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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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persecute you c. In handling the former verse we shewed the meaning of these words how they serue to expoūd the former Rule The point here to be obserued is this That to reuile and slaunder yea as Luke saith to hate a man for a good cause especially for religion is persecution which shewes how fearefull the common sinne of the age is whereby men reuile their brethren with base and odious tearmes because they shewe some care to please God and to adorne their profession by a godly life But thou art a persecutor whosoeuer thou art that vsest this and therefore repent and leaue it for it is a preparation to a greater sinne in this kinde and most odious in Gods sight as the punishment hereof declares Gen. 21. 9 10. with Gal. 4. 29 30. S. Luke addes a second word And when they separate you whereby is meant excōmunicatiō out of the Temple and Synagogue a punishment which Christ foretold should befall his disciples This censure was put in execution in their Synagogues for besides the administration of ciuill Iustice Ecclesiasticall matters were there handled Now marke what Christ saith Though excommunication bee mine owne ordinance yet blessed are you when men excommunicate you out of the Temple and Synagogues for my names sake where hee maketh excommunication a kinde of persecution when it is denounced against men for righteousnesse sake Here then we may learne what to thinke of the Popes Bulls whereby he excommunicates Kings and Queenes and particular Churches for denying subiection to his chaire namely that they are the diuels instruments where with Gods children are persecuted and that all such as are thus excommunicated for defending the truth of the Gospel are blessed for excommunication is not the instrument of a curse to them that suffer it for good cause Secondly hence we learne that excommunication abused against Gods word is no powerfull censure though in it selfe beeing vsed according to Gods ordinance it be a most terrible thunderbolt excluding a man in part from the Church and from the kingdome of heauen and therfore all Churches must see that this censure be not abused for the abusers of it incurre the danger of the curse and not they against whom it is vniustly pronounced Vers. 12. Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Here Christ drawes a conclusion from the former Rule for hauing said in generall that they which suffer for righteousnesse sake are blessed v. 10. and applied it in particular to his Disciples ver 11. hereupon hee infers that they must reioyce in affliction euen then or as Luke saith in that day yea they must be glad which word signifieth exceeding ioy such as we vse to expresse by outward signes in the body as skipping and dauncing such as Dauid vsed to testifie his ioy for the returne of the Arke of God to his citie This is a most worthy conclusion often vrged and commended vnto vs in Scripture Iam. 1. 2. Brethren count it exceeding great ioy when yee fall into diuers temptations Rom. 5. 3. We reioyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience and Act. 5. 41. The Disciples reioyced that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for the name of Christ. Here we learne then that Gods church and people that suffer in a good cause must reioyce and be glad This must be remembred for we ●aue bene many times in great danger of our enemies for the Gospels ●ake and it may please God to leaue vs in their hands for our manifold sinnes and great abuse of his heauenly blessings which if he doe what must be our behauiour must we be swallowed vp with sorrow and griefe no but humbling our selues for our sinnes we must remember for what we doe suffer and reioyce and be glad in that behalfe for though our outward man perish yet the inner man shall bee reuiued Now because it is a hard thing to reioyce in grieuous afflictions therefore Christ doth giue two reasons to mooue them hereunto first from the Recompense of reward after this life in these words for great is your reward in heauen This point I haue handled heretofore therfore I will here onely shewe how the Papists abuse this text to prooué the merits of mans workes of grace for hence they reason thus Where there is a reward there is merit But in heauen there is a reward for mans works of grace and therefore in this life there is merit by them To this it is answered diuers waies I will touch the heads of the principall First the word reward must not bee vnderstood properly but figuratiuely for Christs speech is borrowed from labourers who after they haue done their worke doe receiue their wages which is the reward thereof euen so after Christs disciples and seruants haue suffered afflictions for the name of Christ at the end of this life they shall receiue life euerlasting Secondly when wee read of wages and reward in Scripture wee must not dreame of any thing due by right of debt and merit but conceiue thereby that which is giuen by promise and of meere mercie like as when an earthly Father promiseth to his sonne to giue him this or that thing if hee will learne now the Fathers gift is not merited by the childe but is freely giuen the more to incite the childe to learne his booke Thirdly if we vnderstand reward properly then we must referre it not to our sufferings but to the sufferings of Christ for there is no proportion betweene our sufferings and life eternall the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs Rom. 8. 18. The second reason is taken from the example of the auncient Prophets for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you In this Reason Christ intendeth two things First to teach his Disciples and vs that persecu●ion for good causes is no newe or strange thing Secondly to comfort his Disciples and seruants in their sufferings for that thereby they should bee made comformable to the ancient worthy Prophets who were of old renowned among men and are now glori fied of God in heauen Hereto wee must compare the words of Luke ' spoken to the same purpose for after this manner did the Fathers to the Prophets By Fathers we must needs meane the auncient people of the Iewes for here hee speaketh to his Disciples and others that were Iewes by nation Now hence obserue a strange point to wit that the auncient Prophets who were most worthy men of God were persecuted in their time not so much by forrainers and enemies to religion as by those that were outwardly members of the Church of God and professors of religion This may seeme strange that men liuing in Gods Church should growe to this height of impietie to become persecutors of Gods Saints but Saint
to the eies of men therefore bee carefull that yee glorifie God therein The first part of this reason is in these words yee are the light of the world the second is expressed by two comparisons in the wordes following A citie that is set on a hill c. the conclusion in the sixeteenth verse For the first part ye are the light of the world If Ministers be lights why saith the Scripture that Iohn Baptist was not the light of the world Ioh. 1. 8. Answ. There be two kindes of lights Originall and Deriued Originall is that which is the cause of all light and so Christ alone is the light of the world and in this sense doth the Scripture denie Iohn Baptist to be that light Deriued light is that which shineth forth but yet is receiued from another and so Iohn Baptist was a burning and a shining lampe so were the Apostles lights for God that caused the light to shine out of darkenesse shined into their hearts to inable them to giue the light of knowledge in the face of Iesus Christ. And so must these words be vnderstood that whereas the world naturally sits in darkenes and in the shadow of death the Apostles by the light of their ministerie were to shine vnto them The vse First this title of light giuen to Ministers sheweth the right vse of the Ministerie of the word The whole world lieth in darknesse that is in ignorance vnder sinne and so subiect to damnation by nature now God hath ordained the Ministerie of the word to bee a light whereby this ignorance may bee expelled and they brought to the knowledge of their sinnes and of the way that leadeth vnto life Act. 26. 18. Paul must preach that both Iewes and Gentiles may come from darkenes vnto light Secondly by this Title Christ sheweth how his word is to be handled namely so as it may be a light vnto mens minds and consciences to make them see their sinnes and their great miserie thereby then to let them see the remedie from that miserie which is Iesus Christ and lastly to shewe them that straite way of obedience in all good duties to God and man which God requireth in the life of a Christian. Men may make long discourses vpon a text of Scripture but that onely is true preaching which giues this light of knowledge to the minde and conscience which leadeth men to God Againe the hearers of the word must be admonished of their duties from this title First if Ministers be lights in regard of their Ministerie then euery hearer must so apply his heart vnto the preaching of the word that it may enlighten his conscience with the knowledge of his sinnes and of his miserie by reason of them as also with the true knowledge of Christ and of the will of God which may guide him in obedience otherwise this holy ordinance turneth to his deeper condemnation Secondly euery hearer must learne Pauls lesson Ephes. 5. 8. Yee were once darkenesse but now ye are light in the Lord walke as children of the light that is looke what the word teacheth which is this light that doe When the time is darke wherein we walke we vse torches and candles that so we may see the right path behold the world is darkenesse we therefore must labour to haue the word of God to be a light vnto our feete in all the steps of our callings wherein we liue for hee that walketh in the darke knoweth not whither hee goeth Iohn 12. 35. Lastly there be many that liue in ignorance as blind as though they had neuer heard of Christ and though they heare the word preached yet still they remaine in darkenesse but they must knowe that their case is fearefull for the Ministerie of the word is light they therefore hauing the benefit thereof ought to be children of the light and because they are not enlightened vndoubtedly a most fearefull iudgemēt of God is vpon them for marke what Paul saith If our Gospel be hid it is hid to those that perish in whom the god of this world hath blinded the eies of their minde and therefore such persons must labour to knowe and practise the speciall grounds and duties of true religion that so in conscience they may be truely assured that the word of God is become their light The second part of this reason is this Your condition is such in regard of your calling that all your sayings and doings are seene of men it is expressed by two similitudes First of a citie set on a hill which cannot be hid Secondly of a candle put on a candlesticke ver 15. And thus it dependeth on the former part Whereas Christ had called his Disciples the light of the world they might take it for a matter of some outward renowne Christ therefore tels them that his intent herein is not to giue them titles of praise but to make them acquainted with their hard condition in which they were like to bee by reason of their great and waightie calling wherein they should become spectacles to all the world for thus he saith A Citie that is set on a hill cannot be hid but all that passe by may see it and a Candle lighted and set on a candlesticke giueth light to all that are in the house euen so you mine Apostles by reason of your publike calling shall haue all your sayings and doings manifest to the eies of the whole world Because both these similitudes serue to expresse the same thing therefore the points of instruction which specially concerne Gods ministers shall bee propounded from the ioynt scope of them both First whereas the conditiō of Gods ministers is such to haue their whole cōuersation open manifest to the eies of the world therfore they especially aboue all others though it concerne euery man in his place must haue care that their liues conuersatiōs both for sayings doings be holy blameles for their place is such that by their well doing they win many vnto the Lord but by their bad conuersation they carry many a soule with them to destruction 2. Hereby they must learne not to thinke it strange if they lie open to manifold reproaches and abuses more then any other sort of men for they of all other lie most open to the world if their conuersation bee godly it is the more distastfull to the world as Cain hated Abel for his good works 1. Ioh. 3. 12. 3. Hence it appeareth that men in this calling cannot without great sinne hide the gifts and talents which God hath giuen them for they are as lighted candles which must not be put vnder a bushell Sundrie men haue heretofore offended this way as those in the Primitiue Church who beeing godly men and well qualified for the Ministerie did yet withdraw themselues from publike societies to liue in solitary places for by their gifts they were excellent lights and therefore they ought to haue
fruition of euery grace and blessing we aske of God according to his will Amen verse 14. For if ye doe forgiue men their trespasses your heauenly father will also forgiue you 15. But if you doe not forgiue men their trespasses no more wil your heauenly father forgiue you your trespasses These two verses contain a reason of the fift petition concerning the forgiuenesse of our sinnes which is propounded with a limitation and condition of our forgiuing them that trespasse against vs the reason here is because in this behalfe we shall finde such measure with God as we mete out vnto our brethren For the meaning of the words three points must be discussed First whome this reason doth concerne namely priuate men for priuate trespasses it reacheth not to Magistrates and publike persons in their function who be the Ministers of God to take vengeance on them that doe euill for to such the Lord saith Thiue eye shall not spare the offender but according to the qualitie of the offence must he execute iudgement vpon offenders for the remoouing of euill And so must parents and masters deale in their families and Ministers in their publike dispensation of the word for els offences would so aboūd that there could be no liuing for Gods people in the world II. Point How doth these depend one vpon an other our forgiuing of men and Gods forgiuing vs Ans. We must not conceiue that our forgiuing men their trespasses is a cause why God forgiues vs for we are by nature dead in sinne and can not doe any good thing of our selues till we be enabled thereunto of God but our forgiuing is a signe that God hath forgiuen vs beeing indeede a fruit of our reconciliation with God for it is a signe of true repentance which is a fruit of faith whereby we apprehend the mercie of God for the pardon of our sinnes in Christ. III. Point How should our forgiuenes goe before Gods forgiuing vs for so the words seeme to import If you forgiue your heauenly father will forgiue you c. Ans. The pardon of sinne which God giues must be considered two waies first as it is giuen in heauen secondly as it is reuealed and assured to the conscience of man now the pardon of sinne in heauen alwaies goes before our forgiuing others but our assurance of pardon with God followes after our forgiuing of men for a mans sinnes may be forgiuen with God and yet he may long remaine without the assurance thereof in his owne conscience this we may see in Dauid for when Nathan said The Lord hath put away thy sinne no doubt it was forgiuen in heauen but yet his ●arnest prayer for pardon afterward 〈…〉 wes plainly that he did not vpon Nathans speech receiue the cōfortable assurance of pardon in his owne conscience This then is Christs meaning that if we forgiue men their trespasses God will assure vs in our consciences that he hath forgiuen vs otherwise if we will not forgiue God will denie vs that assurance The vse of this point is first and cheifly this we must learne to forgiue and forget all priuate wrongs and iniuries done vnto vs whether great or final without desire of reuenge The reasons to mooue vs hereto are these First it is Gods commandement here expressely inioyned which must needs bind the conscience to obedience Secondly if we will not forgiue men God will not forgiue vs this Christ inforceth by doubling the sentence now without Gods forgiuenes there 's no saluation and therefore we must be ready to forgiue as we tender our owne saluation Thirdly the frailtie of our nature is such that we our selues are subiect to offer wrong to others this is intimated in this phrase except ye forgiue men their trespasses so that euery man is prone to trespasse against others and therefore as we would be forgiuen when we trespasse so must we also forgiue men their trespasses Now for the better performing of our dutie herein these rules must be obserued I. We shall perceiue in sundrie men many wants frailties which mens laws punish not as in old men frowardnes in others hastines and in some ambition and desire of praise now these and such like we must in loue passe by without taking notice thereof Prov. 19. 11. It is the glorie of a man to passe by an offence II. Rule If men giue vs some light occasions of offence as vpbraid vs with our ignorance vnskilfulnes basenes pouertie or such like we must lightly passe them ouer preferring the bond of peace before outward reputation III. Rule Though a man doe vnto vs that which is indeede flat iniurie yet if it doe not manifestly hinder Gods glorie or too much preiudice our good estate by hurting our good name our goods or life we must cause our priuate griefe and hurt to yeild to publique peace IV. Rule If men doe vs such great wrongs as manifestly hinder Gods glorie and our good estate in life goods or name then we must vse the helpe of the magistrate and the lawfull defence of laws prouided for that ende Alwaies remembring that in seeking to right our selues we lay aside all malice hatred and desire of reuenge and with a single heart propound Gods glorie in the reformation of the partie that doth vs wrong Secondly in this reason perswading to forgiuenes we may see that pardon of sinne before God and reformation of life goe together for here by this one branch of a reformed life in brotherly forgiuenesse is vnderstood all of the same kind but where is no reformation of life there is no pardon of sinne before God Wouldest thou therefore be assured in thy conscience of Gods speciall fauour towards thee in Christ then reforme thy life by euery law of God for this will giue thee assurance from God but if thy life be vnreformed thy hope of pardon is a meere conceit of thine owne braine and therefore if thou want reformation now beginne and if thou haue begunne then hold on and doe it more and more for thy more full assurance vers 16. Moreouer when ye fast looke not sowre as the hypocrites for they disfigure their faces that they might seeme vnto men to fast Verely I say vnto you that they haue their reward Our Sauiour Christ hauing rectified the abuses in Almes-giuing and in praier doth here come to a third Christian dutie namely fasting wherein as in the former first he seeks to reforme abuses and then prescribes the true manner thereof But before we come to these particularly I will in generall handle the doctrine of fasting for the better vnderstanding of this text and exercise of this dutie And first we must know that Christ here speakes not of a ciuill fast appointed by magistrates in their dominions for ciuill respects but of a religious fast respecting the worship of God which appeares by this that he ioyneth the doctrine of
and rebellion into our Land if this were not our peace would continue for euer for the worke of iustice shall be peace quietnesse and assurance for euer And againe in righteousnesse shalt thou be established and be farre from oppression This therefore should mooue all vngodly persons to repent and to breake off the course of their sinnes vnlesse they will continue professed enemies to the peace of the state vnder which they liue The second Point wherein this blessednesse of Peace-makers consists namely in that they shall be called the children of God that is they shall be esteemed and reputed for Gods children in this world of God himselfe and all good men and in the world to come fully manifested so to be That this is true happinesse will soone appeare by the view of the state of euery childe of God for they are vnited vnto Christ by the spirit of grace by which they are regenerate and in Christ they are adopted for sonnes and daughters and so enioy Gods speciall grace and fauour Now hereupon they are Kings children hauing God for their Father who loues them more tenderly then any earthly Parents can loue their owne children secondly they haue Christ for their brother and so are heires annexed with him hauing heauen and earth for their possession In him they are made Kings and Priests vnto God and shall be iudges of the world at the last day yea they haue the holy Angels for ministring spirits to attend vpon their persons for their defence from the power of the enemie which farre surpasseth the dignity of any guard of men on earth whatsoeuer all things worke together for the best vnto them their crosses and afflictions are no curses but fatherly trialls and chastisements yea their sinnes are turned to their good to them death is no death but a sweet sleepe vnto their bodies and a straite passage for their soules into eternall glorie yea in the acte of death they haue the comfort of life in the ioy of the spirit and the Angels readie when breath departeth to carrie their soules to heauen If this be true happinesse to be called Gods children then they that liue after their owne wicked lusts voyd of all care to keepe a good cōscience are miserable and accursed for they are the children of the diuell seruing him in the workes of sinne and expressing his image in vngodlinesse and worldly lustes It stands them therefore in hand if they haue any care of true happinesse to labour after regeneration whereby forsaking the lusts and courses of their former ignorance and embracing and obeying sincerely the word of life they may become Gods children and so happie Secondly hast thou receiued this grace of Gods spirit whereby thou art inclined to haue peace with all men and to seeke for peace between God and thine owne conscience yea betweene the Lord and others then comfort thy selfe thou art the childe of God these motions come from grace flesh and blood brings forth no such fruits labour therefore to maintaine these good motions with all other pledges of thine adoption and so shalt thou growe fully assured of thine own happines In this age men make much adoe to get good assurance of earthly purchases but what madnesse is this so greatly to regard momentanie things and to haue no care in comparison of our eternall inheritance which we shall haue assured vnto vs when wee become the children of God Verse 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen 11. Blessed are ye when men reuile you and persecute you and say all manner of euill against you for my sake falsly 12. Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Here Christ propounds his eight Rule touching happinesse which he handles more largely then the former for hauing laid downe the Rule vers 10. he expounds the same in a speciall application of it to his Disciples in the 11. and 12. verses In the Rule it selfe note two points first the parties blessed secondly wherein their blessednesse consists The parties blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Persecution properly signifieth pursuite such as one enemie maketh after another but here the word must be taken generally for all kind of persecution whatsoeuer Now because it is a paradoxe and absurd in humane reason to thinke him blessed that for any cause is persecuted therefore Christ to verefie the truth hereof repeats the same Rule in the nextwerse where also he expounds euery parcell thereof wherewith I will content my selfe because Christ is the best interpreter of his owne words In the 11. verse therefore Christ sets downe three things all pertaining to the true exposition of this Rule First he explaines more particularly the parties that be blessed saying to his Disciples Blessed are yee In the beginning of the Chapter wee heard that hee cast his eies vpon them and spake vnto them and now here he doth the like again therefore this Rule must not be vnderstood of all men in the world that suffer but of all Christs true Disciples and generally it is not true for the heathen and infidels doe often suffer for good causes and yet remaine infidels without the true God and so are not blessed Againe a Chrstian professor may giue vp his life in a good cause yet not of loue to God or his truth but vpon ambition and so not be blessed for though I giue my bodie to be burned yet wanting loue it profiteth mee nothing Secondly Christ expoundeth particularly what hee meaneth by persecution naming three parts thereof first slaundering and reuiling which is the persecution of the tongue Thus the Iewes persecuted the Apostles saying they were drunke or full of sweete wine Thus Festus persecuted Paul making him madde or beside himselfe Secondly persecution meaning hereby as the word doth properly signifie first pursuite such as one enemie maketh after another when he seekes to spoile him of his goods or of his life secondly the bringing a man vnto the Barre and there of malice to accuse and arraigne him thirdly euill speaking with lying when as men of purpose be without cause malitiously carried thereunto as when the Iewes called Christ a Samaritan that had a diuell and said that he cast out diuels by Belzebub the prince of diuels and thus were the Christians in the Primitiue Church persecuted beeing malitiously accused for killing their owne children for worshipping the head of an asse for incest and such like To these three kindes of persecutions S. Luke Chap. 6. 22. addes a fourth namely hatred and a fift called separation wherby men were excommunicated and cast out of the Temple Synagogues for Christs sake and his Gospels These are the seuerall kinds of that persecution for the enduring whereof Christ pronounceth men blessed vers 10.
whereof Hatred is the roote and the rest are the branches Thirdly Christ laies downe the cause for which this persecution shall be inflicted namely for my sake or as S. Luke saith for the sonne of mans sake which expoundeth this phrase for Righteousnes sake v. 10. to wit for professing beleeuing and maintaining the doctrine of the Gospel taught by Christ touching remission of sinnes and life euerlasting to them that beleeue The vses in generall We see that Christ vrgeth this Rule of blessednes more largely then the former this he doth for speciall cause first hereby he would teach his Disciples and vs in them that it is the will of God his Church in this world should be vnder the crosse in such affliction and persecution as their blood shall be sought for the maintenance of the faith And this hee will haue to bee the state of his Church for speciall causes First that the members thereof by their afflictions may be acquainted with their owne wants and infirmities which they would not much regard if they were freed from the crosse Secondly that by affliction they may be kept from many grieuous sinnes into which they would fall if they liued in peace Thirdly that others seeing the correction of the Church for sinne might learne thereby to hate and auoide sinne and lastly that the Church might glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of his truth vnto death for euen in persecution is Gods truth preserued against the reason of mans wisdome patient suffering for the truth beeing faithfull witnes-bearing thereunto Secondly Christ had newely called the Twelue out of all his Disciples to be Apostles whereupon they might thinke that they should be aduanced to some outward honour ease and peace but Christ hereby calles them from that conceit puts them in mind of affliction which should befall them in time to come that when it came they might the better indure it And thus he prepares all churches to suffer affliction yea and we our selues must hereby learne in time of peace to prepare our selues against the day of triall because his will is that whosoeuer would liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer affliction Thirdly hereby Christ intends to lay a ground of comfort to his disciples in their persecution by a plaine and ful declaration of their happines that suffer for righteousnes sake in that they haue sure title to the kingdome of heauen out of which estate no sound comfort can be had And this same must we lay vp in store against the time to come for we liue now in peace by Gods mercie but we know not how long it will continue we haue beene threatened and dangerously assaulted by our enemies many a time beside the rodde of God shaken with his owne hand against vs and wee may not thinke our peace will last alwaies but seeing our sinnes increase we may be sure our ioy and peace will one day bee turned into sorrow and therefore it will be good to haue this Rule engrauen in our hearts that they are blessed which suffer for righteousnesse sake If therefore tribulation come for the defence of the Gospel we must haue recourse to this promise of blessednesse and that will be our comfort More particularly In the words of this Rule Blessed are they c. Christ would let vs see that deadly hatred which the world beares vnto Gods Church for so much the word persecute importeth The reasons of this hatred may be these First the Church of God in the ministerie of the Gospel seekes the ruine of the diuels kingdome who is the Prince of the world the diuell therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may persecute and quite destroy it if it were possible Secondly Gods Church is a peculiar people seuered from the world in profession doctrine and conuersation and therefore the world hates them Ioh. 15. 19. And this very point may serue to stay our hearts when we shall bee persecuted for the profession and embracing of the Gospel of Christ for the world doth hate Gods Church and will doe to the end there must be enmitie betweene the seed of the serpent and the seede of the woman as then he that was borne of the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the spirit so is it now Gal. 4. 29. Secondly obserue that this hatred of the world is not onely against the members of Gods Church but euen against Christs holy religion so Christ saith for my sake or for my Religions sake This is to be marked as a most excellent argument to perswade our consciences that the Gospel of Christ which we professe is the true and blessed doctrine of God because the wicked world doth alwaies hate it yea it hateth vs also for the Gospels sake now if it were a doctrine of men it would fit their natures well and they would loue it for the world doth loue his owne Ioh. 15. 19. Thirdly if they be blessed that suffer persecution then how may any man lawfully flie in persecution Answer A man may flie in persecution with good conscience these two things obserued first that he be not hindred by his particular calling secondly that he hath libertie offered by Gods prouidence to escape the hands of his enemies The intent of this verse is not to forbid flight but to comfort such as are in persecution and cannot escape for the word signifieth such persecution as is by pursuite and oppression which cannot be auoided Lastly seeing they are blessed that suffer for righteousnes sake Whether are they alwaies cursed that suffer deseruedly for an euill cause for the contrarie reason is in contraries Ans. They are alwaies accursed saue in one case to wit vnlesse they repent for their vnrighteousnes for which they are afflicted but by true repentance they become blessed The thiefe vpon the crosse had liued in theft and was therfore attached condemned and crucified and so he suffered for vnrighteousnesse but yet hee was saued because hee repented and beleeued in Christ. It is added for righteousnesse sake In this clause we are taught a speciall lesson namely that when God shall lay vpon vs any affliction or persecution as imprisonment banishment losse of goods or of life it selfe we must alwaies looke that the cause be good and then suffer willingly This is a necessarie Rule for we must suffer affliction either publikely or priuately if we will liue godly in Christ Iesus Now it is not the punishment but the cause that makes a Martyr and to this purpose Peter saith Let none of you suffer as a Murtherer a Thiefe or a busie-body but if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God in this behalfe and therefore we must be sure the cause be good yea this we must looke vnto in our particular priuate crosses Verse 11. Blessed are ye when men reuile you and
Stephen giueth the reason hereof namely their hard hearts whereby they resisted the holy Ghost in the ministerie of the word for which God left them to themselues so as they ran headlong to this height of impiety to persecute Gods deerest seruants The like we may see in these our daies some that haue beene professors after long hearing breake forth into open Atheisme calling this into question whether there be a God and among others there is also to be seene as vile crueltie and oppression in their particular dealings and as abhominable filthinesse as is to be found among the heathen or Idolaters all which and many other enormous sinnes proceed from this that though men professe religion yet they denie subiection to the Gospel preached so as it is not in them a Word of power for which cause God in his iustice giues them vp to hardnes of heart to commit sinne without remorse And therefore if wee would escape the fearefull iudgement of a reprobate sense let vs labour with feare trembling to become obedient to the word which we heare for if we doe not glorifie God in the meanes wherein he offers grace and mercie God will bee sure to glorifie himselfe in our deserued confusion Vers. 13. Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt haue lost his sauour c. In this verse and the rest to the 16. Christ propoundeth the second branch of his sermon touching the office of the Apostles and in them of all Ministers wherein his intent is to mooue them to diligence in preaching the will of God to all people The Coherence of this part with the former standeth thus Christ had shewed before in diuers precepts that many are blessed whervpon some might aske how they should attaine to this happines and to those graces of the Spirit which make them fit for that estate Christ here answers that the preaching of the Gospel is the principall meanes to worke in their hearts those graces to which true happines is promised And because it is an excellent priuiledge to bring men to this estate therfore he exciteth his disciples to diligence in this Ministerie by two Reasons drawne from the properties of this worke propounded in two similitudes The first is taken from salt in these words ye are the salt of the earth amplified in the words following to the ende of the verse The second is drawne from light ver 14. 15. For the first yee are the salt of the earth yee that is you whom I haue called to be Apostles and set apart for the worke of the Ministry are salt not properly but by resemblance yet not in regard of their persons but of their ministerie because hereby they were to season men for God and to make them sauourie both in heart and life Of the earth not of Iudea only but of the whole world as may appeare by their commission Math. 28. 19. Goe therefore and teach all Nations From this description both Ministers and people may learne their dutie First for Ministers by this title of salt heare giuen vnto them Christ would teach them first how they ought to dispence the word of God both Lawe and Gospell namely so as they labour therein to expresse the properties of salt whereto Christ alludeth in his Title Now the properties of salt applied to rawe flesh or fresh wounds are principally three First it will bite and fret being of nature hot and drie Secondly it makes meats sauourie vnto our taste Thirdly it preserueth meates from putrifaction by drawing out of them superfluous moistnesse The Apostles therefore and other Ministers being salt must not onely in generall deliuer the word of God vnto the people but withall applie the same particularly vnto mens hearts consciences as salt is applied vnto meat And that for three endes first the Law must be applied to rippe vp mens hearts to make them see their sinns it must fret and bite them by the curse thereof to cause them to renounce themselues and to crie with the Iewes Men and brethren what shall we doe Secondly the Gospel must be preached that men feeling their corruption like rottennes in their soules may by the blessing of the spirit be thereby seasoned with grace and so reconciled vnto God and made sauourie in his sight This is the end of the Ministrie 2. Cor. 5. 20. We are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you through vs we pray you in Christs steed that you be reconciled vnto God Thirdly both the Law and the Gospel must bee continually dispensed that thereby sinne and corruption may be daiely mortified and consumed both in heart and life euen as superfluous humours are dried vp by salt And this is the right dispensing of Gods word for euery discourse vpon a text of Scripture is not preaching but he that so expoundeth and applyeth the word that his ministerie may be salt vnto his hearers he it is that preacheth the word indeede Secondly Christ calling his Disciples salt teacheth them and all ministers that they themselues ought first to be seasoned by the word for how can they fitly season others by applying this salt vnto their consciences who neuer felt the biting of it vpon their owne He that is vnseasoned himselfe may speake Gods word which God may blesse to the good of others but yet in respect of himselfe it is a riddle which can not be vnderstood Thirdly this Title giueth good direction to euery Minister for his manner of preaching for if the word of God alone be that sauory salt wherewith mans heart is seasoned for the Lord then it ought to be dispensed purely and sincerely without the mixture of humane inuentions This was Pauls care my word my preaching saith he stood not in the entising speach of mans wisedome but in plaine evidence of the spirit and of power that your faith should not be in the wisedome of men but in the power of God Experience teacheth vs that salt by mixture with other things looseth of his sauour and so is it with the word In deede there is a place for Arts and tongues and humane learning with euery dispenser of the word wherein he may vse them with great commendation to witte in his priuate preparation but not in the publique dispensation whereby he seasoneth mens hearts vnto God that the word of God alone must doe for to it alone belongs the promise of the spirit Isay. 59. 21. And therefore he must vse great discretion in this ministerie and labour so to speake that the spirit may take delight to accompanie the same Fourthly this Titile teacheth all Gods Ministers by patience to possesse their soules when the wicked doe fret and fume against them for their ministerie for this is a testimonie that their ministrcie is salt and bites their corrupt consciences as it ought to doe therefore they are to goe on with chearefulnes endeauouring more and more to season their hearers
him in word or deede and he hath knowledge thereof and iust cause thereupon to complaine Leaue there thy gift before the Altar Still he alludeth to the manner of the Iewes worshippe who when they went to sacrifice to the Lord brought their sheepe or bullocke vnto the vtter court or as some thinke tied it to the hornes of the altar in token that they presented it vnto the Lord now if at that very instant they did remember that they had any way offended their brother then were they to leaue their gift there not quite omiting this dutie but onely suspending or deferring it for a while and goe seeke to be reconciled to their brother whome they had wronged Question How could this departure be warrantable seeing the Iewes had a law that when the seruice of God was once begun none might depart no not the Prince himselfe till it was ended Ans. This Rule must be vnderstood of departure out of the vtter court of the Temple whither the people brought their sacrifice soone after they had presented it before it was begunne to be offered for till the Priests had begunne Gods seruice it was lawfull for the people to depart especially vpon this occasion Question II. But what if the partie offending cannot possibly come to his brother whome he hath wronged by reason of his absence in some farre countrey his close imprisonment or such like Ans. He must testifie his endeauour to be reconciled vnto him and if the act it selfe be necessarily hindred by Gods prouidence God will accept the will for the deede if there be a willing minde for this is Christs meaning that we should doe our vtmost endeauour to be reconciled vnto our brethren whome we haue wronged shewing such care thereof that we preferre the same before the outward actiōs of Gods worship not presuming to worship God till we be reconciled to our brethren Here we haue a notable Rule for the maintaining of loue and charitie among men namely brotherly reconciliation In the giuing whereof Christ still continues his exposition of the sixt commandement for hauing condemned murther and the prouocations thereunto in the former verse here he commandeth the contrarie vertue of brotherly loue and the meanes to vphold the same to wit Reconciliation for offences giuen Out of this Rule in generall we may obserue first a Third direction to the right expounding and vnderstanding of Gods commandements namely where any vice is forbidden there the contrarie vertue is commanded and on the contrarie where any vertue is commaunded there the contrarie vice is forbidden This Rule must be obserued as a priuiledge of the law of God aboue all humane lawes for mens lawes are satisfied by abstaining from the vice forbidden though the contrarie vertue be not practised as he satisfies mans law forbidding Murther that abstaines from the actuall crime though he loue not his brother But he transgresseth the law of God that performeth not the contrarie vertue though he abstaine from the vice forbidden for though a man abstaine from killing yet if he doe not loue his brother hee is guiltie of the breach of this sixt commandement which serues to confute the error of our ignorant people who because they abstaine from Murther Adulterie and other outward sinnes doe perswade themselues that they keepe the law and that God will therefore be mercifull vnto them But they must know that though they should abstaine from the vices forbidden yet they stand culpable of Iudgement for want of doing the contrarie vertues for it is not sufficient to abstaine from euill but we must doe good and therefore Iohn Baptist saith Euery tree that bringeth not forth good fruite is hewen downe and cast into the fire and the sentence of damnation shall bee denounced against the Reprobates for their omission of doing good I was an hungrie and ye gaue me no meate c. Secondly by this Rule of Reconciliation it appeareth that the performance of any outward seruice vnto God is displeasing vnto him if it be separated from the loue of our brethren Isay 1. 11 12. What haue I to doe with the multitude of your sacrifices saith the Lord and so hee proceedeth reiecting in particular all the seruice of the Iewes because they liued in enuie debate and oppression Their hands were full of blood Isay 58. 5 6. The Lord doth there reprehend the Iewes fasting from meates because they did not withall abstaine from strife and oppression adding withall that refraining from crueltie and doing workes of mercie is the fast which hee requires which serues to ouerthrowe the naturall conceit of men who thinke that the whole worshippe of God standeth in the duties of the first Table This was indeede the conceit and practise of the Pharises whereupon they taught the people that if they gaue oblations to the Church though they releeued not their poore parents yet God was well pleased with them And the like is the practise of the Church of Rome who in cases of transgression through want of brotherly loue doe not appoint this Reconciliation but Auricular confession and Canonicall satisfaction as matters well pleasing vnto Almightie God yea such is the conceit of our common people that if they be present at diuine seruice if they heare the word preached and receiue the Sacrac●aments at ordinarie times then they haue done good seruice and he will respect them though in their ciuill conuersation they be at enmitie with their brethren or liue in such like sinnes But we must learne that God is serued not onely in the duties of the first Table but of the second also and that God abhortes the duties of pietie in such persons as make no conscience of the practise of loue and mercie Ierem. 7. 9 10. Will you steale murther comm●t adulterie c. and yet come and stand before me in this house wherein my name is called and say we are deliuered though we haue done all thes●●b●ominations as if he should say neuer thinke it and therefore if 〈◊〉 desi●e true comfort in our seruing of God let vs make conscience to ioyne therewith the practise of mercie towards our brethren Thirdly here also we may learne how to behaue our selues before we come to the Lords Table if we call to minde euen when we be in the Church that we haue any way offended our brother we must first goe and reconcile our selues vnto him and then come to the Lords Table we must not abstaine vpon the remembrance of our wrong doing for so we adde sinne vnto sinne refusing spirituall societie with God because we will retaine enmitie towards our brother but seeking speedily reconciliation we must returne to receiue the Lords Sacrament Which flatly condemnes the common practise of many who abstaine from the Lords Supper because they will not seeke to be reconciled to their brethren This argues an heart full stu●● with pride and malice which preferres it owne lust before the will of
2. The third occasion of offence taken from the Church is the miseri● thereof for the state of the Church is oftentimes in affliction because it consisteth of such as are subiect to the contempt and reproach of the world Hence sundrie are discouraged from ioyning themselues truely to the Church and although this occasion of offence be not much among vs saue onely in reproaches yet it may be more and therefore we must learne to preuent it and to cut it off The way is this we must beleeue and remember that out of the church there is no saluation In this regard Noahs Arke was a true type of the Church for as none were saued from drowning that were out of the Arke in the generall deluge so none can be saued ordinarily from condemnation that are out of the Church for in the Church is Gods couenant of grace with the Sacraments which be the s●ales thereof In the Church is vocation iustification sanctification and the way to glorification but out of the Church are none of all these and therefore it is said that God added to his Church daiely such as should be saued In the Church is protection against all enemies and from all iudgements so farre forth as shal be for the glorie of God and the good of the church and in a word in the Church is li●e euerlasting but out of the Church is nothing but a feareful looking for of eternall woe condemnation and for this cause Moses chose rather to suffer afflicton in Gods church then to enioy all the pleasures in the world out of it whose example wee ought to follow and so shall not the miserie of the Church be any occasion vnto vs to forsake the same especially if wee consider that the whole world will profit a man nothing if hee loose his soule Matthew 16. 26. The fourth offence taken from the Church is from the Apostacie of some that liue in the Church for ordinarily in Gods Church are many Apostates as in this our Church many that were in times past Protestants are become Papists some Arrians Sabellians and some open Atheists and blasphemers Hence many fearing their falls as they pretend dare not ioyne themselues to the truth and the profession thereof But to cut off this occasion two rules must be remembred First that the falling away of any man from the truth is the worke of God discouering an hidden hypocrite 1. Ioh. 2. 19. They went out from vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would haue continued with vs but this is come to passe that it might appeare they were not all of vs. Secondly consider that the beginning and continuance of our religion saluation stands on Gods free election which is vnchangeable and hereupon must we staie our selues touching our estate when we see others fall away 2. Tim. 2. 19. Paul comforteth the Church against the feare of griefe which they might conceiue by the Apostacie of Himeneus and Philetus which were two pillars amongst them by this Rule The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his Now because some might say God indeede knows it but we doe not to this I take it the Apostle answers when he saith and let euery one that calles vpon the name of the Lord depart from iniquitie as if he should say Looke that you call vpon God for grace and make conscience of all sinne and by this you shall know your selues to belong to God which thing when once you know then staie thereon for Gods calling is vnchangeable Againe as these occasions are taken from the whole Church in generall so more especially some take offence from seuerall things therein as first from the wants that be in Ministers both for iudgement and doctrine Hence politicke carnall men plead thus Preaching is full of imperfection therein men publish their owne errors but the written word containeth in it the sermons of Christ and of his Apostles which are most perfect and therefore it is best to content our selues with the Scripture read and to heare no preaching by men To cut off this offence wee must remember that the preaching of the word though it bee by sinnefull man is Gods holy ordinance prescribed and enioyned as solemnely as any morall precept is either against murther or adulterie for from the beginning till the Iews came to mount Sina God himselfe preached to his Church which was then contained in some fewe families But from that time because the people could not abide the voyce of God himselfe it pleased him to ordaine the Ministerie of the word by the hand of sinnefull man Now it beeing Gods owne ordinance vnlesse we will make our selues wiser then God we must subiect our selues thereto with all reuerence albeit it be deliuered by sinnefull man Thus Cor●elius did Act. 10. 33. and the Thessalonians 1. Thess. 2. 13. Secondly many are offended at the liues of Ministers and from the wants that be in them whether in deed or in suspition onely many take occasion to contemne their doctrine thinking as the Rulers of the Iewes said to the blind man Thou art altogether borne in sinne and doest thou teach vs Now to cut off this occasion two things must be remembred First we must distinguish of euery Minister and consider in him a double person both that he is a sinnefull man subiect to many infirmities as we our selues are and also that he is the Lords Ambassadour sent in Gods name to deliuer his will vnto vs. Now looke as we honour the Embassadour of a Prince though his person be vile and base so much more ought wee to reuerence the Embassadour of God himselfe and receiue his doctrine as from God though for his person he be subiect to manifold infirmities Secondly we must consider that it is Gods wil and commandement that though ministers be manifestly faultie and sinnefull yet their ministerie must be receiued and obeyed carefully Math. 23. 2. The Scribes and Pharises sit in Moses chaire saith Christ all therefore that they bid you obserue that doe but after their workes doe not Phil. 1. 15. Some preach Christ of enuie saith Paul and not in sinceritie but yet the Apostle reioyced therein because Christ was preached euery manner of way verse 18. And therefore as we doe not refuse meate for our bodies when wee bee hungrie though a wicked person haue dressed it so must wee not refuse or contemne the word of God the food of our soules for the sinnes of the party that deliuereth it Thirdly many take offence at the lenitie of the Church towards offenders and for the presence of wicked persons at the Lords table doe refuse to communicate with the Church now albeit men should not be admitted hand ouer head to the Lords Table but scandalous persons ought to be restrained yet the
man by oath and not otherwise may either free himselfe from temporall losses or procure to himselfe temporall benefits which be of great weight and moment for an oath for confirmation is among men the ende of all strife now we know that much strife and controuersie doth arise about worldly affaires And in this regard a man by oath may lawfully purge himselfe of infamie and slander In these foure cases a man may lawfully sweare not onely publikely before the Magistrate but also priuately so it be with due reuerence and good conscience But in common talke or on light occasion a man cannot lawfully sweare either by small or great oath for that is to take the name of God in vaine II. Quest. How must a man take an oath when by iust occasion he is called to sweare Ans. To this question the Prophet Ieremie answereth chap. 4. 2. Thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in truth in iudgement and in righteousnes where three vertues are required in an holy manner of swearing First truth and that respecteth two things as well the matter whereto we sweare for God may not be brought for a witnesse to a lie as also the minde of him that sweareth for his oath must be according to his minde without fraud or deceit and with intent to performe that truly which he promises thereupon Secondly Iustice or righteousnes which also respecteth two things first the thing sworne to that must be iust and lawfull and according to Gods word secondly the conscience of the swearer for a man must not sweare for a trifle though the thing be true but either by the authoritie of the Magistrate or vpon some necessarie cause of his lawfull calling and against this vertue doe those sinne that sweare vsually in their common talke though the thing be true for trifles and light matters are not a iust cause of an oath Thirdly iudgement as well of the oath as of his owne person for the oath he that sweareth rightly ought to know the nature of an oath and be able to iudge of the matter whereabout he sweareth and also discerne rightly of the persons before whome of time place and other circumstances And for his owne person a man that sweareth ought to see in his conscience that he is fit to take an oath and thereby to worship and glorifie God for he that sweareth ought to haue his heart smitten with feare and awe towards God as in all other parts of his worship Deut. 10. 20. the feare of God and swearing by his name are ioyned together and a prophane man that hath no feare of God in his heart ought not to sweare And thus much of Christs general Answer to their false interpretation Neither by heauen for it is the throne of God v. 35. Nor yet by the earth for it his footestoole neither by Ierusalem for it is the citie of the great King c. Here our Sauiour Christ commeth particularly to forbid swearing in foure seuerall kinds of oaths vsed among the Iewes vnder which he includeth all indirect oathes by the creatures and withall obserue that he addeth seuerall reasons in prohibiting these seuerall kinds of indirect oathes as that a man must not sweare by heauen because it is the throne of God c. Now as I take it Christ doth not directly forbid swearing by the creatures in this place for his intent is to forbid ordinarie swearing in common speach whether it be by God or by the creatures which here he nameth because the Iewes counted them but light oathes Yet here this point must needes be skanned Whether it be lawfull at any time to sweare by the creatures Sundrie Papists and those of the best account both for learning and deuotion make two kinde of oathes in swearing by the creatures First when a man sweares by the creature and puts it in the place of God making it a Iudge and witnesse to his conscience of the truth of the thing whereof he sweareth and this doe all condemne as wicked and vnlawfull both Protestants and Papists Secondly when the creature is named but yet the oath is directed to God in the minde of the swearer vnder the name of the creature as the creature is in relation to God a signe of his presence and this kind of swearing is taken for lawfull not onely of all Papists but of many Protestant Diuines which be of good account in our age Yet with reuerence to them all I see no reason in the word of God to warrant this kind of swearing by the creature with direction to God in the minde of him that sweareth Indeede a man may name the creature in his oath as Paul did I call God to record to my conscience and yet sweare by God for it is one thing to name the creature in swearing and an other thing to sweare by the creature Reasons against this forme of swearing by the creatures are these First an oath is part of Gods worship as hath before beene shewed now euery part of Gods worship must be referred to God directly so we pray and giue thankes vnto God directly and not in the creature and so we ought to sweare but in indirect swearing by the creatures the oath is directly referred to the creature and indirectly vnto God namely in the creature which is not lawfull Secondly a man must sweare by him that is greater then himselfe and therefore God sware by himselfe because there was no greater to sweare by where it seemeth the holy Ghost takes it for graunted that there is no lawfull swearing by the creatures because they are not greater then man and so there must be but one onely direct kind of swearing by God himselfe Thirdly Deut. 6. 13. Thou shalt sweare by my name there it seemeth he prescribeth such a forme of swearing wherein the name of God in some plaine manner is expressed but in indirect oathes an other besides him that sweareth cannot tell whether he sweare by God or not because the oath is by the creature and directed to God onely in the minde of him that sweareth Fourthly Math. 13. 16. He that sweareth by the Temple sweareth by God whence I gather that an indirect oath is superfluous because it is sufficient that a man sweare by God onely and not by the creature also By these reasons I haue beene mooued to dislike of indirect oathes now let vs see what is said in the behalfe of them First it is saide that Ioseph a man commended for his faith sware by the life of Pharaoh therefore men may sweare by the creatures Ans. It may be well expounded not to be an oath but an asseueration to this effect as surely as Pharaoh liueth but say it is an oath yet this fact prooueth not the lawfulnes of this kind of swearing for no man is so good but he may be tainted with the impieties of the place wherein he liueth especially beeing so wicked a
we professe our selues to be Christians for he that hath not the spirit of God is none of his Rom. 8. 9. And if we be in the spirit wee must obey the motions thereof and learne of Christ who was meeke and humble and following him wee shall finde rest for our soules Secondly when Christ sets downe these three examples of suffering wrong he applies himselfe to the present outward estate of the Iewes which was this For one man to suffer wrong of another in his bodie and in his goods and yet to rest contented without reliefe or amends Now the cause of this their miserable condition was their seruitude to the Romane Emperour who a little before Christs comming had remooued the Scepter from Iuda made Iuda a Prouince tributarie vnto Rome so as they were ruled not by a Prince of their owne but by a forraine enemies Deputies In this estate we may see the miserable condition of any people that are in bondage to a forraine enemie their liues are euery way miserable for besides their personall bondage they are constrained to suffer losses and wrongs in goods and in their names without all remedie or reliefe The consideratiō hereof must teach vs First to be heartily thākfull vnto God for the happie outward peace which with the Gospel of Gods grace we now enioy vnder our dread Soueraigne being free from subiection vnto any forraine power Secondly to praie earnestly vnto the Lord for the good estate life and health of our Prince by whom vnder God we enioy such ioy and prosperitie as also for the continuance of Gods holy hand of protection to preserue the whole land against all forraine power whatsoeuer Thirdly to repent vnfainedly of all our sinnes that so we turning vnto God from them he may continue vnto vs those happy daies of peace wherein we haue freedome from subiection to forraine tyrannie for our sinnes are our greatest foes they lay open the ports of our lands and the gates of our cities to the spoyling enemie they will put downe our strong walls and take away the strength of our armed men no enemies can doe vs so much harme as our owne sinnes and therefore we must humble our selues for them and if we haue not repented now we must beginne and if we haue begunne we must proceede and renew the same more and more If we had felt the miserie of subiection to foraine power as these Iewes now did it would touch vs and therefore before these euills come vpon vs let vs meete our God by true repentance that so he may keepe from vs this fierce wrath vers 42. Giue to him that asketh and from him that would borrow of thee turne not away Christ hauing forbidden priuate reuenge doth here command the requitall of good for euill in two particular examples of well-doing taken from giuing and lending by both which though not expressely yet in sense and meaning Christ would teach his hearers thus much Let the man be what he will doe thou good vnto him for euill For the first Giue to him that asketh c. These words must not be taken simply but in this sense Giue to him that asketh on a iust cause beeing poore though be cannot requite thee againe nay though he had done thee wrong and were thine enemie This exposition is plaine Luk. 6. for hauing set downe his commandement for giuing v. 30. he renders this reason thereof in effect because they cannot requite thee againe v. 33. which plainely imports that it must be to the poore Here now first obserue the forme of Christs words they are commanding Giue to him c. whence I gather that a man is bound in conscience vpon paine of death to giue Almes and releefe Matth. 25. 41 42. Christ adiudgeth some to hell for the neglect of this dutie now there could be no such course if there were no commandement that did bind their conscience to doe that for want whereof they are condemned Againe in the sixt commandement we are bound to doe all duties that may preserue our neighbours life of which sort is giuing releefe vnto the poore without which they cannot liue If it be saide that Daniel made Almes deedes no commandement but a matter of counsell vnto Nebuchadnezzar I answer that things commaunded may be propounded by way of counsell so doth Christ to the Church of Laodicea I counsell thee to buie of me gold c. Againe Daniel vsed this forme of speech to the King Let my counsell be pretious vnto thee not because it was no commandement but because he would so temper his speech that it might better take place in the stout heart of this proud king And when as Paul 2. Cor. 8. 8. speaking of Almes saith he speaketh not by commandement it is to be vnderstood not simply of Almes giuing but of th● measure thereof as the former verse doth plainly shew Here then wee see those men confuted which say they may doe with their owne what they will this is not so for mens goods are not their owne simply but Gods also and they indeede are but the Lords stewards to dispose of them as he commands now his will is that part thereof should be giuen to them which want Secondly we see here also that those men sinne grieuously who are so couetous that they will giue nothing to the poore sell they will and lend also vpon a good pawne for their owne aduantage but by free gift they will part with nothing These are miserable persons who doe what they can to condemne themselues for Gods commandement binds men in conscience to giue vnto the poore and that freely Yet here we must know that not onely they who giue f●eely doe a worke of mercie but also they who lend and sell when as their lending and selling will as much profit the poore as giuing this in effect is almes deedes here also commanded and therefore is Ioseph commended not onely for giuing but for selling corne to the Egyptians and others in the time of dearth Thirdly this beeing a commandement binding conscience must stirre vs vp to doe all good duties of releefe with cheerefulnes that so meete and decent prouision for the poore may not onely be begunne but also continued for it is acceptable vnto God A second point here to be obserued is what kind of commandement this is Giue to him that asketh Gods commandements be of two sorts Affirmatiue and Negatiue and in the Morall law the one is alwaies comprehended in the other now this commandement is affirmatiue which must be noted because negatiue precepts lay a straighter bonde vpon the conscience then the affirmatiue and therefore are the precepts of the Morall law for the most part propounded negatiuely for the negatiue precept binds a man to obedience alwaies and to all and euery time as when God saith Thou shalt not kill a man is neuer exempted from obedience hereunto but an affirmatiue
soules and shall we dispose of them after our pleasures to offend him who doth wholly support vs and that continually Secondly here note Christ saith his sunne not the sunne teaching vs that the sunne which shineth in the firmament is Gods sunne not mens God himselfe is the sole author and gouernour thereof hee continueth that beeing which it hath and the power and vertue which it sheweth forth And the same thing by proportion must be vnderstood of all other creatures both in heauen an earth the moone and starres all beasts and cattell yea and we our selues are Gods creatures and hee is our creator our Lord and gouernour Psal. 50. 12. The whole world is mine and all that is therein Now hence we must learne two things First not to abuse any creature to our lust as food raiment c. but to vse whatsoeuer we enioy to Gods glorie according to his wil. Secondly to endeauour to bee lead by the creatures which we enioy to the knowledge of our creator for they are his but alasse the practise of the world is otherwise men suffer themselues by the creatures to be drawn from God for some make their bellie their God to others riches and pleasures are their God Thirdly Christs saying of the Father that he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and on the good doth shew vs that common bountie which God vouchsafeth to his creatures both good and bad for the rising and shining of the sunne is an excellent worke of God by which many other blessings are conuaied to the creatures For first euery thing vpon the earth receiueth heate and warmnesse from it nothing is hid from the heat thereof Psal. 19. 6. In which regard it may well be called the vniuersall fire of the whole world Secondly the sunne serueth notably for the distinction of times by daie and night weekes moneths quarters and whole yeares whereby wee know the tearme of times from the beginning and so may doe till the ende of the world in regard whereof it may well bee called the clocke of the whole world Which things considered may make vs to blush and bee confounded in our selues for that light regard we haue had of so excellent a creature whereby God conuaies so manifold blessings vpon the earth let vs therefore learne to blesse God for the sunne and to expresse our thankfulnesse by all good duties And sendeth raine on the iust and vniust Here is noted the second common blessing bestowed of God vpon the world to wit the falling of the raine vpon the ground both of good and bad Now here first obserue the forme of speech vsed by Christ saying God raineth see Deut. 11. 14. The Lord giueth raine in due season the first and latter raine This worke is attributed to God for waightie causes First to shew that the same God who ordained in the beginning that the clouds should water the earth doth by his owne power vpholde the continuance of the same blessing vnto this daie and indeede if he should not will the continuance hereof it would for euer cease to raine vpon the earth Secondly to teach vs that God disposeth of the raine that falleth restraining and enlarging it at his pleasure either for the blessing or the punishment of the place whereon it falleth and that many times without the helpe of the second causes Leuit. 26. 3 4. If yee walke in mine ordinances I will send you raine in due season and verse 19. But if you will not obey me I will make your heauen as yron and your earth as brasse Amos 4. 7. I haue with-held the raine from you and caused it to raine vpon one citie and not vpon another one peete was rained vpon and that which was not rained vpon withered Here then we learne first that wee ought to pray vnto God for his raine of blessing that is for fruitfull seasons and also to be thankfull vnto God for seasonable weather when we receiue it because hee sendeth it 2. This must teach vs to obey serue God for he hath the clouds in his hands like a spunge when he wil he presseth out the raine therof now if we obey him he wil cause it to fall vpon the earth for a blessing but if we rebell against him he will either hold it backe or powre it downe vpon vs for a curse 3. Seeing God sendeth down the raine we may gather that no man can certainly tel by the course of the heauēs the particular season of the weather day by day If the raine depended wholly vpon the celestiall bodies then should it fall alike in all places that be of like position to the heauens but that is not so for God ordereth it according to the state of the people vpon whom it falleth either for a blessing or a curse as we haue heard 4. Hence we may gather that neither witches by the help of Satan nor yet Satan himselfe can cause raine as many thinke for it is God alwaies that raineth The deuill indeede is the prince of the ayre and by Gods permission he may ioyne himselfe vnto a storme make it more terrible and hurtful as he did in the destruction of Iobs cattell children by fire from heauen by a mightie winde but yet he cannot make the matter of winde or of raine that is proper to God 5. Doth God raine vpon the earth then we may well consider why the land is so often plagued with vnseasonable raine it is no doubt for our disobedience as we haue heard Leu. 26. 19. the contempt of the word among other sins is one maine cause of this iudgement Now if we would either remoue or preuent this plague at any time we must turne vnto the Lord and repent of our sins for thereto we are called by this iudgement Amos 4. 7. And if we doe turne then wil the Lord send a gratious raine vpon our land but if we wil not turne we shal haue another raine the raine of Sodome and Gomortha for vpon the wicked God will raine snares fire and brimstone And this is certaine where God sends his iudgements for the contempt of his word and yet men doe not repent there one iudgement is but the fore-runner of a greater till they bee consumed And sith experience teacheth that after invndations of waters vsually comes plague and pestilence for the preuenting of these Iudgements let vs repent The last point to bee here obserued is this in what tearmes our Sauiour Christ expresseth who bee the friends of God and who bee his enemies His friends he calleth good and iust his enemies euill and vniust Now that we may discerne of our estate towards God in this behalfe we must see what a good and iust man is In euery such a one two things are required First true faith whereby a man laies holde on Christ for his
righteousnesse sanctification and redemption and for the obtaining hereof he must denie himselfe and become nothing in himselfe that hee may bee all in Christ. Secondly true conuersion of the whole man vnto God from all sinne so as his heart must be renued and disposed to please God in all things And because these things are inward and secret therfore to make them knowne there is further required that a man carrie in his heart a resolute and constant purpose from time to time neuer to sinne against God and this purpose of heart he must testifie by a godly and cons●●onable endeauour of life to please God in all things for this is the fruite of true faith and of sound inward conuersion and in regard hereof were Enoch Iob Dauid Zacharie and Elizabeth called iust But he that wants this constant purpose and a daily endeauour from a beleeuing penitent heart to please God in all things is a wicked person and as yet Gods enemie By this first wee see how many are deceiued euery where with ciuill honestie for if a man liue vprightly among his neighbours and doe abstaine from murther adulterie oppression and such like sinnes hee is presently counted a good man such a one indeede may be counted an honest man ciuilly as Ah●melec● was but yet this outward honestie makes not a man iust and good in the sight of God so as he repute● him for his friend thereto are required true faith and true repentance testified by new obedience Secondly here also see that neither the knowledge of Gods word nor the hearing of it with some gladnesse and bringing forth some fruits no● yet to bee able to conceiue a praier for the forme thereof that none of these I say no no● all of these doe make a man the friend of God indeede for all these may bee in an euill man who hath a purpose in his heart to liue in some sinne in whose heart as yet there is no true faith no● sound repentance without which as wee heard no man is iust in the sight of God nor accounted for his friend And therefore we must not content our selues with these things but labour to be good and iust indeede When affliction shall be●●ll vs or death approach we would giue all the world if it were in our hands for good assurance that God were our friend now then let vs labour for true saith and repentance and testifie these by a constant purpose a godly endeauour to please God in all things through the whole course of our liues and then will the Lord esteeme vs for his friends Verse 46. 〈◊〉 if you loue them that loue you what reward shall yee haue doe not the Publicans euen the same In these words our Sauiour Christ propounds a second reason to perswade his Disciples and hearers to loue their enemies and to the end it might take the deeper root in their hearts he repeats the same againe in the next verse which in effect is the same with this The words are plaine if we know what Publicans were Publicans therefore were officers that gathered t●ll and tribute taxes and rents of the Iewes for the Romane Emperom to whom the Iewes were in subiection Now in the gathering of it they vsed much iniustice oppression for which cause they were hated of the Iewes aboue all other people esteemed most basely of Now saith Christ though these Publicans be void of all good conscience yet they will loue their friends of whom they are loued And hence Christ reasons thus If you my hearers doe but lo●e them that loue you ye do but as these Publicans do but you must do more then such vngodly persons doe and therefore you must loue your very enemies Here first obserue that Christ doth not forbid one friend to loue another for then he should be cōt●ary to himselfe but here he condemnes carnall loue whereby one man loues another onely because he is loued againe which in effect is nothing else but for a man to loue himselfe in another And here to note the true maner of louing our neighbour this Rule must be remembred that all the commandements of the second Table must be practised in with the first cōmandement touching the loue of God thus father and mother must be honoured in God for God thus one man must loue another in God yea thogh he be his enemy because he is Gods creature beares his image as well as he himselfe doth yea he is by God commēded to our loue This must be the groūd though for other respects our loue may increase towards our brother What reward shall ye haue Here Christ would teach vs singular wisdome for the ordering of our liues namely that we giue our selues especially to the doing of such things as with God haue promise of reward what moued Moses to refuse to be called the sonne of P●ar●●● daughter to forsake the pleasures and riches of Egypt and to choose to suffer affliction with Gods people the word of God is plaine he had respect to the recompence of reward But this doctrine is not regarded else how should all places abound so much with idle persons and such as giue themselues wholly to gaming and company keeping to sports and delight now what reward can these looke for at Gods hands vnlesse it be the wages of sinne which is eternall death Let vs therefore beware of such a course and learne to abound in good works which are things good and profitable Doe not the Publicanes euen the same Our Sauiour Christs intent in this instance is to shewe that his Disciples and so all professors of the Gospel must goe beyond all other people in duties of loue indeede then whole life should be spent in the practise of this vertue Ephes. 5. 1. Wal●e that is lead the course of your life in loue and the state of the Church is to dwell in loue 1. Iohn 4. 16. The reason is great for Christians of all other receiue the greatest measure of loue from God through Iesus Christ and therefore they must abound in this grace first ●●wards God and then one towards another this is the badge of a Christian and the grace of our religion and therefore let vs shewe it forth Verse 47. And if yee be friendly to your brethren onely what singular thing doe ye doe not euen the Publicanes likewise Christs drif● in these words is further to inforce the dutie of loue to the same effect with the former verse The word translated be friendly betokens the friendship which was shewed in that countrie in salutations by embracing now saith Christ the very Publicanes will kindly embrace their friends therefore you must doe more We obserued before three branches of kind vsage to be shewed towards an enemie to wit to speake well of him to pray for him to do him good now here we may annexe a fourth
drought and yet the Prophet crouched vnto the earth and put his face betweene his knees no doubt humbling himselfe in praier to God for it as S. Iames saith Where we may see that praier is not contrarie to Gods decree but a subordinate meanes to bring the same to passe and therefore we must rather reason thus that because God hath decreed the euent of all things and hath appointed praier as a meanes to effect sundrie of his decrees therefore we must vse it Considering then that praier is necessarie notwithstanding all that can be saide against it we must learne with speciall ●euerence to giue our selues vnto this dutie both publikely in the assemblies of the Saints and priuately in our families beeing masters and gouernours for no family ought to want this morning and euening sacrifice of praier and thankesgiuing yea we must pray by our selues particularly in regard of our particular wants Indeede the most doe thus plead for themselues that they vse to pray often but the truth is that the cōmon practise of our people in prayer is nothing els but lippe-labour and a mocking of God for what be their praiers but the saying ouer the ten Commandements and the Creede which are no praiers yea their repetition of the Lords praier without vnderstāding or deuotion is no praier with God when they doe it onely of custome and rest in the worke done But here is required an other manner of praier then this And to incite vs vnto it let vs consider the worthie examples of Gods seruants herein Moses praied for the sauing of the Israelites fourtie daies and fourtie nights without meat or drinke Dauid praied seauen times a day and our Sauiour Christ spent whole nights in prayer Now these examples were written for our learning to teach vs to addict our selues to this holy dutie wherein our hearts speake vnto God The want hereof is the cause of the common Atheisme that is in the world of iniustice and crueltie in mens callings of swearing pride backbiting in mens liues for if men would often set themselues in the presence of God by vnfained inuocation the remembrance thereof would still be before their eyes and cause them to abstaine from all these iniquities for who beeing stained with such transgressions durst present himselfe before the maiestie of God who is a consuming fire against all sinne and wickednes hauing fierie eyes to see their sinnes and feete of brasse to bruise them in pieces that will not repent Secondly in this prohibition against hypocrisie in praier we may see that to conceiue a praier and to make profession of religion may for the outward worke as well be performed from pride of heart as from the grace of God carnall men may doe it in pride which Gods children doe by grace as we shewed in the former point of Almes giuing that therfore which Christ said of hearing the word take heed how you heare must be conceiued to be spoken to vs of praier and the profession of religion take heed how you praie and how you professe religion And indeed before we pray we ought to enter into our hearts and there to search out our corruptions diligently that we may be able to discerne in our selues between pride and Gods grace and so perceiue vpon what ground we pray that it be not from a damnable pride but from the sauing grace of Gods holy spirit Thirdly in this prohibition Christ condemnes this false ende of praier when men doe it to haue praise of men whereby we may see that it is a thing incident to the professors of the Gospel to doe the duties of religion for the approbation of men which notably bewraies the hypocrisie of our hearts which naturally haue more respect to men then to the Lord euen then when we haue to deale with God himselfe Thus did the Scribes and Pharisies and it is to be feared the same fault is common among vs for men are farre more forward and carefull to performe the publike duties of religion in the assemblies of the Church then priuate duties either in their families or by themselues Many will praie in the Church that neuer regard priuate praier at home Againe in performing publike duties men haue more care of the outward action then of truth and sinceritie in the heart and many studie more for fit words to delight mens eares then for good affections which God approoueth for what is the cause that many ancient professors when they come to die know not how to commend their soules to God Surely this especially that in the whole course of their profession they more respected men then God and therefore in the time of death when they must needs deale with God indeed they know not what to doe nor how to behaue themselues Lastly Christ here reprooues their behauiour in praier which was standing without all humbling of themselues either in soule or bodie This is a thing incident to many in our congregations who vse to shew no manner of reuerence or humilitie in the time of praier but either stand or fit as though they had no need to humble themselues or else intended onely that men should see them But we must know that howsoeuer the word of God prescribes no peculiar gesture in this action yet it is not a thing indifferent either to vse or not to vse some seemely gesture of humiliation in this worship of God but some must needes be vsed to expresse and further the humilitie of the heart which is chiefly required Isay 6. 2. the S●raphims standing before God couer their feete and faces with their wings in regard of Gods presence and the poore Publicane that praied with the Pharisie howsoeuer he praied standing yet he cast downe his countenance and smote himselfe on the breast to testifie his humiliation Yea Christ Iesus our Lord when hee bare the punishment of our sinnes in the garden fell downe vpon his face and praied thus also did Moses and Aaron Elijah Ezra Daniel humble themselues And it hath alwaies beene the practise of Gods seruants in praier by some conuenient gesture of the bodie to expresse the humilitie of their hearts which checketh the custome of our common people in praier who are so farre from bringing a broken heart to God which is the thing he chiefly requires that they know not what to aske and many there be that will not submit themselues to such outward gesture as might expresse their inward humiliation These things are farre vnseemely for Gods people and therefore let vs learne to humble our selues at Gods footestoole first in our very hearts and withall we must be carefull to testifie the same by some conuenient outward humiliation Verse 6. But when thou praiest enter into thy chamber and when thou hast shut thy doore pray to thy father which is in secret and thy father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Christ hauing
this petition for here we are taught to call to mind our sinnes euery day praying for the pardon of them Secondly here we see whereon we must relie and setle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it selfe namely on the meere mercie of God in Christ by faith in his blood for the pardon of our sinnes Looke to the prayers of all the Saints of God in Scriptures and we shall finde that they made this their rocke and ankor of stay in all distresse Dan. 9. 18 19. O Lord heare and behold not for our owne righteousnesse but for thy great tender mercies deferre not for thy owne sake oh my God This we must obserue to arme vs against the damnable doctrine of the Church of Rome for they will graunt that in his first conuersion a man must relie onely on Gods mercie in Christs blood but after a man is made the childe of God he may rest vpon his owne good merits so it be in modestie and sobrietie But this is the right way to hell flat against this petition for how can wee dreame of any merit when as we must euery day aske mercie and forgiuenesse for to aske mercie and to plead merite are contraries now by our daily sinnes we adde debt to debt and so must still plead mercie and not merit euen after we are conuerted and sanctified euer praising God that hath deliuered vs from the slauish bondage of that proud Synagogue Thirdly here we see what we must doe in respect of our daily sinnes whereunto we fall we must not lie in them but renue our-estate by true humiliation and repentance Also if thou be crossed in the things of this world the way of comfort and deliuerance is to be learned here for as thou doest daily aske bread so thou must aske forgiuenesse for thy sinnes and when they are pardoned thou hast title and interest to al Gods blessings Now this daily humiliation stands in three things 1. in examination of our selues for our debt vnto God by sinne 2. in confessing our debt vnto our creditour yeilding our selues into his hands 3. in humbling our selues vnto him crauing pardon and remission earnestly for Christs sake as for life and death herein the children of God are presidents vnto vs Psal. 32. 5 6. Dauid in great distresse found no release while he held his tongue but when he humbled himselfe and confessed against himselfe then he found mercie and ease whereupon he professeth that he will be a patterne to euery godly man for their behauiour in the time of distresse Fourthly here we haue a notable remedie against desparie wherewith the deuill assaults many a child of God when through infirmitie they fall into some grieuous sinne or commit the same sinne often which greatly wounds the conscience for here Christ bids vs aske forgiuenesse of our daily sinnes whatsoeuer they be or how often so euer cōmitted And no doubt he that bids vs forgiue our brethren that sinne against vs though it were seauen times in a day if they seeke it at our hands will much more forgiue vs. This must not embolden any to sinne presumptuously for the Lord hath saide He will not be mercifull vnto that man Deut. 29. 19. but if any fall through infirmitie hereon he hath to stay himselfe from despaire Fiftly hereby we see that no man possibly can fulfill the law for the Apostles themselues were commanded to aske pardon of sinne euery day whereby it is plaine they could neuer fulfill the law and therefore much lesse can any other Sixtly that which we pray for we must in all godly manner endeauour after And therefore as we pray for pardon of sinne euery day so must we daily vse the meanes wherein God giues assurance of remission to his children as heare the word receiue the Sacraments and pray vnto God publikely and priuately endeauouring to resist all temptations and to glorifie God by newe obedience for it is grosse hypocrisie to aske the pardon of sinne and still to liue in the practise of it Lastly here we see we must pray not only for the pardon of our own sinnes but of our brethrens also Forgiue vs whereby Christ would teach vs to be carefull of the saluation of our brethren and neighbours the good estate of their soules should be deare and pretious vnto vs and if this were so happie would it be with the Church of God but alas men are so farre from care of the saluation of their neighbours that men of the same family are carelesse of one an others soules masters regard not their seruants nor parents their children indeede they will prouide for their bodies and outward state but for their soules they haue no care wherein they bewray themselues to be cruell and mercilesse hauing more care of their hogges and bruit beasts then of their children and seruants for when their hogges haue all needefull prouision their children and seruants soules shall want instruction As we also forgiue our debters These words are here propounded as a condition of the former petition and they include a reason thereof as Luk. 11. 4. Forgiue vs our sinnes FOR euen we forgiue euery man that is indebted vnto vs. And this Christ addeth for waightie causes euen to crosse the fraud and hypocrisie of our corrupt hearts who would haue forgiuenesse of God and yet would not forgiue our brethren nor yet leaue off the practise of sinne our selues But this condition imports that we must exercise mercy towards our brethren and so breake off the course of our sinnes if we looke for mercie at Gods hands Now the words here vsed are comparatiue betokening a likelihood and similitude betweene Gods forgiuing and ours which must be rightly vnderstood because our forgiuenesse is mingled with much corruption through want of mercie and therefore we must not vnderstand it of the measure of forgiuenesse nor yet of the manner simply but especially of the very act of forgiuing for thereto sometimes must similitudes be restrained as Mat. 9. 29. According to your faith be it vnto you And the force of the reason stands in the circumstance thus If we who haue but a drop of mercie doe forgiue others then doe thou who art the fountaine of mercies forgiue vs but we forgiue others therfore do thou forgiue vs. Touching our forgiuing others three questions must bee scanned I. How can any man pardon a trespasse seeing God onely forgiueth sinnes Answ. In euery trespasse which one doth to his neighbour be two things the losse and dammage whereby man is hindered in bodie goods or name and an offence against God by a practise of iniustice against his law Now as a trespasse is a damage vnto man so may a man forgiue it but as it is a sinne against God in the transgression of the morall law so God onely pardons it as when a man hath his goods stollen that dammage done to him a man may
remit but the breach of the eight commaundement therein God onely can forgiue II. Quest. How farre is a man bound to forgiue others that trespasse against him Ans. There is a threefold forgiuenes of reuenge of punishment and of iudgement Forgiuenesse of reuenge is when a man is not desirous of reuenge from an inward grudge but forbeares to render like for like to those that wrong him this is principally here meant for we must alwaies forgiue our brethren in respect of reuenge for vēgeance is mine saith the Lord and I will repaie Rom. 12. 19. Forgiuenes of punishment is the remitting of that punishment which another mans wrong-doing iustly deserues this is not alwaies to be granted especially in the case of offence which may tend to the publike hurt for then were the state of magistracy vnlawful whose office it is to punish offences The forgiuenes of iudgement is the remitting of that censure which an euill deed doth iustly deserue neither is this here meant for beeing lawfully called therevnto wee may freely censure that which is euill done III. Quest. Whether must we forgiue those that wrong vs if they will not confesse their fault nor aske vs forgiuenesse Ans. Wee must forgiue them freely in respect of reuenge Obiect But it is said If hee repent forgiue him Luk. 17. 3. therefore vnlesse hee repent wee neede not to forgiue him Answ. That place is meant of Ecclesiasticall censures that those must proceede no further after the partie offending doth repent Debters Hereby is not meant such as we count debters in the ciuill state that is such as owe vs money graine c. but any one that doth vs iniurie or wrong for no mans estate is so lowe but in some degree God hath giuen one or moe of these 4. things honour life goods or good name and he that hinders his neighbour in any of these is a debter before God and so standeth till hee make recompence to the partie and repent towards God yea further wee must know that besides the endammaging of our neighbour in these things the very omission of preseruing and furthering our neighbours life honour goods good name makes vs also debters before God These words thus vnderstood must be conceiued as a reason drawn not from the cause or like example but from the signe and pledge of Gods forgiuenesse for God hath made a promise to forgiue vs if wee forgiue our brethren their trespasses Mark 11. 25. From whence mercifull men may gather assurance of pardon with God from that inclination to compassion and readinesse which they find in their own hearts to forgiue others that wrong them for Christ teacheth them to reason thus If we be those to whom thou hast promised pardon when they aske it then Lord pardon vs but we are such for wee feele our hearts inclined to mercie therefore Lord pardon vs. So that this reason serues to mooue vs to pray to God for pardon with confidence and assurance yea further they include a profession to God of new obedience in amendment of life for vnder one dutie of mercie towards our neighbour is comprehended the whole practise of repentance and the performance of our vow made in baptisme Uses I. Marke here that asking pardon of God and testimonie of repentance goe together he that receiues the one must expresse the other for where God giues pardon there also he giues grace to repent and mercie is not granted but on condition of repentance Act. 2. 37 38. when the Iewes that were pricked in conscience at Peters sermon asked what to doe to finde mercie Peter said Amend your liues c. And therefore when he perceiued want of repentance in Simon Magus he tels him Thou art yet in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquitie though he had formerly baptized him Whereby we see First with what affection we must come to God when we pray for the pardon of our sinnes namely with humble and contrite hearts hauing a true purpose not to sinne wittingly and willingly but to obey God in all his commandements and the want of this is the cause of that small comfort in praier which many finde in themselues for the promise of pardon is not giuen where the condition of repentance is not performed Secondly this shewes the grosse and fearefull errour of the blind world who sing this song while they liue in sinne to their owne hearts God is mercifull Christ is a Sauiour but thus trusting to Gods mercie they deceiue themselues for they trust to nothing for mercie is not due where repentance is wanting nay the Lord hath said Hee will not be mercifull to that man that shall blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shal haue peace though I walke after the stubbornnesse of mine own heart c. Let vs therefore see to this that we practise repentance when wee pray for pardon and looke to the purpose of our heart against sinne when we waite for mercy to our soules We may not seuer those things which God hath ioyned but looke how heartily wee desire mercie so earnestly must we hunger after grace to repent if we truely seeke both we shall haue both but if we let slip repentance in our selues wee shall come short of mercie with the Lord. II. The ioyning of this condition implying repentance to the petition and the dependance of it on the former teacheth vs euery day to renue our repentance and to humble our selues for our sinnes seeking for a new supply of grace that so our purpose not to sinne may bee more and more confirmed in our hearts which is the infallible signe of a new creature III. Here we see wherein the practise of true repentance standeth namely in exercising mercie loue peace reconciliation and forgiuenesse for though forgiuenesse bee onely named yet vnder it all other fruits of repentance are vnderstood Indeede to heare the word to receiue the Sacrament to preach and pray be excellent workes but yet the heart of man may more easily dissemble in them then in the duties of the second table the most infallible marke of true grace is the practise of the loue of God in workes of loue and mercie to our brethren Iam. 1. 27. Pure religion and vndefiled before God is to visit the fatherlesse c. Iam. 3. 17. The wisedome that is from aboue is first pure then peaceable gentle easie to be intreated full of mercie and good fruits And hence it is that loue is called the fulfilling of the law Rom. 13. 10. IV. Christ knitting our forgiuing our brother with Gods forgiuing vs doth here affoard vnto vs a notable signe of pardon of sinne namely a readie and willing minde to forgiue our brother offending vs our inclination to mercie in suppressing the desire of reuenge when we are wronged giues assurance to our conscience that wee shall finde mercie at Gods hands whereby it is plaine that the child of
God may know his owne estate towards God in regard of his mercie in Christ euen by descending into his owne heart and there finding the affection of mercie in forgiuing those that haue wronged him and this wee must labour for if we would know Gods mercie in Christ to belong vnto vs. V. Hereby we are admonished to beware in our selues of the common sinne of this age ingraffed in our nature to wit desire of reuenge spite and grudging vpon euery occasion for when we pray vnto God with such malitious hearts wee doe in effect desire the Lord to exercise his wrath and to reuenge his iustice on vs. And vndoubtedly many a man doth searefully curse himselfe in his owne prayers while hee is cruelly minded towards his brethren and God oftentimes saith Amen to such curses most deseruedly seeing men are so cruell to their owne soules to curse themselues and therefore we had need to looke to our hearts when we pray to God that we forgiue men if we would be forgiuen of God VI. Here note a general grosse abuse in this age most men wil seeke to be reconciled to their brethren with whom they are at variance whē they come to the Lords table but at all other times thy take their pleasure thinking they may well enough performe all other duties of religion though they retaine malice and enmitie towards their brethren But here we may obserue that we ought to be reconciled with our brethren whensoeuer we goe to God in prayer for else if we come in malice and enuie towards our brethren wee curse our selues and sinne against our owne soules In prayer we bring the sacrifice of our hearts the calues of our lips vnto God but before we offer it wee must reconcile our selues vnto our brethren as we heard before VII Here also we may see the grosse hypocrisie of our nature for so oft as we make this petition wee make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our conuersion from all sinne sith that true repentance for one sinne cannot stand with a purpose to liue in any other And yet behold though men say this prayer often yet stil they continue in their old sinnes as in blasphemie drunkennes whoredome oppression lying fraud c. as though it were nothing to dissemble with God but God is not mocked either amend thy wicked conuersation or leaue off to make this holy profession VIII In that Christ tieth our duty of forgiuing our brethren to so waightie a condition as is our forgiuenesse with God hereby he would acquaint vs with the horrible crueltie of our nature and pronenesse to reuenge we must therefore take notice of it and labour to see and to bewaile this corruption of our hearts and on the other side to hunger after loue mercie gentlenesse meekenesse and to endeauour to practise the same continually Lastly ioyne both parts of this petition together they shew vs a way how to keepe true peace of conscience for euer namely First wee must call vpon God for the pardon of our sinnes euery daie Secondly we must follow after peace with men in the practise of forgiuenesse reconciliation when offences growe for when we are at one with God and man we haue a blessed peace and hence will follow peace in our owne hearts which is that peace which the world cannot giue which while we retaine wee need not to feare any euill no not death it selfe for if God be with vs who can be against vs Verse 13. And lead vs not into temptation But deliuer vs from euill These words containe the sixt and last petition which is not needelesse as some may thinke but for waightie causes set after all the former though a man had the fruition of all the graces there desired to wit First to teach vs who they be that are most troubled with temptations namely the children of God that set themselues to seeke his glorie to aduance his kingdome to doe his will to depend vpon his prouidence and to relie vpon his mercie for the pardon of their sinnes these of all other are most subiect to temptation for beeing escaped out of the deuils snare he bestirres himselfe by all possible meanes to bring them in againe grieuous temptations doe alwaies accompany remission of sinne which is ioyned with endeauour to glorifie God as both the word of God and Christian experience doe fully witnesse which must be well obserued both to staie the minde of those that are deepely humbled through Satans temptations thinking that they are not the children of God because they are so troubled with sinne and Satan when as the case is cleane contrarie for spirituall temptations if they be resisted with godly sorrow are rather a signe of Gods loue because the deuils hatred is most toward them whom God loues best on whom God shewes mercie towards them will the deuill exercise his malice As also this discouereth the follie of those that sooth vp thēselues in this fond conceit that God surely loues them and they are deepe in his fauour because they are freed from temptations when as indeede they ought rather to suspect themselues to be vnder the power of Satan for when the strong man armed keepes the holde the things that he possesseth are in peace Luk. 11. 21. Whereby is signified that the wicked of the world beeing possessed of Satan are at peace in themselues in regard of temptations for what needes hee to trouble them which are alreadie at his command but let them beginne to repent to seeke mercie for their sinnes with endeauour to leaue them they shal soone find that Gods fauour is not enioied without the deuils malice Secondly this petition is ioyned with the former to teach vs that as we must be carefull to begge mercie and pardon for our sinnes already past so we must be watchfull to preuent sinnes to come he that saith Forgiue vs our trespasses must pray also not to be lead into temptation and therefore as we would not haue our consciences pricked with the sting of our old sinnes so we must be carefull wee fall not into them againe neither be ouercome with new temptations The meaning The words themselues containe one onely petition though some haue thought otherwise consisting of two parts the first is the petition it selfe And lead vs not into temptation the second is the exposition thereof But deliuer vs from euill for in effect it is thus much That we be not lead into temptation deliuer vs from euill For the first that we may rightly vnderstand it wee must search out two things First what a temptation is Secondly what it is to bee lead into temptation There be two sorts of temptations Good and Euill I call that a good and holy temptation when as God tempts a man and it is an action of God
bold-hardie that they will rai●e vpon and defie the deuill and command him to be gone But without a calling thereunto we may not so doe Indeede if by Gods prouidence we be called to liue in such places necessarily then this we may doe we must not reason with the deuill but betake our selues to God by humble and earnest praier and complaine of Satans vexation making God our shelter and defence both for soule and bodie els if we presume to meddle with him without a calling from God we may iustly be foyled and abused by him as the sonnes of Sceva were because we haue no promise from the Lord to be protected from him For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for euer Amen These words conteine the reason of the former sixe petitions touching which we must obserue two things in generall first that they are not a reason to mooue God whose wil is vnchāgeable but to perswade the child of God that prayeth thus that God will graunt his requests Secondly that this reason is not peculiar to the last petition but generally belonging to them all as halowed be thy name because thine is the kingdome power and glorie and so for the rest The meaning Kingdome This here imports three things in God first that he is al-sufficient of himselfe to doe all things whatsoeuer needing no helpe nor instrument beside his soueraigne will Gen. 17. 1. I am God al-sufficient Secondly that he hath a soueraigne right and title to all things in heauen and earth as a King hath to those things which belong to his territories and iurisdiction Thirdly that he hath soueraigne rule and authoritie ouer all things in heauen and earth gouerning them as he pleaseth and bringing them into an absolute subiection Further the kingdome of God is twofold The kingdome of his prouidence whereby he rules and gouernes all things in heauen and earth euen the deuill and all his angels and instruments and the kingdome of grace whereby he gouernes his Church by his word and spirit and both these are here to be vnderstood Thine The kingdome is here called Gods for two causes First to shew that God hath his kingdome of himselfe and from himselfe alone thus the kingdome of grace and of prouidence are both his Secondly to distinguish God from earthly kings for though they haue a kingdome power and glorie as Daniel tells Nebuchadnezzer yet they haue all these from God not of themselues but God hath them of himselfe alone and not from any other Now because our nature is blind in the things of God I will here propound some reasons to prooue that God hath such a soueraigne kingdome as also to shew the excellencie of it First this appeares by that excellent order which God hath set in all his workes by their creation for how fitly doe times and seasons as spring time and summer autumne and winter succeede one an other how sweetely doe the heauenly creatures the sunne moone and starres serue for the creatures here below as hearbs and plants how doe these serue for beasts and foules and all of them for the vse of man as this prooues against the Atheist that there is a God so it shewes the soueraigntie and most wise regiment of his kingdome When a man sees a great armie in good array and euery one keeping his place and standing constantly he will presently commend the wisdome and authoritie of the leader why then should we not acknowledge the power and souerangntie of the almightie in that constant station of the creatures in that sweete order which they obserue from the creation Secondly the terror accusation of a guiltie conscience doth argue euidently the absolute soueraigntie of Gods kingdom for when a man hath committed some grieuous sinne either against the law of nature or the written word of God though it be so secretly that no man know of it yet wil his conscience accuse and fright him which it would not doe vnles he were to answer for that fact to God the soueraigne Lord of al. Thirdly men of death that is such as by some notorious crime deserue death though through the ignorance or negligence of magistrats they be let to escape yet ordinarily they are ouertaken with some fearefull iudgement and one way or other meete with their desert which is a speciall worke of Gods soueraigne prouidence Fourthly the Gospel preached is as contrarie to mans corrupt nature as fire is to water and yet hath it in all ages wonne men vnto it to professe it and to loue it so as they haue been content for the Gospels sake to forsake house and lands wife children yea and life itselfe This no word of man could euer doe therfore it argues plainly that some supernatural power worketh with it which draws the heart of mā vnto it Here some may say that the Deuill hath a kingdome contrarie to Gods kingdome wherein he raigneth and therfore Gods kingdome is not absolute Ans. If we regard the malice of Satan or the practise of the wicked it may seeme Gods kingdome should not be absolute because they continually rebell against his reuealed will but consider the power of God which ouerruleth Satan and all his instruments disposing most wisely of all their works to his owne glorie the good of his Church and their own ruine and then we shall plainly see that God ruleth ouer all for howsoeuer the deuill and his angels and all other his instruments oppose themselues vnto the word of God which is the law of his kingdom of grace yet God willingly permits all such works and restraines them all at his pleasure so as that which comes to passe against Gods reuealed will is not contrarie to his absolute will Thine is the power By power is meant an abilitie in God whereby he can doe whatsoeuer he will and more then he will doe for the better conceiuing of it note these two things First that God is not onely powerfull but euen power it selfe in regard of his nature as he is goodnesse and wisdome c. Men and Angels are called powerfull as receiuing power from God but God onely is power it selfe because his nature is infinite in power as in all other properties Secondly that power and will in God are one and the same for our better conceiuing of them they may be distinguished but in themselues they differ not for Gods willing of a thing is the effecting and doing of it It is not so in vs for we will many things which we cannot doe but whatsoeuer God willeth that he doth and that which he cannot doe he cannot will The Scripture saith God cannot lie nor denie himselfe nor die c. now as he cannot doe these things so neither can he wil them for they are no workes of power but of weakenesse and frailtie and therefore is God omnipotent because he can neither doe nor will the same Thine is
thou diddest not annoint but she hath annointed my feete with ointment for as Dauid ●aith God giues oyle to make the face to shine Ps. 104. 15. But yet these words are not to be taken properly neither do they bind vs to annoint our heads when we fast as may appeare by these reasons 1. If the words should be taken properly then should Christ condemne al the fasts of holy men in the old testament who vsed neither ointments nor washings but abstained from all such bodily delights for that time 2. Christ should command contraries namely the vse of such things in fasting as were more proper to feasting wherin mē vse to be ioyfull cheerefull 3. He should inioyne that to some countries which were not in their power or at least could not be vsed of thē without excessiue charges as in this or other cold coūtries where sweet oiles are rare costly The true meaning therfore must be gathered out of the circūstances of the place now Christs intent is here as in the former points of Alms-deeds praier to prescribe vnto men the approuing of their hearts vnto God in fasting by auoyding ostentation therein desire of the praise of men therfore he names such behauiour as doth no way intimate a fast vnto others meaning thereby that we should conceale our priuate fasts frō men as if he should say when thou fastest priuately so carrie thy selfe that it may not appeare to men thou fastest and in all thy fasts seeke onely to approue thy heart vnto God The words thus explaned containe 2. parts a commandement and a reason therof The commandement is two-fold First that we should cōceale our fasts frō men intimated by wash thy face annoint thy head secondly that we should seeke to approoue our selues not to men but to God in our relgious fasts in these words That thou seeme not to men to fast but to thy father which is in secret In this first branch of this commandement we may learne that the priuate worship of God must be performed priuately vnto God concealed frō men for that which is here said of priuate fasting which is a meanes to further our praiers is true of praier it selfe of euery part of Gods priuate worship for there is the same reason of all as may thus appeare First in al actions of Gods worship there must be obserued an holy comelines decencie which is then done when they be performed with fi● conuenient circūstances that is publike actions of worship with publike circumstances and priuate actiōs with priuate circūstances as publike praier must be made of a publike person in a publike place with an audible loud voice priuate praier must be made in a priuate place by priuate persons with a still and lowe voice other seemely priuate gestures Secondly when priuate worship is performed with publike circumstāces there are many occasions giuen to ambitiō pride hypocrisie but being done priuately these occasions are preuented the heart is more free to seeke the approbation of God only This doctrine serues to direct our practise in Gods worship as first that we must not reserue our priuate preparatiō to Gods publike worship til we come to the publike congregation but prepare our selues at home priuately in our chāber or closet for though to pray euery where be lawfull yet because conuenient circumstances must be obserued in all our actions of worship therefore priuate praier in a publike place is not so seemely nor conuenient for publike circumstances doe not beseem priuate worship Quest. What if a man wanted time or had forgot to prepare himselfe before hand Ans. Slight pretences cannot iustifie any disorder in Gods worship yet if a man will needs there performe his priuate preparation he must conceale all outward signes of praier only lift vp his heart vnto God for a good dutie may become offensiue by inconuenient circumstances Secondly this shews how Christian families must order their priuate exercises of religion namely so priuately for voice gesture that they may conceale the same from others beside their familie present and so must particular persons praying alone obserue such circumstances as may conceale their praiers from others for all occasions of ostentation must be auoided that so the heart may apply it selfe wholly towards the Lord. That thou seeme not to men to fast This is the secōd branch of Christs commandement wherein wee learne a second dutie in a religious fast namely that therein we seeke to approoue our selues our action only to God for which end we must obserue 3. things 1. With our fasting wee must ioyne a conuersion of our heart frō sin vnto God Ioel 2. 12. Turne you vnto me with all your heart with fasting there God hath ioyned them together they may not be seuered Now that our hearts may turne to God in fasting we must haue speciall regard to our behauiour both before in and after our fast whether publike or priuate Before the fast we must prepare our selues thereto in an holy manner by a serious consideration of the causes and occasions of our fast a worthy example hereof we haue in Iehoshaphat who considering a fearefull iudgement to be at hand in the approching of his enemies was sore afraid therupon set his heart to seeke the Lord proclaimed a fast In fasting wee must labour to haue more tender affections deeper humiliation then ordinarie 1. Sam. 7. 6. The Israelites humbling themselues in fasting for their idolatrie in Mispah drew water and powred it out before the Lord which words import their deep humiliation whether it were by abundant weeping as some expound the place or by powring out water indeed to signifie that they powred out their soules before the Lord. After the fast we must labour for reformation and amendment of life that our behauiour both towards God and man may be euery way better then before A notable example hereof wee haue in the Iewes who hauing renued their couenant with God vpon their humiliation did not onely write it and seale vnto it but bound themselues thereto by curse oath 2. That we approoue our selues our action to God in fasting we must be sure we propound vnto our selues therein the right ends of a religious fast which we haue before propoūded for if we faile therein and propound other ends vnto our selues we corrupt the whol action vnto our selues 3. With our fasting we must ioyne the duties of the second table in the works of iustice mercie loue to our brethrē for without these our loue to God is not sincere nay God reiects that bodily humiliation which is seuered from the exercise of mercie cōpassion as we may see at large Isay 58. 3 4 c. I shewed before that we had iust cause to humble our selues which when we doe wee must bee carefull
say there is a God and this God is to be worshipped to be loued and feared and that we must loue our neighbour as our selues and liue wel they seeke no further and yet if a man were brought vp in the wildernesse he might see all this by the light of nature the wicked eie seeth thus much but we must not content our selues herewith for if there be no more the life is full of darkenesse still and the soule may goe to vtter darkenesse with all this We therefore must remember to get the single eie else we are no schollers in the schoole of Christ. Indeed some plead that Preachers can say no more in effect but this Loue God aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe but these men know not what they say blessing themselues in their ignorance they must know that grace must be put to nature and sanctifie it and spirituall knowledge ioyned with naturall or else we remaine with the wicked eie If wee haue no more but a generall confused knowledge in moral points that serues not to saue vs but to make vs without excuse at the last day Againe another common fault worthy reproofe is this that men content themselues with naturall reformation they will graunt that God is to bee worshipped and loued that we must liue wel deale iustly and loue our neighbours but the blinde eie seeth thus much The meere ciuill man will goe thus farre and yet his life is nothing but darkenesse all this reformation is but naturall We therefore must labour for renued hearts by the spirit of God and reformed liue● according to the Gospel for howsoeuer a ciuill conuersation may commend vs vnto men yet it will not saue vs in the day of the Lord. Thirdly is this euill eie in euery one by nature then beware we bee not wise in our selues and from our selues in matters of saluation herein the word of God must be our wisedome Deut. 12. 8. 11. Ye shall not doe euery man that which seemeth good in his owne ●ies but that which I command you Farre be it therefore from vs to appoint to our selues how we will worship God or how we will be saued and yet such is our blinde presumption that wee will bee our owne masters in these things The Turke hath his religion the Iewe his and the Papist his all swaruing from the truth of God and yet euery one of these look to be saued in their religion each one of these haue a different manner of worshipping God and all swaruing from the true worship and yet they all perswade themselues that God is well pleased with their seruice And thus it goes with naturall men among v● though otherwise sufficiently wise for worldly things they resolue vpon their own course for the saluation of their soules let the preacher say what he will some thinke if they repent at their ende and then commend their soules to God it is sufficient others looke to be saued by their wel-doing and others by their faith as they call it but in truth by their owne good meaning and intent to liue well for what faith haue they that knowe not Gods word and promises Thus by their owne wisedome wil men be saued and hereby the deuil destroyes many a soule but let God bee wise and euery man a foole and let vs submit our selues in the things of God wholly to be ruled and guided by his written word lest Iewishly and Popishly we going about to stablish our own conceits in the matters of saluation doe plunge our soules into the pit of destruction Fourthly is the eie of the minde naturally corrupt then must wee labour for a better eie that is the eie of faith by which we relie on Gods mercie for our saluation and on his prouidence for all needfull things in life and death This eie makes supply to that which is wanting to naturall knowledge hereby we discerne rightly of God and of our selues this enables vs to see afarre off yea hereby we see things inuisible for it is the euidence of things which are not seene Heb. 11. 1. hereby Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad Ioh. 8. 58. and all the Patriarkes saw the promise of God afarre off Heb. 11. 13. This will inable vs to walke in their steps towards the heauenly ci●ie and therefore let vs get this faith that so becomming children of the promise we may be counted for the seed And thus much for the wicked eie The third kind of eie is the blinde eie which is set out with the fruits thereof in these words Wherefore if the light that is in thee bee darkenesse how great is that darkenesse For the better discerning of the state of man with this blinde eie we must see what is meant by light and also by darkenesse By light is meant that knowledge of God of iustice of good and euill which is in the minde by nature now though this cannot be quite put out for the most wicked wretch and the veriest Atheist that liues hath some conscience remaining which is a worke of this light yet it may be so buried and couered that no light shall appeare nor any vse be made of it and then is it said to be darkenes which is the state of those that are giuen vp to a reprobate sense as when a man denies there is a God or that the Scriptures be the word of God or such like in these men naturall light is become darkenesse And the cause of this change in them is their corrupt will and rebellious affections which ouer-ruling naturall knowledge and conscience cause men to giue themselues to actuall sinnes whereby at length they come to commit sinne greedily and without remorse yea euen against conscience and the light of nature and so burie them both in such sort that they haue no more vse of them then if they were quite put out Now where the light of nature is thus put out the fruite of it is most palpable darknesse How great is that darkenesse that is there is nothing in that mans life but brutish confusion in hellish actions of pride couetousnesse enuie blasphemie and vnnaturall vncleannesse as Rom. 1. 27 29 c. The Use. Considering the light of nature may be thus put out wee must hereby be admonished First to enter into a serious consideration of our owne vilenesse for naturally wee haue in vs euen the best of vs all such rebellious lust and damnable desires as vnlesse they be restrained or renewed by grace will darken and as good as put out the light of nature This should make vs vile in our owne eies that nourish such corruptions and esteeme so of sinne which wil put out that light which yet Adams fall left in vs. Secondly hereby we are admonished to haue speciall care to mortifie our corrupt desires and our vnruly affections that else wil exstinguish in vs the light of nature Before the fall the
there be in thee the flesh the spirit the one haling thee one way the other another yet while thou striuest against the flesh desiring and endeauouring to be wholly subiect to the spirit though thou faile often in action yet in Christ bee thy sinnes pardoned and God accepts in thee the will for the deed Endeauour therefore to acquaint thy selfe more and more with the will of thy heauenly master and seeke to please him in all things and labour to mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit so shalt thou know God to be thy onely master and in due time perceiue thy freedom from the bondage of the flesh Vers. 25. Therefore I say vnto you be not carefull for your life what yee shall eate or what yee shall drinke nor yet for your bodie what ye shall put on Is not the life more worth then meat and the body then ra●ment Our Sauiour Christ hauing forbidden the practises of couetousnes and preuented such obiectiōs as the corrupt heart of man might frame to excuse it selfe therein doth here strike at the very root of couetousnes and seekes to remooue the cause thereof to wit distrustfull inordinate care for the things of this life though they be things necessarie as meat drinke and cloathing and in this argument he proceeds to the end of this chapter Now this verse depends vpon the former as a conclusion inferred vpon all that he had said before cōcerning couetousnes from the 19. v. to this effect Seing they that seek earthly treasures neglecting the heauenly doe want the single ●i● of spirituall wisdome to discerne of the true treasure also are themselues seruants vnto Mammon therefore I say vnto you my Disciples be not carefull no not for thing needful immoderately and in a distrustful manner And here againe he meets with another pretence of a couetous minde wherewith it pleads for the seruice of Mammon to wit that the things they seeke for are things necessary without which they cannot liue Hereto Christ answers Yea but I say you must not seek no not for things needful to your life immoderately and distrustfully The Exposition I say vnto you that is I that am your master vpon whom you depend for all heauenly instruction directiō in all things needfull both for your soules bodies I say vnto you by this he would prepare them to attention reuerent obseruatiō of his cōmandement following as being a matter of great importance whereon depends the life of all obedience in relying on Gods prouidence in regard whereof wee also must with all good conscience marke the same Bee not carefull for your life c. Least wee should mistake Christs meaning wee must knowe that there bee two kindes of care a godly moderate care and a distrustfull carking care The moderate honest care is inioyned vs by Gods commandement Prov. 6. 6. Wisdome sends the sluggard to learne diligence and prouidence for things needfull of the litle Ant or pismire and Paul saith fathers must lay vp for their children 2. Cor. 12. 14. And he that prouideth not for his owne especially for them of his family is worse then an infidell 1. Tim. 5. 8. So that there is a lawfull care euen for the things of this life Now the practise of it stands in two things First in the diligent walking in a mans lawfull calling dealing vprightly iustly therein with euery one minding onely to get things honest and necessarie in the sight of all men Secondly in leauing the successe and issue of all our labour and endeauour to God for that belongs to him we must vse the meanes soberly and honestly leaue the blessing to God This godly care Moses shewed notably in leading the children of Israel out of Egypt for what God commanded him to doe that he did he goes which way God sends him although he met with many crosses and vseth the meanes that God calls him vnto leauing the issue to God as appeares notably at the red sea when they were at a wonderful strait hauing the sea before them the Egyptians behind thē and woods and mountaines on each side yet beeing commanded to strike the waters with the rod of God he shewes notable trust in Gods prouidence Feare not saith he stand still and behold the saluation of our God And when Abraham at Gods commandement went to sacrifice his sonne Isaac askes him my father where is the sacrifice Abrahā answers with words of faith My sonne God will prouide And thus David went to fight against the Philistims to Keilah at Gods commandement though his owne men discouraged him from it whereby it is plaine he relied on God for the issue of the battell Now this godly moderate care is not here forbidden which hath respect to obedience in the dutie and for the successe depends vpon Gods prouidence The distrustfull care is that whereby men trouble themselues about the issue of their labours and when they haue done the worke doe not rest therwith but vex thēselues about the successe not relying on Gods prouidence for the blessing but onely on the meanes This distrustfull care for our better discerning of it hath these effects First it oppresseth the heart making it exceeding hea●●e and pensiue for feare of want where this feare is there is this distrustful care for this argues a mā dares not trust God but would haue the successe of his labour out of Gods hand in his owne Secondly it allureth draweth men to vse vnlawfull meanes to got worldly things as lying fraud iniustice in false waights measures c. Thirdly it makes men wearie of Gods worship i● distracts their minds in praier and hearing the word and as Christ saith it ch●akes the word that it brings forth no fruit for when the minde is wholly set vpon the world there is no respect to the matters of God And this is that care which is here forbidden euen a distrustful carking care which as the greeke word signifies diuides and distracts the mind by troubling and perplexing it about the issue and successe of our endeauours The Use. That which Christ here forbids his Disciples is the common sin of our age time not in a few persons but in many for though this distrustfull care be the disease of the heart yet it shewes it selfe by actions in the life For first what is the cause of so little fruite of the word preached as may euery where bee discerned is not among many other this worldly care one speciall cause This wee may see in the parable Luke 8. 14. for the seed● that light among thornes which choaked it is the word preached to a heart possessed with worldly cares let these men obserue themselues and they shall finde that they can neither pray nor heare the word nor meditate therein without manifold distractions from these worldly thoughts Secondly there is no trade
or calling without his conuaiances of craft and deceipt though it doe not appeare so much in some callings as in others and hard it is to finde them that make conscience hereof when gaine and profit may come thereby which comes from this distrustfull care in mens hearts whereby they doubt of Gods blessing answerable to their desire in the vse of lawfull meanes onely But sith Christ forewarnes vs of this sinne we must beware it take not place in our hearts and for the auoyding of it we must follow the counsell of the holy Ghost in Scripture Psal. 37. 5. Commit thy way vnto the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe which is oft commended vnto vs Psal. 55. 22. Cast thy burden vpon the Lord he shall nourish thee Pro. 16. 3. Rowle thy worke vpon the Lord 1. Pet. 5. 7. Cast all your care on him for ●e careth for you In all which places we haue a most worthy instruction to this effect not exempting men from doing the duties of their calling but teaching thē that when they haue done their endeauour in the diligent sober vpright vse of meanes then they must leaue the euent and issue for good successe to the blessing of God Thus the trades-man whose liuing stands by buying and selling must be carefull and diligent about his businesse without deceit or lying and in so doing referre the successe of his bargaine to the blessing of God and so must the husbandman plow and sowe leaue earing and haruest to Gods good prouidence This is the Apostles coūfell Phil. 4. 6. Be nothing carefull that is after a distrustf●ll or distracting sort as the word signifies but in all things let your requests bee made knowne to God with giuing of thankes where it is to be marked that distrustfull care is opposed to praier and thankesgiuing as an hinderer thereof and therefore our care must onely be to vse the lawfull meanes moderately for any blessing and then to pray to God for good successe and blessing relying wholly thereon that when it comes wee may giue him thankes But some will say it is hard for flesh and blood not to be carefull of successe how then should we be able to leaue it wholly to God Answer We must lay to our hearts the blessed promises of God made to them that depend vpon his mercy and goodnesse and labour to liue by faith thereon Psal. 127. 2. It is in vaine for man to rise early and to lie downe late and to eate the bread of sorrow meaning while hee trusts to himselfe or in the meanes but God will surely giue rest to his beloued which serue him and trust in him in the vse of meanes Psal. 34. 10. The Lyons doe lacke and suffer hunger though euery poore beast of the field bee a prey to his teeth but they which seeke the Lord shall lacke nothing that is good If wee had no more promises in the Bible yet these were sufficient to cause vs to rest vpon his prouidence in the sober vse of lawfull meanes Againe this must bee considered how wee shall relie vpon his mercie for the sauing of our soules in the time of temptation and howre of death that dare not trust in his prouidence for the things of this life Quest. But what if all things goe crosse with men will some say may I not then sticke more to the meanes Ans. Nay rather cleaue the more to God for if the blessing were in the means men would not be so often crossed God knoweth what is good for thee better then thou thy selfe and therfore rest contented with his prouidence though he crosse thine expectation for outward blessings want is many times better for Gods children then plentie and affliction then peace and prosperity as Dauid found Psal. 119. 67 71. therfore God laies it vpon them Did not good Iosias fall before Pharaoh Necho which he should not haue done but that God would chasten him for not regarding the words of Pharaoh Necho which were of the mouth of God perswading him not to fight against him and also that he might be taken away from seeing the euill to come and was not Hezekiahs heart puffed vp in time of peace in so much that wrath came vpon him and vpon Iudah and Ierusalem Therefore learne to depend vpon Gods prouidence in the moderate vse of lawfull meanes whether he giue thee blessings or take them away blesse his name for it is good for thee it should be so And thus much for the maine commaundement Now further marke in the wordes how Christ distinguisheth betweene life and the bodie and applieth meate and drinke to life and raiment to the bodie and yet we know that apparel serues to preserue life also especially in cold countries But Christ doth thus distinguish them so iust cause for though in cold countries apparell serues to preserue life as well as meate and drinke doe yet the first and most generall vse of apparell is another matter to wit to hide the shame of nakednesse which the sinne of Adam brought vpon it Gen. 3. 7. 21. for before their fall the man and the woman were both naked were not ashamed Gen. 2. 21. Here then we are to learne that the proper and maine end of apparell is for the bodie to couer the shame of nakednesse that sinne hath brought vpon vs which is so great that if necessitie would permit both hands and face should also be couered The consideration whereof as it shews their immodestie and want of shame that laie open the nakednesse of their breasts or other parts of their bodie more then need requires so it teacheth vs neuer to bee proud of our apparell but rather humbled and abashed when we put it on or looke vpon it for it is the couer of our shame and so an ensigne of our sinne the thiefe hath as good cause to be proud of the bolts on his heeles or of his brād in the hand or hole in the care as wee of our apparell for as these are badges of misdemeanour so is apparel a badge of our sinne And on the other side that we may haue comfort in this ordinance of God for our bodies wee must labour therein to expresse the graces of God in our hearts as modestie sobrietie temperance frugalitie and such like Is not the life more worth then meat and the bodie then raiment Our Sauiour Christ hauing giuen commandement against the immoderate care for things needfull to naturall life least the same should passe away without effect doth here begin to enforce the same with diuers arguments the first whereof is in these words taken frō the creation wherin God giues life and the bodie which are better then food raiment from whence Christ reasons for his prouidence thus The life is better thē food the body then raiment but God by creation giues life bodie therefore will he
condition of man in this life whereby in Christ he enioyes the fauour of God and hath right to euerlasting life This very estate of man is in Scripture called the kingdome of God and the kingdome of heauen because whosoeuer is in this estate hath sure right and interest to Gods glorie in heauen and God here rules in him as a king ruleth in his kingdome The kingdome of God is onely one and yet it hath two degrees the first in grace and the second in glorie The kingdome of grace is that spirituall regiment which God exerciseth in man or in his Church by his word and spirit in this life and it is the first step or entrance into Gods heauenly kingdome The kingdome of glorie is the full fruition of immediate fellowship with the blessed Trinitie by meanes of Iesus Christ in the highest heauens after this life Now both these degrees are here vnderstood by the kingdom of God The second thing to be thus sought for is his righteousnesse that is the righteousnesse of God and not as some translate it the righteousnesse thereof that is of Gods kingdome for the wordes will not beare that translation And the seeking of Gods righteousnesse is here added for speciall cause to let vs see by way of explication when we haue obtained for our selues the kingdome of God for Gods kingdome standes in righteousnesse and then doth God rule in man when hee makes him partaker of his righteousnesse Now by righteousnesse of God wee must here vnderstand the obedience which Christ our mediatour performed for vs in fulfilling the law and in his sufferings This is the very ground-worke and foundation of Gods kingdome among men hereof Paul speaketh oft Rom. 1. 17. For by it that is the Gospel the righteousnesse of God is reuealed from faith to faith and Rom. 3. 21 22. Now is the righteousnesse of God made manifest c. and 2. Cor. 5. 21. God made him to be sinne for vs which knew no sinne that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him And it is so called for diuers respects First because it is freely giuen vs of God to be our righteousnesse in his sight and man cannot attaine vnto it of himselfe by any worke of nature or of grace without the gift of God Secondly because God will accept this obedience of Christ at the day of iudgement for his elect as satisfying his iustice and the rigour of the law which no righteousnes of man can doe Thirdly because it is the righteousnesse of that person who is God for Christ is both God and man and though he obeyed the law and suffered death as he was man yet that obedience was performed by that person who was also God Adams righteousnesse by creation was in himselfe but he lost it by his fall but our righteousnes is in Christ out of vs and therefore he is said to be made righteousnesse vnto vs of God But how should we get this righteousnesse seeing it is in Christ Answ. It is made ours by imputation for when wee truely repent of our sinnes and beleeue in Christ God accepts the obedience of Christ for vs as if wee had perfectly satisfied his iustice and done his will in our own persons Now with this imputed righteousnesse wee must vnderstand and ioyne the fruite hereof in vs which is sanctification or renued holinesse whereby we are enabled to walke before God in new obedience bringing forth the fruits of righteousnesse for these two are neuer seuered whom God iustifies by the righteousnesse of Christ them he sanctifies by his spirit The full meaning then of Christs commandement here is this First seeke c. that is aboue all things in this world let your principall care bee to procure vnto your selues the kingdome of God that is that state of grace whereby you may enioy Gods fauour in Christ being iustified by his obedience and sanctified by his spirit whereby you walke in good workes The vse First by this commandement of Christ to seeke Gods kingdome we may gather that by nature we are all out of Gods kingdome destitute of the grace and fauour of God and indeed vnder the power of Satan and in his kingdome of darkenesse This the holy Ghost shews in calling Satan the god of this world 2. Cor. 4. 4. and the prince of this world Ioh. 12. 31. because all the world naturally are vassals vnto him yeelding him homage in the workes of sinne and therefore is he called the prince that ruleth in the aire that workes in the children of disobedience And this naturall miserie is iustly come vpon vs for seeing we refuse to yeeld subiection vnto God in his kingdome are we not worthily left to the power of Satan to bee made his slaues and drudges Now that men liue naturally out of Christs kingdome may appeare by the course of their liues for howsoeuer most men can bee contented to beare the badge of Christ in outward profession hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments yet in heart and life they doe homage to the deuill for they pull their neckes from the yoake of Christ and runne with greedinesse to the workes of sinne they account a strict endeauour after morall obedience to be curiositie and precisenesse and when they be dehorted from vnlawfull gaine and vaine pleasures they wil not heare not consent whereby in effect they say to God with wicked men in Iob Depart from vs we desire not the knowledge of thy waies and with the wicked citizens wee will not haue this man to raigne ouer vs. Secondly here Christ would teach vs that our principall care aboue all other things must be to win for our selues the kingdome of God I shall not need to prooue this to be our dutie seeing it is the onely thing which Christ here intends to commend vnto vs and that by expresse command But some will aske how we shall win and get for our selues the kingdome of God Answ. We must doe three thinges for the obtaining of it First we must come to the place where this kingdome is to be found Secondly we must then enter into it Thirdly we must waite for the full possession of it For the first This kingdome is not to be found in all places but there onely where God doth manifest and reueale the same to the sonnes of men and that is in the assemblies of the Saints where the publike ministerie of reconciliation is dispensed for there God holds out his scepter and offers himselfe to bee a Lord and king vnto men and therefore Dauid calls this ministerie of the word the rod or scepter of Gods power Psal. 110. 2. and in the parable of the sower Matth. 13. 19. the Gospel preached is called the word of the kingdome because hereby God reueales this kingdome vnto men and translates them into it Colos. 1. 13. And for the same cause in the parable of the
person of another then in conscience and by Gods word he ought to doe Example of this wee haue in Satan for when the Lord commended Iob for his fidelitie Satan tels the Lord that Iob indeede serued the Lord but it was onely for his owne profit for saith hee withdrawe thou thin● hand from him and thou shalt see whether hee will not curse thee to thy face This then wee see is a deuillish practise and ought to bee farre from euery one of vs. Wee must remember what an auntient Diuine hath taught heretofore that there are three things exempted from the iudgement and censure of men the Scriptures the Counsell of God and the condemnation of any mans person Rash censure of mens speeches and actions is giuen many waies I. When things are well done to carpe and cauill at them without any iust cause Thus the profession of Religion at this day is accounted of many to be but counterfeit holines and the due obedience to the morall Law is nicknamed and tearmed precisenesse and the professours thereof called Puritans and Precisians for this cause onely that they make conscience of walking in obedience to Gods law II. When actions or speeches indifferent are taken in the worser part Thus was Dauids kindnesse ill accepted of Hanun king of Ammon when Dauid sent his seruants to comfort him after the death of his father for his Nobles told him and perswaded him that Dauid sent not vnto him because he honoured his father though Dauid vndoubtedly sent with an honest and vpright heart but as it were craftily to search out the citie and to spie it out and to ouerthrow it Now hereupon Dauids seruants were badly intreated and shamefully sent away whence grew the warre that ensued betweene them III. When vpon light occasion and vncerten reports we suspect and surmise euill of our neighbour suspicions indeede are sometime good beeing conceiued on a good ground and retained for a good ende as to beware of the partie and of his euill but when they are conceiued vpon light causes and for some sinister respect as the common practise is vpon no good ground to conceiue most badly this is rash iudgement IV. When we see any want in our neighbours speach or behauiour to make it worse then it was meant or then indeede it is V. When we spread abroad and publish the wants of men to defame them which might better be concealed and in conscience and charitie ought so to be VI. When we speake nothing but the truth of another but yet withall doe insinuate thereby some euill of the partie into the hearts of the hearers This practise is as pestilent and daungerous as any of the former Thus Doeg told Saul of the fact of Ahimelec vnto Dauid how he gaue him victualls and the sword of Goliah which was true but withall he did therein insinuate that Dauid and Ahimelec intended conspiracie against Saul And this telling of the truth in that sort cost the liues of fourescore and fiue persons that weare the liuen Ephod as we may read 1. Sam. 21. 7. compared with the 22. chap. v. 9. and 18. VII When in hearing the word preached and sinnes reprooued in the congregation some hearers misapply the same as for example the minister reprooues the sinne of swearing of drunkennesse or any such sinne then some one gultie hereof doth not onely surmise but also breake forth intò this speach Now the preacher meanes me he speakes this of me he censures my facts and speaches herevpon followes spite and malice against the person of the minister and also rash censuring and condemning of his ministerie They also sinne in this kinde that apply the reproofes of sinne to the person of others as when they say now such a one is touched there is a good lesson for such a one if he would learne it yea others goe further and say now the preacher meanes such a man now he speakes against such a man but this also is rash iudgement in hearing of the word they misconceiue of the purpose of the minister for his maner is not when he standeth in the roome of God to rippe vp the secrets and liues of some particular hearers but to deliuer the will of God concerning such and such sinnes vnto all it is the power of the word not the mind of the preacher that causeth it to touch thy conscience and therefore euery one ought to apply the word vnto his own heart and not to lay it vpon others or els take it to be spoken of himselfe for his disgrace for it is to misapply the word and to iudge amisse of the preacher and this is a common sinne which is the cause why many men reape so little profit by the word preached as they doe The VIII practise of rash iudgement is when in townes and cities some persons are wrongfully reputed and taken for witches this is as common a sinne throughout the world as any of the former one man will say such a one is a witch because he in conscience is so perswaded and yet the ground of this perswasion is nothing but his bare conceit Another man saith such a one is a witch because a wise man or a wise woman hath so reported of him or her and yet this testimonie is but the testimonie of the deuill who is a lyar and the father thereof if he tell truth it is with purpose to deceiue Againe another is iudged to be a witch because comming to a mans house to borrow something and beeing denied thereof he tooks it vnkindly and thereupon gaue these or such like threatning words it had beene as good you had lent it me or I will meete with you and hereupon some one in the family fell sicke or some cattell died and other things did miscarie It is no question but witches be too rife among vs and ought to be sought out and seuerely punished and there be lawfull waies of conuincing a witch but vpon these bare presumptions to iudge any one to be a witch is an vnchristian practise of rash iudgement for why may not the hand of God befall thee in visiting some one in thy family or in the death of thy cattell as well as the annoyance of the witch after some hard speeches of another A witch therefore must first be lawfully conuinced and then iudged to be a witch and not before This thing especially Iurers ought to looke vnto els if they haue but the ordinarie discretion of common people to iudge one for a witch vpon these presumptions they may easily defile their hands with innocent blood Thus much for the sinne of rash Iudgement and the practises thereof which are condemned and forbidden in this place Now because it is so common a sinne in all places and with most men counted no sinne for the common talke in all meetings is of other men and selfeloue makes the heart glad to heare other mens faults ripped vp yea this sinne will
to see whether they had done according to the cry that was come vp to the Lord. Gen. 18. 21. whereby the Lord would teach vs that before he enter into iudgement with any man or any people he first takes good consideration of the fact which causeth his punishment Secondly we must haue authoritie and warrant by calling to giue iudgement or els some thing which is answerable thereto though the iudgement be priuate as to giue admonition or iust dispraise yet without a calling we must not doe it he that giueth iudgement must be able truly to say the Lord hath called me thus to doe The Magistrate the Minister the master and euery superiour hath authoritie to iudge those that are vnder him and for priuate men in priuate iudgement though they want this authority by calling yet if they haue that which is answerable hereto that is the affection of Christian loue so as they can say with Paul the loue of God constraineth me then they may iudge Thirdly we must alwaies haue a good ende of our iudgement as well as a good beginning that is the reformation and amendment not the defaming of our brother And these three concurring in all hard speeches they cease to be rash and vniust censures Iohn Baptist calls the Pharisies and Sadduces a generation of vipers Matth. 3. 7. our Sauiour Christ calls them hypocrites and painted tombes and Herod a foxe the Prophet Isai calls the Princes and people of Iuda and Israel Princes and people of Sodom and the Apostle Paul calls the Galatians fooles Gal. 3. 1. and the Cretians lyars euill beasts slow bellies Tit. 1. 12 13. All which are hard speeches but yet no slanders because they had all of them a calling so to doe and likewise did this on good ground and for a good ende Thus much for the commandement Now follow two reasons to induce vs to make conscience of rash iudgement The former is laide downe in these words That ye be not iudged And it may be framed thus If ye iudge ye shall be iudged of men againe with rash iudgement But ye cannot abide to be iudged of rashly and therefore iudge not The second part is vnderstood but yet necessarily collected The conclusion is the commandement it selfe Iudge not This reason doth affoard vnto vs two instructions I. It giueth vs a tast and view of our owne naturall pride and selfeloue for when we heare God dishonoured by sweating or our neighbours name defamed by slandering we are not onely not grieued but oftentimes are the cause thereof and take great delight therein especially in hearing other mens faults ripped vp to their disgrace but yet we can in no sort brooke or suffer our owne good name to be called into question if our selues be ill spoken of we are presently filled with malice and enuie and cannot be at rest till we be requited or reuenged nay though we be in a good manner admonished of our fault euen in loue and after a friendly sort yet we can very hardly brooke it though the partie admonishing make knowne vnto vs that he doth it only for our good without all purpose of disgrace vnto our persons II. Instruct. Here also our Sauiour Christ affoardeth vnto vs a notable way whereby we may come to the knowledge of our own sinnes and of the hainousnes thereof When we behold sinne in our selues we hardly iudge it to be sinne we must therefore looke vpon our owne sinnes in the person of others and learne to iudge of it in our selues as we iudge of it in others When we consider of rash iudgement in others against our selues we count it a vile and grieuous sinne yea odious and intolerable and in like sort ought we to thinke of rash iudgement in our selues towards others and so for euery other sinne in our selues we ought to iudge of it as we doe when we see it in the person of others against vs otherwise if we looke onely to our selues we shall sooth vp our selues in sinne making great sinnes little sinnes and small sinnes none at all vers 2. For with what iudgement ye iudge ye shall be iudged and with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you againe This verse containes a double confirmation of the former reason drawne from the euent The first in these words For with what iudgement ye iudge ye shall be iudged as if Christ had said If ye iudge men rashly then men againe by the appointment of God in his wisdome and prouidence shall accordingly giue rash iudgement vpon you but if ye iudge men righteously then men againe by Gods appointment and prouidence shall iudge well of you for so I take the words to be meant of mens iudgement by Gods appointment in his prouidence and not of Gods iudgement immediatly Now in this proofe first we may obserue one true and maine cause of that personal defamation which is common in the world and it is to be found in the person himselfe that is defamed he hath rashly and vniustly censured others for which God in his prouidence doth most iustly cause others to defame him againe so as men themselues doe most of all wound their owne good names and by their bad cariage toward others iustly cause their owne disgrace In regard whereof we must learne first to set a carefull watch before our mouthes to keepe the doore of our lips gouerning our tongues by the word of God for when we censure others rashly we doe procure iudgement vnto our selues Secondly to be patient vnder the rash censures and slaunders of others For we must thinke that we our selues haue heretofore done the like to others and therefore it is iustice with God to reward vs in the same kinde wherewith we haue wronged others This is Salomons counsell Giue not thine heart to all the words that men speake least thou doe heare thy seruant cursing thee for oft ●imes also thine heart knoweth that thou likewise hast cursed others Secondly in this proofe wee may also obserue the right way how to get and keepe a good name to wit by iudging others with Christian iudgement carying a charitable opinion of euery one speaking the the best of them in all companies so farforth as we can with good conscience and neuer iudging hardly of any till we be indeed lawfully called thereunto hauing a good ground for our action and doing it for a good end If thou wouldst liue long saith the Prophet and see good dayes refraine thy tongue from euill and thy lips that they speake no guile that is speake not euill of any man though thou know ill by him till thou be lawfully called thereto Thirdly from the consideration of this prouidence of God whereby he ordereth and disposeth that defamers of others shal be rewarded in their kind and that by others we may gather that God knowes euery vnaduised thought of the heart and euery rash censure
which we speake or thinke of others els how could this be true that rash Iudgers shal be so rewarded in their kind seeing men may cōceale their thoughts and many times their words from the eyes of men To this purpose Salomon admonisheth not to curse the king no not in thy thought nor the rich in thy bedchamber for the foule of heauen shal carie the voice and that which hath winges shall declare the matter And this must teach vs to make conscience of all our speaches and thoughts that concerne others yea then when we our selues are iudged When Dauid was rayled vpon by wicked Shemei he staied himself with the consideration of this that God knew it and had appointed Shemei to curse Dauid 2. Sam. 16. 10. Lastly here it may be doubted howe God can be cleared from the guilt of rash iudgement seeing in his prouidence he causeth it by his decree Answ. Though he decree it yet is he free from the fault thereof for first he decrees it not to be the cause thereof himselfe but to permit it among men leauing them to be the authors thereof secondly he decrees to dispose of it well and to order it as a iust punishment of the rash iudgement of others and so in no sort is the cause of the euill in rash iudgement howsoeuer he dispose hereof for the iust punishment of offenders in this kinde The second confirmation of the first reason is contained in this parable which tendeth to the same ende with the former sentence And with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you againe That is the Lord hath ordained that men shall be rewarded in their kind like for like Hence we may obserue this rule of Gods iustice in the punishment of sinne namely to reward men in their kind punishing them in the same things wherein they offend David sinned by committing adulterie with Bathsheba the wife of Vriah and God by way of punishment raised vp euil against him out of his owne house in the same kind for his own son Absolon deflowred his fathers cōeubines in the sight of all Israel 2. Sam. 12. 9. 11. 16. 22. And experience shewes that blood will haue blood for though the murtherer escape the hands of the ciuill Iudge yet the terror vengeāce of God doth ordinarily pursue him to destruction A notable exāple hereof we haue in the holy league as it is called but indeed the bloodie league wherein the enemies of Gods grace and truth did confederate themselues to roote out true religion and the professors thereof from off the earth but the Lord hath rewarded them in their kind and turned their owne swords against thēselues causing them to spoile one an other according to the prophesie of Isai Woe to thee that spoilest and was not spoiled and doest wickedly and they did not wickedly against thee when thou shalt cease to spoile thou shalt be spoiled Isa. 33. 1. This rewarding iustice of God well obserued doth discouer vnto vs yea and denounce a fearefull woe not onely against all those that giue out rash iudgement of others but against all vsurers and oppressors who met● out hard measure vnto others euen cruelty without mercie but so shall they be serued againe Gods heauie hand hath heretofore laine sore vpon this land for many yeares in dearth and sca●fitie which also in some sort hath bin made more grieuous vpon the poore by hard hearted rich men who are like to great fishes that deuoure the lesser for they grind the faces of the poore and plucke off their skinnes from thē and their flesh from the bones by their wicked couetousnes yea doubtlesse their cruelty costs many a mans life Some in higher place by inclosing and racking of rents others of meaner sort by ingrossing and withholding the commodities of the land frō the common good till a time of dearth come wherein as the Prophet saith they may make the Epha small and the Shekel great that is sell little for much lessening the measure and enhauncing the price And indeed such a time of dearth is the worldlings day wherein they doe inrich themselues by the spoile of the poore but they must know that a feareful woe belongs vnto thē for the like mercilesse measure shall be measured to them againe and when they cease to spoile then shall they be spoiled for when the hand of God is heauie vpon the poore then no doubt is vengeance preparing for hard hearted rich men who increase the same The Lord forbiddeth to trouble the widdow or fatherles child Exod. 22. 22 2● c. for if thou vexe and trouble such and so he call and cry vnto me I will surely heare his crie then shall my wrath be kindled and I will kill you with the sword and your wiues shall be widows and your children fatherles This is Gods word and it must stand The Lord himselfe foretold that towards the latter day iniquitie should abound and charitie should waxe cold are not these the times whereof Christ spake for what power hath the Gospel to withdraw mens hearts from iniquitie and when was there euer lesse charitie then is now well these are forerunners of greater iudgements and therefore in the feare of God let vs make conscience of this and all other sinnes euen in consideration of this that the Lord will pay vs home in that kinde wherein we offend v. 3. And why seest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye and perceiuest not the beame that is in thine owne eye 4. Or how saiest thou to thy brother Suffer me to cast out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beame is in thine owne eye These two verses containe a second reason to inforce the former cōmandement against rash iudgement The meaning of the words is this Why seest thou that is vpon what ground forwhat cause and with what conscience seest thou And so in the 4. v. How saiest thou that is with what face with what honestie and conscience saiest thou So much these interrogations how and why import Seest sight here is not a light or sudden beholding of the mote but a seeing with attention a serious and considerate obseruation thereof A mote the word vsed in the originall may as well be translated a straw or a peece of a straw as a mote as it hath beene in former times for it will beare ei●her translation yet the word beame seemes rather to haue reference to a straw then to a mote but which way soeuer it be taken it signifies small and little sinnes as sinnes of ignorance and infirmitie such as the best Christians doe commit cannot be free from in this life Again it signifies supposed sinnes such as are not indeed sinnes before God but onely in his opinion that giues rash iudgement And perceiuest not this perceiuing is properly an action of the minde standing in consideration and thinking which follows after seeing Thus the word
to condemne but this is a preposterous course swaruing farre from this direction of our Sauiour Christ. And then shalt thou see cleerly to cast out the mote out of thy brothers eie This is the fruite of the former remedie by curing himselfe first a man comes to see cleerely what his neighbours fault is and how it is to bee cured and amended Where wee may note that out of the amendment of our selues followes a spirituall gift of iudgement and wisdom whereby wee see aright how to reforme our brothers fault Hence I gather this generall doctrine that Right wisedome and vnderstanding followes the reformation of our owne hearts and liues The beginning of wisedome is the feare of the Lord Psal. 111. 10. that is true wisdome and good vnderstanding comes from a reuerent awe of God in regard of his word and commandement so Psal. 119. 100. I was made wiser th●n the ancient by keeping thy cōmandement first Dauid reformed himself and then hee became exceeding wise As it is said of Manasses that when hee repented and humbled himselfe he knew that the Lord was God and after Nabuchadnezzer was humbled his vnderstanding was restored to him Daniel 4. 31. for God teacheth the humble his waies Psalm 25. 9. The proud man is hee that builds vp his sinnes with posts and beames and such a one the Lord will not teach but him that pluckes downe these posts by amendment of his life will the Lord instruct in the way that he should walke Christ saith to his Disciples Ye are my friends if ye keepe my commandements and to his friends will he make knowne all things needfull that he hath heard of his father Ioh. 15. 14 15. by all which it is plaine that right iudgement followes true reformation of life Vses I. Hereby we see how to come to vnderstand the holy Scriptures read or heard namely by the amendement of our owne liues First reforme thine owne heart and life and then shalt thou haue true iudgement giuen vnto thee to be able in reading or hearing to vnderstand Gods word at least so much thereof as shall be needfull for thee and doubtlesse the cause why most men profit so little in the Scriptures though they heare and read them much is for that they looke not to the reformation of their owne liues and consciences according to the word Prou. 1. 23. Turne you at my correction saith Wisdome and I will powre out my minde vnto you and make you vnderstand my words The student therefore that must fit himselfe to get true vnderstanding in Gods word for the edification of Gods Church must remember this direction and labour first to plucke out the beame out of his owne eie and then shall hee see cleerely to reade with iudgement the word of God and to discerne the true way of euerlasting life for the good of Gods people but if thou come in thy sinnes thou readest without profit II. Use. Againe wouldest thou know thy selfe to be the childe of God remember then to purge thy heart and life from all sinne for thence floweth true vnderstanding and thereupon God will certifie thy conscience of thine election and reconciliation but if thou suffer thy selfe to lie in sinne thou maiest long waite for this certificate and yet neuer haue it III. Use. Many men there be that will bee of no religion because there are so many and diuers opinions about matters of religion in the world and therefore till some generall Councell haue determined of the truth of religion they will liue as they doe but these men must know that they take a wrong course If they would come to know the truth of religion they must first reforme their liues but while they liue in sinne they can neuer see what is good what is badde what is truth what is falshood in religion Ioh. 7. 17. If any man will doe my fathers will saith Christ hee shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speake of my selfe where he plainely giues vs to vnderstand that true iudgement of religion comes from obedience vnto God This is the right way to reforme an Atheist first to bring him to obedience And in a word whosoeuer thou art that wouldest in thy calling whatsoeuer it be please God and doe good to others first purge thine owne heart and life from sinne and then shalt thou see clearely wherein thou failest and how thou art to amend thy fault and afterward to doe good to others A II. generall Point Further in this remedie our Sauiour Christ opposeth Brotherly correction vnto rash iudgement and withall prescribes brotherly correction as a dutie to be practised among Gods people Touching this point foure things are to bee considered I. who is to correct II. Who is to be corrected III. What is to bee corrected and IV. In what manner For the first the partie that must correct is a brother that is any member of Gods Church so it is said Then shalt thou see cleerely to put out the mote out of thy brothers eie Leuit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart but shalt plainely rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer him to sinne and Math. 18. 15. If thy brother sinne against thee that is doe thee any wrong or else sinne against God and thou be priuie to it for that sinne may bee said to be against a man whereto he is priue though the wrong bee not against him because there is an offence giuen vnto him Then tell him his fault betweene him and thee alone that is correct and admonish him priuately Againe euery man is bound in conscience to saue his brothers soule which oft-times may bee done by brotherly correction and for want thereof many times the soule may perish and therefore it is euery mans dutie to correct his brother yet with this clause and caution that iust occasion be offered and time and place obserued for there be certaine particular exceptions in which a man is freed from this dutie and all because there is no iust occasion of correction offered as first if he bee not certaine of the fault committed for all lawfull correction is of faults certainely and truely knowne Secondly if the partie offending doe repent for the ende of correction is to bring the offender to amendment Thirdly if there bee no hope of his amendment Prou. 9. 8. Repro●●e not a skorner that is such a one as mookes thee for thy labour Fourthly If it may in better manner and to better purpose be performed by others which for place and abilitie may and wil more fitly performe it But yet out of these cases if iust occasion bee offered euery one is to performe brotherly correction vnto his brother Here I note one particular instruction that not onely the Minister of Gods word is our Pastor but euen euery brother after a son is a pastor in regard that hee
deale with a broken ioynt wil handle the same very tenderly and so must they be dealt with in reproofe that sinne of humane fiailtie Example of this mildenes in reproofe we haue in Nathan who reprooued Dauid in a parable and so brought him to condemne himselfe the Apostle Paul reproouing the Co●inthians in the beginning of the first Epistle doth include himselfe Apollos in the same reproofe as though they had bin guiltie of the same crime 1. Cor. 4. 6. And giuing direction to Timothy how to carrie himselfe in the Church of God though he allow him to vse rebuke reproofe 2. Tim. 4. 2. yet he bids him Exhort an Elder therein giuing good directiō for admonition if the partie be an Elder though reproofe be not vnlawfull yet it is not so fit as exhortation and the like mildenesse must be vsed toward all those that sinne of humane frailty But if the offence proceede from wilfulnes and obstinacie then the iudgements of God must be denounced against them to driue them to repentance 4. Euery one that is to correct another must consider himselfe and his owne estate knowing that of himselfe he may fall into the like offence So Paul bids them that are to seeke the restoring of such as are fallen to consider thēselues Galat. 6. 1. 5. Brotherly correction must bee deliuered with Doctrine and instruction 2. Tim. 4. 1 2. I charge thee before God to reprooue exhort and rebuke with all long suffering and doctrine He that will admonish must first himselfe be resolued that the thing done is a sinne then he must propound it to the partie as a sinne out of Gods word and deliuer the reproofe not in his owne name but in the name of God so as hereby the partie may know himselfe to haue offended and also say that he is reprooued of God himselfe rather then of man This ought all superiours to practise in correcting and admonishing their inferiours they must not goe thereto in rage but in long suffering nor rudely but with doctrine that the partie offending may see his fault And thus much for this dutie of brotherly correction Vers. 6. Giue not that which is holy vnto dogs neither cast yee your pearls before swine least they tread them vnder their feet and turning againe all to rent you Hitherto the Euangelist hath set down the seuerall heads of Christs Sermon more at large but from this verse to the ende of the Chapter he handleth briefly the points which follow This verse dependeth not vpon the former but herein our Sauiour Christ laies down a new point of instruction directing his Disciples and in them all ministers vnto that Christian discretion which ought to be obserued in the dispensation of the word of God And his direction is here propounded in a prohibition of giuing holy things to dogs or casting pearles before swine which is enforced by a double reason least they tread vpon you c. Now for the better vnderstanding hereof first I will speake of the words because they are hard and difficult and then come to the doctrines In the words foure things are to be sought out 1. What is meant by holy things 2. What is meant by pearles 3. What is meant by dogs and 4. what is meant by swine For the first by that which is holy we must vnderstand first and properly the word of God written in the bookes of the old and new testament in his right and holy vse that is read dispensed and preached and consequently by holy things are meant the Sacraments and Christian admonition Gods word is called an holy thing for sundry causes but principally for these two first because it is holy in it selfe and secondly in effect operation It is holy in it selfe because it is set apart by God to be in the Church in stead of his owne liuely voyce vnto his people for the reucaling and determining of all things to be beleeued and done in his Church In the old testament God himselfe spake by a liuely voice vnto the Patriarkes and after the giuing of the Law hee gaue answer to the high Priest at the Mercie-seat yet we are not inferiour to them though we want that liuely voice for we haue the written word in stead thereof which is answerable euery way thereunto for looke what the written word saith is as much as if the Lord from heauen should speake by a liuely voice and so consequently it is to vs in stead of the Arke of God a pledge of his presence And thus it is holy in it selfe Secondly Gods word is holy in regard of operation for it is the instrument of the spirit set apart by God himselfe to be the meanes whereby he sanctifies and reformes the hearts and liues of his children And consequently the Sacraments are holy things for they are the word made visible so likewise is Christian admonition grounded ●pon Gods word From this doctrine sundrie dutie 〈◊〉 to be learned First we are oft commanded in Gods word to drawe neer● v●●o God to seeke him to feare him and to walke before him in his pr●●●nce how shall wee doe these things seeing God is inuisible and in glory and maiestie is in heauen Surely we must consider the word of God which is that holy thing set apart by God to be in stead of his owne liuely voyce therefore we neede not seeke for him that is inuisible but wee must haue recourse vnto the word labour to haue it present with vs in our hearts in our liues and consciences Enoch walked before God not onely in regard of his infinite maiestie which though it bee inuisible is euery where present but principally in respect of his word setting that before him wheresoeuer he was When we are commanded to feare God wee must know that that is done not onely when wee stand in awe of his glorious maiestie but principally when wee feare to offend God commanding vs in his word The Apostle saith that the holy Ghost dwels in our hearts which must not be thought to be meant of that infinite substance of the holy spirit but of the dwelling of the word which is made effectuall by the holy spirit for saith euer hath relation to the word beeing beleeued it dwels in the heart makes the spirit which workes by the same word present also In which regard Paul saith Now I liue not but Christ liues in me which he expoundeth after saying I liue now by faith in the son of God because the word of Christ was present with him and the grace of saith that liues by that word Secondly seeing the word of God is of this holinesse we must learne to vse the same publikely or priuately with all reuerence carefully sanctifying our selues thereunto When the people came to receiue the Law in Mount Sina they were sanctified three daies before the same preparation for substance ought we to
make before we heare the word of God First we must wash our hands in innocencie and then compasse the Altar of the Lord the word and sacraments are holy in thēselues but not so to vs out of their holy vse and therefore if we would reape profit to our selues by them we must prepare our hearts therevnto Thirdly whereas the word is vnto vs the voice of God the means of sanctification we may learne that in the congregatiō of Gods people ordinarily the pure word of God alone ought to be heard without the mixture of the words of men be they neuer so holy for it is not said of the words of any man that they are that holy thing The Lord himselfe alone had the appointment of the making of the holy oyle which was to anoint the Kings and Priests vnder the law neither might any man adde any thing thereto though it were neuer so pure and good nor make any oyle like vnto it so likewise the trumpets that serued for the Tabernacle to assemble the people the Lord himselfe alone had the appointment of them and none might vse any other though it were made of most pure gold Had the Lord this care ouer his Sanctuarie vnder the law to take the appointment of these things to himselfe alone and shall we thinke that the trumpet of his holy word which now by his appointment soundeth in the congregation of the Saints may admit a mixture with the words of men humane or diuine be they neuer so holy The ancient Church was farre from this mixture and therfore forbade the publike reading of the Apocrypha which yet are more excellent bookes then the writings of men published since the Apostles But it is saide that they onely finde fault with this kinde of preaching which cannot attaine vnto it I answer it is no point of the greatest learning to vse the sayings of Fathers and Poets in preaching and they which vse it not refraine therefrom not because they cannot doe it but because they dare not mingle the sayings of men with the word of God which is that holy thing seruing in stead of Gods owne glorious voice in all matters that concerne our faith and obedience and beeing the onely sufficient instrument of our sanctification and therefore it were to be wished that in the congregations of the Saints the pure word of God might sound alone vnto Gods people that as they are begotten alone of this immortall seede so they might be fedde alone with this sincere milke II. Point What is meant by pearles Ans. The wholesome doctrines and instructions of Gods word contained partly in commandements and partly in sweete and heauenly promises so Matt. 13. 46. the Gospel preached is compared to a pretious pearle And further we are to note that these wholesome instructions are called your pearles Christ speaking to his Disciples and other hearers now they are so called in two respects First in regard of the Apostles and other Ministers their successors because they are the Lords stewards to dispense the word and the doctrine thereof to Gods people Secondly in regard of all true beleeuers and seruants of God that haue care to know and to obey the word of God for euery beleeuer hath a speciall right vnto Gods word aboue other men to which purpose the Lord saith Bind vp the testimonie seale vp the law among my disciples Isa. 8. 16. that is commend cōmit my word vnto my disciples there giuing a special right and interest vnto them in the word of saluation● for they haue the true iudgment and meaning thereof they keepe it in their hearts expresse the power of it in their liues they haue the vse and benefit thereof in euery estate in this world and vnto their eternall saluation in heauen From this that the doctrines of Gods word are our pearles first wee are taught to place all our riches in the word of God for that is our Iewell and our principall treasure of this Salomon saith Her merchandise are better then merchandise of siluer and the gaine thereof better then gold In the valuing of this pearle Dauids practise is notable who made the testimonies of God his heritage and the very ioy of his heart Psalm 119. 111. and esteemed them aboue gold yea aboue most si●e gold vers 127. Secondly we must hereby learne to content our selues in all casualties and calamities of this lise with this pearle of the word of God for though we loose friends health goods or good name yet this pearle of good doctrines and sweete promises is not lost if that were taken away with the losse of outward commodities then there were some cause of discomfort but seeing this iewell remaines with vs in all estates therefore herewith we must stay and comfort our selues as Dauid did counting Gods promises his comfort in trouble Psal. 119. 50. his songs in his pilgrimage v. 54. Thirdly this must teach vs to vse the doctrines and promises of Gods worde as pearles wee must looke them vp in our hearts and haue them in faithfull keeping in our memories A man that hath an earthly iewell that is of any worth will bee very carefull to looke it vp in the surest chest he hath how much more care ought wee to haue of these true pearles of heauenly instructions As the Holy Ghost speakes of Deacon● they must bee such as keepe the mysterie of faith in good conscience so must euery one of vs bee carefull keepers of this heauenly pearle This was Maries practise Luke 2. 51. Shee powdered the sayings of Christ in her heart and Dauid hidde the word of God in his heart that he might not sinne against the Lord. Psal. 119. 11. IU Instruct. The doctrines and promises in Gods word are the pearles of the Apostles and ministers therefore they aboue others in all ages and times ought to haue speciall care by all good meanes to preserue the puritie of doctrine in the Church of God This is Pauls charge to Timothie keepe that which is committed vnto thee that is that whole some doctrine which thou hast learned of me this neerely concerneth ministers at this day that as by the good meanes of others they haue receiued true doctrine purified from the dregges of Popery so they should preserue keepe the same frō all ●int of corruption to their posteritie The third and fourth things to be considered are touching dogs and swine where these three points are to bee handled I. What are here properly meant by dogs and swine II. Who must giue iudgement of men to be dogs and swine and III. Where they are to be found For the first By dogs and swine wee must vnderstand the enemies of Gods word yet not all enemies for so euery sinner should be a dog a swine but onely such as are malitious obstinate enemies manifestly conuicted of their enmitie to Gods word doctrine of whose
one for killing himselfe which is the most cruell and dangerous murther that can be and the author also excuseth his insufficiencie in penning of it which beseemeth not him that is guided by Gods spirit In the song of the 3. children it is said the flame ascended 49. cubits aboue the furnace which seemes incredible especially that still they should then cast in fuell or approach so neere as to put any man into it Likewise in the storie of Susanna it is said vers 45. that Daniel was a young childe when he executed iudgement vpon the two false witnesses which was in the ende of Astiages raigne immediately before the raigne of Cyrus and verse 64. Daniel by this meanes is said to growe famous which cannot possibly accord with the true storie of Daniel neither for his age nor for his fame and reputation And the like may be said of the rest whereby it is plaine these bookes cannot be canonicall Scripture And yet they are not to be reiected but reuerently esteemed of as the books of worthy men Here some may say If Moses and the Prophets comprehend all Scripture that hath diuine testimonie then the bookes of the new Testament shall not be Scripture because they were not written by the Prophets Answ. They were either penned by the Apostles or by other Apostolike men and allowed by the Apostles as Saint Lukes Gospel and the Acts were written by Luke a Physition and Saint Marke that writ that Gospel was not an Apostle yet those bookes were approoued by Apostolike authoritie which is all one as if they had beene written by the Apostles and the Apostles in speaking and writing were of equall authoritie with the Prophets hauing the infallible assistance of the holy Ghost as well as the Prophets for Acts 15. 28. they say It seemeth good to the holy Ghost and to vs and Ephes. 2. 20. the Church is said to be built on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles where the Apostles are made equall with the Prophets II. Point This reason also doth giue vs to vnderstand what was the first Scripture that euer was penned namely the bookes of Moses before which there was no word of God written which was for the space of 2400. yeares It may be asked what was then the booke of the warres of the Lord mentioned Numb 21. and the booke of the Righteous spoken of by Ioshuah Chapt. 10. 13. Answer These were the writings of men humane stories like to our bookes of Chronicles Yet it is said Iude 14. Enoch the seauenth from Adam prophesied Answ. That prophecie was not penned but went from hand to hand ●y word of mouth and if it were penned yet it was not done by Enoch himselfe but by some Iew in his name long after Moses for it cannot bee prooued that Enoch euer penned any part of Scripture Some will aske mee how the people of God did for that space of two thousand and foure hundred yeares before the Law was written what guide had they for to knowe the will of God Answer They had the word of God immediately taught them by word of mouth from God himselfe as we may see in the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob and they to whom it was deliuered did also conuaie the same from man to man by tradition And because it may seeme strange how religion could for so long time bee preserued pure without writing wee are to knowe that before the lawe was written the Church of God from the beginning was the most part in one familie onely as in Adams Enochs Noes Abrahams c. whereby it was a more easie thing to preserue Gods word among them Againe those men that first receiued the word of God without writing were of long continuance liuing neere to a thousand yeares space whereby they might better see the word preserued and continued without writing by tradition Besides when religion was corrupted God himselfe restored the puritie thereof reuealing his will againe and renewing his couenant vnto his seruants as hee did to Abraham and the rest of the Patriarkes Here then behold how the heads of families preserued Gods word and true religion in the beginning of the world namely by teaching it to their posteritie and from them we may learne what is the dutie and ought to bee the practise of euery gouernour of a family at this day they must not thinke themselues discharged for that the word is written in the Church and euery man may read and heare the same but they must see the same bee taught vnto their children and to the rest of their familie that so it may bee preserued among them So God commandeth his people to teach their children the seruice of the Passeouer Exod. 12. 26. 27. and to whet the words of the Law vpon their children Deut. 6. 7. III. Point In this reason our Sauiour Christ takes for granted that the writings of Moses and of the Prophets are of infallible certaintie for it is all one as if he had said this must needes be euery mans dutie to doe as he would be done to for this is the Law and the Prophets and so answerable to them all other bookes of Scripture containe doctrine of infallible truth and certaintie Here some may aske how we should be perswaded hereof in our consciences Answ. By these Arguments which are all drawne from Scripture it selfe for as euery Science and Arte hath his grounds and principles so hath the holy Scripture which is not the Church but Scripture it selfe 1. from the causes 2. from the effects 3. from the properties 4. from signes 5. from the contraries 6. from the testimonie that is giuen hereof The 1. Argument Among the causes the first and principall is the Author thereof which is God himselfe to him doe Scriptures referre themselues also shew how God is their Author In Scripture we read that God spake to Adam to Enoch Noe Abraham and the rest and of Christ the new Testament giues most liuely testimony making him the Author subiect thereof Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if Scripture had not beene Gods word it would long agone haue vanished Again the cause conuersant must bee considered the deuill by wicked men and heretickes hath laboured to take away Gods word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserued in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all angels that is by the power of God Thirdly the pen-men the instrumentall causes they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue and pietie farre exceeded other writers and if they had beene meere polititians their writings would haue shewed it for the pen-men of holy Scripture haue there in faithfully registred their own faults which no politike person would haue done Againe consider the matter of holy Scripture which stands in
bookes Diuine Ecclesiasticall and Humane Diuine bookes are the bookes of God penned by the Prophets and Apostles and they are all the word of God for whether we regard the matter of them or the manner of reuealing them they are all from God the Prophets and Apostles were onely Gods hands and instruments in penning them the holy Ghost gaue the matter the order and the very words from whence it must needs follow that they are of al-sufficient authoritie of themselues Ecclesiasticall bookes are bookes of diuine matters penned by learned men in the Church and they are either generall bookes or particular Generall bookes Ecclesiasticall I call those which were either made or confirmed by the whole Church as the Creedes of the Apostles the Nicene and of Athanasius and the foure first generall Councels and these haue Catholike allowance yet not absolute authoritie but depending on Scripture Particular bookes Ecclesiasticall I call the Catechismes and Confessions of particular Churches made by them or by particular members thereof which haue not authoritie of themselues but from the Scripture or from generall consent Now both these kindes of bookes may bee called Gods word so farre forth as they agree with Scripture and yet they are also the word of men because they were penned by men and haue both order and style from men and in this regard that they were partly mens workes they are not authenticall of themselues but depend vpon the authoritie of Scripture Humane bookes are bookes penned by men either of the Church or out of the Church concerning humane things as bookes of naturall Philosophie of Policie and other Artes and these are not the bookes of God but of men alone hauing both matter and style from men many of them containe excellent truthes in their kind yet gathered onely from experience and common reason but they haue not in them that truth which is truth according to godlinesse seruing to builde vp and to binde the conscience vnlesse it bee in one case to stoppe the mouthes of Atheists and Epicures and to conuince their consciences And thus by conference of all bookes wee see that Scripture alone is authenticall in it selfe and no bookes beside Uses 1. This teacheth vs that ministers in the dispensing of Gods word should content themselues with the testimony of Scripture alone for the end of the ministerie is to worke and confirme faith and to settle and build vp the conscience in the truth of religion and matters concerning saluation which no other word can doe saue onely the word of God in Scripture that hath sufficient authoritie in it selfe from which conscience cannot appeale and for which cause our Sauiour Christ the true Prophet of the Church contents himselfe with the testimony of the Law and Prophets alone and after him his Apostles did the like See this notably confirmed by Paul who in his preaching to the Iewes professeth himselfe to haue said none other thing then that whic● the Prophets and Moses said should come Other writings haue the●● good vse in their time and place but not in the publike ministerie for authoritie and testimonie from Scripture is authenticall This the Scripture saith therefore it is so but authority from Councels and Father ●is sophistrie as Austin saith so therefore it is so this is no good reason for it implies that all that Austin said is true which indeede is false ●ee beeing as all men are subiect to errour 2. Use. This also sheweth that wee cannot beleeue vnwritten traditions thoug● they be called Apostolicall The Church of Rome intend to decei●e vs when they would beare vs in hand that halfe of those things t●●t are to be beleeued are not written in Scripture but receiued by tr●dition but these traditions we cannot beleeue by a diuine faith hovsoeuer by a common humane faith we may for they are contained in t●e bookes of Councels and Fathers which were worthie men yet subiect to errour 3. Vse Th●● also sheweth that we must submit our selues with feare and trembling to the word of God for it hath absolute authoritie to iudge vs and to con●ince our conselence in all matters of faith manners that pertaine to saluation IV. Point Wh●●eas Christ alleadgeth Moses and the Prophets to confirme his minist●●ie it may be demanded whether there be any difference for authoriti● between Christ and the Prophets for he that alleadgeth another m●●s authoritie seemes to be inferiour thereto I answer if we cōpare C●rist the Prophets we must distinguish between their doctrine th●ir persons The doctrine of Moses of the Prophets is equall to th● doctrine of Christ 2. waies First in certaintie of truth for it is as vnd●ubtedly true as if Christ himselfe had taught the same Secondly in e●ficacie authoritie for the power of binding conscience for the doct●in of the Prophets binds conscience as fully truly as if Christ himse●fe had spoken it And yet the person of Christ is aboue the person of Moses of all the Prophets for he is the Sonne of God both God ●an they were men he is the author of truth they only the instrumēts pen-mē therof frō hence it coms that Christs doctrine doth more bind vs to obedience then the doctrine of the Prophets because the person deliuering it is of more authority excellēcy and for this cause Christ alleadges Moses and the Prophets not for that his word is inferiour to theirs but that in regard of our obedience he might increase the authoritie of Moses and the Prophets because a greater measure of obedience is required to Christs word in regard of the dignitie of his person And this shewes that we now are more bound to obedience vnder the Gospel then the people vere vnder the law for we haue Christs doctrine which in regard of ●is person is of more authoritie then Moses and the Prophets see the point plainely laid downe by the Author to the Hebrewes in the irst Chapter he saith God in times past spake to hi● Church by his Propets but in these last dayes he hath spoken to vs by his sonne and in the second chapter verse 1. he laies downe the vse of this that now we haue Christ for our teacher namely that therefore we ought more aboundanly to giue heede to the things that we haue heard least at any time we le them slip c. shewing that our disobedience now shall be more seue●ly punished V. Point Ignorant people abuse this text to persvade themselue s that preaching is needlesse because no man can say moe then this doe as ye would be done to for this is the summe of the law a●d the Prophets But we wust know that this is not the summe of all tht the Prophets say but onely touching the matter of iustice and equi●e and indeede that we may attaine to saluation more is needfull for ve must not only know Gods word in generall but in particular
casts downe his beames vpon vs by meanes whereof we againe see the body of the sunne euen so the knowledge of God whereby he knoweth vs for his worketh in our hearts a knowledge of God in vs whereby we know him for our God So Gal. 4. 9. Seeing ye know God or rather are known of God so that the knowledge of God whereby he knoweth vs to be his is the grounde of our knowledge of him to be our God Againe in this knowledge of God whereby he knoweth his elect is contained his loue towards them for he knoweth and accepteth of man and therefore loueth him this brings forth in man loue to God againe We loue God because hee hath loued vs first 1. Ioh. 4. 19. So likewise God by his knowledge chooseth vs to be his peculiar people and hence comes our choosing of God to be our God for looke as the seale sets a print in the waxe like vnto it selfe so the knowledge of God bringeth forth such fruits in vs to God-ward as therewith God beareth and manifesteth towards vs. On the other side there he some whom God neuer knewe and the fruits hereof in them bee the fruits of iustice God not knowing them they knowe not God and the fruits of this knowledge as loue and giuing their hearts vnto God they haue not Indeed the sinnes which men commit come not from this that God knoweth them not but frō the corrupt will of man and yet these wants of knowledge of loue faith to God as they are punishments come from this that God doth not know nor acknowledge men for his Now whereas this knowledge of God is powerfull in his elect to produce from thē true knowledge affiance loue of God againe we are to bee admonished to labour to feele in our hearts these graces which are the impressions and fruits of Gods knowledge of vs that by them wee may be able to say I knowe God to be my God and Christ my redeemer Let vs therefore labour to knowe God aright and to loue God in Christ in his mēbers by true loue to choose the true God to be our God bestowing our hearts affections on him for by these graces wee shall know certainly that God knoweth vs loueth and chooseth vs for his sonnes and daughters in Christ because these graces in vs are the proper fruits of the knowledge loue of God towards vs euen as wee may knowe the Princes broade seale by the forme of it in waxe though wee neuer see the seale it selfe And on the contrarie wee must take heed of that heauie iudgement of God whereby men goe on without knowledge loue and affiance in God for these are fearefull tokens of his wrath befalling those whom he neuer knew The vse 1. Whereas God knoweth some men for his owne and will not acknowledge the same of others and that onely vpon his will pleasure we may see here a wōderful vnsearchable mystery which first of all ought to stirre vs vp not to plead with God but in an holy reuerēce to wōder at to admire his vnspeakable power soueraignty ouer his creature Rom. 11. 32. God hath shut vp all vnder vnbeleefe that he might haue mercie on all saith the Apostle Now he doth not reason the case further but there staies himselfe with an admiration of Gods wonderfull power and wisdome crying out O the deepnes of the riches both of the wisedom and knowledge of God how vnsearchable are his iudgements his waies past finding out v. 33. 2. This must strike our hearts with feare trembling towards God in regard of his iudgements the Apostle Paul speaking to the Gentiles of Gods auncient people saith the Iewes are cut off through vnbeleefe and thou standest by f●●th thereupon makes this vse vnto the Gentiles Be not high minded but fe●re Ro. 11. 20. 3. Hence we are taught not to sooth vp our selues as vsually we doe on hope of mercie in the death of Christ without some ground hereof through true grace but rather with feare trembling so long as we haue time to labour in the means of saluatiō which is Gods word prayer Sacraments to become true members of Christ because we may deceiue our selues with a vaine profession for though Gods mercie be endlesse in it selfe yet it admits restraint to vs-ward indeed it shall neuer be extended to all nay not to many that in their life time made full account thereof in their vaine perswasions A third point here to be obserued is this that such as professed Christs name here on earth yet after shall be condēned neuer had true faith nor true repentance sound loue nor hope they might haue some kinde of faith I confesse many other excellēt gifts but if they had had true faith therby they should haue pleased God bin approoued of Christ so at sometime also haue bin accepted acknowledged of him for his owne For this wee must learne and hold as the truth of God that where true faith loue and hope are truely wrought there they remaine for euer at least in the roote they may seeme for a time to bee lost but yet neuer can be quite extinct for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. Fourthly here it is plaine that those whom Christ will not saue hee neuer knewe hence it followes that whom he knowes to bee his them he wil know to be his for euer This point must be remembred because it is the true foundation and ground of the saluation of mens soules we are said to bee saued by faith and by the word of God yet onely as by meanes not as causes but the onely cause of our saluation and of the meanes that brings vs thereto is this knowledge of God whereby he accepteth and approoueth vs to be his owne Hence we may gather that those who are elect vnto saluation shall neuer perish for whom God once knowes to be his them he knowes to be his for euer therfore Mat. 24. 24. it is made a thing impossible that the elect should perish and the Apostle takes it for granted that the election of God is vnchangeable Rom. 9. 11. remaining euer according to his purpose This knowledge of God is that foundatiō which remaineth sure 2. Tim. 2. 19. The first grace of all is Gods fauour choosing some men to be his of his meere good will and this first grace to whomsoeuer it is vouchsafed remaineth for euer admitting no change nor alteration nor interruption This doctrine must be remembred as the staie of our faith and a sure foundation of sound comfort in any distresse for true beleeuers in time of affliction finde in themselues much vnbeleefe and great pronenesse to fall away from God Yet here they haue a sure stay whereon to rest they must goe out of themselues and fasten their faith on Gods election knowing hence that though they
obeyeth is the only wise man I will liken him saith Christ vnto a wise man This point is likewise with care to bee remembred that the hearing doing of the word of God is a speciall part of true wisdome this is notably verefied in the 32. Psalme which is intituled Dauids learning and indeed it is a notable psalme of learning cōtaining the summe of all religion which Dauid bringeth to these two heads his repentance new obedience So Deut. 4. 6. the peoples obedience to Gods commandements is counted by Moses their wisdome for this cause he there saith they shal be counted the wisest people vnder heauen because they serued obeyed the true God to which purpose it is said The feare of God is the beginning of wisdome a good vnderstanding haue all they that doe thereafter Psal. 111. 10. Hence we learne these instructions 1. all superiours magi●●rates masters parents are bound to goe before their inferiours in wisdome as they are aboue them in authoritie therfore considering obedience is true wisdome euery superiour ought to goe before his inferiours in obedience to Gods commaundements for this onely is true wisedome without which all other wisdome is but folly and madnesse 2. Hence all students that professe themselues to seeke for wisdome and learning are taught especially to giue themselues to learne obey the will and commandements of God for this is true wisdom both before God and man And it is a great blemish and disgrace for any man of knowledge to lead a loose and dissolute life this argues their want of Gods feare which is the very ground of true wisedome 3. This giues a good caueat to ignorant persons who perswade themselues they may continue in their ignorance because they are not book-learned but they deceiue themselues for obedience is true wisdome and therefore they must labour for so much knowledge as will bring them to this wisdome here commended Now to come more specially to this true wisdom we must search out wherein it lieth This is expressed in these words which hath builded his house on a rocke which S. Luke setteth down more largely ch 6. 48. saying he digged deep Laid his foundation on a rocke In which words 3. part● of this wisdome are propounded 1. to dig deep 2. to make choice of a rocke for a foundation 3. to build thereon The builder is the professor of the name of Christ and this digging deepe to finde out a fit foundation signifieth thus much that he that would make sure his owne saluation must come to a deepe search examination of his own corrupt heart that he may know the iniquitie therof also he must renoūce himselfe his pleasures whatsoeuer may hinder him in this building he must cast out for without this deepe search ransacking of the heart there can be no sure foundation laid nor certainty of saluatiō attained The second point of this wisdom is to choose a foundatiō to lay our saluation vpon that is the rocke Christ Iesus himselfe alone God and man he is the chiefe corner stone on which the whole building is coupled Eph. 2. 20 21. neither is their saluatiō in any other for among men there is giuen no other name vnder heauen by which wee must bee saued then Christ Iesus onely Act. 4. 12. and no other foundation can any man la●e then that which is alreadie laid which is Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 3. 11. Christ is the rocke and corner stone true Christians are liuing st●nes built vp● him 1. Pet. 2. 5. As for our works they are fruits but no part of this foūdation vnlesse to them that build on the sand like foolis● builders Thirdly hauing found a good foundation we must build thereon Our soules and our saluation must be builded on Christ. This is done by our faith in Christ for as mutuall loue ioynes one man vnto an other so true faith makes vs one with Christ Eph. 3. 17. the holy Ghost saith that Christ doth dwell in our hearts by faith and Psal. 125. 1. He that trusts in the Lord is as mount Sion that cannot be remooued Yet here two ca●●ats must be remembred I. That Christ is a rocke yet not euery way that man frames in his owne heart but onely so as he hath offered himselfe in the promise of the Gospel which is the word of the couenant of grace And for this cause we must labour that this word of Gods grace may be rooted and grounded in our hearts by faith for it is all one to beleeue in Christ and to beleeue the word that reueales Christ vnto vs so saith our Sauiour He that refuseth me and receiueth not my word hath one that iudgeth him Ioh. 12. 48. And If ye abide in me and my words abide in you Ioh. 15. 7. We therefore must be like the good ground for as it receiues and keepes the good seede so doth the good heart receiue and keepe the word of grace which beeing rooted in our hearts keepes vs vnited vnto Christ and therefore it is called the engraffed word Iam. 1. 21. which beeing mingled with faith in our hearts is profitable for it knits vs fast to Christ and makes vs growe vp in him vnto perfection II. Caueat We must set all the maine affections of our heart on Christ for hereby must we shew forth our faith We must so esteeme and loue Christ as that in regard of him we count all things losse and dung with the Apostle yea we must so delight in Christ that we desire him wholly and receiue nothing into our hearts but Christ alone Thomas desired but to put his finger into his side but we must goe further and desire to haue our soules washed in the blood that issued thence and to haue our hearts possessed by his spirit whome he giueth to his Church Use. Seeing Christ Iesus is the rocke of our saluation our dutie is to haue our hearts rooted and founded on Christ. They which be as the stonie ground heare and receiue the word and it takes some rooting in them and brings forth some fruit but as the rooting is not deepe so the fruit is neuer ripe and therefore when heat commeth it withereth so it is with professors a man may be one in name and bring forth some fruit of the word which he heares and yet be deceiued in the matter of his saluation because he is not rooted and founded in Christ. This is the point which Paul stands much vpon in sundrie of his Epistles for shew of grace will not serue the turne Indeede in these happie daies of peace any grace makes a man seeme to be a Christian but when the parching heat of persecution comes vnlesse we be throughly rooted in Christ we shall neuer continue to the ende nor bring forth fruit with patience III. Point The fruite of this true obedience in which men by faith build themselues on
of the word so did Paul 2. Cor. 4. 2. 3. in such plainenesse deliuer the word of God that if it were hid he saith it was hid to them which perish The third circumstance is the obiect of their astonishment that is his doctrine They were astonied at his Doctrine This teacheth vs that the word of God must be so deliuered that the Doctrine it selfe may affect the hearers It is a carnall thing for a man so to preach as the consideration of his wit of his memorie of his eloquence of his great reading may affect the hearers many worthy parts no doubt were in our Sauiour Christ for which he might well be admired and yet in the dispensation of his word he labours by his doctrine onely to affect his hearers and so must all they doe that will be followers of Christ. II. Point Thus much for the fruite of Christs sermon Now follows the cause thereof which is Christs authoritie in teaching v. 29. for hee taught a● on● hauing authoritie not as the Scribes This authoritie in Christ● ministerie was caused from three things I. From the matter of his sermon II. From the manner of his deliuerie III. From the things that accompanied his teaching I. The matter of his sermon was the incomparable excellencie of heauenly doctrine thus much his enemies the Scribes that came to tempt him did confesse Mar. 12. 14. Master thou art true and teachest the way of God truly And this was long before confirmed by Moses who deliuered the promise of Christ vnto the people into whose mouth God would put his word Deut. 18. 18. and Ioh. 7. 16. Christ confesseth that his doctrine was not his owne but his fathers that sent him II. The manner of his teaching was heauenly and this shewed it selfe in sundrie things for I. Christ taught in his owne name as a Lord of his doctrine and not as a messenger or interpreter thereof as the Prophets were II. His speach and deliuerie was with speciall grace Luk. 4. v. 22. The people wondred at the gratious words that proceeded out of his mouth wherein he expressed his humilitie his meekenes loue mercie and compassion plainly shewing by his speech that he was indued with all gifts of the spi●●● aboue measure in this regard it is said Isa. 50. 4. God gaue him that is Christ the tongue of the learned to be able to speake a word in due season for the comfort and appea●ing of a distressed conscience which no man but Christ is able to doe III. As he deliuered the word vocally vnto the outward ●are so hee was able by the power of his Godhead to make his hearers giue attendance and to receiue and beleeue that which he taught And lastly his zeale for his fathers glorie and his earnest desire to bring the soules of men vnto saluation which were principall ends of his ministery did also adde grace and authoritie thereto III. The things that went with his doctrine did also cause authoritie in his ministerie and these were two I. Miracles as curing the sicke and casting out deuils which did greatly confirme his doctrine vnto his hearers Mark 7. 37. when hee had cured one that was both deafe and dumbe the people were beyond measure astonished II. An vnblameable life for hee was Iesus Christ the righeous who performed all things that the law required fulfilling the will of God in suffering and suffering in his obedience Further note the phrase in the originall it is said here Hee was teaching that is it was his vsuall manner and custome thus to preach with authoritie Herin Christ is a notable presidēt vnto vs for sundrie duties First hereby euerie minister of Gods word is taught to maintaine the credit of his ministrie and to preserue the same from contempt especially in his owne place and in his owne person though Christ were here in a meane and base estate yet he would not suffer his calling to be contemned but gets grace therevnto And Paul chargeth Timothie to see that no man de●pise his youth 1. Tim 4. 12. and to Titus he giues the like commandement Tit. 2. 15. These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all authoritie See that no m●● dispi●e thee Now in the example of Christ we shall see how this is done not by outward pompe and estate or by earthly meanes but by truth and soundnesse of doctrine by zeale for Gods glorie and for the good of mens soules and by an vnblameable life Secondly hence also Gods ministers if they wil be followers of Christ must learne not onely to ●each sound and heauenly doctrine but to obserue therein a diuine and spirituall manner of teaching 1. Cor. 2. vers 4. and 13. Paul saith his preaching was not in humane wisdome but in the plaine euidence of the spirit comparing spirituall things with spirituall things which is then done wh● the people may acknowledge the grace of God in the teacher As it is said of the ignorant man who is rebuked of the Prophets 1. Cor. 14. 25. Hee falls downe on his face and saith plainely God is in you indeedr There is great difference to be made betweene discoursing in Philosophie which may be done by humane wit and preaching in diuinitie Hee that can discourse well in Philosophie cannot therupon presently preach dispense the word of God aright for preaching is a spirituall dutie which cannot be performed by naturall gifts only The Prophet Isay must haue his tongue touched with a cole from Gods altar before hee could speake and vtter Gods word vnto the people and Paul the most famous of the Apostles desireth in all his Epistles to be praied for that his mouth might bee opened whereby he doth signifie that to deliuer wholesome doctrine in spirituall manner for the glorie of God the good of his people is a great matter and cannot by naturall gifts be attained vnto And indeed this is that teaching which saues the soule affects the heart of him that belongs to God which is the thing that euery minister of Gods word ought to labour for Thirdly seeing Christ in his preaching doth maintaine the authoritie of his ministerie euery man in his place is taught to maintaine and preserue the dignitie of his profession We are all of vs by our profession Christians and by baptisme the sonnes and daughters of God now our dutie is to walke worthie this our calling to take heed wee bring it not into contempt It is a most hainous wickednes for any man to bring a slaunder vpon the name and religion of God and yet nothing is more frequent in this our age for men will needs ●e christians in profession and therefore will receiue the sacraments which be the highest top sailes of all profession and yet in their liues they are profane and liue as they list yea and if others will not ioyne with them in their wickednes they will not sp●r● to scorne
and reuile them But herein they sinne fearefully in dishono●●ing their profession and though they charge others with hypocrisie that endeauour in some truth to bee answerable to their profession yet they themselues practise most grosse hypocrisie when as they will beare the name of Christians in profession and communicate with the Lord his holy ordinances and yet make no conscience of sinne but scorne those that doe Ephes. 4. 1. Paul praied for the Ephesians that they might walke worthy the vocation whereto they were called and Titus 2. 7. hee exhorts Titus hereunto that in all things he should shew himselfe an e●sample of good works with vncorrupt doctrine with gra●itie and integritie c. Yea verse 10. hee requires seruants to shew such faithfulnesse in their seruice that they may adorne the doctrine of God And not as the Scribes For first they failed in the matter they deliuered not the doctrine of God but the traditions of men about washings and ●ythings Secondly they failed in the maner they taught coldly without zeale Thirdly they failed in the end they taught in pride and ambition seeking themselues and not Gods glorie But Christ as we haue seene taught farre otherwise and although he misliked their preaching both for matter manner and end yet he vouchsafed to heare them or else how could he haue reprooued these things in thē Which shewes that Christ would not separate himselfe from their assemblies whose doctrine he disliked with the deliuerie thereof And therefore no man ought to seuer himselfe from the Church of England for some wants that be therein we haue the true doctrine of Christ preached among vs by Gods blessing and though there be corruptions in manners among vs yea and though they could iustly finde fault with our doctrine yet so long as we hold Christ no man ought to seuer himselfe from our Church And thus much for this Sermon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Table of the chiefe points and questions handled in this Commentarie the figures note the page the let ters b the beginning m the middle e the ende of the page A ADams fall decreed 134. m Adoption how knowne 430. m. sixe notes of Adoption out of the Lords praier 324. m Adulterie described 110. m. the greatnes of this sinne 111. m occasions of it forbidden 113. e Affliction how to honour God therin 262. b. 248. m. how to liue therein 480. m. comforts to the afflicted 12. e. 13. b. 438. m. 454. m Alchemists confuted 382. m Almes described 189. b. Almes-giuing handled at large in eight points 188 189. c. it is iustice 217. e. and a dutie of the rich 186. e. what makes our giuing to be Almes 218. m. mo●●ues to Almes giuing 194. e. whether the wife may giue Almes without the husbands consent 188. e Amen what it signifies 320. m Anabaptists confuted 460. b Angels how they doe Gods will 280. m. our imitation of them ibid 282. m. how we are to honour them 283. c Anger aduised is lawfull 94. b. notes of it ibid. rash Anger a degree of murther 91. b Antiquitie no certen note of truth 89. e Apparell wherefore ordained 376. m. practises of inordinate care for Apparell 38● e Apocrypha bookes not canonicall 463. m Apostacie siue degrees of it 365. m Armour of a Christian. 308. e Assault what a man may doe being vnlawfully assaulted 182. b Asseueration in common talke vnlawfull 171. m Astonishment by the ministerie of the word no signe of conuersion 546. e Atheisme abounding 368. m Authoritie of Christ and the Apostles whether equall 473. e B BAnishment a comfort therein 19. b Bargaining how to deale therein 461. e Beggers cause of many beggers 223. m. lustie beggers must not be ordinarily releeued 191. m 192. e. 193 Blessings temporal how they becom ours 287. e Boldnes in prayer how gottē 255. b Bookes diuine Ecclesiasticall and humane 471. e. 472 Bountifulnes of God 403. b. duties from thence 403. m Bread what it signifies 285. b Bruit creatures more obedient then man 378. e Builders on the rocke 538. b. on the sand 542. m C CAlling each one ought to haue a lawfull calling 28. our Callings should be the instruments of mercie 27. b. the duties of lawfull Callings be good workes 63. b Care twofold 372. e. 404. m. the Christian mans care 394. m. 289. e. the practise of moderate care 373. b. distrustfull care with effects and signes thereof 373. e. 404. e. 391. b. reasons against it 1. frō the creation 376. 2. from Gods prouidence 377. m. 3. from the vanitie of it 380. m. 4. from Gods prouidence 384. b. 5. it is heathenish 392. b. 6. God careth for vs. 393. m. 7. from the burden of it 405. m Censurers commonly the vilest persons 424. m Ceremonies whē abrogated 103. m Chalenging the field vnlawfull 181. m Charmes condēned ●99 b. 315. m Chastitie how it is preserued 117. b Children of God their happy estate 38. e. true note of Gods child 205. e Children of wrath 173. m Christs righteousnesse 86. e. how Christ fulfilled the law 71. m Church of God may be hid 56. e. how God taught his Church before Scripture was written 465. m. Gods Church must be vnder the crosse 41. m. why the world hateth it 42. m. Church an incompetent Iudge 471. m. a sure note of the true Church 136. b. our Church defended against the Brownists 136 137. 168. b. 505. b Ciuill honestie insufficient to saue any 85. e. 210. m. 479. e Comfort from God 4. waies 13. e Comforts in sundrie temptations 21. b. 371. e Commandements briefly handled 484 485 486. Commandements negatiue binde more then the affirmatiue 187. e. mans conceit of keeping the Commandements 90. m. third Commandement restored 149. m. sixt Commandement restored and expounded 89 90. c. our examination by it 96. ● the 7. Commandement restored and expounded 110. b. c. our examination by it 116. b. the generall commandement of lou● restored and expounded 199. ● c. Communication a rule for it 170. e. Inuocation of God therein vnlawfull 171. b Communicants dutie 102. m. we may communicate with the wicked 140. m Communitie of all things not required of God 195. m Conscience how to keepe good conscience 313. e. 462. m Cōsent to sinners two waies 121. m Contentions beseeme not Christians 183. b Contentation grounds thereof 248. m. 272. e. 285. e. 286. 385. e. 393. e. motiues to contentation 345. b Conuersion described 397. m. why Christ conuerted so few 547. e Correction or reproofe handled in foure points 431. b Couetousnes the maine cause therof 356. m. practises of Couetousnes forbidden 343. m. 345. m. disswasiues from Couetousnesse 285. m Creatures insensible made our teachers 384. m D DAmnation of the nūber that shall be damned 519. m Death preparation thereto 273. e remedie against the feare of it 14. m. the second death 531. e. how Christ suffered it 532. b Debt why sinne is
9. can 11. c. b Rhem. on 2. Tim. 4. sect 4. c Rhem. on Matth. 26. s●ct 4. d Bellar. de Rom. 〈…〉 4. cap. 1● 6. e Rhem. on Heb. 9 sect 10. f M●ss●le Ro● a●●● 5. in ●●itan p. 30● g C●nsur Col ●●f 22● h Ibid. s. ●●7 i C●●us l. ● c. 13. k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de hi●● ●●●les c. 2. 3. The way of nature grace 〈…〉 Way of death broad Vniuersall grace con●●●ed Our dutie 〈◊〉 r gard of these two waies Luk. 13. 24. I. Charge How to walk in the way of life 1 2 3 II. Charge How to get courage against the straitnes of this way 1. Dutie How the law restraines our naturall desires 1. Commandement Restraints in the 2. Com. Restraints in the 3. Com. Restraints in the 4. Com. Restraints in the 5. Com. Restraints in the 6. Restraints in the 7. Restraints in the 8. Restraints in the 9. Restraints in the 10. Restraints of man● desires by the Gospel Math. 19. 26. Su●fer afflication patiently Our duti● in profession of the tr●d● III. 〈…〉 St●●●● to enter Ma●● 11. 12. Psal. 132. 2 3 4 5. 〈…〉 ●●demned 〈…〉 to 〈◊〉 1. The danger of ●e●ur●●i● ●●d ●6 29. 30 The assurāce of the pe●●tent Excuses of secure persons remooued 2. Excuse 3. Excus● from Gods predestination The better sort are slack i● striuing 11. part of Christs sermon What mak●● a false Prophet The meaning False Prophets di●f●r from schismatikes Iesuites and Priests are false Teachers Familists and Arrians Satans malice against the Church Act. 20. 28 29 30. The aboundance of he●etikes in the primi●iue Church Our weakenesse in the faith Gal. 4. 15. Gal. 1. 6. Our itching humo●r in matters of religion We must be constant in the faith Directions to maintaine the truth a 1. Ki. 21 20 b Cha. 22. 8. 2. Rule Restorers of religion ought to be had in account 3. Rule Howe to knowe the truth in religion Iam. 1. 5. 4. Rule Society with false Prophets is vnlawfull Rom. 16. 17. E●seb Recl hist. l. 3. c. 25. Delight in Popish writers vnlawfull Act. 19 19. Free sale of hereticall bookes is dangerous Toleration of false religion vnlawfull To separate from Rome no schisme Whether a false Prophet should be put to death 1. Kin. 21. 10. 13. Dan. 3 29. Why God suffers false Prophets 2. Th 2. 11 11 Danger of false Prophets 7. Pretences of false prophets 1. Allegation of scripture 2. Deep learning Rhem. on Heb. ● sect 8 Co●c Trid. sess 4. decr 2. 3. Goodly ti●●es 4. Fai●ed humilitie Colos 2. 18. and 23. ● Working miracles 6 Faire speeches 1. King 22. ● 7. Boldnesse in suffering Be wise as serpents We must preserue the puritie of the truth Fruits of a true Prophet God calleth Prophets diuersly How the restorers of religion frō Poperie were called 1. Not● of a false Prophet 2 Note of a true Prophet 2. Note of a false Prophet 3 Note of a true prophet of a false Rom. 16. 18. Luk. 20. 2 3. D●r●i Confu● resp Whita● ad 10. ●at Cap. p. 70. a Miss Rom. à Pio 5. in Li●an p. 304 b Rhem. on Heb 〈◊〉 sect 9. and c on Mat. 2. sect 3. d Aquin. 3. Summ. q. 25. 〈◊〉 3. 4. Xixti 5. Po●●t orat de morte Hen● ● habi●a a● 1589. f ●●llar de ●l●r l. 1. c 19. g Rhem on Rom. 6. sect ● h Rhem. on 2. Tim. 4. sect 4. Chap. 〈◊〉 p. 5● Our church defended against the Brownists The people ought to bee able to iudge of teachers We may vse the ministrie of wicked liuers Math. 23. 2 3. Philip. 1 18. ●●k 9. 49. The maine dutie of students in diuinitie What commends a minister How some ●●ces becom euill The state of the vnregenerate The greatnes of originall sinne Sauing grace is not vniuersall Bellarm. de grat lib. arb l. a. c. 5. G●b Bi● l. 2. dist 27. d●b 4. The miserie of the vnregenerate Good works follow iustification Concil Trid. sess 6. cap. 7. can 32. ●eli●r de ●us●i● l. 4. c. 14 The punishment of sa●e prophets Io● 15. 2. 6. Comfort against false prophets Matth. 25. 42. 45. Duties of him that would discouer a false prophet Rhem. on 1. Tim. 3. sect 9. 12. Part of Christs Sermon What professor shall not be saued Three grosse hypocrites 1 2 3 Close hypocrites What gifts a close hypo crite may haue 1 2 4 5 What professors shal be saued Wherin the doing of God will standeth Sauing faith comprehēds 3. things Ho● to know ●●r f●●●h to b● 〈…〉 Isa. 28. 16. The grou●●●f repēt●ce The nature of repentance New obedience Branches of new obedience How to become cheerfull d●●●● of the will of God We must go be●ond hypocrite● in grace Of the number that shal be condemned A dangerous conceit of a mans good estate The terror of the Lord. What it is to prophesie What it is to prophesie in Christs name What a miracle is God alone can work● miracles How men worke miracles Miracles now ceased Excellent gifts wil not saue vs without faith Mat. 12. 47 48 49 50. Receiue no new doctrine though confirmed by a miracle Gods knowledge of his creature 1. Generall 2. Speciall Vniuersall redemption confuted God deales not hardly in denying redemption to some Gods election and reprobation prooued The ground of Gods predestination For ●●ecne workes are not the ground of Gods decree The effect of Gods knowledge of some to be his A motiue to know and loue God 2 3 The Reprob●te neuer had tr●e 〈◊〉 Elect neue●●all away Wherein the secōd death standeth How Christ s●ff●red the sec●d death A monue to get fellowship with God How professors of religion may be work●●● of iniquiti●● Christ marks the most secret sinnes How Christ esteeme● a godly life A strong motiue to repētance Purge the heart from a ●u●pose of sinning Conclusion of Christs sermon The dutie of euery good hearer Obedient hearing is true wisdo● Superiours dutie Students dutie The true wisdome of prof●ssors 1. part of it 2. part of it 3. Part. How we are built on Christ. Eph. 2. 20 21. and 3. 17. Coloss. 2. 7. The fruit of true obedience A motiue to obedience True faith cannot be lost True beleeuers must haue their trialls The practise of a badde hearer How all hearers are bound to obedience The follie of professors Iam. 1. 22 23. Our commō error in iudging men to be wise A motiue to obedience Who build on the sands I. Papists Concil Trid. sess 6. cap. 7. 10. 16. 2 Common Protestants 3 The more forward Protestant The fruit of bad hearing Euery professor must be tried Our dutie in regard of trialls Daunger of hypocrisie The maiesty of Christs ministerie Astonishment at the word no sure signe of conuersion Act. 16. 27. 31 Quest. Why Christ conuerted so few Act. 2. 4● ●om 15. 8. Silence in the holy assemblies of the Church Christ preached plainly Carnall preaching The authoritie of Christs ministrie Causes of it ● The matter 2. The manner of his teaching 3. things accompanying his ministery Mini●●er● must maintaine the credit of their ministry Right manner of preaching Isay 6. 6 7. We must maintaine the dignitie of our profession Separation f●●m our Church is vnlawfull
vndoubtedly is our miserable and wofull case in our selues And there is no way to escape this curse but onely this we must humble our selues before God and confesse against our selues the murther of our hearts declared in our gesture speech and behauiour then we must labour to be grieued for these sinnes for which ende we must applie vnto our selues Gods fearefull iudgements due vnto vs for them Thirdly we must earnestly sue vnto God for mercie and pardon as for life and death like as poore prisoners doe when the sentence of death is to be pronounced against them yea we must crie with sighs and grones that cannot be expressed and giue the Lord no rest till he send into our consciences the comfortable message of mercie and pardon by his good spirit This done we must labour in our callings for the time to come to procure and further the welfare and safetie of our brethren as well as our owne we must not seeke our selues but the common good eschewing those things that may grieue our brethren and doing those that may be good and comfortable vnto them that so by new obedience we may shew forth thankefulnes for Gods mercie and fauour towards vs. Hitherto we haue hādled the three degrees of murther which Christ condemneth by this law beyond the doctrine of the Iewish teachers Besides these there is a fourth degree here condemned which is actuall killing This Christ doth not here name because he taketh it for graunted euen by the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisies Now because it is the main sinne of this cōmandement therfore here it is to be handled which we wil doe thus first we wil shew when killing is murther and when it is not and then handle the kinds thereof For the first Killing is not alwaies murther for sometime a man hath power giuen of God to kill and it is no sinne now God giues a man power to kill three waies I. by the written word thus Princes and Gouerners and vnder them executioners are allowed to kill malefactours that deserue death and thus souldiers are warranted to kill their enemies in a lawfull warre II. by an extraordinarie Commandement and so Abraham might lawfully haue killed his sonne if the Angel of the Lord had not staied his hand III. by an extraordinarie instinct which is answerable to a speciall commandement and so Phinees slue Zimri and Cosbie without guilt of murther But killing is murther when men of their own wills without warrant from God slay others and this sinne is plainely and directly forbidden in this commandement II. Point The kindes of killing be two either voluntarie or casuall Uoluntarie killing is when a man killeth of purpose and intent and this sinne is so hainous that it defileth the land where the blood is shedde till it be purged by the blood of him that shedde it And this purpose to kill is twofold either with deliberation and fore-desire of reuenge as when a man hath caried a grudge in his heart long before or without deliberation when a man without all former malice is suddenly caried by furie and anger to slay his brother and this second kinde of killing is distinguished from that which is vpon deliberation by the name of manslaughter and also fauoured by the lawes of some Countries because it is not done of set purpose but through sudden anger before the blood be cold but Gods law maketh both of them murther and admitteth no recompense for the life of the murtherer nay beside it adiudgeth the murtherer to eternall death both in soule and bodie To this voluntarie murther we must referre those that giue commandement counsell or helpe vnto the murtherer for he that commandeth is the principall Agent and the murtherer is his instrument Againe it is voluntarie murther to strike an other though with purpose onely to wound if death follow thereon And that also which is committed by a drunken man for his will is free though sense and reason be blinded Casuall killing commonly called chance medlie is when a man killeth an other hauing no purpose to doe him hurt The presumptions of casuall killing be these First if a man kill an other hauing no ill will or anger towardes him nor to any other for his sake neither is mooued thereto by couetousnes or any affection Secondly if he be doing the lawfull duties of his particular calling Thirdly if he be well occupied doing some lawfull worke beside his calling And lastly if he be doing a thing which he ordinarily practiseth keeping his vsuall place and time And albeit this kind of killing if it be meerely casuall is no sinne yet the partie committing it in old time was bound to come to his answer thereby to purge and cleare himselfe from suspition of murther as also to auoide the hatred and daunger of the friends of the partie killed and lastly to keepe and maintaine the hatred of murther among Gods people Now this sixt commandement is not to be vnderstood of casuall but of voluntarie killing And this also must be obserued that Christ giueth the name of murther to all the occasions thereof that he might breede in our hearts an hatred of them all as of murther it selfe verse 23. If thou then bring thy gift to the Altar and remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee 24. Leaue there thy gift before the Altar goe thy waies first be reconciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift Here Christ propounds a Rule of concord by seeking reconciliation with them whome we haue wronged and it depends vpon the former verse as a consequent and conclusion drawne therefrom as may appeare by the first wordes If then or therefore as if he had said If rash anger and the testification thereof either in gesture or reuiling speech be murther and deserue condemnation then we are with all diligence to seeke to be reconciled to our brethren whensoeuer any breach of loue is made betweene vs and them The Exposition If thou bring thy gift to the Altar Here Christ alludeth to the Iewes manner of worshippe vnder the law which was to offer in the Temple sacrifices vnto God both of propitiation and thanksgiuing And though Christ here onely name this one kind of ceremoniall worshippe yet vnder this he comprehendeth all manner of true outward worshippe whether Legall or Euangelicall as if he should say If thou come to worship God any way either by offering sacrifices or by praying vnto God by hearing his word or receiuing the Sacraments and remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee that is that thou hast any way wronged and offended thy brother this appeareth to be the true meaning by the like wordes of Marke If thou hast ought against thy brother meaning for iniurie done vnto thee by him forgiue him and therefore our brother hath something against vs when we haue wronged or offended