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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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will not be despised 1. Tim. 4.12 2. The Diuell that god of this world doth mightily labour in this point to keepe men from affecting the Gospell If he cannot hinder men from hearing then his next worke is by all possible indeuours to blinde their minds and marre their tastes that they may not perceiue nor regard the glorious things of God in Christ 2. Cor. 4.4 3. Euill company is a wonderfull impediment it causeth perpetually hardnes of hart and carelesnes it keepes the hearts of the wicked men in a continuall habituall deadnes and the best men seldome light into prophane company but they get some degree of dulnes and deadnes of affections by it Pro. 9.6 Psa. 119.115 4. God himselfe being prouoked by mans extreame wilfulnes in sinning giues them ouer to a spirit of slumber and curseth their very blessings yea restraineth sometimes the very gifts of his seruants that so he may execute his iudgements vpon a rebellious people The Lord hideth his statutes from them and with-holding his spirit keeps back the life of the word in their harts Esay 6.10 yea many times to scourge the vnthankfulnes and vnprofitablenes of his own people he doth for a time hide his testimonies from them Psal. 119.19 Thus much of the lets without vs. The internall lets must be considered First In the wicked Secondly In the godly The cause of this hartlesnes and want of affection in the wicked is First their ignorance they know not either the word or the worth of the word or their own need of it Secondly their prophaneness irreligiousnes They liue without God or without Christ in the world they make no conscience of their waies They forget their later end they minde not the good of their soules but only earthly things they neuer tasted of the bountifulnes of the Lord but were altogether corrupt and strangers from the life of God only greedy in sinning Thirdly Atheisme There is in the harts of all wicked men in some degree abominable conceits concerning God and his word They either doubt whether the scriptures be the true word of god or els they are strongly carried to resolue ther is no profit in the knowledge of gods waies or in seruing the almighty Iob. 21.14 Malac. 3.15 Fourthly Cares of life The loue of the profits or pleasures of this life choak the word and the power of it as is apparant by these places Math. 13. Luke 14. Psal. 119 36 37 c. Fiftly In some either whoredome or wine for these two sinns together or either of them take away mens harts they are voide of all due consideration and of all affection to gods word They are senseless creatures Hosh. 4. Thus of the cheef letts in the wicked The lets of affection in the godly are diuers First Sometimes it is their worldliness their too much minding and plodding about the things of this life or their excessiue burthening of their heads about their calling They haue too much to doe or they haue too much care care I say that is distrustfull and carking care Psal. 119.36 Secondly Sometimes it is want of comfortable felowshippe in the Gospell Affection that is alone is seldome constant in the same degree There is much quickning and comfort and incitation in a constant and tender and profitable society with such as loue the word Psalm 119. verse 63. Thirdly sometimes it is some secret sinne that gets too much dominion ouer them As affection may stand with meer frailties and infirmities So on the other side if any sinne once get head and men yeeld to it and agree to obey it their affections to the word presently dy within them Psal. 119.133 yea if this sinne bee but in the thoughts and bee yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seek the pleasure of contemplatiue wickednes and do not resist it by praying against it euen vain thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification The soule will gather aboundance of humors as well the body and therefore Christians should not go too long especially if they feele a kinde of fulnesse to growe vpon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselues before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all harty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their owne harts for very want of order and that they go not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heap of doctrine which they knowe not what to doo withall Psal. 50. vlt. Sixtly sometimes again it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect nouelties and seek to themselues a heap of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of loathing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seuenthly sometimes very idleness is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselues in the six daies breeds a general kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not onely to the times of priuate duties in the working daies but to the very Sabbath also They cannot work at Gods work with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne work Eightthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and vnbeleef when a Christian knowes not his right to the word and wil not be perswaded of the fatherly loue and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I haue beleeued therefore I will speak so must Hearers say I haue beleeued therefore I will hear They should knowe that they are welcome to Christ and may eat and drink Cant. 5.1 and that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Vse Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Enuy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third vse may bee for instruction to teach vs to striue for affection to the word and to prouide to order our selues so as wee bee not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as haue it that they may keep it aright Quest. What must such doo as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doo six things First they must refrain their feet from euery euill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they
euill Pro. 14.12 yea the Prophet Esay expounds it of euery turning after our owne waies for which we haue no warrant in the Word of God and in which men persist without repentance Esay 53.6 It is implied Psal. 119.110 For the second The misery of men liuing in their sinnes without repentance is very great I am tied to the consideration of it only so far forth as the similitude of a sheep going astray will import Euery wicked man then is like a lost sheep and that in diuers respects 1. Because hee is not within the compasse of God's speciall prouidence GOD doth not tend him nor look to him he is no part of his flock he is without God in the world and without Christ as the lost sheep is without the protection and keeping of the shepheard Wicked men haue no keeper they are left to the way of their owne harts which is a fearefull curse Esay 53.6 The wicked shall be as a sheep that no man takes vp Esay 13.14 2. Because hee hath no certain pasture The prouision for his life for soule and body is altogether vncertain Hee is like Cain a vagabond vpon the earth He is heer to day he knowes not where he shall be tomorrow God hath not giuen him any assurance of the keeping or getting of any thing he hath or desires He is like the stray sheep that hath all the world before him but knows not where to settle Mat. 9.36 3. Because in the midst of all the best possessions of this life they haue no peace Esay 57. vlt. The sound of feare is alwaies in their eares If a stray sheep get into a good pasture yet he is still in feare apt to bee frighted with euery sound ready to runne away vpon euery occasion so is it with them that are rich in the world and not rich with God 1. Tim. 6.10 4. Because hee is shut out from all comfortable society with the godly hee enioyes not the sound fruit of communion with Saints The stray sheep may sort with hogges or wilde beasts but from the sheep it is gone away Euill company is a miserable plague of a mans life to sort with such all a mans daies from whom he may haue a world of vanity and filthinesse but not any thing scarce worthy of the nature of men in an age Euery wicked man is an alien a stranger forainer from the Common-wealth of Israel Eph. 2.12 5. A sheep going astray is easily taken by a strange Lord it is driuen any whither by any body it is so silly And such is the fearfull estate of a man liuing in sinne strange Lords may easily surprize him false teachers may easily seduce him euill company may carry him to any wickednes a Prince may turn him to any religion a very Atheist or diuell incarnate may easily lead him captiue 6. A sheep is apt to be worried with dogs or deuoured with wolues or wilde beasts when there is no shepheard to tend him So is it with wicked men their soules their bodies their estates are all in danger to bee seized vpon by diuels by vniust and vnreasonable men especially as any of them are more simple so they are more liable to become a prey to the mighty Ones of the earth 7. Men that wander out of the way of vnderstanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead Psalm 49.15 Pro. 21.16 And therefore he that conuerts a man from the error of his way is said to saue a soule from death Iames 5. vlt. And this going astray of vnregenerate men is the more grieuous because they are liable to many aggrauations for First they go astray from the womb they were neuer yet in the right way Psalm 58.3 Secondly because they wander in euery work they doo as was said of Egypt Esay 19.14 All their works are abominable Psalm 14. All things are impure Thirdly because this is the curse of all vnregenerate men we are turned euery one to his owne way Esay 53.6 Fourthly because they delight to wander place their felicity in their sinnes and will not be reclaimed or aduised Fiftly because they may prouoke God so long that hee may sweare they shall neuer enter into his rest Psal. 95.10 11. The third point is the cause of their going astray and that is noted in the originall word They were deceiued Now then it is to bee considered distinctly who are the great deceiuers of the world that cause millions of soules to goe astray First the diuell is the Arch-deceiuer hee hath beene a lier and a murtherer from the beginning hee deceiued our first Parents and made them and all their posterity goe astray Iohn 8.44 1. Tim. 2.14 and by him are all wicked men drawne out of the way and led captiue at his will 2. Tim. 2.26 Secondly Antichrist is the next great deceiuer who by his sorceries made all nations in the time of the Gospel goe astray Eccles. 18.23 with his diuellish doctrine and by wicked sorceries hee deceiued the Christian world Thirdly a swarme of wicked ministers haue deceiued whole townes and countries and made the sheepe goe astray euen their whole flocks in many places some of them because they take the fleece and neuer feed the flock Ezech. 34.2 c. Iohn 10.12 Some of them by preaching lies and flattering the people with deuices of men and say Peace when there is no peace Ierem. 23.17 19 20 32. Fourthly the world is a mischieuous deceiuer and it deceiueth by euill example and euill company and euill report raysed against the godly and the good way and the inticements of profits and pleasures and vanities of all sorts and honours and the like Fiftly mans owne heart deceiueth him yea the heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things Ierem. 17.9 It will vse such carnall reasons pretend such vaine excuses intertaine such deceiuable hopes and ioyne it selfe to such swarmes of temptations and lusts as it cannot auoid wandring if there were no other deceiuers to goe withall The way of our owne hearts is alwaies to goe out of the way Sixtly ignorance of the Scripture is a chiefe cause of erring and going astray both in opinion and life Math. 22.29 Seuenthly the loue of some particular sinne doth vtterly vndoe many a man that will not bee warned of the deceitfulnes of sinne Heb. 3.12 Thus couetousnes made many a man to erre from the faith 1. Tim. 6.20 Eightthly God himselfe in a fearefull kind of Iustice many times not only consents but permits a very spirit of peruersnes and errour to seaze vp on some men that refused to bee guided or kept by God so as they are giuen ouer to eternall perdition and destruction by reason of it Fourthly the signes of a lost sheep follow and they are First he that refuseth reproofe is out of the way Men that cannot abide to bee told of their faults are not healed Prou. 10.17 as hee is in the way of life
excellent knowledge of Christ which may bee heer had Philip. 3.9 Secondly Longing and appetite after it as true and certaine as the very appetite of a childe is to the brest This is expressed by the similitudes of panting thirsting and watching after the word in diuers scriptures and when this longing is more vehement it is set out by the passion of fainting for it and of the breaking of the soule for it Psal. 42.1 et 84.2 et 119.20.40 et 131. Thirdly Satisfaction and contentment when wee speed well in the word As the child is quieted and sleepeth in the rest and vertue of the milk it hath receiued Dauid saith his soule was satisfied as with marrow Psal. 63.1.5 and is graunted of all the godly and chosen ones Psa. 65.4 When it is sweet like hony to our tast Psal. 119.103 Fourthly Constancy the renewing of affection A childes appetite is renewed euery day though it seem to be full for the present and such is the true desire of the godly It is not a desire for a fit but is renewed daily as the appetite to our appointed food is Iob 23. Hee that hath this desire may be found daily waiting at the gates of wisdome Prou. 8.34 Vse 1. The vse of all may bee cheefly threefold For First it may serue for triall wee should euery one examine our selues whether wee haue this true desire after the word or no. For if wee find this wee are sure to prosper and if we find it not wee are nothing but staruelings in matter of godliness Question But how may wee know whether wee haue this estimation longing after and constant affection to the word Answer It may be knowne diuers waies especially if our affections bee grown to any good ripeness and tenderness in the measure of them For it may be euidently discerned First If we seek the blessing of the word of God as a cheefe happiness wee would desire of him in his specially mercy to giue it vnto vs. Psa. 119.68.132.155.144 and so by the constancy of praier we may also discerne the constancy of our appetite Secondly If wee can be diligent and content to take any paines or bee at any cost that wee may be prouided of this food that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 Thirdly If wee can hoord and hide vp the word in our hartes as worldly men would doe their treasures Psalme 119.11 Ioying in it as much as in all riches Psalme 119.14.162 especially if wee can batten and wex fat by the contentments of it as carnall men doe when they liue at harts ease Psalme 119.70 Fourthly If it will still our crying that is If it will comfort vs and quiet our harts in all distresses Psal. 119.50.143.92 so as nothing shall offend vs. verse 165. Fiftly If we make haste and come willingly at the time of assembling Psalm 110.3 But especially if we make haste and not delay in practising what we learn thence Psal. 119.60 Sixtly If we be thankfull to God and abound in the free will offrings of our mouthes for the good we get by the word Psal. 119.7.108.164.171 Seauenthly If we can bee truly greeued and say with Dauid Sorow takes hould on vs because the wicked keep not gods lawe 119.159 Eightthly If we delight to talk of gods word and to speak of his wondrous works discouered in his word Psal. 119.27.172 c. These things and the like are in them that haue their affections tender and striuing in them Now whereas many of gods children may haue true desire to the word and yet not find euidently some of these signes therfore I will giue other signes of true affection to the word though ther be not alwaies such delight in it as they desire The lesser measure of true appetite to the word may bee discerned by some of these signes that follow First it is a signe that we doe hartily loue the word when wee can from our harts loue and blesse them that doe loue the word accounting them happy for their very loue to the word Psal. 119.1.12 Secondly T is a signe of desire after the word when we can stick to the word and the constant frequenting of it notwithstanding the scornes and shame of the world Psal. 119 31 46 141. It is a sure testimony of our loue to the gospell when we can forsake father and mother brother and sister house and land for the Gospells sake Mark 10.29 Thirdly It is a signe of loue to the word and of desire after it when we can mourn for the famine of the word as a bitter crosse Psal. 42.3.4 Fourthly Yea when men haue the word and yet finde not comfort in it it is a signe of their true affection when they long for those comforts with heauines of heart and account themselues in an vncomfortable distresse yea bitter distresse till the Lord returne to them in his person in the power of the meanes Psal. 119.82.83.123.131 Fiftly It is a signe we loue the word when such as feare god are glad of vs it is a signe that the godly doe discerne appetite in vs though we doe not when they are tenderly affected toward vs. Psal. 119.74 Sixtly We may know our affection to the word by our willingnes to be ruled by it If wee can make the word our Counseller it is sure we we doe delight in it whatsoeuer we conceiue of our selues Psal. 119.24 Lastly To striue against our dulnes constantly and to pray to be quickned is a good signe that we haue some desire to the word One may loue gods precepts and yet need to be quickned Psal. 119.159 Vse 2. Secondly this doctrine of desire and appetite after the word may much humble the most of vs some being altogether void of all desire after it more then for fashion sake and the better sort haue their appetites either dull or decayed Quest. Whence comes it that people haue no more affection to the word or that men are so clo●ed with the word Ans. The lets of appetite and affection to the word may be considered two wayes First as they are without vs. Secondly as they are within vs. Without vs the cause of want of affection is sometimes in the Minister sometimes in the Diuell sometimes in the company men sort withall and sometimes in God himselfe 1. In Ministers there are two things which maruelously hinder the admiration and desire after the word The first is the manner of their teaching when they teach vnskilfully deceitfully vaingloriously negligently or coldly When there is not a maiesty and purity and life in the Teacher it is no wonder if there be no affection in the people 2. Cor. 4.2 1. Thessal 2. 2 3 4 6 8. 1. Cor. 2.4 2. Tim. 2.15 The second is their ill liues What made the people in Elies time so loath the seruice of God but the wicked liues of Hophni and Phineas 1. Sam. 3. Ministers must teach by example as well as by doctrine if they
the promises of God in Christ are the sweet spices which being beaten yeeld a heauenly and supernaturall smell in the soules of the godly hearers 2. Cor. 2.14 15. But then Ministers must take heed they corrupt not Gods Word and see to it that their preaching bee in sincerity and as of God and in the sight of God in Christ and with demonstration of the truth to mens consciences 2. Cor. 2.17 else any Preacher will not serue the turn And in both these respects Ministers haue reason to cry out with the Apostle Oh! who is sufficient for these things If euery Sermon must leaue so sweet a sauour behinde it in the hearts of the hearers and in the nostrils of God too who can bee without the speciall assistance of God fitte for these things Lastly this may serue for singular reproof and terror to the wicked and that in diuerse respects First for such as are mockers and call sweet sowre that is speak euill of the good word of God secondly for the miserable neglect of that they should account the life of their life Alas whither shall wee go or what is this miserable and wretched life if we want the sweet comforts of the word To dwell without the word is To dwell in the parched places of the wildernesse and this Ministery is the more dangerous in such or to such as are daily inuited and haue all things ready made and yet wil not inwardly obey gods calling nor profit by the means but finde excuses to shift off the inuitation of God How justly may that curse be inflicted vpon them These men shall neuer taste of my supper Luke 14.17 c. 24. Thus much of the second doctrine Doct. 3. The third doctrine out of these words may be this that such as finde a true taste of the sweetnes of God in his Word may conceiue hopefully that their soules doo and shall prosper and growe There is no doubt to be made of our growth if once we come to feel the sweetnes of the Word For the cleerer vnderstanding of this doctrine I must answer two questions Quest. First what this true taste is Secondly whether this taste may not bee in wicked men Ans. For the first A true taste of the sweetnes of the Word and Gods graciousnes in it may bee knowne both by the cause and by the effects The cause of this taste is faith for by faith onely doth the soule taste Or that thing that raiseth so sweet a rellish in our hearts is A perswasion in particular of the graciousnes of God to vs euen of that graciousnes which the Word doth discouer The effects of this taste are three For first it reuiues the heart and raiseth it from the dead and frames it to bee a new creature working an vnfained change in the heart of man from the world and sin to the care of Gods glory and saluation of their own soules and thus it is called A sauour of life vnto life 2. Cor. 2.15 Secondly it settleth in the heart an estimation of the Word and spirituall things and the assurance of Gods fauour of al earthly things in the world Phil. 3.9 Psalm 84.10 Thirdly this taste works a heauenly kind of contentment in the heart so as the Godly when they haue found this are abundantly satisfied they haue enough Psalm 36.10 and 95.4 For the second question concerning wicked men and their rellishing of the sweetnes of the Word I say two things First that the most wicked men are without spirituall senses and finde no more taste in God or his Word than in the White of an egge they sauour not the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 1. Cor. 2.13 Of this afterwards But yet it may not be denied but that some wicked men may go so farre as to taste of the good Word of God and of the powers of the life to come and of heauenly gifts as the Apostle granteth Heb. 6.5 6. Quest. Now there-hence ariseth a great question What should bee the difference between this taste in wicked men and the true taste in godly men Answer For answer heerunto diuers differences may be giuen First in the things tasted there is a difference For wicked men may haue common graces yea and miraculous gifts too by imposition of hands and these are a great taste giuen them of the glory of Gods Kingdome but they neuer taste of sauing graces or if a taste of sauing graces were granted yet they taste as it were of the Riuer running by them but not of the Fountain whereas the Godly haue the very Spring of grace flowing in them Secondly in the time of tasting This taste in wicked men is but for a season it cannot hold long in them and therefore is their faith joy said to be temporary Whereas godly men may keep their taste to their dying daies not onely in the gifts of sauing graces but in the very sense of the sweetnes of Christ and the Word too c. Thirdly in the manner of tasting For wicked men may taste of the Gospell and Religion by senses or by a dimme kinde of contemplation or by a sudden illumination as by a flash of lightning but they cannot taste with their hearts cleerely by Faith Or thus wicked men may in the generall taste that is know and beleeue that the Mystery of Christ is true but they cannot taste or know this Mystery with particular and sound application as theirs Fourthly in the grounds of this taste or delight For a wicked man perswaded by false reasons settled in the common hope or transported with an high conceit of some temporary and common gifts and Graces may be much delighted and ioyed in the Word and the thought of going to heauen for a time but he neuer rightly applyed the promises of Grace in Christ nor doth he euer possesse so much as one infallible signe of a childe of God Fiftly In the effects and consequents of tasting for 1. A wicked man may taste but hee neuer digests An euill conscience casts vp the food againe or choakes and poisons it whereas in godly men their taste abides in them and they digest the food they receiue The vertue of it continues with them 2. A godly man is transformed and made another man by this taste so is not the wicked man It is not a sauour of life to the wicked 3. A true taste in the godly works as is before noted a high estimation and sound contentment so as the godly place the felicity of their liues in this communion with God his word But that can neuer a wicked man doe Sixtly and lastly wicked men may seem to taste and yet doe not Many men professe religion and delight in the word and in religion and religious duties who yet neuer did attaine to it but constantly found a wearines secret loathing and many times a secret and inward ill sauor in the word and in the duties of religion so as the
taste of the comforts of a better life Why long wee not to enioy those pleasures for euermore Psal. 17. vlt. Yea we may know how good it is to bee in Heauen by the taste wee haue sometimes on Earth If it doe vs such vnspeakeable ease and ioy to feele of the sweetnes of God for a little moment Oh how great then is that goodnes God hath laied vp for them that feare him Psal. 31.19 The smaleness of the quantity and shortnes of the continuance of our tast of the graciousness of God on earth should make vs to vse the meanes of communion with God with so much the more feruency and frequency and humility Doct. 5. A fift doctrine is that many in the Churches of Christians neuer so much as tasted of the sweetness of Gods grace and word and that may bee a cause why the Apostle speakes with an If as knowing it was a great question whether many of them had had experience of the sweetnesse of the Word Question Now if any aske what should be the cause that many Christians haue so little sence of the sweetnesse of the word and Gods graciousness and goodness in the Word Answere I answere that it is First with many so because they want the ordinances of God in their power and life of them They want powerfull preaching some congregations haue no preaching at all and many that haue preaching haue it not in the life and power The spices of the word are not beaten to the smell as they should be 2. Cor. 2.15 16. Secondly In others because the taste of the pleasures and profits and lusts of the world are in their hearts when they come to the word and so by the cares of life all sence of sweetnes is beaten out Math. 13. Luke 14.24 Thirdly It is in the most because they consider not their misery in themselues nor remember their latter end A man neuer knowes the sweetnes of Christ crucified till he be pricked in his heart and afflicted for his sinnes and forlorne estate in himselfe by nature and till men know how to number their daies they will neuer apply their hearts to wisdome Psal. 90.12 Fourthly Some men are infected with superstition and the loue of a strange god They prepare a table for the troope and therefore are hungry when Gods seruants eat and vexed when they sing for ioy of heart They cannot feele the sweetnes of the Gospell their hearts are so poisoned with secret popery Esay 65.11 13. Fiftly Some men taste not of wisdoms banquet because they leaue not the way of the foolish All sense is extinguished by the euill company they keep Prou. 9.6 Sixtly Too many Christians are poisoned with some of the sinnes mentioned in the first verse of this Chapter that destroyes both taste and appetite in them Seuenthly Some are fearefully deliuered to a spirituall slumber the Iustice of God scourging their impenitency and disobedience that made no vse of his iudgements and the remorses they felt before And so are in the case of the Iewes Rom. 11. Eightthly Because God doth for the most part reserue these tastes as the onely portion of his owne people and therefore neuer wonder though the common multitude attain not to it Psalm 36.8.9 Lastly the best Christians are often much restrained in their taste of the sweetnes of Gods fauour and presence because they are not carefull enough to attend vpon God in his ordinances they doo not seek God and striue to finde Gods fauour and presence in the means they hear and pray loosely with too much slacknes and remisnes of zeal and attention The consideration heerof should serue much to humble and melt the hearts of such as feel this to be their case they should be afraid and tremble at the iudgements of God vpon them heerin and fear their owne case and by speedy repentance make their recourse to God in the Name of Christ to seek a remedy for their distresse And to this end 1. They should gather a Catalogue of all such sins as they knowe by themselues for which they might most fear Gods displeasure and then go in secret and humble themselues in confession of those sinnes striuing till the Lord be pleased to giue them a soft hart and sensible sorrows This course will both marre the relish of sin and besides it opens the fountain of grace and ioy in the heart of a man Hosh. 14.3.5 Mat. 5.6 2. They should there attend with all possible heed to the Word of the Lord hearing it as the Word of God and not of man with this sincere couenant of their hearts to do whatsoeuer the Lord commands and then the Lord wil not long with-hold himself Secondly the Godly that finde this sweetnes in the Word should be so much the more thankfull for the gracious entertainment GOD giues them in his House in that hee hath not nor doth deal so with thousands of Christians as he deals with them Doct. 6. The last doctrine is that it is a shame for such Christians as haue felt of the sweetnesse of the Word to lose their appetite or any way to abate of their company in resorting and constancy of desire after it or estimation of it This answers to the main scope because these words are brought-in as a reason to excite appetite The remembrance of the good we haue found in the House of God should make vs loue it stil though we doo not alwaies speed alike wee should beleeue that God will return though hee hide his face for a time Such Christians then must bear their shame that haue lost their first loue and repent lest God take away the Candle-stick from them Verse 4. To whom coming as to a liuing stone disallowed of men but chosen of God and precious HItherto of the exhortation as it concernes the Word of God The exhortation as it concerns the Sonne of God follows from verse 4. to verse 13 wherein it is the purpose of the Apostle to shew vnto them in the second place the principall means of holinesse euen the originall fountain it self and that is Christ to whom they must continually come to seek grace if euer they will prosper and growe in godlinesse In the exhortation as it concerns Christ three things may be obserued First the Proposition wherein hee tels them what they must doo verses 4 and 5. Secondly the Confirmation of it and that two waies First by testimony of Scripture shewing what Christ is which Scripture is both cited and expounded verse 6 7 8. Secondly by the consideration of their owne excellent estate in Christ which is set out positiuely verse 9. and comparatiuely verse 10 or thus it is confirmed by arguments taken from the praise first of Christ verses 6 7 8. secondly of Christians verses 9 10. Thirdly the Conclusion where hee shewes the vse they should make both in what they should auoid verse 11. and in what they should doo verse 12. That which in generall
his works neuer creature did works of such price so vsefull so exquisite so transcendent Fourthly in respect of his sufferings hee paid such a price to God in the ransome of man as all the world besides could not raise or any way make Fiftly in respect of effects he giues the most precious things no treasures like those may be had from him his very promises are precious 2. Pet. 1.4 This may serue first to inform vs in diuers things as First concerning that matchlesse loue of God to vs that gaue vs his Sonne who is so precious Rom. 8.34 Secondly concerning the horrible sin of Iudas and the high Priests that valewed him but at thirtie pieces Thirdly concerning the most miserable condition of all prophane people and persons euen whole multitudes of people that so neglect Christ that can with Esau sell him for trifles pleasures or profits euen as meane sometimes as a messe of pottage c. The more glorious Christ is the more vile is their sinne of neglect or contempt of Christ. Woe to them that disallow him then Euen to all those sortes of men before mentioned Christ will not be a foundation stone to support them nor a precious stone to enrich them but as the vpper and nether milstone to grinde them to pieces or as a rock falling vpon them Quest. But what should bee the reason that Christ is in no more request amongst men Answer First one cause is mans ignorance both of their owne misery out of Christ as also of the glory of Christ in himself of the priuiledges man might attaine by him and of the singular glory to come Secondly another cause is vnbeliefe Men haue a secret kinde of Atheisme in them and doe not beleeue the report of the seruants of Christ out of the Word Esay 53.1 3. Thirdly another cause is that the most men look vpon the outside of the kingdom of Christ and of the estate of Christians which because they find it couered with afflictions and seated in a low condition without outward splendor they therefore contemn it Our life is hid with Christ in God Colos. 3.3 Fourthly but the maine reason is because men doe falsely esteeme of other things they set so high a price vpon their pleasures profits lusts credits honours hopes c. that Christ is not remembred nor valued vnlesse it bee at Iuda● his rate and yet many will not valew him at so much as thirtie pence but they will make shipwrack of a good conscience euen for a peny I meane for extreme small gaine in buying and selling and such like dealing And thus much of the third thing wee may be informed of The last is concerning the wealthy estate of all true Christians How rich are they that possesse this Mine of treasure who haue his spirit graces righteousnes ordinances and glory And as it may thus informe vs so it should teach vs Vse 2. First to account of Christ as most precious to esteeme of him as euer precious in our eies and shew it 1. By seeking to get Christ aboue all gettings 2. By accounting all things but as dust and dung in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Iesus Christ Phil. 3.8 3. By selling all to buy this precious stone Math. 13. forsaking father and mother house and land for Christs sake and the Gospels 4. By keeping our communion with Christ with all carefulnes 5. By auoiding all the waies by which Christ is disallowed and dis-esteemed 6. By longing for and louing his appearing 2. Tim. 4. hasting to it and looking for his comming 2. Pet. 3. Secondly to consecrate our selues and whatsoeuer is deare and precious to God and the seruice of Christ striuing to bee a precious people and peculiar to God zealous of good things and workes Tit. 2.12 14.1 Cor. 6.20 Thirdly We should liue like such as hauing attained so precious a treasure 1. Liuing by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 2. Not being the seruants of men 1. Cor. 7.2 3. 3. Keeping our selues from all pollution by which the Kingdome of God may be defiled laying vp this treasure in a pure conscience Lastly Ministers that know that there is no other foundation but this liuing and precious stone should study by all meanes to build gold siluer and precious stones and not hay and stubble striuing like skilfull master-builders to make the whole frame some-way answerable to the foundation 1. Cor. 3.12 Thus of the description of Christ. Now followeth what Christians must doe that from Christ they may receiue vertue for the attaining of holinesse of life First they must come vnto him To whom comming Diuers things may heere bee noted in the generall First that men may come vnto Christ euen while they are on earth Secondly that naturall men or naturally men are absent from Christ or without Christ. Thirdly that without comming to Christ we can neuer be sanctified Fourthly that all that once take taste of the sweetnes of Christ in his ordinances will come vnto him Fiftly that to come to Christ is a continuall work Christians are still comming their life is but a continued iourney to Christ or a daily seeking out of Christ c. But in particular I especially consider two things First how many waies men come to Christ. Secondly In what manner men must approach to Christ. First we must come to Christ diuers waies First and chiefely by belieuing in him wee must drawe neere to Christ by the assurance of faith Heb. 16.22 Secondly by making him our daily refuge in praier vsing him as our continuall mediator and aduocate Psa. 65.12 Ierem. 31.9 carrying all our petitions to him in all our distresses making our moane to him as the Client doth to the Counsellor or as the oppressed doe to the Iudge Thirdly by the frequenting his ordinances viz. the Word Sacraments thus to come to his feasts euen to his great Supper Prou. 9. Luke 14. 17 c. Math. 22. Thus we come to worship Fourthly by contemplation remembring him and setting our affections on him thinking on him that sits at the right hand of God Col. 3.1 Fiftly by receiuing his seruants and visiting them in their distresses He that receiueth them receiueth Christ Math. 10. and to visit them in prison is to come vnto Christ or to visit Christ Mathew 26. But the fourefirst waies are especially meant and the first chiefely For the second Wee must come to Christ. First speedily as the men that suffer shipwrack quickly haste to the shore Secondly penitently going and weeping we must goe Ierem. 50.4 Hee cals to him sinners and that to repentance Math. 9.13 we must come weary and heauy loaden Math. 11.28 we must returne and come Esay 25.12 and not as they Ier. 7.9 10. Zachar. 14.1 c. that came in their sinnes with Idols in their heart Wee should come to Christ as Benhadad did to Ahab with ropes about our necks that is with all
the thiefe vpon the Crosse Consider that God hath offered thee thy pardon in the Sacrament Feare the Lord therefore and his goodnes and returne with all thine heart and iniquity shall not be thy ruine Hitherto of their sinne their punishment followes and so first vpon their rulers and leaders in these words The Stone which the builders refused is become the Head of the corner Which words are taken out of Psal. 118.22 where they are vsed by the Prophet Dauid and here quoted by the Apostle Peter The words haue a double sense for they did concern both Dauid and Christ. As they concern'd Dauid this was the meaning that Though the Nobles and Courtiers did despise and reiect and oppose Dauid yet such was God's prouidence that the man whom they reiected GOD made King of Israel and the chief stay support of that State Now for this sense of the words diuers things may be noted First that God ●ath raised vp great men in the Common-wealth for this end that they might seek the publick good and imploy their labours for the building vp and prosperity of the State Which should both teach great men to think of their duties and the accounts they must make to God as also it should teach the people to pray the more heartily for them and to obey them in all lawfull things Secondly we may hence gather the imperfection of all humane things For in that earthly Kingdomes need building vp still it shewes that they attain to no perfection but at the best are stil in progresse Thirdly that many times great men wilfully oppose the right and set themselues against the righteous and resist the will of GOD. Which should teach vs not to place our confidence in the great men of this world nor to be alwaies led by their example in opinions Fourthly that God will finde out the wickednes of great men and bring them to confusion God accepts not persons hee hateth sin in great men as well as in mean men and will crosse and confound their godlesse and vngodly coun●els Fiftly that God takes to himself the power to dispose of earthly Kingdomes and to giue Kings and Rulers at his owne pleasure It was the Lord's dooing and it was maruellous that Dauid should become the Head of the corner Psal. 118.23 The Lord pleads it as a part of his soueraignty and prerogatiue To set vp Kings By me Kings raign Pro. 8. Which should teach Princes and Iudges and Nobles to doo homage to God and acknowledge him for their Soueraign and therefore serue him with fear Psalm 2. And it should teach the people to giue honour and tribute and custome and obedience for conscience sake to their Rulers seeing the power that is is of God Rom. 13. Now as these words were vnderstood in the case of Dauid so was Dauid heerin a type of Christ and so the words are to be vnderstood in the case of Christ also as our Sauiour himselfe applies them Mat. 22. and as it is euident to bee the meaning of the Apostle heer And it is the drift of the Apostle to strengthen weak Christians against the scandall that might arise from the opposition of the Kingdome of Christ. For it might trouble them and amaze them to consider how Christ was opposed by the Scribes and Pharises who were the great learned men of the time and such as were eminent in the Church and in the account of the most men were the chief persons that took care for Religion and the state of the Church and did excell all other sorts c. Now that this scandall might be remoued he shewes in these words First that nothing did therein fall out but what was the lot of Dauid in his time Secondly that all this was foretold in the old Testament and therfore might not seem strange Thirdly that all those oppositions should bee in vain for GOD would reiect and confound those opposites and would prosper and aduance the right of Iesus Christ without the help of those men In the particular consideration of these words three things must bee noted First the persons threatned viz. the Builders that is the Scribes and Pharises and those that vnder pretence of religion did oppose Christ. Secondly the cause of their punishment viz. the refusing of Christ the foundation stone Thirdly the iudgement inflicted vpon them which is twofold the one implied the other expressed There is a iudgement implied viz. that Though they were by calling and in the account of the multitude Builders yet God would reiect them and go on with his work in conuerting both Iewes and Gentiles without them The iudgement expressed is that Christ whom they so much hated and opposed should be in spight of their hearts and to their extreme vexation made King of the Church and exalted to supreme power ouer all things and the only stay of the whole Church both of Iews and Gentiles And heerin it is to be noted both the manner how this shall be done in the word is become or is made and also the time in that hee sayth It is made Builders Quest. A question may be moued heere for the sense viz. how the Scribes and Pharises and such like men can be sayd to be builders Ans. For answere whereunto we must vnderstand that the Scribes and Pharises and so wicked men that possesse eminent places in the Church may be said to be builders First in the account of the multitude whatsoeuer they were indeed yet they were commonly so accounted as builders and prime men in managing the affaires of the Church Secondly the Scribes and Pharises may be acknowledged in some respects as builders indeed they did God some worke For howsoeuer they did not soundly teach Christ yet they drew the people by their doctrine to auoid on the right hand the Stoicall strictnesse of the Essenes and on the left hand the prophane irreligiousnesse of the Sadduces Thirdly they were builders by calling they haue the name not so much from what they were as from what men in their places had been or ought to haue been And these are the persons that oppose CHRIST and are thus seuerely iudged of God Diuers things may be hence noted First that men may be great in their owne opinion and in the account of the world who yet are nothing set by of God such were these Pharises Luke 16.14 15. And therefore wee should labour for a spirit without guile and not be wise in our selues or rest in outward shewes but seek the praise of God we are safe if God allow of vs though all the world disallow vs. Secondly that God will acknowledge freely any good hee findes in his very enemies as heer the Pharises are not denied the title of Builders for that generall work they did in encountring the Sadduces and Essenes And as they are called Builders so are the diuels called Principalities and Powers to import what is any way of praise in them notwithstanding
first verse of this Chapter And he is well said to bee Head of the corner because vpon Christ meet as the two sides meete in the corner stone both Angels and men and amongst men both the Saints in heauen and the godly on earth and amongst men on earth both Iewes and Gentiles euen all the Elect of all nations ages and conditions in the world The vses of the exaltation of Christ briefely follow First It should teach vs to striue by all meanes to get into his seruice that is so powerfull and able to do so much for his seruants Secondly It shewes vs the end of the oppositions of all wicked men Christ shall increase and prosper and they shall bee confounded and perish Thirdly It should especially enforce the necessity of beleeuing in Christ we should lye vpon him with all our waight as the building doth on the foundation Fourthly It should comfort vs in all distresses considering what end God gaue to the sufferings of Christ and so it is vrged Hebr. 12.2 The consideration of the manner and the time followes Is become or is made He doth not tell how but leaues that as granted to bee effected without hands euen by the speciall prouidence of God which giues vs occasion to take notice of the truth that in things of the Kingdom of Iesus Christ God is pleased to make his worke or to worke sometimes without vsing any of the meanes which the world takes notice of he neglects all those meanes which fall within the expectation Psal. 118.20 21. as heere for the proclaiming of the Messias there was not any one order or rank of men eminent in the world which God made vse of But by a way altogether strange to the world erected the Christian Monarchie which should teach vs not to limit God to the meanes which is likeliest to vs but to liue in all things by faith where meanes seeme to faile then with Abraham aboue hope and vnder hope to giue glory to God and cast our selues and all our care vpon God Thus of the manner The time followes In that he said It is become Christ was Head of the corner according to the present time First if we consider the type of it Christ was become head of the corner in that Dauid was made King of Israel as a type of Christs Kingdome ouer the Church Secondly Christ was Head in that in the Apostles time hee had receiued power after his Ascension ouer all things though as yet the Gentiles were not so fully conuerted Thirdly that he is becom the head may be taken prophetically For the Prophets to express the certainty of a thing to come vtter it in the words of the present tense It is so because it shall as surely be so as if it were already done Verse 8. And a stone to stumble at and a rocke of offence euen to them which stumble at the Word being disobedient vnto the which thing they were euen ordained HItherto of the punishments vpon the builders The punishment vpon the whole body of vnbeleeuers is contained in this verse Wherein note first the kindes of punishment Christ is a rock of offence and a stone of stumbling Secondly the causes both in themselues and in God in the words that follow A rocke of offence and a stone of stumbling Since wicked men haue refused Christ and will not beleeue in him He that may not be a stone of foundation will proue a stone of stumbling and a rock for them to dash on till they be dashed to pieces which words import the fearefull iudgements of God spiritually inflicted vpon vnbeleeuers which is two-fold First they shall be giuen vp to scandall and then secondly to despaire Before I open the words particularly diuers things may be noted in generall First that the punishments that light vpon particular wicked men are to be accounted the punishments of the whole body of vnbeleeuers as here despaire and taking offence at Christ it may light vpon some particular offenders only yet they are punishments belonging to all 1. Because there is no iudgement but all wicked men haue deserued it 2. Because when God plagues some he meanes all he threatens all 3. Because no wicked man can be sure for the time to come that he shall not fall into them 4. Because the afflictions of this life are typical to wicked men as despair is a typicall hell and so all other iudgements are but little hels And this doctrine should much amaze impenitēt sinners if they consider that any fearfull iudgement they see fall vpon others may fall vpon them and that GOD is aswell displeased with their sins as with the sins of those he so plagued as Christ shewes Luke 13.1 to 6. Secondly that from one and the same cause may arise diuers and contrary effects as Christ that is a stone of foundation to the beleeuer is a stone of stumbling to the vnbeleeuer Thus in Luke 2. hee was appointed for the rising and falling of many in Israel Thus the Gospel of peace is to wicked men a fire a sword a fanne It is a sauour of life to the Godly and a sauour of death to the Wicked 2. Cor. 2. as the Sun melteth the wax and hardneth the clay This comes to pass by accident and by the corruption that is in the hearts of wicked men and by the fearfull iudgements of God Vse The vse should bee to teach vs therefore not to rest in the hauing of the meanes of saluation as the preaching of the Word c. For through thy corruption it may be a meanes of greater damnation Thirdly that of all iudgements in this life spirituall iudgements are the worst which appears from hence in this that when the LORD would declare his speciall displeasure vpon wicked men he threatens these in this place as the most fearfull Now for explication of this point All iudgements in this life are either spirituall or temporall By temporall iudgements I meane such as haue their proper effects on the outward man such as are pouerty disgrace sicknes imprisonment losses in mens estates and the like By spirituall iudgements I mean such as haue their proper effects vpon the soule as for example hardnes of heart the spirit of slumber dissertion or the absence of GOD the taking away of the gifts of the minde the with-holding of the Gospell the deliuering of men vp to the power of Satan or to the loue of lies terrours of despaire or taking of offense of which later in this place Now these spirituall iudgements are much worse than any of the former temporall crosses first because these iudgements light vpon the best part of man which is the soule and by how much the soule is better than the body by so much it is worse to be distressed in soule than in body Secondly because they with-hould from vs the best Good which is God or Christ now that which straightens vs in the best things
must needs be the worst kinde of restraint Thirdly because these crosses are more hardly cured it is much easier to heal a sicknes in the body than a disease in the soule Fourthly because these iudgements for the most part are inflicted vpon the worst offenders I say for the most part for sometimes the Godly themselues may be scourged for a time and for iust reasons with some kindes of spirituall iudgements Vse The vse may be first for reproof of the madnesse of multitudes of people in the world that can bee extremely vexed and grieued for worldly crosses yet haue no sense or care of spirituall iudgements they howle vpon their beds if GOD take from them corn or wine or the fruits of the field but neuer grieue if God take the Gospell from them they are much troubled if they lose the fauour of their greatest friends but neuer mourn because GOD hath forsaken them they are very impatient if their bodies be sick and yet very quiet if their soules bee sick they would think themselues vndon if they were carried to prison who yet are not much moued at it that God should deliuer them vp to Satan And yet I would not be mistaken I do not mean to say that wicked men should not mourn for worldly or outward crosses It is true godly men should not or not with great sorrows but for wicked men they ought to be extremely grieued for euery outward affliction because it comes in wrath from God and is but the beginning of euils But then two things must bee noted First that their sorrow should be godly viz. for their sinnes that brought those iudgements not for the crosse it self secondly that they ought to bee more troubled for spiritual iudgements than for temporall Secondly this should much comfort godly men and women in all their afflictions and it should make them patient because though God afflicts them in their bodies or states yet hee spareth their soules and doth not execute those outward crosses but with much compassion Thirdly it should teach vs how to pray in the case of afflictions if they bee spirituall iudgements wee may pray directly for the remoueall of them but for temporall iudgements we must pray with condition And thus of the generall obseruations Before I enter vpon the particular breaking open of the doctrine of this verse it will not be amisse to shew that this and such doctrine as this is not vnprofitable Quest. For some one might say To what end serues this doctrine of God's dealing with vnbeleeuers Ans. I answer it is profitable both for godly men and wicked men For wicked men may hence hear and fear and doo no more wickedly seeing hence they may discern what they may come to if they preuent it not by repentance And for godly men they may hence be the more inflamed with the admiration of Gods goodnes when they shall heare of their owne priuiledges by grace Such Scriptures as this containe the arraignment and triall of the vngodly Now it is very profitable for vs to stand by and hear the triall Wee know multitudes of innocent men flock to the Assises to heare the araignement of malefactors which breeds in them first contentment in the obseruation of the solemnity and manner of administration of Iustice Secondly a feare to offend the terror of their sentence frightes the heart for many daies after Thirdly a loue of innocency it makes men loue innocency much the better for a long while after Fourthly compassion to malefactors it softens the heart and makes men fit to shew mercy to these poore condemned men The like to all this is bred by the consideration of such Doctrines as this In the words of this verse then two things are to bee noted first the kindes of punishments inflicted vpon the body of vnbeleeuers secondly the causes of it The kindes are two first God will deliuer them vp to scandall and then to despaire to scandall as Christ is a stone of stumbling to despaire as Christ is a rocke of offence These words are taken out of the Prophet Esay Chapter 8. where the Lord intends by them to denounce the reprobation of the Iewes as some think or rather foretels the spirituall Iudgements which shall bee inflicted vpon them The Apostle in this place applies the words to the vnbeleeuers of his time among whome the obstinate Iewes were chiefe to shew that as the other Scripture was comfortable to the Godly so were there places that did threaten the wicked that as the former place did proue Christ a stone of foundation for the godly so this did shew that Christ was a stone in another sense to the wicked Christ is a stone of triall to all men in the Church because the Doctrine of Christ tryes men whether they be elected or reiected good or bad so Esay 28.16 Againe Christ is a precious stone to the beleeuer and thirdly heer a stone of stumbling to the vnbeleeuers Now that we may know what offence or scandal is we may be helped by the Etimology of the originall words For Scandall in the originall is either deriued of a word that signifies to halt or els it noteth any thing that lieth in a mans way a stone or a piece of wood against which he that runneth stumbleth and so hurteth or hindreth himselfe It most properly signifieth rest or a certaine crooked piece with a baite vpon it in instruments by which mice or wolues or foxes are taken and thence the Church translated the name of scandall to note the snares by which men are catched as beastes are in grins and baites so the word it seemes is vsed So then a scandall is any thing which causeth or occasioneth offences by which a man is made to halt or is brought into a snare or made to stand still or fall in matter of Religion or saluation And so the sorcerers were a stumbling block to Pharaoh and the false prophets to Ahab and the lying signes of Antichrist to such as loue not the truth Now all scandall may be thus diuided Scandall is either actiue or Passiue that is giuen or taken Scandall giuen is when the authour of the action is likewise the cause of the hurt that comes by it Thus Elies sonnes were scandalous thus Dauid by his greeuous sinnes gaue offence 1. Sam. 2.17.2 Sam. 18.22 c. and thus Scandall is giuen either by euill doctrine first whether hereticall secondly or superstitious or else by wickednes of life or by wilfull abuse of Christian liberty Offence taken is either from our selues or from others A man may bee an offence a stumbling blocke to himselfe by dallying with some speciall beloued corruption of which our Sauiour Christ saith If thine eye offend thee pull it out or thy hand or thy foot c. Math. 5.29 Scandall taken from others is either that they call humane or that they call diabolical Scandall taken which they call humane may either bee found in Godly
estimation from them or at least put them to silence c. For the first if wicked men bee offended for doing good wee are not to regard their offence As when the Pharises were offended at Christ he cared not but said Let them alone they are blind and leaders of the blinde c. Math. 15.14 And so the Apostles answered It is better to obey God then men Acts 5.29 It is better that scandal arise then that the truth should bee forsaken Thus Michaiah cares not for the offence of Ahab nor Eliah and in this case Leui is not to respect father or mother bretheren or children Deut. 33.9 And so though wicked men bee offended wee must preach the Gospel with all plainenesse and not affect wisdome of words 1. Cor. 1.23 and wee must labour for the meate that perisheth not and must pray vnto God and vse religious exercises in our houses as Daniel did wee must renew Iustification by our owne workes and we must suffer in a good cause and wee must with strictnes auoid the excesses of the time Now for the second we may be guilty of giuing offence to the wicked First by scandalous and vicious life thus Dauid gaue offence Secondly by indiscretion in the manner of doing good duties as if men pray or fast or giue almes to bee heard or seene of men Thirdly by rash zeale as when men proclaime to the world a great deale of strictnes in things that are not grounded vpon the Word and yet are tainted openly with known infirmities and sinnes or when men are violent and rash censurers especially in things they commit themselues or when men neglect their calling and liue inordinately and are busie-bodies vnder pretence of Religion or when men that haue a faire dore opened to doe good by preaching the Gospell will not yeeld in some indifferent things that they may winne them as woe had beene to Paul if he had not beene a Iew with the Iewes that hee might gaine the Iewes thereby or necessity lay vpon him the preaching of the Gospell or to preach the Gospell though it were clogd at that time with condition of yielding to the Iewish ceremonies 1. Cor. 9. Now for the third there are diuers excellent rules that may much adorne the liues of Christians in their courage toward the wicked and so either preuent scandall or leaue them without excuse themselues being Iudges as they will confesse in the day of visitation These things then will much aduance our cause before wicked men to shew in our conuersation 1. Integrity and harmelesnes and sound care of the practising of godlines Philippians 1.15 16. 2. Submission and obedience vnto the King and his humane ordinances 1. Peter 2.13.14.15 3. Reuerence and feare when we intreate of any thing that concernes God and Religion 4. Meeknes of wisdome expressing a minde free from conceitednes frowardnes or affectation Iam. 3.13 5. Mercy to the poore and a minde free from the greedy desire of earthly things a serious declaration of the contempt of the world Iam. 1.26 Math. 5.16 c. 6. Quietnes and peace to be shewed first in studying to be quiet to meddle with our owne busines secondly in making peace amongst others Math. 5.8 7. Loue to our enemies being ready to pray for them or doe them any good Lastly hence may be gathered some matter of consolation for the godly For first if the Lord haue kept them from taking offence hee hath freed them from a great sore spirituall iudgement Secondly if the wicked should be so peruerse as to take offence when he giues none yet this may stay him that Christ himselfe was an offence vnto them Thirdly as it is a great iudgement to bee offended at Christ so it is a great mercy and supernaturall grace when the Lord makes our hearts able to loue the Lord Iesus in all sincerity Hitherto of the first kinde of punishment the second is that Christ shall be to them A rock of offence that is they shall fall vpon Christ as the ship doth vpon the rock and be broken all to pieces There shall bee a desperate anguish vpon their consciences perceiuing themselues to haue no right in Christ by the feare of which as men that haue suffred shipwrack they shall be out of all hope of mercy Thus hee that falleth on this stone shal be broken and vpon whom it shall fall he shall be ground to powder Luke 20 17. The consciences of wicked men are diuersly affected some are without feeling of any grieuance in the matters of their soules some haue feeling The consciēce is without feeling either through a continuall security and sleepines which is in all men or through a searednes by which some men are growne past feeling Now those wicked men that haue any feeling in this text are cast into two sorts for either they are offended or they despaire Christ is to those latter an occasion of their ruine they suffer shipwracke vpon Christ which is ioyned with singular offence or paine or grieuance of their consciences This rocke is like that in the Iudges chap. 6.21 out of which fire went and consumed them The despaire that wicked men feel is of two sorts For either it is a despaire which riseth from their perswasion of their want of helpe in spirituall things or from their want of help in outward things somtimes they fall into desperate tormēts and griefs and fears about outward things either vpon fear of danger or vpon an apprehension that they are vtterly vndone or shall be in matters of the world this was the despair mentioned and this despair was in Saul Achitophel and Belshazzer Dan. 5. and in the Iews when they said there was no hope Ier. 2.25 and this was in the Aegyptians Babylonians Tyrians and their case in the desolation of their estate by warre mentioned in many chapters of the Prophet Esay But this despair is not meant heer for this is a despair of all help or saluation of the soule by Christ conceiuing that they are vtterly cast off of God and shall perish for euer Thus Cain and Iudas despaired of all mercy in God And this despaire of saluation and all happinesse is felt either in hell or at the day of Iudgement or in this life First it is certain that the Wicked feel an eternall despair in hell which increaseth their torments because they haue no hope of ease or help and thus also the diuels despair This despair in hell is a meer gnawing the conscience and tormenting it which neuer dieth Secondly they also feel despair with singular horrour when they come to appear before Iesus Christ at the last Day when they behold the face of the Iudge and feel within them a witnes that tels them they shall bee damned This torment will then come vpon them like the pains of a woman in trauell and their anguish will bee so great that they will cry to the mountains
iudge our selues that wee bee not condemned of the Lord. For the attendance vpon this point maketh all safe whereas the long neglect of our daily sinnes without any humiliation for them may turn in the end to the pangs of some miserable despair Vse 4. Fourthly hence the Godly may comfort themselues because Christ is to them a rock to build on Mat. 16. a rock for refuge and safety Psal. 18.2 a rock for shadow Esay 32.2 And therefore let the Inhabitants of the earth sing Esay 42.11 and withall if they consider how God sheweth them they should account their other afflictions but light in comparison of what falls vpon wicked men Ob. But we read that godly men haue been in despair as Dauid Iob and others Sol. It is true but yet there was euer great difference between the despair of the Godly and the Wicked which I will briefly note First they differed in the causes The honors of the Wicked proceeded from the curse of God whereas the sorrows of the Godly proceeded from his mercy Secondly they differed sometimes in the ob●iect for godly men despair of themselues wicked men despair of God It is a grace vsuall in repentance to despair of all happinesse from our selues but now wicked men are out of all hope of God's mercy and help Thirdly they differ in the effects For Cain blasphemes God in his despair and saith his punishment is greater than he can bear or his sinnes greater than can bee forgiuen but the Godly giue glory to God and account him alwaies iust and good Again wicked men rage and repent not but godly men bewail their sinnes and cry mightily to God Reu. 16.9 10. Ier. 18.12 Wicked men bee in trauell but they bring forth nothing but winde they are neuer the better when they come out of their affliction no though they poured out a praier to GOD in the time of distresse Esay 26.16 17 18. Thirdly the confidence of the wicked man is swept down as the house of a spider they haue no hope at all Iob 8.13 and 11. vlt. Whereas godly men at the worst are supported with some kinde of hope or perswasion of mercy and therefore vsually they rather ask whether God's mercy be clean gone than say it is so Psalm 77. and they rather complain that God hides himself from them than that God hateth them Psalm 88.15 Fourthly they differ in the measure too For God alwaies hath respect to the strength of his children to lay no more vpon them than they are able to bear whereas he respects the sinne of wicked men and regards it not though they cry out with Cain they cannot bear it Fiftly God giues issue out of the triall and returns from his displeasure in a moment when he deals with the Godly Esay 54. whereas wicked men can haue no such hope Lastly seeing despair is such a curse and is so farre from leading men to Christ that it makes them suffer shipwrack vpon Christ Ministers all others should take heed of driuing the people vpon any pretense into this kinde of desperation let men bee taught to despair of themselues but neuer to despair of God Hitherto of the kindes of punishments The causes follow first in themselues secondly in God In themselues it is their stumbling at the word and their disobedience To them which stumble at the Word There is a diuerse reading The old reading was thus To them that offend in the Word noting either in general that Gods word or Christ doth not profit these men that were guilty of euill speaking and the grosse abuses of the toung or in particular it should note the sinnes of the stubborne Iewes who offended in word when they blasphemed Christ and denied him But I rather take it as heer it is translated and so it notes the causes why many men fall into scandall and from thence into despaire viz. because they bring ill harts to the Word of God they haue mindes that are rebellious and will not be subiect to the Gospell but intertaine it with diseased cauilling mindes Those persōs are likely not to receiue any good by Christ that quarrell at the Word of Christ. Now that this may not be mistaken or neglected I will shew first what it is not to stumble at the Word lest some weak ones should be dismaied Then secondly how many waies wicked men stumble at the Word For the first To bee grieued in heart for the reproofes of the Word is not an offence but a grace so we are troubled not with dislike of the Word but of our owne sinnes Secondly to inquire of the truth and that which is deliuered and to try the doctrine by turning to the Scriptures as the Bereans did this is not condemned heere nor is it a stumbling at the Word to put a difference betweene the teaching of Christ and the teaching of the Scribes and Pharises Secondly but men are said to bee offended at the Word when their harts rise against it or they ensnare themselues through their owne corruption by occasion of the Word To speak distinctly wicked men are offēded at the word with a three-fold offence First with the offence of anger when they rage and fret at the Word or the teachers thereof because their sinnes are reprooued or their miseries foretold And this offence they shew either when they enuy the successe of the Word Acts. 4.2 or raile and reuile Gods Saints as Ahab did Michaiah for telling him the truth or when they mocke at the Word as the Pharises did Luke 16.14 Secondly with the offence of scandall when they take occasion from the doctrine they heare to fall off from hearing or from the true Religion or from the company of the godly Thus they stumbled at those hard sayings of Christ that departed from him for that cause or reason Ioh. 6. Thirdly with the offence diabolicall when men peruert the good Word of God to inflame themselues the more greedily to sin making it a doctrine of liberty or taking occasion to commit sin from the Law that rebukes sinne The vse may bee first for information and so two waies For first we may hence see the reason why many hearers profit not by the Word It is not because the Word wants power but because they stumble at it They nourish cauils and obiections against it they oppose reason to faith Secondly we may hence take notice of the difference of a regenerate and vnregenerate heart To the one the Word is a sauour of life to the other it is a deadly sauour and full of offence to them And withall this may humble wicked men For this is a sure truth that so long as they are offended at the Word so long they haue no part in Christ and withall it may comfort all those that loue the Word and receiue it with ioy constantly For that is a meanes and signe of their interest in Christ. Being disobedient These words containe another
cause why Christ was no better rellished by them and why they found such an ill taste in the word of Christ it ●as the wickednes that was in them Sinne had marred their tastes sweet meates haue but an ill rellish with those who haue corrupt and diseased stomacks and the cause is apparant the ill humors in their stomacks and nothing in the meates they eate But of their disobedience before and therefore this shall suffice in this place and thus of the cause in themselues The cause in God followes Whereunto they were appointed There is much difference of the reading of the originall words in the translations Some read thus They stumble at the Word beleeue not in him in whome they are placed or set and expound it thus In whom they liue moue and haue their being some read in stead of disobedient They beleeued not But for these words read them as heer But then their meaning is that the Iewes beleeued not though they were thereunto appointed that is though they had the promise of saluation and were a people separate thereunto and so it is an aggrauation of their vnbeliefe This sence and reading is not to bee despised But I take it as I finde it in the translation and so the sence is that these men whether Iewes or Gentiles that are heere spoken of were appointed to this misery by the decree of God and so they are words that expresse the substance of that part of Gods decree which Diuines call Reprobation And so it is to bee obserued from hence that wicked men are appointed from euerlasting to the enduring of the miserie which are inflicted vpō them in this life or in Hell This is a doctrine which is extremely distasted by flesh and blood and proues many times more offensiue to the common people and is alwaies to bee reckned as strong meat and therefore that I may fairely get off this point I offer two things to your considerations First the proofes that plainely auouch so much as is heere obserued Secondly I will set downe certaine infallible obseruations which tend to quiet mens mindes and perswade them against the seeming difficulty or absurdity of this truth For the first the Apostle Iude saith that the wicked men he treateth of were of old ordained to this condemnation Iude 4. and the Apostle Peter saith that the vngodly were reserued vnto the day of Iudgement to be punished 2. Pet. 2.9 and verse 12. he saith that they are naturall brute beasts made to bee taken and destroied and it is manifestly implied 1. Thes. 5.8 that God hath ordained wicked men to wrath so Rom. 9.22 For the second though this doctrine seeme wonderfull hard yet to assure vs there is no hard dealing at all in God there bee many things may confirme vs and ease our mindes though for the present wee cannot vnderstand how this should be and perhaps are much troubled about this point and therefore seriously consider First for thy selfe that if thou haue truely repented and doe beleeue in Iesus Christ and hast in thee the signes of a child of God for thy part thou art free from this danger and out of all question art in safe estate and therefore oughtest not to greeue but reioyce with singular praise to God Secondly seeing God hath comforted vs with many doctrines and trusted vs with many cleere points of knowledge can wee not bee contented that God should speak darkly to vs in one point Especially when wee are told before-hand that there is an Abyssus a depth yea many depths in this doctrine Shall we bee wayward because one truth will not sinke yet into our heads Wee are told that this is a point vnsearcheable Rom. 11.32 33. and the rather because weake Christians are not tied to eate strong meat they may safely let this doctrine alone Thirdly that no man can know his owne reprobation nor ought to beleeue so of himselfe but is called vpon to vse the meanes by which he may bee saued Fourthly wee haue this oath of God for it That he desires not the death of the sinner but would haue all men to repent and bee saued Fiftly that whereas Diuines make two parts of the decree of reprobation Praeterition and Praedamnation All Diuines are agreed for the latter that God did neuer determine to damne any man for his owne pleasure but the cause of his perdition was his owne sinne And heere is reason for it For God may to shew his soueraignty annihilate his creature but to appoint a reasonable creature to an estate of endles paine without respect of his desert cannot agree to the vnspotted Iustice of God And for the other part of passing ouer and forsaking a great part of men for the glory of his Iustice the exactest Diuines doe not attribute that to the meer will of God but hold that God did first look vpon those men as sinners at least in the generall corruption brought in by the Fall For all men haue sinned in Adam and are guilty of high treason against God Sixtly that sinne is no effect of reprobation but onely a consequent Gods decree doth not force any man to sinne c. Seuenthly that what soeuer God hath decreed yet all grant that God is no way any Author of sin he doth not cause sin in any but onely permits it and endureth it and whereas the most that can bee obiected is that God hardneth whom hee will Rom. 9. it is agreed vpon in the answer of all sound Diuines that God doth not infuse any wickednes from without in mens hearts but whereas their hearts are in themselues by custome in sinne hardned as a iust Iudge hee giues them ouer to Satan and his power who is as it were the Iayler but doth neuer restraine them from good and the meanes of it Eightthly now may men say that ●●nne came vpon men by reason of the rigour of Gods Law For it was impossible to bee kept For this there is a cleere answer When God gaue his Law at first man was able to keep it and it came by his owne default that hee was not able to keepe it afterwards A man that sends his seruant to the market and giues him charge to doe such and such busines for him if that seruant make himselfe drunken and so bee vnfit to doe his masters busines hee is worthy to bee punished because hee was fit to doe it when hee was first sent about it Ninthly it is plain in this verse that those men of whom he heer speaks are indited of grieuous sin against Christ and the Gospell Tenthly that things may be iust though the reasons of them doo not appear vnto vs if it bee true of some cases of iustice among men much more in this case of God's iustice Lastly it should much satisfie vs that in the day of Iesus Christ those mysteries of Religion shall be broken open and all then shall bee made cleer vnto vs as cleer as
5. That if he doo bring affliction vpon his people to humble them yet he will not consume them but will repent him of the euill Ioel 2.13 Deut. 32.36 Amos 7.36 6. That in shewing his loue hee is of great kindnes called the maruellous louing kindnesse Psalm 17.7 hence resembled to marriage-kindnes Hosh. 2.19 No husband can be so fond of his wife as God is of his people nor can any man deuise such waies to expresse kindnes as GOD doth to his people 7. That his mercy is without all grieuance to him Mercy pleaseth him Mic. 7.18 It breeds as it were an vnspeakable contentment in GOD himself when hee hath dealt mercifully with his seruants Secondly his mercy is immense vnmeasurable and this is exprest by diuers forms of speech in the Scripture Thus God is said to be plentious in mercy Psalm 86.5 aboundant in mercy 1. Pet. 1.3 rich in mercy Eph. 2.4 His mercy is great aboue the heauens Psal. 108.5 Gods Word heerin hath magnified his name aboue all things Psalm 138.2 Hee hath a multitude of mercies Psalm 51.1 manifold mercies Nehemie 9.19 They are vnsearchable high as the heauen is from the earth Psalm 103.11 His kindnes is said to be maruellous louing kindnes Psalm 17.7 Which must needs appear to be so because hee is a Father of mercies all mercies in the world flowe from him 2. Cor. 1.3 and all his paths are mercie and truth Whatsoeuer hee doth to his people is in mercy Psalm 25.6 And therefore the Prophet that could finde similitudes to expresse the faithfulnesse and iudgements of God by yet is fain to giue-ouer when he comes to his speciall mercy to his Chosen and vents himself by exclamation Oh how excellent is thy mercy Psalm 36.7.8 Thirdly this mercy is the more admirable in that it is free which appears diuers waies First in that it is shewed without deserts on our parts which the tearm gracious euery where giuen to God in Scripture doth import Secondly in that God is tied to no man nor to any posterity of men he hath mercy on whom he wil haue mercy Rom. 9. Thirdly because it is extended to all sorts of people If the rich mercy of God could haue been obtained onely by Kings or Apostles or the like it had been the lesse comfortable vnto vs but bond as well as the free the Barbarian as well as the Grecian the Gentile as well as the Iew the poor as well as the rich may be possessed heerof Hee doth not spend all his mercy on Abraham or Dauid but hee reserueth mercy for thousands Exod. 34.6 and will bestowe the true mercies of Dauid vpon meaner men Esay 55.4 His mercy is ouer all his works especially ouer all his spirituall works in Iesus Christ Psalm 145.9 Fourthly it appears to be free because it can be alone God can loue vs though no body else doo though Abraham knowe vs not yet GOD will bee a Father vnto vs and neuer leaue vs nor forsake vs Esay 63.15 16. Ob. But might some one say In the second Commandement it is plain that GOD shewes mercy ●o them that keep his Commandements It seemes then his mercy is not free but he hath respect to deserts in vs. Sol. First our keeping of the Commandements is not alleaged as the cause of mercy but as the signe of mercy The words shew to whom God will shew mercie not for what cause Secondly when he saith he will shew mercy it euidently excludes merit For it is mercy that God will bestow such great things vpon men for their works for there is no proportion betweene our works and the goodnesse wee receiue from God When we haue done all we should account our selues vnprofitable seruants Ob. But it seemes God's mercy is caused by merit for God shews vs mercy for the merits of Christ If Christ deserue it then it seemes it is not free Sol. First mercy excludes merit in vs though not in Christ. Secondly it was mercy that God gaue vs Christ to merit for vs. And thus of the third property of God's mercy Fourthly God's mercy is the more admirable yet in that it is eternall God will not change his word He keepeth his couenant and mercy with his seruants 1. King 8.23 God's mercies haue beene from all eternitie Psalme 25.6 and hee will not take away his mercy from his seruants Psalme 89.34 but his mercy and louing kindnesse shall follow them all the dayes of their life Psalme 23. vlt. His mercies are new euery morning he hath neuer done shewing of mercy Lament 3.23 Esay 33.3 He is still building vp his mercies and will neuer leaue till he haue finished them in an euerlasting frame of vnspeakeable glory Psalme 89.2 His mercy is euerlasting and endureth for euer Psalme 103.3 136. from euerlasting to euerlasting Psalme 103.17 God may forsake his people for a moment to their thinking and in a little wrath he may hide his face but with euerlasting mercies hee will receiue them As he hath sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more couer the Earth so hath hee sworn he wil no more be wroth with his people The hills may be remoued and the mountaines may depart but God's couenant of peace shall not be remoued saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee Isaiah 54.7 to 11. If God's couenant be not with day and night and if hee haue not appointed the ordinances of heauen and earth then may hee cast away his seruants and their seed Ierem. 33.25 26. But we see the course of nature is firme and therefore ought to bee more assured of the firmnesse of the couenant of God's mercy to his people The effects of mercy follow To obtaine mercy is to obtaine those benefits which God hath promised to his people as the fruits of his mercy Where God shews mercy First he will heare their prayers graciously this is promised Isaiah 30.18 19. and pleaded by Dauid Psalme 4.1 Secondly hee sanctifies all afflictions so as whatsoeuer befalls the godly proceedes from mercy and not iustice in God and shall worke for the best Rom. 8.28 It is God's loue that maketh him correct Heb. 12.6 7. Thirdly he heales their natures from the diseases of their mindes for to shew mercy is likewise to cure vs and sanctifie vs and God promiseth it Hosh. 14.3 Fourthly he multiplies pardon Isaiah 55.7 It is not grieuous to forgiue sinne daily when they seeke to him for forgiuenesse Fiftly he deliuers the soule absolutely from the pit they are free from condemnation Iob 33.27 Psal. 86.13 c. Sixtly In all dangers and weakenesses his mercy holds them vp euen when the godly say their foot slippeth Psal. 94.18 Seuenthly he guides them in all their waies He that hath mercy on them saith the Prophet shall leade them euen by the springs of water shall he guide them Isaiah 49.10 The World is like a wildernesse the wicked are like wilde beasts in a desart God's children are so
Capernaites were offended and some of his Disciples turned Apostates about it beeing such persons as would not abide the exposition of his meaning Iohn 6.52 Seuenthly the like is to be said of such persons as take offense out of enuy or malice as the man in the Parable that enuied Christ's bounty or the Pharises that out of malice were offended at Christ Mat. 20.15 Mat. 15.14 1. Pet. 2.8 Eightthly that in things that haue proued scandalous yet wee are not bound to lose our liberty till the weak brother declare his offense Meat sacrificed to idols was offensiue to many in all countries yet the Apostle's rule is Eat and make no question vnlesse one say This is meat sacrificed to idols 1. Cor. 10.25 28. Thus of the fiue things that make things indifferent to become inconuenient and yet not vnlawfull I might adde some other things as that a man may practise and vse such ceremonies for the aduancing of the substantiall part of God's worship as hee himself hath euery where preached against Acts 22.21 and in some cases hath refused to doo Gal. 2.5 24. Again that such inconuenient ceremonies may bee imposed vpon such persons and Churches as neuer receiu'd them before Acts 15.19 28. and 21.25 Quest. The last question is Whether wee must submit vnto Magistrates when they command vnlawfull things Ans. A great difference is to bee put between things commanded by Magistrates concerning the lawfulnes of which was doubt and such things concerning which the Subiect is assured that they are vnlawfull It is clear that if I knowe the Magistrate commands a thing vnlawfull I must not doo it because in that case I am bound to obey God and not men but suspicion or doubting of the lawfulnesse of things is no discharge for obedience It is true that in things indifferent which I may doo or not doo I must be fully perswaded and whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne but I suppose that the Inferiour is not discharged from his obedience in any case but when hee knowes the Magistrate commands a sinne Infinite confusion would follow in the family and common-wealth and Churches if the coniectures and suspicions of the Inferiours might warrant their refusall of subiection Secondly though I must in things vnlawfull refuse to obey yet I must look to the manner of refusall I must take heed that I bee not guilty of that sinne of speaking euill of dignities 2. Pet. 2. Iude. Which prohibition was giuen them when the Magistrates were wicked men and did command vnlawfull things Thus of the doctrine and explication of these things that concerne mans ordinances and their authority in the extent of them The vses follow Vse The vse may bee for reproof and so both of those that offend in the excesse and of those that offend in the defect First some men attribute too much to the ordinances of men and that diuers waies as when they account mens ordinances in the obseruation of them to be a worship to God or to bee meritorious or to bee necessary to saluation or in themselues simply to binde consciences and also when more care is had for the keeping of mens ordinances then of Gods commandements or when Gods seruice is hindred or transgressed or neglected for mens traditions Secondly some men offend in the defect as 1. Such Christians as deny obedience to the ordinances of men in the indifferent or onely inconuenient things 2. Such Christians as in the manner shew no scruple nor feare nor trouble of minde for breaking Gods express Law in requiring obedience to Magistrates while they are ignorant whether it be a sinne or no to obey and yet on the other side are extremely fearefull and troubled in themselues to vary from the aduice or example of such men as they account godly or fathers to them or others in Religion so are more fearfull to break mens traditions then Gods commandements Tradition is ill aswell when it comes from good men as when it comes from bad men 3. The Iesuites that maintaine that horrid Doctrine of deposing or murthering of Princes so far are they from obeying them persons rather to bee confuted by strokes then by arguments as men that offend not onely against the Lawes of God but the Lawes of nations and the Lawe of nature Hitherto of the things to which they must submit themselues viz. to euery ordinance of man The motiue or manner followes For the Lords sake These words doe import both the cause and the manner of submission they must submit for the Lords sake and so First there are diuers things in God which should moue Christians to all possible care of pleasing and obeying their Magistrates as First Gods and mens Magistrates were ordained of God and therefore for his sake that set them vp we should obey them Secondly Gods commandements God hath required our submission and therefore for the respect of the duty wee owe to God wee should obey them Thirdly Gods Image Magistrates are little Gods in the world they resemble Gods soueraignty or Maiesty and therefore because they are like God wee should obey them euen for so much of the similitude of God as wee may behold in them or their authority Fourthly Gods mercies wee are infinitely bound vnto God and therefore for his sake euen for the loue wee beare to him wee should doe this which hee requireth Fiftly Gods glory God shall get much honour and his religion will bee well-spoken of if Christians liue obediently and contrariwise if Christians bee not obedient God may bee much dishonored thereby and great stormes of affliction may bee brought vpon the Church by the wrath of Princes Sixtly the iudgements of God because they must giue account to God for their behauiour toward Magistrates aswell as for their behauiour towards God himselfe Secondly these words may note the manner of obedience wee must obey Princes for Gods sake not onely for conscience sake but euen as if wee did obey God himselfe and with a due respect vnto God and so it may make also a limitation wee must so obey man as wee still haue respect vnto God so as nothing be done against the Word or pleasure of God Vse The vse should bee therefore for instruction to teach vs to looke carefully to our selues in our submission and so to obey First from the hart because God is intituled to this seruice Secondly with feare because God will bee an auenger of disobedience and resisting of the powers Thirdly though our subiection should bee to our losse or discredit or danger or hurt any way yet for the Lords sake wee should doe it There is motiue enough in God though there were not worthines in the Magistrate or recompence to vs. Againe it serues to shew the hatefulnes of the transgressors that resist the power and will not make conscience of it to submit themselues to the ordinances of Magistrates For this is to resist God himselfe this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and
with them in the cause and quarrell of Religion striuing by all meanes to be of one opinion and affection with them in matters of Religion and to the vttermost of our power to defend them by word and deed according to our callings and occa●ions Phil. 1.27 1. Cor. 1.10 Phil. 2.3 Vses The vse may bee first for the discouery of the notable wickednes of multitudes of Christians that are so farre from louing godly men in the places where they liue that of all other men they most dislike them and shew it by reproaching them by traducing them by auoiding their society by diuers hatreds of them and by many iniurious causes against them And this is the condition of multitudes of Christians that imbrace any fellowship with other sorts of men though neuer so vile and stand in direct opposition to the godly yea so blind are the most that they almost thinke they do God good seruice if they could rid the countrey of them Esay 65.5 The misery of such men is manifestly described in diuers Scriptures and by this signe they are discouerd to bee no Christians indeed 1. Iohn 2.9 but rather of the race of Cain or Ismael 1. Iohn 3.20 Gal. 4.29 and therefore most hatefull to God 1. Iohn 3.15 Secondly wee may hence gather a signe of such as are in the state of saluation actually For if wee loue the brother-hood wee shall bee saued as the Apostle is peremptory 1. Iohn 3.14 and the more apparant will bee the signe if wee loue all the godly and for godlines sake both which the word brother-hood imports Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly I might hence obserue also that all the godly are brethren and so they are in diuers respects First in respect of profession they haue all one faith and wear one and the same liuery of Baptism and serue all one Lord Ephes. 4.4 Secondly they haue all one Father Mat. 2.10 one God begate them Thirdly they haue all one mother the Church Fourthly they must needs bee brethren they are so like one another they are all fashioned in the image of God and are all like the Father Vse 1. The vse should bee first for instruction and so to teach Christians to take heed of iudging and censuring one another Rom. 14.10 of offending and grieuing one another Rom. 14.13 21. of contentions and schisme one from another 1 Cor. 1.10 of going to law one with another 1. Cor. 6.1 2 c. to verse 8. of coozening and defrauding one another 1. Thes. 4.6 of accepting of persons to preferre a rich man before a poor beleeuer Iames 2.1 2. of detracting one from another or grudging or complaining one of another Iames 4.11 so also Mat. 23.8 of all dissimulation and guilefull courses Rom. 12.9 All these things ought to be auoided in our carriage toward godly men because they are our brethren Haue we not all one Father why then do wee transgresse euen more against our brethren Thus Mal. 2.10 And secondly it should teach vs diuerse things to be done or sought after as for instance 1. It should teach vs vnity to liue together with all concord because wee are brethren For how comely a thing is it for brethren to liue together in vnity Psalm 133.1 2. It should teach vs mercy and that both spirituall and corporall as was in part shewed before they are brethren and therefore if thou be conuerted strengthen them Luke 22.32 If they trespasse against thee and confess it forgiue them Mat. 18. It they fall by temptation into any sinne of infirmity hate them not but reprooue them plainly Leu. 19.17 If they offend more freely separate from them but yet hope the best as of a brother reiect them not as enemies 2. Thes. 3.15 And if they be in any outward aduersity remember that a brother was born for the day of aduersity Pro. 17.17 And therefore if thy brother bee impouerished let him be relieued to the vttermost of thy power Leu. 25.35 3. All iust and faithfull dealing should wee shew one towards another because we are bretheren yea none of vs should allow himself liberty so much as to imagine euill against his brother Zach. 7.9 10. Thirdly Superiours also should learn heer not to be tyrannicall or hard-hearted or proud or arrogant in their carriage towards their Inferiours for they rule their brethren not their slaues Deut. 17.19 Phil. 10. Nor yet should inferiours for this reason growe carelesse or disobedient for the Apostle shewes that that were an abuse of this doctrine 1. Tim. 6.1 2. Vse 4. Fourthly all poor Christians that are true Christians haue much cause to reioy●e Iam. 1.9 for they haue a great kinred All the Godly are their brethren yea the Apostles Acts 15.23 yea the godly Kings Psalm 122.8 yea the Angels Reu. 19.10 yea Christ himself is not ashamed to call them brethren Rom. 8.29 Heb. 2.10 Mat. 12.49 I might adde that wicked men should take heed how they oppose godly men there are a great kinred of them and they neuer prospered that wronged them yea some great Ones haue been fain to humble themselues and to lick the very dust of their feet sometimes that they might be reconciled to them Esay 60.14 Mat. 7.17 And thus of the second part of the Apostle's Charge The third part forms the Christian in respect of piety to God Fear God Piety to God consists either in knowing of him or in worshipping of him and the right knoweledge of God is conceiued in the godly not for contemplations sake onely but for practice 1. Iohn 2.3 4. And all the vse of our knowledge in respect of practice toward God is comprehended in his worship This worship is a religious honour wee giue to God I say religious honour to distinguish it from that ciuill honour which in generall we giue to all men or in speciall to some men either for their graces as to the godly or for their authority as to Kings and Superiours This worship of God is either internall or externall The internall is the worship of the hart the externall is the worship of the body The internall is the very life and soule of the externall without which the externall is but a dead contemptible carcase The fear of God heer commanded belongs to the inward worship and so it is to bee noted that the Apostle when hee would charge Christians about piety and deuotion to God doth not enioine them to come to Church to heare the Word receiue the Sacraments or pray though these bee else-where required but especially requires that they look to the heart within that the true fear of God be preserued in them and that especially for two causes First because men may do that which belongs externally to the outward worship and yet bee still but hypocrites and wicked men as is manifest in the case of the Iewes Esay 1. and of the Pharises Ma. 23. Secondly because if they be rightly formed in the
First they seeke not only painefull and skilfull but religious seruants Psal. 101.1 6 7. Secondly they not onely licence but teach their seruants to keepe God's Sabbaths and to worship him Commandement 4. Genes 18.19 Thirdly they will not command their seruants to doe any thing that is sinfull or to lie as snares or defraud others for their profit Fourthly that receiue their seruants especially such as are Religious as their brethren Fiftly that are ouerseers as well of the manners of their seruants as of their labours being as carefull that their seruants be no worse to themselues than to their Masters Sixtly that vse their seruants well not onely praysing them for well doing but alwaies rewarding their seruice with liberall wages and when they part from them not suffering them to goe from them empty without portion c. Masters shewe their gentlenesse also diuers waies as First when they vse their Authority moderately or are not haughtie or violent towards their seruants Secondly when they passe by their infirmities and take not notice of all the ill they say or doe Eccles. 7.22 Thirdly when their seruants offend they chide them with good words and not reuile them But also to the froward Froward Masters are such as are bitter to their seruants hard to please that are apt to finde fault that vse their seruants hardly in words or deedes but chiefely such as are cholerick and passionate and peeuish in their carriage towards their seruants So that foure Doctrines may bee noted from these words and from the coherence Doct. 1. First that God takes notice of the faults of Superiours as well as hee requires duties of Inferiours he sees frowardnes in masters as well as disobedience in seruants and the reason is both because God is no respecter of persons and also because hee giues his Law to all men And therefore Superiours must make conscience of their duties for though in all things they are not to giue accounts to their Inferiours yet they must giue accounts of all they doo to God Col. 3.24 Doct. 2. That God sees and dislikes such faults as the lawes of man take not notice of If a Master should kill his hired seruant mens lawes would take hould of him but if he be neuer so froward with him he may escape mens lawes But though the lawes of men punish not frowardnes yet God will So wee see in the exposition of Christ giuen vnto diuers commandements Mat. 5. man failed in killing adultery purity c. not once thinking of anger lust filthy speaking reuiling c. yet God forbids euen these things also which serues to reproue the folly of such as iustify themselues for very iust men because they offend not the lawes of men but neuer consider that God can finde a world of faults in them that mens lawes cannot because God sees the heart and by his Lawes requires obedience of the inward man and condemnes all sweruing from the right temper of heart and carriage And therefore wee should all looke to our waies to approue our selues not onely to men but to God and so to confesse the imperfections of mens lawes as to admire the perfection of Gods Word Doct. 3. That frowardnes is a vice to bee auoided of all sorts of men It is not onely vncomely in seruants but in Masters too and so consequently in all sorts of men and it is to bee auoided for many reasons First if wee consider the nature of the vice either in it selfe or by comparison It is of it selfe a kind of madnes A froward person during the fit is in some degree a mad person Besides they are very foolish and absurd The month of the righteous saith Salomō bringeth foorth wisdom but the froward tongue shall bee cut out In which words note the opposition The righteous mouth brings foorth wisdome but the froward mouth brings foorth foolish things and therefore shall bee cut out Pro. 10.31 Could froward and peeuish persons remember and consider what passeth from them in these fits they would be wōderfully ashamed of themselues Againe consider how contrary frowardnes is to Gods nature He saith of His words that there is no frowardnes in them Prou. 8.8 to note that frowardnes is a thing altogether contrary to God so as the froward persons in their froward fits are not like God but rather like the diuell Secondly if wee consider the causes of this peeuishnes and frowardnes either in man or woman wee shall find that this ill humour is bred of vile causes sometimes it comes of drunkennes as is noted Prouerbs 23.33 alwaies it proceedes from ignorance and want of wit and discretion Prou. 2.11 12. and vsually it ariseth of idlenes and want of constant imployment and of pride arrogance and stomake Pro. 8.13 It sometimes ariseth from iealousy and suspicion sometimes it is raised by idle and vile hypocrisy while they striue more for reputation to be thought good then indeed to be such either as they would seem to be or should bee Thirdly if wee consider the effects of frowardnes For those are vile whether we respect the froward persons themselues or others or God First for themselues It is a vice most vnprofitable For it is like a disease full of anguish and vnquietnes it eates vp their owne hearts troubles their minds and robs them of al contentment besides it breeds a grieuous indisposition in them to all good duties both to God and men and brings vpon them many mischiefes It dares annoy their friends For they that are wise will make no frendship with the froward and in such as are tied to them that they must needs conuerse with them it much alienateth their inward loue and respect of them And therefore Salomon saith well Hee that hath a froward heart findes no good and hee that hath a peruerse tongue falleth into mischiefe Pro. 17.20 And againe Thornes and snares are in the mouthes of the froward Pro. 22.5 Secondly to others their peeuishnes is a great vexation and burthen Hence came the prouerb The lips of the righteous know what is acceptable that is a godly patient discreet man is exceeding pleasing to others in his words and carriage but the mouth of the wicked speaketh frowardnes that is a sinfull peeuish foolish person is in his word and carriage exceeding troublesome and vnpleasing for so the Antithesis imports Besides it breeds discord a froward mouth soweth discord Yea it many times driues such as conuerse with such persons into perplexities and amazednes that they know not what to doe to free themselues from their peruersenes according to that of Salomon The way of a man is peruerse and strange but as for the pure his work is right Prou. 21.8 And therefore Dauid when hee was to order his family is specially carefull that no froward person dwell with him For where frowardnes is there is confusion and euery euil work I●rem 3.16 Thirdly if wee respect God It is a
suffring But committed himself to him that iudgeth righteously From these words diuers things may bee obserued Doct. 1. First that in case of wrongs from other men it is not alwaies needfull or conuenient to complain to the Magistrate for redresse Christ heer commits his cause to God but complaineth not nay though hee were wronged almost continually and with grieuous wrongs yet we read not that euer he complained against them that did him wrong Heer two things are to be enquired after First in what cases it is not fit to complaine to men Secondly in what cases it may bee lawfull and fitte In these cases following it is not fit to complain to the Magistrate First where redresse of the wrongs may be had by priuate and peacefull courses 1. Cor. 6. Secondly where the lawes of men doo not prouide punishment some wrongs are offenses and yet not punishable by mens lawes Thirdly where the offense is committed of meere frailty or ignorance Fourthly where the offense is grounded vpon meer surmises which in the iudgement of charity ought not to be conceiued .1 Cor. 13. Fiftly where the iniury is lesse and the party trespassing doth acknowledge the wrong in this case the rule of Christ holds If thy brother say It repenteth me thou must forgiue him Luke 17.4 Sixtly where by the suite Religion wil receiue greater dammage by the scandall then the party suffers by the wrong as in the case of the Corinthians where a brother went to law with a brother before Iudges that were Infidels Seuenthly where the Magistrates haue declared themselues to bee enemies to iustice and iust men as heer in the case of Christ it was bootlesse to complain because all the Rulers were his professed enemies Contrariwise in these and such like cases following men may lawfully seek iustice from men in authority First where the offense is grieuous and against the Lawes of God and men Secondly where the offender persists in euill-doing without repentance Thirdly where the offense is against God and Religion as well as against the party wronged Fourthly where such wrongs are vsually punishable Fiftly where the party complaining is bound to complain by his office either by charge or oath prouided that the party complaining first loue his enemies and secondly prosecute with continuall respect to God's glory and thirdly vse the benefit of the Law with charity and mercy without cruelty or extremity Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. The malice of wicked men against the godly is so great that when they begin to oppose them though it be but in their name they will neuer cease opposition if they haue power till they haue their liues too Thus I gather from hence that our Sauiour beeing reuiled doth not onely commit his cause to God but commits himself to God as expecting the increase of their oppositions till they haue put him to death This is the reason why God indites euery man that hates his brother of murder 1. Iohn 3.15 And Dauid so often complaines of his enemies that slandred him that they also sought his life yea his soule as if they were desirous not onely to kill his body but damne his soule also Doct. 3. Wee may heer also note that God is to be conceiued of according to the occasion seeing we cannot comprehend God wholly as he is wee ought to raise vp such conceptions in our hearts of the glory of God as may with honour answer the occasion that presently concernes vs as heer in the case of wrongs God is conceiued as a righteous Iudge In the case of death hee is called The God of the spirits of all flesh In the case of prayer he is called a God that delighteth to hear prayer in the case of infirmities a God that takes away iniquity and passeth by transgression and in cases of great difficulty he is conceiued of as Almighty and so forth Doct. 4. It is euident from hence that God is a Iudge and this point is both terrible to the wicked and comfortable to the godly It is terrible to the wicked many waies First because he is Iudge of all the world all must be iudged by him Gen. 18.25 Heb. 12.23 1. Sam. 2.10 Hee is not a Iudge of some one circuit as Iudges amongst men are Secondly because he is a Iudge that needs no euidence bee brought-in for hee knowes all causes and is witnes himself Ier. 29.23 and so Iudges among men are not Thirdly because hee iudgeth for all offenses he tries the hearts and the reines as well as the words and works of men Psalm 7.9 11. Earthly Iudges try malefactors but in one or some few cases Fourthly because hee hath Armies of Executioners he can call to the heauens or speak to the earth and haue hostes of seruants to doo his will and execute his iudgements Daniel 7.9 10. Psalm 50.4 22. so as none can deliuer out of his hands Fiftly because hee is Iudge himself Psa. 50.6 and 75.8 He doth not do iustice by Deputies but will hear all cases himself Sixtly because his iudgement is the last and highest iudgement and therefore there lieth no appeale from it Seuenthly because he can bring men to iudgement without any warning hee standeth before the doore and often seizeth vpon the offender without seruing any Writ or giuing him any summons Iames 5.9 And therefore wicked men do very foolishly that ruffle heer in the world and lift vp their horns so high and speak with such a stiffe neck and walk on in their sinnes and iniuries so securely Psalm 75.5 6 7 8. Again if God bee Iudge it is comfortable to penitent sinners First because repentance will alter the iudgement if it be after the fact and before the Sentence euen in such offenses as deserue euerlasting death as appeareth in the case of Dauid and the Niniuites and is notified to the world Acts 17.31 Whereas earthly Iudges must proceed in their iudgement whether the parties bee penitent or no. Again it is the more comfortable that God is Iudge because all parties wronged or grieued may haue accesse to God and put vp their supplications at any time he is ready to be found and willing to heare which is seldome true of earthly Iudges Thirdly because godly men know their sentence already God hath acquitted them by his Word and by his Son and by his Spirit and therefore they need not feare his last iudgement Doct. 5. God will iudge righteously God's iudgement is a most righteous iudgement Psal. 9.8 Rom. 2.5 2. Tim. 4.8 He is the righteous Iudge by an excellency because there is no Iudge but misseth it some way onely God's iudgment is alwaies righteous and it must needes bee so for many reasons First because hee iudgeth the high as well as the low Iob 21.22 Secondly because his iudgement extendeth to euery offender in the world Iude 15. Earthly Iudges may punish some malefactors but they leaue thousands of men that
that keepeth instruction Secondly hee that liueth in any knowne sinne without repentance is a lost sheep Thirdly hee that fouleth with his feete that which the good sheepe should eate or drink and hee that thrusts with the side and pusheth the diseased with his hornes is no good sheepe Ezech. 34.17 19 21. They are so farre from feeding vpon the good Word and Ordinances of God that by wicked reproaches they soule it as much as they can and they that if they finde a poore Christian that is diseased with some infirmities will push at him to dis-hartē him vtterly frō a religious course these are wicked beasts they are no good sheepe Fourthly he that liues without God and Christ that can spend whole daies and nights without any communion with God yea that when hee is present before God finds his hart continually carried with wandring distractions that constantly draw him away from all inward attendance vpon God Ephes. 2.12 Esay 29.13 hee erres in his heart Psalme 95.10 Fiftly he that hath no other companions of his life but swine and wilde beasts that is wicked men of all sorts especially when it is ioyned with willing neglect and sh●●●ing of the society of the godly Psalme 5. 2. Cor. 6. Sixtly he that tastes nothing but earthly things and findes no sauour in spirituall things it is a signe that hee is out of the pasture and feedes in the wildernes Rom. 8.1 Iohn 2.18 Seuenthly hee that when hee is told hee is out of the way blesseth himselfe in his heart when it is plainely found that hee openly wandereth Psal. 36.1 2. Deut. 29.19 Eightthly he that liues in any of the grosse sins expresly mentioned in the Catalogue in Scripture without repentance as swearing Cor. 3. adultery couetousnes drunkennes rayling extortion 1. Cor. 6.9 or the knowne sinnes of deceit Micah 6.10 Ninthly he that doth his works of purpose to be seene of men resting onely in the praises of men not seeking the praise of God Math. 6. Rom. 2.26 Tenthly he that knowes not Gods waies especially if he desire not knowledge or intertain wilfull Obiections against the meanes of knowledge Psalme 95.10 Eleuenthly they that spend their zeal in meeting with other mens infirmities neglecting sound reformation in themselues It is the wisedome of the prudent to vnderstand his own waies but to be a busibody in other mens matters is erring and the folly onely of fooles Pro. 14.8 Euery busibody is out of the way The doctrines follow and so diuers things may bee obserued out of these words Doct. 1. Euen godly men before their calling were out of the way as lost sheepe as well as others Ephes. 2.2 Tit. 3.3 Which should serue First to set out the riches of Gods free grace as the only first cause of the happines and saluation of the Elect Secondly it should teach the godly diuers duties both toward God other men and themselues As for God they should liue to his praise and spend their daies in magnifying his great compassions in their deliuerance that deserued so ill at his hands And withall it should teach them to put all their trust in God seeing they carry about them a nature that hath been apt to wandring and therefore haue cause to mistrust themselues And for other men that are out of the way they should pity them and carry themselues with all meeknes and charity remembring what themselues haue been Tit. 3.1 2 3. And for themselues they should bee the more humble and abased hating all pride and conceitednes and contempt of others Doct. 2. A man may bee a sheep and yet lost Not onely Dogs Goats Swine Lions c. may bee out of the way but euen sheep may wander and bee clean lost men of harmlesse natures and such as are profitable members of humane societies and such as are of a gentle disposition and free from grosse offenses yet may bee vtterly lost and clean out of the way of happinesse and if they return not by repentance may perish for euer And this is a point which should maruellously affect ciuil-honest men and moue them at length to see the weak vanity of their confidence in their praises for ciuility of nature or life This is a doctrine very hardly entertained by this sort of men and the rather because they think they want nothing vnto the praise of a good life neuer considering that they are not religious tho they bee ciuill and that they haue a world of inward impurities though they are free from outward grosse vncleannesse of life and that they neuer felt the ioies of the holy Ghost to approoue of them though they haue been tickled with the praises of men and that they haue not sought or desired the assurance of God's fauour or a better life but spent their time in a still dream without prouiding for what is most necessary and that they neuer serue God nor haue had any sociable fellowship with him in any of his Ordinances in respect of the inward power of them Doct. 3. To break out from the means of Religion and from the society of godly Christians is the very way to vndo many a soule A sheep is lost when it is gotten from sheep and is out of the pasture and hath no discreet shepheard to take the care of it Thus of the first part that is mans misery by nature The means of recouery out of that misery followeth and that is noted in the word Returne Where first may bee obserued that wicked men may return It is not impossible for men that haue spent a great part of their liues in sinne and vanity at the length to be saued And it is the first part of a mans work that would return to inform himself seriously of the arguments that may prooue that he may be helped out of his misery The first thing a diseased man inquires after is whether his disease be curable or no. Now there are diuers things that giue hope of curing and saluation euen to men that are as yet clean out of the way as First the disposition of God towards sinners which appears first because he swears he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he should return and liue Ezech. 18.21 Secondly he is patient and hath been with thee all this while and he is therefore patient that men might repent and be saued Rom. 2.4 2. Pet. 3.9 Thirdly he hath declared himself to bee willing to forgiue all sinnes but onely the sinne against the holy Ghost One sin onely is vnpardonable all other sinnes may be forgiuen Secondly the sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ He is the Lamb of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Iohn 1. Rom. 3.25 Thirdly the work of God's grace already shewed vnto them For first God hath placed them in the visible Church where repentance and saluation may be had Secondly he hath bestowed vpon them many temporall blessings to allure them to seek to him for
against malice From the causes From the effects 1. In vs. 2 In God Vses Aggrauations of malice Note Remedies for malice 1 In our selues Note 2 In others Of Guile The acceptation of the word Ob. Sol. Why Guile is to be auoided Vse 1. The miserie of deceitfull persons The aggrauations of the sin of deceit 1 The manner of deceiuing 2 The persons vpon whom it is practised 3 The time Ob. 1. Sol. Of the misery of such as thriue by deceit Note Ob. 2. Sol. Seruants must not vse lying deceit to please their masters Ob. 3. Sol. Of secret cosenage Ob. 4. Sol. Vse 2. The iniquity of the time Vse 3. Against equiuocation Vse 4. The signes of a man without guile Incouragements to such men Note that he saies all malice and all Guile How many wais men commit Hypocrisie Motiues against Hypocrisie The effects of Hypocrisie both priuatiue and positiue What may befall him What will befall them The obiection of hypocrites remoued Vses For information Note For instruction The sorts of Hypocrisie we are most in danger of Preseruatiues against hypocrisie Note Ob. Sol. About censuring other men for Hypocrisie Quest. Ans. How an open Hypocrite may be discerned Ob. Sol. What makes an Hypocrite Vse 3. Quest. Ans. How a man may knowe that he is not an hypocrite The hatefulnesse of the sin of enuy Signes of a man free ●rom enuie The aggrauation of Euill speaking Reasons to diswade from Euil● speaking Note Rules against euill speaking What we should do to auoid euill speaking in others 5 Generall doctrines Note For triall How we may discerne our desire and affection after the word Note Other signes of true desire Impediments to true desires externall Inward lets in wickedmen Le ts of affection in the godly Means to get true desires to the word Rules for the preseruing of good desires Rules for such as be afflicted with melancholy The Motiues The causes why the most are but babes in religion Note Speciall duties of such as be but new born babes Speciall praises in children by nature to be expressed by vs. Priuiledges of weake Christians How far wicked men may desire after the word Note Note Diuers kindes of growth In what graces Christians ought especially to growe Philip. 1.10 1 Thes. 3.12 Philip. 2.1 3. Ephes. 4.3.4 Rules to helpe our growth Impediments of growth Signes of growth Vnprofitableness of life aggrauated in many respects Apostasie is two fould Encouragement for weake Christians Wherein Gods graciousnes is seene What wee must do to taste the goodnes of God Doct. 2. Note A true taste is seen by the cause and effects of it Wherin the taste of wicked men and the godly differ How far the taste of wicked men may goe Vse Diuers things noted for clearing the sin against the holy Ghost 4. Doct. The causes why so many haue little or no taste of the word Christ is diuersly described by the Apostle Eph. 1.7 Christ doeth many waies excell earthly Lords towards his seruants Christ is three wayes called a stone 1 Cor. 7.8 Math. 16.18 What kind of men disalolw Christ. Christ chosen of God diuersly Christ is precious many waies Causes why Christ is no more precious with men Pro. 8.11 16 Fiue points in generall Wee come to Christ many waies Esay 9.6 In what manner wee must come to Christ. Psal. 40.7 Many are the reasons why we should come to Christ. Matth. 22. In what respcts the Godly are likened to stones Reasons why we ought to be liuely stones How we shewe our liuelinesse What wee must doe to quicken our harts Meanes to build vp a Christian. Pro. 24.27 Luke 14.28 Causes why many are so little edified Io● 13.21 Christ hath a fiue-fold Tabernacle Esay 40. ●2 A godly man like the Tabernacle in diuers respects Godly men are priests in many respects Exodus 29.21 Vses Diuers sorts of sacrifices for Christians Marke 8.34.35 1 Ioh. 2.2 Rom. 3.25 Prou. 23.26 Speciall lawes to be obserued in offering vp our sacrifices What we must do to get our works acceptable to God What is meant by Scripture and why it is so called Wherein the Scriptures exceedes all other writings Malach. 3.1 Esay 55.4 Esay 62.11 Mat. 4.11 Vse That Christ is laid as a foundation-stone imparts many things The Church is like Mount Sion in diuers respects Marks of such as are true members of Sion 1 Kings 19.1 21. Reuel 14.5 Psal. 65.1 Speciall prerogatiues of Sion and the true members of it Esay 4.5 Esay 33.20 Vse 8. Esay 49.15 Note How we may get an esteeme of Christ aboue all things How we manifest our account of Christ as precious Note Note Psal. 127.5 Meanes by which God keepes the beleeuer from being confounded In what things the beleeuer shal not be confounded Rom. 3.25 How far the godly may be confounded Conditions of such as will not be confounded What sorts of men shall suffer shame and confusion Rules for the applying of the Word aright Rules for meditation What it is to beleeue and in how many things it is seen Marks of a true sauing ●aith Signes of a weak but yet a true faith in weak Christians Vse Vnbeleeuers are guilty of disobedience in diuers respects Disobedience aggrauated How far wicked men may be cald Builders How it comes to passe that many great and learned men oppose the truth of the Gospell By what means an ignorant and simple man may stay his heart notwithstanding the oppositions of learned wise men Mat. 11.15 1. Cor. 1.28 Christ is many waies refused How Church-men viz. builders may refuse Christ. Note Vses Iudgements inflicted on some particular offenders belong to all for diuerse reasons Spirituall plagues are worse than temporall crosses for diuers reasons Note Scandall defined and distinguished Math. 18. Ans. Wicked men were offended at Christ in many things Esay 53.2 Ioh. 18.36 Math. 9 10. Ob. Sol. Note Wherein we are not to regard the offence of wicked men In what things we may be guilty of giuing offence to wicked men Rules for the preuenting of scandall 1 Pet. 3.16 Deut. 28.96.67 How many waies wicked men may despaire Reu. 1.7 6.16 Preseruatiues against despair Speciall differences between the despair of the Godly and the Wicked How wherein men take offence at the Word Vses Proofes of Reprobation Certaine obseruations for the quieting of our mindes in the doctrine of reprobation The specialties of Election Rom. 9. Vses Signes of Election Markes of such as truely suffer with Christ. Ioh. 15.18 19. Rules to liue so as becoms the assurance of Election Godly Christians come of the best kinred which appears by many reasons Godly men are Royall many waeies Differences between spirituall and earthly Kings Vses Mat. 11.12 Christians are holy many waies Speciall rules for the right ordering of vs in an holy conuersation Meanes for obtayning an holy conuersation Differences betweene the holines of conuersation in ciuill honest men and Gods elect Differences betweene the Hypocrite
Christ. 320 Inferiours why first charged 715 Inoffensiuenesse 329 Inuentions of men how to bee obeyed how not See Magistrates 587 Iudgements how far extended 249 Iudgements spiritual the worst 251 K Kindred spirituall the best 290 Kings earthly and spirituall difference betwixt them 295 Kings meant by Saint Peter 604 Originall of Kings 606 Excellency of Kings 609 Supremacy of Kings 612 L Lawes of land not to be transgressed 561 Lawes of land to be studied 562 Learned men oft oppose the Word 238 Liberty of Christians 670 Liberty abused 680 Liuelinesse spirituall 143 Liuing spiritually how happy 852 Light acceptation thereof 354 Light of godly maruelous 358 Lost sheepe who be 893 How they that as sheepe may bee lost 896 Loue to the Godly 329 Saints onely loued of God 402 How that Loue prescribed 404 Lusts to bee auoided 406 Diffrence of lusts in the godly 408 Helps to auoid lust 409 Lusts how fleshly 413 How lusts hurt the soule 416 How victory ouer lusts 469 When ouercome of lusts 470 M Madnesse spirituall 654 Magistrates our dutie to them to be learned 561 Submit to Magistrates why 566 All to be subiect to magistrates 571 How Magistrates an ordinance of men 575 Magistrates distinguished 578 Magistrates in what to be obeied 581 In what not to be obeied ibid. Magistrates power in matters ecclesiasticall 582 Obedience to Magistrates for the Lords sake 600 Magistrates of God 615 Magistrates to encourage godly men 629 When not fit to complaine to Magistrates 824 When redresse may be sought of Magistrates 825 Masters their originall 732 Signes of good Masters 736 Malice signes of it 6 Remedies against it 10 Maliciousnes 680 Meditation rules for it 219 Meekenesse 323 Melancholy rules about it 64 Mercy in man 327 Men not vnder mercy 380 Why many obtain not mercy 388 4. Properties of Gods mercy 390 6. Effects of Gods mercy 394 Helpes to obtaine mercy 399 Ministers must apply the word 220 Mortification signes of it 849 N The godly nation 311 O Obedience see Magistrates Obstinacy of sinners 478 Offence see scandal 255 Offence by outward shewes 332 P Patience 327 Motiues to patience 822 The peculiar people of God 314 Wicked no people 366 Who are not Gods people 369 Gods people 3. waies 371 Gods people excell all other 372 Gods people onely beloued ones 402 The phantasy 452 The work of it in sleepe 454 Priests how the godly are Priests 155 What vses to bee made therof ibid. Priesthood of Christians 300 Praise of men how to bee sought 623 The best need praise 624 For what praise due 626 Helps to get praise from men 628 R The faculty of reason 457 Refusing Christ. 242 Remembrance of misery past profitable 345 Repentāce put off dangerous 548 Repentāce conformable to Christs death in many things 849 Reprobation 851 Reports when not to bee receiued 494 Reproaches see euill speaking 37 Helps to beare reproaches 493 Reproaches to bee auoided 646 Reuiling 818 Roiall estate of godly 293 Righteous life the best life 854 Righteous mens signes 857 Righteousnes distinguished 860 Righteousnes reiected why 862 Helps vnto Righteousnes 864 Defects of Righteousnes 868 S Sacrifices for Christians 161 Lawes for offering those sacrifices 165 Scandal defined and distinguished 255 How wicked take scandall at Christ. 257 Wherein not to regard scandall of wicked 261 How guilty of giuing scandal 262 Rules to preuent scandall 263 How scandal taken at word 273 Rules about giuing or taking scandall at ceremonies 595 Seruing God 686 Who serue not God 689 Prerogatiues of Gods seruāts 690 Seruants of men 718 Seruitude how it came in 719 Seruants comfort 723 Seruants subiection 727 Helps to seruants to obey 728 How seruants shew a feare to God 734 Scripture why Word so called 176 Wherein it exceeds other writings 176 Sense by the soule 449 Of the fiue senses 449 Sight and hearing the best senses 450 The inward sense 452 Sheep in allusion to men 888 Signes of lost sheepe 893 How they that are as sheep may be lost 896 Shame spirituall 209 Sicknes of soule see diseases 873 Sin against holy Ghost 106 Sin done many waies 809 Who aliue to sin 140 Sincere Word see Word 74 Sion spirituall 187 Society how made happy 713 Societies diuers kinds of thē 606 Soule diuers acceptation of it 418 Description of the Soule ibid. What it is not 420 The soule is a substance 421 The soule is immortall 423 The originall of the soule 429 It comes by generation 431 The soule created of God 434 Soule and body how vnited 441 The soules faculties 446 The soules working motion 455 Why the soule was made 460 War against the soule 463 Speaking euill 37 Motiues against it 39 How to keepe men from speaking euill of vs. 45 Saints euer euill spoken of 486 The causes why it is so 487 Reasons against euill speaking 489 Euill speaking when odious 491 Stone how Christ a stone 120 How the godly are stones 141 Why liuely stones 143 Godly strangers and pilgrims 410 Submission see Magistrates 566 Suffering for Christ marks of it 284 Sufferings of Christ. 796 787 T Tabernacle how Christ one 149 How godly a tabernacle 150 Taste of Word see Word 100 V Vaine glory 783 Vegetation by the soule 447 Vertue of God what it is 317 Nine vertues of Christ to bee shewed forth 321 Vertues in vs vertues in Christ. 334 Vnbeleeuers are disobedient 231 Visitation attributed to God 534 How God visits 535 Time of Gods visitation 540 Signes of being visited in mercy 541 Glorious effects thereof 552 W War lawfull 570. Will of God 631 ●●ds will a strong motiue 630 Well doing see Doing well 5 Things to profit by the Word 3 Hinderances of the Word 5 Desire of the Word 50 How desire of the Word discerned 53 Impediments to the desire of the Word 56 Meanes to get true desire of the Word 61 How to preserue a true desire of the Word 62 How wicked men may desire the Word 72 The Word resembled to milk 73 How the Word is sincere 74 The Word sweetned with Gods goodnes 96 How the sweetenes of the Word is tasted 101 Difference betwixt godly and wicked in tasting the Word 102 Why many haue no taste of the Word 109 Word of God our Warrant 559 How Gods word is Gods wil. 634 World contempt thereof 326 Worthy walking 340.378 Works note of Religion 496 Works iustifie before men 497 Works wherein good 498 Rules for good works 501 Kinds of good works 505 How works cōfort the Saints 508 For what ends good works 509 How works may bee lost 511 What works may bee shewed 513 What may not be shewed 514 FINIS The coherence The Analysis of th● first part of this chapter 5. Things to be auoided if we would profit by the word Generall obseruations The benefit of brief catalogues of sins or duties or graces How many waies the sinnes heer-mentioned do hinder the word Of Malice Acceptation of the word Signes of malice Reasons