrath and Judgments they have therefore need to be washed and purged from their sins by the Blood of Christ sealed by the Water in Baptism c. Which therefore ought to stir up all Parents to be careful to procure this Sacrament for their Children and that in due time not delaying it too long for worldly respects c. Vse 2 Vse 2. See what cause for Parents to be humbled and repent not only for their own sins but also for the sins of their Children confessing and craving pardon of them in Christ that so they may be forgiven them and that by this means they may be delivered from the Wrath and Curse of God at least from eternal Wrath and from temporal Judgments so far as is good for them that they may either be with-holden from them or sanctified unto them to work for their good Use 3 Use 3. This should also move Parents to use all good means whereby the natural Corruption of sin may come to be mortified in their Children and purged out of them more and more and whereby the contrary work of Grace may be wrought in them that as they have been Instruments of their natural Birth in sin and so made them Children of Wrath so they may be the means of their Regeneration or new Birth To this end they ought to be most careful to train them up religiously in the true Knowledge and Fear of God using all means to reform sin in them and to further the Work of Grace in them as frequent Instruction Admonition due and moderate Correction c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Lord did lay this heavy Affliction upon this Child being very young even in his Infancy as is probable whereas he passed over and spared many other not onely Children but elder People who were as much and more polluted with sin the cause or reason of this the Lord's dealing is secret neither is it expressed here by the Evangelist as being known to God onely From whence therefore we may learn thus much that the wayes and proceedings which God doth use with men in executing his Judgments upon them in this life are oftentimes secret and hidden from us in respect of the Causes and Reasons of them We neither do nor can alwayes know or comprehend the Causes or Reasons moving the Lord to execute such or such temporal Judgments upon men or Children in this life but the causes are many times secret to us and known onely to God himself Rom. 11. 33. How unsearchable are the Judgments of God and his wayes past finding out So far as the Lord doth manifest the causes and reasons of his Judgments upon men either in his Word or by his Works and by the outward events which happen we may know them but because he doth not alwayes so manifest them therefore they are not alwayes known to us but sometimes secret and unsearchable Note here that this is not to be understood of the original or meritorious cause of God's Judgments for that is alwayes known to be sin but especially of the final causes or ends which the Lord aimeth at in such Judgments These are oftentimes secret and unsearchable unto us Use Use This teacheth us not too curiously to search into the causes reasons or ends which the Lord aimeth at in those temporal Judgments or Chastisements which he inflicteth either upon us or others in this life especially if they be strange or unwonted Judgments but we are rather to admire and religiously to adore them and withal to endeavour to make a holy use of them For this we must know that although the causes of God's Judgments are sometimes secret yet are they alwayes just and therefore we must hereof rest assured without curious searching after the secret wayes of God remembring what is said Deut. 29. 29. Secret things belong unto the Lord our God c. Such secret things are the wayes and dealings of God in respect of his Judgments which he often inflicteth upon men in this life and therefore not too curiously to be pryed into by us or rashly to be censured or spoken of but rather in religious silence to be adored and reverenced The Lord doth many times inflict strange and unwonted Judgments and Afflictions upon Men Women and Children in this life such as we can give no probable reason of why the Lord should so deal with them rather than with others here then we must remember not to be curious in searching after the secret causes and ends which the Lord aimeth at in such Judgments but to rest in his most just proceedings in all his Judgments making the best and most religious use of them unto our selves Mark 9. 22. And oft times it hath cast him into the fire and into the Waters to destroy him but if thou canst do April 29. 1627. any thing c. NOW followeth the further declaration and amplification of his Child's misery by acquainting our Saviour into how great perils and dangers of death the Devil had often brought the Child by casting him into the Fire and Water to destroy or kill him Observ 1 Observ 1. The deadly hatred and malice of the Devil against mankind in that he desireth and seeketh not onely the hurt and annoyances but also the utter ruine and destruction of those over whom he hath any Power See Chap. 1. Ver. 23. Joh. 8. 44. A Murderer
and destruction Now as this Love and Mercy of Christ doth in some sort extend to Mankind in general so more especially it reacheth to his Saints and faithful People for whose sakes especially he doth use to rebuke Satan their Enemy for his malice against them Zech. 13. 1 2. when Satan stood at the right hand of Joshua the High-Priest to resist and hinder him in the execution of his Office it is said The Lord said unto Satan the Lord rebuke thee c. that is Christ as Mediatour prayed unto God to rebuke or reprove the Devil for his malice shewed against the Lord's faithful Minister And this shews the singular Love of Christ to his faithful Servants and care which he hath of their good in that he shews himself such an Enemy to the Devil being their main Enemy And if it be mentioned Psal 105. 14. as a Token of God's special Love to his Church that He reproved Kings for their sakes much more is it an evidence of his Love and Mercy to his Saints and Servants that he doth reprove and rebuke the Devil himself for their sakes who is a far more potent and dangerous Enemy to the Church of Christ than any Kings of the Earth can be Use Vse The consideration of this special love and goodness of Christ toward Mankind especially to his Church and faithful Servants testified by his rebuking of Satan their Enemy and shewing himself grieved and offended at him for his malice against them I say the consideration hereof is matter of great comfort to us all times but especially in such miseries and troubles as are stirred up against us either by Satan or his Instruments For we may assure our selves that Christ Jesus our Saviour is affected with our miseries and much offended at Satan and his Instruments for his rage and malice against us and he will in due time shew himself so to be by rebuking both Satan and his wicked Instruments though not in words as he did now rebuke the Devil in this possessed Child yet really by curbing and restraining their power and malice yea by executing his just wrath and vengeance upon them for the same Mark 9. 25 26 27. Saying unto him Thou dumb and deaf Spirit I charge thee come out of him and enter no more June 3. 1627. into him c. NOW followeth the matter of the Charger or Commandment which our Saviour now laid upon the foul Spirit which was in the Child He said unto him Thou dumb and deaf Spirit I charge thee come out of him c. Where 1. Consider the Names or Titles of reproach which he giveth to the Devil by way of upbraiding or reproving of him calling him the dumb and deaf Spirit 2. The Charge it self Of the first Thou dumb and deaf Spirit These Titles he giveth unto the Devil in regard of those malicious and cruell Effects which he had wrought in the Child not onely entring into his body and possessing it by fits and at certain times but also striking the Child and disabling him in his outward Senses and natural Powers of his body so as he had no use of them bereaving him both of the faculty of Speech and of the sense of Hearing Observ Observ That by God's permission the Devil hath Power not onely to enter into the bodies of Men Women or Children and to holy possession of them but also to annoy and hurt the powers and faculties of Nature in them and to hinder the operation of them He hath power to strike men with the loss of their bodily Senses as Hearing Seeing c. and to take from them the faculty of Speech as here he did unto this Child Matth. 12. 22. They brought unto him one possessed with a Devill blind and dumb and he healed him c. Luke 11. 14. He was casting out a Devill and it was dumb And when the Devill was gone out the dumb spake c. which shews plainly that the Devil was the cause of that dumbness in the party that was possessed So Luke 13. 11. mention is made of a Woman which had a Spirit of Infirmity and was so bowed and made crooked in her body by Satan for eighteen years that she could not stand or go upright notwithstanding the use of means Use Use See how we are bound to bless God and to be thankfull for his mercy in not suffering Satan to have this Power over us or ours to strike us in our senses or in other naturall powers of our bodies and to take from us the use of them as he would do if the Lord did not restrain him If he might have his will he would strike us deaf that we should not hear the Word of God to our comfort or edification or dumb that we be not able to speak a word to God's Glory or Edification of others in Prayer Thanksgiving or otherwise or he would strike us blind that we might not behold the Glory of God in his Creatures to our comfort Therefore seeing it is by God's mercy that we do enjoy the benefit of our senses and that we are not by Satan's malice bereft of them let us be truly thankful unto God and shew it by using our senses and all the powers of our bodies to his Glory in the practice of those holy Duties which he requireth of us Now followeth the Charge or Commandment it self which our Saviour layeth upon the Devil which is two-fold 1. To come out of the Child 2. To enter no more into him I charge thee Or straightly Command thee By this our Saviour testified his absolute Power and Authority over the foul Spirit And enter no more c. Because the Devil had formerly used to take the child by fits at certain times as we have heard entring into him again and again and that sundry times after he was departed out of him therefore our Saviour not onely chargeth him to depart out but withall forbiddeth him to enter any more into him Observ 1 Observ 1. That Christ hath absolute Power and Authority over the evil Angels or Devils to command and over-rule them as he pleaseth This Power he shewed even while he lived upon Earth in state of Humiliation by commanding or charging evil Spirits to go out of such as were bodily possessed by them as here we see he did and at other times The same Power of Christ over the Devils doth further appear by this That when they were cast out they could not enter into the herd of Swine without his permission chap. 5. Now if while he lived on Earth in state of Humiliation he had this Power and Authority over the Devil then much more now that he is exalted to the right hand of God in Heaven Phil. 2. 9. God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow c. Col. 2. 10. He is called the Head of all Principality and Power viz.
doth reprove and condemn the profanesse of such as do speak evil of the sex of Women calling them necessary evils or by the like unfit and reproachful names which is nothing else but to speak evil of Gods work of Creation who made them both male and female and consequently to controll his wisdom shewed in the Creation which is no better than a degree of blasphemy Observ 3 Observ 3. Seeing God is the Creator of both Sexes of Mankind both male and female hence we learn That both sexes ought to glorifie and serve God their Creator in this life by the conscionable practice of all such duties of obedience as he requireth of them not only men but women must do this and not only women but men both sexes alike As God hath created both male and female of Mankind so he will be obeyed and served by both this being the end of their creation Therefore Psal 148. 12. both young men and maidens are exhorted to praise the Lord their Creator and Deut. 31. 12. The Lord commands by Moses that when the Law should be read both men and women should be gathered together to hear it and to learn to obey it See 1 Cor. 11. This shews that neither sex must think themselves exempted from the duties of Gods true worship and service in this life neither the male nor female sex neither men nor women under any colour or pretence whatsoever but both alike and equally are bound in conscience to glorifie God their Creator by those duties of obedience and service which he requireth of them And for either of them to deny this obedience and service to God is in effect to deny him to be their Creator and themselves to be his creatures which is wicked Atheism Observ 4 Observ 4. Seeing God in the first creation of Mankind did make two distinct sexes that is to say the male and female sex distinguished one from the other hence we may further learn That it is a great sin for any to go about to confound these two sexes which God would have distinguished and which himself did distinguish in the first Creation of them Now these Sexes may be confounded sundry wayes As for example By the practice of that unnatural sin of Sodomy practised by the wicked Sodomites from whom it took the name and by other of the profane Gentiles as appeareth Rom. 1. 26. Also by confounding the outward habit and apparel of both sexes as when men do puton and wear womens apparel or women mens apparel which is abomination to the Lord Deut. 22. 5. Or when men and women do so disguise themselves with strange fashions of apparel that it is hard to know and discern men and women asunder by their apparel and habit Now as the creation and distinction of both sexes was the work of God from the beginning so this confusion of them is the invention and practice of the devil which hath been the cause and fountain of manifold grosse sins and abominations committed in the world Which must therefore teach us to abhor and detest this practice of Satan and all occasions and means which tend to the bringing in or maintaining of this confusion of sexes which God will have to be distinguished Mark 10. 6 7 8. But from the beginning of the Creation God made them male and female c. Febr. 24. 1627. THese words do contain the second part of our Saviour's last and full answer which he made to the Pharisees Question touching divorcement In which he proveth the unlawfulnesse of such divorces as were permitted by Moses by the near Union which is betwixt man and wife by Gods Ordinance from the beginning for the shewing whereof he layeth down the first Institution of Marriage Concerning which he sheweth four things 1. The Time when Marriage was ●nstituted From the beginning of the Creation 2. The Author of it God himself 3. The means of instituting it which was by creating Mankind both male and female 4. The speciall Decree of God which he set down and pronounced immediately upon the creation touching the near Union that should be between man and wife in the married estate That a man should leave his father c. Of the three first I have formerly spoken Now followeth the fourth which is the Decree or Sanction of God touching the near Union between married persons For this cause c. These words our Saviour alledgeth out of Gen. 2. 24. where we find them uttered by Adam immediately after that the Lord had created the woman and brought her unto him to be his Wife Now our Saviour here alledgeth them as spoken or uttered by God himself as appeareth Matth. 19. 5. the reason whereof is because Adam in uttering them did speak prophetically and by speciall instinct and motion from God So then the words contain in them God's own Decree and Ordinance set down and pronounced by Adam in the Name of God touching the near Union that should be between married persons c. Of which Decree or Sanction of God there are three parts The first is touching the ground or cause of that near Union that should be between Man and Wife implyed in the first words For this cause The second is Touching the duty of married persons which they owe one to another in respect of that near union betwixt them implyed in these words A man shall forsake his father c. The third is Touching the union it self which should be between man and wife in the married estate They should be two in one flesh c. Of the first For this cause These words as they are uttered by Adam through the immediate instinct of God himself Gen. 2. 24. have relation unto that which goes before in that place namely to that near union or conjunction which Adam affirmeth to be between him and Eve his wife in regard of the manner of her creation being made of his own body even of a rib taken out of him in which respect he saith she was bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh c. Verse 23. whereupon he inferreth the words here alledged by our Saviour Therefore or for this cause q. d. seeing this woman which the Lord hath given to be my Wife is taken out of my own body and so in regard of this manner of her creation is so near unto me that she is even a part of my self therefore it is the Ordinance of God that from henceforth there shall be a most near and strait union between every man and his wife in the married estate Observ Observ That the Union betwixt man and Wife in the Married estate is grounded upon that union which was between man and woman in their first Creation in that the Woman was first created and made out of the body of the man in respect whereof she was as a part of him and so most nearly united unto him And this is one reason why it is said afterward that man
15. The Israelites by living in Egypt had learned to commit Idolatry with a Golden Calf Use Use This shews how needfull it is even for the best to look well to themselves and to be watchfull over their own hearts and wayes that they be not drawn away by the common errors or corruptions of the times and places where they live 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness On the contrary we must flee the common corruption that is in the World through lust 2 Pet. 1. 4 And labour to shine as Lights in the midst of a perverse Generation Phil. 2. 15. Great is the force of evill example and of the common customes and practises of the times to draw away and infect even the better sort like an Epidemicall disease c. Therefore had we need to look carefully to our selves to escape the common contagion and pray unto God to keep us upright in our wayes that we fall not away Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples were so hard to conceive and believe this Doctrine which our Saviour had taught both at this time and formerly also Matth. 5. 32. touching the unlawfulness of such Divorcements as were commonly practi●ed amongst the Jews because it was a Doctrine which was contrary to their erronious conceipt and prejudicate opinion and also to the custome of the times this shews how hard it is for men to receive and imbrace such Truths and Doctrines of the Word of God as are contrary to their corrupt and prejudicate Opinions and especially if they be also contrary to the common custome of the times Such Doctrines though never so true and ●ound yet are hardly received and imbraced by men yea by the better sort how much more then by the common sort which shews how needful it is for such Truths and Doctrines to be often taught and urged again and again by the Ministers of God c. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Disciples being yet ignorant and unresolved in this matter of Divorces are not ashamed to acknowledg their ignorance by comming to enquire and ask further of Christ their Master touching this matter this is commendable in them and should teach us that shame should not hinder us from asking questions or from enquiring of those who are able and ●it to resolve us in matters of Religion and cases of Conscience which we are yet ignorant or doubtfull in but we should be forward to enquire and seek resolution from such Thus the Disciples used to go to Christ in all their doubts See before chap. 4 10. and chap. 9. 11-28 Observ 4 Observ 4. In that they came to him privately being in the house when he was most free and at liberty to instruct and resolve them hereof we are taught to be wise in taking the fittest opportunities of time and place to propound our doubts and to seek instruction from such as are ●it and able to resolve and teach us c. See for this also before chap. 4. 10. and chap. 9. 28. Mark 10. 11 12. And he saith unto them Whosoever shall c. April 27. 1628. NOw followeth Christ's answer to his Disciples ver 11 12. In which he sheweth the unlawfulness of such Divorces as were practised amongst the Jews for leight causes or for any cause except Adultery by the grievousness of the sin of such married persons as do in such sort or for any such cause besides Adultery put away their own wives or husbands and marry with others affirming such to be guilty of the sin of Adultery And he sa●th unto them That is to his Disciples Yet Matth. 19. 9. the words are set down as if our Saviour had spoken them to the Pharisees whence it may seem probable that our Saviour did utter these or like words twice first to the Pharisees in publick disputation with them and then again repeating and explaining the same to his Disciples in the private house Whosoever shall put away his Wife viz. By giving her a Bill or writing of Divorcement and so ●eparating himself wholly from her for small or leight cause yea for any cause whatsoever except for the sin of Adultery That this is the meaning appeareth partly by the scope of our Saviour in these words and partly by comparing this place with Matth. 19. 9. where our Saviour ●aith thus Whosoever shall put away his Wife except it be for Fornication c. that is for the sin of Incontinency committed by the wife after Marriage which is properly the sin of Adultery And shall marry another That is after such a Divorcement or separation made from his own wife shall joyn himself in marriage with another woman He committeth Adultery against her That is by such a second Marriage after such Divorcement from his first and lawfull wife he doth make himself guilty of no less or other sin than the sin of Adultery and that against his first and onely lawfull wife which he did unjustly put away For the Marriage-bond remaining still between him and his first wife notwithstanding such an unjust Divorce hence it follows That the second wife which he joyneth himself to is not his wife but his harlot and so that he is an Adulterer by this means against his first and lawfull wife And if a Woman shall put away her Husband Shall separate her self wholly from her husband or use means to be Divorced from him for any cause except Adultery as before was said of the husbands putting away his wife And be married to another That is to another man or second husband after such separation from her first lawfull husband She committeth Adultery By such a second marriage she becommeth an Adulteress against her first and onely lawfull husband c. as before was said of the husbands marrying after Divorce from his first wife Now from these words the Papists would prove it to be unlawfull for such as are lawfully Divorced to marry again during the life of the former husband or Wife because our Saviour affirmeth such as do so marry again to be guilty of Adultery c. But for answer to them 1. This is a manifest corrupting and perverting of the true sense of this place for our Saviour doth not here speak of marrying again after lawfull Divorcement but of marrying again after unjust Divorcement or separation of man and wife that is to say for such leight causes for which Divorces were practised among the Jews and for any cause except Adultery as doth plainly appear both by the main scope and drift of our Saviour in this place which is to condemn such unjust Divorces practised by the Jews for leight causes and out of the case of Adultery as also by comparing this place with Matth. 19. 9. and with Matth. 5. 32. Where our Saviour doth expresly mention that exception of the case of Adultery as was said before 2. This place is so far from